Four rounds in and with one more to go, it’s time to crown our 24H SERIES Europe champions for 2019. And alongside the standings, there are a few things you should bear in mind during our 24-hour title showdown. For instance…
1. Might this be the first year since 2013 that Porsche doesn’t take an overall win in the 24H SERIES?
Though the team has clearly lost none of its competitive edge, having claimed three consecutive A6-Am class wins and coming unbearably close to an overall GT win at Spa-Francorchamps, Herberth Motorsport (#91), unusually, goes into the 2019 24H SERIES powered by Hankook season finale without an outright win under its belt. We’ve never seen that. Even in its maiden campaign in 2015, the Bavarian team scooped the overall win in Mugello, two rounds in.
It’s even rarer to see Porsche ‘win-less’ overall in the 24H SERIES. To find the last time that happened, you have to go back to 2013, when Mercedes-AMG and Lamborghini were represented on the top step in Dubai and Barcelona, and Hungary respectively.
Can Herberth Motorsport end this particular streak in Barcelona? Absolutely. The team, after all, is a previous two-time winner of the Hankook 24H BARCELONA.
However….
2. Scuderia Praha has won the last round of the European season finale every year since 2015
If the recent run by Bohemia Energy racing with Scuderia Praha (#11) wasn’t enough to put the Czech team in the hot seat heading into Barcelona, then this probably will be. Not since SPS automotive performance took victory at the Hankook 12H HUNGARY to close out the 2014 season has anyone other than Scuderia Praha failed to win the last European round of a 24H SERIES season. And bear in mind, the Czech Ferrari didn’t even enter the event that year.
The Ferrari 458 GT3 did enter three races that year though, finishing 4th in Mugello, DNF-ing at Zandvoort, and securing the win at the penultimate round of the season at, of all places, Barcelona.






















