“It’s heart-breaking for the 912 crew really. They did so well, adapted quickly, and truly deserved that win. If the car had been repairable, we would have fixed it, even with only four hours left to the flag. This is endurance and we are competitors at heart. But this is the strange thing about running two cars: for the 911, the accident put them back onto the podium.”
As we talk, the banner above the garage is being snipped down, ready for the 1,100km journey to join the rest of the collection in Lanester. Crew members walk past wheeling packing crates or carrying boxes. The TV monitors and laptops have been disconnected and stowed, the roof of the gazebo sags as the poles are collapsed, and alongside its fallen sister, the 911 is being wheeled back into the pit box, ready to be prepped for the long drive home. As I peer through the emptying garage, I can see the pit perch. It’s empty.
“We had a small celebration under the podium but our weekend isn’t over. We need to clear the garage by 8pm tonight. There’s just no downtime!”
This may seem a silly question, given the bronze and European championship trophies sitting in celebratory fashion on a nearby packing crate, but I can’t help but ask anyway. It’s been an exhausting weekend, with few breaks, no sleep, and triumph mixed with heart-ache. Porsche Lorient Racing is no stranger to this kind of weekend, given their tenure in the 24H SERIES, but why do they continue to put themselves through it?
“The 24H SERIES is a hard championship because you’re always busy. We start at 8am, we finish at 1am, if we’re lucky, and you need to check everything if you want to finish. And even then, issues can still happen. So it’s tough, but when you have a car on the track, you have a lot of adrenaline. We’re all like that. It keeps us going! We want to be there for the car, the driver and the team. It’s why we keep coming back. We love endurance racing.”