| Tire puncture, contact deny pole-sitting No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R shot at podium |
| FUJI, Japan (Sept. 15, 2024) – Cadillac Racing will take its small victory in the Six Hours of Fuji and build for a larger prize in the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) season finale. The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R, which Alex Lynn drove to Cadillac Racing’s maiden Hypercar pole position Saturday for what he hailed as “quite a nice victory,” led the initial 1 hour, 9 minutes of the race Sunday on the 2.835-mile, 12-turn Fuji Speedway circuit with Earl Bamber at the wheel. |
| The Chip Ganassi Racing-run team’s quick work in the pits kept the No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R on the lead lap to recover and be running ninth and looking to score championship points with 30 minutes left before Bamber got caught out on the marbles, wiggled and nosed into the tire barrier. Bamber guided the damaged car back to the pit box, where it was retired. The No. 6 Porsche 963 won the 213-lap race. Pole position was the first for the program in 14 WEC races over two seasons and the 28th for Cadillac Racing in WEC/IMSA prototype competition since 2017. Cadillac is the fourth manufacturer this season to claim pole position in the seven races. The No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R’s previous best qualifying spot this season was second at Spa-Francorchamps and for the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Media resources: Cadillac Racing photo gallery | ’24 WEC statisticsCadillac has qualified in the top four in five consecutive WEC races and will seek to extend that streak and earn a podium spot Nov. 2 in the Eight Hours of Bahrain. In 2023, the No. 2 Cadillac V-Series.R qualified third on the 3.363-mile (5.412-kilometer) Bahrain International Circuit that opened in 2004. |
| Driver quotes |
| Earl Bamber (after starting race and driving 1-hour, 9-minute stint): “Good opening stint. Led the race, which was a great start and was pretty comfortable. Lost a bit of tire grip toward the end and was a little unlucky with traffic.” Alex Lynn (after his first stint): “It was OK. Unfortunately, we were jumped on the stops by the No. 6 and then spent the whole time behind the No. 6 Porsche and trying to keep the other cars that stopped for new tires under Safety Car behind, which we managed to do. With the temperature, everybody is struggling with tire deg.” |