If you want nail-biting competition, look no further than the LMP2 category. The category, mostly occupied by Oreca 07 Gibson-powered cars, saw no less than 28 leader changes. Once the race had set, after a chaotic first few laps, it was the Jota #38 who seemed to be in control, but a small mistake sent its hopes and dreams of victory into the gravel trap. The further the race unravelled the more likely it became that the Belgian WRT squad would take a double podium. However, as a flashback to the Toyota in 2016, the #41 WRT car halted in the middle of the track shattering their hopes for victory. It was a heartbreaking moment for Robert Kubica, who was enjoying his first Le Mans, along with Louis Deletraz and Ye Yifei. This handed the victory to the #31 WRT car of Ferdinand Habsburg, Charles Milesi, and Robin Frijns. This also handed a P2 position to the newest Motul partner Jota, whose car was fielded by non-other than F1 and FE ace Stoffel Vandoorne, Sean Gelael, and Tom Blomqvist. United Autosports brought a strong line-up of three cars, yet they had a weekend they’d rather forget about even though they managed to park their #23 car in fourth position in the LMP2 standings. Damage and collisions (even an unfortunate collision between their own cars) turned their dream race into a nightmare.
