Alonso shines through the night on his Le Mans debut

Alonso, who is bidding to complete the second part of motor racing's Triple Crown, climbed out of his car smiling and scarcely showing signs of fatigue.

Published : Jun 17, 2018 16:12 IST , France

Spanish driver Fernando Alonso looks on during the 86th Le Mans 24-hours endurance race, at the Circuit de la Sarthe, France.
Spanish driver Fernando Alonso looks on during the 86th Le Mans 24-hours endurance race, at the Circuit de la Sarthe, France.
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Spanish driver Fernando Alonso looks on during the 86th Le Mans 24-hours endurance race, at the Circuit de la Sarthe, France.

Fernando Alonso strung together a series of fast laps through the night to set up his Toyota to retake the lead on his 24 hours of Le Mans debut just after dawn on Sunday.

The Spaniard put the Toyota No. 8 in position for Japanese co-driver Kazuki Nakajima to overtake stable-mates Toyota No. 7, driven by Kamui Kobayashi.

When Alonso took his second turn at the wheel, the car was 2min 15sec behind No.7 after the car's third driver, Swiss Sebastien Buemi, had picked up a one-minute “stop and go” penalty for speeding in a temporary slow zone.

When Alonso handed over to Nakajima two and a half hours later, the two-time Formula One world champion had closed the gap to 45 seconds, after once again demonstrating his extraordinary ability to adapt, following two brilliant overtaking manoeuvres to claim the lead during his first stint late on Saturday afternoon.

Alonso, who is bidding to complete the second part of motor racing's Triple Crown, climbed out of his car smiling and scarcely showing signs of fatigue.

“I felt good at night. I was in the zone and I pushed to catch up,” said the 36-year-old, who has already won the F1 Monaco Grand Prix and also still needs the Indy 500 for the Triple Crown.

“Some of the work is done, but it's still a long race.”

Toyota have sometimes seemed jinxed at Le Mans in recent years and the other Toyota picked up a stop-go penalty after British driver Mike Conway went too fast in a slow zone.

Yet, after 19 hours of racing, the closest pursuers were the two Rebellion Racing non-hybrids, both more than 11 laps back.

Many of the other six entrants in the top category, Le Mans Prototype 1, were having a tougher race.

The SMP Racing car, driven by another former Formula One world champion Jenson Button, spent three hours in the pits with a mechanical problem and one of each the Bykolles and the SMP Racing cars went off the track.

The leader in LMP2, after 19 hours, was the G-Drive Racing car of Frenchmen Jean-Eric Vergne and Andrea Pizzitola and Russian Roman Rusinov, lying fifth overall, 14 laps behind Alonso's Toyota.

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