We all need some cheering up right now, so the news that Porsche will return to the Le Mans 24 Hours in a few years’ time is just the tonic we require.

Not only will a true sportscar icon return to the biggest race of them all, it will do so facing off against Audi, Peugeot and Toyota in 2023 – with more huge marques likely to join them. The key to this is not just the big-buck factory teams, although we love to see them battling it out, but the availability of the next generation of prototypes to customer teams.

As Porsche’s head of motorsports agrees, it’s this aspect that truly boosts the potential of an amazing grid packed with quality in future years. While the mighty Goliaths have their own battle, we can also get some plucky Davids in the mix in equal machinery.

It casts my mind back to the ‘New-Man’ Joest Porsches beating all the factory cars in the epic mid-80s era. I’d love to see that kind of thing happen again, with the World Endurance Championship and IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Series being elevated to another level too.

 

 Charles Bradley, Global Editor in Chief
 Motorsport.com

Porsche believes that sportscar racing could be heading into a new golden era with levels of manufacturer participation in the top class rivalling that of the 1980s and early '90s.
 
 
G A R Y   W A T K I N S
Porsche LMDh prototype set for Le Mans, WEC, IMSA in 2023
Porsche will return to the Le Mans 24 Hours with an LMDh prototype in 2023 as part of a dual assault on the FIA World Endurance Championship and IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.
 
 
 
G A R Y   W A T K I N S
The Porsche icon that forged sportscar racing's greatest era
Porsche is returning to the top class of Le Mans with an LMDh prototype that it hopes will write its next successful chapter in sportscar racing. But it will have to go some to emulate its 956/962, a car which defines the Group C age more than any other.
 
 
 
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Mazepin loses court battle over failed attempt to buy Force India
The case brought by Dmitry Mazepin’s company Uralkali against the administrators of the Force India Formula 1 team in the High Court in London has been dismissed.
 
 
 
J O N A T H A N   N O B L E
Engine freeze talks give Red Bull hope of keeping Honda engines
Red Bull says alignment among rival teams over a Formula 1 engine freeze has made it hopeful it can still secure a deal to keep running Honda engines from 2022.
 
 
 
 
 
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