Tag: Cadillac Racing

  • The Key Achievements That Will Represent Tangible Success for Cadillac in 2026

    The Key Achievements That Will Represent Tangible Success for Cadillac in 2026

    Cadillac has already ticked off plenty of its 2026 to do list, in not looking like breaching the 107% qualifying rule and getting two cars to the finish at the second attempt in the Chinese Grand Prix.

    With those goals achieved, this is not the time for F1’s newest team to rest on their laurels as the scale of their medium and long terms competitive aims has already hit home at the General Motors backed entry.

    While the latest American team to join the F1 grid is another to have been built from the ground up after Haas joined the grid, at its core for 2026 is decades of F1 experience with Team Principal Graeme Lowdon having formerly been in charge at 2010 new team Virgin, latterly Marussia, until 2015. Executive Engineering Consultant Pat Symonds having previously worked for Benetton and Renault at Team Enstone and later Williams, while drivers Sergio Perez and Valtteri Bottas have 14 and 12 years’ experience in F1 respectively.

    With the prospect of points an unlikely one for 2026, we take a look at what milestones and achievements would represent a successful debut season for Cadillac.

    Consistently Clean Weekends

    While Cadillac have gotten two cars to the finish faster than World Champions McLaren, neither weekend has been trouble free for the team, which follows a winter schedule in which the team was ahead of only the beleaguered Aston Martin Honda entry in terms of mileage completed across the two official Tests in Bahrain.

    In Australia, Perez only managed 16 laps across the first two practice sessions as reliability issues hobbled the Mexican former Red Bull driver, while Bottas was able only to complete 12 laps on Saturday morning ahead of qualifying before retiring with an engine failure after 15 laps in the race.

    In China, Perez was once again hamstrung on Friday morning.

    He only completed 13 laps in the sole practice session of the first Sprint weekend of the season before failing to set a time in Sprint qualifying, and having his Sprint race and Grand Prix Qualifying were once again compromised as deployment issues set the 36-year-old back. Those gremlins would last into the race, notwithstanding a clumsy collision with Bottas at the start of the Grand Prix.

    This ultra-complicated era of Formula One engine regulations have caused problems for numerous teams including the aforementioned McLaren, who failed to start with either Lando Norris or Oscar Piastri in Shanghai on Sunday, while Audi have yet to have both scares start a Grand Prix this season and Red Bull have had at least one retirement in each Grand Prix so far, so this inexperienced at ground level team are far from alone.

    Nevertheless, the team will be targeting cleaner weekends as it attempts to build a better understanding of its car and the new era.

    Taking advantage of F1 experience inside the team

    We earlier referenced the F1 experience that Cadillac does have including a combined 26 seasons of experience across its driver lineup.

    Few were enthralled when it was announced that Bottas and Perez would be taking the two race seats ahead of an unlikely berth for now F2 and Cadillac development driver Colton Herta, himself an Indycar race winner.

    Coming into the season, the two men had 16 grand prix wins and 527 starts between them. Both drivers have been part of dominant F1 teams in their career, with Bottas a fine understudy to Lewis Hamilton for five seasons from 2017 through to 2021 at Mercedes, while Perez was at Red Bull for four seasons during their return to domination with the all-conquering Max Verstappen up until his untimely departure in 2024.

    Both are known to have strong technical feedback which should help the team build a better understanding of their car in more timely fashion compared to an inexperienced rookie, and they will be able to bring to the team elite level processes after recent stints with two behemoths of Formula One.

    Cadillac CEO Dan Towriss pointed to the experience brought by the two drivers when both men were announced for 2026 back in August last year.

    In Team Principal Lowdon it has a man experienced in starting a Formula One team from Ground Zero. While Virgin’s ambitions and scale did not compare to the plans that Cadillac will eventually have, Lowdon has seen the challenges the team will face all before. Given the difficult birth that Virgin suffered, including a fuel tank that began 2010 too small to complete a Grand Prix, he is equipped to solve problems that new teams will face and implementing processes across an entirely new team.

    With Symonds in an Engineering Consultancy role, the team has a man who’s been involved in the good – and bad – of Formula One with his time encompassing title victories at Benetton with Michael Schumacher and Renault with Fernando Alonso. He was a key part of the leadership team during his time there and was in a consultancy role when Lowdon was in charge at Virgin-Marussia.

    The presence of both Bottas and Perez have given the new team instant credibility and tapping into the F1 experience and nous they already have will be vital to the team’s short and medium term progress.

    Getting on to the back of the midfield

    Cadillac’s pace is at the higher end of where they were expected to start in 2026, but over a single lap they are still behind even the troubled Aston Martin package, and while they have been clear in the races that is mostly down to the reliability measures Honda have had to take.

    They were a thrice lapped 16th with Perez in Melbourne, while both drivers were lapped down in 13th and 15th in China, albeit aided by a Safety Car after 10 laps as Lance Stroll retired.

    The Ferrari Power Unit that the team has until at least 2028 is a competitive one bested only by Mercedes at this stage of the season, and with the current generation of cars being so young the rate of development will be huge, and Perez did tentatively target points by the end of the season when speaking after the Chinese Grand Prix.

    Time will tell whether that proves to be realistic this season, but there is only so long that the team will accept being on the back row and a second off the next nearest team.

    The team will learn a lot about how well they can develop a car throughout their debut season ahead of providing a solid base for a more competitive 2027.

    Image: Pirelli F1 Media

  • Twelve Hours of Sebring preview

    Twelve Hours of Sebring preview

    This year’s running of International Motor Sports Association’s (IMSA) Twelve Hours of Sebring sees 58 cars entered into the race, Lamborghini making it’s GTP debut, and race title sponsor Mobil 1 celebrating its 50th anniversary with gold liveries, making it an unmissable event for motorsport and automotive enthusiasts. 

    • Race breakdown
    • Lamborghini IMSA GTP debut
    • Mobil 1 50th anniversary
    • Two all-female lineups
    • Qualifying 

    5 min read

    Race breakdown

    The 17-turn 3.74 mile circuit of Sebring International Raceway is one of the toughest and unforgiving race tracks on the planet, with bumpy and narrow straights, treacherous corners, and very little run-off, making winning the 12-hour race a truly honourable feat.

    This Saturday’s 72nd running of the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring marks the second race of the 2024 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar championship, with all four classes, Grand Touring Prototype (GTP), Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) and Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) competing. 

    2023 Twelve Hours of Sebring (USA), 15th to 18th March 2023. BMW M Motorsport, IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, Twelve Hours of Sebring, BMW M Team RLL, #24 BMW M Hybrid V8, Philipp Eng (AUT), Augusto Farfus (BRA), Marco Wittmann (GER), #25 BMW M Hybrid V8, Connor De Phillippi (USA), Nick Yelloly (GBR), Sheldon van der Linde (RSA), GTP class (Photo courtesy of BMW Group Press Club)

    Cadillac look set to continue their hot streak at Sebring, having won four of the last five Sebring 12 Hour races, including the last three, and sweeping the front row during qualifying Friday afternoon.

    The race begins 9.40am ET/1:40pm UK time, with international coverage starting from 9am ET/1pm UK time via IMSA TV/IMSA Radio/IMSA YouTube.

    This means that the race begins on a Floridian Saturday morning, and will end under the pitch black of night, following a glorious sunset in the final turn just after 7:30pm local time.

    Lamborghini IMSA GTP debut

    The Lamborghini SC63, with IMSA President John Doonan calling it the “Verde Mantis”, is making its IMSA GTP debut this Saturday, the fifth GTP manufacturer to compete in the series

    With a Ligier chassis, an all-new 3.8-litre, twin-turbo V8 engine, and with a bright green and Italian flag striped livery, it will surely turn heads this weekend.

    Operated by the Iron Lynx team who will have the one car effort in IMSA’s GTP class with is Italian factory driver Andrea Caldarelli, Matteo Cairoli and ex-Formula 1 and full-time IndyCar driver Romain Grosjean piloting the No. 63 raging bull.

    American Debut for Lamborghini Squadra Corse Iron Lynx at Sebring International Raceway (Photo courtesy of Lamborghini media center)

    A single car entry has also been entered into the WEC season, already having raced in the WEC season opener at Qatar.

    This is the first time Lamborghini’s Squadra Corse program has entered the top class of IMSA racing since entering the championship in 2016 with it’s Huracan GT3 GTD class car.

    Emmanuel Esnault, the team’s racing director, said following its WEC at Qatar: “We will be competing in the Twelve Hours of Sebring, one of the world’s toughest races. We need to extract the maximum benefits from what we are learning during race weekends to develop the car and further improve our trackside operations to provide our drivers with the best possible opportunities.”

    The team qualified eighth for Saturday’s race.

    Mobil 1 50th anniversary

    Motor oil company and title sponsor of the Twelve Hours of Sebring, Mobil 1, is celebrating its 50th anniversary since its inception, with several cars sporting special 50th anniversary gold liveries including the two Corvette Racing GTD Pro cars and No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F GTD Pro car.

    Two all-female lineups

    Two all-female lineups, will race in Saturday’s Sebring Twelve Hours, an IMSA WeatherTech SportCar Championship first.

    Katherine Legge will join Sheena Monk and Tati Calderon in the No. 66 Gradient Racing Acura NSX GT3 in the Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) class, while Sarah Bovy, Rahel Frey and Michelle Gatting will co-drive the No. 83 Iron Dames Lamborghini Huracán GT3 EVO2.

    #66: Gradient Racing, Acura NSX GT3, GTD: Sheena Monk, Katherine Legge, Tati Calderon, Stevan McAleer, racing the #62: Risi Competizione, Ferrari 296 GT3, GTD PRO: Daniel Serra, Davide Rigon, Alessandro Pier Guidi, James Calado in the 2024 24 Hours of Daytona (Photo courtesy of Honda Racing News Room)

    Katherine Legge said: “Our program and Iron Dames are done in a serious and professional way. We are professional sports teams that just happen to be female. It’s showcasing female power. It’s not done as anything else. We’ve picked the best drivers we can pick. It’s a showcase rather than a publicity stunt.”

    The same Iron Dames trio made history last year when they the GTE Am class in the WEC’s 8 Hours of Bahrain race, the first time an-all female lineup earned a class win in WEC history.

    Qualifying

    GTP

    The No. 31 Whelen Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series. R ended qualifying right where they led off last year when they won the 2023 Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring by qualifying on pole Friday afternoon with Pipo Derani by doing a 1.48.152 lap.

    Derani is going for his fifth Twelve Hours of Sebring victory, this time teaming up with Jack Aitken and current IndyCar driver Tom Blomqvist.

    Joining the No. 31 Whelen on the front row is the No. 01 Cadillac Racing V-Series. R car after accomplished sportscar driver Sebastian Bourdais laid down a lap time of a 01:48.299.

    Sebastian Bourdais qualifying the No. 01 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac V-Series. R (Photo courtesy of Chip Ganassi Racing)

    The qualifying session came down to who could get their car in optimum performance range after the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport 963 car brought out the red flag after the car snapped in the exit of turn one as Mathieu Jaminet took too much kerb, smacking the right hand side wall with the front of the car.

    With less than four minutes to go as the session went back green, it was about who could get their GTP car operating at it’s most optimum.

    It looked like at first that the pole would go to the No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti Acura Arx-06 car being driven by Ricky Taylor when he laid down a lap time of 1.48.038, only to have it taken off them and be disqualified for working on the car under the red flag.

    LMP2

    The fan-favourite No. 99 AO Racing Oreca 07 Gibson car, known as “Spike the Dragon”, secured class pole, driven by PJ Hyett, with a lap time of 1.52.142.

    Hyett said: “Let’s just say this is probably top three moments of my life happening right now. When I met my wife, birth of my children and I just got pole at Sebring in a P2. I don’t know what the hell’s happening, it’s wonderful!”

    GTD Pro/GTD

    GTD Pro qualifying saw Jack Hawksworth, piloting the No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Lexus RC F GT3 car, locked down pole with a class-record lap of 1.58.714, sporting the Mobil 1 50th anniversary gold and black paint scheme.

    The No. 57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 car also looked set to continue in the same fashion as Cadillac Racing by winning the GTD pole and second overall in GTD Friday afternoon with Phillip Ellis, following on from their 2024 Daytona 24 Hours class victory.

    It was not to be however as the team was disqualified due to running unapproved sensors during the session, handing GTD pole to the No. 47 Cetilar Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 team, with Antonio Fuoco qualifying the car second overall in GTD with a lap time of 1:59.014, so will start alongside the No. 14 Lexus.

    The race begins Saturday 9.40am ET/1:40pm UK time, with international coverage starting from 9am ET/1pm UK time via IMSA TV/IMSA Radio/IMSA YouTube. 

    Featured Image: The Lamborghini SC63 GTP at Sebring (Photo courtesy of Lamborghini Media Center)