TOYOTA GAZOO Racing battled back strongly to earn a double points finish from an incident-packed and exciting 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, the third round of the 2025 FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC).
The reigning World Champions fought valiantly to recover from a disappointing qualifying and score valuable points after an intense team effort featuring determined driving and smart strategy in the final race before next month’s Le Mans 24 Hours, which it aims to win for a sixth time.
Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley and Ryo Hirakawa finished in a hard-fought fourth place in their #8 GR010 HYBRID after choosing an aggressive fuel strategy, while Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Nyck de Vries were seventh in their #7 GR010 HYBRID.
Cheered on by a weekend crowd of 98,874, including employees from the team’s Cologne base and colleagues from Toyota Motor Europe, an epic battle began on a warm and sunny afternoon. The team’s difficult qualifying meant Brendon started 15th and Mike 16th, but both GR010 HYBRIDs fought hard from the green light to gain positions.
An exciting opening stint set the tone for the race, with wheel-to-wheel racing throughout the 18-strong Hypercar field. TOYOTA GAZOO Racing started its fightback and precise, aggressive driving helped both GR010 HYBRIDs move closer to the top 10, although Mike’s progress was hindered by a front-right puncture after 23 minutes.
A virtual safety car late in the second hour allowed Mike to make his next pit stop while losing less time than a stop in green flag conditions, lifting the #7 into the top 10. At the next pit stops, midway through the third hour, Kamui took over the car in eighth while Ryo took the wheel of the 11th-placed #8.
In a thrilling duel, Kamui fought past the #5 Porsche for seventh but had to cede the place after drifting off track. He repeated the move successfully just a lap later, before a safety car at half distance gave a further opportunity to gain positions. When the field pitted together, a faster stop – thanks to changing only two tyres – allowed Kamui to leapfrog several rivals and sit third at the restart.
When racing resumed, Kamui was under intense pressure from the Ferraris. A locked brake into the Bus Stop chicane saw the #7 run wide and, with all cars running so close together, dropped down to seventh.
Yet another safety car late in the fourth hour prompted both cars to pit for a driver change. Nyck took over the #7 in fourth, while Sébastien strapped into the ninth-placed #8. In the process, Sébastien equalled the record for participating in the most WEC races, 89 since his debut at Le Mans 2012.
Entering the final two hours, differing fuel strategies emerged. The #8 car opted for a bold plan by cutting short its penultimate stint to move out of traffic and allow Sébastien to set faster lap times. As rivals made their regular stops, Sébastien even moved into the lead until his final fuel stop, with 45 minutes remaining.
The #8 crept back up the order as the other Hypercars made their last stops. As the clock ticked down, Sébastien progressed to fourth while Nyck also gained positions and crossed the line in seventh for a result which maintains the team’s 100% points-scoring start to the season.
The next round is the highlight of the endurance racing season, the 24 Hours of Le Mans on 14-15 June, when TOYOTA GAZOO Racing will challenge for its sixth victory at La Sarthe.
“This race was changing all the time, with lots of incidents. We had the puncture in my stint which forced us to change strategy, then we got a bit lucky with the virtual safety soon after. At the end, car #8 went for an alternative fuel strategy and it worked, so well done to them. Together we scored some decent World Championship points. We didn’t have the pace of the front runners, but the result was better than expected, even if we are always aiming for more.”