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Qatar’s road to Le Mans: How a nation is making its mark on motorsport’s greatest stage

By Staff Reporter

Doha: Few events in global motorsport carry the weight and prestige of the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Since its debut in 1923, this legendary race held each June in northwestern France has stood as the ultimate test of speed, strategy, and endurance — and today it anchors the FIA World Endurance Championship as its most iconic fixture.

What separates Le Mans from conventional racing is its relentless, clock-driven format. Rather than competing over a fixed number of laps, teams battle continuously for a full 24 hours across day and night, with the winner determined simply by who covers the most ground. Every decision — fuel loads, tire changes, driver rotations, weather reads — compounds over thousands of kilometers, and a single mechanical fault can unravel months of preparation.

The battlefield is the 13.626 km Circuit de la Sarthe, a hybrid of permanent track sections and temporarily closed public roads. It is fast, technical, and punishing, demanding as much from the machinery as it does from the drivers behind the wheel.

That human element is central to what makes Le Mans extraordinary. Rotating driver lineups manage fatigue across a grueling 24-hour window, balancing physical limits against competitive demands while navigating traffic, shifting conditions, and the ever-present threat of mechanical failure.

Over its century-long history, Le Mans has also evolved into motorsport’s foremost proving ground for automotive innovation, drawing the world’s biggest manufacturers — Ferrari, Porsche, Toyota, Mercedes-AMG, Cadillac, Aston Martin, BMW, Peugeot, and Alpine among them — all competing at the sharp end of endurance racing’s premier categories.

It is onto this stage that Qatar is now stepping, and making its presence felt.

Team Qatar’s 2026 European Le Mans Series (ELMS) campaign — a fiercely competitive championship widely recognized as the primary development pathway to Le Mans itself — has already announced the nation’s arrival in emphatic fashion. Racing in partnership with Iron Lynx, the team’s GT programme pairs Qatari driver Abdulla Al Khelaifi with Julian Hanses and Giuliano Alesi. At the season opener in Barcelona, the trio claimed pole position, narrowly missed the podium, and finished fourth in the LMGT3 class — with Al Khelaifi earning Most Valuable Driver honors for his standout display.

The momentum has only grown since. Team Qatar has added outright victories at Mugello and Spa-Francorchamps this season, results that speak to the rapid acceleration of Qatar’s standing in international endurance competition.

Behind the programme sits a broader vision. The Qatar Motor and Motorcycle Federation’s investment in motorsport reflects a nation with serious long-term ambitions on the world stage — building competitive infrastructure, nurturing homegrown talent, and chasing the ultimate prize that Le Mans represents. The road is long, but the direction is clear.

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