2013 24 Hours of Le Mans


The 81st 24 Hours of Le Mans was an automobile endurance racing event for Le Mans Prototype and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance cars held from 19 to 23 June 2013 at the Circuit de la Sarthe at Le Mans, France. It was the 81st running of the event, as organised by the Automobile Club de l'Ouest since 1923. The race was the third and the premier round of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship, with 32 of the race's 56 entries contesting the championship. A test day was held two weeks prior to the race on 9 June. Approximately 245,000 spectators attended the event.
The race was won by the No. 2 Audi R18 e-tron quattro driven by Dane Tom Kristensen, Brit Allan McNish and Frenchman Loïc Duval after it led the last 248 laps, taking the manufacturers' twelfth victory at Le Mans since its first in the 2000 edition. It was Kristensen's ninth victory, McNish's third and Duval's first. The car started from pole position but lost the lead at the start to the sister No. 1 Audi of André Lotterer, Marcel Fässler and Benoît Tréluyer who traded the position with the No. 8 Toyota TS030 Hybrid of Anthony Davidson, Stéphane Sarrazin and Sébastien Buemi under pit stop rotation until it was forced into the pit lane in the seventh hour with a crankshaft position sensor fault. Buemi, Davidson and Sarrazin finished second and Lucas di Grassi, Marc Gené and Oliver Jarvis in the No. 3 Audi completed the race podium.
The Le Mans Prototype 2 category finished with the No. 35 OAK Racing Morgan car of Bertrand Baguette, Martin Plowman and Ricardo González ahead of the sister No. 24 entry of Alex Brundle, David Heinemeier Hansson and Olivier Pla by a distance of one lap. The class podium was completed by the No. 42 Greaves Motorsport Zytek Z11SN, driven by Michael Krumm, Jann Mardenborough and Lucas Ordóñez. The No. 92 Porsche Manthey Racing 991 RSR of Romain Dumas, Marc Lieb and Richard Lietz won the Le Mans Grand Touring Professional class and the sister No. 91 vehicle of Jörg Bergmeister, Timo Bernhard and Patrick Pilet in second. Porsche also won the Le Mans Grand Touring Amateur category with the No. 76 IMSA Performance Matmut car of Raymond Narac, Christophe Bourret and Jean-Karl Vernay, earning the marque its 100th class victory at Le Mans.
The result elevated Kristensen, McNish and Duval to the top of the Drivers' Championship with 94 points. The championship leaders going into the race, Lotterer, Fässler and Tréluyer fell to second while Davidson, Sarrazin and Buemi maintained third due to the trio's second-place finish. Di Grassi, Gené and Jarvis moved from sixth to fourth and the duo of Alexander Wurz and Nicolas Lapierre rounded out the top five. With 102 points, Audi increased their lead over Toyota in the Manufacturers' Championship to 35 points with five rounds left in the season.

Background

The 2013 24 Hours of Le Mans was moved forward one week after a request was filed by the world governing body of motorsport, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, in order to harmonise the 2013 motor racing calendar. It was the 81st annual edition of the event, as well as the third of eight scheduled automobile endurance racing events of the 2013 FIA World Endurance Championship. Going into the race, Audi Sport Team Joest drivers André Lotterer, Marcel Fässler and Benoît Tréluyer led the Drivers' Championship with 44 points, one ahead of their teammates Allan McNish, Tom Kristensen and Loïc Duval in second. Anthony Davidson, Stéphane Sarrazin and Sébastien Buemi of Toyota were third with 27 points. Rebellion Racing's Neel Jani, Nico Prost and Nick Heidfeld placed fourth with 20 points, and Andrea Belicchi, Mathias Beche and Cheng Congfu in the other team car rounded out the top five with 16 points. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Audi led their rivals Toyota with a 20-point advantage.

Balance of Performance changes

The FIA Endurance Committee altered the balance of performance in three of the four categories to try and create parity in the classes. All hybrid and non-hybrid petrol powered LMP1 cars received an additional of fuel capacity for improved fuel mileage, allowing the Toyota TS030 Hybrid to run with a fuel tank and the Rebellion Racing Lola B12/60s and the Strakka Racing HPD ARX-03c had fuel tanks. Porsche received an increase in performance by allowing a larger air restrictor on the air intake of their engines in the Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Professional and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance Amateur classes. Aston Martin had of ballast added to its LMGTE Pro Vantage while the Chevrolet Corvette C6.R received a reduction in weight. The Ferrari 458 Italia and the SRT Viper GTS-R had no performance changes.

Entries

The automotive group Automobile Club de l'Ouest granted 56 invitations to the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Entries were divided between the LMP1, LMP2, LMGTE Pro and LMGTE Am categories. By the deadline for entries on 16 January, 71 applications had been filed with the ACO.

Automatic entries

Automatic entries are earned by teams which won their class in the previous running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans, or have won Le Mans-based series and events such as the American Le Mans Series, European Le Mans Series, and the Petit Le Mans. Some second-place finishers are also granted automatic entries in certain series. Entries are also granted for the winners of the Michelin Energy Endurance Challenge in the FIA World Endurance Championship. A final entry is granted to the champion in the Formula Le Mans category of the Le Mans Series, with the winner receiving their invitation in LMP2. For the first time, champions in the American Le Mans Series or at the Petit Le Mans did not automatically receive an entry. Instead, the American Le Mans Series was given three "at-large" entries, which the series awarded to teams interested in participating at Le Mans. As automatic entries were granted to teams, the teams were allowed to change their cars from the previous year to the next, but were not allowed to change their category. However, automatic invitations in the two GTE categories could be swapped between the two based on the driver line-ups chosen by these teams.
On 14 November 2012, the list of automatic entries was announced by the ACO. JMB Racing and Conquest Racing were the two teams who chose not to accept their automatic invitations as they did not run in any series during the 2013 season.

Entry list

In conjunction with the announcement of entries for the FIA World Endurance Championship and the European Le Mans Series, the ACO announced the full 56 car entry list and ten vehicle reserve list during a press conference at the Eurosites George V in Paris on 1 February. In addition to the 32 guaranteed entries from the World Endurance Championship, ten entries came from the European Le Mans Series, and eight from the American Le Mans Series, while the rest of the field was filled with one-off entries competing only at Le Mans.

Garage 56

The ACO continued the Garage 56 concept that was started in the 2012 race. Garage 56 allows a 56th entry to the race, using the rigors of the 24 Hours of Le Mans to test new technology. The ACO announced during 2012 that the Swiss-developed GreenGT vehicle had been granted the Garage 56 entry for the 2013 edition. The GreenGT LMP-H2 utilizes a hydrogen fuel cell to run electric motors within an open-top Le Mans Prototype style body. Three weeks before the race, GreenGT withdrew their entry, citing a lack of time to complete the complex fine-tuning of the hydrogen fuel cell system. No reserve was available for the 56th garage.

Reserves

Ten reserves were initially nominated by the ACO, limited to the LMP2 and both of the LMGTE categories. Extreme Speed Motorsports announced that their Ferrari 458 Italia would be withdrawn on 1 March, after it made a late switch to the P2 category in the American Le Mans Series. This promoted the 98 Aston Martin Racing Vantage to the race entry as a result and the car was moved from LMGTE Am to the LMGTE Pro class to bring the number of Aston Martins in the event to five. Two weeks later, Sébastien Loeb Racing withdrew its Oreca 03-Nissan because of financial troubles, promoting the No. 34 Race Performance Oreca-Judd entry from the reserves. Starworks Motorsport, defending champions of Le Mans and the FIA World Endurance Championship in the LMP2 category, withdrew their HPD-Honda entry on 9 April due to a lack of funding from sponsors, promoting Morand Racing's Morgan-Judd.
Ten days later, Gulf Racing Middle East withdrew the second of its Lola-Nissan B12/80s and DKR Engineering's Lola-Judd replaced the entry. On 21 May, the ACO released a revised entry list that confirmed the withdrawal of Extreme Speed Motorsport's Ferrari 458 Italia, Sébastien Loeb Racing's Oreca 03-Nissan, Starworks Motorsports' HPD-Honda and Gulf Racing Middle East's Lola-Nissan B12/80 from the 24 Hours of Le Mans. On 1 June, GreenGT Technologies announced the withdrawal of the Garage 56 entry, with Prospeed Competition's LMGTE Am Porsche 911 GT3 RSR being announced as its replacement. By the start of the event, only a single reserve entry had not been promoted to the race.

Testing and practice

A test day was held on 9 June, two weeks prior to the race, and required all entrants for the race to participate in eight hours of track time divided into two sessions. All 56 entries were involved as well as a fourth Audi R18 e-tron quattro driven by Marco Bonanomi for 2014 tyre testing, a Signatech Alpine A450 for Paul-Loup Chatin and Tristan Gommendy and a spare Level 5 Motorsports HPD ARX-03b tested by Scott Tucker. Two Team Endurance Challenge-entered Le Mans Prototype Challenge Oreca-FLM09s also participated. Wet weather swept the area during the day and had Audi set the fastest time with a 3 minutes and 22.583 seconds lap from Duval in the No. 2 car at the end of the second session. Lucas di Grassi in the sister No. 3 entry followed in second and Lotterer completed an all-Audi top three lockout in third. Toyota placed fourth and sixth with its best times coming from Sarrazin and Alexander Wurz; they were separated by Bonanomi's Audi. During the first session, Duval was distracted by an unidentified object hitting his windscreen and heavily damaged the No. 2 car in the wall alongside the track at Tertre Rouge corner. Olivier Pla's OAK Racing Morgan-Nissan was the fastest LMP2 car with a late second session effort of 3 minutes and 38.801 and he was eight-tenths of a second faster than Nelson Panciatici's Signatech Alpine. LMGTE Pro was topped by Peter Dumbreck for Aston Martin Racing while Jamie Campbell-Walter also helped the marque lead in LMGTE Am. Crashes from Tracy Krohn of Krohn Racing at the right of Mulsanne corner, AF Corse's Giancarlo Fisichella leaving the same turn and Dominik Kraihamer for Lotus in the Porsche Curves led to stoppages during both sessions.
Two days after the test day, Audi and Signatech Alpine held two half an hour practice sessions in the morning and the afternoon on the shorter and permanent Bugatti Circuit in wet weather conditions to ensure that car components worked efficiently before the race. Official practice was held on 19 June with the full 56-car field on track for four hours. A torrential rain shower fell at Le Mans in the early afternoon but it tapered off before practice commenced and the track dried up during the session although light rain returned midway through and some cars spun. Audi again led from the start with Tréluyer's No. 1 car setting a benchmark time until Duval went quickest with a 3 minutes and 25.514 seconds lap. Marino Franchitti's No. 33 Level 5 Motorsports car was the early LMP2 pace setter until Alex Brundle's No. 24 OAK Racing Morgan moved to first but it was Bertrand Baguette's sister No. 35 entry who was fastest with a lap of 3 minutes and 42.813 seconds. He was a second faster than Maxime Martin's No. 46 Thiriet by TDS Racing Oreca. An hour into the session, Eric Lux crashed the No. 41 Graves Motorsport car heavily into a barrier entering the second Mulsanne chicane and the session was stopped due to debris on the track. Lux was unhurt. The LMGTE Pro class lead constantly changed amongst the field with Richard Lietz's No. 91 Porsche 911 RSR fastest with Kamui Kobayashi's No. 71 AF Corse Ferrari two-tenths of a second slower in second. Kristian Poulsen's No. 95 Aston Martin was quickest in the LMGTE Am category. Krohn had a high speed accident at the downhill Dunlop Esses and his car was launched about into the air before landing in a gravel trap, bringing an early end to practice due to a large amount of damage to the barriers.

Qualifying

The first dry session of the week occurred on Wednesday night in the first of three qualifying sessions. Audi again led from the outset with Duval's early lap of 3 minutes and 23.169 seconds which he then improved to 3 minutes and 22.349 seconds. The lap was not bettered for the remainder of the session, giving the No. 2 car provisional pole position. Marc Gené's sister No. 3 car followed in second and Lotterer's No. 1 vehicle was third. The two Toyotas replicated their test day results of fourth and sixth with drivers Kazuki Nakajima and Buemi although the former was second early in qualifying and a driveline problem curtailed the No. 8 Toyota's session at Arnage corner; they were separated by the leading LMP1 privateer, the No. 12 Rebellion. John Martin's No. 26 G-Drive Oreca set the only lap under 3 minute and 40 seconds in LMP2 with the best class lap of 3 minutes and 39.535 seconds, ahead of Franck Mailleux's No. 43 Morand Racing Morgan-Nissan and Brundle's No. 24 OAK Racing car. Pierre Thiriet had a heavy accident at the second Mulsanne chicane, denting the barriers alongside the track, and ending the session 15 minutes early because repairs could not be completed in time. The professional category of LMGTE was dominated by Aston Martin who took three of the first four places with the best time coming from Frédéric Makowiecki's No. 99 car as less than a second separated the top seven. Allan Simonsen helped Aston Martin to be fastest in LMGTE Am and he narrowly eclipsed Paolo Ruberti's No. 88 Proton Porsche.
during the first qualifying session.
Thursday's first qualifying session was affected by a waterlogged track after a short torrential downpour fell minutes before it commenced. Track conditions improved progressively as it dried but all lap times were slower than on Wednesday evening. The best overall lap time of the session came from Davidson in the No. 7 Toyota with a time of 3 minutes and 42.507 seconds and the fastest Audi was the No. 3 entry of di Grassi in second. The second Audi driven by Fässler was third-fastest and the quickest privateer team was the No. 12 Rebellion in fourth. Davidson's No. 8 Toyota rounded out the top five. In LMP2, John Martin kept the No. 26 G-Drive car leading the category while Tom Kimber-Smith drove the No. 41 Greaves Motorsport Zytek-Nissan on its first laps since it was repaired and was second-fastest in its class during the session and was provisionally 19th overall. The sister No. 42 Greaves car was third in the hands of Jann Mardenborough. The No. 40 Boutsen Ginion Oreca-Nissan of Matt Downs crashed heavily into the inside barrier entering Indianapolis corner with its front. Downs was unhurt but qualifying ended early because repairs to the wall ran until after the session. The LMGTE Pro class was led by Jan Magnussen's No. 73 Chevrolet Corvette C6.R while the LMGTE Am category was topped by the No. 96 Aston Martin of Stuart Hall with his teammate Poulsen in second.
With the stoppage in the second qualifying session, the third session was expanded by half an hour to give teams more time on the circuit. The track continued to be wet but it dried sufficiently enough to allow for an improvement to lap times with 20 minutes left as on-track grip continued to improve. Two stoppages curtailed running in the session: the first was triggered for ten minutes when Christophe Bourret removed the left-front wheel off the No. 77 IMSA Performance Matmut car in an impact with the wall at the first Mulsanne chicane. Jonny Kane in the No. 21 Strakka Racing HPD ARX-03c caused the second red flag after he heavily clouted a barrier and littered debris at the second Mulsanne chicane. Lotterer and his teammate di Grassi could not usurp Duval's time from Wednesday evening because they were caught out by damp patches on the circuit and the No. 2 started from pole position in the first Audi top three lockout on the Le Mans grid since the 2002 edition. Toyota could not challenge Audi but Sarrazin improved the No. 8 car's best lap in the final seconds of qualifying to start fourth and Nakajima's sister No. 7 vehicle qualified fifth. The No. 12 Rebellion Lola of Jani was the highest-placed privateer in sixth overall.
LMP2 continued to be led by G-Drive because of John Martin's lap from first qualifying until Pla's No. 24 OAK Racing Morgan pushed hard in clear air to clinch the pole position in the category with a time of 3 minutes and 38.621 seconds recorded at the end of the session. The car was a second faster than the No. 26 G-Drive Oreca which began from the second position. Oliver Turvey found improved pace in the No. 38 Jota Sport Zytek Nissan and bettered the car's best time to start third and the top three in LMP2 were represented by three manufacturers. Stefan Mücke got the No. 97 Aston Martin to provisional pole position in LMGTE Pro but his teammate Makowiecki in the sister No. 99 car responded immediately to retake the position with a lap of 3 minutes and 54.635 seconds. The No. 91 Porsche of Marc Lieb bettered the car's fastest lap time on the final lap of the third qualifying session to take third place on the starting grid. The lead in LMGTE Am remained with the No. 95 Aston Martin as Simonsen improved his own provisional pole lap to a 3 minutes and 57.776 seconds to go more than a second faster than Proton Competition's Porsche.

Qualifying results

s in each class are denoted in bold and by a. The fastest time set by each entry is denoted in gray.
ClassTeamQualifying 1Qualifying 2Qualifying 3
1LMP12Audi Sport Team Joest3:22.349no time3:27.5131
2LMP11Audi Sport Team Joest3:25.4743:41.9513:23.696+1.3472
3LMP13Audi Sport Team Joest3:24.3413:40.9903:24.776+1.9923
4LMP18Toyota Racing3:30.8413:42.5073:26.654+4.3054
5LMP17Toyota Racing3:26.6763:40.9243:28.859+4.3275
6LMP112Rebellion Racing3:30.4233:42.2613:28.935+6.5866
7LMP113Rebellion Racing3:32.1674:07.0393:37.296+9.8187
8LMP121Strakka Racing3:36.547no time3:45.173+14.19836
9LMP224OAK Racing3:40.780no time3:38.621+16.2728
10LMP226G-Drive Racing3:39.5353:53.9983:45.468+17.1869
11LMP238Jota Sport3:44.835no time3:40.459+18.11010
12LMP243Morand Racing3:40.741no time3:43.839+18.39211
13LMP225Delta-ADR3:40.9254:12.2003:45.147+18.57612
14LMP247KCMG3:45.500no time3:41.042+18.69313
15LMP248Murphy Prototypes3:44.538no time3:41.569+19.22014
16LMP236Signatech Alpine3:43.8354:06.2133:41.654+19.30515
17LMP235OAK Racing3:42.387no time3:41.854+19.50516
18LMP249Pecom Racing3:43.4204:00.1273:44.637+21.07117
19LMP246Thiriet by TDS Racing3:43.494no timeno time+21.14537
20LMP242Greaves Motorsport3:49.4213:58.8073:44.421+22.07218
21LMP241Greaves Motorsportno time3:56.4873:44.621+22.27219
22LMP234Race Performance3:45.244no time3:51.498+22.89520
23LMP232Lotusno time4:12.3273:45.274+22.92521
24LMP231Lotus3:47.920no time3:49.548+25.57138
25LMP245OAK Racing3:48.196no time3:59.988+25.84722
26LMP233Level 5 Motorsports3:48.5974:03.5283:53.861+26.24823
27LMP228Gulf Racing Middle East3:49.096no time4:08.116+26.74739
28LMP230HVM Status GP3:49.8054:14.4733:54.358+27.45624
29LMGTE Pro99Aston Martin Racing3:55.6584:17.8623:54.635+32.28625
30LMGTE Pro97Aston Martin Racing3:56.0044:25.8343:55.445+33.09626
31LMGTE Pro92Porsche AG Team Manthey3:56.4574:29.0963:55.491+33.14227
32LMGTE Pro51AF Corse3:55.9094:20.6204:00.196+33.56028
33LMGTE Pro98Aston Martin Racing3:56.336no time4:01.283+33.98740
34LMGTE Pro71AF Corse3:56.4714:25.7403:58.078+34.12229
35LMGTE Pro91Porsche AG Team Manthey3:56.5734:17.9963:58.433+34.22430
36LMP239DKR Engineering3:56.905no time4:03.613+34.55641
37LMP240Boutsen Ginion Racing3:57.1394:11.1374:10.631+34.79042
38LMGTE Am95Aston Martin Racing3:58.6614:19.4863:57.776+35.42731
39LMGTE Pro74Corvette Racing3:59.8604:21.5743:58.644+36.29532
40LMGTE Am88Proton Competition3:59.246no time3:58.889+36.54043
41LMGTE Pro73Corvette Racing3:59.5264:11.0344:02.189+37.17733
42LMGTE Am96Aston Martin Racing4:01.0354:18.8293:59.805+37.45644
43LMGTE Am61AF Corse4:02.8154:24.8973:59.997+37.64845
44LMGTE Am67IMSA Performance Matmut4:00.503no time4:50.043+38.15446
45LMGTE Am75Prospeed Competition4:11.719no time4:00.682+38.33347
46LMGTE Pro53SRT Motorsports4:03.127no time4:00.802+38.45334
47LMGTE Am77Dempsey Del Piero-Proton4:03.378no time4:00.916+38.56748
48LMGTE Am76IMSA Performance Matmut4:01.713no time4:15.101+39.36449
49LMGTE Am818 Star Motorsports4:07.6254:24.0024:01.934+39.58550
50LMGTE Pro93SRT Motorsports4:03.461no time4:04.477+41.11235
51LMGTE Am55AF Corse4:03.9664:22.1944:05.924+41.61751
52LMGTE Am70Larbre Compétition4:04.5124:38.7394:29.068+42.16352
53LMGTE Am50Larbre Compétition4:04.8734:31.2164:09.723+42.52453
54LMGTE Pro66JMW Motorsportno timeno time4:05.417+43.06854
55LMGTE Am54AF Corse4:09.064no time4:41.506+46.71555
56LMGTE Am57Krohn Racingno timeno time4:16.233+53.88456
ClassTeamQualifying 1Qualifying 2Qualifying 3

Notes:

Warm-up

The cars took to the circuit on Saturday morning for a 45-minute warm-up session in dry and clear weather. The No. 7 Toyota of Nicolas Lapierre set the team's fastest lap time of the weekend so far at 3 minutes and 26.227 seconds. McNish's No. 2 Audi was 0.504 seconds adrift in second and third was occupied by his teammate Fässler in the sister No. 1 car. The fastest LMP2 lap was set by John Martin's No. 26 G-Drive Oreca with a time of 3 minutes and 43.158 seconds, almost nine-tenths of a second faster than Brendon Hartley in the No. 48 Murphy Prototypes vehicle and Archie Hamilton's No. 25 Delta-ADR car was third. Porsche and AF Corse exchanged first in LMGTE Pro before Toni Vilander's No. 71 Ferrari set the best time in the category, while Patrick Long, driving the No. 77 Dempsey Proton Porsche, was fastest in LMGTE Am and second quickest amongst all LMGTE cars. Several drivers went off the track during the session. Kristensen hit the No. 67 IMSA Performance Matmut car of Pascal Gibon at Indianapolis turn and yellow flags were waved in the area because Kristensen was stranded in the grass to the left of the circuit. Philippe Dumas crashed the No. 70 Larbre Compétition Corvette into a tyre barrier at the Dunlop chicane halfway through the session and the No. 25 G-Drive car of Tor Graves blew its right-rear tyre on the run to the Porsche Curves and veered heavily into the inside barriers and debris was littered on the track. Graves was unhurt.

Start

Approximately 245,000 spectators attended the event on race day. The weather at the start was damp and overcast. The air temperature throughout ranged from and the track temperature was between. The race began at 15:00 Central European Summer Time, with Grand-Am Road Racing founder and NASCAR vice-chairman Jim France waving the French tricolour to signal the start the race. Lotterer moved past McNish for the lead and then Lapierre overtook McNish for second place at the second Mulsanne chicane but he lost the position at the exit of the corner. Lapierre then reclaimed second from McNish on the approach to Mulsanne turn. Davidson overtook di Grassi for second through the Ford chicane as Darren Turner's No. 97 Aston Martin took the lead of LMGTE Pro from his Aston Martin teammate Bell in the No. 95 car. Lapierre was closing on Lotterer when the safety cars were deployed for an accident at Tetre Rouge corner. LMGTE Am leader Allan Simonsen had pulled clear of the class field when nine minutes into the race the rear-left corner of his car lost traction on a kerb leaving Tetre Rouge corner. When he attempted to correct, his car veered left and he collided heavily with a left-hand armco barrier at a near head-on trajectory. The impact crushed the roof of the car and its supporting roll cage; its force launched it slowly back onto the circuit with a wheel and its doors detached.
Medical personnel were swift to tend to Simonsen, who was reported to be conscious and talking to officials before going into unconsciousness. He was extricated from the car and transported to the infield medical centre after about 20 minutes. Simonsen was later declared dead from his injuries at the infield medical centre. His partner Catrina requested that Aston Martin Racing continue racing. The safety cars remained on track for 58 minutes in which the LMGTE Pro order was divided into two halves. When racing resumed, Davidson and the Audi duo of McNish of di Grassi overtook Lapierre to demote him to fifth. Davidson took the overall lead for the first time on pit stop cycle rotation due to Toyota's better fuel economy over the Audis and kept it until the end of lap fifteen. Lieb moved to the front of LMGTE Pro by passing the Aston Martins of Rob Bell and Turner but the No. 91 Porsche lost the first position to Turner halfway through the second hour. At the start of the third hour, Lotterer was demoted to second when Lapierre moved past him on the exit to Mulsanne corner but he was not recorded as the leader because he entered the pit lane at the end of lap twenty-seven. Rain returned to the track at this time as Turvey and Maxime Martin moved in front of Pierre Kaffer's No. 49 Pecom Racing Oreca for second and third in LMP2.
at Mulsanne corner
Lapierre stopped at the side of the Mulsanne Straight with a fuel pressure fault for half a minute before resuming in fifth. At the close of hour three, Gibon's No. 67 IMSA Performance Matmut car blew its left-rear tyre and lost the lead of LMGTE Am. The rain later eased and Audi re-established its advantage in the top three overall while Brundle extended the No. 24 OAK Racing car's gap in LMP2 over Mike Conway after he went into the gravel trap at Mulsanne corner while lapping Hall's No. 99 Aston Martin and Matt Griffin assumed the lead in LMGTE Am. The main on-track action involved Lucas Luhr who ran wide in the Porsche Curves and glanced an inside barrier alongside the track but he continued without significant damage to the No. 38 Jota Sport Zytek. Makowiecki moved past his Aston Martin teammate Mücke for the LMGTE Pro lead and Oliver Jarvis was delayed by the No. 39 DKR Engineering Lola through the Porsche Curves and lost third to Buemi. He retook the position from Buemi on the next lap. Later, Bill Auberlen relieved Mücke in the No. 97 Aston Martin and he was overtaken by Patrick Pilet's No. 92 Porsche for second in LMGTE Pro. Seven minutes into the sixth hour, the left-rear tyre of Gommendy's No. 36 Signatech Alpine blew and disintegrated entering the Mulsanne Straight as he hit the barrier at Tetre Rouge turn. The safety cars were dispatched for 15 minutes for debris removal.

Night

As the safety cars were recalled, David Heinemeier Hansson in the No. 24 OAK Racing Nissan collided with Duval's leading No. 2 Audi in the Porsche Curves, losing him the LMP2 lead to the No. 26 G-Drive car of Roman Rusinov. The safety cars were once again required for a short period of time as Kraihamer's No. 32 Lotus T128 shed its rear bodywork on the Mulsanne Straight and nullifying Tréluyer and Jarvis' advantage because Duval returned to second after he made a pit stop during the period. When racing resumed, Duval reset the fastest lap of the race to 3 minutes and 23.269 seconds as Bruno Senna's No. 99 Aston Martin traded the lead of LMGTE Pro with Dumbreck's No. 97 car for two laps. Two of the three contenders for the outright victory had trouble soon after. Jarvis' No. 3 Audi made contact with slower traffic and his right-rear tyre was punctured and spun under the Dunlop Bridge. The tyre carcass fell off as he returned to the pit lane though repairs to the rear of the car were deemed unnecessary by his crew and the car returned to the circuit in fourth overall. Later, the No. 1 Audi of Tréluyer was forced into the garage for 43 minutes to replace a failed crankshaft position sensor and gave the lead back to the sister No. 2 Audi of Duval and Sarrazin's No. 8 Toyota took over second. Darryl O'Young had been the fastest driver in LMGTE Am at the time and brought the No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari into the class lead.
, Martin Plowman and Ricardo González.
John Martin's No. 26 G-Drive entry ceded the lead of LMP2 to Baguette's No. 35 OAK Racing car when he was instructed to enter the pit lane to have an illuminated door number panel repaired, which took two laps to complete. The safety cars were deployed for a fourth time after 8 hours and 50 minutes when Graves spun the No. 25 Delta-ADR vehicle into the barriers at the Porsche Curves and scattered debris on the track. In the outright lead, the safety cars divided the field into two with Kristensen increasing his lead to three minutes and seven seconds over Sarrazin. Safety cars were required once again at the close of the ninth hour when Krohn spun and crashed his Ferrari in the Porsche Curves and retired. Racing resumed ten minutes into hour ten with Gianluca Roda beaching the No. 88 Porsche into the gravel trap at the Dunlop Bridge and allowing actor Patrick Dempsey in the No. 77 Dempsey Proton car into the lead of LMGTE Am. Turner ran the No. 97 Aston Martin into the gravel at Mulsanne corner, allowing Lieb's No. 91 Porsche to pass him for second in LMGTE Pro. In LMGTE Am, Lorenzo Case's No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari returned to the category lead when Dempsey made a scheduled pit stop for fuel. For 21 minutes, safety cars were needed as Tony Burgess destroyed the rear of the No. 30 HVM Status Lola in the Porsche Curves. Burgess was unhurt and he was transported to hospital for a precautionary check-up.
As the race approached its halfway point, Howard Blank significantly damaged the No. 54 AF Corse Ferrari as well as the catchfencing at the Dunlop Esses and Tetre Rouge corner, causing an event record seventh safety car period. Blank was unhurt and attempted a return to the pit lane but he could not do so and retired. During the safety car period, the No. 99 Aston Martin had its brake discs changed and gave the LMGTE Pro lead to the No. 92 Porsche. The safety cars were due to be withdrawn just before the conclusion of hour 13 but heavy rain over much of the circuit extended it by nine minutes and several teams installed wet-weather tyres on their cars. Two laps after racing resumed, Lapierre's No. 7 Toyota got ahead of his teammate Buemi for second overall and he maintained it until Buemi retook the position. Before the close of the 14th hour, Kane spun and beached the No. 21 Strakka car in the gravel trap at the Ford Chicane but got the car back onto the circuit. Romain Brandela's No. 39 DKR Engineering Lola piled into the No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari and the No. 88 Proton Porsche before swerving in the front of Buemi's No. 8 Toyota at the Dunlop chicane. Luhr's No. 38 Jota Sport Zytek bowed out of a battle with the No. 42 Greaves Zytek of Michael Krumm for third in LMP2 when he entered the garage for repairs to his front wheel bearing.

Morning to early afternoon

In the 16th hour, Richard Lietz brought the No. 92 Porsche to the pit lane and had its brake discs changed in four minutes, giving the lead of LMGTE Pro to Senna's No. 99 Aston Martin, which held a three-quarters of a minute advantage over him but Lietz lowered it to six seconds by the hour's end. Light rain returned during the 17th hour but it was not heavy enough to affect the race. In LMGTE Am, Bourret led in the No. 76 IMSA Performance Matmut Porsche by a lap over Lorenzo Case's No. 55 AF Corse Ferrari while Dempsey in his No. 77 Porsche was being closed on by Marco Cioci's No. 61 car. The 18th hour commenced with Auberlen's No. 98 Aston Martin emitting smoke from the car and leaking a large amount of oil down the Mulsanne Straight before stopping at Mulsanne corner. The safety cars were dispatched for 25 minutes to allow the oil to be dried by track marshals. Racing resumed for only half a minute as the safety cars were needed to tend to repairs to a heavily damaged trackside barrier exiting the second Mulsanne chicane; Belicchi was about to lap a slower GTE Porsche but lost traction at the rear of the No. 13 Rebellion and veered right into a barrier. He returned to the pit lane for extensive repairs to the car's front. When racing resumed, Lietz retook the LMGTE Pro lead. He held it until his spin at the Dunlop chicane delayed Dumbreck, allowing Senna in the class lead and Timo Bernhard's No. 91 Porsche into second.
, Richard Lietz and Romain Dumas won the LMGTE Pro class.
After the safety cars were withdrawn, Makowiecki relieved Senna in the No. 99 Aston Martin and pulled away from Lieb's No. 92 Porsche. Rain again fell on the circuit with five hours and fifteen minutes to go and some cars were caught out in the change of weather. Makowiecki veered to the left coming out of the second Mulsanne chicane and collided with a barrier head-on. That ricocheted the car back to the centre of the track. Makowiecki was unhurt but the safety cars were again required as repairs were made to the wall and Lieb became the new LMGTE Pro leader. After racing continued, Nakajima's No. 7 Toyota cut the Dunlop chicane and launched over the kerb and spun backwards across the circuit. He rejoined without losing third. The rain eased and track conditions improved as Turner reduced Lieb's advantage at the front of LMGTE Pro to 8.8 seconds by the end of the 20th hour. In the 21st hour, a miscommunication with the mechanics of Matteo Malucelli's No. 51 AF Corse Ferrari in his pit box released him with the fuelling hose attached to the car and into a collision with the No. 45 OAK Racing Morgan of Philippe Mondolot. Rain returned to the circuit during the hour. The No. 1 Audi of Lotterer aquaplaned into a gravel trap and narrowly avoided piling into Davidson's No. 8 Toyota on the Mulsanne Straight.
The No. 3 Audi of Jarvis moved past Lapierre's No. 7 Toyota for third during pit stop rotation and Lapierre went off at the exit of Indianapolis corner as he battled to retake the position. Kristensen's No. 2 Audi made a pit stop for a slow puncture as heavy rain returned with 90 minutes left and several cars aquaplaned on the saturated circuit. Lapierre's No. 7 Toyota had no grip on the run into the Porsche Curves and veered deep left into the tyre wall at high speed. He exited the car but returned to it after two minutes. Baguette had an anxious moment going into Indianapolis turn in the No. 24 OAK Racing car but kept the LMP2 lead over his teammate Pla's sister No. 25 car. The safety cars were again dispatched as the LMGTE Pro lead returned to Lieb's No. 91 Porsche from Mücke's No. 97 Aston Martin in pit stop rotation. During the safety car period, Pla's No. 25 OAK Racing entry was separated from his teammate Baguette and was four minutes behind as the No. 6 Toyota was repaired in its garage and returned in fourth. Just before the safety cars entered the pit lane with half an hour to go, the No. 97 Aston Martin made a pit stop for tyres and made the LMGTE Pro battle against the two lead Porsches. More rain began to fall 15 minutes later and it turned into a deluge over the entire circuit as Kristensen's No. 2 Audi began the final lap.

Finish

The No. 2 Audi of Kristensen, Duval and McNish led the final 248 laps to claim the manufacturer's twelfth victory at Le Mans since its first at the 2000 race. It was Kristensen's ninth overall victory, McNish's third and Duval's first. Buemi unlapped himself from Kristensen in the final half an hour but fell back a lap soon after. He, Davidson and Sarrazin's No. 8 Toyota finished second and the No. 3 Audi of di Grassi, Jarvis and Gené completed the overall podium in third. On the podium, the Danish flag was flown at half-mast in memory of Simonsen and Kristensen dedicated the victory to him. The No. 21 Strakka HPD ARX-03c of Kane, Danny Watts and Nick Leventis was unhindered after the demise of Rebellion and won the privateer LMP1 category in sixth overall. OAK Racing won the LMP2 class with the No. 35 Morgan of Baugette, Ricardo González and Martin Plowman and the team's second car of Pla, Heinememer Hansson and Brundle was a lap behind for a second-place finish. John Martin, Conway and Rusinov finished third in class in the No. 26 G-Drive Oreca but the car was disqualified because its fuel tank was found to be over the mandated limit of, promoting the No. 42 Greaves Zytek of Mardenborough, Krumm and Lucas Ordóñez to the category podium. In LMGTE Pro, Porsche Manthey Racing claimed the category win on the Le Mans debut of the new 991-generation race car with drivers Lieb, Lietz and Romain Dumas in the No. 92 car, while the LMGTE Am class increased Porsche's total class victories at Le Mans to 100 with the No. 76 IMSA Performance entry of Jean-Karl Vernay, Raymond Narac and Bourret winning.

Post-race

Allan Simonsen was mourned by the motorsport community. A memorial foundation was established in his honour by the Danish Automobile Sports Union and he was given a funeral in his hometown of Odense in Southern Denmark on 2 July. Following Simonsen's death, the ACO announced the improvements to several sections of the circuit in December 2013. Tertre Rouge was re-profiled and new barriers and tire walls were added at the corner's exit onto the Mulsanne Straight. Run-off areas in the Corvette corners were expanded, and TecPro barriers were added behind the tire walls at the start of the Porsche corners. Large kerbs were added to the paved run-off at the second Ford chicane to deter cars from cutting the corner. A new safety system was implemented, which allowed for the intervention of safety vehicles on a particular section of the circuit without the need for neutralising the entire race with safety cars. The system, termed a slow zone, requires cars to slow and maintain a speed of 60 km/h within a specific zone.
With their victory, Kristensen, McNish and Duval became the new leaders of the Drivers' Championship with 94 points. Lotterer, Fässler and Tréluyer fell to second and were thirty points behind their teammates. Davidson, Sarrazin and Buemi's second-place result enabled the trio to remain in third while di Grassi, Gené and Jarvis' third-position result allowed them to advance from sixth to fourth. Wurz and Lapierre rounded out the top five drivers in the championship standings. In the Manufacturers' Championship, Audi kept their lead with 102 points but increased it to thirty-five points over Toyota with five rounds left in the season.

Race results

Class winners are marked in bold and by a. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance are marked as Not Classified.
ClassTeamDriversChassisTyreTime/Retired
ClassTeamDriversEngineTyreTime/Retired
1LMP12 Audi Sport Team Joest Allan McNish
Tom Kristensen
Loïc Duval
Audi R18 e-tron quattro34824:01'16.436
1LMP12 Audi Sport Team Joest Allan McNish
Tom Kristensen
Loïc Duval
Audi TDI 3.7 L Turbo V6
34824:01'16.436
2LMP18 Toyota Racing Anthony Davidson
Stéphane Sarrazin
Sébastien Buemi
Toyota TS030 Hybrid347+1 Lap
2LMP18 Toyota Racing Anthony Davidson
Stéphane Sarrazin
Sébastien Buemi
Toyota 3.4 L V8
347+1 Lap
3LMP13 Audi Sport Team Joest Marc Gené
Oliver Jarvis
Lucas di Grassi
Audi R18 e-tron quattro347+1 Lap
3LMP13 Audi Sport Team Joest Marc Gené
Oliver Jarvis
Lucas di Grassi
Audi TDI 3.7 L Turbo V6
347+1 Lap
4LMP17 Toyota Racing Alexander Wurz
Nicolas Lapierre
Kazuki Nakajima
Toyota TS030 Hybrid341+7 Laps
4LMP17 Toyota Racing Alexander Wurz
Nicolas Lapierre
Kazuki Nakajima
Toyota 3.4 L V8
341+7 Laps
5LMP11 Audi Sport Team Joest André Lotterer
Marcel Fässler
Benoît Tréluyer
Audi R18 e-tron quattro338+10 Laps
5LMP11 Audi Sport Team Joest André Lotterer
Marcel Fässler
Benoît Tréluyer
Audi TDI 3.7 L Turbo V6
338+10 Laps
6LMP121 Strakka Racing Nick Leventis
Jonny Kane
Danny Watts
HPD ARX-03c332+16 Laps
6LMP121 Strakka Racing Nick Leventis
Jonny Kane
Danny Watts
Honda LM-V8 3.4 L V8332+16 Laps
7LMP235 OAK Racing Bertrand Baguette
Martin Plowman
Ricardo González
Morgan LMP2329+19 Laps
7LMP235 OAK Racing Bertrand Baguette
Martin Plowman
Ricardo González
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8329+19 Laps
8LMP224 OAK Racing Olivier Pla
Alex Brundle
David Heinemeier Hansson
Morgan LMP2328+20 Laps
8LMP224 OAK Racing Olivier Pla
Alex Brundle
David Heinemeier Hansson
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8328+20 Laps
9LMP242 Greaves Motorsport Michael Krumm
Jann Mardenborough
Lucas Ordóñez
Zytek Z11SN327+21 Laps
9LMP242 Greaves Motorsport Michael Krumm
Jann Mardenborough
Lucas Ordóñez
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8327+21 Laps
10LMP249 Pecom Racing Luís Pérez Companc
Pierre Kaffer
Nicolas Minassian
Oreca 03325+23 Laps
10LMP249 Pecom Racing Luís Pérez Companc
Pierre Kaffer
Nicolas Minassian
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8325+23 Laps
11LMP243 Morand Racing Natacha Gachnang
Franck Mailleux
Olivier Lombard
Morgan LMP2320+28 Laps
11LMP243 Morand Racing Natacha Gachnang
Franck Mailleux
Olivier Lombard
Judd HK 3.6 L V8320+28 Laps
12LMP248 Murphy Prototypes Brendon Hartley
Karun Chandhok
Mark Patterson
Oreca 03319+29 Laps
12LMP248 Murphy Prototypes Brendon Hartley
Karun Chandhok
Mark Patterson
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8319+29 Laps
13LMP238 Jota Sport Simon Dolan
Oliver Turvey
Lucas Luhr
Zytek Z11SN319+29 Laps
13LMP238 Jota Sport Simon Dolan
Oliver Turvey
Lucas Luhr
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8319+29 Laps
14LMP236 Signatech-Alpine Pierre Ragues
Nelson Panciatici
Tristan Gommendy
Alpine A450317+31 Laps
14LMP236 Signatech-Alpine Pierre Ragues
Nelson Panciatici
Tristan Gommendy
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8317+31 Laps
15LMGTE
Pro
92 Porsche AG Team Manthey Marc Lieb
Richard Lietz
Romain Dumas
Porsche 911 RSR315+33 Laps
15LMGTE
Pro
92 Porsche AG Team Manthey Marc Lieb
Richard Lietz
Romain Dumas
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6315+33 Laps
16LMGTE
Pro
91 Porsche AG Team Manthey Jörg Bergmeister
Timo Bernhard
Patrick Pilet
Porsche 911 RSR315+33 Laps
16LMGTE
Pro
91 Porsche AG Team Manthey Jörg Bergmeister
Timo Bernhard
Patrick Pilet
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6315+33 Laps
17LMGTE
Pro
97 Aston Martin Racing Darren Turner
Peter Dumbreck
Stefan Mücke
Aston Martin Vantage GTE314+34 Laps
17LMGTE
Pro
97 Aston Martin Racing Darren Turner
Peter Dumbreck
Stefan Mücke
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8314+34 Laps
18LMP234 Race Performance Michel Frey
Patric Niederhauser
Jeroen Bleekemolen
Oreca 03314+34 Laps
18LMP234 Race Performance Michel Frey
Patric Niederhauser
Jeroen Bleekemolen
Judd HK 3.6 L V8314+34 Laps
19LMGTE
Pro
73 Corvette Racing Antonio García
Jan Magnussen
Jordan Taylor
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R312+36 Laps
19LMGTE
Pro
73 Corvette Racing Antonio García
Jan Magnussen
Jordan Taylor
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8312+36 Laps
20LMGTE
Pro
71 AF Corse Olivier Beretta
Kamui Kobayashi
Toni Vilander
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2312+36 Laps
20LMGTE
Pro
71 AF Corse Olivier Beretta
Kamui Kobayashi
Toni Vilander
Ferrari 4.5 L V8312+36 Laps
21LMGTE
Pro
51 AF Corse Gianmaria Bruni
Giancarlo Fisichella
Matteo Malucelli
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2311+37 Laps
21LMGTE
Pro
51 AF Corse Gianmaria Bruni
Giancarlo Fisichella
Matteo Malucelli
Ferrari 4.5 L V8311+37 Laps
22LMGTE
Pro
74 Corvette Racing Oliver Gavin
Richard Westbrook
Tommy Milner
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R309+39 Laps
22LMGTE
Pro
74 Corvette Racing Oliver Gavin
Richard Westbrook
Tommy Milner
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8309+39 Laps
23LMP241 Greaves Motorsport Alexander Rossi
Eric Lux
Tom Kimber-Smith
Zytek Z11SN307+41 Laps
23LMP241 Greaves Motorsport Alexander Rossi
Eric Lux
Tom Kimber-Smith
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8307+41 Laps
24LMGTE
Pro
53 SRT Motorsports Marc Goossens
Dominik Farnbacher
Ryan Dalziel
SRT Viper GTS-R306+42 Laps
24LMGTE
Pro
53 SRT Motorsports Marc Goossens
Dominik Farnbacher
Ryan Dalziel
SRT 8.0 L V10306+42 Laps
25LMGTE
Am
76 IMSA Performance Matmut Raymond Narac
Christophe Bourret
Jean-Karl Vernay
Porsche 911 GT3 RSR306+42 Laps
25LMGTE
Am
76 IMSA Performance Matmut Raymond Narac
Christophe Bourret
Jean-Karl Vernay
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6306+42 Laps
26LMGTE
Am
55 AF Corse Piergiuseppe Perazzini
Lorenzo Casè
Darryl O'Young
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2305+43 Laps
26LMGTE
Am
55 AF Corse Piergiuseppe Perazzini
Lorenzo Casè
Darryl O'Young
Ferrari 4.5 L V8305+43 Laps
27LMGTE
Am
61 AF Corse Jack Gerber
Matt Griffin
Marco Cioci
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2305+43 Laps
27LMGTE
Am
61 AF Corse Jack Gerber
Matt Griffin
Marco Cioci
Ferrari 4.5 L V8305+43 Laps
28LMGTE
Am
77 Dempsey Del Piero-Proton Patrick Dempsey
Patrick Long
Joe Foster
Porsche 911 GT3 RSR305+43 Laps
28LMGTE
Am
77 Dempsey Del Piero-Proton Patrick Dempsey
Patrick Long
Joe Foster
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6305+43 Laps
29LMGTE
Am
50 Larbre Compétition Julien Canal
Patrick Bornhauser
Ricky Taylor
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R302+46 Laps
29LMGTE
Am
50 Larbre Compétition Julien Canal
Patrick Bornhauser
Ricky Taylor
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8302+46 Laps
30LMGTE
Am
96 Aston Martin Racing Roald Goethe
Jamie Campbell-Walter
Stuart Hall
Aston Martin Vantage GTE301+47 Laps
30LMGTE
Am
96 Aston Martin Racing Roald Goethe
Jamie Campbell-Walter
Stuart Hall
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8301+47 Laps
31LMGTE
Pro
93 SRT Motorsports Tommy Kendall
Jonathan Bomarito
Kuno Wittmer
SRT Viper GTS-R301+47 Laps
31LMGTE
Pro
93 SRT Motorsports Tommy Kendall
Jonathan Bomarito
Kuno Wittmer
SRT 8.0 L V10301+47 Laps
32LMP240 Boutsen Ginion Racing Thomas Dagoneou
Matt Downs
Rodin Younessi
Oreca 03300+48 Laps
32LMP240 Boutsen Ginion Racing Thomas Dagoneou
Matt Downs
Rodin Younessi
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8300+48 Laps
33LMGTE
Am
67 IMSA Performance Matmut Pascal Gibon
Patrice Milesi
Wolf Henzler
Porsche 911 GT3 RSR300+48 Laps
33LMGTE
Am
67 IMSA Performance Matmut Pascal Gibon
Patrice Milesi
Wolf Henzler
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6300+48 Laps
34LMGTE
Pro
66 JMW Motorsport Andrea Bertolini
Abdulaziz al Faisal
Khaled al Qubaisi
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2300+48 Laps
34LMGTE
Pro
66 JMW Motorsport Andrea Bertolini
Abdulaziz al Faisal
Khaled al Qubaisi
Ferrari 4.5 L V8300+48 Laps
35LMGTE
Am
88 Proton Competition Christian Ried
Gianluca Roda
Paolo Ruberti
Porsche 911 GT3 RSR300+48 Laps
35LMGTE
Am
88 Proton Competition Christian Ried
Gianluca Roda
Paolo Ruberti
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6300+48 Laps
36LMGTE
Am
75 Prospeed Competition Emmanuel Collard
François Perrodo
Sebastien Crubilé
Porsche 911 GT3 RSR298+50 Laps
36LMGTE
Am
75 Prospeed Competition Emmanuel Collard
François Perrodo
Sebastien Crubilé
Porsche 4.0 L Flat-6298+50 Laps
37LMGTE
Am
81 8 Star Motorsports Enzo Potolicchio
Rui Águas
Jason Bright
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2294+54 Laps
37LMGTE
Am
81 8 Star Motorsports Enzo Potolicchio
Rui Águas
Jason Bright
Ferrari 4.5 L V8294+54 Laps
38LMP239 DKR Engineering Olivier Porta
Romain Brandela
Stéphane Raffin
Lola B11/40280+68 Laps
38LMP239 DKR Engineering Olivier Porta
Romain Brandela
Stéphane Raffin
Judd HK 3.6 L V8280+68 Laps
39LMP112 Rebellion Racing Nicolas Prost
Neel Jani
Nick Heidfeld
Lola B12/60275+73 Laps
39LMP112 Rebellion Racing Nicolas Prost
Neel Jani
Nick Heidfeld
Toyota RV8KLM 3.4 L V8275+73 Laps
40LMP113 Rebellion Racing Mathias Beche
Andrea Belicchi
Congfu Cheng
Lola B12/60275+73 Laps
40LMP113 Rebellion Racing Mathias Beche
Andrea Belicchi
Congfu Cheng
Toyota RV8KLM 3.4 L V8275+73 Laps
41LMGTE
Am
70 Larbre Compétition Cooper MacNeil
Manuel Rodrigues
Philippe Dumas
Chevrolet Corvette C6.R268+80 Laps
41LMGTE
Am
70 Larbre Compétition Cooper MacNeil
Manuel Rodrigues
Philippe Dumas
Chevrolet 5.5 L V8268+80 Laps
NCLMP233 Level 5 Motorsports Scott Tucker
Marino Franchitti
Ryan Briscoe
HPD ARX-03b242Not classified
NCLMP233 Level 5 Motorsports Scott Tucker
Marino Franchitti
Ryan Briscoe
Honda HR28TT 2.8 L Turbo V6242Not classified
DNFLMP246 Thiriet by TDS Racing Pierre Thiriet
Ludovic Badey
Maxime Martin
Oreca 03310Accident
DNFLMP246 Thiriet by TDS Racing Pierre Thiriet
Ludovic Badey
Maxime Martin
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8310Accident
DNFLMGTE
Pro
99 Aston Martin Racing Bruno Senna
Frédéric Makowiecki
Rob Bell
Aston Martin Vantage GTE248Accident
DNFLMGTE
Pro
99 Aston Martin Racing Bruno Senna
Frédéric Makowiecki
Rob Bell
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8248Accident
DNFLMP245 OAK Racing Jacques Nicolet
Jean-Marc Merlin
Philippe Mondolot
Morgan LMP2246Accident
DNFLMP245 OAK Racing Jacques Nicolet
Jean-Marc Merlin
Philippe Mondolot
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8246Accident
DNFLMP247 KCMG Alexandre Imperatori
Matt Howson
Ho-Pin Tung
Morgan LMP2241Oil leak
DNFLMP247 KCMG Alexandre Imperatori
Matt Howson
Ho-Pin Tung
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8241Oil leak
DNFLMGTE
Pro
98 Aston Martin Racing Paul Dalla Lana
Bill Auberlen
Pedro Lamy
Aston Martin Vantage GTE221Engine
DNFLMGTE
Pro
98 Aston Martin Racing Paul Dalla Lana
Bill Auberlen
Pedro Lamy
Aston Martin 4.5 L V8221Engine
DNFLMP232 Lotus Thomas Holzer
Dominik Kraihamer
Jan Charouz
Lotus T128219Gearbox
DNFLMP232 Lotus Thomas Holzer
Dominik Kraihamer
Jan Charouz
Praga 3.6 L V8219Gearbox
DNFLMP230 HVM Status GP Johnny Mowlem
Tony Burgess
Jonathan Hirschi
Lola B12/80153Accident
DNFLMP230 HVM Status GP Johnny Mowlem
Tony Burgess
Jonathan Hirschi
Judd HK 3.6 L V8153Accident
DNFLMGTE
Am
54 AF Corse Yannick Mallégol
Jean-Marc Bachelier
Howard Blank
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2147Accident
DNFLMGTE
Am
54 AF Corse Yannick Mallégol
Jean-Marc Bachelier
Howard Blank
Ferrari 4.5 L V8147Accident
DNFLMGTE
Am
57 Krohn Racing Tracy Krohn
Niclas Jönsson
Maurizio Mediani
Ferrari 458 Italia GT2111Accident
DNFLMGTE
Am
57 Krohn Racing Tracy Krohn
Niclas Jönsson
Maurizio Mediani
Ferrari 4.5 L V8111Accident
DNFLMP225 Delta-ADR Tor Graves
Archie Hamilton
Shinji Nakano
Oreca 03101Accident
DNFLMP225 Delta-ADR Tor Graves
Archie Hamilton
Shinji Nakano
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8101Accident
DNFLMP228 Gulf Racing Middle East Fabien Giroix
Philippe Haezebrouck
Keiko Ihara
Lola B12/8022Accident
DNFLMP228 Gulf Racing Middle East Fabien Giroix
Philippe Haezebrouck
Keiko Ihara
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V822Accident
DNFLMP231 Lotus Kevin Weeda
James Rossiter
Christophe Bouchut
Lotus T12817Electrical
DNFLMP231 Lotus Kevin Weeda
James Rossiter
Christophe Bouchut
Praga 3.6 L V817Electrical
DNFLMGTE
Am
95 Aston Martin Racing Allan Simonsen
Kristian Poulsen
Christoffer Nygaard
Aston Martin Vantage GTE2Fatal accident,
Simonsen
DNFLMGTE
Am
95 Aston Martin Racing Allan Simonsen
Kristian Poulsen
Christoffer Nygaard
Aston Martin 4.5 L V82Fatal accident,
Simonsen
EXLMP226 G-Drive Racing Roman Rusinov
John Martin
Mike Conway
Oreca 03Disqualified
EXLMP226 G-Drive Racing Roman Rusinov
John Martin
Mike Conway
Nissan VK45DE 4.5 L V8Disqualified

Standings after the race

;World Endurance Drivers' Championship standings
+/–DriverPoints
1 1 Allan McNish
Tom Kristensen
Loïc Duval
94
2 1 André Lotterer
Marcel Fässler
Benoît Tréluyer
64
3 Anthony Davidson
Stéphane Sarrazin
Sébastien Buemi
63
4 2 Lucas di Grassi
Marc Gené
Oliver Jarvis
45
5 2 Alexander Wurz
Nicolas Lapierre
37

;World Endurance Manufacturers' Championship standings
+/–ConstructorPoints
1 Audi102
2 Toyota67

Footnotes