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Kubica pole keeps pressure on in title fight in Texas

There is a Pole on pole at Circuit of The Americas for tomorrow’s Lone Star Le Mans – round six of the 2025 FIA World Endurance Championship campaign – as the Ferrari star conquered challenging conditions to cement the top spot on the starting grid for the six-hour contest.

Kubica pole keeps pressure on in title fight in Texas
@crédit : DPPI
06/09/2025

Following scorching temperatures throughout Friday’s free practice running, competitors were faced with a very different scenario during the two-part qualifying session, as light rain rendered the track slippery.

That resulted in contrasting tactics in Q1, as the two Cadillacs – fresh off the back of their breakthrough one-two finish in Brazil last time out – and #7 Toyota rolled the dice by pitting to switch from slick tyres to wets midway through. Initially, they looked to have made the right call as Alex Lynn began lighting up the timing screens, but when the rain subsequently eased again, they tumbled down the order and ultimately ended up propping up the timesheets.

That swung the advantage back in favour of Ferrari, and in the ten-minute Hyperpole showdown, it was Kubica – winner of June’s 24 Hours of Le Mans alongside team-mates Yifei Ye and Phil Hanson – who managed the situation best.

Antonio Giovinazzi looked to be the only driver likely to challenge, but a mistake by the Italian towards the end of the session effectively consigned the championship-leading Ferrari 499P to second on the grid. That secured Kubica his first Hypercar pole position in FIA WEC by a whisker under a tenth-of-a-second – and the first for a privately-entered car in the current era.

“That was one of the most challenging sessions of my life,” acknowledged the former grand prix-winner. “The grip was changing corner-by-corner, which made it difficult to find the limit and the rain was moving around, but I felt quite confident straightaway. 

“I managed to build up temperature in the tyres and tried to read the track as best as I could without taking too much risk, because if you went off-line or came with too much speed, there was no room for recovery. 

“I would say it was nicer to watch from outside than being in the car, but we managed to grab P1, which is a great achievement. It’s an extra championship point, which is the most valuable outcome from today, but the race will be a different story.”

Jean-Éric Vergne drew upon all of his experience to initially put Team Peugeot TotalEnergies’ 9X8 Hypercar a season-high third, but the #93 entry was subsequently demoted to the rear of the 18-car Hypercar grid after all of its lap times were deleted due to its rear rain light not being permanently switched on when the track was declared wet by the Race Director. 

That elevated reigning world champion Kévin Estre to third for Porsche Penske Motorsport, with Nicklas Nielsen fourth in the #50 Ferrari and Nicolas Varrone a superb fifth in the independent Proton Competition Porsche. The Argentine ace  impressively set the pace in Q1.

The Charles Milesi-piloted #35 Alpine was next up in sixth, followed by Ryō Hirakawa in the #8 Toyota, Dries Vanthoor in the #15 BMW, Alex Riberas in the #009 Aston Martin – the new-for-2025 Valkyrie qualifying inside the top ten for the very first time – and the #5 Porsche in the hands of Julien Andlauer.

Lone Star Le Mans will get underway at 13:00 local time (20:00 CET) tomorrow (Sunday, 7 September).

Check out the full Hypercar grid for the race.

Watch FIA WEC live or on-demand via the official FIA WEC TV app – your full-access pass to the FIA World Endurance Championship including the iconic 24 Hours of Le Mans. Don’t miss a moment. For further information, check out the app.

Written by
Russell ATKINS
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