The Brit has taken plenty more WEC race wins since then too. However, despite all that experience, Hanson says this was the most intense race he’d ever been in.
“To see so many cars in a field of that size not have any issues, in what was also a dry race, made it ten times tougher,” he emphasises.
Mick Schumacher commented at this year’s Le Mans that due to the strength of Hypercar Michelin tyres, WEC was now the championship where you pushed flat out, whereas F1 is the series where drivers cruise to look after their rubber.
That, combined with the competitiveness and reliability of cars, plus the calibre of drivers, means the racing is close – and that strategy is key.
“’Getting to the end’ no longer matters, because most cars do now without issues,” concurs Hanson. “So now it’s about how fast you can be across the 24 hours.
Ferrari claimed an historic Le Mans treble thanks to its ‘privateer’ No83 car
Ferrari
“It used to be about managing kerbs and all that stuff – it’s not now. I think until the last 20 minutes of the race, we were still abusing the hell out of this car.
“Considering the last two Le Mans wins for Ferrari had wet spells, this is the hardest the 499P has ever been pushed. We were going into the unknown. The car didn’t falter, which is wild.”
With such a competitive entry, a canny strategy was key – with no one proving this more than the yellow Ferrari.
“The strategy was painful at first”
The No83 AF Corse entry lined up 13th on the grid, so needed some lateral thinking to get it up the field. Only after Hanson had survived the start, of course.
“It was a bit hectic,” he deadpans. “We were able to make a few positions up, and then we opted to fuel save and go a lot longer early on.
“When we stopped, everyone had short-filled on fuel to try and jump positions. So we just took the maximum amount of fuel and lost five more positions – so then had to come from even further back. Then we did the same thing, and went longer again.
“It seemed quite painful at first, but what it did was offset us from the leaders.
That meant was that when we came back into it later in the race, we had a two-lap fuel advantage over everyone else. It opened up options for us as the race went on.”