Ferrari claimed its third straight overall Le Mans 24 Hours win with the 499P Hypercar today at the Circuit de la Sarthe. After the No. 50 and No. 51 factory cars strung together three wins between them through the opening rounds of the 2025 FIA WEC season, this weekend, it was the No. 83 privately entered 499P’s time to shine.
For Robert Kubica, Yifei Ye and Phil Hanson, it was a stunning performance. They had the speed and enjoyed the cleanest race of the three Ferraris in the huge Hypercar field, positioning themselves up front at the end to win the race by just 14 seconds.
It’s the first Le Mans overall win for all three drivers, as Ye and Kubica became the first men from China and Poland, respectively, to claim outright victories in the French classic. All three FIA WEC-entered 499Ps now have a Le Mans win, too, after the No. 51 won Centenary Le Mans in 2023 and the No. 50 emerged triumphant in last year’s edition.
“It’s a dream come true, I have to pinch myself. I have to thank the team, winning Le Mans back to back to back,” Ye said.
“It’s a special day. Winning Le Mans since I started here in 2021, I have really enjoyed it and felt like a small kid in karting. This will be emotional for a long time. It’s a special day, and I didn’t expect it,” Kubica, who completed an Iron Man stint at the end of the race, commented.
“The emotions haven’t really hit yet,” Hanson summarized.

Yifei Ye (left) Phil Hanson (second from right) and Robert Kubica (second from left) celebrate their breakthrough win. Ker Robertson/Getty Images
It was close up top in Hypercar, with five cars finishing classified on the lead lap. However, the results sheet doesn’t reflect the true story, as Ferrari dominated most of the race, which was remarkably clean, featuring just one safety car intervention to bunch up the field.
And it was that safety car, called with just under 13 hours remaining on the clock following a hefty shunt for Nielsen Racing’s LMP2 ORECA at Tertre Rouge, that acted as a reprieve for Ferrari.
At that point, the 499Ps were not in control as all three were hit by penalties of varying severity in the opening hours of the race, for pit lane speeding, yellow flag infractions, gaining an advantage off-track, and even contact with a Corvette in the case of the No. 51. However, with the gaps reset, the Ferraris were able to claw their way back to the front through Sunday morning.

It took a titanic effort from the No. 6 Porsche team to deny Ferrari a podium sweep. Fabrizio Boldoni/DPPI
For a long while, it looked like a 1-2-3 finish was on the cards, but in the end, there was one car which spoiled the party: The No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport 963. Kevin Estre, Matt Campbell and Laurens Vanthoor, who started at the back of the field after their exclusion from qualifying, provided the only genuine opposition to Ferrari in the second half of the race.
It took a near-flawless run to keep the pressure on Ferrari’s freight train and prevent a podium sweep. The three Porsche hopefuls kept their heads down and went on to claim second, clawing their way back into the fight for silverware in the final few hours through a mixture of pit strategy and consistent lap times.
It never truly looked on for the win, even as the three Ferraris switched places through the various pit cycles and the No. 6 was in the mix, but it wouldn’t have taken much drama for Porsche’s dream of a 20th overall win and Penske’s hopes for a first to go from dream to reality.
“It will hurt for a while, getting a chance like this and coming so close isn’t something that comes along every day,” Laurens Vanthoor admitted.
“We ran a perfect race today, with no mistakes, so we’ve got to be proud of what we achieved. We gave it everything,” Campbell added.
Third on the road and a further 14 seconds adrift was the No. 51 factory 499P of James Calado, Alessandro Pier Guidi and Antonio Giovinazzi, making it a double podium for the Prancing Horse. The defending race winners in the No. 50 were forced to settle for fourth after ending up on the wrong end of late switches in position orchestrated by the team in an attempt to catch and pass the Porsche, which ultimately failed.