IMSA stripped Tower Motorsports of its LMP2 class victory at the Rolex 24 at Daytona because of a technical infraction.
Asked to explain why IMSA is rising in recent years, some of its most significant entrants, starting with McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown, whose company is preparing to build new cars to race in IMSA's top GTP class, lined up to give the series led by ...
McLaren Racing is eyeing expansion into sports car racing and it is unclear what impact that might have on its Formula E and IndyCar programs.
The McLaren CEO, who is involved in both F1 and IndyCar, makes his case for how the American series can move towards the future by looking at its European counterpart
United Autosports USA has inherited the LMP2 class win in the 63rd Rolex 24 At Daytona after Tower Motorsports’ car was penalized due to a technical violation. After a lengthy-post-race
president of IMSA, who said the quiet part out loud when, unprompted, in his prerace remarks about the strength of the series said: "It looks like the papaya army plans to join us." Is it true? Maybe, according to McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown. But the more ...
McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown tells The Associated Press he'd like to be in the World Endurance Championship in 2027 and IMSA in 2028. To make those moves happen, he has to evaluate participation ...
Maybe, according to McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown. But the more Brown talked ... "And whether we enter WEC and/or IMSA, that would probably be staggered. And at the same time, we're always ...
Maybe, according to McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown. But the more Brown talked ... “And whether we enter WEC and/or IMSA, that would probably be staggered. And at the same time, we're always ...
The whispers that McLaren Racing was eyeing sports car racing have circulated for months, and the rumor made sense.
McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown is considering entering sports car racing in 2027, with the World Endurance Championship being a prime target, while also reviewing its current participation in Formula E and IndyCar.
Tower Motorsports has been stripped of its LMP2 class victory in the Rolex 24 at Daytona as a result of a technical infraction. John Farano, Sebastien Bourdais, Sebastian Alvarez and Job van Uitert initially took victory during the 63rd edition of the Florida endurance classic, beating the No. 22 United Autosports Oreca 07 Gibson.