GT1 battle evaporates as Corvette challenge halved?

The anticipated duel-to-the flag in the GT1 class of this year's Le Mans 24 Hours is seemingly all-but over less than two hours 𒉰from the end of the 🐎race, after the #64 Corvette ground to a halt with suspected transmission woes.

The #63 and #64 entries have waged a race-long tussle for supremacy right𓂃 from the very beginning, with rarely much to choose between them - and considerable pride at stake given that this year is Corvette's last at La Sarthe in an official capacity.

The anticipated duel-to-the flag in the GT1 class of tꦍhis year's Le Mans 24 Hours is seemingly all-but over less𒊎 than two hours from the end of the race, after the #64 Corvette ground to a halt with suspected transmission woes.

The #63 and #64 entries have ♚waged a race-long tussle for supremacy right from the very beginning, with rarely much to choose between them - and considerable pride at stake given that this year is Corvette's last at La Sarthe in an official capacity.

With all looking set for a titanic battle for glory, however, Marcel Fassler in the black entry he shares with Oliver Gavin and Olivier Beretta stopped just before the Ford Chicane, and though the Swiss ace - who crashed heavily out of last year's race in an LMP1 Oreca - was pushed to the entrance to the pit-lane, he has since been able to go no further, so near yet so far from potential res🌜🥂cue.

That has left the traditionally-liveried💎 yellow #63 machine of Jan Magnussen, Johnny O'Connell and Antonio Garcia comfortably in the class lead, seven laps🎀 clear of the lead Luc Alphand Aventures C6.R of Yann Clairay, Xavier Maassen and Julien Jousse, with the stationary #64 entry currently classified third in GT1 and 19th overall and an hour-and-a-half left to run.

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