BMW storms to Sao Paulo 6 Hours victory

James Moy Photography/Getty Images

By Stephen Kilbey - Jul 12, 2026, 4:37 PM ET

BMW storms to Sao Paulo 6 Hours victory

BMW M Team WRT’s No. 15 M Hybrid V8 battled its way to victory in today’s FIA WEC 6 Hours of São Paulo. Kevin Magnussen, Raffaele Marciello and an unwell Dries Vanthoor, who started fourth on the grid, beat the best that Alpine, Cadillac and Ferrari could throw at them en route to their first win of the season and BMW’s second.

It was a race that played out completely differently from the 2025 edition. Last year, Cadillac controlled proceedings from the start and finished 1-2, lapping all but one of their Hypercar competitors at least once. This time, 11 cars finished on the lead lap after a tight, unpredictable, absorbing contest that saw multiple strategies play out, with just one Full-Course Yellow and zero safety cars across six hours.

Previously, the WEC’s race in Brazil had never been won by a car that started off the front row. Not this time. Cadillac’s V-Series.Rs were unable to convert their front-row lockout to a second victory for the program in the WEC, after both cars dropped time at their first pit stops, lost track position and ultimately failed to fully recover.

The No. 12 suffered a jammed front-right wheel nut when Stevens boxed for the first time, suffered a spin during Norman Nato’s stint and was later handed a time penalty for contact with the No. 87 Lexus at Turn 8. The sister car, meanwhile, overshot its pit box at the first stop, costing it valuable seconds and was later handed two time penalties for on-track contact.

Will Stevens crossed the line third in the No. 12, just five seconds behind the winning car, a second up the road from the No. 38, driven by Jack Aitken at the end.

Cadillac’s woes left the door open for another manufacturer to capitalize. And it was BMW and its No. 15 crew that stepped forward with a clean, measured run, ending with the three drivers capturing their first Hypercar wins.

“The car was amazing, the BMW was the quickest car. Strategy, pit stops, everything was perfect. I’m so happy to finally get this victory, it’s been a long time coming, but we’re finally there,” Magnussen said.

Alpine opted to run both of its cars off-strategy – similar to BMW at Spa – to gain track position and the lead in clear air. For a while, it looked to work with both A424s running well, with the No. 35 leading its fair share of laps.

But the team knew it needed a caution period to avoid splashes at the end, and both would suffer slow punctures in the second half of the race, forcing the team to pit for single tire changes. The No. 35 finished a disappointing 10th, ahead of the No. 36 just outside the points in 11th.

Ferrari, meanwhile, was the surprise package of the race. The No. 51 scored the Italian marque its first podium at the circuit with the 499P in fine style. Antonio Giovinazzi, Alessandro Pier Guidi and James Calado would finish just 2.2 seconds behind the winning BMW, after the car came alive in the second half of the race when the temperature dropped, and the mist arrived.

It wasn’t a perfect run, though, from the car. Calado, on cold tires, went into the tire barriers at pit-out in the fifth hour, which thankfully didn’t damage the car significantly or affect the cooling or pace, even though he was left to drive with a piece of advertising board stuck to the front for a whole stint.

Behind the two Cadillacs, the No. 83 AF Corse Ferrari finished fifth, after Robert Kubica was gifted two places when the No. 20 BMW of Robin Frijns and No. 50 Ferrari of Antonio Fuoco came together in the final 20 minutes at the Senna S. The No. 50 Ferrari, which suffered a spin from side contact, dropped to eighth behind the No. 007 Aston Martin. Frijns salvaged sixth.

Further back, Genesis, despite showing speed throughout the meeting, was unable to secure a top-10 finish with either car. And Toyota, this year’s Le Mans winner, didn’t score any points either. The No. 7 TR010 struggled for pace and came home 12th. The No. 8 suffered suspension damage from early contact and finished 17th, 23 laps down following repairs in the garage.

Racing Team Turkey’s No. 34 Corvette won the race after a faultless run from Salih Yoluc, Peter Dempsey and Charlie Eastwood. James Moy Photography/Getty Images

LMGT3 was wild, featuring door-to-door action throughout and, similar to Hypercar, a large platter of varying tire and fuel strategies that played out over the course of the race.

Racing Team Turkey’s No. 34 Corvette won the race after a faultless run from Salih Yoluc, Peter Dempsey and Charlie Eastwood. The team’s strategy of putting its Silver, Yoluc, in for the start, and saving the middle stint for Dempsey (the Bronze) paid off, allowing Eastwood to bring the car home, the only drama being a slow puncture with an hour to go that didn't cost the team time or positions.

The No. 69 WRT BMW M4 GT3 eventually finished second, after a late move from Dan Harper on Seb Priaulx’s No. 77 Proton Ford Mustang with 24 minutes on the clock. The two Manthey Porsches – the Bend example leading the DK Engineering 911 – finishing third and fourth as the Ford faded on a fuel save run.

The sister No. 88 Proton Ford finished up fifth after a hard-charging run from Logan Sargeant, with the No. 61 Iron Lynx Mercedes-AMG sixth.

Heart of Racing’s No. 23 Aston Martin, which started from pole, was not a factor. Gray Newell lost the lead at the start, dropped to seventh, suffered a spin in the second hour, then sustained diffuser damage from contact with the No. 83 Ferrari. It finished dead last.

Next on the schedule is Lone Star Le Mans at Circuit of The Americas on Sept. 6.

RESULTS

Stephen Kilbey
Stephen Kilbey

UK-based Stephen Kilbey is RACER.com's FIA World Endurance Championship correspondent, and is also Deputy Editor of Dailysportscar.com He has a first-class honours degree in Sports Journalism and is a previous winner of the UK Guild of Motoring Writers Sir William Lyons Award.

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