While Lamborghini’s breakthrough win in the 2025 CrowdStrike 24 Hours of Spa made history, the event’s extensive support package provided thrilling racing of its own. Across five series, the action ranged from chaotic multi-car incidents to strategic duels, all set against the demanding backdrop of Spa-Francorchamps.

GT World Challenge Europe – 24 Hours of Spa: Grasser gives Lamborghini long-awaited first win

Grasser Racing Team finally delivered Lamborghini’s breakthrough at Spa, as Mirko Bortolotti, Jordan Pepper, and Luca Engstler guided the #63 Huracán to an exciting victory in the 2025 CrowdStrike 24 Hours of Spa. The trio took the lead on Sunday morning and resisted late pressure from Rutronik’s Porsche to seal the win in a race shaped by high attrition.

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GT4 European Series: Speedcar and Borusan share Silver wins as W&S dominates Am

Race 1

Team Speedcar secured a dominant one-two in Friday’s opener, with Grégory Guilvert and Paul Petit taking their first win of the season after a smartly timed stop and rapid in-lap. A chaotic opening phase eliminated several contenders, including the Academy Motorsport Ford Mustang. That opened the door for Guilvert to stretch his stint deep into the window and hand over to Petit, who held firm at the front. Lariche and Consani finished second to extend their points lead, while Borusan’s Gabriele Piana was classified fourth after a late penalty for spinning McLaren rival McKenzy Cresswell.

In Pro-Am, W&S Motorsport’s Hendrik Still and Joachim Bölting notched their fourth win from five races, controlling the class from start to finish despite pressure from Schubert Motorsport in the second half. W&S also scored victory in Am with Daniel Blickle and Max Kronberg, taking full advantage after the class-leading Chazel BMW retired in the early chaos.

Race 2

Saturday’s race was shortened after a major accident at Raidillon eliminated six cars, including the Race 1-winning Speedcar Audi. Once racing resumed, Borusan’s Piana took the lead from Cresswell with a well-timed move at Les Combes. After the stops, Berkay Besler rejoined just ahead of Josh Rattican and withstood pressure to give the team a hard-earned first win of the season.

PB Racing’s Stefano D’Aste and Alberto Naska went from DNS to Pro-Am winners after their Lotus held off the Toyota Supra of Holmlund and Skärås by just three-tenths of a second. In Am, Kronberg and Blickle completed a perfect weekend with a second win, putting them level on points with the Chazel BMW heading into Misano.

GT2 European Series: Mičánek unstoppable, RTR stuns Am class

Race 1

Stefan Rosina and Bronek Formanek kicked off the weekend with a fourth Pro-Am win from five races, despite receiving a 13-second penalty for a short pit stop. Rosina built enough of a lead during the opening stint to keep the Mičánek Motorsport Lamborghini clear after the adjustment, finishing 3.4 seconds ahead of the #7 Dinamic Maserati of Mauro Calamia and Roberto Pampanini.

A late move by Mato Homola secured third overall for the #89 RTR Projects KTM, giving debutant Davit Kajaia his first podium. In Am, Philippe Prette remained in control with his third consecutive win aboard the LP Racing Maserati, finishing well ahead of Oliver Freymuth (AKF Lamborghini) and the Akkodis ASP Mercedes of Pascal Gibon and Christophe Bourret.

Race 2

Formanek and Rosina made it five wins from six in Sunday morning’s second race, once again overcoming a pair of penalties. Rosina led from pole before serving a five-second formation lap infringement and a 10-second success penalty. After the stops, Formanek emerged third but quickly moved past Pampanini and closed a five-second gap to Davit Kajaia’s KTM. With five minutes to go, he made the decisive pass into Les Combes.

RTR Projects finished second with Kajaia and Homola, while Dinamic’s Calamia and Pampanini completed the podium. In Am, a dramatic last-minute mistake by Gibon at the final chicane handed victory to Petr Lisa and Viktor Mraz in the #789 RTR KTM — their maiden series win. Akkodis ASP still took second, with Freymuth completing the podium. Prette recovered to fourth after a long stop to fix bodywork damage.

Porsche Carrera Cup France: Perrot claims first win, Jaubert rebounds in Race 2

Race 1

Spa-Francorchamps delivered a dramatic opener to the weekend’s Porsche Carrera Cup France round, with Louis Perrot claiming his first-ever series win after a post-race penalty scare. The Schumacher CLRT driver hounded pole-sitter Mathys Jaubert throughout the race, finally passing him after a late Safety Car period triggered by Eric Debard’s stranded car.

Although Perrot was initially handed a five-second penalty that would have handed victory back to Jaubert, stewards later reversed the decision, confirming Perrot as the winner. Jaubert was classified second, ahead of Keagan Masters (TFT Racing), with Marcus Amand (CLRT) and Paul Cauhaupé (ABM) completing the top five.

In the Rookies, Enzo Joulié ended Chester Kieffer’s unbeaten run with a strong comeback from the back of the grid to finish just behind category winner Kieffer. Mathys Cappuccio returned to the podium in third.

Marc Guillot took Pro-Am honours for Racing Technology, edging Jérôme Boullery in the closing stages. Cyril Caillo made it a one-two for the team. In Am, British driver Graham King sprung a surprise win, ahead of Jean-Philippe Gambaro (ABM) and Jordan Boisson (TFT).

Race 2

Jaubert bounced back in Sunday’s second race to take his third win of the season. After starting from pole once again, the Martinet by Alméras driver held his nerve to stay ahead of the chasing pack.

Jérôme Boullery reversed the Pro-Am result by taking victory ahead of Race 1 winner Guillot, while Boisson continued his strong form in Am, adding another win to his tally and taking the points lead. Gambaro and Debard joined him on the podium.

Renault Clio Cup Series: Torelli and Pouget take the wins in closely fought double-header

Several of Europe’s Clio Cup championships came together at Spa-Francorchamps for a fiercely contested third round of the 2025 season, with Gabriele Torelli and David Pouget each taking a win after two action-packed races.

Race 1

Saturday’s opener saw Gabriele Torelli (Rangoni Corse) return to the top step of the podium, withstanding intense pressure and two Safety Car restarts to take his first win of the season. A tight three-way scrap in the closing laps saw Alex Finkelstein narrowly edge out David Pouget for second, the trio separated by less than half a second at the flag. Multiple category battles unfolded behind them, with incidents and penalties shaking up the top ten.

Race 2

Sunday’s race delivered an even tighter fight, with Torelli again leading for much of the running. After trading places with Pouget and Finkelstein, the Italian crossed the line first, only to receive a post-race penalty for leaving the track and gaining an advantage. That handed the win to Pouget, his second of the season, while Torelli and Finkelstein completed the podium once again.

Next up: DTM storms Norisring as NLS-Light brings non-GT3 action to the Nordschleife

With most major GT and endurance series idle this weekend, all eyes turn to the streets of Norisring, where DTM takes centre stage. The short, high-speed city circuit is notorious for its tight walls, heavy braking zones, and unpredictable racing, making it a perfect stage for the midpoint of the 2025 season.

Meanwhile, NLS returns to the Nürburgring-Nordschleife with a 4-hour race that features a GT3-free grid. The event offers teams in lower classes a rare spotlight of their own on the Green Hell, ahead of the championship’s full-field return later this summer. Read the NLS-Light preview here.