Qualifying
On Saturday afternoon, Giorgio Roda delivered a flawless qualifying session to claim pole position with a 1:30.332 lap—nearly a second faster than the rest of the field.
“We have a very strong lineup and worked hard over the winter. Now the most important thing is tomorrow’s race. I have full confidence in the team.” Giorgio Roda
Race
The 4 Hours of Barcelona got underway at exactly noon on Sunday. Despite a chaotic start with multiple on-track incidents, the #30, driven by Giorgio Roda, emerged unscathed. The race was red-flagged before resuming half an hour later.
At the restart, Roda expertly navigated traffic, running 10th overall while maintaining the PRO/AM lead and gradually extending the gap.
After 45 minutes, the #30 made its first pit stop for fuel and retained the lead upon rejoining. Shortly after, Roda briefly dropped to second before reclaiming the top spot.
With 2 hours and 50 minutes remaining, the #30 pitted again for a driver change, with Roda handing over to Doriane Pin. Soon after, a Virtual Safety Car (VSC) was deployed following an LMP2 going off track.
At the restart, Pin defended her position strongly and built a gap of around 15 seconds over her closest rival.