Leaving from Southwark, the Ford GT will cross over the Thames and veer right toward St. Paul's cathedral, then head to St. Pancras train station before going on to the Whitechapel district, rendered infamous by Jack the Ripper, then take the equally famous Tower Bridge which dominates the Tower of London where King Henry VIII had executed two of his six wives.
Six is the number of drivers who will take the start at the 6 Hours of Silverstone on April 17th in one of Ford Chip Ganassi Racing's two Ford GTs given that Billy Johnson and Harry Tincknell will support - like at the 24 Hours of Le Mans - head drivers Stefan Mücke and Olivier Pla in the No. 66 car, and Andy Priaulx and Marino Franchitti in No. 67, respectively.
At Le Mans, the two Fords entered in the World Endurance Championship (WEC) will be joined by the two sister cars entered in the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, new name of the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship, for the driver line-ups Joey Hand-Dirk Müller-Sébastien Bourdais and Ryan Briscoe-Richard Westbrook-Scott Dixon in the No. 68 and No. 69.
These numbers were not chosen randomly since Ford won overall at the 24 Hours four times in a row between 1966 and 1969 with the Ford GT40. Fifty years later, the marque hopes to clinch a win at Le Mans, but this time in the LM GTE Pro class, magnificently won last year by Corvette Racing with only one C7.R at the start.
Cécile Bonardel / ACO - Translation by Nikki Ehrhardt / ACO