Retired Formula One veteran Rubens Barrichello will make his debut driving in the Le Mans 24 Hour endurance race, it was confirmed yesterday. The Brazilian will share the wheel of a Dutch entry with Jan Lammers, the 1988 winner with Jaguar.
 “I’m delighted to hear that we have been accepted for my 23rd Le Mans and Racing Team Netherlands’ first entry,” former F1 driver Lammer told Britain’s Autosport magazine online edition. “We are extremely proud to enter some Brazilian flavour into Le Mans,” he added.
 They will be driving a Dallara LMP2 car which the pair have already started testing.
 Whilst this will be Barrichello’s first taste of Le Mans, the 44-year-old has completed three editions of the Daytona 24 Hour, finishing runner-up last year. The former Ferrari ace retired from F1 in 2011 after 11 wins.
 The 85th running of motorsport’s mythic race will be staged without the participation of Audi. The German auto giant announced in October they were pulling out of the world endurance championship to focus on Formula E. Audi won Le Mans 13 times between 2000 and 2014 but the last two years saw them usurped by Porsche.
 Barrichello follows in the footsteps of other F1 stars to be drawn to Le Mans including Mark Webber, the Australian who on June 17 will be acting as a marshall and official starter. In total 60 cars were accepted for the race which attracts a crowd of 250,000 petrol heads to the circuit.
 Among the list of proposed drivers are F1 legend Alain Prost’s son Nicolas, Nelson Piquet Junior and footballer Fabien Barthez, the 1998 French World Cup winner who returns in a Ligier. Denmark’s Christina Nelson is the only female driver.
 Toyota are set to compete with three cars as they try to gain revenge on Porsche after the agony of leading last year’s race only for their car to pack up in the closing lap.
 “No one will forget last year’s race,” said Pierre Fillon, the brother of French presidential candidate Francois Fillon and president of ACO, the local Sarthe region’s automobile club. “The Le Mans 24 Hours remains the holy grail which all the (endurance) drivers want to win,” he added.
Kubica to race Le Mans with ByKolles team Former Formula One driver Robert Kubica will make his Le Mans 24 Hours sportscar debut in June and compete in the full World Endurance Championship, the Germany-based ByKolles team announced yesterday.
 “After my time in rally I’ve been looking for something as close to Formula One as possible. This is exactly what I’ve found in LMP1 (the top Le Mans category),” the 32-year-old Pole said in a statement.
 “I’m happy to be a part of it. The WEC is racing on circuits that I know well from my time in Formula One. The exception is Le Mans...
 “I’m very excited about my first start at this 24-Hour race.”
 Kubica’s Formula One career ended in February 2011 when he suffered severe arm, leg and hand injuries in a near-fatal crash during a minor rally in northern Italy that he had entered for fun.
 One of the sport’s brightest prospects before his accident, with talk of a move to Ferrari, the Pole was a winner with
BMW-Sauber in Canada in 2008 and had joined the Renault team in 2010.
 He raced, with a best result of fifth in Germany, in the World Rally Championship between 2013 and 2016.