How to Watch 2024 Sebring 12 Hours: A Race Preview

Sebring 12 Hours Preview 2024.jpg
The second round of the Florida 36 hours takes place this weekend as the IMSA paddock heads to Sebring for the 12 Hours following the Daytona 24. Here is all you need to know about the event, including how to watch live.

Image credit: BMW Newsroom

It has now been almost two months since the IMSA Sportscar Championship got underway at Daytona. But only now is the paddock reforming for its second round of the season.

As ever, it is the Sebring 12 Hours that hosts this second race of the year, forming the second leg of what sportscar fans call the Florida 36 hours. With Porsche Penske Motorsport claiming the honours at the Rolex 24 in January, they will be keen to complete the Floridian combo. But there are a plethora of teams, including one new squad, snapping at their heels. Here is all you need to know about this weekend's race.

Sebring 12: A Golden Grid​

For the 2024 edition of the Sebring 12 Hours, it is not just an enthralling prospect of a race that fans can celebrate. In fact, this year, the event's title sponsor Mobil 1 celebrates its 50th anniversary. And with the occasion come a number of rather glowing racecar liveries.


Throughout the early days of race week, as fans arrived at the track, and teams began unpacking their kit, glimmers of gold started to show themselves. It turns out that a plethora of cars in the race will bare touches of gold. Some models even feature fully gold designs.

Among the grid, the #01 Cadillac Racing GTP and #14 GTD Pro Lexus will feature touches of gold to their designs. But the most shocking of all is no doubt the pair of top flight Corvettes, revealing themselves to have dropped the infamous Corvette yellow, instead running in full gold.

A Full Entry List​

With the explosion in sportscar popularity of recent years, grids are seemingly consistently at capacity. That is no different here at Sebring. An eye-watering 58 cars will compete on the infamous ex-Air Force base this weekend, across four classes.

Lamborghini Coming to Sebring.jpg

Lamborghini made its WEC debut this month, now it's time for its GTP start. Image credit: Lamborghini Newsroom

For most viewers, the GTP category will be the one that grabs the headlines. From Daytona's ten-car field, the top class grows an entrant. Lamborghini finally join IMSA after a first outing for its SC63 in the Qatar WEC opener. A brand new car, the Iron Lynx squad is sure to struggle at Sebring. But it will be good to see how the Italian marque stacks up against the GTP competition.

At Daytona, perhaps the most competitive class was GTD Pro. With a plethora of strong factory GT efforts, the class saw battles across multiple car models all race long. Whilst the grid does reduce somewhat from the Rolex enduro, Sebring is sure to continue the intensity of battle. In total, 12 cars featuring nine brands will race for the crown. These include fast picks such as the Corvette duo, Daytona-winning Risi Ferrari 296, IMSA favourites in the #14 Lexus and Pfaff as they continue their McLaren voyage.

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Aston Martin hoping for first new Vantage GT3 win at Sebring. Image credit: Aston Martin on Newspress

The non-pro version of GTD is also expected to be strong with no less than 22 entries. With such a large grid, predicting a winner is always tough. But much like GTD Pro, Lexus' Vasser Sullivan effort is always a strong bet. Elsewhere, the new Corvette, Mustang and Aston Martin models showed potential in January's opener.

Finally, the LMP2 class typically gets lost in the action between the popular GTP and GTD classes. But with an equally large entry list and plenty of big names, it is not one to overlook. Ben Keating in the #2 United Autosport car will be keen to get his first win of the season after missing out in Daytona. Meanwhile, the #18 Era Motorsport car and #88 AF Corse car have undeniably strong line ups.

Respect The Bumps​

Do not expect the list of finishers to be anywhere near the total of 58 cars however. Reputed for its harsh surface and tricky layout, Sebring is nothing if not a car killer. Last year's World Endurance Championship opener certainly proved that knocking a majority of the new cars out of contention. In addition, a late-race incident in the 2023 12 hours made for a spectacularly surprising win.


Reliability is sure to be a major factor in this year's running of the race, so speed early on in the race is unlikely to translate to victory. Teams will first need to make it through the first 11 hours of the event before pushing for the win in the final 60 minutes.

As we mentioned in the Daytona 24 Hours preview, Safety Cars are an integral element to IMSA racing strategy. Not only do they bunch the field, they also reset the pit cycle, allowing all teams to come in at set times. Last year's race saw no less than 13 SC periods. So being fast right at the very end is more crucial than ever.

How to Watch the Sebring 12 Hours​

One of the main reasons sportscar fans love the IMSA Sportscar Championship is the access. At the track, one can freely walk around the paddock and get as close as possible to these impressive racing machines.


But from the comfort of one's own home, streaming access for IMSA races is unrivalled. IMSA.TV, along with Radio IMSA host full coverage of every race, including support events. Over the next few days, race fans will have access to more racing action than they can watch, including the fan favourite Mazda Cup.

Whether you have been planning on watching the race for a while, or just discovering it now, here are all the times you need to watch the Sebring 12 Hours in 2024.
  • Sebring 12 Hours Qualifying: Friday - 17:50 CET, 16:50 GMT
  • Sebring 12 Hours: Saturday - 14:40 CET, 13:40 GMT
Will you watch the 2024 Sebring 12 Hours?
About author
Angus Martin
Motorsport gets my blood pumping more than anything else. Be it physical or virtual, I'm down to bang doors.

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does anyone know a way to cast it to Chromecast/smart tv in Europe?
 
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An appetizer. Practice footage by Lanky Turtle. Personal highlights:

The kick at 55 seconds to get the rear bodywork fitted. Gold.
Footage at around 4m30s showing T1 and how the cars ride the bumps, some are scary.
And just anytime a Cadillac goes by on song.
 
does anyone know a way to cast it to Chromecast/smart tv in Europe?
Just go to the IMSA site in Europe, all the events are live on it, and you can cast them to your chromecast from there. No advertising for Europe.
 
does anyone know a way to cast it to Chromecast/smart tv in Europe?

Had one of those years ago. Nowadays I just cast streams to my tv by using the windows "Connect to a wireless display" function to extend my desktop.
 

Of course this US company will not let us watch in the US (and they expect me to pay for such nonsense; I once tried to watch a music video by a US group on a US label and was told "you cannot view this in your area"). We can get twelve hours a day for a week of Wimbledon coverage, we can get 48 hours of football every weekend during the season ...but a twelve hour car race? oh no, that's too long to cover. Daytona amounts to a couple of hours coverage of the start, then a couple of hours of highlights and the finish a day later; we don't get that much for LeMans.
 
Staff
Premium
Good news
 

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What a race! Yellows towards the end definitely got frustrating as it would have been great to see how strategy played out. But that battle at the end was epic.
Also, driving standards and stewarding need a real hard look. From the 6 not getting a penalty for its hit with the NSX to Hawksworth making ridiculous lunges and forcing rivals off-track. IMSA needs to improve there.

Nevertheless, on a high after that and despite it being 3am I will not be able to sleep!
 
Spent most of the day following the Sebring 12 hours. Nice fight, induced by the last yellow flag, at the end between the Cadillac GTP and the Acura GTP.
The yellow flag and safety car and how they regroup by category behind the safety car is a very important aspect of that type of racing.
How does LMU offline handles that crucial aspect?
 
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What a race! Yellows towards the end definitely got frustrating as it would have been great to see how strategy played out. But that battle at the end was epic.
Also, driving standards and stewarding need a real hard look. From the 6 not getting a penalty for its hit with the NSX to Hawksworth making ridiculous lunges and forcing rivals off-track. IMSA needs to improve there.

Nevertheless, on a high after that and despite it being 3am I will not be able to sleep!
The 6 should have got a penalty, definitely, but at least karma sorted that out much better.

Regarding Hawksworth: yes, they were borderline, but how he could brake insanely later and still not depend on leaning on the other cars to stay in control and on the tarmac, tells me that grip difference was just too big and moves were still fair. Against the #3 Corvette it was legit, he just caught Juncadella out who failed to check on his mirrors (it's the last 15 minutes of Sebring dammit!) and Jack was there already. Regarding the #62 Ferrari, I don't agree he pushed him out; while he definitely forced his way in, his tracking out was progressive but the Ferrari was going off regardless because his line was compromised, and he still tried to outgun the Lexus out of the corner. There was a car width in between them all the time since both went on the throttle.
 

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