Neymar will report to Paris Saint-Germain's preseason training on July 15, something the French club had been informed of weeks ago, according to the player's father and agent.
"We had commercial and institutional commitments [on July 12, 13] ) set," Neymar Sr. told Fox Sports Brasil. "For the past five years, [Neymar's] institute takes part in those.
"PSG, with the presence of president Nasser [Al-Khelaifi] included, took part in those events. I don't understand the reason for this arbitrariness. We are annoyed by this but PSG knew about this situation."
Instituto Neymar Jr. is a "non-profit civil society organisation dedicated to social causes and serving thousands of children, adolescents and their families," according to NR Sports, the company which manages the ex-Barcelona man's career and image rights.
PSG sporting director Leonardo said those dates "were not agreed with PSG" and added Neymar would face the same consequences as "any other employee" for his unapproved absence.
However, while Leonardo added there had been "superficial contact" with Barca, the French champions had not received any offers for the 27-year-old.
UOL Esporte reported Neymar spoke to Leonardo, who presented his team project to the player. However, according to the Brazilian outlet, while Neymar praised the ideas of the new sporting director, he reiterated his wish to leave PSG this summer.
Neymar, who joined PSG in a world-record €222 million transfer from Barcelona in 2017, has three years left on his contract with the Ligue 1 giants.
He missed the Copa America, which his country hosted and won, due to a ligament ankle injury sustained during the team's preparations for the tournament.
Ander Herrera has said his decision to leave Manchester United for Paris Saint-Germain was triggered by a lack of urgency from the club in contract negotiations as well as questions over his role in the side.
PSG signed Herrera, who joined United from Athletic Bilbao in 2014, on a five-year deal after the midfielder ran down his contract.
"I do not like looking at the past very much, but there were differences regarding the project and my importance within it," Herrera told Spanish newspaper Marca.
"I was very happy, I have a lot to thank the club and the fans for it and also to [Ole Gunnar] Solskjaer.
"He did a lot for me to stay, but things did not happen, they arrived late, and by then I had already made the decision to play in Paris..."
Herrera made 189 appearances for United and scored 20 goals, winning the FA Cup, League Cup and Europa League in his time at the club.
Manchester United midfielder Paul Pogba was filmed in an apparent row with teammate Jesse Lingard on the club's preseason tour of Australia.
Pogba, who has two more years remaining on his United contract, has been linked with a move to either Real Madrid or Juventus after his agent said he is ready to leave and a transfer is "in the process."
United posted a 79-second video on its official Twitter page on Monday of players walking through Perth, and 11 seconds in there appears to be a spat between Pogba and Lingard.
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has been involved in top-level football long enough to identify a pivotal moment when one arrives, so the Manchester United manager should not be in any doubt as to the challenge he faces over the coming days. The Norwegian is fighting for credibility, both within the dressing room and among the supporters, and it is not simply about what happens with Paul Pogba.
It has now become the norm for United that their preseason preparations are played out to the backdrop of a seemingly endless saga and, as Solskjaer's squad landed in Perth on Monday for the first leg of their summer tour of Australia, Singapore and China, Pogba had already ensured that he would be the central figure in this year's Old Trafford soap opera. The France midfielder, who posted video on social media over the weekend of his personal running sessions in New York's Central Park, has already spoken of his desire for a "new challenge" this summer, while his agent, Mino Raiola, confirmed last week that his client was seeking to leave United before the start of the 2019-20 season.
United have insisted that Pogba is not for sale, but sources have told ESPN FC that Solskjaer and his coaching staff were prepared for a public war of wills involving the club and the player, knowing that every decision and every comment in the media would have to be carefully considered and delivered in order to maintain some element of control over the situation. But the Pogba saga is likely to be the easy part of the summer for Solskjaer. If he persuades him to stay, Solskjaer will have kept his best player, yet if he sanctions his departure, the United manager will instantly receive the backing of a fan base that has grown tired of the 26-year-old and his unconvincing performances on the pitch and, at times, infuriating behaviour off it.
Sources have told ESPN FC that Pogba is also not universally popular among the playing squad, with some teammates exasperated by the £89 million signing from Juventus and his failure to live up to his reputation as one of the world's best midfielders. But while there is scepticism over Pogba's ability, or desire, to make a difference, there is also a group of players at United who want to see more from Solskjaer and his coaches in order to be convinced that the team is heading in the right direction.
One source has told ESPN FC that there were concerns within the squad's foreign contingent as early as February -- when Solskjaer was still unbeaten in his role as caretaker-manager -- that the approach under the former Cardiff City manager was "too British" and lacking in continental expertise. The same source has claimed that last week's training regime was "just running, running, running," with players forced to do double sessions on their first week back in preseason following Solskjaer's decision to bring the squad back as early as July 1 to start preparations for the new campaign.
Complaints about a heavy training workload are likely to receive short shrift from Solskjaer and his coaches, with ESPN FC reporting in May that Solskjaer and his assistant, Mike Phelan, had been dismayed by the poor fitness levels of the squad following their arrival in place of the sacked Jose Mourinho last December. Solskjaer and Phelan are determined to ensure that a vast improvement on basic fitness levels are dealt with as a priority, so there are likely to be more demands placed on the players during their first week on tour in Australia.
However, one of the first mistakes made by David Moyes during his ill-fated 10-month reign as manager in 2013-14 was to focus too heavily on fitness rather than technique and the Scot struggled, and ultimately failed, to convince the players of his fitness-first approach.
Solskjaer has also travelled to Australia knowing that Pogba is not the only member of his squad who wants to leave. Romelu Lukaku is keen to secure a move to Italy with Inter Milan, David De Gea continues to resist United's attempts to tie him to a new contract, while Nemanja Matic is aware of interest from Inter and AC Milan and prepared to leave Old Trafford for the right offer.
Having allowed Marouane Fellaini to leave for China in January before seeing Antonio Valencia and Ander Herrera leave as free agents this summer, Solskjaer's squad is now arguably weaker than when he arrived, with only Swansea youngster Daniel James and Crystal Palace right-back Aaron Wan-Bissaka being added since the end of last season.
Attempts to sign a new centre-half after seeing the team post United's worst defensive record in Premier League history last season have so far failed to come to fruition, while interest in Newcastle youngster Sean Longstaff has yet to result in a bid, despite the St James' Park outfit being in a state of flux following the exit of manager Rafa Benitez.
After a dismal end to the 2018-19 season, which saw United win just two of their last 12 games in all competitions, Solskjaer was always going to be under pressure to turn the tide this summer. But before a ball has even been kicked in preseason, he is already on the back foot thanks to Pogba, the doubts of some of his players and the failure to make more substantial changes to his squad. So what happens in Australia, Singapore and China over the next two-and-a-half weeks will be crucial for Solskjaer and his hopes of enjoying any kind of success at Old Trafford.
The World Cup knockouts are here! First up, India v New Zealand at Old Trafford. Get all your live updates and analyses on ESPNcricinfo's blog (if it doesn't load for you, please refresh your page).
CLEVELAND -- On the night he hit more than seven miles' worth of home runs, a night that showed the world that he's far more than the name he inherited from his famous father, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. launched himself into the annals of Home Run Derby history by smashing baseballs in never-before-seen fashion. And that, it turns out, was tiring. Vlad Jr. just wanted a moment to himself, and when he finished answering the final question about his 91-home run performance at the 2019 Derby, he took a breath and said, "Ay dios mio."
Which, actually, summed up the night pretty well. Whether it was his record-setting first round, his epic second-round duel or his going-on-fumes final round, Vlad Jr., the 20-year-old Toronto Blue Jays rookie, will be the enduring memory of the 35th Derby. It would've been nice for him to beat the actual winner, New York Mets rookie Pete Alonso, and take the $1 million prize that came with the victory. Guerrero, like Mark McGwire and Josh Hamilton before him, instead settled for inspiring countless fans and viewers to utter the English translation of what he said exhaustedly as the evening neared its end: "Oh my God."
It's the most succinct summation of what took place on Monday at Progressive Field. Guerrero started the day with eight career major league home runs and questions about whether he belonged in the field when 181 big leaguers have hit more homers than he has this season. He erased some doubts when he deposited the first pitch he saw 462 feet off the scoreboard in left field, cleared them for good when he set a single-round record with 29 home runs in the first round and made them seem laughable after he outlasted Los Angeles Dodgers slugger Joc Pederson in a triple-overtime second-round battle he won 40-39.
Yes, Vlad Jr. hit 40 home runs in a single round: 29 of them in the standard four minutes with 30 seconds of bonus time for hitting balls so far, eight in the minute-long extra period, one in a three-swing tiebreaker and two more in another tiebreaker that Pederson simply couldn't match.
Vlad Jr. ties his derby record, celebrates too soon on potential 30th
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hits a Home Run Derby-record 29 home runs for a second straight round but falls just short of his 30th long ball.
By the time Alonso hit his final home run to win the final 23-22, Guerrero's numbers almost defied belief. He saw 207 pitches. He swung at 195 of them. He homered on 91. He hit 38,641 feet worth of home runs -- the longest 488 feet, the shortest 373, the average more than 424. He finished with 34 more homers in his three rounds than Alonso. He had the seven hardest-hit balls. After one night, he has the second-most home runs in Derby history -- and nearly five times as many as his father, the Hall of Fame outfielder who won the 2007 Derby.
"He was the star of the show," said John Schneider, the Blue Jays coach who might have had the greatest vantage point in the stadium: He was pitching to Guerrero. Schneider didn't exactly take time to admire the balls like the crowd of 36,119. He did, however, see the fruits of his labor flying high into the sky again and again and again from a right-handed swing that is equal parts pretty and ferocious. Five times in the first round Vlad Jr. hit four consecutive pitches for home runs. He dispatched Matt Chapman, a last-second replacement for the top-seeded Christian Yelich, 29-13.
During a practice round this week, Guerrero hit 17 home runs. He wasn't satisfied with the result, Schneider said, but wasn't worried either. Guerrero, Schneider said, declared that he was going to hit 30 in the first round and knock out Yelich. He came close to 30 against Chapman and blew past it in his slugfest with Pederson.
Guerrero's most impressive stretch of the night came in the middle of the second round. In a 2-minute, 1-second window, he swung at 25 pitches and homered on 19 of them. It was reminiscent of Hamilton, who, in a previous format that didn't pit players head-to-head, homered 28 times on 38 swings.
"It's pretty standard for him," said Marcus Stroman, Guerrero's Blue Jays teammate. "It's easy. It's very easy. Didn't surprise me in the slightest."
Vlad Jr. finally takes down Pederson in second swing-off
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hits two homers in the second swing-off, and Joc Pederson cannot match him, sending Vlad Jr. to the finals.
Pederson's matching Guerrero's 29 home runs to force the minute-long overtime was a tad surprising, and his following Guerrero's eight home runs with eight of his own was perhaps even more so. Pederson was taking the volume approach, swinging 84 times to Guerrero's 73 in those five-and-a-half minutes. Given the advantage of going second, Pederson could only tie Guerrero's one home run in the first swing-off and had two chances to force a fourth tiebreaker but didn't homer on either.
Guerrero laughed as they embraced at home plate following Pederson's final swing. Even if he wouldn't go on to win, he had won by surviving.
"That was elite hitting," Alonso said. "That was some of the best rounds of BP I've ever watched. That was up there with -- I think that was even better than the Josh Hamilton round because both of them going back and forth, and clawing back the way that Joc did, he had his work cut out for him. ... I don't know if we're ever going to see that again. That was special."
Guerrero tried to summon that magic in the final round. Whereas Schneider previously fed him pitches over the heart of the plate, in the final round Guerrero asked him to leave the ball slightly inside so he could cheat to his pull side. Schneider tried to elevate pitches to keep Guerrero from needing to use his tiring legs.
"Kind of did it on adrenaline, I think," Schneider said. "His last round was better than my last round, to be honest. After that second round, it was so mentally and physically exhausting, and he still put up 22, which not many people did that at all."
It more than validated Major League Baseball's choice to invite Guerrero, who entered the season as the most well-regarded hitting prospect in years. Now he has an indelible moment to attach to his name and pedigree, which is the very sort of thing the Derby should serve to do.
"My 15-year-old was all for it," New York Yankees pitcher CC Sabathia said. "Even my girls. They're really not that into baseball, and they were into the Derby."
How couldn't they be? Vlad Jr. vs. expectations in the first round was a resounding KO. Vlad Jr. vs. Joc in the second round turned an exhibition that runs the risk of redundancy into grand theater. Vlad Jr. vs. Alonso was two rookies playing for a prize nearly twice their $555,000 salaries. However high the expectations, the 2019 Derby exceeded them.
Schneider knows. Earlier this week, his wife filled out a Derby bracket and picked Vlad Jr. She asked Schneider how many to choose. Bryce Harper won the previous year with 45, so, Schneider said, probably 55.
He chortled. How quaint. How naïve. He's a coach on the Blue Jays' staff. He knows Guerrero's power. He should've seen something like this coming.
Then again, come on. This was the sort of night even dreamers can't imagine. Home runs upon home runs, miles and miles of them, from a kid with a cherubic face and blond-dyed dreadlocks and a charming smile, and the captured hearts of everyone who saw Vladimir Guerrero Jr. do what he did Monday and couldn't help themselves when they said, "Oh my God."
If Britain's Johanna Konta finds herself in a third set in Tuesday's Wimbledon quarter-final, she can draw confidence from the fact that on recent form she is likely to pull through.
The British number one came from behind to beat two-time champion Petra Kvitova to win her 13th of 15 three-setters in 2019 and faces Barbora Strycova next.
"That's something I can be really proud of," the 28-year-old said.
"It comes with match fitness, as well, with playing a lot of them."
Konta will face Strycova on Centre Court after 23-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams takes on fellow American Alison Riske at 13:00 BST.
The Briton is one win away from emulating her 2017 feat of reaching the last four and two away from becoming the first British women's singles finalist since Virginia Wade won the title in 1977.
"The experience that I had in 2017 was a magnificent one. It was something that is incredibly special to me," Konta said.
"Equally how I'm doing so far, I'm just really pleased with the level I'm playing, how I'm competing, how I'm really just trying to find a way in each match that I play."
She has faced Czech world number 54 Strycova just once before, losing in straight sets on a hard court in Tokyo in 2017.
"She's a very crafty player," Konta said. "She knows how to mix up the game. She knows how to play on this surface.
"To know... that I have the capability to stay there as long as I need to for however long, even if losing the first set, I know I have every opportunity to get back into the match."
Analysis - 'Konta has a shot at winning'
Three-time Wimbledon singles champion John McEnroe on BBC TV
I admire Konta's fighting qualities. Everything about her game is very meticulously planned out. To me she is a better player now than when she got to the semi-finals at Wimbledon in 2017.
She is mixing up her serve nicely. The team has looked back on her career and realised that variety is the spice of life and that could help her in the end.
I'm not going to say she's the favourite to win this but she's got a shot at it, for sure.
Williams faces debutant - and has a Murray debate to settle
If Konta can beat Strycova, she would face the winner of the match between Williams and Riske, who beat world number one Ashleigh Barty to reach her first Grand Slam quarter-final.
Williams will play two matches in one day on Centre Court, playing her singles quarter-final before returning to action after Konta's match to continue her high-profile mixed doubles partnership with Britain's Andy Murray.
They face American Raquel Atawo and Frenchman Fabrice Martin in the second round as former world number one Murray continues his comeback following hip surgery.
They gelled well in their first crowd-pleasing display on Saturday, but they still need to sort out one issue - their nickname.
"He did tweet Ser-Andy. I was like, 'I like Murena. My vote is still for Murena'," Williams smiled.
Seventh seed Simona Halep is the highest ranked player left in the women's singles after defeats on Monday for Barty and third seed Karolina Pliskova.
She faces China's Zhang Shuai, who is ranked 50th in the world but who has posed the Romanian problems in the past, including a stunning upset in the 2016 Australian Open first round.
"Things are different now," Halep said. "I don't want to think about the past that much. I'm different and I'm feeling different on court. This is what matters."
In the other quarter-final, Ukrainian eighth seed Elina Svitolina takes on Czech world number 68 Karolina Muchova.
The performance of the world no.3 at this week’s Korea Open was reason to celebrate for Ding fans, who before Busan had not seen the Queen of Hearts grace a World Tour final since the 2018 Australian Open. Even if she wasn’t able to penetrate World no.1 Chen Meng’s armour in the final in Busan, the left-hander took full advantage of the opportunity to send a message to the rest of the world: Don’t count me out.
That’s already a strong improvement from the beginning of the year. After a triumphant 2018, including wins at the Bulgaria Open and Women’s World Cup and strong contributions to China’s golden success at the World Team Championships and Women’s Team World Cup, assured that the Rio Olympic champion in women’s singles would enter 2019 as the world’s top-ranked player — not bad for someone who had started the year ranked no. 20. There was every reason to think that 2019 would be the same.
But from the beginning, things didn’t go according to plan. Ding withdrew from January’s Hungarian Open, citing “the purpose of protecting my physical condition.” Filled with accolades yes, but the year of intense competitions had taken their toll.
“At the end of last year, I participated in a series of international and domestic events, seeing me expend a lot of physical strength and energy,” she wrote on Weibo. “For me, at 29 years of age, it is key that I protect my body properly and I must arrange my training regime more reasonably. I hope that I can avoid accidental injuries caused by fatigue and I hope that I can adjust better to reach competitive shape.”
And then the customary appearances in finals stopped materializing. There was her semi-finals elimination at the hands of Wang Manyu in Doha. At April’s Liebherr 2019 World Championships in Budapest, she bowed to Liu Shiwen. Then there was the quarter-finals exit due to Mima Ito in Shenzhen and finally a round of 16 elimination by Hitomi Sato in Sapporo last month.
But Ding Ning is a fighter. In Korea last week, she showed flashes of the inimitable Queen of Hearts, ploughing through He Zhuojia and Singapore’s Feng Tianwei in the early rounds before ejecting Korea’s Jeon Jihee in straight games in the quarter-finals. The toughest confrontation came against Sun Yingsha: down 3-1, Ding rallied beautifully, skillfully employing her time-outs to stifle Sun’s effectiveness while mounting an offensive comeback that stopped Sun in her tracks.
When the dust cleared, Ding had turned the tables in one of the hardest fought matches of the tournament (8-11, 11-5, 8-11, 9-11, 11-8, 11-6, 11-8) — and earned her first trip to a final in a year. Even though she didn’t prevail, she signalled that she remains a formidable contender, full of possibility.
In Australia this week, at the same tournament where she last made the final before Busan, Ding will try again. And this time, the Queen of Hearts is coming in on a high.
Chinese Liu Weishan and Japan’s Miyu Kato were in top gear in their first matches of the 2019 Australian Open, recording swift victories in around 30 minutes.
Up against Singaporean Yu Mengyu, Liu was relentless and took the match 4:0 (11-9, 11-7, 11-3, 11-5). For Miyu, it was the host nation’s Jee Minhyung who could not handle Miyu’s speed of serve in another straight games win (11-9, 11-7, 11-9, 11-4).
European and Asian derbies end the same
There were early continental domestic battles involved here in Geelong, as Indian Madhurika Patkar lost out to Hong Kong’s Ng Wing Kam in a one sided match (8-11, 11-7, 11-8, 11-8, 12-10).
Europe had it’s own derby with Austrian Yui Hamamoto seeing off Czech Dana Cechova in five games (11-5, 11-5, 11-7, 9-11, 11-1). Despite the best efforts of Dana, Yui had to sweat little in a match that lasted less than 30 minutes. In other news, Portuguese Yu Fu had to withdraw because of injury, sending her Japanese opponent Shiho Matsudaira through to the next round.
Lind and Cho advance
Coming off the back of a rather impressive Korea Open, Danish Anders Lind had to channel his previous best in taking down Huang Chien-Tu of Chinese Taipei in seven games (11-5, 6-11, 9-11, 11-3, 11-7, 9-11, 11-8).
Korean Cho Seungmin had a much smoother qualification, defeating Hong Kong’s Kwan Man Ho in five, taking Cho no longer than 36 minutes (11-4, 11-8, 10-12, 11-5, 11-9).
Chinese duo impress
China’s Xue Fei and Sun Wen both impressed in their opening preliminary round men’s singles matches when facing formidable Japanese opposition.
Xue Fei beat Shunsuke Togami (11-9, 13-11, 7-11, 11-6, 5-11, 6-11, 11-6); Sun Wen accounted for Takuya Jin (3-11, 7-11, 13-11, 11-7, 11-7, 11-8).
Don’t be confused
The host nation’s Ma Lin experienced defeat in the opening preliminary round of the men’s singles event; he was beaten by Thailand’s Supanut Wisutmaythangkoon (11-4, 11-7, 13-11, 11-6)
No, Ma Lin, the Beijing 2008 Olympic champion, has not suddenly picked up his racket and emigrated to Australia; the player in question is a para athlete who alongside Lei Lina and Yang Qian has moved down under. However, like his namesake he has enjoyed major success; he won men’s singles class 9 at the London 2012 Paralympic Games.
First round defeats for para pair
Recently moved to Australia, highly successful at para tournaments, both Lei Lina and Yang Qian experienced first preliminary round women’s singles defeat. Lei Lina was beaten by Korea Republic’s Shin Yubin (11-2, 11-6, 11-2, 11-2); Yang Qian suffered at the hands of Audrey Zarif from France (11-5, 11-7, 7-11, 11-8, 11-4).
Born in Sichuan, most notably at the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games, Lei Lina won class 9 gold; in London four years later she successfully defended her title. Meanwhile, Yang Qian, a class 10 athlete, succeeded at the Asian Games in both 2010 and 2014.
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GOODWOOD, England – Porsche will put its faith in a new 911 RSR to defend its FIA World Endurance Championship titles and continue the German marque’s ongoing success in the GT Le Mans class of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship here in North America.
The race car, which complies with all FIA LMGTE regulations, is a completely new development over the present generation car which has raced since 2017.
The machine has undergone improvements in all areas and will replace the successful 911 RSR, with which Porsche won the manufacturers’ and drivers’ world championship in the FIA WEC, the 24 Hours of Le Mans and eight IMSA races, including major endurance events at Sebring and Road Atlanta during its platform life.
“Since 2017, the 911 RSR has yielded us more than 20 class wins in the world championship as well as at long-distance series in North America and Europe,” said Fritz Enzinger, Vice President Porsche Motorsport. “Our job in the development was to make a very good car even better. The engineers at Weissach have perfectly implemented this in every aspect.”
The Porsche GT Team will field two works cars in eight rounds of the 2019/2020 calendar with 2018/2019 FIA World Champions Michael Christensen and Kévin Estre (France) as well as Gianmaria Bruni and Richard Lietz.
“We never rest on our laurels. We’ve extensively analyzed all factory and customer campaigns with the Porsche 911 RSR. Our engineers noticed room for improvement in a number of areas,” said Pascal Zurlinden, Director GT Factory Motorsport. “We have made significant progress in the development of our car for the next three-year homologation period, especially in the complex areas of drivability, efficiency, durability and serviceability. Ninety-five percent of the car is new. The only components that we’ve kept unchanged from the predecessor are the headlights, brake system, clutch, driver’s seat and parts of the suspension. Tests so far have run excellently. We’re already looking forward to the first races of the 2019/2020 FIA WEC season.”
In the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, the switch to the latest model will take place for the 2020 season as the two-car program fights for the GT Le Mans title. The first public laps of the car in North America will be at the 2020 IMSA Roar Before the Rolex 24 at Daytona Int’l Speedway in early January. The first competition laps will come later in the month at the Rolex 24. For customer teams, the vehicle will be available for purchasing beginning with the 2020/2021 FIA WEC season.
“First of all, I’m really pleased that nothing serious happened to the driver in the terrible accident involving the prototype car,” said Steffen Höllwarth, Program Manager, IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship. “That’s the most important thing. As far as our race result is concerned, I’m simply proud of everyone. We very deliberately implemented two different strategies to be prepared for all eventualities. In terms of the team and the drivers, the race was perfectly executed. Five wins in a row is the well-deserved reward for the great work over these intense weeks.”
In terms of the drivetrain, Porsche remains faithful to its chosen path. The latest 911 is powered by a six-cylinder naturally aspirated engine. The highly efficient boxer unit positioned in front of the rear axle has a capacity of 4.2-liters (256 cubic in / 4,194 cc) and – depending on the size of the air restrictor mandated by each sanctioning body – produces approximately 515 horsepower.
The new power unit is the largest boxer engine to be mounted in a Porsche 911 to-date, and offers stronger drivability over a wider rev-band compared to the predecessor’s proven four-liter unit. Power is delivered to the rear wheels via a weight-optimized, sequential six-speed constant-mesh gearbox which has been made more rigid for the new model.
The new powertrain in the Porsche 911 RSR ensures faster gear-shift times and increased efficiency. Two exhaust pipes now exit on each side of the iconic 911-shape in front of the rear wheels. The new exhaust gas ducting saves weight and is aerodynamically advantageous over previous generation 911 race cars which had exhaust pipes that exited at the rear of the car.
With the repositioning of the tailpipes, space has been made for an aerodynamically optimized rear diffuser. The distinctive component at the rear of the Porsche 911 RSR now generates more downforce from the airflow under the car. Thanks to the optimization of airflow at the front and the sides, aerodynamic efficiency and stability have increased significantly, thereby further improving the use and durability of the Michelin tires during racing.
Drivability and serviceability are critical factors in long-distance racing. For this reason, Porsche placed particular emphasis on these aspects when developing the new 911 RSR. The cockpit has been reworked with the focus on better usability for drivers and technicians alike. In this regard, extensive feedback from the Porsche drivers proved invaluable. Like with its predecessor, the body made of carbon-fiber reinforced plastic can be swapped out quickly and thus ensures efficient pit processes in long-distance racing.
To give drivers further added protection, the active and passive safety elements in the Porsche 911 RSR have been further updated. The proven collision warning system introduced on the previous generation 911 RSR, allows drivers a better overview to detect approaching prototype vehicles earlier to minimize incidents during overtaking. The optimized roll cage, the FIA side impact panel in the door and cage as well as additional impact protection for the legs improve the passive safety in the event of an accident. Other features include the removable roof hatch and the rigidly-mounted racing seat featuring a six-point safety harness for the driver.
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