Why Lexus? Why not GR?
Photography Credit: Courtesy Lexus
The parent company of Lexus, Toyota, has the GR Supra, GR86 and GR Corolla as part of its namesake brand. These are cars with solid reputations in the motorsports space. So, why not go with a Toyota in GT3 racing rather than a Lexus?
“Walk the grid,” said Jeff Bal, Lexus Senior Manager of Motorsports. “Look at every competitor we’re racing against. Every one of them is a luxury car.”
Mercedes-AMG. Aston Martin. McLaren. Acura. Lamborghini. Porsche. BMW.
Point made.
Admittedly, Bal added that Lexus has work to do to get word out about the brand.
“The LC 500, if you go to the fan experience here, there are people who ask what that car is,” said Bal. “If they’re not a Lexus owner already, they don’t know.”
Bal cites the Lexus Performance Driving School, with its lead instructor being five-time Rolex 24 overall winner Scott Pruett, as one way to turn people on to Lexus.
“[It is] about 50/50 of who’s a Lexus owner and who’s not,” Bal said of the school’s participants. “At the end of the day, [school participants say,] ‘Man, I had no idea Lexus built cars that could do that.’”
Furthermore, racing provides another way for Lexus to confirm its place as a luxury brand with solid performance chops.
“This is the highest level of sports car racing in North America,” said Bal. “This is the best opportunity to connect performance with the brand.”
Making a Street Car a Race Car
Photography Credit: J.A. Ackley
Lexus engines powered prototypes from 2004 to 2009, winning the Rolex 24 for three straight years. The company then selected its two-door coupe, the RC F, as its entrant into the IMSA GT world in 2017.
“Mercedes, Lamborghini, Ferrari–they started as race cars years ago,” Bal said. “Maybe reluctantly, they became luxury brands. We started as luxury brand.”
Along those lines, Lexus began with a passenger car and then built a race car from it.
“Before you draw your first line on paper, you have to decide whether you’re going to build a GT3 car–that really has to be in the consideration set,” said David Wilson, TRD President. “What happened with the RC F–which we’ve developed into a good race car, and it’s capable of winning–racing was an afterthought.”
Because of this, the RC F needs to overcome some challenges as a race car.
“The perfect case in point is last year in [the Rolex 24], the last lap coming to the checkered flag there were two Porsche 911s racing door to door like it was a NASCAR race–they were bouncing off each other,” Wilson said. “They both made it to the checkered flag and Porsche won the race. Our Lexus would not have survived that.”
In addition to durability comes another aspect of racing: the ability to repair a car quickly when trouble inevitability occurs.
“The manner in which you service a car in a 24-hour [race] … should be factored in,” said Wilson. “The poster child for that is the brand-new Ferrari … because it’s very modular.”
Regardless of its vulnerabilities, the Lexus RC F continues to rise to the occasion.
“It’s a credit to the production car,” Wilson said.
On the Horizon
Photography Credit: Courtesy LAT Images/IMSA
Lexus debuted the RC F in IMSA competition in 2017. That makes it the oldest car on the GTD grid.
“The challenge is there’s only so much we can do with this platform,” said Wilson. “We’ve been polishing this rock for years.”
The age of the car is not lost on Lexus.
“The good news is because of the success we’ve had in IMSA, we’ve developed a level of respect and credibility with our colleagues in Japan,” Wilson said. “They’re listening to us. We’re actively engaged in in the development of our next generation of sports car.”
You may have seen the Toyota GR GT3 concept car. That won’t be the new car for Lexus.
“No, this is separate,” said Shahani of the new GT3 car for Lexus. “We’re not ready to talk about timing, yet.”
[Toyota GR GT3 Concept now in “development”]
Methodical. That’s a trait you can attribute to Lexus, too.
Go back to the roots of the brand. In 1983, then-chairman of Toyota, Eiji Toyoda, issued the challenge to build the world’s best car, code-named F1 for Flagship One. They designed approximately 450 prototypes and spent more than $1 billion to develop the first Lexus, the LS 400. It debuted in January 1989 at the North American International Auto Show.
“One thing that Toyota is great for is we don’t tend to rush and hurry things,” Bal said. “We are meticulous in how we bring things to market. We want the [new GT3] car tomorrow. But, we’re taking our time.”
In the mean time, the Lexus RC F continues to shine in IMSA.
“We’re earning the respect,,” said Wilson. “It’s got other GT3 owners coming to us asking if they can run our car next year. We’d love to say yes. Candidly, we don’t have the inventory. We have to preserve the parts and pieces that we have to service [our race cars].
“What’s remarkable is that in spite of the fact that this isn’t a proper GT3 car, we have interest from our competitors. That’s not a reflection of the car, that’s a reflection of Lexus and the quality of this organization. That’s what makes me proudest more than anything else.”