Talk about throwing down the gauntlet to Ferrari, Toyota, Peugeot and the rest. Porsche’s announcement that Team Penske – America’s most successful racing organisation – will run its return to premier division sports car racing from 2023 only reinforces what was always going to be a formidable global campaign from endurance motorsport’s greatest car maker.

It absolutely makes sense, too, of course – on a number of counts. First, these giants have a wealth of joint experience and shared heritage, dating back to the glory days of Can-Am in the early 1970s but also incorporating a super-successful American Le Mans Series bid with the LMP1-beating LMP2 RS Spyder in the first decade of the 21st century.

More important, the collaboration matters on a practical level. The technical and cost restrictions of the LMDh sub-category of the LMH class revolve around LMP2 chassis, a spec hybrid system and standard electronics that only leave manufacturers scope for only limited engine and aerodynamic development – which is precisely why so many major automotive players are being attracted to this relatively cut-price sports car reboot. That means team expertise and best practice could make all the difference to results on the race track.

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Audi, Porsche’s sibling brand under the Volkswagen Group umbrella, has already announced the two brands will share the same underpinnings for its two-for-the-price-of-one bargain LMDh entries. With that in mind, Porsche’s deal with Team Penske – an organisation renowned for its professionalism on whichever motorsport field it competes – should be considered a major coup. Weissach has a guaranteed, built-in edge before a wheel has turned.