2026 FIM World Endurance Round 3 Results
Honda HRC claimed victory in the 47th Coca-Cola Suzuka 8 Hours on Sunday, July 5, overcoming mixed weather conditions to win Japan’s premier endurance race for the fifth consecutive year. The race was brought to an early conclusion under safety-car conditions after heavy rain made the circuit unsafe, with the factory Honda team declared the winner after completing 188 laps.
The number 30 Honda CBR1000RR-R Fireblade SP piloted by Jonathan Rea and Takumi Takahashi (with Somkiat Chantra as the reserve rider) led much of the race after inheriting pole position when Saturday’s Top 10 Trial was canceled due to wet weather. Friday’s qualifying times therefore determined the starting order.
Although conditions remained dry for the opening stages, intermittent showers throughout the afternoon forced teams to continually adapt their tire and pit strategies. As rain intensified during the closing stages, race control deployed the safety car before eventually ending the race early.
“In these conditions, you couldn’t afford a single mistake, with the changing weather and all the pressure, but the team did an incredible job, and the bike was amazing,” Rea said. “My teammates were fantastic, so consistent, and I just did my job. It was a huge team effort.”
Yamaha Factory Racing Team (Andrea Locatelli, Jack Miller and Katsuyuki Nakasuga) finished second after remaining in contention throughout the nearly eight-hour contest. The Yamaha squad kept pressure on the leaders during the middle portion of the race but was ultimately unable to close the gap before the weather intervention.
BMW Motorrad World Endurance Team (Markus Reiterberger, Steven Odendaal and Sylvain Guintoli) completed the podium in third, earning the German manufacturer its first Suzuka 8 Hours podium finish after a consistent and trouble-free ride.
For Takahashi, the victory was his record-extending eighth overall Suzuka 8 Hours win, further cementing his status as the event’s most successful rider. Rea added another Suzuka triumph to his resume, while Chantra celebrated victory in his first appearance with Honda’s factory endurance squad after joining the lineup in place of the injured Johann Zarco.
Behind the leading trio, several factory-supported entries battled throughout the race despite the constantly evolving conditions. Strategy became increasingly important as teams weighed the risk of changing tires against remaining on track, while the arrival of heavier rain in the final hour ultimately prevented a full eight hours of uninterrupted racing.
With victory on home soil, Honda extended both its recent dominance of the event and its all-time record to 32 Suzuka 8 Hours wins.CN
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