There are road races, and then there’s La Carrera Panamericana — Mexico’s ribbon of madness that once devoured engines, broke egos, and crowned legends. The kind of race where cars flew over crests, drivers lit cigarettes mid-stage, and the tarmac itself seemed to hum with danger. And this year, 75 years after it first carved its name into motorsport folklore, Porsche sent one of its modern icons back to the scene of the crime.
His name? Timo Bernhard — endurance champion, Le Mans winner, Nürburgring tamer, and all-round Porsche deity. The man’s racing CV reads like an anthology of motorsport’s greatest hits. But in 2025, Bernhard wasn’t hunting lap records or podiums. He was chasing ghosts.

The Race That Made Porsche a Legend
Back in the early ’50s, La Carrera Panamericana wasn’t just a race. It was a 3,000-kilometre, seven-day torture test that sliced from the Guatemalan border to the Texas line. It was dusty, dangerous, and spectacularly stupid — exactly the sort of thing Porsche loved.
It was here that a young Hans Herrmann hurled a lightweight 550 Spyder across Mexico’s wilderness and etched Porsche’s name into the global racing psyche. Mechanics like Herbert Linge became folk heroes, keeping fragile engines alive with nothing but spanners, sweat and optimism. And somewhere between the chaos, Porsche became Porsche — the small, clever German outfit that could outsmart and outlast the big guns.
So when Bernhard rolled into Mexico this year, it wasn’t just another event. It was a pilgrimage.
Bernhard and the 911 GT3: Old Soul, New Machine
For this modern revival — part rally, part rolling museum — Bernhard climbed behind the wheel of a 911 GT3, joined by Mexican co-driver Patrice Spitalier. The car was unmistakably modern, but its spirit? Pure 1954.
“I know from Porsche’s history that La Carrera was a major race with exceptional drivers — heroes like Hans Herrmann and Herbert Linge,” Bernhard told us. “This time, I wasn’t chasing results. It was about celebrating Porsche’s legacy and sharing that passion with the fans.”
And what fans they are. Along the winding Mexican roads, people lined the route waving flags, cheering, and — because this is Mexico — throwing one hell of a fiesta. For Porsche, this was more than a drive. It was a love letter to its own DNA, a nod to the origins of names we still whisper reverently today: Carrera, Panamera.
From the Nürburgring to the Sierra Madre
Timo Bernhard isn’t just another ex-racer trotted out for photo ops. The man’s résumé borders on mythical:
- Two FIA World Endurance Championships (2015 & 2017).
- Victory at Le Mans in 2017 with the 919 Hybrid.
- Five wins at the Nürburgring 24 Hours.
- And triumphs at Daytona, Sebring, and across the American Le Mans Series.
That’s the triple crown of endurance racing — the stuff of motorsport legend.

Porsche and Bernhard have been intertwined since 1999, when an 18-year-old kid joined the brand’s Junior Programme. Twenty-six years later, he’s not just part of the furniture; he is the furniture — polished mahogany, carved with history and fuelled by caffeine and tire smoke.
🇲🇽 Mexico: 100% Win Rate, Infinite Memories
Bernhard’s connection with Mexico didn’t start with La Carrera. In 2016 and 2017, he conquered the 6 Hours of Mexico City in the WEC, piloting the fearsome 919 Hybrid to back-to-back victories at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez.
“I’ve got great memories of Mexico,” he grins. “I raced twice there — and I’ve got a 100 per cent win rate! The passion from the fans is unreal. After the race, they threw a party for us right there at the track. It was magical.”
Fast forward to 2025, and the magic’s still alive. Bernhard’s return to Mexico, behind the wheel of a GT3 and surrounded by cheering fans, feels like the closing of a circle — a bridge between the fearless pioneers of the past and the precision-built racers of today.
The Spirit Lives On
La Pana, as the locals lovingly call it, may no longer claim lives or shatter records, but its soul burns brighter than ever. What began as a wild idea in the 1950s has evolved into a celebration of everything that makes motorsport glorious — speed, courage, craftsmanship, and stories worth telling.
And Porsche? It’s been there from the start, its badge a constant through decades of dust, glory, and gasoline.
Timo Bernhard’s return wasn’t just a cameo. It was a reminder that Porsche’s story is still being written — one roaring, red-line moment at a time.
In Mexico, they say La Carrera never really ends. It just waits for the right driver to come along and wake it up again.
Source: Porsche