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Maserati GT2 Builds on 2025 Championship Success Ahead of Global 2026 Push

Maserati has never been shy about drama, but its modern racing renaissance is shaping up to be something more compelling than nostalgia. The 2025 season quietly confirmed what the Trident’s return to closed-wheel racing hinted at back in 2023: Maserati isn’t visiting the paddock—it’s moving in.

The proof comes with hardware. Lots of it.

Philippe Prette, driving the Maserati GT2 run by LP Racing, locked down the Am Class title in the GT2 European Series powered by Pirelli, successfully defending his championship crown after winning it in 2024. That’s not a footnote; that’s dominance. Ten wins from twelve races will do that, especially in a category designed to reward consistency rather than hero laps. The title was formally handed over on November 22 at the SRO Motorsports Group Awards in Venice—a suitably ornate setting for a brand that has always preferred silk gloves to pit-lane grease.

But the bigger story isn’t just what Maserati won. It’s where it’s going.

GT2, Confirmed—and Expanded

Maserati’s GT2 program is officially locked in for 2026, with the GT2 European Series returning and kicking off at Monza on May 30–31. That alone would be enough to keep Modena’s engineers busy, but Maserati is stacking the deck. The brand has signed on to the SRO GT Academy project, first announced during the 24 Hours of Spa, opening the door to something far more ambitious.

The new SRO structure introduces a Silver class, with the GT Academy title awarded to its champion. The prize? A full-season campaign in the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup starting in 2027, run in either Silver or Pro-Am trim. In other words, Maserati is positioning itself not just as a constructor, but as a ladder—one that can carry drivers from GT2 into the sharp end of global endurance racing.

That’s not heritage marketing. That’s infrastructure.

America, Finally

For U.S. fans who’ve watched Maserati’s racing revival from afar, here’s the part that matters most: the Maserati GT2 and the unhinged MCXtrema are heading stateside.

The International GT Championship will, for the first time, welcome both cars into its GTX category. This isn’t a token appearance, either. The calendar reads like a greatest-hits album of American road racing: Sebring, Road Atlanta, Lime Rock, Mid-Ohio, Road America, Watkins Glen, VIR, Laguna Seca, Barber, and COTA. If there’s a better way to introduce a European GT weapon to American audiences, we haven’t found it.

Sebring kicks things off February 26 through March 1, which feels appropriate. The place is bumpy, unforgiving, and brutally honest—exactly the sort of circuit that exposes whether a car is built for headlines or for racing. Maserati seems confident it’s the latter.

Built to Travel

Part of that confidence comes from the GT2’s growing eligibility. Thanks to the 2025 rollout of Maserati’s Endurance Pack, the GT2 is now cleared to compete across an even broader range of series. The numbers are telling: over 20 championships, more than 170 races annually, and upwards of 100 race weekends spread across the calendar year.

That’s not boutique racing. That’s a global program.

It also reflects a subtle but important shift in Maserati’s motorsports philosophy. Where the brand once dipped into competition for prestige, it’s now engineering cars designed to work—across rulesets, continents, and driver skill levels. GT2 isn’t a halo project. It’s a platform.

A Century in the Making

All of this momentum lands in a year that carries serious historical weight. In 2026, Maserati will celebrate the 100th anniversary of its racing debut, which came in 1926 when the Tipo 26—wearing the Trident badge for the first time—entered the Targa Florio and promptly won its class.

That victory established a pattern: Maseratis don’t ease into competition; they announce themselves.

Nearly a century later, the names and technologies have changed, but the intent hasn’t. The GT2 program isn’t chasing Le Mans headlines or Formula One relevance. It’s doing something arguably more difficult—building credibility race by race, championship by championship, in series where performance matters more than mythology.

The takeaway is simple. Maserati’s return to racing is no longer a comeback story. It’s an expansion plan.

And judging by the trophy count, the calendar, and the circuits now on the itinerary, the Trident isn’t done carving its name into the asphalt anytime soon.

Source: Maserati

Alfa Romeo’s New 33 Stradale Comes Home

Some cars travel the world like celebrities. Others return home like royalty. The new Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale has done both—and now it’s back where it belongs, under Italian light, inside the Alfa Romeo Museum in Arese, where it will be on display through January 6. This marks the car’s second public appearance at the museum, following its official unveiling in August 2023, and it feels less like a museum exhibit and more like a victory lap.

After a globe-trotting North American tour that read like a greatest-hits list of the modern concours circuit—Monterey Car Week, The Quail, Laguna Seca, the Petersen Automotive Museum, Art Basel—the 33 Stradale has returned to Italy to remind everyone that Alfa Romeo still knows how to build a car that makes grown adults stop mid-sentence.

The museum has placed the car in a dedicated area of the “Timeline” section, strategically positioned near a wind-tunnel model. That’s not accidental. The new 33 Stradale isn’t just a styling exercise or a nostalgia trip—it’s a statement about how aerodynamics, performance, and design still intertwine at Alfa Romeo when the brand is operating at full volume. Think of it as a thesis statement written in carbon fiber and aluminum.

Only 33 examples will ever exist, which is both a nod to the original 1967 33 Stradale and a reminder that this car plays in an entirely different league from Alfa’s production models. Each one is built using an artisan-focused approach under the brand’s BOTTEGAFUORISERIE program, meaning no two cars are exactly alike. This isn’t mass production—it’s modern coachbuilding, filtered through a 21st-century performance lens.

And yes, this thing goes like it looks. Beneath the rear decklid sits a twin-turbocharged V-6 producing 630 horsepower, enough to launch the 33 Stradale from zero to 100 km/h in under three seconds and on to a claimed top speed of 333 km/h. Those numbers feel almost theatrical, but that’s kind of the point. This car isn’t chasing Nürburgring lap records or spec-sheet dominance; it’s about delivering a sense of occasion every time it turns a wheel.

What makes the new 33 Stradale especially compelling is how confidently it balances reverence and restraint. It draws clear inspiration from the original 33 Stradale and the Tipo 33 race cars without slipping into retro caricature. The proportions are dramatic but clean, the surfaces sensual without being overwrought. It looks unmistakably Alfa Romeo, yet entirely modern—a harder trick than it sounds.

Its North American tour reinforced that point. At Monterey Car Week, surrounded by seven-figure hypercars and concept vehicles with more screens than a Best Buy, the Alfa didn’t need gimmicks to stand out. It relied on form, history, and the quiet confidence of a brand that knows exactly what it’s doing when it wants to. Appearances at events like Motorlux, Hagerty House, and the Concours at Wynn Las Vegas only cemented its status as one of the most talked-about modern Alfas in decades.

Now, back in Arese, the 33 Stradale sits within a museum that has become a pilgrimage site since reopening in 2015. Organized into three sections—Timeline, Beauty, and Speed—the Alfa Romeo Museum tells the brand’s story not as a straight line, but as a series of emotional highs. The 33 Stradale fits perfectly into that narrative, bridging past and future with the kind of clarity Alfa has sometimes struggled to maintain.

Visitors through January 6 also get an added bonus: a temporary exhibition titled “Colore,” the final chapter in a series exploring the many shades of Alfa Romeo’s signature Rosso. It’s a fitting backdrop. If any modern Alfa deserves to be surrounded by a deep dive into the brand’s most iconic color, it’s this one.

In a car world increasingly dominated by software updates, electrification roadmaps, and carefully managed brand messaging, the new 33 Stradale feels almost rebellious. It exists because Alfa Romeo wanted to prove—to itself as much as to anyone else—that it still can. Seeing it back in Italy, displayed not as a relic but as a living expression of what the brand is capable of, makes one thing clear: when Alfa Romeo decides to aim high, it still knows exactly where the target is.

Source: Stellantis

Two Cars, One Number: Porsche 911 S/T and the Human Side of Perfection

Porsche doesn’t miss details. It obsesses over them. So when a company that can tell you the weight difference between two paint finishes accidentally duplicates a limited-edition number on one of the most collectible 911s ever made, it’s less a scandal than a reminder: even perfection is assembled by humans.

To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the 911, Porsche built the 911 S/T—arguably the purest modern 911 this side of a motorsports paddock. Production was capped at 1,963 units, a nod to the year the original 911 debuted. Each car carries its individual build number on a badge mounted on the passenger-side dash. Or at least, it’s supposed to.

Somewhere between Zuffenhausen and the far corners of the globe, number 1724 was born twice.

One 911 S/T with that number went to Pedro Solís Klussmann, president of Porsche Club Guatemala. The other landed with Suzan Taher, who pilots her S/T on the opposite side of the planet. Same car. Same badge. Same number. Not exactly the sort of rarity Porsche intended.

The mistake stemmed from the most old-school part of the Sonderwunsch process: manual ordering. According to Karl-Heinz Volz, Director of Porsche Sonderwunsch, that human involvement is both the program’s greatest strength—and its occasional vulnerability. “Mistakes can happen,” Volz said, “The important thing is how you deal with them.” Credit Porsche for not hiding behind bureaucracy.

The irony? Klussmann had chosen 1724 with care. The 17th ties together birthdays shared by his mother, grandmother, and himself; the 24 marks his father’s birthday. Taher’s car, meanwhile, was meant to wear 1742, a number with no emotional backstory at all. Fate, it seems, had a sense of humor.

Porsche’s solution was peak Stuttgart. The company flew both owners to Zuffenhausen for a private, ceremonial mea culpa. There, they received corrected plaques, a framed photograph of their two cars together, and presentation boxes containing samples of their respective interior and exterior materials. The incorrect badge—the physical proof of the mix-up—was formally handed over to the Porsche archive, catalogued as part of company history while the owners looked on. Somewhere, a future brand historian is already smiling.

Beyond their brief numerical overlap, the two 911 S/Ts couldn’t be more different—and that’s the point.

Klussmann’s car wears the Heritage Design package, finished in Shore Blue Metallic, a color that feels lifted from Porsche’s greatest hits album. Inside, Classic Cognac fabric seat centers with black pinstripes deliver a tasteful wink to Porsche’s past, while a carbon-fiber roll cage reminds you this is no museum piece—it’s meant to be driven.

Taher’s S/T goes in the opposite direction, drenched in Paint to Sample Plus Rose Red. If the color feels familiar, it should. Known as “Fraise” in the 1970s, it adorned legends like the Carrera RS 2.7 and the IROC-spec 911 Carrera RSR 3.0. The shade was so compelling in this modern execution that Porsche will officially add it to the Paint to Sample catalog for the 2026 model year. Inside, Guards Red leather covers much of the cabin, turning the S/T into something that’s equal parts time capsule and contemporary statement.

And underneath all that personalization is the real reason the 911 S/T exists.

Developed in Weissach with a singular mission, the S/T is a love letter to lightness and involvement. Power comes from a naturally aspirated 4.0-liter flat-six producing 525 horsepower, paired exclusively with a close-ratio manual transmission. No turbos. No PDK. No distractions. Weight savings are obsessive, the chassis tuned for agility rather than lap-time bragging rights.

The name itself reaches back to Porsche history. In 1969, the 911 S spawned a competition-focused variant internally known as the 911 ST. The modern S/T carries that same philosophy forward: less mass, more feel, and a direct connection between driver and machine that’s increasingly rare in today’s performance-car landscape.

In the end, the duplicated number didn’t cheapen the 911 S/T. If anything, it added another layer to its story. These cars aren’t just collections of carbon fiber and carefully calibrated steering feel—they’re artifacts of a company that still does things by hand, still invites customers into its history, and still believes that owning a Porsche should feel personal.

Even when the numbers don’t quite add up the first time.

Source: Porsche