
Jacky Ickx tests Genesis Hypercar, calls it 'another world'
At 81, six-time Le Mans winner Jacky Ickx sampled Genesis's GMR-001 Hypercar at Paul Ricard, confronting a cockpit with 18 buttons and left-foot braking that left him both awed and nostalgic.
Motorsport legend Jacky Ickx brought his racing heritage to Circuit Paul Ricard for a symbolic track test in Genesis's GMR-001 Hypercar, emerging with a rare sense of wonder.
Under the southern French sun, the 81-year-old – a six-time Le Mans winner and two-time F1 runner-up – stepped into a world defined by digital displays, telemetry, and a steering wheel with 18 buttons and four more behind it.
Why it matters:
Ickx's test underscores the gulf between motorsport's golden age and modern endurance racing, where cognitive load and precision have replaced raw instinct. For a man who raced in an era of non-assisted steering, confronting today's Hypercar highlights how far the sport has evolved – and what remains timeless.
The details:
- Cockpit shock: Ickx found the carbon-fiber cockpit claustrophobic, with switches everywhere. "Please, simplify my life," he joked to engineers.
- Left-foot braking: A muscle memory challenge. "I’m a right-foot braker. It’s not the same feeling at all. I had to rethink everything."
- Sprint mentality: "Endurance racing has become a permanent sprint. No room for improvisation. Everything has to be planned."
- Visual tribute: The car wore a blue-and-white livery mirroring Ickx’s iconic helmet, honoring his role as sporting advisor.
What's next:
Ickx completed three symbolic laps, leaving the garage team impressed. Reflecting on the experience, he emphasized teamwork over technology: "The principles of cohesion and sharing passion – nothing has changed." The test serves as a bridge between eras, proving that while cars transform, the soul of racing endures.
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