If attending the 12 Hours of Sebring has been on your bucket list, start making your way to central Florida. The 61st edition of the event marks the final appearance of the American Le Mans Series at the legendary airport circuit before it’s replaced by the unified, Grand-Am-sanctioned championship in 2014. And, like the ALMS itself, the headlining P1 cars will also be gone when practice gets underway for next year’s race. With sports car racing set to undergo this dramatic change of eras, many fans, teams and manufacturers are going to be feeling a bit nostalgic.
41 cars are currently listed on Sebring’s ever-evolving entry list, a significant drop from the 60-plus cars at last year’s confusing ALMS + FIA WEC round. Despite the reduction in  … More