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Inside Rolex’s pursuit of glory on the world’s toughest racetracks

Tatler Hong Kong

更新於 10月15日06:20 • 發布於 10月14日07:22 • Amrita Katara

Endurance racing strips away all illusions. When a race lasts 24 hours, there’s nowhere to hide—not for the machines and certainly not for the drivers. Success demands far more than which team has the fastest car or the most talented driver; this game is all about consistency. Rolex has built its motorsport reputation on recognising precisely this achievement and partnering with the world’s most prestigious and demanding endurance challenges.

Since becoming the official timepiece of the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) in 2016, Rolex has witnessed first-hand how the sport is about far more than individual achievement—it demands collective excellence. This timing partnership extends across eight races spanning Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and North and South America, a global stage where the sport’s fundamental truth becomes apparent: no driver wins alone. Nine-time Le Mans winner and Rolex Testimonee Tom Kristensen believes endurance racing success relies on “responsibility, respect, communication and faith in your team”, principles mirroring Rolex’s collaborative watchmaking process.

See also: Behind the scenes: exploring Audemars Piguet’s role in supporting Montreux Jazz Festival’s legendary stage for musicians

24 Hours of Le Mans in 2024 (Photo: Courtesy of Rolex)

24 Hours of Le Mans in 2024 (Photo: Courtesy of Rolex)

Both disciplines push engineering boundaries while maintaining reliability under extreme conditions. The WEC’s commitment since 2022 to 100 per cent renewable fuel reflects Rolex’s own pursuit of innovations that extend beyond immediate commercial interests. Hybrid engines, advanced brake systems and safety technologies developed on endurance racing circuits eventually benefit everyday automotive applications—much as Rolex’s chronometer innovations have influenced precision timekeeping across industries. Rolex’s motorsport heritage traces back to Sir Malcolm Campbell’s 1930s land speed records on Daytona Beach, where he reached record-breaking speeds of 272 mph (438 km/h) wearing a Rolex Oyster on his wrist. That foundation of demonstrating peak performance under extreme conditions continues to inform the brand’s approach to endurance racing partnerships. The relationship transcends simple sponsorship into something approaching philosophical alignment.

As the 2025 WEC season unfolds across continents, the sport’s essence remains unchanged: victory emerges from the intersection of human determination, technological innovation and collective effort. In a discipline where success depends as much on what happens in the pits as on the track, Rolex’s recognition of the complete journey—not just the final result—reflects an understanding that true achievement rarely arrives alone. The crown may sit on one head, but placing it there requires many hands.

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