De Oliveira had to give up ByKolles Le Mans seat
SUPER GT driver Joao Paulo de Oliveira would have driven in this year's Le Mans 24 Hours for the ByKolles LMP1 team without the travel restrictions introduced as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

The 2010 Formula Nippon champion and long-time Nissan GT500 driver revealed he tested the ByKolles ENSO CLM P1/01 last year and that plans were also made for him to be part of the team's line-up for the preceding FIA World Endurance Championship round at Spa.
But Japan's strict immigration rules prevented de Oliveira from taking up the seat, as leaving the country would have prevented him from re-entering and honouring his commitments with the Kondo Racing GT300 team this season.
Instead, former DTM champion Bruno Spengler was chosen to join ByKolles regulars Tom Dillmann and Oliver Webb for the French endurance classic on September 19-20.
"I tested the car last year at Brno alongside Tom Dillmann," de Oliveira told Motorsport.com. "It was fantastic, the team was very happy with me and excited. And we agreed that I was going to race with them this year at Spa and Le Mans.
"And then all this mess [happened], especially in Japan not being able to leave the country and come back. If I was able to come back to Japan, it wouldn’t be a problem. But if I left now I couldn’t race again in SUPER GT the rest of this year, so it’s a no-no.

Kiyoto Fujinami, Joao Paulo de Oliveira(#56 Kondo Racing GT-R)
Photo by: Tomohiro Yoshita
"It's very unfortunate because it was my first real opportunity to race in Le Mans, which I’ve always wanted to do."
Asked if he would target a Le Mans debut in 2021, de Oliveira replied: "Yeah. I’ve always had a good relationship with the team, I know Colin [Kolles] from way back in the past because I drove for him in [German] Formula 3 in 2002.
"We will keep in touch and we’ll see how things go on into next year. It’s tough times; the pandemic means everything is restricted on budgets. I think once the dust settles, we’ll know a bit more. It’s very hard to make plans for next year right now."
Since leaving Nissan's GT500 stable at the end of 2018, de Oliveira has tried his hand in a number of categories outside of Japan, including the Intercontinental GT Challenge, the FIA World Touring Car Cup and the Nurburgring 24 Hours.
Asked if he could see his future racing internationally, the Brazilian said: "I want to have a good year and see what options I have for next year, but I definitely want to fight for a championship next year, be it here [in Japan] or in Europe.
"We’ll see. It’s hard to speculate without knowing the options that are on the table, but I’m working towards going higher, not staying where I am. That’s for sure."

Joao Paulo de Oliveira, KC Motorgroup Honda Civic TCR
Photo by: WTCR

Previous article
Le Mans 24 Hours to be held without fans in 2020
Next article
Why Le Mans magic will miss a crucial ingredient in 2020

About this article
Series | Le Mans , Super GT , WEC |
Drivers | Joao Paulo de Oliveira |
Teams | Kolles Racing |
Author | Jamie Klein |
De Oliveira had to give up ByKolles Le Mans seat
Trending
1988: The number 2 Jaguar wins Le Mans
Entry list for the 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans
Le Mans: Dan Gurney - Le Mans 1967
Why Ferrari is ending its 50-year top-flight sportscar racing exile
Making a return to top-flight sportscar racing after 50 years away, Ferrari will enter the Le Mans Hypercar ranks in 2023. The Italian marque denies the link with Formula 1's new cost cap that frees up resources, but it's certainly no coincidence...
Oliver Gavin's Corvette Racing highlights
Oliver Gavin has stepped down from the full-time Corvette Racing line-up after a stellar career with the team spanning nearly 20 years. He looks back on a stint that encompassed, among other successes, five Le Mans 24 Hours victories.
How Tandy joined an exclusive club of endurance legends
Victory at last year's Spa 24 Hours meant Nick Tandy had completed the unofficial sextuple crown of the world's six biggest endurance races, becoming the first Briton to do so. Ahead of his fresh start with Corvette Racing, he explains how he did it…
The cherished curios kept by motorsport's professionals at home
Keeping trophies and momentos of key triumphs is par for the course for motorsport professionals, but what are the most cherished souvenirs picked up by the drivers and engineers who have seen and done it all?
The Porsche icon that forged sportscar racing's greatest era
Porsche is returning to the top class of Le Mans with an LMDh prototype that it hopes will write its next successful chapter in sportscar racing. But it will have to go some to emulate its 956/962, a car which defines the Group C age more than any other.
How Tom Kristensen forged his ‘Mr Le Mans’ legend
He is synonymous with success at the Circuit de la Sarthe, but Tom Kristensen's sportscar legacy amounts to much more than his record-breaking nine Le Mans wins, as the most successful driver ever at Sebring and a world champion to boot…
Why Audi’s shock return promises a new age for sportscars
OPINION: The news that Audi will return to Le Mans means we'll at last get to see the fight promised in 2012 against Peugeot and Toyota. It also gives LMDh a tangible form, which could open the floodgates for more like-minded marques to follow suit…
The eternal debate revived after the 2019/20 WEC season
It may have been missed amid the clamour over Lewis Hamilton's seventh F1 title, but Britain had another world champion crowned last weekend. Mike Conway's WEC crown raises an old conundrum - does title glory make up for the pain of Le Mans defeat?