Share this article on LinkedIn Email

Aston Martin is set have four Valkyrie hypercars split across two teams on the grid for the 2020/21 World Endurance Championship.

The Multimatic and R-Motorsport squads look on course to field two Valkyries each in the premier class of the WEC next season, according to Autosport sources.

Canadian automotive giant Multimatic's involvement in the Valkyrie project has been confirmed by Aston Martin boss Andy Palmer.

Palmer described an organisation that undertook much of the design and build of the Aston One-77 sportscar as a "go-to" partner for the marque.

He refused to elaborate on Multimatic's part in the road and race elements of the Valkyrie programme, but it is understood that it will lead development of the racing car.

The rhetoric from Aston since the announcement of its hypercar race programme at the Le Mans 24 Hours in June has indicated that the organisation developing the car would also race it.

Palmer re-iterated this at the Nurburgring on Friday on the launch a of a new Aston one-make series in Europe next year.

"We will be working with a manufacturer who also knows how to race," he said.

"No announcements yet, but now we have a clear image of who we are working with and who are our partners.

"I think they will be announced in the next few weeks."

Multimatic, which masterminded Ford's GTE Pro assault in the WEC in 2015-19, declined on comment, but in a statement marking the end of the programme back in June it said its British-based race team was "gearing up new challenges, which will be revealed soon".

R-Motorsport, which races under the Aston banner in the DTM and fields its Vantage GT3 across multiple series, has never made any secret of its aspirations to race in the WEC and at the Le Mans 24 Hours.

It made much of its involvement in the Valkyrie hypercar during Friday's unveiling of next year's Aston Martin Vantage Cup by R-Motorsport.

R-Motorsport's parent company, AF Racing, is billed as a strategic partner and underwrote the Valkyrie road car, which is being developed in conjunction with Red Bull Advanced Technologies.

Its press statement confirming the launch of the Vantage Cup said that "further plans with details for the motorsport future will be announced at a later stage".

Cryptic comments made by R-Motorsport team principal Florian Kamelger at the Spa 24 Hours Blancpain GT Series round in July appear to back up the idea that the team could be involved in Aston's hypercar assault from the get-go.

"I've said since the beginning that I want R-Motorsport competing eventually at Le Mans," he said.

"Yes, there is a strong link to the Aston Martin Valkyrie project and everything else can be confirmed by Aston Martin in the future, or if I know by me.

Asked if the team could race a Valkyrie in 2020/21, he replied: "We are ready, but also having said that, it would be pure speculation to go on the date at the moment."

It is unclear whether R-Motorsport, whose WEC assault would likely be run by the joint Arden/Jota operation that fields its Vantages, would be a full factory team and whether it could have cars in time for the start of the season next autumn.

Aston has only said that it will be represented by a minimum of two factory cars in season one, with Palmer saying on Friday that it could "add some partners as we go along".