After decades away from the track, Bentley returned to racing – and to Le Mans – in 2001. As part of a three-year quest to recapture the 24-Hour Trophy, an all-new Bentley track car, the EXP Speed 8, entered the race. Despite torrential rain, the team secured third place. When the Bentley driver team of Andy Wallace, Butch Leitzinger and Eric van de Poele took to the podium for the first time in more than 70 years, they were wearing 1920s-style Bentley overalls.
The following year, an improved car with an even more powerful engine finished fourth – a useful test run for the new technology. But it wasn’t until the year after – almost 73 years to the day since two Bentleys took first and second place in 1930 – that Guy Smith, Dindo Capello, Tom Kristensen, Johnny Herbert, David Brabham and Mark Blundell repeated this impressive feat. Le Mans winners again, one of the Bentley Speed 8 cars also recorded the fastest lap. To commemorate this stunning victory, the number 7 Speed 8 was guest of honour at a dinner held at the Savoy, just as ‘Old Number 7’ had been in 1927. Even the drinks list was the same as it had been 76 years earlier. Of all the tracks on which Bentley has raced, none has played a more pivotal part in the company’s hundred-year long story than Le Mans.
In 2019, to commemorate Bentley's Centenary, the City of Le Mans renamed a street in honour of the original ‘Bentley Boys’ who won five Le Mans 24-hour races between 1924 and 1930, and their successors who took the laurels in 2003. The street has been named 'Rue des Bentley Boys'.