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FIA World Rally Championship / Rally Guanajuato Mexico / Ogier vaults into lead

FIA World Rally Championship / Rally Guanajuato Mexico / Ogier vaults into lead

11/03/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 26042689

 

 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Ogier springs clear on dramatic day in Mexico after Loeb puncture
 
Ogier springs clear on dramatic day in Mexico after Loeb puncture
Daily Recap Clip (Clean) Saturday 2/3
 
Teemu Suninen
 
Sebastien Loeb
 
Thierry Neuville, Nicolas Gilsoul
 
Reigning champion up from fifth to lead Rally Guanajuato Mexico on Saturday.
 

Sébastien Ogier avoided trouble on Saturday at Rally Guanajuato Mexico while his rivals faltered in intense heat on dirt roads and, after starting more than half a minute off the lead in the morning, the Frenchman will now carry a 35.9sec advantage into Sunday’s finale.

The reigning five-time WRC champion strung together four consecutive speed test victories in the mountains near León in his Ford Fiesta to put him on the verge of a second season win with Sunday’s short leg remaining.

“It’s been a perfect day. I pushed as hard as I could and it worked for us. We had a bit of tyre wear late this afternoon so I didn’t push as hard as I would have wanted,” he said.

Ogier left behind a string of disappointed drivers, none more so than returning nine-time WRC champion Sébastien Loeb. The 44-year-old raised hopes of a fairytale victory at his first gravel WRC outing for almost five years when he surged into the morning lead.

However, a front left puncture ended the dream. Loeb conceded almost 2min 30sec when he stopped to change the wheel after hitting a stone in his Citroën C3 and plunged to fifth.

Team-mate Kris Meeke took up the cudgels behind Ogier. He was only a handful of seconds adrift before a spin dropped him back, although the Ulsterman doubted he had the pace to stay in touch.

Dani Sordo began the day in front and the Spaniard was less than three seconds adrift of Loeb before he punctured after hitting the same stone. He was luckier and drove his Hyundai i20 to the finish losing only 30sec. He was third, 10.9sec behind Meeke.

Ott Tänak’s overnight third vanished in the opening test. The Estonian limped through the second half with a turbo boost problem in his Toyota Yaris and retired soon after.

A frustrated Andreas Mikkelsen split Sordo and Loeb in fourth. The Norwegian tried different driving techniques and modified his i20’s set-up in a bid to stem the time loss but ended in no man’s land between them.

Championship leader Thierry Neuville endured another taxing day in his i20. As road opener, he ploughed slippery loose gravel on the surface and a series of mistakes cost more time.

He stopped for a minute in the opening stage when his engine ingested water at a river crossing and stopped. A slow puncture later in the test and several unplanned visits to ditches cost more time and he finished sixth.

Just three stages totalling 46.46km comprise Sunday’s finale. The rally ends with the Las Minas Power Stage, in which the fastest five drivers will score bonus points.

Leading positions :

1. S Ogier/J Ingrassia FRA Ford Fiesta 3hr 25min 03.1sec
2. K Meeke/P Nagle GBR Citroën C3 +35.9sec
3. D Sordo/C del Barrio ESP Hyundai i20 +46.8sec
4. A Mikkelsen/A Jaeger NOR Hyundai i20 +1min 28.4sec
5. S Loeb/D Elena FRA Citroën C3 +2min 19.7sec
6. T Neuville/N Gilsoul BEL Hyundai i20 +4min 44.6sec

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Sebastien Loeb
 
Sebastien Loeb (FRA) poses for a portrait during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Leon, Mexico on 10.03.2018
 
Dani Sordo
 
Dani Sordo (ESP) performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Leon, Mexico on 10.03.2018
 
Thierry Neuville
 
Thierry Neuville (BEL) performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Leon, Mexico on 10.03.2018
 
Sebastien Ogier
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA) performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Leon, Mexico on 10.03.2018
 
Dani Sordo
 
Dani Sordo (ESP) performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Leon, Mexico on 10.03.2018
 
Sebastien Loeb
 
Sebastien Loeb (FRA) performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Leon, Mexico on 10.03.2018
 
 
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Cool Neuville nets Sweden victory to claim overall lead from Ogier

Cool Neuville nets Sweden victory to claim overall lead from Ogier

19/02/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 25835496
 
 
 
Web Version
 
 
 
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Cool Neuville nets Sweden victory to claim overall lead from Ogier
 
Cool Neuville nets Sweden victory to claim overall lead from Ogier
Short News Cut - Sunday
 
Thierry Neuville, Craig Breen, Andreas Mikkelsen
 
Craig Breen
 
Thierry Neuville
 
Belgian becomes only third non-Nordic driver to win WRC's only pure winter rally.
 

Ice-cool Thierry Neuville kept calm in the heat of a furious fight to win Rally Sweden on Sunday afternoon and take the lead of the FIA World Rally Championship.

The Belgian became only the third non-Nordic driver to win the calendar's solitary pure winter rally and end an agonising 12-month wait after crashing out of a comfortable lead last year.

He overcame an electrical glitch with his Hyundai's paddle shift gearchange system, a lurid spin into a snow bank and extreme pressure from the chasing pack to win the four-day encounter on snow and ice-covered forest roads by 19.8sec.

"It's an incredible weekend. We didn't expect to be so fast over here this year, but the team and the car gave us the chance to fight for victory. We deserved it last year, even more this year," said Neuville.

He finally broke clear of his pursuers on Saturday afternoon and eased through Sunday's final three speed tests to head Ireland's Craig Breen, driving a Citroën C3, for whom second was a career-best result.

Breen climbed to second on Saturday morning when Andreas Mikkelsen spun at exactly the same point as Neuville. He kept his composure to hold off the Norwegian, team-mate to the rally winner, by 8.5sec.

Esapekka Lappi hounded Neuville early on until he plunged down the order after burying his Toyota Yaris in a snow bank. He fought back and gained two places in the final three stages to finish fourth, 17.5sec adrift of Mikkelsen.

A final stage mistake from Hayden Paddon made life easier for Lappi. The Kiwi stalled his i20 a couple of kilometres from the finish and trailed the Finn by 8.6sec.

After only a day's pre-event testing, Mads Østberg was sixth on his debut drive in a C3. The Norwegian ran as high as second but he slid down the order as unfamiliarity with the car and a lack of confidence in its set-up cost time.

Jari-Matti Latvala, who delivered Toyota Gazoo Racing a fairytale win last season on only the Japanese manufacturer's second rally back at the top level after a 17-year absence, was seventh after being delayed by a troublesome front differential and adverse road conditions.

Fellow Finn Teemu Suninen was seventh in a Ford Fiesta and the leading M-Sport World Rally Team driver after the squad, which headed the manufacturers' standings after last month's Rallye Monte-Carlo, endured a nightmare weekend.

Ott Tänak and Monte-Carlo winner Sébastien Ogier dropped big chunks of time in Friday's opening leg as they ploughed a path through deep snow. They were unable to regain lost ground, finishing ninth and 11th.

The championship journeys to Mexico next month for 2018's first taste of gravel roads. Rally Guanajuato Mexico is based in León from March 8-11.

Rally Sweden (Torsby), February 15-18 2018:

1. T Neuville / N Gilsoul BEL Hyundai i20 2hr 52min 13.1sec
2. C Breen / S Martin IRE Citroën C3 + 19.8sec
3. A Mikkelsen / A Jaeger NOR Hyundai i20 + 28.3sec
4. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota Yaris + 45.8sec
5. H Paddon / S Marshall NZL Hyundai i20 + 54.4sec
6. M Østberg / T Eriksen NOR Citroën C3 + 1min 15.3sec

FIA World Rally Championship (after round 2 of 13):

1. T Neuville 41pts
2. S Ogier 30pts
3. J-M Latvala 23pts
 

 
 
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Five in a row for Ogier

Five in a row for Ogier

29/01/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 25624575
   
 
 
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Five in a row for Ogier
 
Five in a row for Ogier
Carlos Sainz jr.
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA) , Ott Tanak (EST),  Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN)
 
Sebastien Ogier
 
Frenchman holds off Tänak for home win at Rallye Monte-Carlo season opener.
 

Defending FIA World Rally Champion Sébastien Ogier has made the perfect start to his bid to clinch a sixth drivers’ crown by mastering the elements to clinch his fifth Rallye Monte-Carlo in a row on home soil.

The M-Sport man began the final day of the season curtain-raiser 33.5sec ahead of the pursuing Ott Tänak following a sustained push from his Toyota rival, but he immediately quelled any thoughts the Estonian may have had of launching a late bid for glory by going 11.5sec faster than the Toyota Yaris driver on SS14 (La Bollene Vesubie - Peira Cava).

The tone was set, and with Tänak thereafter backing off to secure a superb second place on his debut for his new employer, Ogier could pace himself to the finish for a fifth consecutive victory in the principality.

“Rallye Monte-Carlo is a special event for me,” the Frenchman reflected. “I’ve always done well here – I seem to have a really good connection with my home rally – and I’m super happy to take another win.

"It's been a difficult weekend. You often have to face tough conditions here, but this one was extremely tricky. I've never struggled so much with tyre choice. It was all about trying to minimise mistakes, and I managed to make fewer than the others.

"I need to thank the team for the best possible start to the season, but it has also shown that the competition will be huge this year. It’s wide open – and I’m looking forward to it.”

Tänak was delighted to seal the runner-up spoils on his first outing with Toyota, 58.3sec adrift of Ogier but 53.7sec clear of Jari-Matti Latvala, who made it a podium double for the Japanese manufacturer.

Although unable to match his team-mate’s speed, the Finn was consistent throughout and happy to banish the memories of the Power Stage accident that cost him second place on the final event of 2017.

The Power Stage this time was dominated by Kris Meeke, who salvaged some consolation for Citroën at the end of a troubled weekend with fourth overall – 2min 51.1sec behind Latvala – and five additional points.

Meeke’s position had initially looked like going the way of Toyota’s Esapekka Lappi, but the young Finn made a costly mistake on SS17 (La Cabanette - Col de Braus), dropping him behind not only the Ulsterman but also Thierry Neuville and Elfyn Evans.

Neuville was the architect of a remarkable recovery in his Hyundai i20, battling back from opening day misfortune to overhaul Evans and Lappi with a determined effort. The Belgian ultimately fell just 10.7sec shy of similarly passing Meeke, finishing 1.0sec clear of Evans overall and 3.7sec ahead of Lappi.

2011 winner Bryan Bouffier came home eighth – the Frenchman losing time in a snow bank on SS16 (La Bollene Vesubie - Peira Cava) – with Craig Breen ninth in the second Citroën C3, the Irishman never recovering from a significant time loss as the ‘snow plough’ on Saturday morning. WRC 2 winner Jan Kopecky completed the final top 10.

Leading positions:

1. S Ogier FRA Ford Fiesta 4hr 18min 55.5sec
2. O Tänak EST Toyota Yaris + 58.3sec
3. J-M Latvala FIN Toyota Yaris +1min 52sec
4. K Meeke GBR Citroën C3 + 4min 43.1sec
5. T Neuville BEL Hyundai i20 +4min 53.8sec

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
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The official Home of World Rallying: wrc.com

 
 
 
 
Elfyn Evans , Daniel Barrit
 
Elfyn Evans (GBR), Daniel Barrit (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 28.01.2018
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA), Julien Ingrassia (FRA)
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA), Julien Ingrassia (FRA) celebrate the podium during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 28.01.2018
 
FIA World Rally Championship 2018 Stop 1 - Monte Carlo TEMPLATE Jaanus RBCP
 
Kalle Rovanpera (FIN), Jonne Haltunen (FIN) celebrate the podium during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 28.01.2018
 
Jan Kopecky, Pavel Dresler
 
Jan Kopecky (CZE), Pavel Dresler (CZE) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 28.01.2018
 
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN), Miikka Anttila (FIN) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 28.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 28.01.2018
 
 
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Tänak gives chase to Ogier

Tänak gives chase to Ogier

29/01/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 25624449

 

English
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Tänak gives chase to Ogier
 
Tänak gives chase to Ogier
Daily Recap Clip (Dirty) Saturday 2/3
 
Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm
 
Elfyn Evans , Daniel Barrit
 
Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle
 
Estonian hot on tail of Frenchman heading into Rallye Monte-Carlo finale.
 

Sébastien Ogier is just four speed tests away from a popular home WRC victory at Rallye Monte-Carlo, but the Frenchman will need to hold his nerve in the Sunday finale after impressive Toyota debutant Ott Tänak kept him on his toes throughout Saturday.

Ogier and Tänak began leg three of the season curtain-raiser separated by just under 15 seconds. Although the Frenchman had more than doubled that advantage come day’s end, the figures do not paint the full picture of a see-saw scrap that at one point saw him more than a minute clear.

The M-Sport man produced a virtuoso performance on the SS9 opener, maximising his favourable road position in treacherously snowy conditions to extend his lead over Tänak to 1min 18.4sec – but then the Estonian fought back.

Fastest on both SS10 and SS11 – notwithstanding an excursion into a field – by the time the cars headed back to evening service, the gap between the pair was just 33.5sec.

“Losing six seconds (to Tänak) on SS13 was what we had allowed for – I wanted to have at least 30 seconds in hand tonight, and that’s what we have,” reflected Ogier.

“We perhaps didn’t make the perfect tyre choice for today’s final stage – it was very dirty and we were a bit on the limit – but it’s ok.”

Tänak’s Toyota team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala briefly flirted with second spot himself – closing to barely 20 seconds shy after SS9 – before falling away and settling into a solid and lonely third place. The Finn’s cause was aided when Hyundai rival Dani Sordo crashed out of a podium position.

Latvala overhauled compatriot Esapekka Lappi in another Yaris as he moved up the order, with the younger Finn falling behind Britain’s Kris Meeke when a mistake precipitated a puncture on SS11.

Lappi spent the remainder of the day playing catch-up, with his dogged determination paying off as he narrowly reclaimed fourth spot from his Citroën rival on the final stage (SS13).

Elfyn Evans sits sixth overnight as the Welshman continues to battle back from opening day misfortune in his Ford Fiesta, with Hyundai’s similarly delayed Thierry Neuville recovering to seventh.

Bryan Bouffier has slipped to eighth ahead of Citroën’s Craig Breen, who suffered for being the ‘road-sweeper’ through the snow of SS9. WRC 2 pace-setter Jan Kopecky completes the overall top 10.

On Sunday, crews will tackle two identical loops of two stages totalling 63.72km in the steep Alpes-Maritimes hills – including the legendary Col de Turini and the points-paying Power Stage – with no service break in-between.

Leading positions:

1. S Ogier FRA Ford Fiesta 3hr 30min 30.9sec
2. O Tänak EST Toyota Yaris + 33.5sec
3. J-M Latvala FIN Toyota Yaris +1min 32.7sec
4. E Lappi FIN Toyota Yaris + 4min 38.5sec
5. K Meeke GBR Citroën C3 + 4min 40.1sec

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
Content free of charge for editorial use

The official Home of World Rallying: wrc.com

 
 
 
 
Jan Kopecky, Pavel Dresler
 
Jan Kopecky (CZE), Pavel Dresler (CZE) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA) and Julien Ingrassia (FRA) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN), Miikka Anttila (FIN) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Elfyn Evans , Daniel Barrit
 
Elfyn Evans (GBR), Daniel Barrit (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Thierry Neuville, Nicolas Gilsoul
 
Thierry Neuville (BEL), Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
 
WRC_Partner_Panel_Horizontal_V1[2].ai_2file.png
English
 
 
Web Version
 
 
 
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Tänak gives chase to Ogier
 
Tänak gives chase to Ogier
Daily Recap Clip (Dirty) Saturday 2/3
 
Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm
 
Elfyn Evans , Daniel Barrit
 
Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle
 
Estonian hot on tail of Frenchman heading into Rallye Monte-Carlo finale.
 

Sébastien Ogier is just four speed tests away from a popular home WRC victory at Rallye Monte-Carlo, but the Frenchman will need to hold his nerve in the Sunday finale after impressive Toyota debutant Ott Tänak kept him on his toes throughout Saturday.

Ogier and Tänak began leg three of the season curtain-raiser separated by just under 15 seconds. Although the Frenchman had more than doubled that advantage come day’s end, the figures do not paint the full picture of a see-saw scrap that at one point saw him more than a minute clear.

The M-Sport man produced a virtuoso performance on the SS9 opener, maximising his favourable road position in treacherously snowy conditions to extend his lead over Tänak to 1min 18.4sec – but then the Estonian fought back.

Fastest on both SS10 and SS11 – notwithstanding an excursion into a field – by the time the cars headed back to evening service, the gap between the pair was just 33.5sec.

“Losing six seconds (to Tänak) on SS13 was what we had allowed for – I wanted to have at least 30 seconds in hand tonight, and that’s what we have,” reflected Ogier.

“We perhaps didn’t make the perfect tyre choice for today’s final stage – it was very dirty and we were a bit on the limit – but it’s ok.”

Tänak’s Toyota team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala briefly flirted with second spot himself – closing to barely 20 seconds shy after SS9 – before falling away and settling into a solid and lonely third place. The Finn’s cause was aided when Hyundai rival Dani Sordo crashed out of a podium position.

Latvala overhauled compatriot Esapekka Lappi in another Yaris as he moved up the order, with the younger Finn falling behind Britain’s Kris Meeke when a mistake precipitated a puncture on SS11.

Lappi spent the remainder of the day playing catch-up, with his dogged determination paying off as he narrowly reclaimed fourth spot from his Citroën rival on the final stage (SS13).

Elfyn Evans sits sixth overnight as the Welshman continues to battle back from opening day misfortune in his Ford Fiesta, with Hyundai’s similarly delayed Thierry Neuville recovering to seventh.

Bryan Bouffier has slipped to eighth ahead of Citroën’s Craig Breen, who suffered for being the ‘road-sweeper’ through the snow of SS9. WRC 2 pace-setter Jan Kopecky completes the overall top 10.

On Sunday, crews will tackle two identical loops of two stages totalling 63.72km in the steep Alpes-Maritimes hills – including the legendary Col de Turini and the points-paying Power Stage – with no service break in-between.

Leading positions:

1. S Ogier FRA Ford Fiesta 3hr 30min 30.9sec
2. O Tänak EST Toyota Yaris + 33.5sec
3. J-M Latvala FIN Toyota Yaris +1min 32.7sec
4. E Lappi FIN Toyota Yaris + 4min 38.5sec
5. K Meeke GBR Citroën C3 + 4min 40.1sec

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
Content free of charge for editorial use

The official Home of World Rallying: wrc.com

 
 
 
 
Jan Kopecky, Pavel Dresler
 
Jan Kopecky (CZE), Pavel Dresler (CZE) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA) and Julien Ingrassia (FRA) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN), Miikka Anttila (FIN) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Elfyn Evans , Daniel Barrit
 
Elfyn Evans (GBR), Daniel Barrit (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
Thierry Neuville, Nicolas Gilsoul
 
Thierry Neuville (BEL), Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 27.01.2018
 
 
WRC_Partner_Panel_Horizontal_V1[2].ai_2file.png
Monte-Carlo escape for Ogier

Monte-Carlo escape for Ogier

27/01/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 25605198

 

   
 
 
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Monte-Carlo escape for Ogier
 
Monte-Carlo escape for Ogier
Competitor
 
Bryan Bouffier
 
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Esapekka Lappi
 
Lucky Frenchman keeps Tänak and Sordo at bay during WRC season opener.
 

Rallye Monte-Carlo master Sébastien Ogier escaped an uncharacteristic second error to remain on target for a fifth consecutive WRC win on Friday night.

He spun his Ford Fiesta into a ditch on Friday’s penultimate speed test and watched his lead of almost 40sec dwindle as fans manhandled it back onto rain-soaked mountain roads in the French Alps.

The incident followed a previous spin on an icy bend during a crazy opening night of the four-day event on Thursday, but the reigning champion still led this opening round of the FIA World Rally Championship by 14.9sec from Ott Tänak.

“It was a difficult day but we’re here and still leading,” said Ogier. “It would have been better without the spin, we would have been a minute ahead. Tomorrow must be better.”

Tänak climbed from fifth overnight, but lacked the confidence to push hard in the heavy rain on his Toyota Gazoo Racing debut. Driving a Yaris, the Estonian won two of the day’s six speed tests and was one of three drivers to take on the mantle of Ogier’s closest pursuer.

Andreas Mikkelsen, second overnight, conceded the position after overshooting a junction in the opening stage before retiring on the following liaison section with a broken alternator in his Hyundai i20.

Team-mate Dani Sordo moved up but fell back to third, after a mix-up in tyre selection and a misted windscreen delayed the Spaniard. He ended 59.7sec behind Tänak.

Toyota’s Finns, Esapekka Lappi and Jari-Matti Latvala, were fourth and fifth to complete an impressive showing by the Japanese manufacturer. Lappi trailed Sordo by 10.2sec and was just 0.2sec ahead of his colleague, who struggled with understeer this morning.

Kris Meeke was a lonely sixth, the Northern Ireland driver 1min 35.4sec further back in his Citroën C3 and admitting he needed those ahead to hit problems to give him any chance of climbing higher.

Bryan Bouffier was seventh ahead of fellow M-Sport Ford driver Elfyn Evans, who won two stages as he recovered from a time-consuming puncture on Thursday night.

Thierry Neuville, who dropped more than four minutes on Thursday after sliding into a snow bank, climbed to ninth in his i20. The Belgian has set himself the target of a top-six finish.

Craig Breen was a deflated 10th, the Irishman losing more than three minutes on Friday morning with a brake problem in his C3.

Saturday's drivers will face two identical loops of two stages north of Gap before a repeat of Thursday night’s Bayons - Breziers test. After 117.55km of action, they make the long journey south to Monaco ahead of Sunday’sfinale in the mountains above the Principality.

Leading positions:

1. S Ogier FRA Ford Fiesta 2hr 07min 15.4sec
2. O Tänak EST Toyota Yaris + 14.9sec
3. D Sordo SPN Hyundai i20 + 59.7sec
4. E Lappi FIN Toyota Yaris + 1min 09.9sec
5. J-M Latvala FIN Toyota Yaris +1min 10.1sec

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
Content free of charge for editorial use

The official Home of World Rallying: wrc.com

 
 
 
 
Bryan Bouffier, Jerome Degout
 
Bryan Bouffier (FRA) and Jerome Degout (FRA) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Craig Breen, Scott Martin
 
Craig Breen (IRL), Scott Martin (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Competitor
 
Competitor performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm
 
Esapekka Lappi (FIN), Janne Ferm (FIN) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA) and Julien Ingrassia (FRA) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
 
WRC_Partner_Panel_Horizontal_V1[2].ai_2file.png
English
 
 
Web Version
 
 
 
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Monte-Carlo escape for Ogier
 
Monte-Carlo escape for Ogier
Competitor
 
Bryan Bouffier
 
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Esapekka Lappi
 
Lucky Frenchman keeps Tänak and Sordo at bay during WRC season opener.
 

Rallye Monte-Carlo master Sébastien Ogier escaped an uncharacteristic second error to remain on target for a fifth consecutive WRC win on Friday night.

He spun his Ford Fiesta into a ditch on Friday’s penultimate speed test and watched his lead of almost 40sec dwindle as fans manhandled it back onto rain-soaked mountain roads in the French Alps.

The incident followed a previous spin on an icy bend during a crazy opening night of the four-day event on Thursday, but the reigning champion still led this opening round of the FIA World Rally Championship by 14.9sec from Ott Tänak.

“It was a difficult day but we’re here and still leading,” said Ogier. “It would have been better without the spin, we would have been a minute ahead. Tomorrow must be better.”

Tänak climbed from fifth overnight, but lacked the confidence to push hard in the heavy rain on his Toyota Gazoo Racing debut. Driving a Yaris, the Estonian won two of the day’s six speed tests and was one of three drivers to take on the mantle of Ogier’s closest pursuer.

Andreas Mikkelsen, second overnight, conceded the position after overshooting a junction in the opening stage before retiring on the following liaison section with a broken alternator in his Hyundai i20.

Team-mate Dani Sordo moved up but fell back to third, after a mix-up in tyre selection and a misted windscreen delayed the Spaniard. He ended 59.7sec behind Tänak.

Toyota’s Finns, Esapekka Lappi and Jari-Matti Latvala, were fourth and fifth to complete an impressive showing by the Japanese manufacturer. Lappi trailed Sordo by 10.2sec and was just 0.2sec ahead of his colleague, who struggled with understeer this morning.

Kris Meeke was a lonely sixth, the Northern Ireland driver 1min 35.4sec further back in his Citroën C3 and admitting he needed those ahead to hit problems to give him any chance of climbing higher.

Bryan Bouffier was seventh ahead of fellow M-Sport Ford driver Elfyn Evans, who won two stages as he recovered from a time-consuming puncture on Thursday night.

Thierry Neuville, who dropped more than four minutes on Thursday after sliding into a snow bank, climbed to ninth in his i20. The Belgian has set himself the target of a top-six finish.

Craig Breen was a deflated 10th, the Irishman losing more than three minutes on Friday morning with a brake problem in his C3.

Saturday's drivers will face two identical loops of two stages north of Gap before a repeat of Thursday night’s Bayons - Breziers test. After 117.55km of action, they make the long journey south to Monaco ahead of Sunday’sfinale in the mountains above the Principality.

Leading positions:

1. S Ogier FRA Ford Fiesta 2hr 07min 15.4sec
2. O Tänak EST Toyota Yaris + 14.9sec
3. D Sordo SPN Hyundai i20 + 59.7sec
4. E Lappi FIN Toyota Yaris + 1min 09.9sec
5. J-M Latvala FIN Toyota Yaris +1min 10.1sec

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
Content free of charge for editorial use

The official Home of World Rallying: wrc.com

 
 
 
 
Bryan Bouffier, Jerome Degout
 
Bryan Bouffier (FRA) and Jerome Degout (FRA) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Craig Breen, Scott Martin
 
Craig Breen (IRL), Scott Martin (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Competitor
 
Competitor performs during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Esapekka Lappi, Janne Ferm
 
Esapekka Lappi (FIN), Janne Ferm (FIN) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
Sebastien Ogier (FRA) and Julien Ingrassia (FRA) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 26.01.2018
 
 
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Ogier overcomes early scare

Ogier overcomes early scare

26/01/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 25595642

 

 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Ogier overcomes early scare
 
Ogier overcomes early scare
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Dani Sordo, Carlos del Barrio
 
Craig Breen, Scott Martin
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
WRC champion leads Mikkelsen and Sordo in Monte-Carlo season opener.
 

World champion Sébastien Ogier recovered from a spin on the opening stage at Rallye Monte-Carlo on Thursdaynight to secure a handy 17.3sec lead heading into day two. A number of his rivals weren't quite so lucky as patches of black ice and snow shook up the early leaderboard.

The Frenchman, who was born close to the host town of Gap, used his local knowledge to master the asphalt stages that were smattered with patches of ice that could barely be seen in the darkness.

Despite a slow half spin in the 36.69km Thoard - Sisteron stage, Ogier was fastest through both of the opening speed tests in his M-Sport Ford World Rally Team Fiesta WRC.

He was happy with his start as he went in search of his sixth Rallye Monte-Carlo win. "We knew on the first stage it would be difficult to pass the icy section. Before the spin I was right in the middle of the road doing 10kph. Luckily I managed to stay on the road," he explained.

"The information we got from the ice note crew was correct. We have some small things to improve but it's not a bad start."

Andreas Mikkelsen emerged from the darkness as the second fastest driver overall. The Norwegian managed to keep his Hyundai i20 pointing in the right direction across both opening stages but complained that it was hard to know how hard he could push – without doing anything he would later regret.

Hyundai team-mate Dani Sordo was a further 8.3sec behind as he made a positive start to the first rally of the 2018 WRC season. The Spaniard was 11.8sec ahead of Toyota Gazoo Racing's fastest driver, Esapekka Lappi.

The Finn beamed: "We are on a mission. No mistakes, that was the target tonight. The pace was not the best but it's not so easy to drive on these stages. I need to build up the confidence step-by-step."

Team-mates Ott Tänak and Jari Matti Latvala completed the top six in their respective Yaris WRCs but both men had endured a fraught opening night of competition. Tänak dropped 37.3sec in the opening test when he spun and got stuck, while Latvala slid off the road twice in the same stage and dropped even more time.

"It was very difficult. The road was icy so I went into the snow to try and get some more grip. But it was worse and we spun a couple of times. That's Rallye Monte-Carlo," Latvala said philosophically.

Craig Breen guided his Citroën C3 to seventh place despite getting it stuck when he too suffered a first stage spin. He was 48.7sec clear of 2011 winner Bryan Bouffier who filled eighth spot.

Kris Meeke, Elfyn Evans and Thierry Neuville all suffered a disastrous first night at Rallye Monte-Carlo and found themselves in ninth, tenth and 11th places respectively.

Meeke and Neuville both spun off the road and got stuck in the opening stage while Evans had to stop his Fiesta to change a puncture after only 12km of the same stage. Meeke ended the day 2m 12.7sec off Ogier's lead while Evans and Neuville were already more than four minutes off the pace as the opening night drew to a close.

The rally resumes on Friday, when crews will tackle six more mountain stages covering a total distance of 144.88km.

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
Content free of charge for editorial use
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Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle
 
Kris Meeke (GBR), Paul Nagle (IRL) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018
 
Elfyn Evans, Daniel Barrit
 
Elfyn Evans (GBR), Daniel Barrit (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018
 
Thierry Neuville, Nicolas Gilsoul
 
Thierry Neuville (BEL), Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018 
 
 
WRC_Partner_Panel_Horizontal_V1[2].ai_2file.png
 
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Ogier overcomes early scare
 
Ogier overcomes early scare
Jari-Matti Latvala, Miikka Anttila
 
Dani Sordo, Carlos del Barrio
 
Craig Breen, Scott Martin
 
Sebastien Ogier , Julien Ingrassia
 
WRC champion leads Mikkelsen and Sordo in Monte-Carlo season opener.
 

World champion Sébastien Ogier recovered from a spin on the opening stage at Rallye Monte-Carlo on Thursdaynight to secure a handy 17.3sec lead heading into day two. A number of his rivals weren't quite so lucky as patches of black ice and snow shook up the early leaderboard.

The Frenchman, who was born close to the host town of Gap, used his local knowledge to master the asphalt stages that were smattered with patches of ice that could barely be seen in the darkness.

Despite a slow half spin in the 36.69km Thoard - Sisteron stage, Ogier was fastest through both of the opening speed tests in his M-Sport Ford World Rally Team Fiesta WRC.

He was happy with his start as he went in search of his sixth Rallye Monte-Carlo win. "We knew on the first stage it would be difficult to pass the icy section. Before the spin I was right in the middle of the road doing 10kph. Luckily I managed to stay on the road," he explained.

"The information we got from the ice note crew was correct. We have some small things to improve but it's not a bad start."

Andreas Mikkelsen emerged from the darkness as the second fastest driver overall. The Norwegian managed to keep his Hyundai i20 pointing in the right direction across both opening stages but complained that it was hard to know how hard he could push – without doing anything he would later regret.

Hyundai team-mate Dani Sordo was a further 8.3sec behind as he made a positive start to the first rally of the 2018 WRC season. The Spaniard was 11.8sec ahead of Toyota Gazoo Racing's fastest driver, Esapekka Lappi.

The Finn beamed: "We are on a mission. No mistakes, that was the target tonight. The pace was not the best but it's not so easy to drive on these stages. I need to build up the confidence step-by-step."

Team-mates Ott Tänak and Jari Matti Latvala completed the top six in their respective Yaris WRCs but both men had endured a fraught opening night of competition. Tänak dropped 37.3sec in the opening test when he spun and got stuck, while Latvala slid off the road twice in the same stage and dropped even more time.

"It was very difficult. The road was icy so I went into the snow to try and get some more grip. But it was worse and we spun a couple of times. That's Rallye Monte-Carlo," Latvala said philosophically.

Craig Breen guided his Citroën C3 to seventh place despite getting it stuck when he too suffered a first stage spin. He was 48.7sec clear of 2011 winner Bryan Bouffier who filled eighth spot.

Kris Meeke, Elfyn Evans and Thierry Neuville all suffered a disastrous first night at Rallye Monte-Carlo and found themselves in ninth, tenth and 11th places respectively.

Meeke and Neuville both spun off the road and got stuck in the opening stage while Evans had to stop his Fiesta to change a puncture after only 12km of the same stage. Meeke ended the day 2m 12.7sec off Ogier's lead while Evans and Neuville were already more than four minutes off the pace as the opening night drew to a close.

The rally resumes on Friday, when crews will tackle six more mountain stages covering a total distance of 144.88km.

Find all stories, images and videos on the WRC Media Room
Content free of charge for editorial use
The official Home of World Rallying: wrc.com

 
 
 
 
Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle
 
Kris Meeke (GBR), Paul Nagle (IRL) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018
 
Elfyn Evans, Daniel Barrit
 
Elfyn Evans (GBR), Daniel Barrit (GBR) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018
 
Thierry Neuville, Nicolas Gilsoul
 
Thierry Neuville (BEL), Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018
 
Ott Tanak, Martin Jarveoja
 
Ott Tanak (EST), Martin Jarveoja (EST) perform during FIA World Rally Championship 2018 in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 24.01.2018 (Editors note: this image was created by multiple exposures in camera)
 
 
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Ogier’s title defence begins at home

Ogier’s title defence begins at home

25/01/2018, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 25583592

 

 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Ogier’s title defence begins at home
 
Ogier’s title defence begins at home
MON PREVIEW clip - dirty
 
Sebastien Ogier
 
Venue
 
Thierry Neuville
 
Frenchman begins push for sixth straight FIA World Rally Championship title.
 

Sébastien Ogier will begin his push for a sixth consecutive FIA World Rally Championship title on home ground tomorrow (Thursday) at Rallye Monte-Carlo [25-28 January].

The iconic winter asphalt rally is the first of 13 events on the 2018 calendar and has special significance for Ogier, who was born near the host town of Gap.

The 34-year-old M-Sport Ford Fiesta driver will start with the best Monte record of this year's crews, with five wins and unbeaten here in the WRC since 2014.

But the Monte's notoriously tricky mix of wet and dry asphalt, often covered in slippery ice and snow, mean nothing can be taken for granted. Tyre strategy plays a decisive role with conditions varying dramatically, often within a single stage.

Ogier warned Thursday night’s opening speed test could prove decisive in his bid to repeat his win 12 months ago. The classic Sisteron special stage, the longest of the four-day event, will be driven in darkness and in the reverse direction to normal.

“We’ll start this year with what could be the biggest challenge of the entire rally. It doesn’t get much tougher than that, but that’s Monte. It’s always a challenge and that will be the case from the very first stage this year." Ogier explained.

Ogier's closest rival could be last year's championship runner-up, Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville. The Belgian was a sensation in 2017, and led until the penultimate day, when broken suspension shattered his hopes of a maiden Monte win.

"That’s what Monte is all about; it’s a tough challenge to start the year," Neuville reflected. "We will aim to put all the lessons learned from our participation in the recent editions of this event to good use."

The rally marks the first appearance in a Toyota Yaris for Estonia's Ott Tänak, who collected two wins last year with M-Sport Ford. Welshman Elfyn Evans replaces Tanak as Ogier's team-mate.

The event will get underway on Thursday night from Casino Square in Monte-Carlo, and finishes back in Monaco on Sunday afternoon after 17 stages covering 388.59km in the French Alps.

Find more FIA WRC content HERE.

 
 
 
 
MON PREVIEW clip - clean
 
Preview Clip: Monte-Carlo
 
 
WRC_Partner_Panel.png
 
 
FIA World Rally Championship
 
 
 
 
Ogier’s title defence begins at home
 
Ogier’s title defence begins at home
MON PREVIEW clip - dirty
 
Sebastien Ogier
 
Venue
 
Thierry Neuville
 
Frenchman begins push for sixth straight FIA World Rally Championship title.
 

Sébastien Ogier will begin his push for a sixth consecutive FIA World Rally Championship title on home ground tomorrow (Thursday) at Rallye Monte-Carlo [25-28 January].

The iconic winter asphalt rally is the first of 13 events on the 2018 calendar and has special significance for Ogier, who was born near the host town of Gap.

The 34-year-old M-Sport Ford Fiesta driver will start with the best Monte record of this year's crews, with five wins and unbeaten here in the WRC since 2014.

But the Monte's notoriously tricky mix of wet and dry asphalt, often covered in slippery ice and snow, mean nothing can be taken for granted. Tyre strategy plays a decisive role with conditions varying dramatically, often within a single stage.

Ogier warned Thursday night’s opening speed test could prove decisive in his bid to repeat his win 12 months ago. The classic Sisteron special stage, the longest of the four-day event, will be driven in darkness and in the reverse direction to normal.

“We’ll start this year with what could be the biggest challenge of the entire rally. It doesn’t get much tougher than that, but that’s Monte. It’s always a challenge and that will be the case from the very first stage this year." Ogier explained.

Ogier's closest rival could be last year's championship runner-up, Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville. The Belgian was a sensation in 2017, and led until the penultimate day, when broken suspension shattered his hopes of a maiden Monte win.

"That’s what Monte is all about; it’s a tough challenge to start the year," Neuville reflected. "We will aim to put all the lessons learned from our participation in the recent editions of this event to good use."

The rally marks the first appearance in a Toyota Yaris for Estonia's Ott Tänak, who collected two wins last year with M-Sport Ford. Welshman Elfyn Evans replaces Tanak as Ogier's team-mate.

The event will get underway on Thursday night from Casino Square in Monte-Carlo, and finishes back in Monaco on Sunday afternoon after 17 stages covering 388.59km in the French Alps.

Find more FIA WRC content HERE.

 
 
 
 
MON PREVIEW clip - clean
 
Preview Clip: Monte-Carlo
 
 
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West Australians winning on world rally stage

West Australians winning on world rally stage

22/11/2017, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 24920795
RallyWA logo
Nathan Quinn and Ben Searcy flying through Rally Australia. Photo: Wishart Media

West Australians winning on world rally stage

 
In the final round of the FIA World Rally Championship (WRC), international and local drivers put on a show for rally fans in a gripping finish in Kennards Hire Rally Australia held in Coffs Harbour from 16-20 November 2017.
 
The final day of action was scheduled to include five stages, two runs through Pilbara Reverse (9.93km) and Wedding Bells (6.44km), as well as tackling the longer 31.90km Bucca test.
 
Torrential rain from the start of the day created chaotic conditions with standing water and unpredictable rainfall making the stages a lottery. Ultimately, conditions were so bad that event organisers were forced to cancel the penultimate stage, the repeat of Pilbara Reverse.
 
In the sport’s top tier, Hyundai’s Belgian ace Thierry Neuville survived challenging conditions to record his first Rally Australia victory and fourth rally win of the season.
 
Nathan Quinn and Ben Searcy win the ARC. Photo: Wishart Media

Australian Rally Championship

 
In the national championship, Coffs Harbour local Nathan Quinn with co-driver Ben Searcy (East Vic Park, WA) won the event and Quinn also won the CAMS Australian Rally Drivers Championship (ARC).
 
In their Coffs Coast Rally Team Mitsubishi Evo IX, a nine-year-old car, Quinn / Searcy finished Rally Australia in ninth place outright, in the WRC points.
 
Clearly emotional, when asked about his win, Quinn said, “It’s pretty good,” as a deluge of tears flowed like the morning’s rain.
 
“It’s such a mental build up to get here and a lot of pressure. We run the team on a tight budget like most privateers,” Quinn, 31, said.
 
WRC commentator Colin Clarke named Quinn star of the week.
 
Ben Searcy said he was impressed with Quinn’s driving ability and composure on the stages.
 
“Nathan drove a blinder. There was a torrential downpour during the first three stages on the final day and the conditions were quite treacherous to be honest. He drove very sensibly and very smart to finish the event, and he was still winning stages,” Searcy said.
 
Quinn dominated the national field in the fifth and final ARC round, winning all three legs, taking 12 of 17 stage wins and claiming first outright by a staggering 13 minutes.
 
They were battling last year’s ARC winner Molly Taylor (NSW) and Bill Hayes (Maida Vale, WA) of Subaru do who had an unfortunate engine issue at the end of Leg 2 that could not be fixed, forcing retirement.
 
Bill Hayes said it was a tough day in the office.
 
“A disappointing weekend. We’d found a very comfortable and safe pace that should have rewarded us with back to back championships only to have a small engine issue that became terminal. The crew worked for six hours trying to make a repair that would allow us to continue but unfortunately it was not to be. It has been another character building experience that will make this team stronger and better for the future,” Hayes said.
 
While the Rally Australia result was disappointing for Subaru Do, Hayes did have something to cheer about, winning the ARC Co-Drivers Championship.
 
Finishing the ARC in third and in 16th outright were West Australians John O’Dowd (Gooseberry Hill, WA) and Kenneth Sheil (Perth, WA) of Maximum Motorsport in a Subaru WRX STI.
 
It was O’Dowd’s first ARC podium, he took out the ARC2 4WD title and secured third in the ARC driver championship.
 
“First ARC podium, it’s fantastic. It’s a really good end to the year for the team, we couldn’t be happier,” said O’Dowd.
 
“To take out ARC2 was a bonus, we didn’t expect that but we will take it.”
 
Maximum Motorsport teammate Dean Herridge (Landsdale, WA) with co-driver Sam Hill (NSW), a new pairing for Rally Australia, in a formidable performance, finished impressively in tenth place outright in a Subaru WRX STI.
 
It had been eleven years since Herridge had competed at Rally Australia alongside the world’s best.
 
“I’m delighted with tenth outright, second Australian, I’ll take that any day of the week, especially since it’s been a while. WRC events are demanding and conditions were tricky, Sunday was horrendous. I was hoping that I could find some of the old form and I’d like to think that experience is what got us through,” Herridge said.

Adopted West Australian Mike Young entered Rally Australia with one goal in mind, to finish.
 
The 24-year-old driver from Balga did better than that; he was the first 2WD to finish. With compatriot Malcolm Read (NZ) co-driving in their Citroën DS3 R3, the duo put in a solid performance to finish in 17th place outright.
 
Father and son team Jason Lowther and Paul Lowther, 62, from Australind (WA) were excited to enter their first WRC event in their Toyota Corolla.
 
“It was an awesome experience to be part of the WRC. The crowds out in the stages are incredible. And they love rallying, whether it’s the world rally cars or even our old corolla. It is definitely an experience I won't forget,” the 38-year-old said.
 
Unfortunately, the duo hit a tree on the first stage of the final day, Pilbara Reverse 1, without injury. Their Corolla, however did sustain damage and while superficial, resulted in oil cooler damage preventing them from continuing.

Eight of the 20 cars, or 40 percent of the ARC field didn’t finish Rally Australia.
 
Recently crowned five-times World Rally Champion Sebastien Ogier (M-Sport) finished fourth after topping the Power Stage run in fine conditions and televised live on free-to-air in Australia.
 
Herridge / Hill. Photo: Wishart Media
O'Dowd / Sheil - ARC2 winner, ARC third. Photo: Wishart Media
O'Dowd / Sheil. Photo: Wishart Media
Young / Read - first 2WD. Photo: Wishart Media
Taylor / Hayes. Photo: Wishart Media

RESULTS

For full results, visit www.rallyaustralia.com
 
Provisional Top 10 Outright – Kennards Hire Rally Australia ARC
1. QUINN/SEARCY 2:58:26.4
2. CLARKE/PRESTON 3:11:40.5 (+13:14.1)
3. O’DOWD/SHEIL 3:18:02.0 (+19:35.6)
4. YOUNG/READ 3:19:31.9 (+21:05.5)
5. BROOKS/GLENNEY 3:20:22.0 (+21:55.6)
6. DUNN/NEAGLE 3:24:32.8 (+26:06.4)
7. MORTON/BENSON 3:36:20.8 (+37:54.4)
8. WEBSTER/PRIEST 3:38:50.4 (+40:24.0)
9. EVANS/WESTON 3:39:28.7 (+41:02.3)
10.BATES/MOSCATT 3:39:54.8 (+41:28.4)

Provisional Top 5 – 2017 CAMS Australian Rally Champion Driver Pointscore
1. Nathan Quinn 331 points
2. Molly Taylor 282 points
3. John O’Dowd 216 points
4. Craig Books 197 points
5. Harry Bates 195 points

Provisional Top 5 – 2017 CAMS Australian Rally Champion Co-Driver Pointscore
1. Bill Hayes 282 points
2. Ben Searcy 246 points
3. Ken Sheil 216 points
4. Steve Glenney 197 points
5. John McCarthy 195 points



 

 



The following table identifies home suburbs for driver / co-drivers.

Name Driver / Co-driver Suburb
Bill Hayes Co-driver Maida Vale
Dean Herridge Driver Landsdale
Jason Lowther Driver Australind
Paul Lowther Co-driver Australind
John O’Dowd Driver Gooseberry Hill
Ben Searcy Co-driver East Vic Park
Kenneth Sheil Co-driver Perth
Mike Young Driver Balga



 
Lowther / Lowther. Photo: Wishart Media
Kennards Hire Rally Australia, last round of the WRC. Photo: Wishart Media
RallyWA sponsor logos
Harri's son Kalle makes rally history in Australia as youngest ever WRC2 winner.

Harri's son Kalle makes rally history in Australia as youngest ever WRC2 winner.

21/11/2017, International, Motorsport - Rally, World Rally Championship, Article # 24903585
 

Rovanperä on road to success

 
20.11.2017
 
 

Harri's son Kalle makes rally history in Australia as youngest ever WRC2 winner.

Travel is never far from the minds of most 17-year-olds. The gap year’s beckoning and there’s a whole wide world out there to be explored before hitting the books again. 

Kalle Rovanperä’s no different. He’s interested in travel. But you can keep the gap year. And the books. Kalle’s trip to Australia last week was all about one thing: becoming the youngest ever winner of a WRC2 round. 

Provided he kept his M-Sport Ford Fiesta R5 on the road and in one piece, the odds on a maiden category success for the teenager were pretty good: he was the only starter in the WRC2 class. 

“The competition wasn’t so good,” said the son of one-time world rally winner Harri Rovanperä, “but the experience was incredible.” 

Rovanperä Jr is the latest flying Finn preparing for take-off – but he first captured the imagination of the rally world nine years ago when footage of him driving a Toyota Starlet went viral. 

He turned 17 on October 1, passed his driving test on October 2 and started his first ever World Rally Championship event in Wales just 25 days later. With Rally GB done, it was time to travel down under. 

Before the journey, Rovanperä wasn’t sure what to expect. “I only took one longhaul flight before. I was nine, so I don’t remember so much,” he said. “Australia will be new one for me.” 

By his own admission, Rovanperä doesn’t go a day without riding or racing something with an engine. Admittedly, he would be surrounded by four of the most powerful engines in the world while riding at 900kph. But sitting still for a day’s not his idea of fun. Out the other side, it wasn’t too bad. 

“It wasn’t too good, either,” he grimaced. “But, OK, sitting down for nearly one day, I think I managed it. I downloaded some Netflix, watched some films and then just tried to chill and sleep for as long as I could.” 

Rovanpera is regularly tipped as a future world champion, but for now there are no frills in his flying. He came from Helsinki to Hong Kong to Sydney to Coffs Harbour at the back of the plane.  

Harri was relieved. He said: “When I took him to Mexico, we went to drive Studebakers. He liked that bit, but when he got off the plane home he said: “I don’t ever want to do that long flying again!” 

Read the full story HERE. 
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