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Tag: Dakar 2023
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With caution as strategy, Harith Noah finishes 47th in Prologue: Dakar 2023
Yanbu (Saudi Arabia), 31 Dec 2022: TVS Factory Racing star Harith Noah, the only rider from India at Dakar 2023, made a cautious beginning finishing the opening Prologue at 47th place in the overall classification and 26th in the Rally GP class, here on Saturday.
Watch the Sherco video of Noah’s Prologue here.
Caution was the strategy for this first timed-test and the Sherco TVS Factory rider clocked 9 minutes and 8 seconds to finish 47 among 138 riders. After three days of set-up and checks, the race is on for the Sherco Factory Rally Team. The riders left and rode the very slippery 13-km prologue using extreme caution. The route went around the base Sea Camp, on the shores of the Red Sea.
Harith Noah is taking part in the Bikes top class, the Rally GP and he has also entered for the Raid Raid World Championship, for which Dakar is the first leg.
Noah from Shoranur in Kerala, is taking part in his fourth Dakar, all in Saudi Arabia. He is a five-time Indian National Supercross champion. He trained hard in USA for about two months to develop his Road Book skills. The road book this year will be paperless and will only be on the digital monitors provided on the bike. As preparation he also took part in the Andalusia Rally and Rally of Morocco.
All of the riders followed the instructions of the team manager David Castero, who asked them to remain in the background and play it safe to ensure that everyone finished this short stage. A strategy of caution that proved to be judicious as a rider who started in front of them had a bad fall and finished his Dakar a few meters after the start.
“Another objective was to also start behind the race leaders tomorrow and follow in their tracks. The riders followed the instructions well, the bikes are working great, and the atmosphere is excellent within the team, which bodes well for the future,” said a Sherco team member.
Noah’s Sherco teammates Lorenzo Santolino finished P24 while Rui Gonçalvez came in next at P25.
Lorenzo Santolino said: “The special was very fast and slippery. I made a small error, but the sensations were very good! We are waiting for tomorrow’s starting order, the day which will be the real start of the race, the start of the premier race of the year!”
Tomorrow, the riders are getting down to business with a 603 km stage, including 368 km of special. The stage forms a loop, the start and finish will be at Sea camp.
About Harith Noah
It took him two editions to learn and adapt but 6 years after CS Santosh, Harith Noah became the third Indian rider to reach the finish of the world’s toughest rally. Not only did he achieve his dream he also managed the best ever performance for an Indian claiming an excellent 20th overall position in 2021.
In the footsteps of pioneers Santosh CS and Aravind Prabhakar, the young man from Kerala, but born in Germany had a rather long journey before taking on rallies. It started on his sixteenth birthday when he was given a motorbike. A weekend later, he was racing and although he finished last of that first race, his passion grew. His first encounter with the Dakar came thanks to the video tapes his dad would bring back from his business trips all over the world. He was 5 years old then and far from imagining that he would be on the start line of the 2020 Dakar.
Part of the Sherco TVS factory team, Noah’s first encounter with the race was a hard one. He was indeed forced to retire from the rally as soon as day 3 due to technical issues. But thanks to the new “Dakar Experience” that allows competitors to carry on while no longer being in the general classification, he was able to learn and gain experience. For his fourth attempt, after again failing to finish last year, the 29-year old who took part in the Morocco and Andalucia rallies this year, will again be alongside his team mates Lorenzo Santolino and Rui Gonçalves with the goal to once again do better than his starting number 20.
“I got my first bike in 2009 and on the next weekend I was racing in the paddy fields by my house in Kerala. I fell in love with it immediately. Two years later I became national supercross champion in the privateer class. My focus was really on supercross, not the Dakar and then TVS got involved. About the last Dakar, my 3rd attempt, the two weeks got over pretty quick. To be honest I was not satisfied, but I believe this will give me an extra drive to keep pushing forward. It’s another mindset riding a stage at the Dakar with nothing to lose,” said Noah on the official Dakar site. -

From the beaches of Red Sea to sands of Arabian Gulf: New route for 2023 Dakar
There will be a new itinerary for the fourth edition of the Dakar in Saudi Arabia from December 31, 2022, to January 15, 2023 and 1st round ot the FIA-FIM World Rally-Raid Championship. The route will take the pilots from the beaches of the Red Sea to the sands of the Arabian Gulf in Dammam. Harith Noah from Kerala will again lead the Indian challenge at Dakar 2023 and he is likely to be joined by other Indians from Petronas TVS Racing.
This crossing of the country will be, in fact, a complete tour as the 14 stages will first lead the Dakar to the north-western mountain regions before heading to the deep southeast for a three-day journey through ocean of dunes in the Empty Quarter.
AN XXL BIVOUAC STARTING WITH THE “CHECKS”
The competitors will arrive in Saudi Arabia in friendly atmosphere near the beach. The new start format will accommodate the entire Dakar caravan during the final technical and administrative checks, which will take place mainly at the Castellet circuit at the end of November. The structures have been redesigned for the occasion to include entertainment and provide areas for conviviality and interaction. The “Sea Camp” concept consists of taking over a piece of desert by the sea. The adventure has already begun.
1 + 14 = 15 DAYS OF COMPETITION
The 2023 Dakar is characterised by its length, with 14 stages plus a prologue for 15 days of competition. The itinerary includes 70% new special stages. It is also the densest rally format in its modern era. The overwhelming majority of the special stages are close to 450 kilometres. The liaison sectors will be shorter, with the finish lines closer to the bivouacs, which will reduce liaison times. In total, with almost 5,000 kilometres of special stages, this edition will feature the longest distance of competition since 2014.
THREE DAYS IN THE EMPTY QUARTER
The Dakar competitors have become familiar with this immense region of Saudi territory designated as the “Empty Quarter” of the Arabian Peninsula. But forays to the marathon bivouac at Shubeyta in 2020 or loops traced from Wadi Ad Dawasir only revealed a minuscule portion of this vast desert. Thanks to the route that provides communications with the neighbouring state of Oman, a much deeper immersion is now possible and allows for a bivouac to be set up in the extreme-eastern region of Saudi Arabia. The pilots will also have to cope with the challenge of a marathon stage during the three days in the Empty Quarter.
THE “EXPLORERS” REWARDED
The Dakar has the distinction of assembling the most successful competitors on the planet and enthusiasts who set themselves the sporting challenge of a lifetime with much less pretension. The mutual pride in competing on the same route is part and parcel of the essence of the Dakar. The respective means of the professionals and the amateurs provide additional encouragement to the latter, who will benefit each day from a separate classification and prize money. There will be a list of “Factory” drivers for each category based on the results in their rally-raid careers. “Explorers” will compete for valuable bonuses to validate their improvement in the discipline: equipment, etc.
RANDOM ROADBOOKS: NO COPYING!
The principle has been known for a long time in elementary schools where teachers sometimes hand out different assignments to two neighbouring students…, which is the best way to ensure that clever competitors will not be tempted to copy. Similarly, the routes of most of the special stages will be split into two over a more or less long section, with the roadbooks of A and B routes assigned randomly. Competitors tempted to follow their predecessors without thinking run the risk of missing their waypoints and thus incur severe penalties.
BIKES: A BONUS FOR OPENING A STAGE
The sequence of stages causes a yo-yo effect among the leading riders that can give credence to opportunist race strategies. Being the first to start a stage is the most delicate position of all. It so happens that the stage victory can be perceived as a disadvantage to such an extent that some riders voluntarily forego the win to avoid exposing themselves to a quasi-inevitable loss of time the following day. This year, time compensations will be awarded.
A DIGITAL ROADBOOK FOR EVERYONE
Paper is a thing of the past. For the past several years, “tablets” have appeared in the cars and then trucks before being tested by the elite category riders. The system has been thoroughly tested and is now ready to be used in all categories. All vehicles will be equipped with this digital version beginning this year.
DAKAR CLASSIC: TWO NEW CHALLENGES
With 140 vehicles, the second edition of the Dakar Classic was a great success and highlighted the significant differences in potential between the older cars and those from the late 1990s. Thus, an additional speed group, called H0, has been added to define lower average speeds adapted to less powerful cars. There will be two new challenges: “Authentic Codriver Challenge” for vehicles that enter without modern regularity instruments; and “Iconic Classic Club” for original vehicles that participated in the Dakar in the 20th century, thus excluding all “replicas”. A selection committee will limit the number of entries to a maximum of 150.
“DAKAR FUTURE”: A FURTHER STEP FORWARD
The Dakar saw a decisive step forward in its energy transition in 2022 with the creation of the T1-U category and the spectacular entry of Audi’s hybrid 4x4s, winners of 4 special stages with Carlos Sainz, Mattias Ekstrom and Stéphane Peterhansel. New projects are being developed and progress goes on thanks to the use of bio-fuels or synthetic fuels that drastically reduce the vehicles’ carbon footprint.
