Tag: WRC, Rally

  • Jan Solans wins FIA Junior WRC 2019 Championship

    Jan Solans wins FIA Junior WRC 2019 Championship

    Jan Solans, Mauro Barreiro on the podium after winning the Jr WRC 2019 championship on Sunday. FIA images

    Wales, 6 Oct 2019: Jan Solans has made FIA Junior WRC history, winning the 2019 championship and Wales Rally GB, he becomes one half of the only pair of sibling champions in Junior WRC. His brother Nil Solans won the championship in 2017.

    The Spaniard wins a career-transforming prize package. He receives free registration for the 2020 WRC2 category in his own, brand new, EcoBoost-powered M-Sport Fiesta R5 MkII with 200 Pirelli tyres and five free WRC2 entries for the 2020 FIA World Rally Championship.

    Mauro Barreiro, co-driver for Solans, has also been crowned FIA Junior WRC co-drivers Champion.

    A Champion’s drive

    Solans delivered a level-headed but supreme performance on Wales Rally GB, becoming a force to be reckoned with for Rally victory from the get go. Tom Kristensson was locked in duel for the championship with Solans throughout Friday before suffering a puncture at the end of the morning loop on Saturday, losing over three minutes to Solans. From that moment onwards, Solans changed his strategy with the sole focus of bringing his EcoBoost-powered M-Sport Fiesta R2 home to clinch victory on Wales Rally GB and claim the biggest prize in rallying, the FIA Junior WRC Drivers Championship.

    He joins the likes of WRC stars Sebastien Loeb, Dani Sordo, Sebastien Ogier, Craig Breen, Elfyn Evans and Pontus Tidemand.

    The champion’s season

    Solans has had an incredible season throughout 2019, taking an impressive podium at the season opener on Rally Sweden. Tour de Corse was a rally where he had his sights set on victory but suffered a puncture early on in the rally and immediately turned his attention to racking up stage win points on his way to fourth position. Sardinia was where Solans emerged as a true contender for the championship, dicing for stage wins and the lead with Dennis Radstrom. It was a battle he came out on top of, winning the rally and claiming the championship lead. The fourth round of the championship was held on Rally Finland where the Spaniard claimed a respectable second position and added more stage win points to his tally. Heading into Wales Rally GB, Solans had 24 stage win points to his name and was just one-point shy of the championship lead.

    His pace and determination to push for stage wins has caught the attention of many throughout the WRC service park, and it certainly bodes well for his 2020 WRC2 campaign.

    Jan Solans, 2019 FIA Junior WRC Champion, said: “It feels amazing after winning my first WRC category title and have some many people to thank for their support through this season. Hopefully next year will be a great season in WRC2 which I’m really looking forward to.”

    FIA Junior WRC Championship Manager, Maciej Woda, said: “Huge congratulations to Jan and Mauro – amazing result from this duo in their first season in the WRC. It is a very well deserved win in a very competitive Championship. I am hugely impressed with his speed and I can see Jan being serious contender in 2020 WRC2.

    “I would like to thank and congratulate all Junior WRC drivers this year for very friendly and very fair competition, which is what makes Junior WRC so special.

    “Thank you Jan and congratulations!”

  • Flash: Ott Tanak-Martin Jarveoja claim Rally GB

    Flash: Ott Tanak-Martin Jarveoja claim Rally GB

    Ott Tanak, Jarveoja win Rally GB on Sunday. An FIA image

    Wales, 6 Oct 2019: Ott Tänak and Martin Järveoja have claimed victory for Toyota on Rally GB. They finished 10.9 seconds ahead of Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul of Hyundai, while Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia completed the podium for Citroën.

    By also winning the Power Stage, Tänak now leads the drivers’ standings by 28 points over Ogier and 41 over Neuville. Toyota has reduced the gap to Hyundai in the manufacturers’ championship to eight points.

    Kalle Rovanperä has taken the FIA WRC 2 Pro win in ninth overall in his Škoda, provisionally securing the drivers’ championship in the category.

    Petter Solberg has won FIA WRC 2 and finished 10th overall in the 2003 World Champion’s farewell event.

    Jan Solans is provisionally the FIA Junior WRC champion after winning the final round of the season in the category.

    All results are subject to final FIA confirmation. More to come.

  • Jan Solans close to FIA Junior WRC title after drama-filled Satruday: Wales Rally GB

    Jan Solans close to FIA Junior WRC title after drama-filled Satruday: Wales Rally GB

    An FIA Jr WRC image

    Wales, 6Oct 2019: Jan Solans has one hand firmly on the 2019 FIA Junior WRC Championship after a drama-filled Saturday that saw Tom Kristensson suffer a major setback in his bid for championship glory.

    American Sean Johnston is set to record the best result of his career with a podium position and collect fourth in the championship in a major upset, displacing Roland Poom who was fourth heading into Wales Rally GB.

    Home favourite Tom Williams ended his day prematurely on the opening stage as he sent his M-Sport Fiesta R2T rolling out of a sweeping right hander eventually coming to rest in a treeline bordering the stage.

    Kristensson closed the gap to Solans by 4.1 seconds on the opening stage of Saturday keeping his championship hopes alive while Radstrom bounced back from a disappointing Friday to take the first stage win of the day.

    Solans struck back on SS12, doubling his lead to 24 seconds and earning an additional championship point while Kristensson finished the stage fourth as Roland Poon delivered a top-three stage time.

    SS13 was where Kristensson’s championship fight fell apart. He suffered a puncture 10.5 km into the stage losing three minutes and three seconds thanks to debris trapped in the wheel that needed changing.

    Solans went on to cruise through the rest of the day’s stages thanks to his sizeable cushion over his Swedish rival who immediately regrouped after his puncture. Kristensson was determined to continue and be the only driver to finish on the podium at every round of the 2019 Junior WRC Championship.

    If Kristensson were to finish in second, the position he currently occupies, he would win the 2019 FIA Junior WRC Rookie Award and earn €15,000 to put towards his 2020 Junior WRC campaign.

    Despite crashing out of the championship race early in the day on Friday, Dennis Rådström returned to fine form on Saturday, taking a total of five stage wins and a clean sweep of stage wins in the afternoon loop.

    The fight for the final top five positions in the rally began with Fabrizio Zaldivar in fourth and Enrico Oldrati fifth. By the time of the tyre fitting zone after SS13 the pair had maintained position but by the conclusion of the second pass on Sweet Lamb, the order began to change. Oldrati suffered a puncture, losing in excess of four minutes, promoting American rookie Ryan Booth to the final top five position. Stage 16 saw Booth relegated to sixth just as quickly as he was promoted due to an electrical issue seeing Oldrati reclaim fifth position. The drama continued on the following stage when Zaldivar left the stage and found himself in a ditch, with no spectators around to help recover him, he retired from the stage. Remarkably he only lost one position by the conclusion of the day and will resume restart Wales Rally GB on Sunday in fifth with Oldrati now occupying fourth.

    Jan Solans said: “We are now in a very comfortable lead so we need to take this car to the finish line and try to avoid mistakes. We need to keep going and focussed on our own rally without making mistakes and arrive at the finish line on the last stage tomorrow. The championship is in my hands now so it’s a little bit of pressure, but we just need to keep our concentration.”

  • Ott Tanak extends his lead as title race reaches fever pitch: Wales Rally GB

    Ott Tanak extends his lead as title race reaches fever pitch: Wales Rally GB

    Ott Tanak leads after Saturday. An FIA image

    Wales, 5 Oct 2019: Estonian ace Ott Tänak extended his lead of Wales Rally GB to 11 seconds on the toughest leg of the event.

    The Toyota Yaris WRC driver battled through the day’s classic fast and flowing stages in the forests of mid-Wales to head into the final leg with his fellow FIA World Rally Championship title protagonists in hot pursuit.

    Tänak adapted well to the inclement conditions to ensure the fight for the lead would swing in his favour, doubling his slender overnight advantage over title rival Thierry Neuville. The hard-charging Hyundai i20 WRC driver threw his hat into the ring from the opening stage of the day, first overhauling Toyota driver Kris Meeke and then six-time FIA World Rally champion Sébastien Ogier.

    The Citroën C3 WRC driver admitted he was ‘right on the limit’ and ‘couldn’t do any more’ as he dropped from the second spot he held overnight, whilst in contrast, Neuville bolstered his chances of remaining in the three-way battle for the WRC title.

    With the trio of title adversaries now locked in a titanic battle in the podium positions, tomorrow’s finale is likely to play a major role in the destination of this year’s WRC crown.

    Kris Meeke, who led for virtually all of Friday, started 3.6sec off the lead but could not reproduce the same speed on faster and wider roads in his Yaris. He ended 26.5sec behind team-mate Tänak, but in a vital points-paying position for Toyota’s manufacturers’ title challenge.

    Andreas Mikkelsen won a stage en route to retaining fifth in his i20. The Norwegian came under fierce pressure from Elfyn Evans, who won all three morning stages in his Ford Fiesta. The Welshman was less dominant this afternoon but was only 4.5sec adrift tonight.

    Team-mate Teemu Suninen was more than two minutes further back after losing time when he crashed off the road and punctured a tyre. Losing his Fiesta’s front splitter later cost aerodynamic downforce and more time.

    Pontus Tidemand, Craig Breen and FIA WRC 2 Pro leader Kalle Rovanperä completed the leaderboard.

    In the FIA WRC 2 class, rally legend Petter Solberg leads the field on his farewell tour, ahead of Frenchmen Pierre-Louis Loubet – only 12.5 seconds behind – and Adrien Fourmaux.

    Jan Solans is the leader of FIA Junior WRC, over three minutes ahead of his closest rival Kristensson, who sustained a puncture. The Spaniard was never headed during Saturday’s challenging stages in Britain and is now within reach of the championship’s title.

    Breen dropped five minutes after a spectacular roll this morning, the Irishman blaming an over optimistic pace note. He struggled through the rest of the day with a cracked windscreen hampering visibility.

    Sunday’s finale returns to north Wales. Two loops of two forest stages sandwich an asphalt test around the rocky Great Orme headland on the edge of host town Llandudno. It totals 38.42km and the final Power Stage offers bonus points to the fastest five drivers.

    2019 Wales Rally GB – Unofficial Results after Section 6:

    1. Ott Tänak (EST) / Martin Järveoja (EST) Toyota Yaris WRC 2hr 42min 2.7sec
    2. Thierry Neuville (BEL) / Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2hr 42min 13.7sec
    3. Sébastien Ogier (FRA) / Julien Ingrassia (FRA) Citroën C3 WRC 2hr 42min 20.0sec
    4. Kris Meeke (GBR) / Sebastian Marshall (GBR) Toyota Yaris WRC 2hr 42min 29.2sec
    5. Andreas Mikkelsen (NOR) / Anders Jaeger-Amland (NOR) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2hr 42min 49.6sec
    6. Elfyn Evans (GBR) / Scott Martin (GBR) Ford Fiesta WRC 2hr 42min 54.1sec
    7. Teemu Suninen (FIN) / Marko Salminen (FIN) Ford Fiesta WRC 2hr 45min 10.6sec
    8. Pontus Tidemand (SWE) / Ola Floene (NOR) Ford Fiesta WRC 2hr 47min 02.3sec
    9. Craig Breen (IRL) / Paul Nagle (IRL) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2hr 51min 18.7sec
    10. Kalle Rovanperä (FIN) / Jonne Halttunen (FIN) Škoda Fabia R5 Evo 2hr 51min 32.9sec
  • Sebastian Ogier wins Rally Turkey: WRC

    Sebastian Ogier wins Rally Turkey: WRC

    Sebastian Ogier wins Rally Turkey with codriver Ingrassia. An FIA image

    Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia managed to throw the FIA World Rally Championship title race wide open again after claiming a priceless maiden victory in Rally Turkey on Sunday.

    Needing to secure maximum points to realistically continue his challenge for a seventh successive world title, the Citroën driver benefited from the electrical misfortune that plagued series leader Ott Tänak and an accident that cost Thierry Neuville valuable minutes on Saturday.

    By picking up an additional three bonus points on the final Power Stage, Ogier now heads to the remaining three rounds of this year’s championship 17 points behind the leading Estonian after starting the weekend 40 adrift.

    Esapekka Lappi took the fight to his triumphant team-mate from the opening gravel stage. The Finn led from stages three to 11, secured three stage wins and, despite an overshoot and a spin, delivered an impressive performance to give the French manufacturer a first one-two finish since Kris Meeke and Mads Østberg prevailed in Argentina in 2015 with a pair of DS3 WRCs.

    The 34.7-second win was a 47th career WRC success for Ogier and a first since Mexico in early March this year.

    The final morning developed into a procession with the three title contenders conserving their tyres for a final Power Stage push.

    Hyundai’s Andreas Mikkelsen delivered vital points for the Korean manufacturer with third overall. The Norwegian claimed three stage wins in his i20 and was easily the class of the rest of the field behind the Citroën duo.

    M-Sport Ford World Rally Team’s Teemu Suninen’s challenge for the podium fizzled out on the final morning, but the Finn was able to deliver fourth place in Turkey for a second successive year.

    Fifth overall for Spaniard Dani Sordo handed Hyundai crucial points for the Manufacturers’ Championship and enabled the team to move 19 clear of the Toyota Team. The Toyotas of both Jari-Matti Latvala and Kris Meeke reached the finish in sixth and seventh overall. Latvala recorded three stage wins and Meeke one.

    Thierry Neuville conserved his tyres on the final morning to challenge for the Power Stage win and the Belgian collected four bonus points to add to his eighth overall, an accident on Saturday morning potentially wrecking his title dream for another season.

    M-Sport Ford’s Pontus Tidemand delivered a measured drive to ninth place in the second of the works Fords and WRC leader Ott Tänak was last of the factory team drivers after his electrical woes on Saturday. The Estonian opted to take no spare wheel in his Yaris for a flat out push on the Power Stage and he at least salvaged a maximum five bonus points from a train-wreck of a weekend as far as his title aspirations were concerned.

    England’s Gus Greensmith returned to the FIA WRC 2 Pro section after recent forays in an M-Sport Ford Fiesta WRC and repaid the team’s loyalty with maximum points in his category and 10th overall, despite an accident after the flying finish of SS16 that left the Ford looking decidedly worse for wear at the finish.

    Both the Škoda Fabia R5 Evos of Jan Kopecký and Kalle Rovanperä suffered a series of punctures during the weekend and had to settle for second and third in FIA WRC 2 Pro, the former finishing as runner-up in 11th overall – 29.4 seconds behind Greensmiith – after leading the category for long periods.

    Poland’s Kajetan Kajetanowicz made a late switch from a Volkswagen Polo GTI R5 to a Škoda Fabia R5 and showed a clean pair of heels to his FIA WRC 2 rivals. A fine drive was rewarded with 12th overall, although he suffered a late front left drive shaft breakage on the penultimate test and lost two places in the overall rankings to his WRC 2 Pro rivals. His consolation was the joint lead in the 2019 WRC 2 Championship.

    Behind Kajetanowicz in FIA WRC 2, Bolivian driver Marco Bulacia and Italy’s Fabio Andolfi rounded off the top three places.

     

    2019 Rally Turkey – Final Unofficial Results:

    1. Sébastien Ogier (FRA) / Julien Ingrassia (FRA) Citroën C3 WRC 3hr 50min 12.1sec
    2. Esapekka Lappi (FIN) / Janne Ferm (FIN) Citroën C3 WRC 3hr 50min 46.8sec
    3. Andreas Mikkelsen (NOR) / Anders Jaeger-Amland (NOR) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3hr 51min 16.6sec
    4. Teemu Suninen (FIN) / Marko Salminen (FIN) Ford Fiesta WRC 3hr 51min 47.2sec
    5. Dani Sordo (SPA) / Carlos Del Barrio (SPA) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3hr 52min 38.0sec
    6. Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN) / Mikka Anttila Toyota Yaris WRC 3hr 53min 11.2sec
    7. Kris Meeke (GBR) / Sebastian Marshall (GBR) Toyota Yaris WRC 3hr 54min 05.4sec
    8. Thierry Neuville (BEL) / Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3hr 55min 46.9sec
    9. Pontus Tidemand (SWE) / Ola Floene (NOR) Ford Fiesta WRC 3hr 57min 35.0sec
    10. Gus Greensmith (GBR) / Elliott Edmondson (GBR) Ford Fiesta R5 MkII 4hr 05min 30.8sec
  • Gaurav Gill ends Turkey campaign in WRC2, wins accolades

    Gaurav Gill ends Turkey campaign in WRC2, wins accolades

    Gaurav Gill takes a huge jump on the final day of Rally Turkey. An MSport image

    New Delhi, 15 Sept 2019:  India’s top rally driver Gaurav Gill won commendations of his co-competitors in the World Rally Championship, overcoming mechanical failures and a series of punctures in the grueling Rally of Turkey before it all ended in heartbreak for him and the country late on Sunday.

    Gaurav Gill said:

    “This has been one of the toughest rallies of my life. Right from the start it was difficult to get into a good rhythm because the stages were so slow and twisty with so many rocks and boulders.

    “Without much experience of this car and set-up I wanted to take my time and I think that worked out well for us. But luck was not on our side and we were marred by quite a few issues.

    “We failed to finish the rally this weekend, but we set some good times which is a big positive and I’ll look to build on that at the next event.”

    Going into the final day with a top-five finish firmly in sight, the JK Racing ace underlined his mettle by finishing second in the first stage of the day. He continued in the same vein, taking the third place in the next stage too, demonstrating phenomenal speed and control to post spectacular timings to inch up the leader-board.
    These two added up to a top-3 finish in five out of the 9 stages that he had conquered without a hitch, not counting the shakedown in which he proved to be the fastest among the lot.
    In the penultimate stage with a strong finish beckoning him, disaster struck: the transmission of the car seized and ground him to a halt. The car locked up completely and could not even be pushed into neutral, killing all chances of recouping and making up in the final stretch of the WRC.
    “It was one of the toughest weekends, rather toughest rallies of my life. Right from the beginning, it was difficult to get into a good rhythm because the rally was so slow and twisty, with so many huge rocks and boulders around,” Gaurav said.
    “I of course didn’t have much previous experience with the car and the setup, making it that much more difficult. The plan was to take one step at a time and it almost paid off. But we were marred by so many issues, including mechanical problems in the car. The good thing is we got some great timings and should keep us in a positive frame for the next round,” he added.
    “Almost all the top drivers congratulated me for the way I drove and handled the situations,” Gaurav revealed.
    The Rally of Turkey lived up to its reputation of being the toughest in the world, pushing as many as 11 drivers to the brink and a DNF. Spread over four days, Gaurav had to cover a total distance of 988.50 kms, with 310.10 kms earmarked for special stages. More tellingly, every stage was a test for the driver as well as the car, traversing past picturesque locales that could transform into death-traps at the tiniest of errors.
    The 3-time APRC champion and Arjuna Awardee began his campaign on the world stage on a high note.
    He faced major mechanical issues in 4 stages, starting with front suspension collapse to tear damper seizure to transmission failure. He even did a couple of stages with punctures.
    He left a lasting impression on the grid which’ll help boost his confidence for future international outings.
  • We are still learning the car, says Gaurav Gill; Greensmith closes on the win: WRC2

    We are still learning the car, says Gaurav Gill; Greensmith closes on the win: WRC2

    Gaurav Gill in action on Saturday. Photo courtesy M-Sport

    M-Sport Ford World Rally Team’s Gus Greensmith and Elliott Edmondson are back in the lead of the FIA World Rally Championship’s premier support series – leading the way in the WRC 2 Pro category with their Ford Fiesta R5 Mk II.

    The new Fiesta secured its maiden victory in the hands of Anders Grøndal at Norway’s Rally Tron last weekend, and Greensmith continues to showcase the power and performance of M-Sport’s latest global rally car at this weekend’s Rally Turkey.

    Despite picking up a puncture through the early stages (SS3), the young Brit rebounded with stage-winning pace throughout the weekend – now holding more than a minute’s lead with just 38.59 competitive kilometres left to contest.

    In the WRC 2 category, Gaurav Gill and Glenn MacNeall were back in action and getting to grips with the notoriously challenging terrain. The pairing showed good speed, but their bad luck continued into the second day of competition with two punctures (SS10 and SS11) and a broken damper on the penultimate speed test (SS12).

    Gus Greensmith said: “It’s been a much better day for us today. We took a bit of a gamble this afternoon with only one spare and just pushed as much as we could which really paid off. We’ve jumped into a good lead in WRC 2 Pro now, and from where we were after the second stage on Friday [when we lost time having to stop and change a puncture] I’d say we’re doing pretty well.”

    Gaurav Gill said: “We were still learning the car in the first stage morning, but had some good speed in the next ones and I was happy with the confidence and the feeling of the car. We wanted to build on that over the second loop but unfortunately we had an issue with the damper which meant we had to cruise through the last stage and get the car back to service in one piece. I guess that’s the nature of this event and that these things can happen, but overall I think it’s been a positive day and we can be happy with the speed.”

  • Sebastian Ogier leads a 1-2 for Citroen: WRC Rally of Turkey

    Sebastian Ogier leads a 1-2 for Citroen: WRC Rally of Turkey

    Ogier takes lead. An FIA image

    Marmaris, 14 Sept 2019: Citroën’s Sébastien Ogier and Esapekka Lappi were the class of the field on the second full day of Rally Turkey and managed their pace to preserve their tyres and secure a comfortable first and second in the overall standings after 13 special stages.

    Lappi started the day with a 17.7 second advantage over the six-time World Champion, but the Frenchman pulled off a brave and canny tyre choice for the longer stage at the start of the morning. The duo became embroiled in a fascinating tussle, until Ogier grabbed the lead in SS12 when Lappi stalled under braking for a downhill hairpin.

    Ogier takes a lead of just 0.2s into the night halt and is on course for a 47th career WRC win and a first since Mexico in early March.

    Hyundai’s Andreas Mikkelsen delivered impressive stage times throughout the day and conserved his tyres to hold third overall, once his team-mate and Ogier’s title rival Thierry Neuville lost his way in the dust on the first stage of the morning, slid off the road and slipped down the rankings to eighth at the night halt. Mikkelsen now finds himself 1min17.1s behind the rally leader.

    In what developed into a dramatic morning on Turkey’s Turquoise Coast, FIA WRC leader Ott Tänak suffered a ECU failure on the road section to SS9 and was sidelined, his demise throwing the title race wide open.

    M-Sport Ford’s Teemu Suninen finished the day in a strong fourth and closed the gap on Mikkelsen to just 9.8 seconds at the end of the leg.

    Spaniard Dani Sordo managed to fend off the challenge from the Toyotas of both Jari-Matti Latvala and Kris Meeke to reach the Asparan Service Park in fifth overall. Meeke survived a late scare when the Yaris snapped sideways due to a lack of grip and slid off the road to hand sixth position to his team-mate.

    Suninen’s team-mate Pontus Tidemand was classified in ninth and FIA WRC 2 front-runner Kajetan Kajetanowicz rounded off the Top 10.

    A flat tyre and then a second puncture on his Škoda Fabia R5 Evo cost long-standing FIA WRC 2 Pro leader Jan Kopecký crucial time and gifted the advantage England’s Gus Greensmith. The Ford Fiesta R5 driver reached the end of the leg with a lead of 1min00.07s. Series leader Kalle Rovanperä returned to action today after a series of punctures blighted his progress on Friday and held third.

    Behind the dominant Kajetanowicz from Poland, Bolivian driver Marco Bulacia and Italy’s Fabio Andolfi were second and third in FIA WRC 2.

    2019 Rally Turkey – Unofficial results after Section 5:

    1. Sébastien Ogier (FRA) / Julien Ingrassia (FRA) Citroën C3 WRC 3hr 20min 12.0sec
    2. Esapekka Lappi (FIN) / Janne Ferm (FIN) Citroën C3 WRC 3hr 20min 12.2sec
    3. Andreas Mikkelsen (NOR) / Anders Jaeger-Amland (NOR) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3hr 21min 29.1sec
    4. Teemu Suninen (FIN) / Marko Salminen (FIN) Ford Fiesta WRC 3hr 21min 38.9sec
    5. Dani Sordo (SPA) / Carlos Del Barrio (SPA) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3hr 22min 36.7sec
    6. Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN) / Mikka Anttila Toyota Yaris WRC 3hr 23min 26.4sec
    7. Kris Meeke (GBR) / Sebastian Marshall (GBR) Toyota Yaris WRC 3hr 23min 41.5sec
    8. Thierry Neuville (BEL) / Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3hr 24min 50.2sec
    9. Pontus Tidemand (SWE) / Ola Floene (NOR) Ford Fiesta WRC 3hr 27min 07.8sec
    10. Kajetan Kajetanowicz (POL) / Maciej Szczepaniak (POL) Škoda Fabia R5 3hr 33min 04.5sec
  • Gaurav Gill bounces back in Rally of Turkey

    New Delhi, 14 Sept 2019: Seasoned Indian rallyist Gaurav Gill showed great grit and tenacity to bounce back from Day 2’s reverses to catapult to the sixth position in WRC2 by the end of Stage 12 in the Rally of Turkey on Saturday.
    Gaurav (along with co-driver Glenn Macneall), driving as a registered driver for JK Racing in the WRC 2 category of the World Rally Championship for the first time, was cruising on Friday too before a mechanical failure prompted him to withdraw for the day with two more stages to go.
    Taking advantage of the scratch time plus seven minutes penalty for three stages that he could not complete, the Arjuna Awardee drove with typical elan to emerge as one of the top drivers on Saturday. He finished the 12 stages so far in 3:51:39.2 hours to be poised for a podium finish in WRC2.
    In the overall scheme too, he is placed 17th despite driving a totally new car with barely any testing time in it. The Rally of Turkey is anyway rated among the toughest in the world, with long rough stretches and unrelenting terrains.
    Starting the day from the 10th position, Gaurav got off to a slow start, taking 27:33.5 minutes to finish the 33-km  long eighth stage. Hence finishing 5th fastest in wrc 2. Once he felt comfortable in the car, he began to push and took just 7.28.3 minutes in the ninth stage, posting the third fastest time.
    He was equally impressive in the 10th stage, once again finishing with the third best time of 7.51.6 minutes.
    As the day progressed, the three-time APRC champion seemed to be in his groove, coming up with yet another impressive performance in the 11th stage, setting the third fastest time (27.56.5 minutes) for the third consecutive time.
    In the 8.75-km long 12th stage, he took 8.49.5 minutes with a seized damper but the rhythm he displayed  today should position him for a top 5 finish.
  • Esapekka Lappi continues to lead in Turkey over Sebastian Ogier: WRC

    Esapekka Lappi continues to lead in Turkey over Sebastian Ogier: WRC

    Action in Rally of Turkey on Friday. An FIA image

    Citroën’s Esapekka Lappi stunned his more illustrious FIA World Rally Championship rivals to snatch a lead of 17.7 seconds after six punishing gravel special stages of Rally Turkey on Friday.

    Abrasive stage surfaces, large rocks, critical tyre choices, heavy rain on one stage and the threat of the unknown forced every driver to err on the side of caution to protect their cars. But Lappi and co-driver Janne Ferm guided their C3 WRC to a stage win and a useful overnight advantage over team-mate and six-time World Champion Sébastien Ogier.

    Like Ogier, Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville kept his title hopes alive with a stage win and third overall, a useful tyre choice in the rain on the longest stage of the day helping the Belgian finish the leg just 0.7s behind his French title rival.

    M-Sport Ford’s Teemu Suninen stayed clear of serious trouble to hold fourth overall and joint overnight leader Andreas Mikkelsen rounded off the top five in the second works Hyundai.

    A fastest time on the last stage of the day enabled Dani Sordo to leap frog both Kris Meeke and Ott Tänak to snatch sixth place, the Spaniard having lost a lot of time with a flat tyre in SS2. A puncture proved costly for series leader Tänak as well and the Estonian now trails the overnight leader by 1min 37.4s.

    Meeke, likewise, had tyre issues and a broken jacking point on the Yaris, although he did claim a stage win.

    The Ulsterman’s Toyota team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala claimed two stage wins, but a puncture, a less advangeous tyre choice and little niggling issues cost the Finn the outright lead he held at the end of SS2. He held ninth place with M-Sport Ford’s Pontus Tidemand rounding off the top 10 on his return to the main factory team.

    Friday the 13th placed its curse on FIA WRC 2 Pro leader Kalle Rovanperä. The Finn sustained a puncture and a roll in his Škoda R5 on the opener and then two further flat tyres put him out of the running for the rest of the day.

    A flat tyre on the Ford Fiesta of his rival Gus Greensmith played into Rovanperä’s team-mate Jan Kopecky’s hands and the Czech headed to the night halt 1min 22.8s in front of the Brito, after erring on the side of caution towards the end.

    11th-placed Polish driver Kajetan Kajetanowicz dominated the FIA WRC 2 section and finished the day over three minutes ahead of young Bolivian Marco Bulacia after veteran Norwegian Henning Solberg lost a lot of time in the sixth stage. Italy’s Fabio Andolfi holds third place.

     

    2019 Rally Turkey – Unofficial results after Section 3:

    1. Esapekka Lappi (FIN) / Janne Ferm (FIN) Citroën C3 WRC 1hr 59min 53.7sec
    2. Sébastien Ogier (FRA) / Julien Ingrassia (FRA) Citroën C3 WRC 2hr 00min 11.4sec
    3. Thierry Neuville (BEL) / Nicolas Gilsoul (BEL) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2hr 00min 12.1sec
    4. Teemu Suninen (FIN) / Marko Salminen (FIN) Ford Fiesta WRC 2hr 00min 38.1sec
    5. Andreas Mikkelsen (NOR) / Anders Jaeger-Amland (NOR) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2hr 00min 57.8sec
    6. Dani Sordo (SPA) / Carlos Del Barrio (SPA) Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2hr 01min 18.9sec
    7. Kris Meeke (GBR) / Sebastian Marshall (GBR) Toyota Yaris WRC 2hr 01min 25.8sec
    8. Ott Tänak (EST) / Martin Järveoja (EST) Toyota Yaris WRC 2hr 01min 31.1sec
    9. Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN) / Mikka Anttila Toyota Yaris WRC 2hr 01min 36.2sec
    10. Pontus Tidemand (SWE) / Ola Floene (NOR) Ford Fiesta WRC 2hr 03min 39.1sec