RALLYING – THE Dakar Rally looks to be on course for an intriguing fight to the finish after Sebastien Loeb began the second week of the event yesterday by securing another superb stage victory for Bahrain Raid Xtreme.
With a dominant drive on the 483km stage from Riyadh to Al Duwadimi, Loeb and Fabian Lurquin in the BRX Prodrive Hunter slashed 10 mins 31 secs off the overall lead held by Carlos Sainz in an Audi.
Loeb’s second successive stage win, and his third overall, underlined the intentions of the nine-time World Rally champion, who set a record six best times in a row in Saudi Arabia last year to record consecutive runner-up finishes.
If he is to follow up with a first outright Dakar victory, both for BRX and himself, he must still wipe out an overall advantage of 19 mins held by Sainz across the five stages leading to Friday’s finish in Yanbu.
Loeb’s win yesterday came despite him opening the stage after the Riyadh rest day. While he held back initially as American Seth Quintero set the pace, Loeb was ahead just after the halfway point, and pulled away to take the stage by more than seven minutes from Brazil’s Lucas Moraes.
Qatar’s defending champion Nasser Al Attiyah was third despite two punctures.
Sainz, who was fourth, will now feel the heat from the Frenchman in the BRX Prodrive Hunter. Loeb replaced the Spaniard’s Audi team-mate, Mattias Ekström, as his closest challenger when the Swede plunged from contention with mechanical problems after just 47km.
After a well-earned day off following the gruelling 48hr Chrono stage, the drivers faced another big test yesterday. Apart from the stage itself, which included 47km of dunes, and the rest mostly made up of dry river beds and off piste, the crews covered 873km of road sections.
Focused
Loeb was clearly focused at the wheel of the BRX Prodrive Hunter, as he recorded his 26th Dakar stage victory overall, leaving him just three behind the great Jacky Ickx.
The Dakar rests at the Al Duwadimi bivouac where the rally last visited at the end of stage two before setting off today on a 458km stage to H’ail.
Loeb said: “That was a really good day today that came out well for us. It was not easy though as it was difficult with the navigation and a bit complicated with a bit of everything; some canyons, some dunes, tracks and so on but we stayed concentrated on the road book.
“We did make a couple of mistakes here and there with direction but overall we were able to correct all those mistakes very quickly to enable us to push. A good day.”
Moraes moved up to third overall but more than an hour off the lead.
“Quite a difficult day, with the navigation. We also had a puncture. I think Seb did really well. 10 minutes is quite a lot,” said triple Dakar winner Sainz, whose son and namesake is the Ferrari Formula One driver.
Audi’s hopes of a first Dakar win for an electric-powered car now rest entirely on Sainz after Stephane Peterhansel was knocked out of contention last week.
Al Attiyah’s hopes of a third successive Dakar victory and career sixth slipped away in the sand last week when he suffered a steering problem and lost more than two hours waiting for assistance.
In the motorcycle category, Chilean Jose Ignacio Cornejo won the stage while American Ricky Brabec retained the overall lead for Honda by a single second from Botswana’s Ross Branch after 2,865km of timed action.
The gap, after 32-and-a-half hours of racing, comes down to about 24 metres.
“The one second difference is crazy, that’s a tight race for sure,” said Brabec.
“I’ve spent seven days up front opening with my team mates, so I’m kind of looking for a break at some point to come from the back and really make a charge.”