|  
          VM 
          kalendern 2022 | 
      
       
         
          
             
              | 20-13 
                jan  | 
              Monte 
                Carlo  | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 24-27 febr | 
              Rally Sweden | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              |  21-27 april | 
              Kroatien  | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 19-22 maj | 
              Portugal | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 2-5 
                juni  | 
              Italien | 
                 | 
                | 
             
             
              | 23-26 juni | 
              Kenya | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 14-17 
                juli  | 
              Estland | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 4-7 aug | 
              Finland | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 18-21 aug | 
              Ypres Rally Belgium | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 8-11 sept | 
              Grekland | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 29-2 okt | 
              Nya Zeeland * | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 20-23 ijt | 
              Spanien | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | 10-13 nov | 
              Japan | 
                | 
                | 
             
             
              | * Subject to contract  | 
             
           
         | 
      
       
        |  
          VM 
          kalendern 2023 | 
      
       
        Monte-Carlo: 
          19  22 January 
          Sweden: 9  12 February 
          Mexico: 16  19 March 
          Croatia: 20  23 April 
          Portugal: 11  14 May 
          Italy: 1  4 June 
          Kenya: 22  25 June 
          Estonia: 20  23 July 
          Finland: 3  6 August 
          Greece: 7  10 September 
          Chile: 28 September  1 October 
          Central Europe (AUT, CZE, GER): 26  29 October 
          Japan: 16  19 November | 
      
    
    
    
    
    
    22-12-15 Nya möjligheter 
    för Oliver Solberg i rally-VM
    Rallyföraren Oliver Solberg siktar på att slåss om WRC2-titeln 
    nästa säsong.
    
    21-åringen skrev nyligen på ett avtal med det tyska Toksport-teamet 
    för 2023. Där får han möjlighet att slåss om VM-titeln 
    i den näst högsta klassen i rally.
     Jag är väldigt glad och tacksam över att få köra 
    rally igen. Nu kan vi fortsätta vår resa mot toppen. Toksport-teamet 
    är väldigt starkt och siktar högt, säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    Senast 2021 vann teamet förartiteln i WRC2 med norrmannen Andreas Mikkelsen. 
    Året innan tog Toksport teammästerskapet i klassen.
    
    Bilen Solberg ska köra är en ny generation Skoda Fabia RS Rally2. 
    Första tävlingen med hans nya team blir Rally Monte-Carlo 19-22 
    januari. VM-programmet i WRC2-klassen startar sedan med Rally Sweden (Umeå) 
    den 9-12 februari.
     Det kommer att bli viktigt att komma igång tidigt, och jag ser 
    väldigt mycket fram emot att köra årets första tävling 
    i legendariska
    Monte-Carlo. Det ska också bli väldigt speciellt att inleda kampen 
    om VM-titeln hemma i Sverige.
    
    Tidigare i veckan testade 21-åringen bilen. Säsongen 2020 körde 
    Solberg tre VM- och ett EM-lopp med motsvarande bilmodell.
     Testet gav en väldigt bra känsla. Bilen har en bra bas, och 
    jag trivdes väldigt bra med att köra den, säger Oliver Solberg. 
    
    22-11-26 WRC powers into 2023 
    with exciting new-look calendar
    All-new three-country concept and return to North and South America are major 
    highlights of the 13-round calendar.
     
    An all-new three-country concept and the return to North and South America 
    are major highlights of the 13-round 2023 FIA World Rally Championship calendar.
    
    In an exciting innovation, the WRC will feature a round which takes place 
    across three countries when Austria, Czech Republic and Germany host the Central 
    European Rally from 26 - 29 October. The asphalt rally will be based out of 
    the south-east German city of Passau.
    
    Running from January to November, the 2023 calendar features a number of regular 
    stops, along with the return of Mexico and Chile for the first time since 
    Covid-19.
    
    We were absolutely determined to get the WRC calendar back to where 
    it was pre-Covid, with a good spread of events inside and outside Europe," 
    expressed WRC Promoter Senior Director of Events, Simon Larkin.
    
    He continued: "There was very high demand for the limited number of slots 
    on the calendar, but were pleased with the range and variety of events 
    we have.
    
    "They will provide a great sporting challenge for the competitors, as 
    well as providing the highest-profile events in each country.
    
    His thoughts were echoed by WRC Promoter Managing Director Jona Siebel.
    
    We are incredibly happy to be returning to North and South America, 
    enthused Siebel. We have maintained a dialogue with the Mexican and 
    Chilean organisers throughout the Covid pandemic and we are confident this 
    is now the right time for our return.
    
    Additionally, with an exciting new concept added to the mix, the WRC 
    is well-placed to reach more fans than ever before.
    
    Beginning with the traditional season opener in Monte-Carlo from 19 - 22 January, 
    the snow and ice of Sweden (9 - 12 February) await drivers for the second 
    stop as the championship returns to Umeå following a successful debut 
    of the new-look winter rally in 2022.
    
    The first long-haul journey of the year takes the championship to Rally Guanajuato 
    México from 16 - 19 March before a return to Europe for the first all-asphalt 
    event of the year, Croatia Rally, from 20 - 23 April. The Croatian fixture 
    now enters its third edition and will once again be based out of the countrys 
    capital Zagreb.
    
    The middle of the year reflects the 2022 calendar with Vodafone Rally de Portugal 
    (11 - 14 May), Rally Italia Sardegna (1 - 4 June), Safari Rally Kenya (22 
     25 June), Rally Estonia (20 - 23 July), Secto Rally Finland (3 - 6 
    August) and EKO Acropolis Rally Greece (7 - 10 September) returning with a 
    similar look and feel.
    
    As the season begins to build towards its climax, South America awaits as 
    the WRC goes back to Concepción, Chile for the first time since it 
    debuted in 2019. The gravel event will run from 28 September - 1 October.
    
    At the end of October, Austria, Czech Republic and Germany play host to Central 
    Europe Rally ahead of FORUM8 Rally Japan - which is back hosting the season 
    finale from 16 - 19 November.
    
    The full calendar is:
    Monte-Carlo: 19  22 January
    Sweden: 9  12 February
    Mexico: 16  19 March
    Croatia: 20  23 April
    Portugal: 11  14 May
    Italy: 1  4 June
    Kenya: 22  25 June
    Estonia: 20  23 July
    Finland: 3  6 August
    Greece: 7  10 September
    Chile: 28 September  1 October
    Central Europe (AUT, CZE, GER): 26  29 October
    Japan: 16  19 November
    22-11-13 Neuville prevails 
    to clinch dramatic Japan win 
    Belgian blasts to glory as Evans falters at 2022 season finale.
    Persistence paid dividends for Thierry Neuville in the FIA World Rally Championship 
    finale as he grabbed the FORUM8 Rally Japan victory from under the nose of 
    Elfyn Evans.
    
    Hyundai i20 N driver Neuville headed Toyota GR Yaris rival Evans by just four 
    seconds heading into Sundays five-stage finale having traded blows with 
    the Welshman since the very first stage on Friday morning.
    
    The stage was set for a thrilling final day of the 2022 WRC season and, as 
    the cars roared into morning service for the last time this year, tyres were 
    the talk of the town. Meteorologists from both camps had their work cut out 
    and there were contrasting opinions on whether rain would fall in the early 
    afternoon.
    
    Neuville believed it would and took an even spread of hard compound, soft 
    compound and wet weather Pirelli rubber. Evans, on the other hand, wasnt 
    convinced and opted for a 50:50 split of hard and soft compound tyres.
    
    It appeared the latter had made the correct choice when he moved to within 
    six-tenths of Neuville after blitzing the Belgian through Asahi Kougen. The 
    excitement was short-lived, however, as disaster struck on the very next test.
    
    A miscommunication between Evans and co-driver Scott Martin saw the duo run 
    wide on a right-hand bend, nudging a kerb with the Toyotas rear left 
    wheel. The resultant puncture took more than 1min 30sec to change - stopping 
    the victory scrap dead in its tracks as he plummeted down the order.
    
    While rain did arrive for the final two tests, it was no worry for Neuville. 
    He cruised to the finish 1min 11.3sec clear of departing team-mate Ott Tänak, 
    who benefited from Evans heartbreak to secure an important 1-2 for Hyundai 
    on the home soil of archrivals Toyota Gazoo Racing
    
    "It feels great," Neuville exclaimed. "It wasn't an easy weekend 
    or an easy year, but to end with a victory after showing a good speed all 
    weekend is a great way to end the season. Our weather guys did an incredible 
    job this weekend, so thanks to them and thanks to everybody."
    
    Takamoto Katsuta also moved up the order at team-mate Evans expense 
    to secure his second podium of the season on local roads. The 29-year-old 
    trailed Tänak by a minute at close of play with Yaris colleague Sébastien 
    Ogier a mere 12.3sec behind.
    
    Ogier leapfrogged Evans - who eventually finished fifth, with a plucky run 
    through the penultimate test. Ending only 2min 23.6sec down on victor Neuville, 
    the Frenchman was left to rue what could have been as he lost almost three 
    minutes with a puncture on Friday morning. Sixth place went to M-Sport Fords 
    Gus Greensmith.
    
    Final result:
    1. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N 2hr 43min 52.3sec
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +1min 11.1sec
    3. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +2min 11.3sec
    4. S Ogier / V Landais FRA Toyota GR Yaris +2min 23.6sec
    5. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +4min 5.1sec
    6. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +4min 7.4sec
    
    2022 FIA World Rally Championship (final driver positions):
    1. K Rovanperä 255pts
    2. O Tänak 205pts
    3. T Neuville 193pts
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com
    
    22-11-12 Saturday charge rewards 
    Neuville with Japan lead
    Belgian dethrones Elfyn Evans to set up final day thriller 
    with duelling duo split by just 4.0sec.
    Thierry Neuville seized the lead of FORUM8 Rally Japan, toppling long-time 
    polesitter Elfyn Evans with a gutsy Saturday drive.
    
    The penultimate leg of this season finale was a game of two halves. Kicking 
    off the day with a three-second lead over his Hyundai i20 N foe, Evans took 
    time from his rival on two of the mornings three asphalt speed tests 
    - building his advantage to 5.9sec by the mid-leg service.
    
    But the Toyota GR Yaris driver fell out of his rhythm after the halfway halt 
    and Neuville saw his chance. The Belgian pulled back 2.6sec through the second 
    run of Nukata Forest, but it was at Lake Mikawako - the next stage - where 
    he really made his mark.
    
    The lead changed hands for the first time since Friday morning when Neuville, 
    despite complaining of differential slip, outpaced his rival by 5.9sec. He 
    was in no mood to compromise either, and edged the Welshman through the closing 
    Okazaki City super special to end the day 4.0sec in front.
    
    The day has been good for us, but it has been a challenging one, 
    Neuville reflected. We have been struggling a bit with the balance throughout 
    the day but we got it better for the afternoon. Lets see what we can 
    do tomorrow.
    
    Evans was left a little dumbfounded by the sudden change in tempo and claimed 
    that, despite no set-up changes being made between the morning and afternoon 
    loops, hed lost the feeling with the front end of his car.
    
    With a hefty 35.9sec gap between Evans and third-placed Ott Tänak heading 
    into Sundays finale, its looking likely to be a thrilling two-way 
    fight for glory.
    
    Estonias Tänak moved into the leading trio early on when Kalle 
    Rovanperä punctured. He, too, struggled to find a good balance aboard 
    his i20 N and made constant alterations throughout the day with varied success.
    
    He may have been out of touch with the frontrunning pair, but Tänak did 
    manage to stretch his buffer over the fourth-placed Toyota of Takamoto Katsuta. 
    The local ace felt unable to push to the maximum and ended 24.6sec in arrears.
    
    The drive of the day undoubtedly went to eight-time world champion Sébastien 
    Ogier, partnered by new co-driver Vincent Landais. A Friday puncture means 
    the Yaris man is out of contention for victory but he climbed from 10th to 
    fifth after collecting three stage wins, leapfrogging Gus Greensmith in the 
    process.
    
    Greensmiths M-Sport Ford Puma also hit trouble on Friday and his tricky 
    run continued as an intermittent power steering fault reared its head in the 
    afternoon. With five stages remaining the Briton sits 3min 25.4sec back from 
    leader Neuville.
    
    WRC2 cars filled the rest of the top 10 - headed by koda Fabia star 
    Emil Lindholm. A comfortable 47.6sec lead in the category means the Finn is 
    on target to clinch the title come Sunday. Sami Pajari, Grégoire Munster 
    and Teemu Suninen completed the leaderboard while Rovanperä languished 
    in 11th overall.
    
    Although the SS8 puncture was to blame for Rovanperäs initial drop 
    down the order, he tumbled even further back when an impact in the next stage 
    buckled his only spare wheel.
    
    The Finn bolted the deflated tyre back onto the car for the mornings 
    finale to prevent further damage, protecting the bent rim in readiness for 
    the 50 kilometre jaunt back to service. He picked up 40sec in penalties for 
    lateness and, with nothing more to fight for, spent the afternoon trialling 
    different set-ups.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N 1hr 51min 28.3sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +4.0sec
    3. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +39.9sec
    4. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +1min 4.5sec
    5. S Ogier / V Landais FRA Toyota GR Yaris +2min 46.7sec
    6. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +3min 25.4sec 
    
    22-11-11 Eager Evans shades 
    Neuville on Friday in Japan
    Welshman leads by 3.0sec with team-mate Rovanperä a close third.
    Elfyn Evans headed Thierry Neuville by the narrowest of margins as Fridays 
    brutal opening leg cut holes through the field at FORUM8 Rally Japan.
    
    Just 3.0sec split the pair after the first full day of action on technical 
    mountain roads around Aichi, with Evans GR Yaris holding strong on the 
    home soil of his Toyota Gazoo Racing squad.
    
    Japan is back on the FIA World Rally Championship calendar for the first time 
    since 2010 and the all-new asphalt event has already claimed the scalps of 
    multiple frontline drivers. Dani Sordos Hyundai i20 N was the first 
    to go - his car reduced to a sorry-looking shell after catching fire in the 
    opener.
    
    Sordos drama resulted in a shortened morning loop, with the first pass 
    of Inabu Dam cancelled due to delays. After two stages Evans and Neuville 
    were level pegging as they returned to mid-leg service in the Toyota Stadium.
    
    The second run through Shitara Town (SS7) was also culled owing to the barrier 
    damage Craig Breens Ford Puma caused when he understeered into retirement. 
    But Evans had found his rhythm and used the remaining two stretches to his 
    advantage.
    
    A benchmark time at Isegamis Tunnel moved the Welshman 1.1sec clear 
    of his Hyundai rival and he repeated that feat in the closing test to consolidate 
    his position. Still, Evans - who is yet to win a rally this year - felt there 
    was room for improvement.
    
    "It's been tough and quite short," he reflected. We're only 
    four stages down but it's still not been easy.
    
    "The stages are very demanding and there's a different feeling in all 
    of them - you're always wanting something different from the car. Tomorrow 
    is more of the same and it's going to be changeable," he added.
    
    Kalle Rovanperä briefly led despite being alarmed by smoke entering his 
    cars cockpit in the opener, but the Finns pace began to dwindle 
    as he wrestled with understeer which overheated the front tyres. Still, he 
    made it two Toyota cars in the top three, trailing Neuville by just 2.1sec.
    
    It was a mediocre first day for Ott Tänak on his final rally with Hyundai 
    Motorsport. A differential niggle slowed the Estonian early in the day but 
    the issue was cured at service, enabling him to end 8.8sec back from the podium 
    in fourth.
    
    Hometown hero Takamoto Katsuta was another man struggling with understeer 
    although his confidence did start to blossom with each stage that passed. 
    Laying 20.6sec back from the lead, a strong result is still within reach for 
    the Toyota driver.
    
    More than a minute back was Gus Greensmith in the only remaining Ford. His 
    day was far from drama-free and the Briton nursed a broken driveshaft throughout 
    the morning. Thursday night leader Sébastien Ogier was also in trouble 
    and languished 2min 49.8sec off the pace after stopping to change a wheel 
    in SS2.
    
    Support category cars dominated the latter half of the leaderboard with WRC2 
    rookie Sami Pajari heading up WRC2 in seventh overall ahead of Teemu Suninen. 
    Emil Lindholm holds ninth overall and is on course to clinch the championship 
    crown after his main title rival Kajetan Kajetanowicz crashed, while Ogier 
    capped off the top ten.
    
    Saturday boasts eight more gruelling stages. Nukata Forest (20.56km) and Lake 
    Mikawako (14.74km) are driven morning and afternoon while a single run through 
    Shinshiro City (7.08km) rounds off the morning loop. Double runs of the fan-favourite 
    Okazaki City SSS (1.40km) bring the day to a close.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris 57min 18.8sec
    2. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +3.0sec
    3. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +5.1sec
    4. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +13.9sec
    5. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +20.6sec
    6. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +2min 0.4sec
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com 
    
    22-11-09 Japanese fixture returns 
    to WRC after 12-year absence
    FORUM8 Rally Japan back on the calendar for the first time since 
    2010. Twelve years after it last appeared in the fixture list, FORUM8 Rally 
    Japan (10 - 13 November) forms the finale of the 2022 FIA World Rally Championship 
    - marking the land of the rising suns return to the WRC for the first 
    time since 2010.
    
    There will be challenges aplenty as, unlike previous editions which were held 
    on the northern island of Hokkaido, this weeks all-new asphalt event 
    is based in Toyota City, on the countrys main island of Honshu.
    
    Crews face 19 demanding special stages in the mountain regions of Aichi and 
    Gifu, boasting a population of approximately nine million people and about 
    three hours drive from capital city Tokyo.
    
    For Toyota Gazoo Racing, its a dream come true.
    
    The Japanese marques global headquarters sit just a stones throw 
    away from the service park. With the drivers, co-drivers and manufacturers 
    titles already in the bag, the team is hoping to celebrate its global success 
    with a strong showing in front of local crowds.
    
    Taking the spotlight will no doubt be Takamoto Katsuta, who drives for Toyotas 
    Next Generation squad. The 29-year-old was born and raised in Nagoya and starts 
    this 13th round in search of his maiden WRC victory.
    
    Of course I know this will be a big rally, Katsuta said. There 
    will be a lot of interest from the people, from the fans and for the team.
    
    I know it will be quite a different rally with different kinds of roads 
    from what we have seen. But I will do my best and, of course, Im going 
    to enjoy Japanese stages!
    
    Joining Katsuta in a trio of identical GR Yaris cars are drivers champion 
    Kalle Rovanperä along with Elfyn Evans and Sébastien Ogier, who 
    has new co-driver Vincent Landais alongside.
    
    Ott Tänak marks his final start for Hyundai Motorsport after confirming 
    his departure from the i20 N team at the end of the season.
    
    A solid result would ensure the Estonian driver bows out with second in the 
    championship, although team-mate Thierry Neuville - third in the points - 
    will be doing all he can to try and overturn the 21-point deficit. Part-time 
    pilot Dani Sordo drives the teams third car on what will be his fifth 
    outing of the season.
    
    M-Sport Ford field a two-strong Puma line-up headed by Irishman Craig Breen. 
    He debuts alongside new co-driver James Fulton, while Gus Greensmith steers 
    a similar car.
    
    Its also a big week in WRC2, the sports premier support category. 
    Emil Lindholm, Kajetan Kajetanowicz and the absent Andreas Mikkelsen each 
    stand a chance of being crowned champion depending on how the action unfolds.
    
    The rally starts on Thursday evening with a super special stage in Kuragaike 
    Park and finishes on Sunday afternoon after 19 tests totalling 283.27km.
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com 
    
    22-11-04 WRC50: Celebrating 
    the greatest moments in the history of the FIA World Rally Championship 
    2022 marks the 50th season of the FIA World Rally Championship and to commemorate 
    this momentous occasion, wrc.com is revealing
 
    the 50 greatest moments in the history of the championship, as selected 
    by an internal expert panel.
    
    Beginning with Jean-Claude Andruets victory at Rallye Monte-Carlo back 
    in January 1973 right through to Kalle Rovanperäs record-shattering 
    maiden title last month at Repco Rally New Zealand, wrc.com will throughout 
    November and December celebrate each and every moment that made it into the 
    chosen 50.
    
    Coming up with just 50 moments was no easy task, with the final list whittled 
    down from more than a hundred. The list represents some of the greatest achievements 
    by teams, drivers and mechanics - from record-breaking seasons to co-drivers 
    taking the wheel and the closest finishes in the history of the championship.
    
    The moments will also be celebrated across WRCs social media channels 
    while members of the public are invited to have their say with the chance 
    to select their five most memorable moments from the final 50.
    
    Additionally, a guest panel of rallying journalists from around the globe 
    will be invited to select their five moments, which will be revealed in the 
    coming weeks in guest columns. 
    
    22-10-27 Tillbaka till rötterna 
    för Oliver Solberg
    Drygt tre år efter sin VM-debut, återvänder Oliver Solberg 
    (21) till Wales för att köra Cambrian Rally på några 
    av de vägarna som var med på VM-tävlingen 2019.
    
    21-åringen gjorde sig ett namn i Llandudno senast världsmästerskapet 
    i rally kom till Storbritannien 2019. Cambrian Rally är den säsongsavslutande 
    tävlingen i British Rally Championship.
     Vägarna är några av de häftigaste, oavsett vad 
    man jämför dem med i resten av rallyvärlden. Det är så 
    sjukt kul att köra dem. När möjligheten dök upp igen var 
    det något jag verkligen ville göra, säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    VM-debuten slutade med en bruten tävling, men 2019 är säsongen 
    då Oliver Solberg vann sju av 13 rallyn i Lettland, Estland och USA.
    
    Tyvärr måste Oliver klara sig utan sin vanliga kartläsare 
    i Wales, britten Elliott Edmondson.
     Elliott välte under träningen på sin mountainbike. 
    Vi tränar hårt och tänjer på gränserna, och det 
    engagemanget är en av de saker jag verkligen gillar och beundrar med 
    Elliott. Jag är verkligen ledsen att han går miste om denna helgen.
    
    Craig Drew kommer att ersätta Edmondson i den walesiska tävlingen. 
    Två gånger tidigare har 39-årige Drew varit Oliver Solbergs 
    kartläsare.
     Jag känner Craig väldigt väl bra sedan tidigare. Vi 
    tävlade tillsammans i Finland och Spanien förra året, och 
    vi var teamkamrater i Subaru Motorsports USA några år innan dess. 
    Han är en trevlig kille och jag är övertygad om att han kommer 
    att göra ett bra jobb. Ett stort tack till honom för att han ställde 
    upp med kort varsel, säger Solberg.
    
    Cambrian Rally startar på fredag ??kväll med två asfaltssträckor. 
    På lördag fortsätter de ut i skogen med två slingor 
    av fyra specialsträckor i känd terräng från VM-tävlingen 
    2019.
    
    Oliver ska köra en privatägd Volkswagen Polo R5 i Wales. 
    
    22-10-23 Double delight in 
    Spain for Ogier and Toyota
    Frenchman victorious as Toyota clinches manufacturers' championship crown.
    Sébastien Ogier stormed to his first victory of the FIA World Rally 
    Championships hybrid era - triumphing at RallyRACC - Rally de España 
    while helping secure the manufacturers title for Toyota Gazoo Racing.
    
    The Frenchman has been contesting a part-time campaign for Toyota this season 
    and took control of this penultimate round when he posted a trio of fastest 
    times across the middle of the three-day asphalt rally.
    
    Driving a GR Yaris, Ogier carried a 20.7sec lead into Sundays final 
    leg and could afford to negotiate the final four speed tests without taking 
    excessive risks.
    
    He did exactly that, clinching victory by 16.4sec from Hyundai i20 N star 
    Thierry Neuville to mark his first triumph of the WRCs hybrid era and 
    win number one for co-driver Benjamin Veillas.
    
    Kalle Rovanperä, who won the drivers championship earlier this 
    month, confirmed a double podium for Toyota. His result secured the Japanese 
    marque its second-successive manufacturers crown.
    
    With one round to spare, the Jyväskylä-based squad holds an unassailable 
    93-point lead over Hyundai Motorsport and can no longer be caught.
    
    "It's Benji's first win so I am very happy for him," beamed Ogier. 
    "It's fantastic to get this win because it was an important weekend for 
    the team.
    
    "It's not always easy to achieve such results and this season has been 
    very dominant, so congratulations to Toyota Gazoo Racing."
    
    Toyota Gazoo Racing team principal Jari-Matti Latvala added: "It's great 
    to secure the title here. The last rally in Japan is the home round for Toyota 
    so now we can be much more relaxed going there. If we can win there, we can 
    have even bigger celebrations!"
    
    Neuville stole the runner-up spot from Rovanperä late on Saturday afternoon 
    and was poised for a tight scrap with the young Finn. That battle never materialised, 
    however, as Rovanperä punctured a front left tyre when he drove over 
    a drainage hole in the second stage. At the final control, 18.1sec split the 
    pair.
    
    Hyundai cars locked out the remainder of the top-five with Ott Tänak 
    finishing 44.0sec back from the lead in fourth overall. The Estonian driver 
    never quite found the sweet spot in terms of his cars set-up and trailed 
    Rovanperä by 9.5sec.
    
    A disappointed Dani Sordo was 32.5sec further back after a mixed weekend on 
    his home roads. He lacked pace for the first day-and-a-half until set-up tweaks 
    at Saturdays midpoint unlocked a sudden turn of speed.
    
    Unfortunately those tweaks came too little too late and, despite winning a 
    couple of the smooth Tarmac speed tests, Sordo was left to rue what could 
    have been.
    
    Also feeling dejected was sixth-placed Elfyn Evans. The Welshman felt he was 
    lacking performance throughout the rally and a puncture in the same place 
    as team-mate Rovanperä at Riudecanyes compounded his woes.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta and Adrien Fourmaux were seventh and eighth. Both drivers 
    gained a position at the expense of Fourmauxs M-Sport Ford Puma colleague 
    Craig Breen, who also had tyre dramas after hitting a hole in the morning.
    
    Breen eventually finished ninth overall as co-driver Paul Nagle bowed into 
    retirement from the sports top level on his 102nd WRC start. Pierre-Louis 
    Loubet - also driving a Puma - completed the leaderboard.
    
    Teemu Suninen wrapped-up a comfortable victory in WRC2 while Finnish youngster 
    Lauri Joona was crowned WRC3 champion after edging Jan Cerny in the all-Ford 
    Fiesta Rally3 category.
    
    The championship reaches its finale next month with an all-new asphalt event. 
    FORUM8 Rally Japan takes place from 10 - 13 November.
    
    Overall classification:
    1. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 44min 43.9sec
    2. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +16.4sec
    3. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +34.5sec
    4. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +44.0sec
    5. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +1min 16.5sec
    6. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +1min 51.1sec
    22-10-22 Ogier outclasses 
    rivals on Saturday in Spain
    Frenchman pulls clear as Toyota poised to take manufacturers' crown.
    A dominant drive moved Sébastien Ogier clear of the RallyRACC - Rally 
    de España field as his Toyota Gazoo Racing squad put one hand on the 
    manufacturers crown on Saturday.
    
    The eight-time WRC champion is on course to claim his maiden victory of the 
    FIA World Rally Championships hybrid era on only his fifth start aboard 
    a Rally1-specification GR Yaris.
    
    Ogier was virtually untouchable and won four out of seven flowing asphalt 
    speed tests in the Costa Daurada hills to turn a slender 4.8sec overnight 
    lead into a 20.7sec advantage over Thierry Neuville with one day remaining 
    of this penultimate round.
    
    Barring any major dramas, Ogiers Toyota Gazoo Racing squad is almost 
    guaranteed to seal the manufacturers championship title on Sunday.
    
    "It's been a very enjoyable day for us," said Ogier. "We had 
    good fun in the car and the times were following. That's always what you dream 
    for when you come to a rally.
    
    "Honestly, I have been happy with my season so far but of course it would 
    be nice to clinch a win. Now we are in a good position but there is still 
    a long way to go."
    
    Neuville moved into the runner-up spot at the final hour - pinching the position 
    from 2022 champion Kalle Rovanperä, who dropped a chunk of time when 
    he selected the wrong engine map on the start line of El Montmell. At close 
    of play just 1.4sec separated the pair.
    
    It was a generally frustrating day for Neuville, however, as he fought to 
    optimise the set-up of his i20 N. Despite continuously making tweaks to the 
    car he could not find the perfect balance between understeer and the rear-end 
    breaking free.
    
    His Estonian team-mate Ott Tänak ended 15.9sec behind. Tänaks 
    day was relatively drama-free and he headed fifth-placed Dani Sordo - also 
    driving an i20 N - by 36.6sec.
    
    Sordos Saturday was one of two halves. The morning was filled with frustration 
    as he repeatedly dropped time to the leading crews. Mid-leg set-up tweaks 
    rejuvenated the Spaniard and he even grabbed a stage win late in the afternoon.
    
    Elfyn Evans remained a lacklustre sixth overall, 14.4sec down on Sordo. His 
    Toyota ran without problems but, like Sordo, something was missing for the 
    33-year-old and he couldnt quite put his finger on what it was.
    
    Tyre management was the major talking point for Craig Breen, who held seventh 
    overall in an M-Sport Ford Puma. The Irishman couldnt gel with the set-up 
    of the car which resulted in him overheating the front tyres on several occasions. 
    He languished 1min 39.7sec back from the lead but pulled clear of Yaris hotshot 
    Takamoto Katsuta.
    
    Puma duo Adrien Fourmaux and Pierre-Louis Loubet completed the leaderboard. 
    The latter broke into the top 10 at the expense of team-mate Gus Greensmith, 
    who retired when he collided with an armco barrier on a right-hand bend in 
    the final stage of the morning loop.
    
    Teemu Suninen sits 11th overall and also holds a commanding lead over Yohan 
    Rossel in the WRC2 category. The WRC3 title will be decided on Sunday and 
    just seconds separate Ford Fiesta rivals Jan Cerný and Lauri Joona.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 10min 18.5sec
    2. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +20.7sec
    3. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +22.1sec
    4. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +36.6sec
    5. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +1min 13.2sec
    6. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +1min 27.6sec 
    
    22-10-19 Neuville on rescue 
    mission to secure Spain hat-trick
    Plucky Belgian targets third-consecutive Rally de España win to keep 
    Hyundais hopes alive.
    The battle for the manufacturers crown in the 2022 FIA World Rally Championship 
    reaches a potentially decisive point in Spain this week as just two teams 
    remain in contention for the crown ahead of RallyRACC  Rally de España 
    (20  23 October).
    
    Toyota Gazoo Racing can seal its second title in as many years at this penultimate 
    round. The only squad able to prevent that from happening is Hyundai Motorsport, 
    which trails the former by 81 points.
    
    With such an advantage, a trouble-free outing for Toyota should be sufficient 
    to get the job done. But Hyundai has a trick up its sleeve: Thierry Neuville.
    
    For two editions on the bounce, the Belgian has been the man to beat on the 
    smooth asphalt roads in the hills behind the Costa Daurada, south of Barcelona. 
    Going three in a row would be a big boost for his Korean manufacturer squad.
    
    It would be nice to take a third win in a row in Spain, he said. 
    Well certainly be aiming to fight at the front and finish the 
    event on the podium again.
    
    Being quick here is all about getting a good set-up and finding a nice 
    flow with the car  then pushing as hard as you can. Well try our 
    best to secure a good result for the team.
    
    Neuville is joined by i20 N colleagues Ott Tänak and home hero Dani Sordo, 
    who has finished on the podium at the last six rallies he has contested.
    
    Toyotas charge is led by Kalle Rovanperä, who became the youngest 
    WRC champion in history at Repco Rally New Zealand earlier this month.
    
    The Finn and team-mates Sébastien Ogier and Elfyn Evans are the men 
    charged with keeping Hyundai at bay, while Takamoto Katsuta drives a fourth 
    GR Yaris under Toyotas Next Generation banner.
    
    M-Sport Ford fields a five-pronged Puma line-up. Craig Breen will be looking 
    to give co-driver Paul Nagle a strong send-off on his final WRC rally, while 
    Gus Greensmith, Adrien Fourmaux and Pierre-Louis Loubet also feature. Greek 
    privateer Jourdan Serderidis drives the fifth car.
    
    After Thursday evenings start ceremony in Salou, the action begins on 
    Friday morning. Competitors face 19 stages covering 293.77km before Sunday 
    afternoons finish in the holiday resort.
    
    
www.wrc.com 
    
    22-10-13 Oliver Solberg får 
    sponsorhjelp til å kjøre britisk rally
    Oliver Solberg stiller til start i Visit Conwy Cambrian Rally i Wales senere 
    denne måneden.
    Han skal delta med en familieeid Volkswagen Polo R5. 21-åringen kjørte 
    sist på walisiske skogsveier da han debuterte i rally-VM for snart tre 
    år siden.
    
    Nylig fikk han beskjed om at Hyundai Motorsport ikke ønsker å 
    forlenge kontrakten når den utløper ved årsskiftet.
    -Ting har åpenbart endret seg. Jeg vil ikke fokusere på det som 
    skjedde, men heller se framover. Etter å ha pratet med sponsorene mine 
    om situasjonen, ble vi enige om at det beste for meg er å kjøre 
    løp igjen. Jeg er veldig heldig som har en bil tilgjengelig og muligheten 
    til å kjøre, sier Oliver Solberg.
    
    Visit Conwy Cambrian Rally er basert i Llandudno; samme by som var vertskap 
    for Storbritannias siste runde av rally-VM i 2019.
    
    Fartsprøver som Brenig, Alwen, Clocaenog og Penmachno er kjent for 
    rallyfans verden over. I VM-debuten for tre år siden vant han Alwen- 
    og Brenig-prøvene. Oliver slo lagkameraten og faren Petter Solberg, 
    som avsluttet sin VM-karriere i en tilsvarende Volkswagen Polo R5.
    
    Visit Conwy Cambrian Rally starter med to fartsprøver på asfalt 
    fredag 28. oktober. Dagen derpå skal bilene kjøre de berømte 
    grusveiene.
    22-10-06 Oliver Solberg måste 
    lämna Hyundai-teamet 
    Rallyföraren Oliver Solberg (21) får inget nytt kontrakt med Hyundai 
    Motorsport kommande säsong.
    
    Det tvååriga kontraktet med fabriksteamet går ut i slutet 
    av året och kommer inte att förnyas.
     Jag är så klart besviken över situationen, men jag 
    måste respektera teamets beslut och deras nya plan att gå vidare 
    med tre bilar och bara rutinerade förare, säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    Beslutet om splittringen togs av det tyskledda teamet. Solberg har startat 
    i åtta deltävlingar i Rally-VM:s värstingklass den här 
    säsongen. Bästa placering är en fjärde plats från 
    asfaltstävlingen Rally Belgium i augusti.
    
    Senast körde han till sig en femteplats i Rally New Zealand. Samtidigt 
    säkrade 21-åringen karriärens första Power Stage-poäng. 
    Den tävlingen var Oliver Solbergs sista i VM som Hyundai-förare.
    
    De goda resultaten kom i slutet av en säsong som har varit präglad 
    av massa lärdom för den unge rallyföraren och hans brittiska 
    kartläsare, Elliott Edmondson.
     Jag vet att det inte var ett lätt beslut för dem att ta eftersom 
    ursprungsplanen har ändrats. Oavsett är jag otroligt tacksam för 
    möjligheten jag fick av Hyundai Motorsport att få delta i rally-VM 
    tillsammans med dem. Vi visste att den här säsongen skulle bli en 
    lärorik period, och den har utan tvekan gett massa erfarenhet inför 
    nästa fas i min karriär, säger Solberg.
    
    Oliver Solberg kommer att förbli en del av fabriksteamet fram till slutet 
    av året. Han ska göra rekognoseringen i Rally Japan, men han kommer 
    inte köra någon mer tävling denna säsongen.
    
    22-10-03 Kalle Rovanperä's 
    WRC-winning season
    Making history: Kalle Rovanperä's WRC-winning season
    How a 22-year-old Finn rewrote rallying's record books.
    
    Sitting at the stop line on the Col de Turini on Thursday evening at this 
    years Rallye Monte-Carlo, Kalle Rovanperä looked anything but comfortable.
    
    It was the debut of the long-awaited hybrid-powered Rally1 cars. New cars, 
    new technology and, with Sébastien Ogier only committing to a part-time 
    schedule, a guaranteed new champion at the end of the season.
    
    I think the balance of the car is really tricky for me to drive, 
    Rovanperä said of his GR Yaris after dropping 42.8sec across 23.25 kilometres 
    on the second stage of the WRCs 50th anniversary season. It's 
    quite difficult for me."
    
    Things soon began to look up for the young Finn. Having ended the opening 
    pair of stages way down in 12th overall, he climbed to ninth on Friday and 
    by Saturday was setting stage-winning times.
    
    Ending Rallye Monte-Carlo in fourth place, perhaps Rovanperä hadnt 
    made such a bad start after all.
    
    It was one month later in Umeå when Rovanperä really established 
    himself as a serious title contender. Opening the roads on the snow and ice 
    of Rally Sweden, he managed his studded Pirelli tyres to perfection to end 
    Fridays opening leg just behind Thierry Neuville.
    
    When Saturday came, he pounced - taking the lead on the very first stage and 
    holding off charging team-mate Elfyn Evans to remain at the fore.
    
    A nighttime attack made all the difference when, under darkness, Rovanperä 
    threw caution to the wind, extending his advantage over the Welshman from 
    1.2sec to 8.3sec heading into a short final day.
    
    When Evans slammed into a snowbank, it was game, set and match. Rovanperä 
    emulated the actions of his father Harri from 21 years prior to take career 
    victory number three.
    
    Now he was on a roll. Aprils Croatia Rally - the first asphalt fixture 
    of the hybrid era - produced some of the most thrilling scenes the WRC had 
    seen in a long time.
    
    Rovanperä led from the start only for a storm in the penultimate speed 
    test wiping out his hard-earned advantage.
    
    A resurgent Ott Tänak, whose gamble on softer Pirelli tyres gave his 
    Hyundai i20 N a performance edge on the streaming asphalt, grabbed a 1.4sec 
    lead before the Wolf Power Stage - but the Yaris driver threw caution to the 
    wind and remarkably overturned that deficit to win by 4.3sec, extending his 
    points lead to 29 after just three rounds.
    
    The hat-trick was completed just weeks later at Vodafone Rally de Portugal. 
    After trailing Evans for the opening two days, Rovanperä relegated his 
    team-mate late in the penultimate leg.
    
    He extended his advantage further on Sunday - winning the rally and taking 
    five bonus points on the Wolf Power Stage to leave Porto 46 points ahead.
    
    Rally Italia Sardegna was a tricky one. With one eye on the championship, 
    Rovanperä had the dubious task of opening the road on Friday and he struggled 
    for traction on the loose gravel stages.
    
    An improved road position later in the rally enabled the Finn to climb the 
    order but he was never really in the podium battle and eventually settled 
    for fifth overall - still the highest-placed Toyota on a disappointing weekend 
    for the team.
    
    Despite that, he did extend his championship advantage by nine points after 
    Evans stopped with suspension trouble.
    
    Rovanperä, co-driven by long-term partner Jonne Halttunen, was soon back 
    to winning ways at Safari Rally Kenya.
    
    Undeterred by feeling unwell, he seized the top spot from team-mate Ogier 
    on Friday afternoon and was unchallenged from then on - heading a historic 
    1-2-3-4 for Toyota Gazoo Racing.
    
    Of course, this win is a bit more special than the other ones," 
    he said after the rally. "To also be the winning car in a result like 
    this - its just fantastic."
    
    Rally Estonia was equally successful. Returning to the site of his maiden 
    FIA World Rally Championship victory 12 months prior, Rovanperä grabbed 
    the lead on Friday afternoon before reeling off seven-consecutive fastest 
    times in inclement weather on Saturday.
    
    Arriving at the finish more than a minute clear of closest challenger Evans, 
    and with another Wolf Power Stage victory to boot, Rovanperä's championship 
    lead now stood at 83 points just seven rounds in.
    
    With a five-year drought since a local driver had won Secto Rally Finland, 
    the pressure was on for Rovanperäs home WRC round. But the Finnish 
    celebrations were put on hold as he finished second overall to Ott Tänak, 
    who enjoyed a fresh turn of speed with his Hyundai.
    
    Ypres Rally Belgium presented the first mathematical opportunity for Rovanperä 
    to seal the title but, for the first time all season, the youngster showed 
    he might be human after all. Overcooking a left-hander on Fridays opener, 
    his Yaris slid into an infamous ditch and rolled spectacularly.
    
    A monumental effort by Toyotas mechanics enabled Rovanperä to rejoin 
    and salvage maximum Wolf Power Stage points, although his points advantage 
    over Tänak - who won the rally - was cut to 72.
    
    It was a similar story at EKO Acropolis Rally Greece. Languishing down in 
    ninth overall after a poor opening day, Rovanperäs car sustained 
    heavy rear-end damage when he sideswiped a tree. He crawled back to service 
    and the team repaired the car, but the damage was done and he finished a lowly 
    15th.
    
    When the WRC returned to Repco Rally New Zealand following a 10-year hiatus, 
    there were question marks over whether Rovanperä would be able to end 
    his bad run of form and do enough to take the title down under.
    
    On paper, he needed to outscore Tänak by eight points to get the job 
    done. By winning the rally, however, he would require just seven more than 
    his rival at the 11th round.
    
    Tänak started strongly and led after day one, but a 15sec penalty for 
    two hybrid rule breaches for the Estonian provided an unexpected birthday 
    gift for the now-22 year old Rovanperä. He pulled clear from the chasing 
    pack to carry a comfortable buffer into Sundays four-stage finale.
    
    Victory was never really in doubt - but the job wasnt done yet. With 
    Rovanperä the only driver yet to complete, Tänak held the benchmark 
    time for the Jack's Ridge Power Stage. To secure the crown, Rovanperä 
    needed at least two bonus points, which would mean being at least fourth-fastest 
    through the stage.
    
    His response? Full send.
    
    Rovanperäs time for the 6.77km test was six-tenths of a second 
    quicker than Tänaks - making him the youngest WRC champion in the 
    sports history aged 22 years and one day.
    
    Weve witnessed the Séb era - could this be the start of the Kalle 
    era? Only time will tell. One thing, however, is certain - hes got age 
    on his side.
    22-10-02 Femteplats och Power 
    Stage-poäng för Solberg
    Rallyföraren Oliver Solberg säkrade säsongens näst bästa 
    VM-placering när 21-åringen körde in på en total femteplats 
    i Rally New Zealand.
    
    Hyundai-föraren har därmed fixat två topp 5-placeringar i 
    rad i rally-VM:s värstingklass. Förra månaden slutade han 
    på karriärens bästa placering då han korsade mållinjen 
    som fjärde bil i Rally Belgium.
    
    Ytterligare en milstolpe nåddes när 21-åringen fick extra 
    VM-poäng för första gången efter fjärde bästa 
    tid i tävlingens sista specialsträcka; så kallad Power Stage.
     Att uppnå det för första gången i Rally New Zealand 
    är extra häftigt och minnesvärt för mig. Målet med 
    tävlingen var att fullfölja och få värdefull erfarenhet 
    av de speciella vägarna i Nya Zeeland. Det är väldigt viktigt 
    för framtiden att förstå hur bilen fungerar på de här 
    vägarna, sa Oliver Solberg.
    
    Ett tekniskt problem på lördagen gjorde att tävlingen inte 
    blev helt perfekt, men en fjärdeplats på två av tävlingens 
    specialsträckor visade att Hyundai-föraren har speeden som krävs.
    
    Solberg kom i mål 3.55,3 minuter efter totalvinnaren Kalle Rovanperä, 
    som dagen efter sin 22-årsdag blev den yngsta världsmästaren 
    i rally genom tiderna. Finländaren vann sin sjätte seger för 
    säsongen på elva tävlingar.
    
    Två VM-tävlingar återstår av säsongen. Näst 
    på tur står Spanien som körs 20-23 oktober. VM avslutas i 
    Japan 10-13 november.
    22-10-02 King Kalle secures 
    record-breaking WRC title down under
    Finnish star makes history by becoming the youngest-ever WRC champion. Finnish 
    wunderkind Kalle Rovanperä obliterated the FIA World Rally Championship 
    record books after sealing a historic title with victory at Repco Rally New 
    Zealand.*
    
    At 22 years and one day old, the Toyota Gazoo Racing driver becomes the youngest 
    driver in the history of the sport to lift the crown - sweeping aside the 
    record previously held by Colin McRae, who won in 1995 aged 27 years and 89 
    days.
    
    Rovanperä, who is co-driven by Jonne Halttunen, required seven more points 
    than Hyundai i20 N rival Ott Tänak to seal the deal at this Auckland-based 
    11th round.
    
    With a hefty lead already earned on Saturday, he remained unchallenged over 
    Sundays final four gravel tests and emerged from the rally-ending Wolf 
    Power Stage having done more than enough - heading a GR Yaris 1-2 by 34.6sec 
    ahead of eight-time world champion Sébastien Ogier as a frustrated 
    Tänak settled for third almost 50sec behind.
    
    This season - only Rovanperäs third in the sports top-flight 
    - proved to be nothing short of extraordinary. After a shaky start at the 
    season-opening Rallye Monte-Carlo, the Finn romped to a hat-trick of successive 
    wins in Sweden, Croatia and Portugal.
    
    Road-opening duties at Rally Italia Sardegna left Rovanperä down in fifth 
    but he was soon back to winning ways, triumphing in Kenya and Estonia before 
    further extending his advantage with second overall on home soil.
    
    The youngsters form then took a brief downturn when he spectacularly 
    rolled on the opening day of Ypres Rally Belgium. He also finished a lowly 
    15th in Greece due to another off-road excursion.
    
    Victory in New Zealand on just his 30th start at the WRCs elite level 
    leaves Rovanperä with an unassailable 64-point lead over Tänak with 
    two rounds to spare.
    
    "It's quite a big relief after such a good season and finally we are 
    here," beamed the newly-crowned champion.
    
    "It was a small wait after a few difficult rallies, but the biggest thanks 
    goes to the team - they made this rocket this year. Even after all the difficult 
    rallies they were believing in us and giving us all the support."
    
    An emotional Jari-Matti Latvala - team principal of Toyota Gazoo Racing - 
    stressed the importance of having a Finnish champion after a 20-year drought 
    since Marcus Grönholm took the title in 2002.
    
    In a way I would like to cry, but I can't cry here, he said. It's 
    really important what Kalle has done. First of all, its amazing for 
    a 22-year-old to be breaking all the records and taking the championship title.
    
    At the same time, it is so important for Finland because it has been 
    20 years and thats a very long time. I am so grateful that Kalle did 
    it - he is a superhero.
    
    Fourth place in the rally went to Hyundai pilot Thierry Neuville, whose issues 
    included a faulty gearbox on Saturday. He trailed Tänak by 1min 10.3sec 
    but led Oliver Solberg, also driving an i20, by a hefty margin after the young 
    Swede dropped time with a Saturday misfire.
    
    New Zealands technical stages took no prisoners with Yaris pairing Elfyn 
    Evans and Takamoto Katsuta plus M-Sport Ford Puma youngster Gus Greensmith 
    all failing to restart on Sunday due to accident damage.
    
    The drama enabled home hero Hayden Paddon to finish sixth overall as well 
    as taking his Rally2-specification Hyundai to WRC2 glory. Puma privateer Lorenzo 
    Bertelli finished seventh while Kajetan Kajetanowicz, Shane Vangisbergen and 
    Harry Bates completed the leaderboard.
    
    The WRC returns to asphalt for the penultimate round at RallyRACC - Rally 
    de España on 20 - 23 October. The fixture is based in Salou.
    
    *Subject to FIA confirmation
    
    Overall classification:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 48min 1.4sec
    2. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +34.6sec
    3. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +48.5sec
    4. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +1min 58.8sec
    5. O Solberg / E Edmondson SWE Ford Puma +3min 55.3sec
    6. H Paddon / J Kennard NZL Hyundai i20 N Rally2 +10min 3.7sec
    
    Drivers' championship standings (after round 11 of 13):
    1. K Rovanperä 237pts
    2. O Tänak 173pts
    3. T Neuville 144pts
    
    22-10-01 Birthday boy Rovanperä 
    puts one hand on WRC crown
    Finn storms into New Zealand lead on super Saturday, edging closer to historic 
    title. Kalle Rovanperä is closing in on his maiden FIA World Rally Championship 
    title after taking the Repco Rally New Zealand field by storm on Saturday.
    
    A 29.0sec lead heading into Sundays final leg was the best 22nd birthday 
    present the Toyota Gazoo racing star could have asked for after six technical 
    stages on gravel roads north of Auckland.
    
    The icing on the cake was a 46.4sec buffer over his main title challenger 
    Ott Tänak, who finished the day in third after being lumbered with 15 
    seconds worth of time penalties.
    
    Rovanperä himself was handed a five-second penalty before the day had 
    even started for his own hybrid rule breach, but the Finn carved through the 
    pack on muddy roads to seize the top spot by mid-leg service before taking 
    a brace of stage wins in the afternoon.
    
    Tänak initially stayed within touching distance of his rival despite 
    being unhappy with the feeling aboard his Hyundai i20 N but slipped out of 
    touch when he received an additional 10sec sanction for a second hybrid breach.
    
    Event stewards ruled the energy released from Tänaks car during 
    hybrid boosts on SS7 exceeded the maximum value allowed for that stage, with 
    Hyundai team manager Pablo Marcus explaining the mistake was simply due to 
    an error made by engineers when setting the hybrid units parameters.
    
    If the top-three positions remain as they are, fourth-fastest on Sunday afternoons 
    bonus points-paying Wolf Power Stage will be enough to crown Rovanperä 
    as the youngest-ever WRC champion.
    
    A great day, smiled Rovanperä. I can be really happy 
    with what we did in these extremely difficult conditions. We pushed really 
    hard and I am happy.
    
    Ogiers afternoon didnt go without drama. He incurred a 10sec penalty 
    for arriving late to SS12 and was keen to stay in line for a solid manufacturers 
    points haul after team-mate Elfyn Evans retired with roll cage damage sustained 
    during an off on the first pass of Puhoi.
    
    Almost one minute back from the podium was Thierry Neuville who, along with 
    i20 partner Oliver Solberg, also picked up time penalties for hybrid rule 
    breaches. The Belgian driver lost third gear during the morning loop but arrived 
    back to service 1min 53.5sec clear of fifth-placed Solberg.
    
    Solbergs top-five position came at the expense of Toyota youngster Takamoto 
    Katsuta, who slid off the road on a tight left-hander in the penultimate stage. 
    Twenty-one-year-old Solberg was relieved not to be joining Katsuta on the 
    retirements list, having limped through three stages with a misfire.
    
    Ford Puma driver Gus Greensmith had been running fifth but was left out of 
    contention with a spectacular roll on SS10. After assessing the damage, Greensmiths 
    M-Sport Ford squad confirmed he will not restart on Sunday.
    
    Such was the rate of attrition that WRC2 leader Hayden Paddon rounded off 
    the top-six in a Rally2-specification Hyundai. The Kiwi had 27.3sec in hand 
    over Puma privateer Lorenzo Bertelli, while Kajetan Kajetanowicz, Shane Vangisbergen 
    and Harry Bates completed the top 10.
    
    Sundays finale comprises a new stage at Whitford Forest Te Maraunga 
    Waiho (8.82km) and the purpose-built Jacks Ridge (6.77km). Both are 
    driven twice, with the second run of Jacks Ridge forming the bonus points-paying 
    Wolf Power Stage.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 28min 26.3sec
    2. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +29.0sec
    3. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +46.4sec
    4. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +1min 41.4sec
    5. O Solberg / E Edmondson SWE Hyundai i20 N +3min 34.9sec
    6. H Paddon / J Kennard NZL Hyundai i20 N Rally2 +8min 51.0sec 
    
    22-09-30 Tänak topples 
    struggling Ogier on Friday in New Zealand
    Estonian battles through torrential downpours to lead after monster opening 
    leg. Ott Tänak reclaimed the top spot at Repco Rally New Zealand as Sébastien 
    Ogier struggled through Fridays final test with a damaged rear spoiler.
    
    Just 7.2sec blanketed the leading four drivers after 158.56km of frantic action 
    on the longest leg of this years FIA World Rally Championship so far.
    
    Tänak was initially dominant in his Hyundai i20 N and opened up a slender 
    advantage as heavy downpours plagued the mornings stages on gravel roads 
    in the Waikato Region.
    
    When the rain clouds briefly parted ahead of the second pass of Whaanga Coast, 
    however, the Estonian driver was hampered by an early road position and struggled 
    for traction as the surface dried and became loose.
    
    He was passed by Toyota Gazoo Racing star Elfyn Evans as well as the Welshmans 
    part-time colleague Ogier who, aided by a lower starting position, climbed 
    from fifth to first overall after outpacing the entire field by 8.2sec while 
    managing his soft compound Pirelli rubber to perfection.
    
    Wet weather returned for the closing two speed tests and Ogier soon came unstuck 
    - brushing a tree branch with the rear end of his Yaris which ripped the upper 
    half of the spoiler from the car.
    
    That enabled Tänak to crank up the pressure and he stormed back in front 
    with a stage win on the final test as Ogier struggled with reduced rear aero, 
    ending 6.7sec adrift of the lead. Evans consistency was rewarded and 
    he swooped into the runner-up spot - trailing the leader by just two-tenths 
    of a second.
    
    Road-opening duties actually played to Kalle Rovanperäs advantage 
    as the Toyota hotshot avoided the worst of a heavy shower on SS6. The Finn 
    finished the day just 0.5sec behind Ogier in fourth overall but, unless he 
    can overhaul Tänak within the next two days, will not be able to seal 
    the drivers title this week.
    
    M-Sport Fords pair of Pumas were initially dominant as Craig Breen and 
    Gus Greensmith locked out the top-two after the opener. Things quickly turned 
    sour, however, when Breen retired after sliding down a banking on the same 
    corner which caught out Colin McRae in 2002.
    
    Greensmith was left flying the flag for the British squad and he coped admirably 
    to end the day 36.6sec back from Rovanperä in fifth.
    
    Thierry Neuvilles morning was plagued by two costly spins but his luck 
    improved as the day wore on. A softer suspension set-up heralded more confidence 
    in his i20 and by close of play the EKO Acropolis Rally Greece winner had 
    moved to within 1.8sec of Greensmith.
    
    Competitors journey north of rally base Auckland on Saturday for double runs 
    through Kaipara Hills (15.83km), Puhoi (22.50km) and Komokoriki (5.81km). 
    A return to Auckland for service separates the loops, which add up to 88.28km.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 1hr 36min 48.6sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +0.2sec
    3. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +6.7sec
    4. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +7.2sec
    5. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +43.8sec
    6. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +45.6sec
    
    22-09-29 Oliver Solberg i sin 
    fars framgångsspår
    18 och ett halvt år efter att pappa Petter vunnit karriärens sjätte 
    (av 13) VM-tävlingar i rally, gör sonen Oliver Solberg (21) sin 
    debut i Rally New Zealand.
    
    Triumfen 2004 var den första Solberg senior säkrade som regerande 
    världsmästare  och den kom efter han vunnit sju specialsträckor 
    och han ledde sedan tävling i stort sett ända in i mål. 2000 
    till 2012 körde Petter Solberg elva VM-tävlingar i öriket.
    
    Nu är det arvtagarens tur. Oliver Solberg fyllde 21 förra veckan 
    och kör karriärens tolfte VM-lopp i WRC-klassen.
     Både jag och mamma var här 2012  senast tävlingen 
    kördes. Jag minns den legendariska Whaanga Coast-etappen bäst, och 
    jag kan inte vänta med att få köra den. Vägarna i Nya 
    Zeeland är väldigt speciella och skiljer sig från vad vi ser 
    i andra tävlingar. Det är mycket löst grus på toppen 
    och har enorma lutningar både in och utöver, säger Oliver 
    Solberg.
    
    Mer än fem veckor har gått sedan Hyundai-föraren senast satt 
    bakom ratten i sin i20 N Rally1-bil. I Rally Belgium gjorde den unge föraren 
    ett stort intryck med sin fjärdeplacering, som är karriärens 
    bästa hittills.
    
    Rally New Zealand är säsongens tredje sista VM-tävling. Tävlingen 
    består av 17 specialsträckor, där den första går 
    på kvällen redan på torsdag.
    
    Tävlingen avslutas natten mot måndag svensk tid.
    
    22-09-28 New Zealand returns 
    to the WRC as title scrap hits fever pitch
    Title favourite Rovanperä excited to debut down under. The FIA World 
    Rally Championship goes down under this week as Repco Rally New Zealand (29 
    September - 2 October) returns to the series for the first time in a decade.
    
    Fast-flowing gravel roads with cambered corners await the crews at this 11th 
    round as the rally winds it way through forests and along the picture postcard 
    coastline of the North Island.
    
    Few of the WRCs frontline stars have previously contested the Auckland-based 
    fixture, which brings a unique challenge to the 13-round championship. Among 
    those making their New Zealand debuts is Toyota Gazoo Racing wunderkind Kalle 
    Rovanperä.
    
    Poor results in recent rallies have seen Rovanperäs title-leading 
    deficit reduced to 53 points over Ott Tänak. The Finn celebrates his 
    22nd birthday this Saturday (1 October) and remains firmly on course to becoming 
    the WRCs youngest-ever champion.
    
    A birthday isnt the only thing Rovanperä might be celebrating this 
    weekend, either. He could seal the drivers championship crown on Sunday 
    should he outscore Tänak by eight points, or just seven if he wins the 
    rally.
    
    It will be really interesting to go to Rally New Zealand, said 
    Rovanperä. I have only heard good things about the country and 
    the rally and how nice the roads are.
    
    Recent rallies have not been ideal for us but we know what we need to 
    improve and we are working hard to have more pace and be more comfortable. 
    Hopefully we can have good speed, enjoy the event and finish with a good result.
    
    Rovanperä is joined in GR Yaris Rally1 cars by Elfyn Evans and Takamoto 
    Katsuta as well as eight-time world champion Sébastien Ogier, who resumes 
    his part-time campaign with the Japanese manufacturer on his first outing 
    since Kenya in June.
    
    With top-three results at the past four rallies, Hyundai Motorsports 
    Tänak is hoping for more of the same. Teamed up with Thierry Neuville 
    and Oliver Solberg in a trio of hybrid-powered i20 N cars, the Estonian admits 
    that New Zealands fabled stages are a dream to drive on.
    
    "The roads seem as if they were made for rallying," he smiled. "Hopefully 
    we can get 100 per cent from the car and achieve a strong result."
    
    Craig Breen and Gus Greensmith lead M-Sport Ford's charge, with Italian privateer 
    Lorenzo Bertelli also fielding a Puma. Adrien Fourmaux was also due to drive 
    for the British squad but withdrew his entry last week.
    
    The four-day counter begins with a super special stage on Thursday evening 
    and features 17 speed tests totalling 276.44km. 
    
    22-09-11 Neuville triumphs 
    as Hyundai makes history in Greece
    Belgian heads up maiden 1-2-3 finish for Korean manufacturer squad. 
    Thierry Neuville secured victory at EKO Acropolis Rally Greece on Sunday afternoon 
    - fronting a historic Hyundai i20 N 1-2-3 finish.
    
    The Belgian driver seized the top spot early on Saturday after nine-time world 
    champion Sébastien Loeb retired with alternator failure. From that 
    moment onwards he never looked back.
    
    Neuvilles Hyundai squad emerged from the penultimate day unscathed while 
    several frontrunners hit trouble. He carried an advantage of almost half a 
    minute over team-mate Ott Tänak into Sundays three-stage finale 
    with Dani Sordo completing the podium lockout in third.
    
    Tänak brought back 2.9sec on the first pass through Elefthori, but any 
    hopes of the Estonian putting more pressure on his colleague were quashed 
    as team orders came into play.
    
    Fourth-placed Elfyn Evans - driving a Toyota GR Yaris - was sidelined by turbo 
    problems on the road section before the opener, leaving the frontrunning trio 
    more than three minutes clear of the field.
    
    Under instructions to bring the cars home, all three Hyundai drivers went 
    into safety mode. Their positions remained unchanged and Neuville took the 
    spoils by 15.0sec - marking his first victory of the WRCs hybrid era 
    as well as a maiden podium lockout for the Korean manufacturer squad.
    
    It has been a tough season so far and to get the victory after a very 
    difficult weekend in Belgium is a relief, Neuville said.
    
    The most important thing is that we have a 1-2-3 for the team. After 
    all these years we finally got it and it's a historical moment for the brand 
    and the team. Everybody has worked hard for this and it's a nice reward."
    
    Tänaks score moved him to within 53 points of championship leader 
    Kalle Rovanperä, who finished more than 17 minutes off the pace.
    
    The 21-year-old Finn hit a tree on Saturday and haemorrhaged time nursing 
    his Yaris to the finish. He did, however, salvage four points from the Wolf 
    Power Stage and could seal the crown at the next round should he outscore 
    Tänak by eight points.
    
    Pierre-Louis Loubet fought back to equal his career-best result by finishing 
    fourth overall aboard an M-Sport Ford Puma. He briefly led and took two stage 
    wins on Friday but tumbled down the standings with a front left puncture the 
    following day, eventually ending 1min 52.5sec down on Sordo.
    
    Loubets team-mate Craig Breen had similar issues on Friday but, aided 
    by problems for those ahead, climbed to sixth overall. The Irishman trailed 
    Loubet by 26.8sec with Toyota youngster Takamoto Katsuta 2min 12.1sec behind.
    
    The WRC heads down under later this month as Repco Rally New Zealand hosts 
    round 11 of 13. The gravel fixture returns to the calendar for the first time 
    since 2012 and takes place from 29 September - 2 October.
    
    Rally classification:
    1. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N 3hr 34min 52.0sec
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +15.0sec
    3. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +1min 49.7sec
    4. P-L Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +3min 42.2sec
    5. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +4min 9.0sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +6min 21.1sec
    
    Drivers' championship points (after round 10 of 13):
    1. K Rovanperä 207pts
    2. O Tänak 154pts
    3. T Neuville 131 pts
    22-09-10 Neuville heads Hyundai 
    lockout on bruising Saturday in Greece
    Belgian driver's team excels as brutal gravel roads pierce through the field. 
    Thierry Neuville charged to a lead of almost half a minute as Saturdays 
    gruelling leg pierced the Rally1 field at EKO Acropolis Rally Greece.
    
    One-third of the top-tier crews failed to complete the brutal 147.98km route 
    on rugged gravel stages near Lamia - but Neuvilles Hyundai Motorsport 
    squad was impenetrable and is poised for what could be the manufacturers 
    first-ever 1-2-3.
    
    After trailing Friday leader Sébastien Loeb by 16.0sec overnight, the 
    Belgian driver was surprised to find himself at the top of the standings just 
    one stage into the penultimate leg when Loebs M-Sport Ford Puma threw 
    an alternator belt after the finish.
    
    Neuville was unchallenged from that moment onwards and he maintained an impressive 
    pace throughout the day, romping to three fastest times as his rivals hit 
    trouble. A dashboard warning alarm for low battery voltage provided a brief 
    scare but did not appear to have any effect on the cars performance.
    
    He carries a hefty 27.9sec advantage over Ott Tänak into Sundays 
    three-stage finale and, as it stands, remains on-course to claim his first-ever 
    victory of the WRCs hybrid era.
    
    "It has been a great day for us, reflected Neuville. A bit 
    of a hard one this afternoon with some trouble with the car, but we survived 
    and we are here now. We had a warning for battery voltage, but it seems okay.
    
    My tyres weren't so good for the last few stages and I was just trying 
    to drive cleanly through to avoid punctures," he added.
    
    Although Tänak started strongly with a stage win at Pygros, he was unable 
    to make any major gains on his leading partner since moving into the top-three 
    when Pierre-Louis Loubets Puma punctured on SS9.
    
    Tänak complained of differential niggles during the morning loop but 
    things seemed to improve after service and he headed colleague Dani Sordo 
    by 25.0sec at close of play.
    
    Sordo swooped onto the podium late in the day at the expense of Toyota man 
    Esapekka Lappi, whose Yaris developed a fuel-related problem in the penultimate 
    stage. The engine kept cutting out and he was eventually forced to retire 
    on the road section.
    
    Toyotas hopes then rested on the shoulders of Elfyn Evans, who brought 
    his Yaris home in fourth overall. The Welshman struggled to find a rhythm, 
    especially in loose conditions on the morning pass, but pressured Sordo in 
    the closing stages to end only 7.1sec behind.
    
    Loubet recovered to round off the top-five, albeit more than two minutes back 
    from the lead. His Puma colleague Craig Breen followed, with Toyota youngster 
    Takamoto Katsuta behind in seventh after a scrappy day which included two 
    spins.
    
    Kalle Rovanperäs hopes of sealing the drivers title this 
    week were dashed when he swiped a tree on the first pass through Perivoli. 
    Although he was able to continue, the Toyota wunderkind dropped over 11 minutes 
    as he limped back to service with body damage and brake issues.
    
    M-Sports woes were compounded by the retirements of Gus Greensmith and 
    Jourdan Serderidis. Greensmith had been running in the top-six but stopped 
    with a mechanical failure on SS11, while Serderidis Puma hit electrical 
    trouble after leaving the lunchtime service.
    
    Sundays finale takes place north of the rally base. Eleftherochori (16.90km) 
    runs twice and sandwiches a single run of Elatia-Rengini (11.26km).
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N 3hr 6min 34.4sec
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +27.9sec
    3. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +52.9sec
    4. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +1min 0.0sec
    5. P-L Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +2min 40.1sec
    6. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +3min 47.2 
    
    22-09-09 Legend Loeb robs Greece 
    lead from apprentice Loubet on Friday
    Experience comes to the fore as nine-time champion heads French 
    1-2 with late charge. Sébastien Loeb snatched the EKO Acropolis Rally 
    Greece lead from team-mate Pierre-Louis Loubet late on Friday evening as their 
    M-Sport Ford team dominated proceedings.
    
    It was a dream day for the British squad with its Ford Puma cars topping the 
    timesheets on every single speed test as the rally threaded its way north 
    following Thursdays spectacular start in Athens.
    
    Loeb was initially dominant on the rugged gravel roads and opened up an early 
    advantage on his fourth WRC start of the season. However, as temperatures 
    soared, the nine-time world champion lost momentum.
    
    An overshoot on a hairpin bend in Dafni was enough to break Loebs stride 
    and he gave way to Puma team-mate and fellow Frenchman Loubet, who seized 
    the top spot whilst also grabbing his first stage win in the WRCs top-flight.
    
    Loubet looked likely to lead overnight after notching up another fastest time 
    at Livadia but Loebs superior experience came to the fore.
    
    Armed with previous knowledge of the stage from his last Acropolis outing 
    in 2012, the 40-year-old shaded his apprentice by 10 seconds in Bauxites to 
    go back in front.
    
    Just 1.7sec separated the Puma duo as Toyota GR Yaris driver Esapekka Lappi 
    filled the final podium spot 8.7sec further back.
    
    I decided to try really hard in this last one because I was losing too 
    much time in the previous stage and I didn't feel too confident, Loeb 
    said of his late push.
    
    I just said: 'Okay, I need to finish on a good rhythm'. There was a 
    stone in the ground which I hit sideways and it lifted the car onto two wheels, 
    but it was no problem."
    
    Loubet remained upbeat despite relinquishing the position and explained how 
    minor mechanical niggles were costing time.
    
    "We can be happy with what we have done, he said. We had 
    an issue with the brakes at the beginning of the stage and something with 
    the power steering at the end.
    
    I didn't want to take any risks and I just brought the car home. It's 
    still amazing - it's like a dream to be fighting with Loeb."
    
    Leading Hyundai driver Thierry Neuville was a further 7.3sec behind Lappi 
    - an admirable effort considering his starting position of fourth.
    
    Lingering dust hampered the Belgian early in the day and an imbalanced set-up 
    left him fighting with understeer. Nevertheless, he headed i20 N colleague 
    Dani Sordo, who lacked confidence in his pace notes, by 22.2sec.
    
    Ott Tänak completed most of the leg with a faulty hybrid unit which left 
    his Hyundai short on power. Behind him were Gus Greensmith (Ford) and Elfyn 
    Evans (Toyota) with just 3.4sec separating the trio.
    
    Championship leader Kalle Rovanperä settled for ninth after opening the 
    road. The Toyota youngster faced extremely loose conditions and his hopes 
    of sealing the drivers title this weekend currently look slim.
    
    Saturday is the longest and toughest leg and covers 147.98 competitive kilometres 
    west of Lamia. Double passes through Pyrgos and Tarzan will be especially 
    hard.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. S Loeb / I Galmiche FRA Ford Puma 1hr 12min 11.9sec
    2. P-L Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +1.7sec
    3. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +8.7sec
    4. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +16.0sec
    5. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +31.1sec
    6. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +33.9sec 
    
    22-09-07 Title-chasing Rovanperä 
    bids for Acropolis double
    Finnish wunderkind hunts down WRC crown at gruelling Greek classic. Kalle 
    Rovanperä is on a quest to secure back-to-back EKO Acropolis Rally Greece 
    (8 - 11 September) victories as he bids to clinch the 2022 FIA World Rally 
    Championship title.
    
    This weeks Lamia-based fixture presents the Toyota Gazoo Racing driver 
    with his second opportunity to become the youngest-ever WRC champion. On paper, 
    he could have sealed the deal at last months Ypres Rally Belgium - but 
    a Friday morning roll put paid to any celebration hopes.
    
    When the Acropolis returned to the calendar last year following a 13-year 
    sabbatical, Rovanperä put on a dominant display to win by over 40 seconds.
    
    He carries a 72-point lead over Hyundai Motorsport rival Ott Tänak into 
    this 10th round and, to stand any chance of taking the title on Sunday, must 
    outscore Tänak by at least 18 points. But that wont be easy.
    
    Punishing gravel tracks in the mountains north of Athens have earned the Acropolis 
    its reputation as the Rally of Gods and the event demands as much 
    respect today as it did when it first featured in 1973.
    
    To be successful here, drivers must measure their pace accordingly - pushing 
    when safe to do so whilst also taking care of their machinery on the rocky 
    terrain.
    
    Belgium was a difficult weekend for us, so in Greece we just need to 
    get back at the level where we should be and try to have a good rally," 
    Rovanperä said.
    
    "The championship is never over until its over, so we cant 
    think about it too much. Were just trying to get good points from each 
    event and control what we can."
    
    Rovanperä is joined in GR Yaris Rally1 cars by Elfyn Evans and Esapekka 
    Lappi. Although Evans remains mathematically in contention for the drivers 
    title, his sights will be set on helping the Japanese marque extend its 88-point 
    lead in the manufacturers series.
    
    Tänak is targeting his third consecutive win and teams up with Hyundai 
    i20 N colleagues Thierry Neuville and Dani Sordo. Neuville can only keep himself 
    in the title hunt if he outscores Rovanperä by at least eight points, 
    while Sordos outing marks the Spaniards first since Italy in June.
    
    "We are feeling positive after our win in Ypres," Tänak explained. 
    "Going from Tarmac to gravel is a big change, but we know we can be strong 
    on this surface after our wins in Italy and Finland."
    
    Craig Breen spearheads M-Sport Fords attack. The British squad fields 
    five Puma cars, with Breen joined by returning nine-time world champion Sébastien 
    Loeb, Gus Greensmith, Pierre-Louis Loubet and Greek privateer Jourdan Serderidis.
    
    Adrien Fourmaux was due to drive a sixth Puma but withdrew his entry due to 
    the damage his car sustained during a crash in Belgium.
    
    The rally starts in Athens on Thursday evening when, for the first time since 
    2006, the capitals Olympic Stadium hosts a super special stage. Three 
    more days of competition around Loutraki and Lamia follow before Sunday afternoons 
    finish after 16 stages covering 303.30km. 
    
    22-08-21 Karriärens 
    bästa för Oliver Solberg i Rally Belgien
    När Oliver Solberg (20) behövde en framgång som 
    mest slog rallyföraren till med en fjärdeplats och karriärens 
    bästa placering i VM-tävlingen Rally Belgium i helgen.
     Det är helt fantastiskt att komma tillbaka på det här 
    sättet och uppnå mitt bästa resultat hittills. Dessutom bidrog 
    vi med bra med VM-poäng till teamet. Jag är otroligt lättad 
    och glad, sa Oliver Solberg.
    
    För två veckor sedan kraschade Hyundai-föraren ur Rally Finland 
    redan på det andra specialsträckan. 20-åringen var mycket 
    bedrövad efter olyckan.
     Det här var en tuff helg på svåra vägar. Min 
    förra asfaltstävling i Kroatien var inte speciellt bra, och efter 
    olyckan i Finland har det varit ett par tuffa veckor. Därför känns 
    det extra bra att nå ett resultat igen.
     Målet för helgen var att köra säkert och riskfritt 
    genom det ena sträckan efter det andra  och slutligen komma säkert 
    i mål. Vi tänkte bara på oss själva och vårt eget 
    race. Det ger självförtroende att kontrollera en sån tävling.
    
    Solberg kom i mål 3.28,5 minuter efter tamkamraten Ott Tänak, som 
    vann säsongens tredje VM-tävling. 1.46,9 minuter blev avståndet 
    till en pallplats.
    
    Inför helgen var femteplatsen i Rally Monza i november förra året 
    hans bästa resultat i WRC-klassen.
    
    Nästa VM-tävling är Acropolis Rally Grekland som startar den 
    8 september. Fyra tävlingar återstår av säsongen.
    22-08-21 Confident Tänak 
    triumphs in Belgium
    Estonian keeps Elfyn Evans at bay to secure second-consecutive 
    WRC win.
    Ott Tänak stormed to Ypres Rally Belgium victory on Sunday afternoon 
    to seal back-to-back FIA World Rally Championship wins.
    
    The Estonian driver inherited the top spot late on the penultimate day when 
    Hyundai i20 N team-mate and long-time leader Thierry Neuville understeered 
    off the road and into a ditch, shattering the Belgians hopes of a repeat 
    home win.
    
    Tänak - winner of Secto Rally Finland earlier this month - carried an 
    8.2sec buffer over Elfyn Evans into Sundays final leg, which comprised 
    four short and sharp asphalt speed tests in the Flanders region.
    
    Toyota GR Yaris star Evans was not willing to give up without a fight. He 
    flew to fastest times on the two opening stages but was still unable to make 
    any major gains on the leader.
    
    It was a similar story in the afternoon and, despite outpacing his rival by 
    2.2sec in the finale, the Welshman was unable to overhaul Tänak, who 
    took the spoils by 5.0sec.
    
    Tänaks success means he now trails championship leader Kalle Rovanperä 
    - who rolled his Yaris out of contention on Friday morning - by 72 points. 
    The 21-year-old Finn salvaged five Wolf Power Stage bonus points and remains 
    on track to become the youngest WRC champion in history with four rounds to 
    go.
    
    The manufacturers championship situation remains unchanged, with Tänaks 
    Hyundai Motorsport squad still 88 points adrift of leaders Toyota Gazoo Racing.
    
    "To win here is a big surprise for us - more or less the same as it was 
    in Finland, said Tänak. We didn't expect it from anywhere 
    basically, but somehow we were able to pull it together during the rally.
    
    "It's great to see that some results are coming, but there is so much 
    we can improve and we could still be a lot stronger, so there is still some 
    work to do," he added.
    
    For Evans, it was a case of what could have been. He gave away valuable seconds 
    on Friday when a slow puncture forced him to run a wet weather tyre in dry 
    conditions. He was also lumbered with a 10sec time penalty for arriving late 
    to SS8. Without that, the outcome could have been different.
    
    Esapekka Lappi made it two GR Yaris cars on the podium - securing a lonely 
    third at the end of a trouble-free weekend where a poor tyre choice on Friday 
    was the only real bump in the road.
    
    He trailed Evans by 1min 36.6sec but held a massive 1min 46.9sec advantage 
    over fourth-placed Hyundai youngster Oliver Solberg, who netted a career-best 
    result to banish all memories of his early retirement last time out.
    
    Solberg was initially locked into a tight scrap with M-Sport Fords Adrien 
    Fourmaux. However, the Puma driver crashed out in the penultimate stage, enabling 
    those behind to gain a position.
    
    Over two minutes back was Takamoto Katsuta, who continued his consistent run 
    of form to take fifth overall in another Yaris car. Although transmission 
    and hybrid unit faults plagued the Japanese driver, he has now finished inside 
    the top six at every round since Sweden in February.
    
    The rest of the leaderboard comprised Rally2 cars, with WRC2 victor Stéphane 
    Lefebvre leading the charge ahead of Andreas Mikkelsen, Yohan Rossel and Chris 
    Ingram.
    
    Drivers are back on gravel next month for the legendary EKO Acropolis Rally 
    Greece. The event will be based in Lamia and takes place from 8 - 11 September.
    
    Leading positions:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 2hr 25min 38.9sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +5.0sec
    3. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +1min 41.6sec
    4. O Solberg / E Edmondson SWE Hyundai i20 N +3min 28.5sec
    5. T Katsuta / A Johnston JAP Toyota GR Yaris +6min 6.1sec
    6. S Lefebvre / A Malfoy (FRA) Citroën C3 Rally2 +9min 45.7sec 
    
    22-08-20 Neuville crash hands 
    Tänak shock Belgium lead
    Estonian driver set for back-to-back WRC wins as Neuville's home dreams are 
    shattered.
    
    Ott Tänak inherited a surprise lead at Ypres Rally Belgium when team-mate 
    and long-time leader Thierry Neuville crashed into retirement on Saturday 
    afternoon.
    
    The Hyundai i20 N driver will carry an 8.2sec advantage over Toyota Gazoo 
    Racings Elfyn Evans into Sundays final leg after team-mate Thierry 
    Neuvilles rally unravelled in the penultimate stage of the day.
    
    Tänak, driving a Hyundai i20 N, briefly took charge after the opening 
    Reninge test but was quickly swept aside by team-mate Neuville as a rear differential 
    issue hampered his progress during the morning.
    
    After pulling 17.2sec clear of his colleague, Neuville looked all but set 
    for a repeat victory at his home WRC round - but the rally was turned on its 
    head 6.4km into the Wijtschate stage when the Belgian understeered into a 
    deep ditch on the outside of a left-hand corner.
    
    Spectators were quickly on scene to extract the car but Neuville pulled over 
    just 1.1km down the road with terminal damage.
    
    His demise means Tänak is on course for his second-consecutive victory, 
    having triumphed just a few weeks ago at Secto Rally Finland.
    
    Obviously in the morning we were struggling with the transmission, but 
    at lunchtime we were able to change it and in the afternoon it was working, 
    Tänak said. It was just a different setting and it took me some 
    time to adapt to it, but in the end I got used to it and started to trust 
    it more.
    
    Tomorrow will be far from easy - I think it will be a big push in the 
    morning. Elfyn is doing a good job and it will not be easy for him, but let's 
    see. It's still a relatively long day tomorrow, he added.
    
    Back at service, Neuville explained he was simply caught out by a patch of 
    loose gravel which had been pulled onto the road after his route note crew 
    had driven through.
    
    "It was basically full of dirt from the cars in front," he said. 
    "We had nothing in the pace notes and we weren't aware it would be so 
    slippery, so we got caught by surprise and understeered into the ditch."
    
    Evans was able to close in on Tänak during the morning loop but lost 
    ground later in the day once his rival had made changes at the mid-leg service. 
    He ended more than one minute clear of GR Yaris team-mate Esapekka Lappi, 
    who filled the final podium spot after a drama-free day.
    
    Almost two minutes further back in fourth overall was Hyundai pilot Oliver 
    Solberg. The young Swede was locked into a dicing duel with M-Sport Ford Puma 
    hotshot Adrien Fourmaux, who ended 14.3sec behind after being lumbered with 
    a 20sec time penalty for arriving late to the start of SS15.
    
    Both drivers moved up the order early in the day when Craig Breen, who had 
    been running fifth, rolled his Puma into retirement after overcooking a left-hander 
    at Dikkebus.
    
    After plummeting down the order with a transmission fault on Friday, Takamoto 
    Katsuta fought back to take sixth overall. It wasnt an easy day for 
    the 29-year-old as a hybrid unit issue left his Yaris intermittently lacking 
    extra boost.
    
    Sunday's closing leg features four special stages and takes place entirely 
    within the Flanders region.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 1hr 58min 55.2sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +8.2sec
    3. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +1min 9.8sec
    4. O Solberg / E Edmondson SWE Hyundai i20 N +2min 51.6sec
    5. A Fourmaux / A Coria FRA Ford Puma +3min 5.9sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JAP Toyota GR Yaris +5min 39.3sec 
    
    22-08-25 Gritty Neuville surges 
    to Friday lead in Belgium
    Home hero produces plucky comeback drive as championship leader Rovanperä 
    rolls out. Thierry Neuville produced a plucky comeback drive to head up a 
    Hyundai Motorsport 1-2 on Friday afternoon at Ypres Rally Belgium.
    
    Just 2.5sec separated Neuville and team-mate Ott Tänak at the end of 
    a frenetic opening leg on treacherous asphalt lanes in the Flanders region 
    of northern Belgium.
    
    Neuvilles day got off to a wobbly start when he dropped more than 10 
    seconds with a costly overshoot in the first stage and the situation showed 
    signs of worsening as he fought with car set-up throughout the morning.
    
    The Belgian driver complained the differential settings on his i20 N were 
    causing the brakes to lock up under braking, and he trailed Elfyn Evans by 
    8.8sec in third overall at the mid-leg halt.
    
    After making several set-up tweaks, Neuville emerged from service a brand-new 
    man. With newfound confidence in the car, he and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe 
    stormed to fastest times on all four of the afternoons speed tests - 
    leapfrogging Tänak and Evans in the process.
    
    "It's been a whole different afternoon in terms of the handling with 
    the car, Neuville explained. I am so much happier now.
    
    I feel like I have seen some areas where we can improve and find a bit 
    more speed, but overall we can be very happy with our afternoon.
    
    Our weather team has done an amazing job with some very precise information 
    and I have felt confident to trust their predictions. That's very important 
    on a day like this," he added.
    
    Aside from a few set-up niggles of his own, Tänaks day went without 
    drama. He never strayed outside the top three stage times all day and held 
    the runner-up spot from the second test onwards.
    
    The same couldnt be said for Toyota star Evans, who led for most of 
    the leg after team-mate and championship leader Kalle Rovanperä rolled 
    into retirement on SS2.
    
    He was forced to bolt a single wet weather tyre onto his Yaris after damaging 
    one of his slicks on SS6. Reduced performance on the dry roads allowed Neuville 
    into the lead and a 10sec time penalty for a late check-in compounded his 
    frustrations.
    
    We lost one of our slick tyres and had to use a rain tyre, which was 
    obviously not ideal in these conditions, he explained. The penalty 
    was no big issue - just a minor error - but one in four years is not bad.
    
    Tyre choice was a key talking point for the second loop. Dark clouds threatened 
    downpours - but heavy rain never arrived.
    
    While the leading trio carried packages more suited to dry conditions, the 
    rest of the field dropped time with combinations taken in the hope of wet 
    weather.
    
    Espekka Lappi joked he was leading the class for the wrong tyres 
    and brought his Yaris home 23.6sec back from the podium. He had 18.8sec in 
    hand over M-Sport Ford man Craig Breen, who held fifth overall despite an 
    overshoot early in the day.
    
    Breens Puma colleague Gus Greensmith ended more than half a minute back 
    in sixth ahead of Oliver Solberg, who battled gearbox niggles on his Hyundai.
    
    Saturday's leg is extremely compact and squeezes eight more treacherous tests 
    covering 135.83km into a 269.05km route.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N 49min 50.1sec
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +2.5sec
    3. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +13.7sec
    4. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +37.3sec
    5. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +56.1sec
    6. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +1min 34.5sec
    
    22-08-18 Nya möjligheter 
    för Oliver Solberg i Rally Belgium
    Oliver Solberg startar sin sjunde tävling i WRC-klassen i rally-VM när 
    Ypres Rally Belgium är på gång i helgen.
    
    Tävlingen går i Västflandern och innehåller 20 specialsträckor 
    över totalt 281,58 kilometer på smala och slingrande gårdsvägar 
    på asfalt.
    
    Den 20-årige fabriksföraren fick överge Rally Finland för 
    två veckor sedan efter en spin-out. Han har en femteplats i Rally Monza 
    förra året som bästa resultat i WRC-klassen.
     Jag är väldigt motiverad att komma tillbaka starkare efter 
    missödet i Finland. Förarna med tidigare erfarenhet av Rally Belgium 
    har en stor fördel i denna tävlingen. Man måste veta var och 
    hur mycket man ska gena i kurvorna. Dessutom ändras greppet ofta på 
    vägarna, säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    Hyundai-föraren ledde, men fick avbryta fjolårets tävling 
    då i WRC 2-klassen på grund av ett elproblem med bilen sista dagen.
     Precisionen blir viktig då det finns många djupa diken 
    vid sidan av vägen. Dessutom är vägarna ibland riktigt leriga 
    och hala.
    
    Tävlingen blir hans andra på asfalt med en Hyundai i20 N Rally1-bil. 
    Rally Belgium är säsongens nionde VM-tävlingen av 13.
    
    Rally Belgium startar med åtta specialsträckor på fredag 
    och avslutas på söndag eftermiddag.
    20-08-17 Desperate Neuville 
    targets return to winning ways in Belgium
    Belgian driver bids to defend home crown in search of his first victory of 
    the season. Thierry Neuville is targeting his first-ever win of the FIA World 
    Rally Championships hybrid era as the series returns to asphalt on his 
    home roads at Ypres Rally Belgium (18 - 21 August).
    
    Twelve months ago the Hyundai Motorsport driver sealed an emotional win after 
    leading since the opening day on Belgiums WRC debut. In contrast, Neuvilles 
    2022 season has been marred by disappointment, with two podiums early in the 
    year his best results to date.
    
    The 34-year-old trails championship leader Kalle Rovanperä by 95 points 
    in third place heading into this ninth round. If there was ever a place for 
    him to try and close that gap, its here.
    
    Neuville has started the event seven times and holds the most Ypres experience 
    out of all the top-level drivers. He knows exactly what it takes to be quick 
    on Flanders narrow farm lanes which make up the three-day fixture.
    
    The stages are littered with tight bends and lined by drainage ditches and 
    telegraph poles. Big cuts in corners mean mud and debris will be dragged onto 
    the asphalt, making conditions progressively dirty.
    
    This is probably the event that were looking forward to the most 
    this season, Neuville admitted. Ive got good memories here 
    and I cant wait to be back.
    
    Were finally heading to Tarmac again after a run of tricky gravel 
    rallies and we hope to return to winning ways. There is only one goal: to 
    repeat our victory from last year.
    
    Neuville is joined in Hyundais i20 N squad by Secto Rally Finland winner 
    Ott Tänak and Swedish youngster Oliver Solberg - the trio keen to slice 
    away at Toyota Gazoo Racings 88-point manufacturers championship 
    lead.
    
    Rovanperä is supported by GR Yaris colleagues Elfyn Evans and Esapekka 
    Lappi. With five wins from eight starts, the Finn is well on track to becoming 
    the youngest WRC champion in history.
    
    He could seal the title this week, but its unlikely. Even if Rovanperä 
    wins the rally and the Wolf Power Stage, he will be reliant on both Tänak 
    and Neuville scoring next to nothing.
    
    Im feeling good about going to Belgium," said the 21-year-old. 
    "If its dry then we saw last year that it can be a bit dusty for 
    the first cars, but if its wet then it should be perfect for us to be 
    the first on the road."
    
    Former Ypres winner Craig Breen leads M-Sport Fords charge alongside 
    Gus Greensmith and Adrien Fourmaux. The three will drive hybrid-powered Puma 
    cars.
    
    The action starts on Friday morning and competitors tackle 20 stages covering 
    281.58km before the finish on Sunday afternoon. 
    
    22-08-07 Tänak prevails 
    in Finland
    Estonian produces gritty drive to give Hyundai Motorsport its first Finnish 
    win. Ott Tänak secured Secto Rally Finland victory on Sunday afternoon 
    to give Hyundai Motorsport its first ever triumph in Jyväskylä with 
    a precision-perfect drive.
    
    The Estonian driver led from the second stage of the rally to finish the four-day 
    gravel road fixture 6.8sec clear of Toyota GR Yaris rival Kalle Rovanperä 
    - clinching his third Finland success in the process.
    
    Tänak found it difficult to be comfortable in his Hyundai i20 N from 
    the get-go, but was still able to produce top times throughout thanks to hard 
    grit and determination.
    
    As Fridays road-opener, Rovanperä was slow out of the blocks but 
    reeled off five stage wins on Saturday to climb from fourth to second overall. 
    He ended the penultimate day just 8.4sec in arrears after slicing the deficit 
    in unpredictable conditions.
    
    Dry conditions ensured further fast-paced action in Sundays closing 
    leg, but Tänak was in no mood to compromise. He gave just 1.8sec away 
    to his rival over the four speed tests and stood atop the podium for the first 
    time since Rally Italia Sardegna in June.
    
    "The Toyota guys gave me some help on Friday at the beginning and since 
    then we saw a chance - some light at the end of the tunnel - and we were pushing 
    from there," Tänak said.
    
    "All I want to say in these difficult times is that it's really all down 
    to my wife. She has been supporting me so much and I am really proud of her. 
    I love you so much," he added, facing the TV cameras.
    
    Rovanperä virtually resigned himself from a maiden home victory after 
    Sunday mornings first pass of Ruuhimäki, where he and Tänak 
    posted identical times. With a solid haul of points in the bag, the 21-year 
    was unwilling to take any unnecessary risks.
    
    He stretched his championship points lead to 94 after eight of 13 rounds, 
    while his Toyota Gazoo Racing squad ended 88 points clear in the manufacturers 
    standings with three Yaris cars in the top four.
    
    Home hero Esapekka Lappi completed the podium 1min 13.9sec down, but was lucky 
    to even see the finish after rolling on SS21. He used epoxy resin to patch 
    a crack in his Toyotas radiator ahead of the last stage and powered 
    through with no front windscreen.
    
    Elfyn Evans was 16.9sec behind and conceded time on Saturday afternoon. Like 
    his team-mate, the Welshman also had to pick up the spanners, bodging together 
    damaged rear suspension using ratchet straps and jubilee clips.
    
    It wasnt Thierry Neuvilles weekend. Set-up frustrations plagued 
    the Hyundai driver and he was never in a position to fight with the leading 
    quartet. He trailed Evans by 40.4sec in fifth overall and slipped to third 
    in the championship behind Tänak.
    
    Yaris hotshot Takamoto Katsuta ended 51.0sec further back to head Gus Greensmith, 
    who was M-Sport Fords leading Puma driver in seventh overall.
    
    Greensmith scrapped with colleague Pierre-Louis Loubet for most of the event 
    but the Frenchman retired with mechanical woes before the final stage.
    
    The championship returns to asphalt in less than two weeks when Belgium makes 
    its second WRC appearance. Ypres Rally Belgium takes place on August 18 - 
    21.
    
    Final positions:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 2hr 24min 4.6sec
    2. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +6.8sec
    3. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +1min 20.7sec
    4. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +1min 37.6sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +2min 18.0sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +3min 9.0sec
    
    FIA World Rally Championship (after round 8 of 13):
    1. K Rovanperä 198pts
    2. O Tänak 104pts
    3. T Neuville 103pts 
    
    22-08-06 Tänak resists 
    Rovanperä's Saturday charge
     Estonian star remains on course for Finnish treble. Ott Tänak 
    is closing in on his third Secto Rally Finland victory after keeping a charging 
    Kalle Rovanperä at bay during Saturdays penultimate leg.
    
    The Estonian driver pushed his Hyundai i20 N to its limits on superfast gravel 
    stages clustered around the Jämsä region, maintaining his position 
    at the head of the field with just four stages remaining.
    
    Wet conditions early in the day werent quite to Tänaks liking, 
    although he arrived back to the mid-leg service in a slightly more comfortable 
    position than when he had left first thing in the morning.
    
    He was more confident on the drier, grippier second pass and set a similar 
    pace with championship leader Kalle Rovanperä, who surged through the 
    field to end the day just 8.6sec in arrears.
    
    The competition in Finland is traditionally very tight and, with Sundays 
    itinerary adding up to just 43.92km, Rovanperä would need to be on another 
    level to realistically overturn the leader. That said, hes carried out 
    similar feats already this year
    
    "It's still a bit of a surprise to be where we are at the moment, but 
    definitely it's been a good day considering the conditions that we had, 
    reflected Tänak. We really thought we would lose a lot more time 
    and actually we are doing good."
    
    Rovanperä was the driver of the day, taking out five stage wins in his 
    GR Yaris machine.
    
    He was hampered by loose road-opening conditions on Friday which left him 
    down in fourth overall, but the Finn blitzed Toyota team-mates Elfyn Evans 
    and Esapekka Lappi to climb the order.
    
    We lost quite a lot of time yesterday, but today we have been trying 
    our best to catch it, he said. It's not easy because the gaps 
    are so small, but we have good points coming and tomorrow we just need to 
    finish the job."
    
    Lappi was feeling frustrated after his car scooped up a stray rock on SS16 
    which cracked the windscreen, drastically reducing visibility. He had to err 
    on the side of caution over countless blind crests and trailed Rovanperä 
    by 26.8sec to fill the final podium spot.
    
    Evans, too, was in trouble. His Yaris took a heavy compression on the penultimate 
    stage which damaged the rear left upright and suspension strut.
    
    Frantic repairs were made using ratchet straps and cable ties and the Welshman 
    nursed the car through Vekkula 2, dropping almost one minute while amazingly 
    still holding his position in fourth overall.
    
    Thierry Neuvilles Hyundai squad fitted new differentials to the car 
    overnight and he enjoyed a drama-free day. The Belgian was a lonely fifth 
    overall - 45.8sec behind Evans but with 42.0sec in hand over Toyota youngster 
    Takamoto Katsuta, who threw away time with a series of spins.
    
    Craig Breen was the days only frontrunning casualty and retired from 
    fifth overall in the second stage. The Irishman misjudged his line over a 
    high-speed jump, colliding with a rock which ripped a rear wheel from his 
    Puma.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 2hr 2min 44.0sec
    2. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +8.4sec
    3. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +35.2sec
    4. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +1min 19.7sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +2min 5.5sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris 2min +47.5sec
    
    22-08-05 Tänak clings 
    onto slender Friday lead as Lappi ups Finland tempo
    Ott Tänak kept his cool under increasing pressure from Esapekka 
    Lappi to lead after Fridays fast-paced opening leg at Secto Rally Finland.
    
    The Estonian - twice a winner of this classic gravel fixture - snatched the 
    top spot from early leader and Hyundai colleague Thierry Neuville on the very 
    first stage and clung onto the position all day long.
    
    Set-up frustrations threatened to rattle Tänaks confidence, especially 
    during the first half of the leg on stages to the north of host city Jyväskylä.
    
    However, aided by some seat-of-the-pants driving, the i20 N star maintained 
    his pace to head Toyota GR Yaris rival Esapekka Lappi by 6.2sec at the days 
    midpoint.
    
    Lappi - also a former Finland winner - responded by cranking up the pressure 
    in the afternoon. He stormed to three stage wins in the final loop to whittle 
    down the deficit but was still unable to overturn the charging leader.
    
    At close of play, Tänak held the upper hand by a slender 3.8sec.
    
    "It's definitely a lot better than we expected," said Tänak. 
    "We definitely did not expect to be in the fight, so to end the day in 
    this position is really positive.
    
    "The other boys were quite slow to wake up, but it seems the Toyotas 
    are slowly getting to where they should be.
    
    "Let's see tomorrow. The weather will probably change a bit as well, 
    but I would say I was on the limit from the first corner of the first stage," 
    he added.
    
    Elfyn Evans was slow out of the blocks but held onto third overall. He arrived 
    back to service 12.2sec down on Lappi and was embroiled in a tight scrap with 
    Yaris team-mate Kalle Rovanperä, who finished just 1.7sec behind.
    
    As championship leader, Rovanperä opened the road and struggled to find 
    traction in some of the loose gravel sections which resulted in some hairy 
    moments. The 21-year-old will start Saturday with a more favourable road position 
    and promised a big push on his home stages.
    
    Craig Breen ended over half a minute back from the lead as M-Sport Fords 
    frontrunning driver in fifth overall. An intercom problem in the opening stage 
    was a minor cause for frustration and the Puma driver was at a loss as to 
    why he didnt have the pace to challenge for stage wins. Takamoto Katsuta 
    was just 3.9sec further back in another Toyota.
    
    A frustrated Thierry Neuville brought his Hyundai home in seventh overall. 
    Like Tänak, he was unhappy with his set-up and struggled to keep the 
    rear end of the car under control.
    
    Oliver Solberg was Friday's big casualty, rolling his Hyundai on the very 
    first corner of the day's first stage. Roll cage damage means he will not 
    restart tomorrow.
    
    Saturday is clustered around Jämsä and, with 150.30km of relentless 
    action, comprises almost half the rallys competitive distance.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 50min 41.2sec
    2. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris +3.8sec
    3. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +19.3sec
    4. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +21.0sec
    5. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +32.5sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +35.5sec
    22-08-05 Oliver Solberg krashade 
    i Rally Finland
    Bara några hundra meter in på tävlingens andra specialsträcka 
    kraschade Oliver Solberg i Rally Finland på fredagsmorgonen. Bilen fick 
    så omfattande skador att det inte går att köra vidare i tävlingen.
     Jag vet inte vad jag ska säga. Tidigt på SS2 "tappade" 
    vi bakvagnen på bilen i en kurva. Det blev väldigt fel, och vi 
    rullade, sa Oliver Solberg.
     Just nu är det svårt och tufft. Väldigt tufft. Jag 
    försöker mitt bästa att få det här att fungera, 
    det göra bara så ont, konstaterade Hyundai-föraren.
    
    Nästa rally för 20-åringen blir VM-tävlingen Ypres Rally 
    Belgien den 18-21 augusti.
    22-08-04 Championship leader 
    searching for success on his home event
    With a factory drive and a huge FIA World Rally Championship lead, Kalle Rovanperä 
    is the man who seemingly has it all. But there is something missing: a victory 
    on home soil.
    
    Its no surprise that Rovanperä is the hottest property in the sport 
    right now. Hes achieved more during three years in rallyings top-flight 
    than many drivers do in their entire careers - and hes only 21 years 
    of age.
    
    The Toyota Gazoo Racing driver is on fine form and, with five wins already 
    this season, arrives at Secto Rally Finland (4 - 7 August) with a massive 
    83-point advantage. The truth is, he doesnt need to score big this week 
    - but hed certainly like to.
    
    Esapekka Lappi was the last Finn to win on home soil in 2017 but, since then, 
    local celebrations have proved elusive.
    
    Rovanperä would like nothing better than to end that dry spell on Sunday 
    - especially as he crashed out of contention in 2021.
    
    Its always really exciting to come to Finland, he admitted. 
    For the Finnish drivers, its the best event of the season - and 
    an important one.
    
    I dont think it brings more pressure. Its more of an excitement 
    boost with high hopes and high feelings before the rally and you know the 
    atmosphere will be great, so you can always enjoy that.
    
    Cars frequently top 200kph on rollercoaster roads amid the forests and lakes 
    of central Finland. Stomach-churning jumps and blind crests mean pace notes 
    must be perfect and delivered with pinpoint accuracy by hard-working co-drivers.
    
    With rain predicted to fall at this eighth round, damp tracks and low grip 
    on slippery gravel are just some of the hazards drivers may face.
    
    It looks like it can rain at some point, Rovanperä explained. 
    Being the first car on the road on Friday, I wouldnt mind a bit 
    of a damp road  it could be good for us.
    
    The Toyota team is based just outside Jyväskylä and remains undefeated 
    at the rally since the Japanese manufacturer returned to the sport in 2017. 
    Last years winner Elfyn Evans will also drive a GR Yaris car alongside 
    Lappi and Takamoto Katsuta.
    
    Hyundai Motorsport trails Toyota by 87 points in its hunt for the manufacturers 
    title and needs strong performances from its hybrid-powered i20 N trio of 
    Thierry Neuville, Ott Tänak and Oliver Solberg.
    
    Craig Breen - twice a podium finisher in Finland - leads M-Sport Fords 
    attack. He is joined by Adrien Fourmaux, Gus Greensmith and Pierre-Louis Loubet, 
    while home hero Jari Huttunen completes the five-car Puma line-up on his top 
    tier debut.
    
    The rally starts in Jyväskylä on Thursday evening and returns for 
    the finish on Sunday afternoon after 22 speed tests covering 322.61km.
    22-08-04 Finsk hoppvecka för 
    Oliver Solberg
    Finsk hoppning är av bästa kvalitet. Även inom motorsporten. 
    Rallyföraren Oliver Solberg (20) tar sig an världseliten på 
    Rally Finlands hoppiga och supersnabba grusvägar i helgen.
    
    Rally-VM fortsätter med säsongens åttonde tävling av 
    13. Rally Finland är inte bara den snabbaste VM-tävlingen; den kännetecknas 
    också av mest flygtid.
     I Finland handlar mycket om att bilar ska kunna flyga. Känslan 
    inne i bilen när allt fungerar, kartläsaren Elliott ropar att jag 
    ska gå flat out" över ett hopp, är väldigt 
    speciell. Även med trepunktsbältet åtdragna supertight runt 
    överkroppen höjer man sig ändå lite i sätet över 
    hoppen. Plötsligt upphör allt ljud från hjulen och marken 
    och det blir nästan tyst i några ögonblick. Sedan landar du, 
    och all action börjar igen. Jag älskar det, säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    För första gången startar 20-åringen i värstingklassen 
    i den finska sommartävlingen. Hyundais-fabriksförare har en femteplats 
    från Rally Monza i november som sitt bästa resultat i WRC-klassen.
     Rally Finland kommer att bli helt rått. Att ha mer än 500 
    hästkrafter att dra oss mellan hoppen kommer att kännas helt otroligt. 
    Det finns mer kraft än jag någonsin haft i Jyväskylä 
    tidigare. Att vara rallyförare på heltid är ett privilegium. 
    Det pirrar i kroppen och du ser fram emot varje tävling enormt mycket. 
    Vissa tävlingar lite mer än andra. Rally Finland är en sådan 
    tävling.
    
    VM-tävlingen inleds med tio specialsträckor på fredag, ytterligare 
    åtta på lördag och avslutas med fyra snabba tidigt på 
    söndag.
    
    Världsrekordet för det snabbaste VM-rallyt genom tiderna innehas 
    av britten Kris Meeke med 126,62 km/h i Rally Finland 2016.
    22-07-18 Dazzling Rovanperä 
    triumphs at Rally Estonia to stretch WRC lead
    Finn scorches to fifth win in six rounds. Kalle Rovanperä clinched back-to-back 
    Rally Estonia wins on Sunday afternoon with a masterclass drive to secure 
    his fifth FIA World Rally Championship win in six rounds.
    
    Twelve months ago he became the WRCs youngest rally winner with victory 
    in Estonia. Todays virtuoso success moved him a step closer to becoming 
    the youngest champion in the series 50-year history.
    
    The 21-year-old Finn finished the four-day gravel road fixture 1min 00.9sec 
    clear of Toyota GR Yaris team-mate Elfyn Evans to stretch his points lead 
    to 83 after seven of 13 rounds.
    
    Evans dominated initially but Rovanperä grabbed the lead in Fridays 
    final rain-soaked speed test. After fine-tuning his cars set-up on Saturday 
    morning, he reeled off seven consecutive fastest times to distance the Welshman 
    and more than double his advantage.
    
    Rain again ensured slippery conditions in Sundays closing leg but Rovanperä 
    was in no mood to compromise. He won the final Wolf Power Stage by an astounding 
    22.4sec to gain maximum bonus points. Such was his dominance that he won 14 
    of the rallys 24 tests.
    
    It was great again and thanks to Jonne [co-driver Halttunen] because 
    it was a difficult weekend but we drove really well, said an elated 
    Rovanperä. We enjoy every rally and although we need to push hard 
    because the pressure is always high, were managing it well.
    
    Evans virtually conceded defeat on Saturday night and any lingering hopes 
    he retained of catching his team-mate were extinguished in Sundays second 
    stage when he spun and dropped almost 10sec.
    
    The 1-2 extended reigning champion Toyota Gazoo Racings manufacturers 
    points lead to 87.
    
    Home hero Ott Tänak completed the podium a further 54.8sec adrift in 
    a Hyundai i20. He never looked like threatening those ahead as he wrestled 
    handling problems but the four-time Estonia winner was more than good enough 
    to finish best of the rest.
    
    Team-mate Thierry Neuville endured similar issues but kept a cool head to 
    finish almost two minutes further back in fourth, despite a Sunday brush with 
    some bushes and a spin.
    
    Fifth was Takamoto Katsutas reward after recovering from a roll in Thursday 
    mornings warm-up which required frantic bodywork repairs from his Toyota 
    team. The Japanese driver ended 20.1sec behind Neuville and 35.7sec clear 
    of Esapekka Lappis GR Yaris.
    
    Lappis hopes of a top four finish ended when he had to change a puncture 
    following a heavy landing on Saturday. The Finn plunged to seventh but won 
    two tests on the final day and eased ahead of Adrian Fourmauxs Ford 
    Puma in the last one.
    
    It was a disappointing final day for M-Sport Ford. Pierre-Louis Loubet retired 
    after hitting a rock in the opening stage and breaking his Pumas front 
    left suspension while Gus Greensmith exited after the next test with a transmission 
    problem.
    
    The WRC remains in northern Europe for another fast gravel road fixture at 
    Secto Rally Finland next month. Round eight of the season is based in Jyväskylä 
    on 4 - 7 August.
    22-07-18 Oliver Solberg en 
    tiondel från första milstolpen i VM 
    En tiondels sekund skilde Oliver Solberg från karriärens första 
    sträckseger i rally-VM:s värstingklass i Rally Estland.
    
    Endast fransmannen Adrien Fourmaux var snabbare än Hyundai-föraren 
    på tävlingens 18:e specialsträcka. Han har aldrig varit närmre 
    en sträckseger i rally-VM. Vid näst sista sträckan på 
    söndagen kopierade unge Solberg sin personbästa placering med ännu 
    en andraplats, men då med en marginal på sju sekunder till Esapekka 
    Lappi som vann sträckan. 
    
    Även från Rally Sweden i slutet av februari fick han en näst 
    bästa tid, då 2,4 sekunder efter Ott Tänak. 13:e plats totalt 
    var ännu en besvikelse för Oliver Solberg i rally-VM.
    
    Punktering, trasig servostyrning och tidsstraff skickade ner 20-åringen 
    i resultatlistorna.
     Alla vet att jag inte är nöjd med det här resultatet 
    i mitt favoritgrusrally. Man kan lugnt säga att Rally Estonia var svårt. 
    Förhållandena var mycket utmanande med mycket regn och varierande 
    grepp. När man kommer till en sån här tävling för 
    att köra en Rally1-bil för första gången på grus 
    så önskar man sig lite jämnare förhållanden, sa 
    Oliver Solberg.
    
    Finlands Kalle Rovanperä vann tävlingen, hans femte seger den här 
    säsongen. Tvåa blev Elfyn Evans och trea Hyundai-föraren Ott 
    Tänak.
    
    Nästa VM-tävling är Rally Finland första veckan i augusti. 
    
    22-06-26 Rovanperä tightens 
    title hold with skilled Safari win
    Finn makes major championship gain on punishing African roads. Kalle Rovanperä 
    boosted his FIA World Rally Championship title hopes with a dominant victory 
    at Safari Rally Kenya on Sunday afternoon.
    
    The 21-year-old continued his run of irresistible form to chalk up win number 
    four of the season as his Toyota Gazoo Racing squad locked out the top four 
    places for the first time in 29 years.
    
    Rovanperä never expected to win this rally. He arrived in Kenya with 
    a commanding points lead and played down his glory hopes, instead starting 
    with the mindset that any points from the championships roughest encounter 
    would be a bonus.
    
    But the Finns bring it home approach soon went out of the 
    window on Friday afternoon when he seized top spot from GR Yaris team-mate 
    Sébastien Ogier, who stopped to change a wheel in the final test.
    
    Despite feeling unwell, Rovanperä strengthened his position on Saturday 
    and thrived in waterlogged conditions as downpours derailed many of his rivals 
    hopes.
    
    The sizeable 40.3sec margin he carried into Sundays finale was extended 
    with another two fastest times and the youngster ended the bruising four-day 
    fixture 52.8sec clear of Elfyn Evans.
    
    He leads the championship by 65 points with seven rounds remaining, while 
    Toyota extended its manufacturers series lead by 62 points.
    
    "It feels great, beamed Rovanperä. I have to say, this 
    was the hardest rally I have ever done and if I am honest we just have to 
    thank the team.
    
    "To have four cars like this with no issues means it is clearly the strongest 
    and fastest car. The team did a fantastic job."
    
    Welshman Evans combated his troubled result last time out in Sardinia with 
    a relatively drama-free drive. He finished 49.9sec ahead of Takamoto Katsuta, 
    who sealed back-to-back Safari podiums. The Japanese driver kept a keen eye 
    on his mirrors with Ogier behind and ended 27.6sec ahead of the eight-time 
    world champion.
    
    Ogier - winner last year - had mixed emotions. Fridays tyre trouble 
    put him out of contention and he conceded more time when the cars engine 
    ingested some famous fesh-fesh sand.
    
    The hotly-anticipated battle with compatriot Sébastien Loeb never materialised 
    either, as the nine-time world champion retired his M-Sport Ford Puma with 
    engine woes on Friday.
    
    Hyundai Motorsports Thierry Neuville was over 10 minutes behind in fifth 
    overall despite incurring a 10min penalty when he crashed his i20 N into a 
    tree and failed to finish Saturdays Sleeping Warrior finale. He retained 
    second in the championship and collected five bonus points for winning the 
    Wolf Power Stage.
    
    Craig Breen was M-Sport Fords leading driver in sixth despite nursing 
    suspension problems in his Puma. He gained the position when Oliver Solberg 
    stopped in the middle of the road with an air filter full of dust, causing 
    the cancellation of Sundays opener.
    
    The championship returns to Europe when Rally Estonia (14 - 17 July) kicks-off 
    the second half of the season.
    
    Final positions:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 3hr 40min 20.4sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +52.8sec
    3. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +1min 42.7sec
    4. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +2min 10.3sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +10min 40.9sec
    6. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +23min 27.9sec
    
    FIA World Rally Championship (after round 6 of 13):
    1. K Rovanperä 145pts
    2. T Neuville 80pts
    3. O Tänak 62pts
    22-06-26 Sand i maskineriet 
    för Oliver Solberg 
    Kenyansk pudersand - så kallad "fesh fesh" - skapade problem 
    för Oliver Solberg i fabriksförarens första möte med det 
    klassiska Safarirallyt i värstingklassen i rally-VM.
    
    Ett antal gånger fick 20-åringen stanna med mekaniska problem 
    orsakade av ökensanden.
    - Mitt första grusrally i värstingklassen kommer jag knappast att 
    glömma. Absolut allt som kunde gå fel, gick fel, konstaterade Solberg 
    efter att han slutat på en10:e plats totalt i tävlingen.
    
    Bästa specialsträckan blev en femteplats på SS13. Förutom 
    tiotals minuter förlorade på sträckorna till följd av 
    problemen, rök Hyundai-föraren dessutom på nästan fyra 
    minuter i tidsstraff.
    - En liten tröst är att det gick mycket bättre än förra 
    året. Vi har mycket att göra i framtiden, men det var en framgång 
    att komma i mål. Det är faktiskt en prestation i sig efter allt 
    vi fick gå igenom. Det är tack vare mekanikerna och teamet. Utan 
    dem är ingenting möjligt i denna sport. Nu ser jag fram emot nya 
    mål i nästa tävling, sa Oliver Solberg.
    
    Han låg på sjätte plats totalt som bäst, men tappade 
    fyra placeringar mot slut efter upprepade mekaniska problem.
    
    Förra året fick Oliver bryta redan på tredje specialsträckan 
    med stora skador på bilen.
    
    Finske Kalle Rovanperä vann säsongens fjärde seger i rally-VM 
    och han har nu en rejäl ledning i totalen. Toyota-förarna tog de 
    fyra första platserna i resultatlistan i tävlingen.
    
    Nästa VM-tävling går av stapeln i Estland den 14-17 juli. 
    Även där kommer Solberg köra WRC-klassen. 
    
    22-06-25 Rovanperä bolsters 
    Safari victory bid with Saturday masterclass
    Finn extends Kenya lead in muddy conditions. Kalle Rovanperä stretched 
    his Safari Rally Kenya lead to more than half a minute on Saturday afternoon 
    as wet weather conditions spiced up the penultimate leg.
    
    On a day which troubled more of the FIA World Rally Championships leading 
    drivers, Rovanperä overcame sickness worries to increase his advantage 
    and headed a Toyota GR Yaris quartet in front of Elfyn Evans.
    
    Championship leader Rovanperä seized the lead of this sixth round late 
    on Friday when team-mate and early polesitter Sébastien Ogier stopped 
    to change a wheel. He measured his pace over the morning and was happy to 
    keep a watchful eye on those behind.
    
    The afternoon loop was a completely different story. Downpours in the final 
    pair of stages caused chaos as the dry and dusty roads turned to mud, with 
    grip levels comparable to ice.
    
    Rovanperä fared well in the extreme conditions despite feeling under 
    the weather himself. He outpaced the entire the field by 11.2sec at Elmenteita 
    2 before adding another 13.2sec to his lead in the Sleeping Warrior finale.
    
    The 21-year-old will start Sundays final leg a hefty 40.3sec clear at 
    the top. 
    
    It was quite a big job just to stay on the road today, said Rovanperä. 
    There is no grip in the mud here and sometimes there is so much water 
    that it's hard to get through.
    
    I just realised straight away it was slippery and I tried to be a bit 
    more clever in places where I saw other drivers' lines going wide or something. 
    Basically, I just tried to keep it clean.
    
    "I have not been feeling too good today. It's not with the stomach, but 
    I feel I am quite tired. Hopefully tomorrow is better, he added.
    
    Evans punctured on SS10 and was also lucky to survive a close call with a 
    tree on the last stage. The Welshman put the mishap down to poor visibility 
    - the result of a broken windscreen washer motor - but ended 35.3sec clear 
    of Takamoto Katsuta.
    
    Katsuta was slow out of the blocks and dropped out of the runners-up spot 
    on the first stage at Soysambu. Two deflated tyres and a late overshoot were 
    the only real bumps in the road for the Japanese driver and he remains on 
    target to claim a second consecutive Kenya podium.
    
    Katsutas place in the leading trio was made possible by Thierry Neuvilles 
    demise on SS13. The Hyundai driver grabbed a brace of early stage wins, but 
    lost time when his i20 N was slow to restart following a stall. His day ended 
    just 1km later following a shunt with a tree.
    
    Neuvilles retirement added insult to injury for his Hyundai Motorsport 
    squad, with Estonian driver Ott Tänak also sidelined by propshaft failure 
    earlier in the day. Such was the rate of attrition, Neuville will start Sunday 
    in fifth overall despite incurring a 10min penalty for failing to finish the 
    final stage.
    
    Eight-time world champion Ogier was aided by the drama unfolding ahead and 
    brought his Yaris home 1min 22.7sec adrift of the podium in fourth overall, 
    while Oliver Solberg completed the top six. The Hyundai youngster incurred 
    1min 30sec in time penalties after making roadside repairs to his cars 
    suspension and trailed the leaders by over 12 minutes at close of play.
    
    Craig Breen nursed a rear suspension issue but remained M-Sport Fords 
    leading driver in seventh overall. His Puma team was left depleted by retirements, 
    with Gus Greensmith halted by accident damage caused by a roll and Adrien 
    Fourmaux succumbing to broken suspension.
    
    Sundays finale features three stages - each run twice - located on the 
    southern side of Lake Naivasha. The leg totals 87.20km.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 52min 39.7sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +40.3sec
    3. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +1min 25.6sec
    4. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +2min 38.3sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +10min 59.3sec
    6. O Solberg / E Edmondson SWE Hyundai i20 N +12min 19.1sec
    
    22-06-24 Rovanperä seizes 
    Safari lead on gruelling Friday
    Finn pounces as team-mate Ogier hits trouble. Kalle Rovanperä capitalised 
    on team-mate Sébastien Ogiers late misfortune to lead after Safari 
    Rally Kenyas vicious opening leg on Friday.
    
    Championship leader Rovanperä languished in 11th overall on Thursday 
    evening after puncturing a tyre on the curtain-raising super special stage, 
    but was immediately into the podium fight on Friday's sandy speed tests on 
    the shores of the Great Rift Valleys Lake Naivasha.
    
    Car-breaking roads and thick fesh-fesh sand punished crews as more than half 
    of the FIA World Rally Championship field suffered some form of drama during 
    the day, but Toyota Gazoo Racings GR Yaris cars performed well under 
    the pressure.
    
    Defending Kenya winner Ogier picked up where he had left off on Thursday and 
    led for the majority of the six stages. He was briefly overtaken by team-mate 
    Elfyn Evans in the morning, but moved back in front in the afternoons 
    opener when the Welshman suffered a soft rear tyre.
    
    Rovanperä lingered inside the leading trio and managed to bag three stage 
    wins before seizing the top spot late in the day when his colleague stopped 
    to change a wheel during the Kedong finale.
    
    The Finn was pleased to be carrying a 22.4sec buffer into Saturdays 
    monster leg despite having to sweep dust from the surface as the first car 
    on the road.
    
    I think we did a good job, reflected Rovanperä. The 
    plan was to be fast and safe and we are in a good position now, but tomorrow 
    will be very challenging.
    
    Ive never really experienced anything like this before. Last year 
    we didnt have this many soft sections of road, so that was something 
    a bit new.
    
    Of course, its always challenging here. There was still some [road] 
    cleaning on the second pass, but other than that we have enjoyed the stages 
    - except the last one - I think we all felt relieved to finish that, 
    he added.
    
    Evans remained Rovanperäs nearest challenger, but he found it difficult 
    to judge exactly how hard to push and what risks to take. He ended just 2.9sec 
    clear of third-placed Ott Tänak, who denied Toyota an overnight podium 
    lockout.
    
    Tänak started on the back foot when the gear lever of his Hyundai i20 
    N snapped during the first stage. Thanks to some quick-thinking, the Estonian 
    carried out a makeshift repair, using the cars spare wheel brace as 
    a temporary shifter before going on to claim a brace of top-three times.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta was demoted from second to fourth overall in the final stage. 
    The Toyota youngster slowed to pass a stricken Craig Breen - who retired his 
    M-Sport Ford Puma with front right suspension damage - and eventually ended 
    1.3sec down on Tänak.
    
    Second in the championship Thierry Neuville also had a troublesome day with 
    his Hyundai. The car briefly lost power after scooping up a cloud of dust 
    on SS4, with Neuville also complaining of traction and drivability issues. 
    He trailed the frontrunners by almost one-minute, ahead of Ogier, who was 
    1min 10.7sec further back.
    
    Last year, Ogier clawed back a similar deficit to take victory after breaking 
    a suspension damper on Friday. Anything is still possible, although the Frenchman 
    appeared to be visibly dejected back at the Naivasha service park.
    
    Being so far behind, I cant really say we are in the fight, 
    he said. Of course, a lot of things can still happen, but its 
    not the same fight when you are this far behind. I am pretty sure things will 
    happen tomorrow, but its still frustrating.
    
    Gus Greensmith was the only M-Sport Ford championship contender to finish 
    the day, but he was almost 15 minutes off the pace after stopping to make 
    stage-side repairs on Kedong 1.
    
    Sébastien Loebs Puma stopped with engine troubles on the way 
    back to midday service and Adrien Fourmauxs similar car also bowed out 
    with a transmission-related failure.
    
    Roads further north around Lake Elmenteita host Saturdays 150.88km route, 
    the longest leg of the weekend.
    
    The day begins with Soysambu (29.32km), which has been lengthened since last 
    year. Next up is a blast over Elmenteitas (15.08km) oft-used tracks 
    in the Delamere Estate, followed by Sleeping Warrior (31.04km), set in the 
    shadow of a hill that resembles a Masai warrior lying down. The trio are driven 
    for a second time after service.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 1hr 20min 58.1sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +22.4sec
    3. O Tänak / M Järveoja ESP Hyundai i20 N +25.3sec
    4. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +26.6sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +57.5sec
    6. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +2min 8.2sec
    
    22-06-23 Afrikansk safari för 
    Oliver Solberg
    Två månader efter förra 
    mötet med eliten i världen får Oliver Solberg en ny chans 
    i rally-VM. Under midsommarhelgen ska 20-åringen tävla i ett av 
    världens svåraste lopp; Safarirallyt i Kenya.
    
    Tävlingen blir den första någonsin på grus med värstingbilen, 
    Hyundai i20 N Rally1.
    - Kenya är olik alla andra tävlingar i världsmästerskapet. 
    Att köra i detta landskap bland giraffer, noshörningar och flodhästar 
    är ganska unikt och speciellt. Vi kommer att köra några snabba 
    specialsträckor vilket gör att värmen inte blir riktigt lika 
    besvärande.
    
    Solberg startade tävlingen förra året, men förstörde 
    bilen och fick bryta redan på sträcka tre.
    - Det var en otroligt lärorik upplevelse. Jag har aldrig sett något 
    liknande till grova vägar och damm förut, och jag är så 
    glad att jag vet vad som väntar den här gången. Jag kommer 
    att börja försiktigt, men ändå pressa så mycket 
    jag kan. Det blir en fin linje att balansera på, säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    Tävlingen startar med en specialsträcka på torsdag och avslutas 
    på söndag.
    
    Tidigare den här säsongen har 20-åringen kört tävlingarna 
    i Monte-Carlo, Sverige och Kroatien i värstingklassen. I Portugal förra 
    månaden körde han i Rally2-klassen.
    
    Efter Safarirallyt i helgen åker 20-åringen vidare till Rally 
    Estonia i mitten av juli för ett nytt pass i WRC-klassen.
    22-06-21 Superstar Sébs 
    go head-to-head in Africa 
    WRC legends clash at toughest rally of the year. Pride of the plains Sébastien 
    Ogier defends his Safari Rally Kenya (23 - 26 June) crown against old foe 
    Sébastien Loeb as they battle for the first time on Africas unforgiving 
    terrain.
    
    The FIA World Rally Championship legends face off for the third time this 
    year at the sixth and toughest round of the series in the picture-postcard 
    Great Rift Valley. The route teems with exotic wildlife including lions, leopards, 
    giraffes, zebras and hippos.
    
    Both drivers are contesting partial programmes this season. Nine-time champion 
    Loeb drew first blood when the 47-year-old became the oldest WRC event winner 
    in history at Rallye Monte-Carlo in his M-Sport Ford Puma Rally1.
    
    Toyota Gazoo Racings Ogier, eight times a title winner, claimed the 
    Safari crown in 2021 when the sub-Saharan classic returned to the series following 
    a 19-year absence.
    
    This will be their first Kenyan clash, with Loebs only previous start 
    way back in 2002.
    
    Long straight roads where speeds could top 200kph contrast with rocky rutted 
    tracks that reduce cars to little more than walking pace. And, to add to the 
    excitement, thunderstorms are predicted during the four-day encounter.
    
    If the forecasters are correct, rain could transform the dry sections into 
    treacherous mudbaths in minutes.
    Last year we had a really nice welcome and a great atmosphere, 
    said Ogier. To win was the cherry on the cake and it will be great to 
    try to repeat that this year with a bit of knowledge of what to expect from 
    the stages.
    
    Its definitely a rally where you have to never give up, and this 
    year with the cars still being so new, we might have to be even more clever 
    than before, he added.
    
    Ogier is joined in GR Yaris cars by championship leader Kalle Rövanperä 
    as well as Elfyn Evans - who retired last year on the opening day - and 2021 
    runner-up Takamoto Katsuta.
    
    Rovanperä has shown incredible form so far this season with three wins 
    from five starts. He tops the standings by 55 points, but may be disadvantaged 
    by opening the gravel roads. In similar circumstances, the Finn could only 
    muster fifth at Rally Italia Sardegna earlier this month.
    
    Loeb is part of a five-car M-Sport Ford entry. He is joined by Craig Breen, 
    fourth in the points, Gus Greensmith, Adrien Fourmaux and gentleman driver 
    Jourdan Serderidis.
    
    Hyundai Motorsport's Thierry Neuville is hunting for redemption after his 
    bid for 2021 Safari success turned sour. The Belgian led for most of the rally 
    before rear suspension failure derailed his challenge.
    
    Neuville will team up with Rally Italia Sardegna winner Ott Tänak as 
    well as Oliver Solberg, who replaces Dani Sordo in the teams third i20 
    N car.
    I feel comfortable on the stages and this year we are out for revenge, 
    explained Neuville. It is a rough event and the weather can also play 
    a big factor, but we are looking forward to it.
    
    Kenyan president Uhuru Kenyatta will flag competitors away from the Nairobi 
    start on Thursday lunchtime. Ahead lie 19 gruelling special stages around 
    Lakes Naivasha and Elmenteita covering 363.44km before Sunday afternoon's 
    finish in Naivasha.
    22-06-14  WRC 
    Rally Estonia is fusing all the best practices for a whole family rally party 
    experience
     For the first time, the new generation of Rally1 hybrid cars can be 
    seen on Estonian home soil.
     Competitions start and finish podium has returned to the heart 
    of Tartu.
     New added value has been preserved in watching the classic rally.
     The Wolf Power Stage podium will be in Leigo, a unique location in 
    the middle of the lake.
    
    The WRC Rally Estonia press conference was held on Tuesday, June 14th. The 
    Organizers of the competition gave an overview of what to expect at the largest 
    motorsport event in the Baltics, WRC Rally Estonia.
    
    The WRC series is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, and Rally Estonia 
    is honoured to be on the World Rally Championship calendar for the third year 
    in a row. After a two-year break, the Rally Estonia finish and start podium 
    ceremonies are back on the unique Tartu Town Hall Square. For the third year 
    in a row, the Estonian National Museum is hosting the world's best rally teams 
    and the WRC Rally Estonia organizing team.
    
    In four days, a total of 24 special stages and 313.84 competitive kilometres 
    are waiting for the competitors. The opening stage will be a 1.66 km speed 
    test on Thursday evening in Tartu. On Friday, the day will start in Central 
    Estonia and move to the south. Technical and fast stages at the Lake Peipsi, 
    in Mustvee, Raanitsa and Vastsemõisa will take place. Saturday will 
    be a classic Rally Estonia competition day, which includes the legendary Alaküla 
    jump, the Truuta spectator area and the Kulbilohu rallycross track. This year's 
    Estonian World Rally Championship will end with Kambja's stage, which will 
    grant Wolf Power stage points to the fastest five cars. The Power stage podium 
    will be in Leigo where it is built on the island of the largest lake in Leigo. 
    In addition to the WRC entries, this year's Rally Estonia will also feature 
    competitors from the Estonian Rally Championship, who will pass seven stages, 
    as part of the competition.
    
    This year's WRC Rally Estonia offers spectators the opportunity to see the 
    new generation of Rally1 hybrid cars driving on Estonian roads for the first 
    time, one of which (Hyundai i20 N Rally1) will feature the 2019 World Rally 
    Champions and three-time Rally Estonia winners Ott Tänak / Martin Järveoja.
    
    After two years of pandemic, rally fans can enjoy WRC Rally Estonia under 
    normal conditions for the first time. The organizers have prepared over 70 
    different viewing areas, divided into three different categories: Arena, Area, 
    and Spot. As there are many events in the summer that rally fans might want 
    to attend, this year, in addition to the WRC Rally Estonia rally passes, day 
    passes will also be on sale so that everyone can still take part at the big 
    rally party.
    
    WRC Rally Estonia rally passes and day tickets are on sale in the Rally Estonia 
    e-store 
https://www.rallyestonia.com/en/shop/ 
    
    
    For the first time the rally audience will be able to go to the service park 
    at the Estonian National Museum to see how the world's best teams, their mechanics, 
    engineers, and many others work. In the evenings of the rally days, the fans 
    gathered in the service park will be able to see the TOP3 at the Meet the 
    Crews session of the day, hosted by Rebecca Becs Williams, who 
    is known to all rally fans from WRC All Live.
    
    Worth noting is the magnificent opening ceremony of WRC Rally Estonia, where 
    some of the best Estonian artists will perform. The start podium begins on 
    Thursday evening, June 14th at 6.30 pm and for the first time in the history 
    of Rally Estonia, all cars will drive over the start podium before the opening 
    stage of the rally starts on the territory of Raadi manor park at 8.38 pm. 
    For all those who do not want to go to Raadi, the opening stage can be watched 
    on the large LED screen at the Tartu Town Hall Square. At 10.30 pm, the artists 
    of 5 Miinust will take the stage with a unique an special one-and-a-half-hour 
    program.
    
    All necessary information for WRC Rally Estonia can be found on the website 
    
https://www.rallyestonia.com/en/spectators
    
    At the end of June the WRC Rally Estonia rally magazine will be published, 
    where in addition to the spectating areas and introductions of competitors, 
    there will be many exciting articles to read.
    
    Urmo Aava, Rally Director of WRC Rally Estonia:
    "I am looking forward to the arrival of the Rally1 hybrid cars in Estonia. 
    Compared to last year, it has changed that all manufacturers have won at least 
    one Rally before our event. Rally Estonia will be even more exciting because 
    all cars have the potential to win here. The experience of previous years 
    has shown that Ott and Martin are the sharpest  they drive on the home 
    roads here. But last year's winners Kalle Rovanperä / Jonne Halttunen 
    and Craig Breen / Paul Nagle, who finished on the podium two times in Estonia, 
    will probably be strong competition for Ott and Martin. In addition to the 
    WRC class, the excitement is definitely shared in WRC2 and JWRC with Egon 
    Kaur, Georg Linnamäe and Robert Virves. Kaur, Linnamäe and Virves 
    have already shown decent speed in the World Championship series this year. 
    All of them can fight for the rally win on their home roads.
    
    In addition to the above, several other Estonian crews have registered for 
    the domestic Rally Championship event, all of whom you can loudly cheer on 
    by the tracks.
    
    Tarmo Hõbe, Commercial Director of WRC Rally Estonia:
    "This year, for the third time on the WRC stage, we have combined all 
    previous best practices into one, offering experiences that have been approved 
    by competitors, teams and spectators. We have brought the start and finish 
    podium back to Tartu Town Hall Square in the heart of the city, and this time 
    the finish of the Power Stage will be by the picturesque lakes of Leigo. On 
    an island of Leigos largest lake we will award the winners. We have 
    prepared almost 80 different viewing areas for spectators, which are logically 
    divided into different categories. Although the restrictions have disappeared, 
    we have also preserved the new added value when watching the classic rally: 
    the arenas have large LED screens, where you can watch live WRC All Live in 
    addition to cars on the track. Otts and Martin's excellent performance 
    in Sardinia has shown that Hyundai is back to former strength. They are clearly 
    competitive and favourites to fight for victory on their home roads. The local 
    rally fans can also cheer for domestic bests in the WRC2 and JWRC classes. 
    Rally Estonia is honoured to be one of the few to organize the future of Rallying 
    with the Juniors. Adding the round of the Estonian championship, the four-day 
    family rally festival awaits!
    
    In addition to the organizers, Estonian top drivers  Ott Tänak, 
    Georg Linnamäe, Robert Virves, Gregor Jeets and Jaspar Vaher also spoke 
    at the WRC Rally Estonia press conference. Toyota Gazoo Racing team principal 
    Jari-Matti Latvala and M-Sport team driver Andrien Fourmaux joined virtually.
    
    Adrien Fourmaux (M-Sport Ford WRT)
    Rally Estonian rally is the rally where I have most participation because 
    I was already there when it was not in WRC (2019) Its nice event quite sandy 
    in some places in the second pass but the speed you have to carry is quite 
    nice. It will me my second fast rally with WRC car so big challenge, but lets 
    see what we can do.
    
    Jari-Matti Latvala (Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT)
    Our target for the season is to try to reach the Drivers and Manufacturers 
    Championship. Its been going really well in the first part of the season, 
    but we know that Hyundai is getting stronger and stronger. If you want to 
    be in the top of the game you need to work all the time, so you cant´just 
    stop development process. Thank you for the very nice offer, but unfortunately, 
    I cant attend myself I need to be working, I already missed Sardinia 
    from my work as a Team Principal. So, I cant drive it with my Celica 
    this time.
    
    Its really nice to have in rally also national class, because there 
    are a lot of drivers who would like to participate in a World Rally Championship 
    event, because the atmosphere is totally different than in national events.
    
    Ott Tänak (Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT)
    Before Rally Estonia we have to drive in Kenya what will be challenge. 
    Estonia, Finland and most probably also New Zealand will be specific rallies. 
    We are starting from Estonia where roads are fast and smooth. These rallies 
    are always tricky and similar to with Sweden, where we have snow, but still 
    fast. These rallies need totally new approach. Will see, we try to do as much 
    possible, but tests are limited from FIA and we dont have much possibility 
    to try. Basically, we have to be spot on from the beginning and hope that 
    we did better than the rest.
    
    Georg Linnamäe (ALM Motorsport)
    I think we can enter Rally Estonia with good feeling and pace because 
    we have much experience from this event. This year we try to show our faster 
    side. I predict that in WRC2 TOP3 will be me, Egon Kaur and Gregor Jeets.
    
    Robert Virves (FIA JWRC)
    As Rally Estonia is fast and my home rally then the target cant 
    be lower than top step of the podium. We try our best to achieve it.
    
    Gregor Jeets (Tehase Auto)
    I think if all preparation going well and luck is on our side then our 
    WRC2 target is TOP5 if not even TOP3. I will predict the same TOP3 as Georg 
    did. 
    
    Jaspar Vaher (CKR Estonia)
    Its nice to drive and be a part of such a big event as Rally Estonia. 
    I would like to thank Estonian Autosport Union for this opportunity.
    
    Rally Estonia is a part of the FIA World Rally Championship for the third 
    year in a row. WRC Rally Estonia 2022 will be run as the seventh round of 
    the season on July 14th till July 17th on the roads of Tartu, Otepää, 
    Elva, Kanepi, Kambja, Peipsiääre and Mustvee. The Rally Service 
    Park and the Media Centre will be Tartu, in the Estonian National Museum (ERM) 
    and the start and finish podium will be the heart of Tartu, on its Town Hall 
    Square. 
    
    22-06-05 Tänak ceases 
    victory drought with Italy win
    Estonian secures dominant win. Ott Tänak ended his long search for another 
    FIA World Rally Championship victory with a convincing win at Rally Italia 
    Sardegna on Sunday afternoon.
    
    The Hyundai Motorsport driver was on dominant form on the Mediterranean islands 
    punishing rock-strewn roads and brought his hybrid-powered i20 N Rally1 car 
    home 1min 3.2sec clear of M-Sport Ford driver Craig Breen.
    
    Tänaks win at the championships fifth round was certainly 
    long-awaited. The last time he stood on the top step of the podium was at 
    Arctic Rally Finland powered by CapitalBox in 2021, which was 462 days ago. 
    Since then, he has struggled to find rally-winning form, mainly due to mechanical 
    troubles.
    
    The Estonian was on the pace from the get-go and traded the lead with GR Yaris 
    driver Esapekka Lappi on Fridays shortened opening leg. A transmission 
    issue on the final blast left him with only three-wheel drive and he trailed 
    the Finn by 0.7sec overnight.
    
    The stage was set for a thrilling battle over Saturdays marathon leg, 
    which took place in the Monte Acuto region with no midday service.
    
    However, the fight was over just 10.4km into the opening Tempio Pausania test 
    when Lappis car rebounded from a heavy compression and bounced into 
    a rock which ripped off the rear left wheel and suspension components.
    
    Lappis demise left Tänak clear at the top and he went on to win 
    six of Saturdays seven speed tests, carrying a hefty advantage into 
    the final leg despite insisting that he wasnt pushing. He was then able 
    to ease through the final four stages and claim a 15th career win.
    
    "It's been very challenging, especially since the beginning of this [hybrid] 
    generation, said Tänak.
    
    We are definitely very happy, especially for the mechanics - they put 
    in an incredible effort all of last year and the beginning of this year. This 
    rally was not easy and they made a good job to keep the car going.
    
    "We have made some good steps. In Portugal, we were really struggling 
    and actually we managed to improve. No doubt, if the confidence is there then 
    we can do a good job. We just need to keep working," he added.
    
    Breen was delighted to grab his best-ever result for M-Sport Ford. The Irishman 
    ended Friday just inside the top-five following a spin and an overshoot, but 
    moved into second soon afterwards when team-mate Pierre-Louis Loubet punctured 
    a front left tyre.
    
    He came under pressure from Dani Sordo before delivering a handful of top-three 
    times on Saturday to bridge the gap to his Spanish rival.
    
    Sordo, ever the safe pair of hands, eventually completed the podium 29.8sec 
    behind. He struggled to find a comfortable set-up early in the rally, but 
    gradual improvements unlocked more pace from his i20 N and a stall following 
    a water splash on SS16 was his only real bump in the road.
    
    Pierre-Louis Loubet brought his Puma 36.4sec further back to mark a career-best 
    result of fourth overall. He took on a mature approach following the puncture, 
    showing pace when needed but also comfortably managing the gap to Kalle Rovanperä, 
    who ended 53.4sec behind.
    
    Rovanperä was the best-finishing Toyota with fifth on what was a disappointing 
    event for the team.
    
    He had the dubious task of opening the road on Friday and initially languished 
    in eighth after struggling for traction on the loose and dusty surface, but 
    an improved road position on Saturday helped him climb the order.
    
    The Finn was able to leapfrog Yaris colleague Takamoto Katsuta, who finished 
    sixth, as well as Adrien Fourmaux, who crashed out on SS17, and he now leads 
    the championship by a commanding 55 points.
    
    Hyundais Thierry Neuville managed to salvage five points with the Wolf 
    Power Stage win after rolling his i20 N out of contention on Saturday. Elfyn 
    Evans also had a rally to forget after retiring on both Friday and Saturday.
    
    The championship reaches its midpoint with a hotly-anticipated visit to Africa 
    next month. The legendary Safari Rally Kenya is based in Naivasha on 23 - 
    26 June.
    
    Final positions:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 3hr 10min 59.1sec
    2. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +1min 3.2sec
    3. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +1min 33.0sec
    4. PL Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +2min 9.4sec
    5. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +3min 2.8sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +4min 2.6sec
    
    FIA World Rally Championship (after round 5 of 13):
    1. K Rovanperä 120pts
    2. T Neuville 65pts
    3. O Tänak 62pts 
    
    22-06-04 
    Merciless Tänak leaves rivals floundering 
    in Italy
    Estonian driver dominates penultimate day. Ott Tänak is on course for 
    a much-needed victory at Rally Italia Sardegna after leaving his rivals for 
    dust on Saturdays penultimate leg.
    
    The Estonian driver will start Sundays final leg with a hefty 46.0sec 
    advantage over M-Sport Fords Craig Breen after pulling clear on what 
    was a disastrous day for Friday leader Esapekka Lappi.
    
    The stage was set for a thrilling battle after Lappi led Tänak by 0.7sec 
    overnight, but he retired on Saturdays opening Tempio Pausania speed 
    blast when a heavy compression sent his Yaris flying into a rock which ripped 
    off the rear left wheel.
    
    Lappis demise left Tänak all alone at the front and, despite insisting 
    he wasnt pushing, the stage times suggested otherwise as he won six 
    of the days seven speed tests.
    
    While his title hopes may be slim after a poor start to the season, victory 
    here would mean a lot to Tänak. He hasnt stood on the top step 
    of the podium since Arctic Rally Finland powered by CapitalBox in 2021, which 
    was 461 days ago.
    
    Its been a good day, reflected Tänak. In the 
    car we had quite a good feeling. The roads were holding up well in the afternoon 
    and it was quite enjoyable.
    
    On the first stage this morning, when Esapekka was still in the fight, 
    we gave it a good push. After that, I would say we were slowing down step 
    by step, but the times were still coming. I guess, if youre in the mood, 
    thats how it should be.
    
    Weve been in this position before and we know how it is. Its 
    not over until the finish line is crossed, so lets say its better 
    not to think about that just yet, he added.
    
    Breen was the only other driver to win a stage on what was a hot and dusty 
    day. The Irishman started third before snatching the runners-up spot when 
    team-mate Pierre-Louis Loubet punctured on the opening test.
    
    He was pressured by Hyundais Dani Sordo in the morning, but managed 
    to build a comfortable buffer as Sordo struggled for pace later in the day. 
    20.8sec separated the pair at close of play.
    
    Loubet delivered a mature drive to bring his Puma home fourth. He trailed 
    Sordo by 25.0sec, but had 51.4sec in hand over fifth-placed Kalle Rovanperä, 
    who started the day eighth after opening the road on Friday.
    
    Rovanperä broke into the top five late in the day when Adrien Fourmaux 
    crashed his Ford on the final Monte Lerno Di Pattada blast and the stage was 
    subsequently red-flagged.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta was almost four minutes down on the leaders. With no midday 
    service, he was forced to drive carefully while nursing a weakened radiator 
    which took a hit through the watersplash at Coiluna - Loelle.
    
    Gus Greensmith was seventh, while the rest of the leaderboard comprised of 
    support category cars. WRC2 leader Nikolay Gryazin headed Jan Solans and Chris 
    Ingram, who completed the top ten.
    
    Hyundais Thierry Neuville was eyeing a climb up the leaderboard after 
    ending Friday ninth following transmission woes. However, the Belgians 
    luck ran out on the third stage of the morning when a rollover put him out 
    for the day.
    
    After restarting following his Friday retirement, Elfyn Evans came unstuck 
    once again when rear suspension failure sidelined his Yaris in the afternoon.
    
    Crews will head north of Alghero along the coast on Sunday to tackle the Monte 
    Baranta (14.51km) and Sassari-Argentiera (7.10km) tests. Both stages are run 
    twice on the final day, with the latter being the venue for the bonus points-paying 
    Wolf Power Stage, which gets underway at 1218 local time.
    
    As has become tradition, whoever emerges from the finale on top will then 
    dive - together with their whole team - into the Alghero harbour.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N 2hr 43min 35.6sec
    2. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +46.0sec
    3. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +1min 6.8sec
    4. PL Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +1min 31.8sec
    5. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +2min 23.2sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston JPN Toyota GR Yaris +3min 52.3sec 
    
    22-06-03 Lappi holds tiny lead 
    after frantic opening day in Italy
    Finn impresses on hybrid-powered gravel debut. Esapekka Lappi delivered a 
    near-perfect drive to round out Fridays punishing opening leg with a 
    slender lead at Rally Italia Sardegna.
    
    The Finn, making his gravel debut in a Toyota GR Yaris, won two of the six 
    rock-strewn speed tests to open up a tiny 0.7sec advantage over Ott Tänak 
    on a shortened opening day at round five of the FIA World Rally Championship.
    
    Unfortunately, the final two stages were cancelled due to delays following 
    an incident during the first passage of Osilu - Tergu.
    
    Lappi started strongly and topped the timesheets after the second passage 
    of Monti di Alà e Buddusò before being quickly overtaken by 
    a charging Ott Tänak at the end of the morning loop.
    
    Tänak was on fine form and looked likely to pull clear in the afternoon, 
    however, a transmission issue hampered the Hyundai i20 N driver on the final 
    stage and he dropped back to second after nursing the car through with three-wheel 
    drive.
    
    The cancellations of SS8 and SS9 held a silver lining for Tänak as he 
    was able to return to the respite of Alghero service without dropping any 
    further back.
    
    Meanwhile, Lappis day was relatively drama-free, a front left puncture 
    on SS5 being the biggest of his worries.
    
    Pierre-Louis Loubet ended 14.4sec back from Tänak in third. The Frenchman 
    traded seconds with his M-Sport Ford Puma colleague Craig Breen throughout 
    the day and both drivers dropped time with small overshoots. At close of play, 
    Breen was just 0.4sec in arrears.
    
    Dani Sordo was only six tenths further behind in his Hyundai. He struggled 
    to find the optimum set-up early on, but adjustments made throughout the day 
    proved fruitful and he notched up a brace of stage wins.
    
    Puma hotshot Adrien Fourmaux was a lonely sixth. He trailed Sordo by 14.7sec, 
    but held a neat 34.7sec over Takamoto Katsuta, who struggled for traction 
    in his Toyota.
    
    Championship leader Kalle Rovanperä languished in eighth after sweeping 
    the road all day followed by a dejected Thierry Neuville, who dropped two 
    minutes with a transmission issue on SS5. WRC2 leader Andreas Mikkelsen completed 
    the leaderboard in tenth overall.
    
    It was a bad day for the British drivers. Elfyn Evans led briefly before retiring 
    his Yaris with radiator damage following a compression on the third stage, 
    while Gus Greensmith ended 2min 19.0sec off the pace after struggling to restart 
    his Puma following an overshoot in the morning.
    
    Saturdays itinerary features eight more stages near Monte Acuto, with 
    131.82km of action broken into two loops of four tests. There will be no midday 
    service halt.
    
    Tempio Pausania (12.03 km) and Erula - Tula (15.27 km) are each repeated twice 
    in the morning, while double runs of Coiluna - Loelle (21.60 km) and Monte 
    Lerno (17.01 km) round off the day before the overnight halt in Alghero.
    
    Leading positions after Friday:
    1. E Lappi / J Ferm FIN Toyota GR Yaris 1hr 10min 41.9sec
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +0.7sec
    3. PL Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +15.1sec
    4. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +15.5sec
    5. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +16.1sec
    6. A Fourmaux / A Coria FRA Ford Puma +30.8sec
    
    22-06-01 Rovanperä bids 
    to maintain untouchable form at Rally Italia Sardegna
    Finn targets fourth consecutive win. 
    Kalle Rovanperä hunts for a fourth consecutive victory at this weekends 
    Rally Italia Sardegna (2 - 5 June) as his Toyota Gazoo Racing squad bids for 
    back-to-back wins on the tough Mediterranean event.
    
    Rovanperä arrives at the championships fifth round in fine form. 
    He recorded victory on snow, asphalt and gravel at the three previous three 
    rounds and carries a hefty 46-point advantage as the championship approaches 
    its halfway point.
    
    While the Finn doesnt have great memories of the Italian island due 
    to retirements in the previous two years, his team-mate Sébastien Ogier 
    - who is absent this weekend - won last seasons edition.
    
    He will have to open the road on Friday, ploughing a line through loose gravel 
    which will become progressively cleaner and grippier with the passage of each 
    car.
    
    Sardinia will be another tough rally, acknowledged Rovanperä. 
    The stages there have been tricky for me in the past, but last year 
    I had a better feeling even though we had some issues during the weekend.
    
    If the conditions are hot and dry like normal, I think it could be more 
    difficult for us to fight for the win from first on the road than in Portugal, 
    but the target will be the same: to do the best job we can.
    
    We go there knowing that we have a good base with the car on gravel 
    and although we need to focus on making it even better, we are already in 
    a good place, he added.
    
    One man who wont be worrying about sweeping the road is Hyundai Motorsports 
    Dani Sordo. The Spaniard is sharing the teams third i20 N Rally1 car 
    with Oliver Solberg this season, and starts eighth in the running order.
    
    Sordo has made his name as a Sardinia master and claimed back-to-back victories 
    across 2019 and 2020. He joins second-placed title contender Thierry Neuville 
    as well as Ott Tänak in the Korean manufacturers line-up.
    
    Rovanperäs GR Yaris colleague Elfyn Evans needs a strong result 
    to continue getting his season back on track. The Welshman is down in fifth 
    after going off the road in Monte-Carlo and Sweden, although he recovered 
    to take second at Vodafone Rally de Portugal last month.
    
    Esapekka Lappi replaces Sébastien Ogier to drive Toyotas third 
    car, while Takamoto Katsuta will pilot a similar machine less than a fortnight 
    after Sordo denied him a podium result in Portugal.
    
    M-Sport Ford fields a four-strong hybrid-powered Puma Rally1 entry led by 
    Craig Breen who sits sixth in the drivers' standings. Young chargers Gus Greensmith, 
    Adrien Fourmaux and Pierre-Louis Loubet will each bid for their maiden WRC 
    podiums.
    
    The rally base has switched back across the island to the west coast town 
    of Alghero after spending 2021 in Olbia, although the fast and narrow roads 
    - many lined with trees and bushes - will be familiar.
    
    After Thursday nights start, competitors face 21 speed tests covering 
    307.91km. 
    
    22-05-22 Solberg seger på 
    ikoniskt specialsträcka
    Tiotusentals rallyfans jublade när Oliver Solberg krossade allt motstånd 
    i sin klass vid det legendariska Fafe-sträckan i Rally Portugal i söndags.
    
    20-åringen hade ingen anledning att hålla igen på tävlingens 
    sista specialsträcka  som också var en så kallat "power 
    stage" (bonuspoängs-sträcka). Han slog klassvinnaren Yohan 
    Rossel med hela 15,6 sekunder på den 11,18 kilometer långa sträckan.
    - Fantastiskt att avsluta rallyt med sträckseger och en positiv upplevelse. 
    Det var speciellt att vinna just den här sträckan och bli en del 
    av Fafe-historien, sa Oliver Solberg efter mötet med den massiva publiken. 
    
    
    Hyundai-föraren vann totalt två sträckor i Rally2-klassen. 
    Han var dock chanslös i totalen då en styrarm brast och såg 
    till att Solberg fick dra sig ur andra halvan av lördagens körning.
    - Jag är faktiskt inte riktigt säker på vad som hände. 
    Jag träffade ingenting, men plötsligt brast styrarmen i fronten. 
    Vägarna i den här tävlingen var tuffare än någon 
    hade sett dem tidigare. Vi jobbade hårt och fixade problemet inför 
    eftermiddagens sträckor, men problemet kom tillbaka redan på andra 
    sträckan och vi tvingades bryta.
    - Lyckligtvis körde vi igenom alla sträckorna. Vi är trots 
    allt här för att skaffa oss erfarenhet och förstå vägarna, 
    sa 20-åringen. Teamet reparerade bilen och gjorde den startklar på 
    söndagen.
    
    Oliver Solberg borde egentligen ha stått över Rally Portugal, men 
    sponsorerna Monster Energy, HTB Racing och Schaktmiljö gick samman och 
    hyrde en Hyundai i20 N Rally2-bil så att han ändå kunde köra 
    VM-tävlingen. 
    
    22-05-22 Hat-trick hero Rovanperä 
    supreme in Rally de Portugal 
    Toyota scores 1-2 finish on gruelling gravel roads. Kalle Rovanperä claimed 
    his third FIA World Rally Championship victory in as many events in Portugal 
    on Sunday afternoon to open a commanding lead in the points standings.
    
    The Finn trailed long-time leader and Toyota GR Yaris team-mate Elfyn Evans 
    for the first two days at Vodafone Rally de Portugal before relegating the 
    Welshman on Saturday evening. He extended a slender advantage on the short 
    final leg to win by 15.2sec.
    
    Rovanperäs triumph on the first gravel fixture of the season followed 
    success on Swedens snow and ice and Croatias asphalt. He holds 
    a 46-point championship advantage after four of 13 rounds.
    
    Victory looked near-impossible for Rovanperä who started Fridays 
    opening leg first in the order. He cleaned the sandy roads to leave more grip 
    for those following, but the 21-year-old avoided trouble on the punishing 
    rock-strewn roads before pouncing on Evans.
    
    Maximum bonus points for winning the final Wolf Power Stage over the legendary 
    Fafe speed test was the icing on the cake.
    
    At the moment it seems we are on a really good drive, he smiled. 
    Starting first here and to fight for the win like this, it was really 
    nice. We saw a lot of issues and tough conditions this weekend and our car 
    was perfect as always so everybody can be really happy.
    
    Second was the best result of the season for Evans, who won six of the 21 
    speed tests compared to Rovanperäs eight. It marked a return to 
    form for the man who has finished championship runner-up for the last two 
    seasons after a torrid start to the year.
    
    We definitely needed a result, thats for sure, he admitted. 
    Of course, were disappointed with the outcome of today, but I 
    take my hat off to Kalle. From my side its nice to be back on the podium 
    and we should be able to build from here.
    
    Toyota Gazoo Racing was on course to lockout the podium with Takamoto Katsuta 
    holding third ahead of the final stage. But a fast-closing Dani Sordo, making 
    his first appearance of the season in a Hyundai i20 N, moved ahead in the 
    final kilometres by 2.1sec.
    
    Thierry Neuville fell away from the victory fight on Friday when a front wheel 
    fell off his i20 N on a liaison section. He drove the final two stages with 
    just two-wheel drive and plunged from second to seventh. He recovered to take 
    fifth, 18.4sec behind Katsuta.
    
    Brake problems cost Craig Breen sixth. The Irishman conceded two places on 
    the final day in his Ford Puma, allowing Ott Tänak into sixth in an i20. 
    The Estonian steadily gained ground after two Friday punctures ended his challenge.
    
    Competitors face more hot weather and rough roads as the WRC moves to the 
    Mediterranean island of Sardinia next month. Rally Italia Sardegna is based 
    in Alghero on 2 - 5 June.
    
    Final positions:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 3hr 44min 19.2sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +15.2sec
    3. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 +2min 17.3sec
    4. T Katsuta / A Johnston GBR Toyota GR Yaris +2min 19.4sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +2min 37.8sec
    6. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 +4min 45.7sec
    
    FIA World Rally Championship (after round 4 of 13)
    1. K Rovanperä 106pts
    2. T Neuville 60pts
    3. T Katsuta 38pts
    
    22-05-21 Rovanperä steals 
    Saturday Rally de Portugal lead from Evans
    Finn carries 5.7sec lead into final day. Kalle Rovanperä snatched the 
    Vodafone Rally de Portugal lead from team-mate Elfyn Evans on Saturday night 
    to set up a thrilling finale.
    
    The Finn trailed Evans by almost 20sec midway through the longest leg of the 
    event before crushing the Welshman this afternoon. He will carry a 5.7sec 
    advantage into Sundays closing day in pursuit of his third straight 
    rally win.
    
    Evans had led this fourth round of the FIA World Rally Championship for virtually 
    the entire distance in his Toyota GR Yaris, but Rovanperä won this afternoons 
    opening two tests to trim the deficit to 9.9sec.
    
    Then rain in the second pass of the long Amarante stage handed Rovanperä 
    a vital advantage. It became increasingly heavy and with Evans starting four 
    minutes after his colleague, he conceded almost 14sec and the lead.
    
    Im sure we could have done a bit more in places, reflected 
    Evans later. The rain did not help us in the long one, but Kalle has 
    driven well. We have to keep the pressure on tomorrow and see what is possible.
    
    Earlier Evans had the best of a morning which was heavily influenced by tyre 
    choice. Both 
    
    favoured Pirellis soft compound Scorpion rubber which offered more grip 
    on the powdery Cabreira Mountain roads than the harder option chosen by others.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta ensured a Toyota Gazoo Racing lockout of the top three after 
    overhauling Dani Sordo for third this morning. Katsuta defeated the Hyundai 
    i20 N pilot on all but one stage to carry a 5.7sec advantage into the overnight 
    halt, almost two minutes off the lead.
    
    Both must keep an eye on a charging Thierry Neuville. The Belgian climbed 
    two places to fifth this morning but was almost a minute behind team-mate 
    Sordo at the midpoint. A blistering drive in Amarante before the rain took 
    hold enabled him to close to within 30.1sec.
    
    Ford Puma team-mates Pierre-Louis Loubet and Craig Breen lost time on hard 
    tyres this morning. Loubets choice was compounded by a spin and he fell 
    behind the Irishman when jammed windscreen wipers hindered his visibility 
    in the rain.
    
    Set-up improvements to the dampers and chassis at the mid-leg service encouraged 
    Breen who demoted Loubet by 14.3sec in sixth. He ended more than 90sec behind 
    Neuville.
    
    Sundays finale is all about the extraordinary Fafe, its big jump before 
    the finish and its crowds. Five tests clustered around the town total 48.87km, 
    with the rally-closing Wolf Power Stage in Fafe offering vital bonus points.
    
    Leading positions:
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 3hr 13min 46.7sec
    2. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +5.7sec
    3. T Katsuta / A Johnston GBR Toyota GR Yaris +1min 50.1sec
    4. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 +1min 55.8sec
    5. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +2min 25.9sec
    6. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +4min 00.4sec 
    
    22-05-20 Evans ahead after 
    vicious Friday at Rally de Portugal
    Loeb and Ogier sidelined by gruelling conditions. Elfyn Evans mastered a brutal 
    opening leg at Vodafone Rally de Portugal to lead Toyota Gazoo Racing team-mate 
    Kalle Rovanperä on Friday night.
    
    A furious fight in the morning became a matter of survival this afternoon 
    as heat, dust and punishing rock-strewn roads took a heavy toll in this first 
    gravel fixture of the FIA World Rally Championship season.
    
    Evans won four of the eight special stages in his GR Yaris to head his Finnish 
    colleague, who twice topped the timesheets, by 13.6sec after almost 125km 
    of action.
    
    The Welshmans low start position meant he enjoyed the benefit of better 
    grip on roads swept clean by the early starters. In contrast, championship 
    leader Rovanperä endured the worst conditions from first in the running 
    order.
    
    Evans demoted Thierry Neuville, who led after Thursday nights short 
    speed test in Coimbras streets, with an opening stage victory. He won 
    the next, too, but was powerless to halt a charging Sébastien Loeb 
    who snatched a 0.5sec advantage.
    
    When Loeb slammed his Ford Puma into retirement against a wall just metres 
    into the next stage, Evans was back ahead and avoided multiple hazards on 
    the deteriorating roads.
    
    They were quite extreme conditions, he said. Everybody was 
    trying to pick a way through and to a point it was a lottery but, of course, 
    you have to try to drive as quick as you can as well. You can always say you 
    could have gone faster, but would you still be here or not?
    
    Second was beyond Rovanperäs hopes. We were scooping a lot 
    of dust into the car. Sometimes I couldnt really breathe or see anything 
    he smiled.
    
    Season debutant Dani Sordo was third in a Hyundai i20, half a minute behind. 
    The Spaniard had 5.2sec in hand over Takamoto Katsuta in another GR Yaris, 
    the Japanese driver handing that time away with a spin.
    
    Sébastien Ogier was on course to make it a great day for Toyota Gazoo 
    Racing as he steered his GR Yaris into third. Two afternoon punctures stranded 
    the Frenchman roadside with no more spare wheels onboard.
    
    Twice Gus Greensmith had a tyre come off the rim on his Ford Puma. His progress 
    was further stifled when dust filled the cockpit but the Briton persevered 
    to hold fifth, a minute off the lead.
    
    M-Sport Ford team-mate Pierre-Louis Loubet was sixth, the Frenchmans 
    hopes of a top three ending when he overshot a penultimate stage junction.
    
    If Friday was tough, Saturday is even more daunting. Almost half the rallys 
    competitive distance is packed into two loops of three speed tests in the 
    Cabreira Mountains. Crews have the respite of mid-leg service and a coastal 
    street stage in Porto ends the day after almost 165km of action.
    
    Leading positions:
    1. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris 1hr 25min 43.3sec
    2. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +13.6sec
    3. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 +44.4sec
    4. T Katsuta / A Johnston GBR Toyota GR Yaris +49.6sec
    5. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +1min 00.7sec
    6. P-L Loubet / V Landais FRA Ford Puma +1min 15.6sec 
    
    22-05-19 WRC rally legends 
    toast championships 50 golden years 
    World champions spanning six decades kicked off the FIA World Rally Championships 
    50th season celebrations in style on Wednesday at a star-studded gala in Portugal.
    
    Title-winning drivers, co-drivers and team managers created the biggest ever 
    gathering of WRC champions in Matosinhos. The event launched five days of 
    celebrations at Vodafone Rally de Portugal (19 - 22 May) during the first 
    gravel fixture of the sports innovative hybrid era.
    
    Nine-time champion Sébastien Loeb (FRA) and eight-time winner Sébastien 
    Ogier (FRA) took a break from preparations for round four of the 2022 series 
    to attend the gala, which recalled some of the most memorable moments across 
    50 years.
    
    They were joined by Walter Röhrl (DEU), Marcus Grönholm and Ari 
    Vatanen (both FIN), Miki Biasion (ITA), Carlos Sainz (ESP), Petter Solberg 
    (NOR) and Ott Tänak (EST). Between them they have amassed 28 titles.
    
    Robert Reid, Derek Ringer and David Richards (all GBR), Luis Moya (ESP), Christian 
    Geistdörfer (DEU), Tiziano Siviero (ITA), Timo Rautiainen (FIN) and Martin 
    Järveoja (EST) represented the champion co-drivers.
    
    Michèle Mouton (FRA) and Fabrizia Pons (ITA), the only female pairing 
    to win a WRC event outright, were present, along with WRC Ladies Cup 
    winners Louise-Aitken-Walker (GBR) and Isolde Holderied (DEU), their co-driver 
    Tina Thörner (SWE), and Christine Driano (FRA).
    
    The gala, attended by 250 guests, was held in the rallys Exponor headquarters. 
    Portugal was a host country in 1973s inaugural WRC season and this years 
    event marks the championships 619th round.
    
    The celebrations continue over the weekend with almost 30 classic cars charting 
    the WRCs history on display. They include an Alpine A110, the model 
    which won the first WRC round at Rallye Monte-Carlo. They will also take part 
    in demonstration runs at special stages.
    
    The gala was organised by championship commercial rights holder WRC Promoter 
    and motorsports governing body, the FIA.
    
    It was a truly special occasion, said WRC Promoter managing director 
    Jona Siebel. We were honoured by the presence of title winners from 
    all six decades of the WRCs history for an evening of celebration, joyous 
    memories and good old-fashioned fun.
    
    The festivities continue for the next four days and it will be pure 
    nostalgia to watch some amazing title-winning cars driving special stages 
    ahead of todays superstars fighting for tenths of a second.
    
    FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem was an enthusiastic guest. There 
    are so many memories and it is such a special moment to be here among your 
    own family, he said.
    
    It is an immense pleasure to be present at Rally de Portugal and celebrate 
    the champions, alongside WRC Promoter and all the partners and friends of 
    the sport. I would like to extend my gratitude to Automóvel Club de 
    Portugals president, Carlos Barbosa, for hosting the festivities as 
    part of the rally event. 
    
    22-05-19 Solbergs sponsorer 
    fixade Portugal-start
    Planen var att Oliver Solberg skulle stå över Rally Portugal. Istället 
    gick 20-åringens sponsorer in och såg till att Oliver står 
    på startlinjen i helgens VM-tävling.
    
    Inför säsongen fick Oliver besked om att "dela" en bil 
    med spanjoren Daniel Sordo i värstingklassen. Efter att ha kört 
    säsongens tre första VM-tävlingarna i Monaco, Sverige och Kroatien, 
    är det nu Sordos tur på portugisiskt grus.
    
    För att Oliver inte ska missa mycket viktig erfarenhet genom att stå 
    över en VM-tävling, gick sponsorerna Monster Energy, HTB Racing 
    och Schaktmiljö samman och hyrde en Hyundai i20 N Rally2-bil till det 
    unga stjärnskottet.
    - Jag är evigt tacksam mot mina sponsorer som ger mig den här chansen. 
    I rally betyder erfarenhet av de olika tävlingarna så mycket, och 
    nu ser de till att jag inte missar den här möjligheten i Portugal, 
    säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    Han kommer att tävla i den näst högsta klassen tillsammans 
    med bland andra Andreas Mikkelsen, Teemu Suninen och ett rekordstort startfält 
    som innehåller många förare i världsklass.
    - Jag kan inte säga annat än att det var lite tråkigt att 
    lämna över "nycklarna" till värstingbilen i20 N Rally1 
    till Dani Sordo. Samtidigt är det enligt plan och som det ska vara i 
    år. Rally2 skiljer sig mycket
    från Rally1-bilen. Men det är bra för mig att få erfarenhet 
    av olika bilar i så många tävlingar som möjligt.
    
    Rally Portugal är säsongens första grusrally.
    - Det är alltid svårt att veta vad det är för grepp vi 
    kan förvänta oss. Eftersom vi är nära Atlantkusten kan 
    vädret förändras både snabbt och drastiskt. Dessutom 
    kommer vi att tävla på en mängd olika vägytor med damm, 
    lera och stenar. Vi vet att detta är ett ganska tekniskt rally, och både 
    däckval och noter kommer att vara viktiga.
    
    Solbergs mål är att skaffa erfarenhet och genomföra tävlingen. 
    Samtidigt vill han slåss om topplaceringar både på specialsträckorna 
    samt totalt i Rally2-klassen. Tävlingen är det första den här 
    säsongen där Oliver Solberg kan dra nytta av sina egna noter från 
    fjolåret (5:e plats).
     Det råder ingen tvekan om att vi hade bra erfarenhet förra 
    året. Nu måste vi bygga vidare på det, säger Solberg.
    
    Rally Portugal drar igång med en kort sträcka på torsdagskvällen 
    och avslutas efter 21 specialsträckor på söndag eftermiddag. 
    
    22-05-18 Legends Loeb and Ogier 
    renew rivalry at Rally de Portugal
    French duo back in action at opening gravel fixture. Rallying superstars Sébastiens 
    Loeb and Ogier face-off for the second course of their FIA World Rally Championship 
    season rivalry at Vodafone Rally de Portugal (19 - 22 May).
    
    The sports two most successful drivers are reunited in battle after 
    serving up a tasty dish at Januarys season-opening Rallye Monte-Carlo. 
    Loeb became the oldest event winner in history at 47 after snatching victory 
    in an epic tussle.
    
    Three rounds further down the road, they return from competing in other disciplines 
    to add extra spice to the opening gravel fixture of both the season and the 
    WRCs hybrid era.
    
    Loeb has the harder task. The nine-time champion is an early starter in Fridays 
    opening leg and with conditions set to remain dry, grip will be low for those 
    at the front on roads coated in slippery sand.
    
    I am fourth on the road and road cleaning is always a challenge in this 
    kind of rally if its dry, said the M-Sport Ford Puma driver.
    
    I dont really know what to expect there so we need to do a good 
    first day, and for the rest we will see where we are. Only one day of testing 
    isnt a lot when its the first time you are driving a car on gravel, 
    but at the end I was happy with the feeling I had.
    
    Eight-time champion Ogier is chasing a record sixth victory in the country 
    where he scored his first WRC win 12 years ago. He is helped by a start position 
    four places behind his fellow Frenchman.
    
    Portugal is a special place for me, admitted the Toyota Gazoo 
    Racing driver. It will be something different for me to not be starting 
    near the front and hopefully that can be a bit of an advantage if it doesnt 
    rain.
    
    The biggest challenge will be getting back in the rhythm straightaway 
    after only one test day on gravel. But at the same time, these cars are new 
    for everyone on gravel.
    
    Ogier is joined in GR Yaris cars by championship leader Kalle Rövanperä, 
    2021 Portugal winner Elfyn Evans, who starts one place behind Ogier, and Takamoto 
    Katsuta.
    
    Rovanperä has won two of the opening three rounds, including a thrilling 
    last-gasp success last time out in Croatia. He tops the standings by 29 points 
    but is disadvantaged by opening the roads on dirt for the first time.
    
    Loeb is part of a five-car M-Sport Ford entry, the biggest from a team in 
    the hybrid generation. He is joined by Craig Breen, third in the points, Adrien 
    Fourmaux, Gus Greensmith and Pierre-Louis Loubet.
    
    Dani Sordo replaces Oliver Solberg at Hyundai Motorsport for his 2022 debut. 
    The Spaniard is joined in i20 N cars by Ott Tänak and Thierry Neuville, 
    podium finishers in Croatia.
    
    The rally is based in the coastal city of Matosinhos. After Thursday nights 
    start in Coimbra, competitors face 21 speed tests covering 338.34km in north 
    and central Portugal. It finishes on Sunday afternoon after a finale over 
    the iconic roads of Fafe.
    
    The rally marks the centrepiece of the WRCs 50th season celebrations. 
    The biggest ever gathering of champion drivers and co-drivers will attend 
    and almost 30 classic cars will parade through several stages. 
    
    22-05-10 WRC rally greats celebrate 
    50 golden championship years
    · FIA World Rally Championship salutes glorious half century
    · Vodafone Rally de Portugal to host 50th season festivities
    · Legendary names to attend largest ever gathering of WRC champions
    · Historic cars to parade through famous special stages
    
    The biggest ever gathering of FIA World Rally champions will celebrate the 
    series half-century at a star-studded festival in Portugal next week.
    
    Title-winning drivers, co-drivers and team managers will honour the WRCs 
    50th season in Matosinhos during five days of celebrations at Vodafone Rally 
    de Portugal (19 - 22 May), this years fourth round.
    
    A host of historic cars will be displayed in the Exponor service park and 
    fans will have a rare chance to see many in demonstration runs through special 
    stages on all four rally days.
    
    Champion drivers due to attend are Sébastien Loeb, Sébastien 
    Ogier, Walter Röhrl, Ari Vatanen, Miki Biasion, Carlos Sainz, Marcus 
    Grönholm, Petter Solberg and Ott Tänak. Between them they have amassed 
    28 titles.
    
    FIA deputy president for sport Robert Reid, Luis Moya, Christian Geistdörfer, 
    Tiziano Siviero, Timo Rautiainen, Derek Ringer, David Richards and Martin 
    Järveoja are among the co-drivers due to appear.
    
    The list is boosted by WRC Ladies Cup winners Louise-Aitken-Walker and 
    Isolde Holderied, their co-driver Tina Thörner, and Christine Driano. 
    Michèle Mouton and Fabrizia Pons, the only female pairing to win a 
    WRC event outright, will also be present.
    
    Other guests include FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem, WRC Promoter managing 
    director Jona Siebel and Carlos Barbosa, president of rally organiser Automóvel 
    Club de Portugal.
    
    Nearly 30 classic cars will chart the WRCs history. They include an 
    Alpine A110, the model which won the first WRC round at Rallye Monte-Carlo 
    in the hands of Jean-Claude Andruet.
    
    Also participating are fire-breathing Group B monsters including Audi Quattro 
    S1, A1 and A2 models and a Lancia Delta S4. Other favourites include a Lancia 
    Stratos, Ford Escort RS1800 and Opel Ascona 400, alongside the more recent 
    Toyota Corolla and Hyundai i20.
    
    Many are provided by the Slowly Sideways group, the organisation headed by 
    WRC photographer Reinhard Klein.
    
    The WRC was launched in 1973 and 35 countries have staged rounds since. Portugal 
    was a host in the inaugural season and this years event marks the championships 
    619th round.
    
    The celebrations kick off with a gala dinner in the service park on Wednesday 
    18 May. More than 200 WRC luminaries will attend.
    
    On Thursday afternoon, historic cars will be displayed in the start city of 
    Coimbra. Demonstration runs will take place through the evenings super 
    special stage. Further displays and parades will take place at Lousada on 
    Friday evening and Saturday nights Porto-Foz street stage.
    
    Röhrl will head a group of cars driven through Sundays fabled Fafe 
    stage between the two competitive passes. Fafe graced Portugals fixture 
    in 1973 and the Pedra Sentada jump is among the championships most popular 
    spectacles.
    
    The celebration is organised by championship commercial rights holder WRC 
    Promoter and motorsports governing body, the FIA.
    
    Everyone has their own memories of the thrills, spills and excitement 
    from the WRC and this is a marvellous one-off opportunity for those who have 
    helped make the championship so special, said WRC Promoter managing 
    director Jona Siebel.
    
    The list of WRC greats coming to Portugal, both human and mechanical, 
    is mouth-watering and a reminder of what a wonderful sport we have the great 
    fortune to be involved in.
    
    But this is also for the fans. The sights and sounds of great cars from 
    yesteryear being driven through the stages will evoke spine-tingling memories 
    from those watching roadside.
    
    FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem said: Since its inaugural season 
    in 1973, the FIA World Rally Championship has delivered spectacular action 
    for global audiences. It has featured the most iconic cars, historic locations 
    and legendary drivers and co-drivers who have secured a special place in the 
    annals of motorsport.
    
    The FIA has continuously driven evolution in a sporting and technical 
    sense: this year is no exception as the WRC ushers in hybrid technology, sustainable 
    fuel and advanced safety measures.
    
    As the championship enters its 50th year, its time to reflect 
    on those remarkable accomplishments, celebrate past and present champions 
    and look ahead to a bright future. I look forward to the upcoming festivities 
    at Rally de Portugal, where the legends will be reunited.
    
    22-04-24 Kalle Rovanperä 
    grabs last-gasp Croatia Rally victory
    Finnish championship leader snatches victory from Ott Tänak 
    on the final stage. Kalle Rovanperä snatched an extraordinary Croatia 
    Rally victory on Sunday afternoon as a downpour turned the event on its head 
    in the final kilometres.
    
    The Finn led from the start of the three-day rally in the hills around Zagreb 
    in his Toyota GR Yaris, only for a storm in the penultimate speed test to 
    wipe out his hard-earned advantage.
    
    A resurgent Ott Tänak, whose gamble on softer Pirelli tyres gave his 
    Hyundai i20 N a performance edge on the streaming asphalt, grabbed a 1.4sec 
    lead.
    
    The pendulum swung back towards Rovanperä as drier roads in the closing 
    Wolf Power Stage offered hope, but the odds remained firmly in Tänak's 
    favour as mud and dirt littered the final 14.09km.
    
    Rovanperä threw caution to the wind and remarkably overturned the deficit 
    to claim back-to-back FIA World Rally Championship wins by 4.3sec. Victory 
    extended his points lead to 29 after three rounds of the 13-event season.
    
    He had dominated the early stages of the event and was almost 90sec clear 
    until falling into Tänak's clutches following a puncture on Saturday 
    morning. He then rebuilt his lead to half a minute until the deluge set up 
    a breathtaking finale.
    
    "I was sure we could not be so fast with these tyres, but it's amazing," 
    smiled Rovanperä. "We pushed really hard and I think we deserve 
    it this weekend. For sure, it was the toughest win of my career."
    
    It was a disappointing outcome for Tänak, whose victory drought dates 
    back to February 2021. "I didn't take any risks, but Kalle obviously 
    did a good drive," he said. "We were fighting for the win, but only 
    because of clever decisions and tyre choices."
    
    The Estonian finished 2min 16.7sec clear of team-mate Thierry Neuville. The 
    Belgian overhauled Craig Breen on the final morning to claim a podium despite 
    a torrid weekend that would have forced many to give up.
    
    He and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe were on the point of collapse after pushing 
    their car for 800 metres into service on Friday, after stopping with alternator 
    problems.
    
    Time penalties and speeding fines knocked them further back and they almost 
    gave up a podium in sight of the finish after hitting a bank and almost rolling.
    
    Breen survived an overshoot and a spin to take fourth in a Ford Puma. The 
    Irishman fended off a closing Elfyn Evans, whose fifth place marked a first 
    points finish of the year for the GR Yaris driver. Japan's Takamoto Katsuta 
    was a distant sixth in another Yaris.
    
    The series switches to gravel for the first time in 2022 at Vodafone Rally 
    de Portugal. The fourth round is based at Matosinhos on May 1922.
    
    Final positions after Sunday
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 2h 48m 21.5s
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 +4.3sec
    3. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +2min 21.0sec
    4. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +3min 7.3sec
    5. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +3min 46.0sec
    22-04-24 Oliver Solberg bröt 
    Kroatien-debuten
    Efter att ha kämpat bland de fem bästa och imponerat första 
    dagen av sin debut i Rally Kroatien fick Oliver Solberg bryta tävlingen 
    på toppnivå. Brännskador baktill på bilen kunde inte 
    repareras i tid för körning på söndagen.
    
    20-åringen fick sladd på lördagens första (nionde av 
    tävlingens) specialsträckor och körde av vägen. Situationen 
    blev allvarligare när det extremt heta avgassystemet satte eld på 
    växtligheten i vägkanten och skadade bilen så mycket att det 
    var färdigkört.
     Dagen gick definitivt inte enligt planerna. Jag "tappade" 
    bakändan på bilen och körde av vägen. De heta avgassystemet 
    orsakade en brand bak i bilen. Därmed fick vi stoppa för dagen, 
    sa Oliver Solberg. Skadorna visade sig vara så omfattande att det inte 
    gick att reparera bilen i tid för mer körning.
     Det här var inte vad vi ville ha från vårt första 
    besök i Kroatien. Visst är det en del av sporten, men ändå 
    är jag väldigt ledsen för teamet, för mig själv och 
    Elliott efter en bra första dag. Men vi har lärt oss mycket, och 
    vi kommer tillbaka starkare, sa 20-åringen.
    
    Nästa VM-tävling i rally kommer att äga rum i Portugal 19-22 
    maj. 
    
    22-04-23 Croatia Rally leader 
    Rovanperä under pressure from Tänak 
    Estonian puts on a charge to reduce the Finn's lead to under 20 seconds. Kalle 
    Rovanperäs commanding Croatia Rally lead came under threat from 
    Ott Tänak during Saturday's absorbing second leg.
    
    FIA World Rally Championship leader Rovanperä began the second day of 
    three in the hills near Zagreb with a seemingly impregnable lead of almost 
    90sec over the Estonian in his Toyota GR Yaris.
    
    He ended with that advantage slashed to just 19.9sec after a puncture and 
    Tänak's persistence set up an exciting Sunday finale.
    
    Tänak had already trimmed Rovanperäs lead when the Finn punctured 
    his front left tyre on the morning's penultimate speed test amid heavy rain 
    and thick fog at the Platak ski resort above the Adriatic coast.
    
    The pair were the only frontrunners who had the advantage of Pirelli's wet 
    weather tyres on all four corners of their cars. While Tänak pushed on 
    through the gloom to win the stage in his Hyundai i20 N, Rovanperä conceded 
    nearly 55sec.
    
    Tänak sniffed the opportunity of a first victory for more than a year 
    and nibbled back more time, despite an afternoon gearchange problem. But Rovanperä 
    sent a clear message in the final test, setting fastest time to regain 5.1sec.
    
    "This is my reply," said a defiant Rovanperä. "It was 
    a good stage, full speed, but we still have a difficult day to come tomorrow."
    
    Tänak admitted the Platak test was an eye opener: "In these conditions 
    you don't care about the time, youre just happy to make it through. 
    It was like a different place in the world. This afternoon I didnt have 
    a good feeling to really push to the limits."
    
    While conditions on the other stages were drier than yesterday, the weather 
    deteriorated in Platak and the afternoon's repeat pass was cancelled.
    
    Craig Breen and Thierry Neuville were blanketed by 4.9sec for the final podium 
    place, almost a minute behind Tänak. Breen overshot a hairpin in his 
    Ford Puma, while Neuville's torrid weekend took yet more twists.
    
    He received a one-minute penalty overnight for speeding on Friday, which relegated 
    him from second to fourth. His i20 N had to be pushed into service this morning 
    and another 10sec penalty came for leaving a minute late.
    
    Neuville clawed back almost 40sec from Breen to end hot on the Irishmans 
    heels and 49.9sec clear of Elfyn Evans. The Welshman won the opening test 
    in a GR Yaris, but was reluctant to take risks when on course for his first 
    points finish of the year.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta rounded off the top six. The Japanese pilot dropped time 
    with a puncture and an overshoot and was almost 3m 40s adrift of Evans.
    
    Oliver Solberg crashed his i20 N out of fifth in the opening stage, which 
    was cancelled as rescue vehicles attended a fire at the rear of the car.
    
    Sunday's finale journeys north of Zagreb and features two technical stages 
    that are driven twice for a total of 54.48km. The closing test forms the live 
    TV Wolf Power Stage, with bonus points on offer to the fastest crews.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 14min 54.5sec
    2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 +19.9sec
    3. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +1min 13.4sec
    4. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +1min 18.3sec
    5. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +2min 06.2sec
    6. T Katsuta / A Johnston GBR Toyota GR Yaris +5min 47.7sec
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com 
    
    22-04-23 Masterful Kalle Rovanperä 
    untouchable on Friday in Croatia 
    Kalle Rovanperä demolished his opponents in Friday's treacherous opening 
    day of the Croatia Rally to build a convincing lead of more than a minute.
    
    Despite rain, mud and mist in the hills west of capital Zagreb, he won six 
    of the eight asphalt speed tests in a Toyota GR Yaris to head a resilient 
    Thierry Neuville by 1m 4s.
    
    FIA World Rally Championship leader Rovanperä thrived in the tricky conditions. 
    He won three of the morning's four special stages to lead by 47.5sec and stretched 
    it during an equally dominant afternoon.
    
    Having missed valuable experience when he crashed in the opening kilometres 
    of Croatia's WRC debut 12 months ago, the Finn expected to be at a disadvantage. 
    But first in the start order helped, as conditions progressively worsened 
    as each car dragged mud onto the road.
    
    "It was probably one of my best days in a rally car," Rovanperä 
    enthused. "It's always nice to have a lead, but it's also difficult to 
    have a big lead like this. Tomorrow is a long day, so I still need to drive 
    fast to keep concentrated."
    
    Neuville endured a topsy-turvy day. The Belgian completed the opening quartet 
    of tests 12.5sec adrift, but a broken alternator belt in his Hyundai i20 N's 
    engine twice stopped the car en route to service.
    
    Neuville and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe pushed the car the final 800m. The 
    exhausted pair fell to the floor as they arrived four minutes late and a 40sec 
    penalty demoted them to fourth.
    
    A spirited afternoon, including fastest time in the final stage, propelled 
    them back to second.
    
    They had 19.3sec in hand over team-mate Ott Tänak. The Estonian's low 
    start position hindered him, along with a penultimate stage puncture, but 
    he was content with third.
    
    Despite overshooting a corner and narrowly missing a water hydrant, Craig 
    Breen was fourth on his first time aboard a Ford Puma in the wet. The Irishman 
    overnighted 11.9sec back.
    
    Oliver Solberg was delayed by a spin and was fortunate to survive an impact 
    in a water-filled corner en route to fifth in his i20 N. He was more than 
    a minute adrift of Breen and 10.6sec clear of Elfyn Evans, who denied Rovanperä 
    a clean sweep of morning stage wins.
    
    That was the Welshman's only joy, as two punctures on his GR Yaris cost valuable 
    time.
    
    In worse trouble was Esapekka Lappi, who retired his GR Yaris in the first 
    stage after clipping a boulder and wrecking the front right corner.
    
    Aside from Breen's efforts, it was a disappointing day for M-Sport Ford. Adrien 
    Fourmaux went out after sliding his Puma through a hedge into a roadside garden, 
    while both Pierre-Louis Loubet and Gus Greensmith exited when three punctures 
    left them with no more usuable tyres onboard.
    
    Saturday's second leg follows a similar format. Four stages are driven morning 
    and afternoon in the same territory, except for the penultimate test of each 
    loop, which heads further west towards the Adriatic coast city of Rijeka. 
    The eight stages cover 116.98km.
    
    Leading positions after Friday
    1. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris 1hr 15min 35.5sec
    2. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +1min 4.0sec
    3. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 +1min 23.3sec
    4. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +1min 35.2sec
    5. O Solberg / E Edmondson SWE Hyundai i20 +2min 38.5sec
    6. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +2min 49.1sec 
    
    22-04-21 Första mötet 
    med Kroatien för Oliver Solberg
    Oliver Solberg får sitt första möte med Kroatien bakom 
    ratten i Hyundaifabrikens tredje bil i rally-VM i helgen. Därmed fortsätter 
    fabriksföraräventyret för 20-åringen. Efter imponerande 
    körning i både Monte-Carlo och svenska Umeå tidigare i år, 
    är unge Solberg fortfarande med i sportens toppnivå i säsongens 
    tredje VM-tävling.
    
    I Monaco fick han bryta sista dagen på grund av avgasförgiftning, 
    men Oliver Solberg gjorde det väldigt bra med en sjätteplats hemma 
    i Sverige för drygt 50 dagar sedan.
    
    Rallyt på kroatisk asfalt blir unge Solbergs sjunde någonsin på 
    toppnivå i VM. Bästa resultat är femteplatsen från Rally 
    Monza i Italien i november.
     I den här tävlingen blir mitt jobb att köra stabilt 
    och komma i mål. Vägarna är mycket svåra, och shakedown 
    (testvägen innan tävlingen) är den tuffaste jag har sett. Tävlingen 
    bjuder på olika typer av asfalt, hopp och smala partier med många 
    kurvor som ska skäras. Tillsammans gör det rallyt väldigt svårt, 
    säger Oliver Solberg.
    
    Den enda tillåtna testdagen innan tävlingen var inte helt optimal 
    då regn och snö ledde till dåliga vägar. Men 20-åringen 
    ger sig ut i sitt första race på asfalt i en Rally1-bil utan press 
    från teamet.
     Jag är väldigt spänd, men jag ser mest av allt fram 
    emot att komma igång. Målet är att följa den plan och 
    strategi som teamet har för mig. De jobbar "flat out" för 
    att förbättra bilen, säger han.
    
    Rally Kroatien har funnits sedan 1974, men kördes först som en VM-tävling 
    förra året - då med Sebastien Ogier som vinnare när 
    han var på väg mot sin åttonde världsmästartitel. 
    Han deltar inte i år. VM-ledaren efter två tävlingar är 
    finske Kalle Rovanperä, som har en ledning på 14 poäng mot 
    Hyundai-föraren Thierry Neuville.
    
    Rallyt startar på fredag morgon och avslutas efter 20 specialsträckor 
    (292 kilometer) på söndag eftermiddag. SVT sänder delar av 
    tävlingen (SS12, SS16, SS18 och SS20).
    
    22-04-20 Tough fight awaits 
    WRC leader Rovanperä in Croatia
    Toyota driver looking to banish memories of 2021 crash at all-asphalt round. 
    Kalle Rovanperä starts on the back foot this weekend as he defends an 
    early-season FIA World Rally Championship lead in Croatia at the event that 
    marked his low point of 2021.
    
    The Toyota Gazoo Racing driver holds a 14-point advantage ahead of the Zagreb-based 
    Croatia Rally (21 - 24 April), round three of the year and the first pure 
    asphalt fixture of the new hybrid-powered era.
    
    Twelve months ago the 21-year-old Finn was in a similar position at Croatias 
    maiden WRC appearance, but the youngest driver ever to lead the series crashed 
    out after just a handful of kilometres.
    
    Rovanperä admits his lack of knowledge of the complex low-grip speed 
    tests in the hills around the capital puts him at a disadvantage. But he is 
    up for the fight.
    
    Everybody has now one more year of experience there so I think its 
    going to be a bit difficult for us, he explained. But we have 
    been in that situation also before and we just try to manage that the best 
    way possible.
    
    Its going to be more tricky for me this year. [Last year] it was 
    a new event for everybody and it seems that it was quite a tricky one. Everybody 
    said the stages were quite difficult with the grip. Watching the videos, it 
    seems the grip was changing all the time.
    
    This second edition has a lot to live up to. Last year was a thriller with 
    Sébastien Ogier snatching victory from Toyota team-mate Elfyn Evans 
    when the Welshman slid onto the grass at the final corner. The 0.6s winning 
    margin was the third-closest WRC finish ever.
    
    Evans and Esapekka Lappi join Rovanperä in GR Yaris cars, with Takamoto 
    Katsuta driving a fourth version for the Japanese manufacturers second 
    team.
    
    Gus Greensmith is M-Sport Fords frontrunner in a Puma. The Briton, who 
    lies fourth in the standings, is joined by Craig Breen and Adrien Fourmaux, 
    who scored an impressive fifth place last year at his top-level debut.
    
    A fourth Puma will be in the hands of 2019 WRC2 champion Pierre-Louis Loubet 
    for the first time.
    
    Hyundai Motorsport fields the same line-up for the third consecutive rally. 
    Thierry Neuville is Rovanperäs closest challenger in the points 
    after finishing second on the previous round in Sweden.
    
    The Belgian is joined in i20 N Rally1 cars by Oliver Solberg and Ott Tänak, 
    who is hoping for a big upturn after a disappointing start to the season.
    
    The rally starts in Zagreb on Thursday evening ahead of three days of competition 
    on asphalt which varies from smooth to badly broken and features many tricky 
    crests and jumps. The 20 stages cover 291.84km. 
    
    22-04-19 Sébastien Loeb 
    returns to M-Sport for Rally de Portugal
    French all-time great set to pilot Ford Puma Hybrid again in May. Nine-time 
    World Rally Champion, Sébastien Loeb, will once again compete behind 
    the wheel of a M-Sport Ford Puma Hybrid Rally1 at Rally de Portugal in May.
    
    Here is all you need to know:
    - After a stunning debut with the M-Sport Ford World Rally Team at Rallye 
    Monte Carlo in January, M-Sport have announced that Loeb and co-driver Isabelle 
    Galmiche will re-join the team to complete a five-car Puma Hybrid Rally1 line-up 
    in Portugal.
    
    - Loeb returned to the FIA World Rally Championship in January and claimed 
    a total of six stage wins throughout the event as he battled against eight-time 
    champion Sébastien Ogier, before taking overall victory at the 2022 
    seasons opening event.
    
    - After securing further success in multiple disciplines around the globe 
    since his first win of 2022, Loeb will take to the famous Porto gravel stages 
    assisted by Galmiche, the first woman to record an overall event victory in 
    WRC since 1997.
    
    - With nine WRC championships and 80 rally wins, Loeb is considered to be 
    the disciplines Greatest of All Time, and one of the best drivers in 
    motorsport history, period  and at 48, he shows no signs of slowing 
    down. Already in 2022, he leads the FIA World Rally Raid Championship having 
    finished runner-up at the Dakar Rally at the wheel of the BRX Hunter T1+. 
    In all, Loebs race programme for 2022 includes driving in the WRC, Dakar, 
    the FIA World Rally Raid Championship, Extreme E and DTM.
    - Rallye de Portugal marks a landmark occasion for the M-Sport Ford World 
    Rally team, which will become the first manufacturer to ever field five Rally1 
    cars at the same event.
    - Loebs return coincides with the 50th anniversary celebrations of the 
    FIA World Rally Championship. A variety of activities are planned throughout 
    the rally weekend as rallying celebrates 50 years of epic action on the most 
    challenging stages and surfaces in the world.
    - The Frenchmans history with the event started back in 2007, where 
    he claimed a victory on his debut in Portugal after winning 11 of 18 stages. 
    He went on to win the event again in 2009, then collecting a further two podium 
    finishes and a grand total of 32 stage wins to add to his record-breaking 
    tally.
    
    - Loeb said: "Driving the Puma is one of my favourite rally memories; 
    winning Monte Carlo after such a long time was incredible. The team worked 
    really well, with a quick fix to the difficulties we faced at shakedown, allowing 
    us to claim our 80th rally win. From my first test with this car, I immediately 
    had a very good feeling and I enjoy driving with so much power with the hybrid 
    system. Its a great car, a great team and we celebrated an incredible 
    moment together.
    - Portugal was an empty space in my calendar and its a gravel 
    rally, I have competed on this version of the rally in 2019 so I have a base 
    of pacenotes from some of the stages. That was one of the reasons for choosing 
    Portugal, the other was I wanted to do a gravel rally; I like driving on gravel 
    so it was a very straightforward choice.
    
    - Rich Millener, M-Sport Team Principal, said: The memories of Monte 
    Carlo still live strong in my mind, and I am sure this is the same for all 
    the team. Personally, to have another chance to work with Seb and Isabelle 
    is a dream come true. The fact that they want to come and drive with us again 
    is something incredibly special for the team and reflects all of the hard 
    work being put in by everybody back home.
    - "It is also really important to give special thanks to Ford and Red 
    Bull who have been pivotal in securing the pairing for this event  another 
    example of how our partners are working together to give us the strongest 
    line-up possible for the events in the WRC this season. I am genuinely excited 
    to see what happens on the legendary Portugal stages, and I know the fans 
    will be very excited to see this news and I look forward to seeing their support 
    over the event weekend!
    - Malcolm Wilson, Managing Director of M-Sport, said: This has been 
    made possible by our great partners at Ford and Red Bull, and Im really 
    looking forward to seeing how Seb and the Puma Hybrid Rally1 perform on the 
    first real gravel event of the year. Its great to have such a strong 
    line-up of drivers and Im very proud that our team is going to be the 
    first to run five top-level cars at a WRC event. If anything, this shows just 
    how appealing these rally1 cars, and Puma in particular, are to drivers and 
    we hope to continue to push the limits of the sport. I am also hoping this 
    popularity of the rally1 cars will lead us to seeing more customers cars competing 
    on events around the world. 
    
    22-02-18 Belgium added to 
    2022 FIA World Rally Championship
    Ypres Rally Belgium makes second WRC appearance after 2021 debut
    · Asphalt fixture scheduled for 18 - 21 August
    · Four-day encounter fills outstanding TBC date in calendar
    
    Ypres Rally Belgium will host an FIA World Rally Championship round for a 
    second consecutive season after being added to the 2022 calendar today (Friday).
    
    Last year Belgium became the 35th nation to stage a WRC round since the series 
    started in 1973. It will return when Ypres, in the north-western Flanders 
    region, hosts round nine of the 13-rally series on 18 - 21 August.
    
    The challenging asphalt event fills the date left outstanding when the 2022 
    fixture list was announced last October.
    
    Ypres was first held in 1965 and is known as one of Europes toughest 
    rallies. Narrow farm roads, littered with tight junctions and lined by drainage 
    ditches, ensure there is no room for error.
    
    Home hero Thierry Neuville won last years encounter after leading for 
    virtually the entire distance.
    
    The rally will feature three days of competition with an atmospheric service 
    park in Ypres historic Grote Markt.
    
    A Thursday afternoon start ceremony there will precede the shakedown  
    the final opportunity for drivers to fine-tune their cars. Full days of competition 
    on Friday and Saturday will lead into Sundays finale, culminating with 
    the lunchtime Wolf Power Stage.
    
    Jona Siebel, managing director of WRC Promoter, which owns the WRCs 
    commercial rights, was delighted to welcome back Ypres Rally Belgium.
    
    Belgium brought something quite different to last years WRC due 
    to its tricky special stages and fast-paced format, which meant there was 
    little time for anyone to pause for breath, he said.
    
    The Ypres region whole-heartedly throws itself into rally week. Theres 
    a great buzz out on the stages and were sure that will be replicated 
    in the town itself this time round when fans will be allowed in the beautiful 
    Grote Markt service park.
    
    The final slot in the calendar came down to a choice between Ypres Rally Belgium 
    and Barum Czech Rally Zlin, which was hoping to bring the WRC to the Czech 
    Republic for the first time.
    
    We were hugely impressed with the professionalism and plans from the 
    organising team in Zlin, Siebel added. The rally remains a key 
    event in the FIA European Rally Championship and the door remains open to 
    their WRC ambitions. We look forward to continue working with them.
    
    FIA WRC category manager Andrew Wheatley said: Ypres Rally Belgium stepped 
    in last season in exceptional circumstances and managed to deliver a strong 
    and innovative event, which showcased the DNA of Belgian rally.
    
    The Royal Automobile Club Belgium, together with local organiser Club 
    Superstage, demonstrated commitment and professionalism to put on a top-class 
    WRC round and Im glad the event will return to the calendar in August. 
    In a rally nation like Belgium, this will be positive news for teams, competitors 
    and fans.
    
    Alain Penasse, president of rally organiser Club Superstage, added: We 
    are very happy to be able to bring the FIA ??World Rally Championship to Ypres 
    again. It is a reward for the efforts that the whole club, all volunteers, 
    our partners and local authorities put in last year to make that first edition 
    a success.
    
    The rally will feature a strong co-operation between official WRC lubricant 
    partner Wolf Lubricants and event sponsor Ardeca Lubricants. Both companies 
    are centred in Belgium.
    
    Yves Decat, global marketing director of Wolf Lubricants said: As a 
    Belgian-based exclusive lubricant partner of the FIA World Rally Championship, 
    we are continuously looking for additional ways to increase the presence and 
    reach of this breathtaking sport.
    
    We are excited to support the return of Ypres Rally Belgium in the calendar 
    for 2022 by joining forces with the rallys main partner, Ardeca Lubricants.
    22-01-23 Record-breaking Loeb 
    snatches dramatic Rallye Monte-Carlo win
    Frenchman edges out Ogier with schoolteacher co-driver Galmiche. Sébastien 
    Loeb became the oldest winner of an FIA World Rally Championship round after 
    grabbing a remarkable Rallye Monte-Carlo victory from the under the nose of 
    old foe Sébastien Ogier on Sunday.
    
    The 47-year-old Frenchman trailed Ogier by almost half a minute heading into 
    the penultimate speed test of the four-day event in the French Alps.
    
    But when Ogier limped to the finish with a front left puncture, Loeb reclaimed 
    a lead he had conceded to his compatriot on Saturday. He stayed calm through 
    the final test to seal his eighth Monte-Carlo success in a Ford Puma by 10.5sec.
    
    Loeb, starting his first WRC event for more than a year, was competing for 
    the British M-Sport Ford squad in a one-off appearance. He joins Ogier at 
    the top of the Monte-Carlo roll of honour with eight wins.
    
    His victory means he has topped the WRC podium in three different decades. 
    Co-driver Isabelle Galmiche, a 50-year-old schoolteacher who was making her 
    first top-tier start, became the first female winner of a WRC fixture since 
    1997.
    
    "I didn't expect so much when I came here," Loeb admitted. "It 
    was a great fight, Ogier was really fast and I struggled a bit yesterday and 
    even this morning."
    
    The duel between the most successful drivers in the sport's history proved 
    a fitting start to the new hybrid-powered era in the championship's 50th season.
    
    Ogier led initially after Thursday's short opening night in his Toyota GR 
    Yaris, but a run of four consecutive fastest times on Friday put Loeb ahead. 
    He failed to find the same pace on Saturday and Ogier moved back in front 
    before Sunday's breathtaking finale.
    
    Craig Breen finished almost 90sec further back in third in another Puma, giving 
    the British-based M-Sport Ford squad an early lead in the manufacturers' championship.
    
    Kalle Rovanperä languished outside the top 10 after the opening night, 
    but after set-up changes improved the balance of his GR Yaris, he soared up 
    the order to secure fourth.
    
    Despite losing time with engine issues on Saturday, Gus Greensmith claimed 
    fifth in another Puma after winning his first special stage at WRC level. 
    Thierry Neuville was sixth in a Hyundai i20 N after a lacklustre weekend for 
    the Korean manufacturer.
    
    The Belgian fought problems all rally, including a broken damper which punched 
    through his bonnet on Saturday. Team-mates Ott Tänak and Oliver Solberg 
    both retired.
    
    Elfyn Evans, championship runner-up in 2021, was on the edge of the fight 
    for victory until he beached his GR Yaris on a bank and remained stranded 
    there for 20 minutes. The Welshman ended 21st.
    
    The championship switches to Scandinavia next month for the only pure winter 
    round of the season. Rally Sweden takes place in Umeå on February 24-27
    
    Final positions
    1. S Loeb / I Galmiche FRA Ford Puma 3hr 00min 32.8sec
    2. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +10.5sec
    3. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +1min 39.8sec
    4. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +2min 16.2sec
    5. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +6min 33.4sec
    6. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +7min 42.6sec
    
    FIA World Rally Drivers' Championship (after round 1 of 13)
    1. S Loeb 27pts
    2. S Ogier 19
    3. K Rovanperä 17
    
    Manufacturers' Championship
    1. M-Sport Ford 42pts
    2. Toyota Gazoo 39
    3. Hyundai Shell Mobis 13
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com
    22-01-23 Toppfart innan Solberg 
    drog sig ur
    Oliver Solberg visade toppfart innan han i samråd med sitt Hyundai-team 
    valde att dra sig ur Rally Monte-Carlo på söndagen på grund 
    av ett avgasläckage tidigare under tävlingen.
    
    På tävlingens 13:e specialsträcka satte Oliver tredje bästa 
    tid, endast slagen av Kalle Rovanperä och Sebastien Ogier. Men han var 
    snabbare än den bästa rallyföraren genom tiderna, Sebastien 
    Loeb, som vann säsongsinledningen i Monte-Carlo före Sebastien Ogier 
    och Craig Breen.
    - Vi hade litet hopp om att kunna genomföra tävlingen när sista 
    dagen startade. Vi låg så långt efter i tid att det enda 
    målet var att få så mycket erfarenhet som möjligt för 
    bilen, teamet och oss själva. Vi hade den sjunde bästa tiden på 
    den 14:e specialsträckan, men efter den sträckan kom vi överens 
    med teamet om att dra oss ur resten av tävlingen. Formen var inte riktigt 
    bra efter de senaste dagarnas händelser, sa Oliver Solberg.
    
    Det första världsmästerskapet i rally med hybridbilar någonsin 
    startade något dämpat för Solberg, som vid de första 
    specialsträckorna som kördes i mörker på torsdagskvällen 
    inte hörde sin kartläsare Elliott Edmondson på grund av problem 
    med det interna kommunikationssystemet.
    
    Lördagen började inte mycket bättre då ett läckage 
    på avgassystemet fyllde kupén med avgaser, vilket skulle visa 
    sig vara avgörande för hela tävlingen. En avkörning på 
    tävlingens 10:e sträcka ledde till att Solberg tappade över 
    en halvtimme och på söndagen valde duon i samråd med teamet 
    att dra sig ur tävlingen när tre specialsträckor återstod.
    - Helgen var lång och jobbig, men jag är väldigt nöjd 
    med det jobb vi
    har gjort. Även om det har varit svårt fick vi några bra 
    etapp- och mellantider. Vi tar med oss ??det positiva från det. Stort 
    tack till teamet för långa dagar och många timmar och stor 
    insats. Tillsammans ska vi jobba för att förbättra oss inför 
    nästa tävling, sa Oliver Solberg.
    
    Nästa VM-tävling körs i Umeå om en månad.
    
    22-01-22 Sharp-eyed Ogier 
    wins Loeb mind games
    Frenchman on verge of record-breaking ninth Rallye Monte-Carlo victory. Sébastien 
    Ogier sits on the cusp of a record-breaking ninth Rallye Monte-Carlo victory 
    after outwitting Sébastien Loeb in the snow and ice of the French Alps 
    on Saturday.
    
    Ogier headed to the closing speed test over the Col de Fontbelle with 5.0sec 
    in hand over his fellow Frenchman after reclaiming the lead earlier in the 
    penultimate leg.
    
    With 5km of wintry roads at the top of the pass, Loeb laid out his cards by 
    bravely fitting his Ford Puma with Pirelli's soft compound asphalt rubber. 
    He hoped to benefit on the dry sections before minimising the time loss on 
    the ice.
    
    Ogier had already decided to mix two soft tyres and two snow tyres on his 
    Toyota GR Yaris, but on seeing Loeb's selection, he made a last-gasp switch 
    to the same combination. He then outpaced Loeb by 16.1sec to reach the final 
    overnight halt with a 21.1sec lead.
    
    "I was planning to go with the snow tyres because that was the safest 
    option but I saw that Séb was going for slicks so I swapped at the 
    last minute before the start," Ogier explained. "It was tricky to 
    drive in places."
    
    Loeb could not reproduce the pace that carried him to four fastest times yesterday.
    
    "Now the gap is a bit far," he admitted. "We tried but Ogier 
    saw it and changed at the last minute. It was really tricky with the slicks 
    and very easy to make a mistake but we're here."
    
    After a day of breathless drama, Craig Breen was third in another Puma. The 
    Irishman was 64.9sec adrift of Loeb, but a clean run enabled him to climb 
    from sixth.
    
    After a dismal opening two days, Kalle Rovanperä found a more balanced 
    set-up for his GR Yaris and soared from ninth to fourth. He ended 37.8sec 
    behind Breen after winning the final two stages.
    
    Gus Greensmith was fifth despite a puncture and an engine problem which cost 
    time in the stages as well as a three-minute penalty as he replaced his Puma's 
    spark plugs. Having slipped to ninth, he recovered well as his rivals fell 
    by the wayside.
    
    Thierry Neuville fought against a broken front damper in his Hyundai i20 N, 
    which punched through the bonnet at one point. He dropped several minutes 
    and ended almost eight minutes off the lead in sixth.
    
    Elfyn Evans was third until he slid off the road, leaving his GR Yaris perched 
    on the edge of a steep drop. He conceded 20 minutes.
    
    Ott Tänak retired his i20 N in the first climb up the Col de Fontbelle 
    after nosing into a bank and damaging his car's radiator, while team-mate 
    Oliver Solberg dropped 35 minutes after locking his brakes and sliding down 
    a bank.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta's fifth place disappeared when he found a ditch on the col 
    and dropped off the leaderboard.
    
    Sunday's finale comprises two tests in the Alpes-Maritimes region driven twice 
    without service before the finish in Monaco's Casino Square. The last stage 
    forms the Wolf Power Stage with bonus points available for the fastest drivers. 
    The four tests add up to 67.26km.
    
    Leading positions after Saturday
    1. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris 2hr 19min 43.1sec
    2. S Loeb / I Galmiche FRA Ford Puma +21.1sec
    3. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +1min 26.0sec
    4. K Rovanperä / J Halttunen FIN Toyota GR Yaris +2min 03.8sec
    5. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +6min 33.8sec
    6. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +7min 44.1sec
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com
    22-01-21 Veteran Loeb Turns 
    Back Clock to Lead Rallye Monte-Carlo on Friday
    Frenchman returns from Dakar Rally quest to lead old rival Ogier and Evans. 
    Sébastien Loeb became the oldest driver to lead an FIA World Rally 
    Championship round after a sensational return to dominate Rallye Monte-Carlo 
    on Friday.
    
    As he approaches his 48th birthday, the Frenchman won four of the six French 
    Alps speed tests to lead the first rally of the WRC's innovative new hybrid 
    era by 9.9sec in M-Sport's Ford Puma.
    
    The Monaco-based event is Loeb's first WRC outing for more than a year and, 
    currently, a one-off appearance with the British squad.
    
    Loeb was second after Thursday night's short opening leg behind old foe Sébastien 
    Ogier. He charged by his fellow countryman in the last of the morning's three 
    special stages and preserved his advantage in the afternoon, despite a small 
    technical issue.
    
    "The first four stages were really great, then we had a little hybrid 
    problem," he explained. "In the last stage I made a good drive, 
    but maybe it was freezing a bit more. We had some little ice coming out at 
    the end of the stage, so it was a bit tricky.
    
    "I was really surprised when I was doing the best time in yesterday's 
    shakedown in the first pass. Usually in shakedown I'm not great, but with 
    this car I was immediately in the rhythm. It's not a big gap, but I'm happy 
    to be leading after the first full day."
    
    Ogier dropped to third behind Toyota GR Yaris team-mate Elfyn Evans after 
    a cautious approach on frosty roads in this morning's final stage, but fastest 
    time on the afternoon repeat promoted him back to second.
    
    A wary run in the same test cost Evans valuable seconds. The Welshman ended 
    12.1sec adrift of his colleague after a frustrating day learning the intricacies 
    of driving with the hybrid system for the first time in competition.
    
    Thierry Neuville topped an intense battle for fourth in a Hyundai i20 N. His 
    day improved after an eye-opening first stage in which he described the balance 
    as 'a nightmare'. "I've never been so scared while driving," he 
    said.
    
    The Belgian stiffened his car's settings and ended 8.9sec clear of team-mate 
    Ott Tänak, with Craig Breen dropping 2.5sec behind the Estonian in the 
    final stage in another Puma.
    
    Team-mate Gus Greensmith celebrated his first WRC stage win en route to seventh. 
    But for a minor problem with the hybrid system, the Briton would have been 
    snapping on Neuville's heels.
    
    Adrien Fourmaux was fourth overnight, but the Frenchman crashed his Puma down 
    a ravine in the opening test. He and co-driver Alex Coria escaped injury, 
    a testament to the new enhanced safety cell chassis introduced this year.
    
    Saturday's action switches west for five stages near Digne-les-Bains. Three 
    morning tests precede a tyre change in the town before the latter two are 
    repeated. The day features two climbs of the mythical Col de Fontbelle, likely 
    to feature several kilometres of snow and ice at the summit.
    
    Leading positions after Friday
    1. S Loeb / I Galmiche FRA Ford Puma 1hr 22min 49.0sec
    2. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris +9.9sec
    3. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +22.0sec
    4. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +47.8sec
    5. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 +56.7sec
    6. C Breen / P Nagle IRL Ford Puma +59.2sec
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com
    22-01-21 Ogier and Loeb in 
    battle royale
    Sébastien Ogier outgunned arch-rival Sébastien Loeb as the two 
    Rallye Monte-Carlo masters went head-to-head in a spectacular opening night 
    of the FIA World Rally Championship season on Thursday.
    
    Ogier, an eight-time winner in the French Alps, opened the series pioneering 
    new hybrid-powered era by winning both speed tests in his Toyota GR Yaris 
    to build a 6.7sec lead.
    
    Snapping on his heels was seven-time Monte winner Loeb. In his first WRC drive 
    for more than a year, the French master finished second in both stages in 
    M-Sport Fords Puma.
    
    It was hard to imagine a more daunting opening to the sports new generation. 
    Two stages on winding roads in darkness, including the crossing of the iconic 
    Col de Turini, with frost settling on the asphalt and drivers yet to learn 
    the mix of electric and combustion engine power in competition.
    
    It didnt feel so great in the first stage, there was a lot of 
    humidity and frost in places, explained Ogier. It was a little 
    better in the second one. We are just trying little things in the car and 
    we are happy to be through.
    
    Loeb was the first of three pouncing Pumas in the top five and his performance 
    turned the clock back to memories of his last Monte victory in 2013.
    
    We had a good start in the first one, but it was very tricky on the 
    top with some white parts and ice, he smiled. I didnt want 
    to make a mistake on the ice so I was a bit too careful. The second one was 
    hard on the tyres. I overheated them before the middle of the stage and struggled 
    to keep the car in the right position.
    
    Elfyn Evans, championship runner-up in 2021, was third in another GR Yaris, 
    the Welshman struggling to acclimatise to the additional hybrid power. He 
    was third in both stages and returned to the overnight halt in Monaco 11.2sec 
    off the lead.
    
    Puma pilots Adrien Fourmaux and Gus Greensmith were fourth and fifth and separated 
    by 4.0sec after rousing opening night drives. Just 6.6sec back was Thierry 
    Neuvilles Hyundai i20 N. The Belgian gambled on tyre choice but struggled 
    with overheating rubber and brake issues.
    
    Craig Breen in seventh headed a downbeat Ott Tänak, whose long 
    list of woes included engine and hydraulic troubles in his i20 N.
    
    Takamoto Katsuta was ninth in another GR Yaris, with Oliver Solberg completing 
    the leaderboard despite a spin at the top of the Turini. He also endured intercom 
    problems meaning he could not hear co-driver Elliott Edmondsons pace 
    notes.
    
    Friday heads further north for two loops of three stages in the Mercantour 
    National Park covering 97.86km. As if the challenge of the Alps was not enough 
    for the first full day of hybrid action, there is no service from leaving 
    Monaco in the morning until returning at night. Drivers must make do with 
    a tyre change only in Puget-Théniers between loops.
    
    Leading positions:
    1. S Ogier / B Veillas FRA Toyota GR Yaris 25min 48.4sec
    2. S Loeb / I Galmiche FRA Ford Puma +6.7sec
    3. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +11.2sec
    4. A Fourmaux / A Coria FRA Ford Puma +17.9sec
    5. G Greensmith / J Andersson GBR Ford Puma +21.9sec
    6. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 +28.5sec 
    
    The official Home of World Rallying: 
wrc.com 
    
    22-01-19 WRCs pioneering 
    hybrid era breaks cover at Rallye Monte-Carlo
    It's a fresh start for the WRC stars as new season begins in Monaco. The curtain 
    is raised on a ground-breaking new FIA World Rally Championship era at this 
    weeks Rallye Monte-Carlo as hybrid-powered cars launch the series into 
    an exciting future.
    
    Innovative new Rally1 cars blend a 100kW electric motor with a 1.6-litre turbocharged 
    engine as the WRC celebrates its 50th season with new regulations to drive 
    the championship towards a more sustainable future.
    
    Energy regeneration from the plug-in hybrid system, a 100 percent hydrocarbon 
    fossil-free fuel and sustainable energy supplies are key to the WRCs 
    commitment to a greener outlook.
    
    The new cars pack a punch. Peak performance will soar above 500hp on the mountain 
    roads in the French Alps, while two Monte masters return to renew rivalries 
    as the door opens on the new generation.
    
    Sébastien Ogier, who clinched his eighth crown last year before stepping 
    back to a part-programme, goes head-to-head with fellow Frenchman and arch-rival 
    Sébastien Loeb, whose nine titles make him the sports most successful 
    driver. Ogier has eight Monte victories compared to Loebs seven.
    
    Ogier drives Toyota Gazoo Racings GR Yaris with new co-driver Benjamin 
    Veillas.
    
    Im at the beginning of a different stage in my career and, as 
    Im not taking part in the full championship, the feeling is a little 
    bit different to usual for me at this time of the year. But Im still 
    a competitor and I still want to win, he said.
    
    I know the team has been working very hard to be ready with this new 
    generation of car and big steps have been made in every test. Its quite 
    a big change and its an exciting challenge to try and adapt to that. 
    Theres more uncertainty than ever going into this rally.
    
    Loeb hopes to pounce in his first WRC drive in more than a year in M-Sport 
    Fords Puma. He starts less than a week after finishing second in Saudi 
    Arabias desert at the Dakar Rally.
    
    He is partnered by Isabelle Galmiche following the retirement of Daniel Elena, 
    with whom Loeb has tackled every one of his previous 180 WRC starts.
    
    Its a radical change of scenery after spending three weeks on 
    the Dakar Rally! quipped Loeb, who squeezed in a brief test at the start 
    of the week.
    
    For this rally, I will certainly be less prepared than the other drivers, 
    but the feeling with the Puma Rally1 was immediately very good and everything 
    just came together, he said.
    
    Manufacturers champions Toyota also field 2021 drivers runner-up 
    Elfyn Evans and Kalle Rovanperä. Takamoto Katsuta steers a fourth GR 
    Yaris in Toyotas second-string squad.
    
    Loeb is joined by new signing Craig Breen and Adrien Fourmaux at M-Sport Ford. 
    Gus Greensmith drives a fourth entry.
    
    Hyundai Motorsport is fired up after a disappointing 2021 campaign. Former 
    world champion Ott Tänak, Thierry Neuville and youngster Oliver Solberg 
    pilot i20 N cars.
    
    Unpredictable mountain weather means competitors can encounter snow, ice and 
    dry asphalt within a handful of kilometres. Cunning tyre selection in such 
    conditions is key and while the forecast suggests this might not be a true 
    winter Monte, nobody will be lulled into a false sense of security.
    
    The rally starts in Monacos refurbished Casino Square on Thursday evening. 
    Crews will face 17 mountain stages covering 296.03km before Sunday afternoons 
    finish there.
    
    22-01-19 Säsongsstart i 
    värstingklassen för Oliver Solberg
    20-årige Oliver Solberg är med från start som fabriksförare 
    för Hyundai Motorsport i WRC-klassen när årets Rally-VM går 
    av stapeln i Monte-Carlo på torsdag.
    
    Efter fyra VM-tävlingar som "lärling" i ett satellitteam 
    2021, står Oliver Solberg officiellt på första raden i den 
    sydkoreanska bilfabriken tillsammans med teamkamraterna Thierry Neuville och 
    Ott Tänak i den 90-åringe klassikern Rally Monte-Carlo.
    -Det ska bli väldigt speciellt att köra den första tävlingen 
    med officiella färger på kläder och bil. Det känns extra 
    spännande att få vara med om allt från start och jag är 
    helt klart väldigt förväntansfull. Det här är något 
    jag har drömt om och arbetat för väldigt länge. Att få 
    börja säsongen som en fullblodsfabriksförare är något 
    helt fantastiskt, säger Oliver Solberg - den yngsta deltagaren i WRC-klassen 
    (Rally1).
    
    Planen är att unge Solberg ska dela teamets tredje Hyundai i20 N Rally1-bil 
    med den spanske veteranen Daniel Sordo under hela säsongen.
    
    I det 50:e världsmästerskapet i rally görs radikala tekniska 
    förändringar. För första gången kommer hybridbilar 
    att användas i VM-serien. Rally1-bilarna blandar en elmotor med 100 kilowatt 
    prestanda och en tävlingstestad 1,6-liters turboladdad bensinmotor, som 
    har drivit sportens toppbilar sedan 2011. Allt är uppbyggt kring ett 
    uppgraderat säkerhetscells-chassi. Muskelpaketet når prestandanivåer 
    till mer än 500 hästkrafter (tidigare cirka 350), samtidigt som 
    de skadliga utsläppen minskar då alla Rally1-bilar kommer att köras 
    med 100 procent hållbart bränsle.
    -Jag tror att alla går runt och är exalterade över allt nytt. 
    Man är ganska nervös över om man har förstått all 
    teknik och hur den kan utnyttjas. Den första tävlingen kommer att 
    ge svar på vem av förarna som har förstått det bäst 
    av alla, säger Solberg.
    
    Efter att ha slutat sjua i sin WRC-debut i Arctic Rally Finland förra 
    säsongen, avslutade Oliver säsongen 2021 med en femteplats i ACI 
    Rally Monza. Det var även första tävlingen med ny kartläsare 
    Elliott Edmondson (27).
    
    Rally Monte-Carlo innehåller totalt 17 specialsträckor fördelade 
    på fyra dagar. De två första kör i mörker på 
    torsdagskvällen. Säsongsöppningen avslutas tidigt på 
    söndag eftermiddag.
    
    Rally-VM 2022 består av 13 tävlingar fördelade på fyra 
    kontinenter.
    
    Efter säsongsinledningen i Monte-Carlo åker mästerskapet vidare 
    till Umeå i Sverige om en månad. Säsongen avslutas enligt 
    plan i Japan den 13 november.
    
    22-01-15 FIA World Rally Championships 
    new hybrid era hits top gear 
    Covers come off the all-new Rally1 cars during live Hangar-7 launch event. 
    Star drivers and pioneering new hybrid cars delivered a high-voltage introduction 
    to the 2022 FIA World Rally Championship in Austria on Saturday evening. The 
    WRCs ground-breaking new Rally1 cars from the three manufacturers gathered 
    for the first time in Salzburgs Hangar-7 as the 2022 season was launched 
    five days before the opening round at Rallye Monte-Carlo (January 20-23). 
    Here is all you need to know:
    - In the presence of FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem, reigning champions 
    Toyota Gazoo Racing, Hyundai Motorsport and M-Sport Ford revealed their stunning 
    all-new cars which will compete across 13 rounds on four continents.
    
    - Among those attending were Toyotas 2021 championship runner-up Elfyn 
    Evans and team-mate Kalle Rovanperä, who became the youngest WRC rally 
    winner in history last season.
    
    - Also present were Hyundais lead drivers Thierry Neuville and Ott Tänak. 
    New M-Sport Ford signing Craig Breen appeared alongside the teams hotly-tipped 
    youngster, Adrien Fourmaux.
    
    - In the championships 50th season, the WRC will undergo major environmental 
    changes as new FIA technical regulations drive the series towards a more sustainable 
    future.
    
    - Plug-in hybrid-powered cars built around an upgraded safety cell chassis, 
    100 percent fossil-free fuel and sustainable energy supplies are key to the 
    sports commitment to a greener future.
    
    - The new hybrid cars blend a 100kW electric motor with a competition-proven 
    1.6-litre turbocharged petrol engine, which has powered the sports top-tier 
    cars since 2011. The package raises peak performance levels to more than 500bhp 
    whilst also reducing harmful emissions.
    
    - President Ben Sulayem, a former WRC competitor himself, said: Todays 
    launch of the new Rally1 era is a very proud and significant moment for the 
    FIA, the entire rally family and I would like to congratulate WRC Promoter 
    for delivering a great show at the start of the championships 50th anniversary 
    season.
    - The enthusiasm for the FIAs new technical regulations has been 
    very much in evidence in recent months and the event further underlined the 
    momentum coming from the teams and manufacturers, with Rallye Monte-Carlo 
    just a few days away.
    - Beside the hybrid technology adding a new dynamic layer of performance 
    combined with safety improvements, Rally1 cars will be using 100 percent sustainable 
    fuel and work is also ongoing to achieve greater sustainability in the organisation 
    of each round of the series. I look forward to an exciting season.
    - WRC Promoter managing director Jona Siebel welcomed the start of a landmark 
    period for the championship: Tonight weve seen what the 
    future of the WRC looks like. I applaud the manufacturers hard work 
    and commitment in readying these amazing and innovative Rally1 cars for the 
    WRCs new era."
    
    This evening was a marvellous opportunity to showcase the WRC and exhibit 
    the strong desire to create an environment where both fiercely competitive 
    motorsport and the planet can thrive together. 
    
    
    .