WRC: Ogier takes another but Tanak stars

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Kris Meeke and Thierry Neuville had unexplained rolls, Seb Ogier overcame road position and Ott Tanak showed his speed on a spectacular Rally Poland

    Ott Tanak performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 4, 2015 Photographer Credit     Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool
Ott Tanak performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 4, 2015
Photographer Credit
Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool

WRC

Sébastien Ogier repelled team-mate Andreas Mikkelsen’s fierce challenge to secure his second consecutive LOTOS Rally Poland victory on Sunday and net his fifth FIA World Rally Championship success in seven rounds.

He won by 11.9sec after almost 300km of super-fast action in north-east Poland, leaving his Volkswagen team-mate still searching for his maiden victory. Ott Tänak equalled his career-best result in third after Jari-Matti Latvala crashed in the final speed test.

Ogier’s victory was achieved the hard way. As road opener for the first two legs, he was disadvantaged by cleaning gravel from the sandy tracks for most of the rally and had Mikkelsen breathing down his neck from the moment he took the lead on Friday afternoon.

The Polo R duo were split by 2.1sec after the opening leg, Ogier had eked his advantage out to 5.6sec by last night and completed victory with a flourish today by claiming maximum bonus points for winning the final live TV Power Stage.

Blistering heat saw the thermometer top 33˚C and tyre choice became decisive. Mikkelsen’s decision to opt for hard compounds on Saturday afternoon gave him the best opportunity to overhaul Ogier, who chose softer rubber, but the Norwegian has hampered by hanging dust.

“This year I’ve had many great wins, but this one is very special,” said Ogier. “For 90 per cent of the rally I opened the road so this is amazing. I had to push from the first metre to the last. I have a small break now and this is the perfect start to my holiday.”

    Kris Meeke performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 4, 2015 Photographer Credit     @tWorld / Red Bull Content Pool
Kris Meeke performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 4, 2015
Photographer Credit
@tWorld / Red Bull Content Pool

Tänak, who led briefly on Friday afternoon, and Jari-Matti Latvala fought tooth and nail for the final podium place. They started the last stage separated by 1.1sec but the Estonian secured third in a Ford Fiesta RS when Latvala hit a tree with a handful of kilometres left.

The impact broke the radiator on his Polo R and he worked furiously on the liaison section after the stage to make repairs to ensure he could drive to the finish (bottom). However a 40sec penalty for checking in late dropped him to fifth.

The beneficiary was Hayden Paddon, who followed his stellar performance in Italy last month with another great drive to finish fourth in a Hyundai i20. He headed Latvala by 10.1sec with team-mate Thierry Neuville completing the top six 19.8sec further back.

Neuville rolled in the penultimate stage but was quickly back on his wheels to finish ahead of Kris Meeke. The Ulsterman struggled for confidence after Thursday’s shakedown roll, but moved ahead of Robert Kubica when the Pole punctured in the final stage.

Mads Østberg surrendered second in the championship to Mikkelsen after finishing ninth, while Dani Sordo completed the leaderboard.

The WRC’s high-speed summer continues at Neste Oil Rally Finland which is based in Jyväskylä on 30 July – 2 August.

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Source FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland Product Title Jari Ketomaaa – Action Production Date 03.Jul 2015 Geolocation Mikolajki Product Number P-20150706-00175 Description Jari Ketomaa performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 3, 2015 Photographer Credit @tWorld / Red Bull Content Pool

WRC2

Esapekka Lappi dominated WRC 2 at 72nd LOTOS Rally Poland to earn Skoda Motorsport’s first victory since joining the support category with its Fabia R5 three rallies ago.

The Finn took the lead in the second stage on Friday morning and was never again headed as he pulled clear of team-mate Pontus Tidemand. The margin of victory after almost 300km of sandy speed tests in the north of the country was 56.1sec.

“I can’t be more satisfied. We only had to push on Friday and from then on it was just a question of keeping a cool head and controlling the lead,” said Lappi, who climbed to fifth in the championship standings.

The two drivers won seven stages each. Next best was Karl Kruuda who claimed three wins and took third in Citroën’s DS 3 R5. The Estonian was second until a puncture on Friday afternoon cost a minute and relegated him to third.

Jari Ketomaa finished fourth, the Finn climbing the order after a trouble-filled opening day in his Ford Fiesta R5. That was enough to promote the Drive DMACK pilot back into the points lead following the retirement of Nasser Al-Attiyah.

Germany’s Armin Kremer finished fifth in another Fabia R5, with young Finn Teemu Suninen scoring the best result of his career in sixth in an older specification Fabia S2000.

Joan Carchat won the Production Cup category in WRC 2 in a Mitsubishi Lancer Evo X. Carchat, from Andorra, finished 1min 14.5sec ahead of Italy’s Max Rendina in a similar car.

 Source     FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland Product Title     Pontus Tidemand - Action Production Date     03.Jul 2015 Geolocation     Mikolajki Product Number     P-20150703-00823 Description     Pontus Tidemand performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 3, 2015 Photographer Credit     Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool
Pontus Tidemand performs at FIA World Rally Championship 2015 Poland in Mikolajki, Poland on July 3, 2015
Photographer Credit
Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool

WRC3

Finland’s Teemu Suninen spoiled hopes of a home win in WRC 3 at Rally Italia Sardegna when he headed a trio of Italian drivers into Sunday’s finish.

Suninen drove Citroën’s DS 3 R3T to a comfortable victory, outlasting three crews from the ACI Team Italia young driver training scheme.

He won by more than 15 minutes from Andrea Crugnola, with Fabio Andolfi in third, a further five minutes in arrears.

Crugnola led after the opening leg in his Renault Clio R3T but retired on Saturday with a water leak in his engine. He was joined on the sidelines by Andolfi, who rolled his Peugeot 208 R2 and Suninen, who stopped with mechanical problems after pushing his car into the finish of SS15.

All restarted today and Suninen eased through the final four stages to take maximum points.