WRC, Rally

Hyundai celebrate 1-2 finish in first-ever WRC win; Ogier, Latvala retire

At the end of an astonishing final day of Rallye Deutschland that has seen two rally leaders crash, Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul have claimed their first-ever WRC victory and the first  win for the Hyundai i20 WRC. Remarkably, the Belgians were lucky to even start the event having rolled six times at shakedown which resulted in the team working 19 hours to fix the car for Friday’s start. To add to Hyundai’s celebrations, team-mates Dani Sordo and Marc Marti made it an impressive one-two for the Korean manufacturer in its debut year in the FIA World Rally Championship with the car. Andreas Mikkelsen and Ola Floene finished third, the only Volkswagen crew to make it to the finish of the rally.
In the FIA World Rally Championship, Volkswagen crews continue to dominate, despite Sébastien Ogier and Jari-Matti Latvala retiring. The pair remain first and second with Mikkelsen third and it is now assured that a Volkswagen driver will clinch the Drivers’ title. In the Manufacturers’ Championship, Volkswagen’s fight for a second consecutive title continues, the German marque now 167 points ahead of the Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team with four rounds remaining.
Today’s route covered two loops of two stages over 74.60 competitive kilometres and looked set to see Jari-Matti Latvala claim his first asphalt rally win, which would also have put him firmly back in contention for the Championship title following the retirement of Ogier. However, the Finn went off in dramatic style in the opening stage, plunging through the vineyards and into instant retirement. Kris Meeke then looked set to become the first Briton to win a WRC event since 2002 until he too crashed out on the first corner of the following stage when a misjudged pace note resulted in him hitting a wall and taking a wheel off. Neuville then became the third rally leader of the day and, with a 37 second advantage over team-mate Sordo, was in a position to control the pace to the finish. Sordo, who won the event last year with Citroën, finished 40.7 seconds adrift and, with Hyundai claiming the victory it has ended Citroën’s 12-year reign of winning Rallye Deutschland and Volkswagen’s winning run of 12 events which began in Australia last year. Mikkelsen, in his first full Tarmac event in the Polo R WRC, finished a fine third despite a spin in the first stage. M-Sport team-mates Elfyn Evans and Mikko Hirvonen battled to the end, Evans taking fourth by just under seven seconds after possibly the best performance of his career which culminated in him winning the Power Stage. Mads Østberg claimed sixth in the sole remaining DS3 WRC and Martin Prokop finished further adrift in seventh.
The FIA World Rally Championship contenders now head to the other side of the world for Rally Australia (11-14 September), the penultimate all-gravel round of the series.
ADAC Rallye Deutschland – Final Unofficial Results (subject to scrutineering)
1.   Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul Hyundai i20 WRC 3hr 07min 20.2sec
2.   Dani Sordo/Marc Marti Hyundai i20 WRC 3hr 08min 00.9sec
3.   Andreas Mikkelsen/Ola Floene Volkswagen Polo R WRC 3hr 08min 18.2sec
4.   Elfyn Evans/Daniel Barritt Ford Fiesta RS WRC 3hr 08min 23.8sec
5.   Mikko Hirvonen/Jarmo Lehtinen Ford Fiesta RS WRC 3hr 08min 30.7sec
6.   Mads Østberg/Jonas Andersson Citroën DS3 WRC 3hr 08min 42.9sec
7.   Martin Prokop/Jan Tomanek Ford Fiesta RS WRC 3hr 12min 13.0sec
8.   Dennis Kuipers/Robin Buysmans Ford Fiesta RS WRC 3hr 16min 38.3sec
9.   Pontus Tidemand/Emil Axelsson Ford Fiesta R5 3hr 18min 55.6sec
10. Ott Tanak/Raigo Molder Ford Fiesta R5 3hr 18min 57.4sec
FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers (after 9 of 13 rounds)
Sébastien Ogier (FRA) 187 points
Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN) 143 points
Andreas Mikkelsen (NOR) 110 points
Mads Østberg (NOR) 74 points
Thierry Neuville (BEL) 73 points
Mikko Hirvonen (FIN) 73 points
Elfyn Evans (GBR) 57 points
Kris Meeke (GBR) 54 points
Martin Prokop (CZE) 37 points
Henning Solberg (NOR) 26 points
Juho Hänninen (FIN) 20 points
Bryan Bouffier (FRA) 18 points
Dani Sordo (ESP) 18 points
Robert Kubica (POL) 12 points
Ott Tanak (EST) 11 points
Benito Guerra (MEX) 8 points
Hayden Paddon (NZL) 8 points
Chris Atkinson (AUS) 6 points
Pontus Tidemand (SWE) 6 points
Jaroslav Melicharek (SVK) 4 points
Dennis Kuipers (NLD) 4 points
Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT) 3 points
Lorenzo Bertelli (ITA) 2 points
Matteo Gamba (ITA) 2 points
Craig Breen (IRL) 2 points
Yuriy Protasov (UKR) 2 points
Jari Ketomaa (FIN) 1 point
Karl Kruuda (EST) 1 point
Khalid Al Qassimi (ARE) 1 point
FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers (after 9 of 13 rounds)
Volkswagen Motorsport 305 points
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team 138 points
Hyundai Motorsport 131 points
M-Sport World Rally Team 128 points
Volkswagen Motorsport II 109 points
Jipocar Czech National Team 40 points
RK M-Sport World Rally Team 21 points
Hyundai Motorsport N 12 points
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