Al-Rajhi wins stage five but Al-Attiyah takes comfortable lead into final day of Qatar Cross-Country Rally

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Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah continued his relentless push towards a sixth victory in the Qatar Cross-Country Rally with another fastest time on one of Monday’s two selective sections in the deserts of Qatar.

 

That enabled the Toyota driver and his French co-driver Matthieu Baumel to take an overall lead of 12min 33sec into the final stage on Tuesday.

Yazeed Al-Rajhi and Dirk von Zitzewitz began the day 9min 52sec behind their team-mates, but lost further ground through the opening stage with a series of three flat tyres, although the Saudi/German pairing did strengthen their hold on second place to 3min 14sec over Jakub Przygonski and his German navigator Timo Gottschalk, the Pole driving the first of two X-raid MINI John Cooper Works Rally cars.

Al-Attiyah’s fastest time on the first of the day’s two stages enabled the Qatari to extend his advantage over Al-Rajhi to 14min 35sec, but that advantage was pegged back by Al-Rajhi in the shorter second test when the Saudi carded his first stage win of the campaign.

Al-Attiyah said: “I am quite happy today. We had one flat tyre from the beginning of stage one. After that, we tried to push and we made the time. The second one, I knew we just had to finish and not take any risks. It was not an easy day. There was a lot of wind and dust and, to open, the navigation is not easy. But we are quite happy. Now we need to finish.”

“Three punctures but everything is okay,” said Al-Rajhi, despite losing the rear-left wing panel of his Hilux after damage sustained by one of the flat tyres. “We kept going. We also took care and didn’t attack on the second one. We will take the last day easy.”

Nasser Saleh Al Attiyah

Przygonski said: “In 80km, we got three punctures and I lost a lot of confidence. Without three tyres it is hard to drive. We were trying to survive after that. One stone and we would have stopped our race. Without four wheels we could not continue. Tomorrow, we need to push and figure a good strategy.”

The BMW X3CC crew of Vladimir Vasilyev and Konstantin Zhiltsov remain in a distant fourth overall, but still in a position to score a useful haul of championship points.

Yasir Seaidan and French navigator Laurent Lichtleuchter were fourth quickest on SS4 and third in the next one to retain fifth in the second MINI. “The first stage we lost a few minutes but we did not get any punctures and we did a good job on the second one. We crossed the dunes very well. I am glad we understand more about the car. Only two cars in front of us tomorrow, so it will not be easy but we hope to do better.”

Czech driver Miroslav Zapletal began the day in sixth in his self-designed Ford F-150 Evo, but the experienced Baja campaigner stopped after the second passage control with two flat tyres and damaged rear-right transmission. He incurred further penalties for failing to start SS5 and slipped out of overall contention.

Bernhard Ten Brinke and Tom Colsoul were second quickest in the first stage of the morning and completed the second special in fourth. They moved up to sixth at the expense of the troubled Zapletal. “It was a little bit better than yesterday. The first stage was a good one with only one puncture and we drive a nice clear race. Navigation was good. The second part was also quite good. We must turn around two times for one dune, because we were on the wrong side and it cost us some seconds. Now we want to finish with a nice result.”

Italy’s Eugenio Amos bounced back from feeling unwell on Sunday to top the times at the first passage control in his Ford 2WD Buggy. He and French co-driver Sebastien Delaunay went on to finish the special in third place and were eighth on the second one after losing their way in the dunes for a time.

Monster Energy Can-Am driver Reinaldo Varela retains a massive lead of 2hrs 36min 10sec in the T3 category over Russian Fedor Vorobeyev. Italian female driver Camelia Liparoti persevered at the rear of the field and was rewarded with ninth position and third in T3 at the end of the day. Qatari Khalid Al-Mohannadi went over his permitted time limit for the stage and incurred time penalties.

Varela said: “Today was difficult navigation, but Qatar is like this. There were very nice dunes in the second stage and we did well. We have a very good advantage to the second place, so we are taking care not to get lost, taking care of the car, everything.”

After their third stage problems, Oman’s Abdullah Al-Zubair and Qatar’s Adel Abdulla were back in a strong pace on day four and the latter set the fastest time on both day’s stages, but it was scant consolation for the disappointment of the last two days.

Ahmed Al-Kuwari stopped with mechanical issues shortly after the start and slipped to ninth on the opening test and Rashid Al-Mohannadi lost time near the end of the second special.

In the duel for T2 honours, Mohammed Al-Meer ground to a halt close to PC1 and Mohammed Al-Harqan lost his way for a few minutes before the control and was then sidelined with mechanical issues and further time penalties. Al-Meer remains on course for the T2 win, despite going dangerous close to OTL in the final kilometres of the day.

Ibrahim Al-Muhanna was still running at the rear of the field in his T4 Mercedes Unimog.

Adel Abdulla

Two selective sections were arranged on leg four, split by a road liaison section of 56.39km where service was not permitted.

The first section of 227.99km included three passage controls at 80.63km, 133.83km and 186.06km, started to the north of Doha and wound it way through the central-western deserts to finish close to the west coast. The shorter second stage of 121.41km finished 95.75km from the bivouac and had no PCs, but passed a series of treacherous sand dunes along the eastern coast, north of the Inland Sea and finishes to the west of Mesaieed.

Twenty-one of the 22 FIA cars were permitted to start leg four: Mubarak Al-Khelaifi’s Polaris was sidelined with engine failure, but Mohammed Al-Harqan returned to the action with 100 hours of time penalties after his gear selection issues on Sunday. There were also maximum stage penalties for Abdullah Al-Zubair, Eugenio Amos and Mohammed Al-Attiyah.

 Tuesday

The final selective section of the event gets underway at 08.05hrs on Tuesday and runs for just 263.8km. Finishers then return to the bivouac at the Lusail Sports Arena to prepare for the ceremonial finish at The Pearl-Qatar at 18.00hrs.

2019 Qatar Cross-Country Rally – positions on SS4 (unofficial @ 11.00hrs)

  1. Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 2hrs 14min 55sec
  2. Bernhard Ten Brinke (NLD)/Tom Colsoul (BEL) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 2hrs 17min 18sec
  3. Eugenio Amos (ITA)/Sebastien Delaunay (FRA) Ford 2WD Buggy 2hrs 18min 50sec
  4. Yasir Seaidan (SAU)/Laurent Lichtleuchter (FRA) MINI John Cooper Works Rally 2hrs 18min 52sec
  5. Yazeed Al-Rajhi (SAU)/Dirk von Zitzewitz (DEU) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 2hrs 19min 38sec
  6. Jakub Przygonski (POL)/Timo Gottschalk (DEU) MINI John Cooper Works Rally 2hrs 21min 50sec

2019 Qatar Cross-Country Rally – positions on SS5 (unofficial @ 14.00hrs)

  1. Yazeed Al-Rajhi (SAU)/Dirk von Zitzewitz (DEU) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 1hr 20min 21sec
  2. Jakub Przygonski (POL)/Timo Gottschalk (DEU) MINI John Cooper Works Rally 1hr 20min 29sec
  3. Yasir Seaidan (SAU)/Laurent Lichtleuchter (FRA) MINI John Cooper Works Rally 1hr 20min 49sec
  4. Bernhard Ten Brinke (NLD)/Tom Colsoul (BEL) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 1hr 21min 24sec
  5. Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 1hr 22min 23sec
  6. Vladimir Vasilyev (RUS)/Konstantin Zhiltsov (RUS) BMW X3 CC 1hr 29min 05sec

2019 Qatar Cross-Country Rally – positions after SS5 (unofficial @ 17.13hrs)

  1. Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 10hrs 50min 00sec
  2. Yazeed Al-Rajhi (SAU)/Dirk von Zitzewitz (DEU) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 11hrs 02min 33sec
  3. Jakub Przygonski (POL)/Timo Gottschalk (DEU) MINI John Cooper Works Rally 11hrs 05min 47sec
  4. Vladimir Vasilyev (RUS)/Konstantin Zhiltsov (RUS) BMW X3 CC 11hrs 40min 46sec
  5. Yasir Seaidan (SAU)/Laurent Lichtleuchter (FRA) MINI John Cooper Works Rally 12hrs 14min 28sec
  6. Bernhard Ten Brinke (NLD)/Tom Colsoul (BEL) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 13hrs 40min 59sec
  7. Reinaldo Varela (BRA)/Gustavo Gugelmin (BRA) Can-Am Maverick T3 15hrs 13min 39sec
  8. Fedor Vorobeyev (RUS)/Kirill Shubin (RUS) Can-Am Maverick X3 T3 17hrs 49min 49sec
  9. Camelia Liparoti (ITA)/Max Delfino (FRA) Yamaha YZX 1000 R T3 19hrs 20min 10sec
  10. Mohammed Al-Meer (QAT)/Alexey Kuzmich (RUS) Toyota Land Cruiser T2 20hrs 12min 12sec
  11. Ibrahim Al-Muhanna (SAU)/Osama Al-Sanad (SAU) Mercedes Unimog T4 21hrs 45min 09sec
  12. Eugenio Amos (ITA)/Sebastien Delaunay (FRA) Ford 2WD Buggy 108hrs 25min 39sec
  13. Miroslav Zapletal (CZE)/Marek Sykora (SVK) Ford F150 Evo 109hrs 00min 34sec
  14. Abdullah Al-Zubair (OMN)/Nasser Al-Kuwari (QAT) Can-Am Maverick T3 110hrs 11min 39sec
  15. Adel Abdulla (QAT)/Marc Serra (ESP) Can-Am Maverick T3 111hrs 37min 56sec
  16. Mohammed Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Sergio Lafuente (URY) Can-Am Maverick T3 112hrs 05min 35sec
  17. Khalid Al-Mohannadi (QAT)/Loic Minaudier (FRA) Polaris RZR 1000 T3 112hrs 39min 22sec
  18. Michele Cinotto (ITA)/Maurizio Dominella (ITA) Polaris RZR 1000 T T3 113hrs 46min 48sec
  19. Ahmed Al-Kuwari (QAT)/Manuel Lucchese (ITA) Can-Am Maverick X3 T3 115hrs 50min 48sec
  20. Rashed Al-Mohannadi (QAT)/Ahmed Al-Fares (KWT) Polaris RZR 1000 T3 116hrs 34min 48sec
  21. Mohammed Al-Harqan (QAT)/Vili Oslaj (SLO) Nissan Patrol T2 206hrs 06min 37sec
 

         

 

 

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