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Despite impressing at a recent formula one test, Sebastien Ogier says he still prefers driving rally cars and has no plans to make a motorsport career change.

The four-time WRC champion realised one of his boyhood dreams when Red Bull Racing invited him to drive a 2011-spec RB7 car at Austria's Red Bull Ring. 

Ogier's tutor on the day, 13-time Grand Prix winner David Coulthard, acknowledged that the 33-year old Frenchman was a star pupil. 

"Considering he's jumped in a Grand Prix car for the first time, he's done 100km around a track he doesn't particularly know, I think he's done an exceptional job,"Coulthard said. 

However, Ogier was quick to dismiss any suggestion that the test might lead to anything more serious in Formula One.

Video: Sebastien Ogier driving a Formula 1 car

"I think I have more chance to perform well in rally than Formula One. To be honest I think rally is the best. I love rally. It's so fantastic to drive all the different surfaces. I really enjoy it so much," he said.

"I'm very, very thankful to Red Bull for giving me the opportunity to drive the Formula One. It was awesome, but keeping my feet on the ground I know I have no chance to switch to another career - it was just pure fun."

Championship leader Ogier will return to WRC duties next week, behind the wheel of his M-Sport Ford Fiesta at Rally Finland end of July.

And even though Finland is the fastest round in the WRC calendar, Ogier admitted it would take time to adjust to his WRC car after sampling F1 machinery. 

"I think I'll have to make a kind of reset and remember what the speeds and braking points are with my rally car, because if I try the same I'm probably going to have some trouble," he said

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Norway's Mads Ostberg will start next week's Rally Finland alongside a new co-driver after parting company with Ola Floene for "sporting reasons".

Østberg will be co-driven by Torstein Eriksen in Finland, having called time on his 18-month partnership with Fløene that began at Rallye Monte-Carlo in 2016. 

Team principal Morten Østberg said: "This is a team decision. We have seen over a period that there have been challenges in the relation between Mads and Ola."

"In the end, we must think about what is best for the team. On high performance level, everything has to run smooth."

Eriksen is part of the Ostberg family's Adapta Motorsport team and he will share co-driving duties on the next few WRC rallies with another team member Patrik Barth until a permanent replacement is found. 

"We know both of them well, and we are certain that they have the experience and skill to perform well and fill the role," Ostberg said. 

Floene, who previously partnered Andreas Mikkelsen at Volkswagen, will continue to work for Adapta Motorsport on other projects.

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The home crowds at Rally Finland will have plenty of local talent to support next week when a strong field of established and rising star drivers take to the stages.

Toyota team-mates and experienced competitors Jari-Matti Latvala and Juho Hänninen head the local entries, and will be joined in the top level by two of the WRC's hottest young talents: Esapekka Lappi and Teemu Suninen [pictured above]. 

In the last couple of rounds, the two Finnish youngsters have underlined their potential with superb performances. Lappi, 26, made his debut for Toyota in Portugal, and on only his second start in Sardinia he came fourth overall and won six stages [see profile video below].

Suninen made his top-flight debut in Poland with M-Sport, and the 23-year-old set a fastest stage time on his first full day in a Fiesta WRC before finishing sixth.

Lappi and Suninen finished first and second respectively in Finland's WRC 2 counter in 2016, and this time they are being tipped to shine at the highest level.

Suninen’s career took off after he was chosen as the first recipient of the Future Rally Star of Finland award (organised by Neste Rally Finland promoter AKK Sports) in 2014, and this year's entry list boasts all of the programme's winners. 

Suninen's two successors Jari Huttunen (2015) and Juuso Nordgren (2016) both make their debuts in the WRC 2 category behind the wheel of Skoda Fabia R5s. The 2017 Future Star, Emil Lindholm, will be one of eight drivers competing for honours in Junior WRC. 

Another local talent to look out for is Max Vatanen, son of 1981 world champion Ari, who steps up in a Ford Fiesta R5 after winning the Drive DMACK Trophy contest on home soil in 2016. 

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1990s nostalgia
Silverstone may be known almost exclusively for Formula 1 and other circuit racing events these days, but it has a bit of rallying history too: the venue played host to stages of Britain’s World Rally Championship round at the end of the 1990s. 
This was a period in which rally fever was at its peak in the country after Colin McRae became its first World Rally Champion in 1995 with Subaru and Pirelli, while Richard Burns quickly joined him among the top drivers en route to repeating that feat in 2001, also on Pirelli rubber.
Silverstone first appeared on the route of the iconic RAC Rally (as it was still known then) in 1997. The centrepiece of its involvement was a specially built mixed-surface superspecial stage adjacent to the British Grand Prix circuit, very close to Stowe corner. 
It was designed with the help of British rally icon Roger Clark, and the aim was for this short stage to be fan and TV-friendly, with two cars competing side-by-side in a simulacrum of racing. At just under two kilometres, it had only minor effects on the leaderboard but it was spectacular nonetheless, with features incorporating a jump and a watersplash.

McRae magic
Attempting to beat Tommi Makinen to the world title, McRae set the best time on its first usage in November 1997, tied with Finnish legend Juha Kankkunen. With Subaru and Pirelli once more, McRae would go on to win the rally, but he missed out on a second drivers’ championship by a single point by the end of it.
Featuring earlier on that first day of the 1997 event, before it headed to the Welsh forests, were two other stages on the Silverstone site, using parts of the racing circuit and access roads. This was doubled to four stages, plus the superspecial, for the 1998 edition, when the name also changed to the ‘Rally of Great Britain’ (although everyone still calls it the ‘RAC’). McRae would win three of those four regular stages at Silverstone, but engine failure later in the rally handed the win to Burns instead.
In 1999, Silverstone hosted three stages including the superspecial, which Burns won, now driving for Subaru and Pirelli. Not only that, but Burns would go on to claim his second of three consecutive wins on his home rally.

Over and out
That day turned out to be the last time that Silverstone staged the WRC, as from then on, all Rally GB stages have been held in Wales. Perhaps fittingly, the home of British motorsport became the scene of Burns’ final stage win on English ground. Two years later, he became England’s first and so far only World Rally Champion, adding to the rallying legend of Subaru and Pirelli.
The enduring tragedy is, of course, that neither of Pirelli’s two British WRC heroes is still with us, for reasons that had nothing to do with their rally careers. At the height of their battle, they drew an estimated million spectators to Rally Great Britain – from Silverstone to Wales and beyond. In terms of the number of people watching in person, Rally Great Britain was actually more popular than the British Grand Prix.
McRae and Burns were in reality good friends, but with such a high-level fight between them, it was inevitable that there would be some antagonism, expressed with varying degrees of vicious humour. 
Burns, for example, probably didn’t have to look far for the culprit who somehow affixed a ‘baby on board’ sticker to the rear of his Subaru during parc ferme on one occasion. And McRae also used to occasionally call Burns up to bait him in the middle of the night, usually after a few refreshments had been taken. 
“It worries me a bit,” observed Richard once, in mock seriousness. “After all, you only call up people who you fancy when you’re drunk. Do you think he’s got a thing about me?”
Colin did, for sure. But definitely not in that sense. 
Just as McRae and Burns are gone, so too is the old rallysprint circuit at Silverstone. It’s now the site of the Porsche Experience Centre, which opened in 2008. So it looks like Silverstone’s rallying days are finally over.

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