MEDIA INFORMATION
China Silk Road Rally 2015
August 26-September 11, 2015
Stage 5: Ejina Qi – Alxa Youqi Right Banner, Inner Mongolia, 774.43km
Liaison, 198.60km; stage 271.73km; liaison, 304.10km.
For immediate release
Thursday, September 3, 2015
TEAM PEUGEOT TOTAL CLAIMS 1-2 FINISH ON CHINA
SILK WAY RALLY STAGE INTO ALXA YOUQI RIGHT BANNER
· Peterhansel and Despres begin to edge clear of Haval team rivals
· Jincheng’s Su Wen Min claims first bike stage win; KTM’s Hernandez still leads
ALXA YOUQI RIGHT BANNER (INNER MONGOLIA, CHINA): Team Peugeot Total hammered home its advantage on the demanding fifth selective section of the China Silk Road Rally between Ejina Qi and Alxa Youqi Right Banner in Inner Mongolia on Thursday.
The French duo of Stéphane Peterhansel and Jean-Paul Cottret claimed their third successive stage win in a time of 2hr 49min 42sec in slippery and wet conditions and completed the timed test 5min 23sec in front of their fellow Peugeot 2008 DKR crew of Cyril Despres and David Castera. The result also means that five-time Dakar winner, Despres, was able to pull clear of Han Wei and strengthen his hold on second place in the overall standings.
“It was a very nice track, quite fast, but it was slippery because we had some rain from the start to the finish,” said Peterhansel. “The last 40km were very twisty on a big sandy track. It was fun.”
The special started in the desert village of Wentugaole and finished at Alateng Aobao. The stage finish location achieved notoriety in November 2011 when it entered the Guinness World Records’ list for hosting the largest-ever camel race with 555 entries. This has since been beaten by a larger race, held in northwest China.
Haval’s Han Wei dropped around six minutes to Despres and retains third position, while French team-mate Christian Lavieille recorded the fourth quickest time and retains a similar place in the overall standings. “It was very fast at the beginning and the car was skidding quite a lot, because we didn’t have the right set-up in the slippery conditions and the rain,” admitted Lavieille.
Wei Hong Jei performed well to set the fifth fastest time in his Buggy, although the Chinese admitted that his open cockpit was not ideal in the wet conditions. Liu Kun was sixth on the stage, although the Mitsubishi Panda MPR11 driver complained that he had to stop on two occasions because of poor visibility. “There was a fog inside the car on the windscreen. It rained from start-to-finish and we had poor ventilation inside the cockpit,” said the Chinese.
China’s Su Wen Min claimed Jincheng’s first stage win of the event in the motorcycle category on his 450Y Rally and the Chinese duly strengthened his grip on second place behind Spain’s Armand Monleón Hernandez. He rode with the Spaniard for much of the day and then passed the Red Bull KTM when Armand stopped 15km from the finish.
“I had a 15-minute lead, so I prefer to let them follow me rather than open the road and make the track,” confessed Hernandez. “I had a problem with my GPS. The water came inside. It stopped and that enabled Su Wen Min to pass me near the finish.”
Zhao Hong Yi finished the stage in third position on a KTM, but Jincheng’s Zhou Tien maintains third in the unofficial overall standings.
Amongst the international crews in the car category, Adrian Di Lallo’s Isuzu MU-X was 20th, Teruhito Sugawara finished the stage with his Hino truck in 24th and French co-driver Sebastien Delaunay and his Chinese driver Zhang Guoyu were 30th in an ATV Polaris 900.
Di Lallo said: “Today was super. The stage was very long and challenging with a lot of mud and heavy sand, with rolling dunes and flat out salt flats, similar to some stages in the north-west of Australia and parts of Argentina.”
The rally is being organised by the China Silk Road Rally Auto Sports Management Company Limited, in association with CCTV Sports and Entertainment Company Ltd. and the Beijing Motorsports Development Company, with the full cooperation of the Federation of Automobile Sports of China (FASC) and the support of the sporting bureaux of several Chinese regions.
Tomorrow (Friday), the event remains at the bivouac in Alxa Youqi, while competitors tackle a loop stage through Inner Mongolia.
A run out of 221.35km to the start in Menggen Bulage will be followed by a selective section of 201.79km and a 76.55km link guides teams back to the overnight halt.
UNOFFICIAL @ 14.25hrs (CET)
2015 China Silk Road Rally – positions on SS5 (Cars):
1. Stéphane Peterhansel (FRA)/Jean-Paul Cottret (FRA) Peugeot 2008 DKR 2hr 49min 42sec
2. Cyril Despres (FRA)/David Castera (FRA) Peugeot 2008 DKR 2hr 55min 05sec
3. Han Wei (CHN)/Pan Hong Yu (CHN) Haval 3hr 01min 36sec
4. Christian Lavieille (FRA)/Jean-Pierre Garcin (FRA) Haval 3hr 02min 38sec
5. Wei Hong Jin (CHN)/Guo Jun (CHN) Xiongfeng Buggy 3hr 02min 42sec
6. Lui Kun (CHN)/Liao (CHN) Mitsubishi Pajero MPR11 3hr 05min 02sec
7. Liu Yan Gui (CHN)/Sha He (CHN) Mitsubishi Panda L200 3hr 20min 24sec
2015 China Silk Road Rally – positions on SS5 (Bikes):
1. Su Wen Min (CHN) JC 450Y Rally 3hr 42min 55sec
2. Armand Monleón Hernandez (ESP) KTM 450 Rally 3hr 45min 17sec
3. Zhao Hong Yi (CHN) KTM 450 Rally 3hr 59min 32sec
4. Zhou Tien (CHN) JC 450Y Rally 4hr 09min 09sec
5. Hu Ai Dong (CHN) Bombardier 1000 4hr 13min 39sec
2015 China Silk Road Rally – overall positions after SS5 (Cars):
1. Stéphane Peterhansel (FRA)/Jean-Paul Cottret (FRA) Peugeot 2008 DKR 7hr 21min 15sec
2. Cyril Despres (FRA)/David Castera (FRA) Peugeot 2008 DKR 7hr 37min 20sec
3. Han Wei (CHN)/Pan Hong Yu (CHN) Haval 7hr 44min 09sec
4. Christian Lavieille (FRA)/Jean-Pierre Garcin (FRA) Haval 7hr 52min 42sec
5. Liu Yan Gui (CHN)/Sha He (CHN) Mitsubishi L200 8hr 15min 01sec
6. Lui Kun (CHN)/Liao (CHN) Mitsubishi Pajero MPR11 8hr 23min 11sec
2015 China Silk Road Rally – overall positions after SS5 (Bikes):
1. Armand Monleón Hernandez (ESP) KTM 450 Rally 8hr 57min 05sec
2. Su Wen Min (CHN) Jincheng 450Y Rally 9hr 08min 35sec
3. Zhou Tien (CHN) Jincheng 450Y Rally 10hr 11min 07sec
4. Zhao Hong Yi (CHN) KTM 450 Rally 10hr 16min 02sec
5. Hu Ai Dong (CHN) Bombardier 1000 10hr 27min 26sec
Ends
For further media information: Hubert Auriol, Email: presse@auriolconsulting.com or Neil Perkins, NDP Publicity Services, Tel: + 44 7831 123153 and Email: ndppublicity@gmail.com
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