Qatar Cross-Country Rally – April 17-22, 2017

2017 FIA Cross-Country Rally World Cup, round 4
2017 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship, round 2

For immediate release
Wednesday, April 19th, 2017

PRZYGONSKI, SUNDERLAND AND HERNANDEZ WIN FIRST DESERT
STAGE TO CLAIM OUTRIGHT LEADS AT QATAR CROSS-COUNTRY RALLY

· Qatar’s Adel Abdulla extends T2 lead; Al-Attiyah drops time with power steering issues

LOSAIL (Qatar): Poland’s Jakub Przygonski, Dubai-based Briton Sam Sunderland and Peru’s Alexis Hernandez won the second competitive stage of the Qatar Cross-Country Rally and hold the outright leads in the car, motorcycle and quad categories.

The stage of 334.08km ran between Rawdat Rashed and a finish close to the Sealine resort, south of Doha, in a fierce hot desert wind. Navigational issues were a factor for many crews and Abu Dhabi Racing’s Sheikh Khalid Al-Qassimi lost vital minutes before the second passage control. Qatar’s Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah, on the other hand, suffered power steering and gearbox woes and was lucky to lose so little time.

Saudi Arabia’s Yazeed Al-Rajhi took full advantage and looked to be heading for the stage win in his new Mini John Cooper Works Rally, but he was pipped at the post by Polish team-mate Jakub Przygonski. A delighted stage winner was upbeat after his achievement. “It was a nice stage for us and Tom (Colsoul) made good navigation. The stage was tough with a lot of off-piste and we did it and we are really happy. For us, we need to learn more and more to be fast in the future, so opening the road now is okay. This will be good training for us.”

“It was a good start, but we had some problems with overheating of the car,” said Al-Rajhi. “We cut the engine and we lost time. We had one small mistake with the navigation, but second place is good for me and we have a good starting position for tomorrow.”

Overdrive Racing’s Erik van Loon and Toyota GAZOO’s Leeroy Poulter ruined a potential X-raid Mini 1-2-3 with third and fourth places and demoted Qatar’s Mohammed Abu Issa (who lost time with a costly puncture) to fifth in the third Mini. Al-Attiyah and Al-Qassimi hold sixth and seventh places.

After his crash in Abu Dhabi, the last thing Al-Attiyah needed was no power steering on his Toyota Hilux. “I was really worried because I still have a pain. The steering rack has completely stopped. It was really difficult to make 190km without power steering. And then the gearbox lever was broken. Matthieu (Baumel) try to change himself, but it took time and we were stuck in third gear to the finish. But I am surprise to lose so little time.”

Al-Qassimi said: “My main problem was I lost a lot of time because I lost the track, maybe between four and five minutes in one place. At the end I had a slow puncture, but it was good on the sandy sections because I am used to this. The Peugeot is too big for the lines on the rocky stages. I am always outside the line on these stages.”

Sunderland, riding for the Red Bull KTM Factory Team, used his favourable starting position and confidence he has gained from two massive wins already this season to steal the initiative. He caught the riders in front and now holds an outright lead of 9min 32.9sec over Monster Energy Honda Team’s Paulo Gonçalves, although Sunderland’s starting position for Thursday’s stage should enable his rivals to reduce that gap.

Honda’s Kevin Benavides holds third, despite fuel pump issues on the road section after the stage, and Pablo Quintanilla of the Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Team is fourth. Overnight motorcycle leader Antoine Meo dropped around 26 minutes with navigational woes before PC1 on the day’s stage and slipped to seventh in the overall standings. Ride to Abu Dhabi’s Mohammed Al-Balooshi holds ninth place.

Sunderland said: “Obviously it’s always hard to have the first day in Qatar and to adjust the brain to start to think about a lot of navigation, especially after Abu Dhabi, where it is all open GPS. I pushed all day and managed to pass all the guys. We are here and safe and the bike was awesome. It was heavy for the hands. They are pretty destroyed after all the stones. It was a tough day. We will have to see how we go with the strategy.”

Second-placed Goncalves said, “I start the rally well. It was a really tough stage with difficult navigation and also some dangerous tracks. At the beginning I tried to keep my speed more or less safe but, after the refuelling, I start to go a little faster. I am happy to arrive with the second overall. The bike is okay. We have more than 1000kms still to go, so we don’t do any calculations. I take each day as it comes.”

Peruvian Alexis Hernandez also misread early route instructions on his quad, but managed to refocus to set the quickest time in the quad category and extend his outright lead to 6min 12.1sec over Poland’s Rafal Sonik. Dutchman Kees Koolen is third. Argentina’s Lucas Innocente was badly delayed on the opening stage, failed to complete the route on Wednesday and incurred massive time penalties.

Saudi Arabia’s Abdulmajeed Al-Khulaifi won the shorter non-FIM section on his Yamaha quad. On a stage that finished at PC2 for the national riders, Sultan Al-Masood was second.


Qatar’s Adel Abdulla broke a front suspension arm on his way to the fastest T2 time in the opening stage, but the Nissan Patrol driver was in excellent form on the first desert section and he reached Losail with a lead of 50.6 seconds in the popular support championship for series production cross-country vehicles. Abu Dhabi Racing’s Mansour Al-Helai holds second and series leader Yasir Saeidan is third.

Local Chevrolet Buggy driver Mohammed Al-Mannai won the day’s stage in the Qatar National Baja and leads the event by 7min 09.2sec from Mohammed Al-Meer. Saudi’s Ahmed Al-Shegawi is third.

Wednesday – as it happened

The real meat of the event began with a 334.08km section from Rawdat Rashed that wound its way around the west and south of Qatar to a finish near Sealine. Super special stage winner Antoine Meo opted to start from 15th with Walkner in 14th and Sunderland in 13th. It meant that the three factory KTM bikes were working together.

The unenviable task of running first on the road fell to Saudi quad rider Abdulmajeed Al-Khulaifi. Mohammed Al-Balooshi was the first of the leading riders on two wheels in fifth. The top 15 ran at three-minute intervals, but South African quad rider Martin Beyers did not take the start after his somersault in the water splash on Tuesday and Qatar’s Ahmed Al-Kuwari was also sidelined.

Czech Miroslav Zapletal was handed road opening duties in the cars with Leeroy Poulter and Yazeed Al-Rajhi following two and four minutes behind. Sheikh Khalid Al-Qassimi slotted into fourth and overnight leader Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah was 10th. An overnight road closure caused the stage start to the delayed for around an hour.

Overnight quad leader Alexis Hernandez lost his way early on, as Sunderland used his starting position to his advantage to lead at PC1 from Quintanilla and Renet. Both Walkner dropped several minutes to his team-mate and Meo suffered his own navigational agony and dropped 26 minutes to Sunderland. Al-Attiyah edged into a small advantage over Al-Rajhi and Abu Issa in the cars. Thomas Bell was unable to start after technical issues on his Range Rover 5 Bowler and Yerden Shagirov, who had complained of gearbox issues on Tuesday, retired from the stage.

Al-Rajhi whittled Al-Attiyah’s advantage down to just 39 seconds at the second checkpoint, but the Qatari lost 10 minutes to the next time control point with power steering issues and Al-Rajhi held on to claim the second fastest time in his latest specification Mini after being pipped to the win by Przygonski.

Tomorrow (Thursday), the third stage of 353.02km starts close to the former bivouac at Sealine and runs south towards the Inland Sea before heading west and up the western coast of Qatar. Refuelling takes place at PC2, in Al-Galayel, and the stage finishes at Mekaines on the Salwa Road.

2017 Qatar Cross-Country Rally – positions after SS2 (unofficial)
Cars – FIA

1. Jakub Przygonski (POL)/Tom Colsoul (BEL) Mini All4 Racing 3hr 24min 15.0sec
2. Yazeed Al-Rajhi (SAU)/Timo Gottschalk (DEU) Mini John Cooper Works Rally 3hr 25min 40.0sec
3. Erik Van Loon (NLD)/Wouter Rosegaar (NLD) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 3hr 28min 14.4sec
4. Leeroy Poulter (ZAF)/Dirk von Zitzewitz (DEU) Toyota Hilux 3hr 29min 53.8sec
5. Mohammed Abu Issa (QAT)/Xavier Panseri (FRA) Mini All4 Racing 3hr 31min 28.1sec
6. Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 3hr 36min 35.1sec
7. Khalid Al-Qassimi (ARE)/Khaled Al-Kendi (ARE) Peugeot 3008 DKR 3hr 37min 29.5sec
8. Martin Prokop (CZE)/Jan Tomanek (CZE) Ford F-150 Evo 3hr 41min 43.3sec

Bikes
1. Sam Sunderland (GBR) KTM 450 Rally 3hr 48min 01.2sec
2. Paolo Gonçalves (PRT) Honda 450 CRF Rally 3hr 57min 34.1sec
3. Kevin Benavides (ARG) Honda 450 CRF Rally 3hr 58min 35.6sec
4. Pablo Quintanilla (CHI) Husqvarna 450 Rally 4hr 00min 55.0sec
5. Pierre Alexander Renet (FRA) Husqvarna 450 Rally 4hr 01min 15.8sec
6. Matthias Walkner (AUT) KTM 450 Rally 4hr 04min 06.8sec
7. Antoine Meo (FRA) KTM 450 Rally 4hr 24min 29.9sec
8. Maciej Giemza (POL) KTM 450 Rally Replica 4hr 41min 15.1sec
9. Mohammed Al-Balooshi (ARE) KTM 450 Rally Replica 4hr 44min 02.5sec

Quads – FIM
1. Alexis Hernandez (PER) Yamaha Raptor 700R 5hr 00min 54.0sec
2. Rafal Sonik (POL) Yamaha YFM 700 R 5hr 07min 06.1sec
3. Kees Koolen (NLD) Barren Racer One 690 5hr 28min 51.3sec
4. Rodolfo Schippers (GUA) Yamaha Raptor 700R 5hr 55min 58.6sec
Quads – non-FIM
1. Abdulmajeed Al-Khulaifi (SAU) Yamaha YFZ 450R 2hr 10min 40.5sec
2. Sultan Al-Masood (SAU) Yamaha YFZ 450R 2hr 33min 21.0sec

Thursday, April 20 – spectator points

SS km GPS Coordinates Remarks 1st bike 1st car
0,00 24° 53.337’N 51° 31.658’E SS3 Start (Sealine area) 07:35 09:05
64,51 24° 34.236’N 51° 20.272’E Track section between dunes & sea 08:13 09:43
118,94 24° 38.070'N 51° 3.338'E PC1 – Al Aamriya rd 08:46 10:16
152,50 24° 45.690'N 50° 51.951'E PC2 + refuel (for bikes only)Al-Galayel (near Salwa rd) 09:06 10:36
203,17 25° 4.768'N 50° 51.782'E Near Umm Bab highway 09:51 11:06
292,21 24° 59.361'N 51° 0.988'E PC3 – Near Salwa rd 10:45 12:00
353,02 25° 7.186'N 51° 13.243'E SS3 STOP (Mekaines) 11:20 12:35

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Ends
Neil Perkins, NDP Publicity Services, International Press Officer, 2017 Qatar Cross-Country Rally, Qatar mobile: + 974 55747423, UK Mobile: + 44 7831 123153, E-mail: NDPPublicity@googlemail.com, www.ndp-publicity.com (press releases). Facebook group: FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Rallies. Twitter: @LordPerkins

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Published On: 19 April 2017