2018 DAKAR RALLY
January 6-20, 2018
For immediate release
Thursday, January 4th, 2018
SOUTH RACING PREPARES TO RUN FIVE CARS IN 40TH
ANNIVERSARY OF GRUELLING DAKAR RALLY
· Bolivian Bulacia aims for top 15 with new Argentinean co-driver Arrieta
· Argentine Halpern, Czech Ouřednīček and German Schröder ready for action
· First Dakar for South African rookies De Klerk and Schutte in new Amarok
LIMA (PERÚ): Weeks of meticulous preparation will be put to the test when South Racing fields five cars in the 2018 Dakar Rally, which starts out of the Peruvian capital of Lima on Saturday (January 6th) and finishes in Córdoba, Argentina, on January 20th.
South Racing has been hard at work preparing two Ford Rangers, one Toyota Hilux, a Nissan Navara and a Volkswagen Amarok in readiness for the 40th anniversary of the world’s most demanding off-road car rally that crosses daunting terrain in Perú, Bolivia and Argentina and is sure to feature several days of treacherous sand dunes and tricky navigation.
The experienced Marco Bulacia and new Argentinean navigator Eugenio Arrieta will crew the first of the two South Racing Ford Rangers (No. 327). The 44-year-old will relish performing well during the event’s visit to his native Bolivia and will be hoping to continue a record that has seen him finish his last five Dakars in 46th, 30th, 44th, 21st and 20th overall.
Bulacia said: “My goal is the top 15. The last Dakar was very exciting because of the number of people who were waiting for us in Bolivia. I have a new navigator, with whom I get along very well. I think the Dakar will be very entertaining. We will have seven stages of dunes. That has been missing from the last editions.”
The Argentinean pairing of Sebastian Halpern and Eduardo Pulenta crew a South Racing Toyota Hilux (No. 331). The 38-year-old Mendoza driver has additional support from Sistemas de riego, Panella Motos, Sportsman and Mendoza Espíritu Grande for his Dakar challenge.
He finished second in the ATV category in 2011 before switching to the car section and returning to running a quad in 2015. Halpern also returns to the Dakar after a two-year absence, although he has been running a programme of Argentine Cross-Country rallies with South Racing.
“I’ve decided to return to the Dakar,” enthused Halpern. “There will be a lot of navigation. This is true cross-country and speed is no longer the determining factor. I have already driven the Toyota on three editions of the Desafio Ruta and we took part in Baja Portalegre in Portugal. I think a top 20 finish is the goal.”
Forty-eight-year-old Czech driver Tomáš Ouřednīček, from Brno, has again teamed up with David Křipal to drive a South Racing Ford Ranger (No. 340). He took part in the event on several occasions as a navigator for Miroslav Zapletal and finished seventh in 2009 in the car category and 40th in a truck in 2012. In 2016, he drove a car and reached the finish in 46th overall with navigator Pavel Vaculik before joining the Central European arm of South Racing with whom he finished eighth in Hungary and 15th in both Spain and Morocco.
“My first Dakar in a car was 2016, but I will be coming back with a proper car this time,” said the Czech. “David is my new co-driver and we managed to win the Morocco Desert Challenge.”
The German father and son duo of Jürgen and Maximilian Schröder crew a South Racing Nissan Navara (No. 343). The driver will celebrate his 60th birthday two days after the Dakar and he would dearly love to reach the finish in Córdoba. The veteran has taken part in seven previous Dakars, finished 18th in 2011 and 37th in 2015, but has retired on four previous occasions.
“We did several races in this year’s FIA World Cup, but we didn’t have much luck on our side. This Dakar will be a big challenge, especially with all the dunes in Perú. This year I will be racing with Max, who came with me and Daniel to watch a couple of years ago. If we have a good run and not too many problems, I think we can finish between 10th and 20th.”
The South African pairing of 48-year-old Hennie De Klerk and navigator Gerhardt Schutte round off the South Racing team line-up in their new Volkswagen Amarok (No. 353). This will be the first Dakar appearance for both, while their car has additional support from Treasury One, Cooper Tyres and Forex. They earned their entry after winning the Dakar Challenge during the Botswana 1000 Desert Race.
De Klerk said: “I started by racing on the track in a Porsche 924 and won the South African Championship in 2010. The Dakar is the reason I then switched to off-road. The Dakar was my ambition and I have been preparing since 2012 for this long-term dream. I’ve been to Namibia several times to train in the dunes. The ambition is to finish. It will probably be my first and only Dakar, so I need to bring the car home. For that, I’ll be racing at 80% and Gerhardt needs to calm me down!”
South Racing brought three of its cars to the finish in 2017. Bolivian Rodrigo Gutierrez led the way in his Toyota Hilux in 16th position, Bulacia was 20th in his Ford Ranger and Argentina’s Eduardo Amor finished 50th in a second Toyota.
“The Dakar is the start of our 2018 season and we have a good line-up of experienced drivers and our goal is to bring all the cars to the finish to continue one of the strengths of South Racing, which is reliability and enabling our customers to fulfil their goals,” said South Racing’s managing director Scott Abraham.
“I think the stages in Perú may be the deciding factor on this years Dakar even though we will also have some tricky stages in Argentina later in the rally. Our drivers will need to keep their heads, drive a clean race and get through each day. I think we have the most diverse field of vehicles in the event, but this is one of the strengths of South Racing that we can work with any manufacturer on any project.”
The event starts out of Lima on Saturday (January 6th). The first five days take place entirely in Perú, with the town of Pisco hosting the first two overnight halts on January 6th and 7th, after stages through tricky coastal dunes and sandy plains.
The Dakar caravan then moves on to San Juan de Marcona, the iron ore mining and fishing hub in the Ica region for the next two nights and further sandy stages at lower altitudes in higher temperatures. Teams then begin the climb into the Andes on January 10th and a night stop over in Arequipa.
The crossing into Bolivia takes place on January 11th and teams tackle a tricky stage to La Paz, the location for the rest halt at altitude on January 12th. From La Paz, the route heads across the Altiplano to the town of Uyuni – a regular stop-off on recent Dakars – and then on to Tupiza, a city located at 2,850 metres above sea level in the Potosi mining department of Bolivia, on January 14th.
Competitors cross into Argentina on January 15th and head to the northern city of Salta via a challenging special stage. The small town of Belén in Argentina’s Catamarca province plays host to the event on January 16th, before the route heads towards Chilecito in the foothills of the Andes and the La Rioja province on January 17th.
Teams will tackle the notorious white dunes of Fiambalá before arriving in San Juan on January 18th and then heading across the vast wastelands of north-western Argentina to the country’s second city of Córdoba.
Classic WRC-style tracks will be the focus in this region around Mina Clavero and Villa Carlos Paz before a short final stage on January 20th precedes the finish in Córdoba.
Ends
For further information: contact Scott Abraham, South Racing, Email: Scott.Abraham@southracing.com, Tel: + 49 172 6662880.
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