AL-RAJHI CLAIMS SECOND STAGE WIN WITH NEW MINI JOHN COOPER WORKS RALLY AS AL-ATTIYAH EXTENDS HIS RALLY KAZAKHSTAN LEAD
AL-RAJHI CLAIMS SECOND STAGE WIN WITH NEW MINI JOHN COOPER
WORKS RALLY AS AL-ATTIYAH EXTENDS HIS RALLY KAZAKHSTAN LEAD
- Qatar’s Abu Issa’s withdraws from event after minor electrical issues
- Yasir Saeidan extends T2 advantage; trouble for Abykayev and delays for Adel Abdulla
KENDERLY (KAZAKHSTAN): Saudi Arabia’s Yazeed Al-Rajhi led from the start of Tuesday’s third stage around the remote deserts of the Mangystau oblast to record a second successive quickest time at what is turning out to be a tough test of man and machine at Rally Kazakhstan.
The Mini John Cooper Works Rally driver carded a time of 4hrs 12min 10sec to beat Qatar’s Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah by 5min 05sec, but it mattered little to Al-Attiyah after the Saudi’s substantial time penalties after day one. The second quickest time on the demanding section enabled the Qatari to extend his outright lead over Jakub Przygonski to 8min 53sec.
“We had another good day and we enjoyed it a lot. We pushed hard from the start and we had a good rhythm to the finish,” said Al-Rajhi. “The dunes today were even more difficult, very slow with bushes and some bumps. Between the bushes was where we could have problems.”
Pole Przygonski remains Al-Attiyah’s closest challenger in the second of the X-raid Minis, but the Orlen Team driver dropped valuable minutes after a minor navigational mistake, but retains second place.
At 421km, the day’s selective section was the longest of the event and ran inland, south of Zhanaozen, and then deep into the heart of the Mangystau oblast. It finished a short distance from Kenderly via a winding trail that ran close to the small town of Senek.
Al-Attiyah, driving an Overdrive Racing Toyota Hilux, said: “It was a good day for us. We try to control our pace. Yazeed was pushing because he doesn’t have anything to lose. I am happy with the car. Everything is working very well. We enjoyed the stage. I am really surprised about these stages. It is not easy!”
Poland’s Aron Domzala was in good form in the second of the Toyotas. He and navigator Maciej Marton tightened their grip on third overall with the fourth quickest time, despite one puncture and the driver commenting about the bumpy nature of one section of dunes. Czech driver Miroslav Zapletal maintains a solid fourth in his Hummer H3 and Yuriy Sazonov remains on course for a top five finish for the host nation in a second Hummer.
Kazakh Yerden Shagirov and Lithuania’s Antanas Juknevicius are sixth and seventh overall, while Yasir Saiedan is a distant eighth overall and well clear of any of his rivals in the T2 category for series production cross-country vehicles.
Qatar’s Mohammed Abu Issa took the decision to withdraw from ninth position after a third day with minor niggling issues. “We had some electrical problems. It was just a fuse. Nothing big. We thought it might be bigger than that and didn’t want to break the engine. It’s better to happen now than in Dakar. I decided to stop now. We had some small technical issues every day. We bent the jack on day one, the fuel was dirty and it blocked our fuel filter and we cannot test anything because the stages are too long. I know kilometres are important but, at this point, I’m going home to refocus for Italy.”
Delays in the sand dunes cost Qatar’s Adel Abdulla a lot of time on the day’s special, although the Nissan Patrol driver retains second in T2 after mechanical issues for AMFK President Marat Abykayev and previous time penalties for the likes of Kirill Chernenkov and Pavel Loginov.
Frenchman Claude Fournier continues to run near the rear of the field in his T3 Polaris RR 1000.
Tuesday – as it happened
Only 10 drivers were still running in the event without incurring 100 hours of time penalties. Al-Rajhi was penalised after his accident on the opening stage on Sunday, while seven of the other eight drivers were penalised after the treacherous sand dunes caused havoc on Monday.
Marat Abykayev, Kirill Chernenkov, Viktor Khoroshavtsev (turbo), Dmitry Pitulov, Zhanat Zhalimbetov, Claude Fournier, Pavel Loginov and Daniyar Alibayev all lined up on Tuesday morning with 100 hours of penalties.
“The first series of sand dunes yesterday were just unbelievable,” said Adel Abdulla, who held 10th overall and second in T2 behind Yasir Saeidan. “There were seven waypoints, sometimes in the bushes in the sand, and we did not have the power to keep going. I had to stop and let Seb (Delaunay) get out and see what was behind. We were so lucky to get through there without rolling. It was so difficult.”
Al-Rajhi was first on the road on the longest loop of the rally, as Al-Attiyah started second and attempted to defend his lead of 3min 39sec over Jakub Przygonski. The Saudi was running 14 seconds faster than Al-Attiyah to the end of the first section before a neutralised zone, but Przygonski dropped around three minutes to the leading Qatari after a navigational error. Qatar’s Mohammed Abu Issa stopped shortly after the stage start and lost over an hour with an electrical issue before resuming his challenge, although he opted to drive directly to the stage finish to retire.
Al-Rajhi continued to lead the way through PC1, although Przygonski managed to claw back a little time that he’d lost heading to the end of the first section of the special. The Saudi held on to claim a second successive stage win with his new Mini. Al-Attiyah, on the other hand, managed his pace well to extend his lead over Przygonski in the overall standings.
Wednesday
The fourth selective section of 276.2km and the second of the loops out of Kenderly is the most remote of the entire event. A liaison of 111.1km takes crews through Zhanaozen and on to the stage start to the west of Senek. The route then heads north-west and deep into the Mangystau wilderness before turning east and then looping back to finish on the road between Senek and Zhanaozen. A 118km liaison then takes teams back to the Kenderly Sea Resort.
2017 Rally Kazakhstan – positions on SS3 (unofficial @ 15.15hrs):
1. Yazeed Al-Rajhi (SAU)/Timo Gottschalk (DEU) Mini John Cooper Works Rally 4hrs 12min 40sec
2. Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 4hrs 17min 49sec
3. Jakub Przygonski (POL)/Tom Colsoul (BEL) Mini All4 Racing 4hrs 23min 03sec
4. Aron Domzala (POL)/Maciej Marton (POL) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 4hrs 23min 28sec
5. Yuriy Sazonov (KAZ)/Vitalyi Yevtyekhov (KAZ) Hummer H3 Evo VIII 4hrs 28min 00sec
6. Miroslav Zapletal (CZE)/Marek Sykora (SLO) Hummer H3 Evo VII 4hrs 28min 31sec
7. Yerden Shagirov (KAZ)/Dmitro Tsyro (UKR) Toyota Hilux 4hrs 36min 33sec
8. Antanas Juknevicius (LTU)/Darius Vaiciulis (LTU) Toyota Hilux 5hrs 01min 43sec
2017 Rally Kazakhstan – positions after SS3 (unofficial @ 15.15hrs):
1. Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 10hrs 51min 52sec
2. Jakub Przygonski (POL)/Tom Colsoul (BEL) Mini All4 Racing 11hrs 00min 45sec
3. Aron Domzala (POL)/Maciej Marton (POL) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 11hrs 05min 23sec
4. Miroslav Zapletal (CZE)/Marek Sykora (SLO) Hummer H3 Evo VII 11hrs 14min 06sec
5. Yuriy Sazonov (KAZ)/Vitalyi Yevtyekhov (KAZ) Hummer H3 Evo VIII 11hrs 49min 10sec
6. Yerden Shagirov (KAZ)/Dmitro Tsyro (UKR) Toyota Hilux 12hrs 00min 47sec
7. Antanas Juknevicius (LTU)/Darius Vaiciulis (LTU) Toyota Hilux 12hrs 29min 56sec
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Tracking
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Ends
For further media information: Neil Perkins, NDP Publicity Services, international media officer, 2017 Rally Kazakhstan, Hotel 20 - 1st Floor, Media Centre, Kenderly Sea Resort, Kazakh mobile: + 7 701 9954306, UK mobile: +44 7831 123153, E-mail: ndppublicity@googlemail.com and rallykazakhstan@gmail.com, Twitter: @LordPerkins.
Twitter: @rallykazakhstan