Tuesday, January 16, 2007

07 Dakar Leg 10 Report

TEAM REPSOL MITSUBISHI RALLIART MAINTAIN IRON GRIP ON DAKAR RALLY AFTER NEMA LOOP STAGE

16 January 2007
Néma - Néma
Liaison 34kms / SS 366kms
Total 400kms

Team Repsol Mitsubishi Ralliart maintained firm control of the 29th Dakar Rally, after the 366km loop stage around the Néma bivouac in Mauritania on Tuesday.

All four Mitsubishi Pajero/Montero Evolutions reached the bivouac without any problems or without the drivers taking any risks, but Stéphane Peterhansel’s and Jean-Paul Cottret’s fourth fastest time means they head into the 11th stage on Thursday, 9m 56s ahead of team mates Luc Alphand and Gilles Picard in the overall standings. Qatar’s Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah clinched his first ever Dakar Rally stage win, with Mitsubishi’s Hiroshi Masuoka in second place.


Luc Alphand/Gilles Picard

Alphand and Picard began the special behind Jean-Louis Schlesser’s Buggy, as they attempted to reduce Peterhansel’s 7m 50s overall lead. But Peterhansel had extended his advantage by 1m 41s at the 186km point and, despite following the defending champion for much of the special caught. He passed Alphand near the end.


Stephane Peterhansel/Jean Paul Cottret

"We caught Luc after about 150km and we stayed behind him in the dust and the soft sand," said Peterhansel. "Then, in an off-road section, we passed him about 10km from the end. But I drove more than 200km in the dust. It was not very comfortable. Today’s stage was not too fast and on a sandy track. It was not too hard, but we will see completely different terrain in the next few days and this was not very kind to me last year, so we will see."

Alphand was unable to claw back any time: "We had orders to preserve our cars this morning and, when we passed Schlesser, it was not easy to be the first car on the road. It is not easy to find a good pace. We will try again over the next few stages without taking any risks. Stéphane will be ahead of us on the next stage, so it will be a little easier."


Hiroshi Masuoka/Pascal Maimon

Hiroshi Masuoka and Pascal Maimon began the stage in fifth overall and were the fastest of the four Mitsubishi crews at PCs one and two, 1m 22s ahead of Peterhansel at the 259km point. The Japanese reached the finish in second position to consolidate fifth overall.

"It was an enjoyable stage, driving in between the small trees," said Masuoka. "It was difficult to overtake the bikes, because the riders were not able to leave the main track. For that reason we needed to be extra careful. When I caught Stéphane and Luc, I followed them and stayed behind to the stage finish without taking any risks."


Joan ’Nani’ Roma/Lucas Cruz

Joan ’Nani’ Roma and Lucas Cruz began the 10th stage in 13th position in the overall standings, after Carlos Sainz had been reinstated in the results in 10th place. Roma was seventh fastest through PC1 and eventually finished the stage in eighth to retain 13th place.

"We lost about a minute and a half with a tiny navigational mistake, but everything else was okay," said Roma. "After that I drove very carefully to make sure I did not break the car. The plan now is to follow the first two cars and stay in contact with them. The new partnership with Lucas is working well."

"Today’s stage was very different to the last two Marathon days," said MMSP’s Managing and Sporting Director Dominique Serieys. "It was not necessary to create a big fight by pushing. We have a cushion now and around 850km of special stages still to run. After the liaison tomorrow we will see. There is still some way to go. Hiroshi and ’Nani’ are now working to support our two lead drivers."

China’s Lui Bin and Thailand’s Pornsiriched safely into Nema


Lui Bin/Serge Henninot

China’s Lui Bin and French co-driver Serge Henninot began the stage in 52nd overall and 41st on the road and reached Nema with the 28th fastest time to move up to 46th position.

"It was again a good day for us," said Bin. "I think that Mauritanian stages are very good for us. Now I must make sure that I conserve the car that we damaged last week on the early stages. Dakar is getting closer every day and I hope to be able to continue without any big problems."

Frenchman Dominique Housieaux and former Mitsubishi factory co-driver Jean-Michel Polato had climbed to 19th overall at the start of the stage on Tuesday. They were 26th in today’s special stage and slipped to 20th.


Mana Pornsiriched/Jean Brucy

Thailand’s Mana Pornsiriched and French co-driver Jean Brucy were classified 70th overall at the start of the loop stage. They began the day’s stage 35th on the road and reached the finish in 35th position. "We are not too far away from Dakar now," said the Thai. "We are on the home straight and it is even more important that we preserve our car over the next few days."

Russian Leonid Novitskiy began Tuesday stage in 24th position and reached the finish in 21st place.

Yaroslav Soloviev was 55th and Brazilian Klever Kolberg was 67th overall. They arrived at the finish in 37th and 22nd, respectively, and the Russian is now 49th.

"I had no problems with my car, but we had a small problem on the stage with another car," said Kolberg. "I pulled over to let Giniel De Villiers go passed and then I saw him stopped in the middle of the stage with a motorcycle in front. We had problems getting passed him, but that was the only real thing today. We are not fighting for overall places any more. I am just trying to reach Dakar."

Tomorrow (Wednesday) will be an enforced rest day on the 29th Dakar Rally, the lack of competition brought about by the curtailment of competition between Néma and Timbuktu. Instead, teams will drive on a 280km liaison section from Néma to Ayoûn-el-Atroûs and competitive action will restart on Thursday morning.

paxtech.blogspot.com

paxtech.blogspot.com

-MMSP

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