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  • Al-Attiyah fends off fierce mini challenge to win Hail Baja 1

Al-Attiyah fends off fierce mini challenge to win Hail Baja 1

Adrien van Beveren during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Adrien van Beveren during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Carlos Sainz during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Carlos Sainz during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Kees Koolen during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Kees Koolen during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Saleh Al-Saif during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Saleh Al-Saif during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Stephane Peterhansel during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Stephane Peterhansel during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Yazeed Al-Rajhi during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
Yazeed Al-Rajhi during the Hail Baja 1. (Supplied)
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13 Dec 2020 03:12:01 GMT9
13 Dec 2020 03:12:01 GMT9
  • Yamaha’s Adrien Van Beveren claims emphatic motorcycle victory

Arab News

JEDDAH: Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah held his nerve to set a second successive fastest time and seal victory in Hail Baja 1, round four of the FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas, on Saturday.

Despite opening the road on the 275.54-kilometer stage and having the extra burden of navigation, the Toyota Hilux driver and his French navigator Matthieu Baumel stayed ahead of closest rivals Carlos Sainz and Stéphane Peterhansel to win the stage by 3 minutes and 20 seconds, sealing a winning margin of 6 minutes and 10 seconds.

Al-Attiyah said: “It was a good day for us. We believed in our speed. We opened the road, but we only had one way and that was to push…I am happy to win Baja 1. Now we have two days of rest. Baja 2 will be different, but we [will] try to do our best.”

Sainz and Peterhansel were closely matched throughout the challenging stage in the two new Mini John Cooper Works Buggies and reached the finish in second and third overall.

Double Dakar and World Rally Championship (WRC) series winner Sainz said: “All is okay, no problem. We keep planning, and we will try a couple more things a day after tomorrow.”

“Today was an interesting stage — a mix of fast tracks, sandy tracks and dunes with a very beautiful landscape,” said third-placed Peterhansel.

“These two days of racing were interesting, with a good level of organization and a good roadbook, and this is a great opportunity just before the Dakar to do it.”

Five-time Hail Rally winner Yazeed Al-Rajhi had to settle for fourth place on the first of the Bajas, the Saudi driver finishing 14 minutes and 48 seconds behind his winning Toyota teammate.

“I enjoyed this rally as preparation for Dakar, and everything went well,” said Al-Rajhi.

“The first day, we had a small issue, and we didn’t take too [many risks] today. I think [for] the next race, we need to improve a little bit in the soft and slow dunes because you do not need to push more. When you push more, you lose time.”

The second stage began close to Jubbah and headed west of Hail before looping through the desert to finish close to the village of Q’na. There were two passage controls after 147.29 kilometers and 261.46 kilometers.

The leading quartet was closely matched through the opening checkpoints with Al-Attiyah holding a slight advantage over Sainz, despite opening the road and relying heavily on Baumel’s precise navigation. He gradually extended that advantage as the stage progressed to seal the win.

Russian Vladimir Vasilyev moved ahead of Dutchman Bernhard Ten Brinke in the battle for the FIA Baja Drivers’ title. The duo finished Hail Baja 1 in fifth and sixth positions, and the outcome of the title race will now be decided at the final round, on Dec. 14-16.

Saleh Al-Saif may have slipped behind Russia’s Denis Krotov (Mini) and into eighth in the overall standings, but the Saudi driver had the superb consolation of a useful victory in the FIA T3 category in his Can-Am.

Erik van Loon (Toyota) and Miroslav Zapletal (Ford) rounded off the top 10, with Guillaume de Mevius finishing 11th and second in T3 and Saudi driver Khalid Al-Jafla taking 12th spot. Poland’s Jakub Przygonski was fifth fastest on the day and finished 14th after fuel issues on the first day.

Dutchman Kees Koolen finished in 13th place and first in the FIA T4 section in his South Racing Can-Am Maverick X3.

He was second best on the day’s stage to a resurgent Aron Domzala, but the Pole’s first-day woes had given Koolen a massive cushion, and he duly closed the gap on his rival for the FIA T4 title.

Khalifa Al-Attiyah, brother of overall event winner Nasser, was third in the category, but technical issues thwarted Lorenço Rosa.

Czech driver Martop Prokop had been unable to start Hail Baja 1, but the former WRC star was permitted to take part in the second leg of the National Rally for testing purposes.

Yamaha’s Adrien van Beveren delivered another polished performance on his pre-Dakar test to crush his amateur rivals in the motorcycle category.

The Frenchman won the stage by 23 minutes, 16 seconds from Konrad Dabrowski to record a winning margin over the Pole of 48 minutes, 25 seconds. Saudi rider Mishal Al-Ghuneim finished a distant third. 

Riyadh Saud Al-Shammeri won his second successive stage to confirm victory in the quad category on his Yamaha. Former Hail Rally winner Absulmajeed Al-Khulaifi was second, 3 minutes and 52 seconds adrift, and Walid Al-Nahath came home in third place.

Al-Mashna Al-Shammeri won the National Rally by 28 minutes and 25 seconds from Mater Abdullah Al-Shammeri.

Hail Rally Toyota 2020 is taking place under the supervision of the Hail Regional Development Authority in cooperation with the General Authority for Tourism and National Heritage and the General Authority for Sport.

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