Rovanperä in control after near-clean sweep in Gran Canaria
Rovanperä rockets into Sunday with a 45.2 sec lead, having won 12 of 13 stages and nearly doubled his overnight advantage
Hot on his heels, Sébastien Ogier holds second, 22.9 sec ahead of Elfyn Evans, consolidating his runner-up spot.
Following closely, Takamoto Katsuta sits fourth, just 25.7 sec ahead of Adrien Fourmaux in fifth.

The Toyota GAZOO Racing star remains firmly on course to become the first-ever winner of a WRC round held on Gran Canarian soil. He will carry a commanding 45.2sec advantage into Sunday’s five-stage final leg, leading an all-GR Yaris Rally1 top four.
Arriving at this fourth round 57 points adrift of the championship lead, Rovanperä has found a rhythm that nobody else has been able to match. He won six of Saturday’s asphalt stages to almost double his overnight advantage — which stood at 26.8sec on Friday — before Elfyn Evans prevented a clean sweep by topping the evening's super special inside the Gran Canaria Arena. Even so, Rovanperä has claimed victory on 12 of the 13 stages run so far.
Evans holds third place, 22.9sec down on Ogier, with Takamoto Katsuta a further 35.8sec adrift. Toyota looked set to lock out the top five before Sami Pajari crashed into a wooden barrier on the penultimate stage, retiring after having held fourth overall.
Ogier, who virtually conceded his hopes of victory on Friday, has since focused on consolidating second place. The Frenchman managed to pull further clear of Evans on Saturday, doubling his buffer after beating his Welsh team-mate across five stages.
As it stands, Evans is on course to extend his championship lead beyond 40 points, with nearest rivals Thierry Neuville and Ott Tänak enduring fraught weekends. Both Hyundai drivers sit sixth and seventh respectively, behind their team-mate Adrien Fourmaux, after struggling with set-up issues believed to be linked to differential settings.
Benefiting from Pajari’s retirement, Fourmaux now occupies fifth despite stalling in the last stage, and trails Katsuta by 25.7sec, while Neuville and Tänak remain within touching distance of the Frenchman.
Elsewhere, Grégoire Munster’s hopes took a hit when he required spectator assistance after running wide and beaching his M-Sport Ford Puma Rally1 on SS10. The incident cost him three minutes and dropped him to 13th overall, promoting WRC2 frontrunners Yohan Rossel and Alejandro Cachón, as well as Munster’s team-mate Josh McErlean, into eighth, ninth, and 10th respectively.
Sunday’s finale features just under 60 kilometres of competitive action, culminating with the bonus points-paying Wolf Power Stage, which wraps up the event at 13:15 local time.