WRC - Ogier and Ingrassia take third win of the season
Tour de Corse - Sunday
Defending FIA World Rally Champions Sebastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia claimed their third WRC victory of the season today, winning the Tour de Corse by a margin of 36.1 seconds. Ott Tanak and Martin Jarveoja headed the Toyota challenge and finished second, ultimately ending up with over 30 seconds in hand to Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul, the Belgians having a late scare in the Power Stage with an unconfirmed engine problem.
In the FIA World Rally Championship standings, Ogier increases his lead at the top of the table and now has a 17-point advantage over Neuville, who in turn has 22 points in hand to third-place Tanak. Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT tops the Manufacturers’ Championship, but with only four points between the Korean team and M-Sport Ford, the battle looks set to rage on.
Today was the shortest of the event and took in just two stages. However, there was a sharp wake-up call for the crews early this morning as the competition kicked off with a daunting 55 kilometre test before closing with the much shorter 16 kilometre Power Stage. Ogier, who led from start to finish, was able to manage the pace and the five-time Champion cruised to the finish, picking up an additional three points on the all-important Power Stage. Victory in Corsica represents the 43rd WRC victory for both he and Ingrassia.
After moving into second place by one-tenth of a second last night, Tanak was second fastest through the long stage, despite some understeer, but was gifted time by Neuville who was forced to complete the final stage down on power. He dropped nearly 15 seconds but had enough of a cushion to team-mate Dani Sordo to retain the final podium position.
The fight for fourth between Dani Sordo and Elfyn Evans continued during the final day and the rivals were split by just 3.5 seconds at the end of the event. Esapekka Lappi suffered heartache in the first stage; after fighting his way into podium contention yesterday, the Finn clipped a kerb and had to stop and change a broken wheel, losing him nearly two minutes. As a consequence, he dropped to sixth but took some consolation from maximum points in the Power Stage.
Andreas Mikkelsen has been at a loss to understand a lack of pace in Corsica and the Norwegian came home in seventh. Asphalt expert Jan Kopecky claimed the FIA WRC 2 Championship win, his second of the season, and finished eighth overall just ahead of Kris Meeke who returned for the final day of action after going off the road yesterday. After his Friday morning accident, Sebastien Loeb finished 14th, having shown the pace befitting a nine-time FIA World Rally Champion. The FIA Junior/WRC 3 Championship was won by Frenchman Jean-Baptiste Franceschi, who finished over 30 seconds ahead of Terry Folb.
The FIA World Rally Championship contenders now take the long trip to South America for one of the most popular events on the calendar, Rally Argentina (26-29 April).
Tour de Corse – Final Unofficial classification (subject to scrutineering)
1 | Sebastien Ogier / Julien Ingrassia | Ford Fiesta WRC | 3hr 26min 52.7sec |
2 | Ott Tanak / Martin Jarveoja | Toyota Yaris WRC | 3hr 27min 28.8sec |
3 | Thierry Neuville / Nicolas Gilsoul | Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC | 3hr 28min 00.2sec |
4 | Dani Sordo / Carlos del Barrio | Hyundai i20 Couple WRC | 3hr 28min 55.3sec |
5 | Elfyn Evans / Phil Mills | Ford Fiesta WRC | 3hr 28min 58.8sec |
6 | Esapekka Lappi / Janne Ferm | Toyota Yaris WRC | 3hr 29min 26.2sec |
7 | Andreas Mikkelsen / Anders Jæger | Hyundai i20 WRC | 3hr 29min 36.1sec |
8 | Jan Kopecky / Pavel Dresler | Skoda Fabia R5 | 3hr 37min 27.5sec |
9 | Kris Meeke / Paul Nagle | Citroen C3 WRC | 3hr 37min 33.2sec |
10 | Yoann Bonato / Benjamin Bouilloud | Citroen C3 R5 | 3hr 39min 18.7sec |