Halfway there

09 January 2011 | 0:00 - By Jacob Black

Halfway into the Dakar Rally, only the Coconut Resort race duo of Geoff Olholm and Steve Riley, the BMW of Simon Pavey, and the lone remaining GHR Honda of Jacob Smith remain for Australia.

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The Coconut Resort team employed their bush mechanic skills to continue on in the Dakar (Image: Jacob Black)

For the Coconut Resort Race team, the last two days have been hellish, returning from stage five just four hours before embarking on stage six - a stage which then took them until 1AM the following day to finish.

Running into the rest day with two mammoth days, and a massive amount of repair, maintenance and modification work to be done on their car, I was surprised to see Geoff up and about in the bivouac this morning, expecting him to sleep in on the rest day, particularly as today is Olholm’s birthday.

“We made it in!” he explained when he saw me this morning. “We were lucky to get through. The day before yesterday, the wheel fell off!

"Basically the bracket holding the A-arm snapped, so we couldn’t fix that, and the other a-arm was all snapped. Because it broke the a-arm it broke the drive shaft, so Steve fixed that, and we waited five hours for the truck to come with the welder on it so we could weld the bracket back on and we welded it up.

“That was about six or seven at night, then we had a good run to the dunes but then the turbo blew,” Olholm explained, adding that Riley had to work without experience to solve the problem.

“So Steve had to change the turbo, which he’d never done, and he did a fantastic job there, and that was midnight, and everyone was camped there - a truck in front of us rolled over while we were there, so there were 20 people camped and we decided we needed to get in.

“We got every way point, the guy at the gate couldn’t believe because cars couldn’t do it, but we got every one.

“We had to get in because the guys had to do work on the car. Yesterday we had a good run because we took it steady, but today the guys will put a new turbo on it because it’s a second hand turbo there, and we’ve got a huge couple of days ahead."

Olholm then compared the Dakar to the Australian Safari, saying that there is no comparison between the two events.

“That course yesterday was rougher than seven days of Safari, that course yesterday, no Safari car would finish,” he said.

Still, Olholm says that some of the things Australians take for granted on the Safari - like vents in the bash plate to prevent sand building up - don’t come standard on his UK built x-raid.

“There are so many things that are standard practice in Australia, with how we build the cars that they just haven’t done here,” he said. “But that’s OK, we’ll fix it up a bit as we go along.”

Not only did Riley do a turbo change, change a tyre just one kilometre from home and weld the a-bar back onto the car, when the truck arrived with the welder, there was no welding mask, so the innovative bush mechanic simply donned three pairs of sun glasses to do the job.

Riley says he saw three trucks rolled, one while the duo waited, “He was trying to back down the dune and he just went over,” Riley explained. “It made such a loud thud.

“We were just going past rolled over 18 tonne trucks, cars, bikes, the lot, it was insane!”

Riley says there is nothing like the Dakar, with the most surreal moment occurring when the Russian team decided to camp where they were for the night: “They just pulled up, got out the ghetto blaster and cranked up the music,” he laughed.

“It filled the whole valley with songs like ‘Take a walk on the wild side’, and it was big valley, but it was so loud you had to put your fingers in your ears.”

With 50 per-cent of the rally now behind them, the Coconut Crew have got some maintenance and mods to do before the next marathon stage of the rally. Including, drilling holes in the bash plates to allow sand to escape and strengthening the a-arms and chassis.

I had to ask Geoff if he’d considered giving up at any stage during the last couple of days, “Nope,” he replied. “Never say die.”

The next stage is a monster 660km of racing from Arica down to Antofagasta.

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Comments (12)

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17 Jan 2011 7:16 AEST

chris stone

From: australiua

dakar 2011

ledgend event ledgend guys done well

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12 Jan 2011 22:39 AEST

Tanya Pavey-Lloyd

From: Gold Coast

Great to see some Aussies still standing!

I would love to see profiling and personal stories on the Aussies and others. That is what makes the Dakar what it is. I feel they spend way to much time reporting on the top 1 - 5 in the factory class. It would be great to see reports from all the classes and the human stories behind.

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12 Jan 2011 18:57 AEST

Murray

From: South West WA

Where's me update eh!

Not a lot of comments but rest assured I'm reading every word of this actually if dakar coverage was about 8 hrs a day I think that would be far more reasonable than the current half hour highlights package. I'm hoping SBS is planning on expanding its coverage for next year as well as covering the silk road rally and the Australian Safari. So two days whats happened to Mr Black is he still wandering in the dunes of Chillie?

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12 Jan 2011 15:32 AEST

Justin

From: Austin, TX, USA

Dakar!

Absolutely great stuff. You Aussies know how to race, not to mention cover a race. Thinking about the flooding down in Oz as well. Thanks for the great article.

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12 Jan 2011 13:12 AEST

Derek Flemming

From: Australia sunshine coast

GUTS EFFORT GEOFF

Hi Geoff , cant belive what you are doing , what , racing the dakar WOW Geoff what an effort and fantastic placing overall . ( lifes definitly not a test drive with you ) , I,ll now be watching with great interest , the best best good luck in the following stages . derek

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11 Jan 2011 3:15 AEST

Bernard Whelan

From: Dublin, Ireland

The Dakar Rally

Great to see the Aussies still hanging in there. The Australian Safari rally is fairly comparable to the the terrain experienced on the Dakar. Great coverage on SBS, it would be great to be a Journalist with SBS covering the event.

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10 Jan 2011 20:41 AEST

simon lee

From: sydney

Good on you Jacob

Nice work Jacob. Another good year deep in the dust. Wish I was with you again (not!)

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10 Jan 2011 20:31 AEST

lisa alkira and tyla riley

From: leongatha victoria

hang big skids

keep up the cement breakfast boys.......lots of love

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10 Jan 2011 17:02 AEST

Geoff Curry

From: Hobart. Tasmania.

Good work Geoff & Steve.

Great to see Geoff & Steve doing so well. Go Boys Go.

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10 Jan 2011 12:06 AEST

Casper Pieters

From: Melbourne

racing

Guys I know you have fun, but I think racing in these oil guzzlers through impoverished war torn countries is seriously out of sync with the sane world. Let's move on and do something beneficial for a change.

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About this Blog

Deep in the Dust is the place to enjoy all the latest stories and interviews from Jacob Black, SBS's man on the ground in Argentina and Chile for the 2011 Dakar Rally.

Jacob Black Jacob Black is a motorsport writer and broadcaster. An accomplished feature article writer and a co-author to several books on Australia's V8 Supercars, (1K08, 1K09 and V808) Jacobs hold a Bachelor of Media, Communications and Culture in Broadcast Journalism from Murdoch University.

Inspired by his father's passion for touring car racing, Jacob developed a keen interest in all things motorsport from an early age. After traveling there in 2008, he also developed a deep affection for South America and in particular, Argentina.

Born in Perth, Western Australia, Jacob is now based in St Kilda, Victoria.

 
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