Cyril Despres has won his fourth Dakar Rally. (Getty)
Despres and Peterhansel crowned champion
16 Jan 2012, 12:00 AM
Cyril Despres and Stephane Peterhansel have again been crowned Dakar Champions.
While the last special was won by Norway's PÃ¥a Anders Ullevalseter (motorcycles) and Robby Gordon (cars), France's Despres and Peterhansel claimed their fourth and tenth Dakars respectively, all categories included.
The champions were applauded on the podium on Lima's Plaza de Armas by a huge crowd which came to acclaim both the competitors and the arrival of the rally to Peru's capital Lima.
In all 97 motorcycles, 12 quads, 78 cars and 60 trucks made it to the finishing line of the 33rd Dakar, 249 of the 443 vehicles which started the rally in Mar del Plata.
After covering 8,300 kilometres on roads, courses and dunes since the start in Mar del Plata, the gap between Marc Coma and Cyril Despres was 53'20". He now holds one more Dakar title than his fierce rival Marc Coma.
Once again, the extremely close race between the two champions proved that one has to be an all-rounder in order to win a Dakar: physical stamina is important, navigational mistakes were tiny but enough to decide their duel, their piloting was as good as it was fast, strategy played an important role, the mechanical aspect (on identical KTMs) was well-managed, with a disappointment for Marc Coma: on the eve of the finish, a gearbox breakdown prevented him from fighting on at a time when he was leading the general classification. The Catalan was also forced to replace his engine, which gave rise to a 45-minute penalty pursuant to the new rule. This time loss proved fatal, following a two-week battle in which victories were measured in seconds.
Behind Despres and Coma, the riders vying for a podium spot were never in a position to challenge the title contenders. Strong and consistent Hélder Rodrigues finished the rally in 3rd place, just like last year. He took a stage win but ended up one hour behind the French champion. He may be able to mount a stronger challenge if he ends up with a Yamaha YZF, which neither David Casteu nor Olivier Pain was able to place at the top of the classification.
On the route between Mar del Plata and Lima, those following the motorcycle category discovered that the future of Catalonia no longer rests exclusively on Marc Coma's shoulders. The breakthrough of this year came from Joan Barreda, who lost all chances of shining in the overall classification at the beginning of the rally (11th at the end) but was still able to leave his mark on the race, with a stage win and eight specials in the Top five.
Italy's Alessandro Boturri was the fastest rookie in the Dakar (8th, 2 h 59'04" behind Despres), racing for the new team Bordone-Ferrari, which also placed Jordi Viladoms in fourth. The Catalan clan can be happy, with Laia Sanz taking the win in the ladies' category. On the other hand, Stéphane Hamard won the classification of riders participating without assistance.
In the car category, everyone expected it to be a Mini affair, since the X-Raid team seemed to have the best hardware and the best drivers... and this was the case. In the end, the Frankfurt-based team won eight stages out of thirteen with four different pilots (with Stéphane Peterhansel taking three).
Most importantly, the team was always in command of the overall classification.
Therefore, it was no surprise to see the main duel take place between "Peter" and his most experienced teammate, Spain's Joan "Nani" Roma. Although he took the lead in stage 3, master "Peter" still had to wait until the penultimate stage to get an unassailable advantage.
In the end, Stéphane Peterhansel took his fourth win in the car category (the first in South America) with a margin of 41'56" over the Catalan driver, joining Vatanen as the record-holder in the car category. Most importantly, the driver from Vésoul has written yet another chapter in the history of the Dakar with his tenth win, all categories included.
Nevertheless, X-Raid's irresistible performance cannot hide Robby Gordon's comeback.
Aided by the driving skills of his team-mate and defending champion, Qatar's Nasser Al-Attiyah, and propelled by the raw power of his car (whose compliance with the rules was disputed), the driver from California left his mark on the 33rd edition of the rally, both on the course and in the bivouac, since he was the only pilot able to stand up to the X-Raid tyranny.
But, despite his three stage victories, Gordon only managed to finish fifth in the overall classification, more than 2 h 15' down.
The highlight of the 2012 Dakar was the performance of ever-consistent Giniel de Villiers, with a less boisterous but more effective style. Although his preparation was cut short and the project was still in the making, the South African driver managed to crack a podium place in the very first participation of the new Toyota. This will give him confidence and ambition for the future.
Finally, the win in the two-wheel drive category went to Ronan Chabot and his SMG buggy. He was extremely consistent and beat South Africa's Mark Corbett by over nine hours. This margin would have made much easier the life of Xavier Foj, the winner of the production category. But once again, the Spaniard had to wait until the final part of the race to open the decisive gap and win the race against his best enemy, Japan's Jun Mitsuhashi, by 59'.
The statistics of the quad category are misleading. Defending champion Alejandro Patronelli managed to get back-to-back wins. He seized the lead after the Copiapó-Copiapó loop and never let it go. His brother Marcos lost all his chances when he conceded 1 h 20' in stage 7.
But the formal domination of the race by the elder of the brothers from Las Flores was contested throughout the entire rally by another Argentinean: Tomás Maffei. Last year's seventh-placed pilot took the lead after stages four and five and was able to cling onto the Patronellis, only losing his second place after stage nine.
The list of stage winners is proof of how hotly contested the race was: four for Maffei, including the prestigious finale in Lima, and three for each of the brothers. Behind the terrific trio, Chile's Ignacio Casale and Uruguay's Sergio Lafuente round off the Top five, over six and eight hours back, respectively. The Italo-French pilot Camelia Liparoti went one better than last year, finishing ninth.
Finally, today will go down in history as the first time the Dakar rally was won by Gerard de Rooy and the Italian constructor Iveco. A winning combination which already seemed to have it in the bag at the start in Mar del Plata, such were the means mobilised by the Dutch armada to reach their goals.
Nevertheless, the balance was only tipped in favour of De Rooy Jr after stage 9, with the withdrawal of Aleš Loprais due to an accident. The young Czech driver had been able to keep Gerard de Rooy in his sights until then, losing only 15'39" in the general classification.
Despite this mano a mano, it was de Rooy who left his mark on the 2012 edition by taking the most stages (five) and leading the race from stage 4 onwards. 25 years after his father Jan, Gerard has written a new chapter of De Rooy history in the Dakar, in a category marked by the failure of the Kamazs to repeat last year's dominating performance. The overhaul of their management team still has to pay dividends. Eduard Nikolayev's disqualification for anti-sportive behaviour in stage 4 showed just how difficult the transition is proving to be. Nevertheless, this allowed Andrey Karginov and the reserved Kazakh Artur Ardavichus to shine by taking their maiden victories at the Dakar.
YOUR SAY
YOUR COMMENTS
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25 Feb 2012 21:25 AEST
Aren't all yanks fat?
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20 Jan 2012 10:23 AEST
Flashy flash flash. I will not be watching the 2013 Dakar coverage if the stroboscopic flashy video editing techniques are used again next year. Dakar scenery is stunning and the action is exciting enough without being subjected to cheap and irritating production. There must have been at least 100 bright flashes every half-hour episode making viewing almost impossible. So please please please Mr Flashy Editor person, STOP this - it is not clever, it is disturbing and distracting.
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18 Jan 2012 8:46 AEST
I like to see if every other competitor had a reduction in their times when they were stuck or was it the top "French" guys only. Obviously the french arn't mud runners. Back to Africa less chance of rain. SBS should look at an hour broadcast, seems a lot of work and money for half an hour and we only get to see the top guys. Id like to see the private teams as well.
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17 Jan 2012 13:59 AEST
I second Paul's comments re Cyril Despres being a joke. If you are stuck in the mud and lose time, wear it !. It would be a fine old race if every competitor protested on such things and won their protest !. And a great broadcast SBS... Thanks !!.
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17 Jan 2012 8:50 AEST
I agree with "Fair Go Mate", I could not push a bike out by myself.However, I would make sure I would not impede a vehicle coming past.To me it was close to obstruction and I would have stepped away for 15 seconds.
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16 Jan 2012 23:01 AEST
There is no way Stephane Peterhansel should be on the podium after his cowardly shunt of the biker in the middle of the creek. @Robin, I'd like to see you try standing waist deep in water in the middle of a creek and push a bike out by yourself! Go back an look at the footage. There was another biker ahead of Filippo Ciotto, getting a push out of the creek. He was simply waiting his turn, as a good sportsman would, in that situation. Then the arrogant Frenchman comes thumping through. Farce!
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16 Jan 2012 22:03 AEST
Well done to the minis, I'm so glad that the fat yank with his fat trophy truck got pumped. Its sad to see coma lose the way he did rather than a race to the end.
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16 Jan 2012 21:52 AEST
WIll SBS replay the final 26' Dakar considering the intermittent and continuous drop out of sound and vision during the telecast with adequate notice of a reply? It was frustrating to fans who watched what was the only telecast of the race on commercial TV. Could this problem not have been resolved sooner? To happen on the final show with presentations, results and interviews was dismal.
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16 Jan 2012 18:18 AEST
Can't wait for Robby Gordon to win next year. Good on Stephane for his 10th win. Glad to see Cyril Despres win. Stephane should have been penalised for what he did to that rider. Sad to see Holowczyc drop down after doing so well in the beginning (at least he finished in the top 10!) And sad to see that Przygonski was out of the race after only 3 stages due to bike problems. Overall, an awesome rally!
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16 Jan 2012 17:06 AEST
If you are in a race and crash you should get out of the way of other competitors coming through. I mean you never see racing drivers standing idiotically in the middle of the circuit and then complaining if a vehicle brushes them lightly and pretending your back is hurt.The bike rider should have been severley penalised for selfishness. The Minis won 8 out of the 14 stages and it was fun listening to Gordon's (Hummer) girl like comments
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