Record-breaker Loeb storms to WRC win number 59

Rally Deutschland - Day 3

By Franck Drui

22 August 2010 - 16:51
Record-breaker Loeb storms to WRC (...)

Sebastien Loeb took a giant step towards claiming his seventh World Rally Championship title by winning Rallye Deutschland today.

His victory, by 51.3 seconds over Citroen team-mate Dani Sordo, takes his tally of wins on the Trier-based event to eight, a record at WRC level.

Loeb, who has now won 59 world championship rallies and stretches his title lead to 58 points over Citroen Junior Team driver Sebastien Ogier in the process, was never headed throughout the 19-stage all-asphalt event, which covered a competitive distance of 407 kilometres, making it the longest round of the WRC so far this season.

At the finish in Trier, the 36-year-old said: “It’s a very good victory for me, quite incredible and I’m really pleased to win. I have a good feeling here in Germany and I don’t like to be beaten on this rally even though I wasn’t sure before the start that I could win because Dani was strong and because this is not an easy rally. We have a bigger lead in the championship now and this is also good.”

Loeb underlined his dominance of the event with the fastest time on two of Sunday’s five special stages, which brought his total number of stage wins on the rally to nine.

Sordo, whose second place was his third podium finish of 2010, was competing alongside new co-driver Diego Vallejo for the first time. The result elevates him ahead of Mikko Hirvonen into fifth in the title chase after the works Ford driver retired when his Focus suffered a broken gearbox on Sunday’s second stage.

“I am really happy how it has gone with Diego for our first time together,” said Sordo. “Today was about not making any mistakes and keeping my position, which is very important for Citroen and the manufacturers’ championship.”

Sebastien Ogier made it a Citroen podium lockout after fending off Jari-Matti Latvala’s advances, despite a stall on Sunday’s opening stage. Afterwards, Latvala said: “It’s my best result ever in Germany so I am really happy even though I did not have the speed to catch Ogier. Apart from one mistake everything has gone well.”

Petter Solberg, who set the pace through the 22.58-kilometre Dhrontal stage on Sunday morning, finished fifth in his privately-run C4, despite a slipping clutch on the penultimate stage of the rally.

Ex-Formula One world champion Kimi Raikkonen started the final stage 5.6s behind Briton Matthew Wilson. Despite going faster than the Stobart M-Sport pilot to claim his first stage victory in the WRC, Raikkonen settled for seventh, 3.8s behind sixth-placed Wilson.

“I made too many mistakes and lost too much time this morning,” said Raikkonen. “Even though I don’t have the experience I expect more from myself so it is a shame that we lost sixth.”

Khalid Al Qassimi completed his recovery from 61st position after sliding into a ditch on Friday’s opening test by finishing eighth overall in his Focus.

Ken Block should have bagged the first points of his WRC career but a broken alternator belt on the road section heading to Sunday’s first stage resulted in his premature exit from the event.

Overall standing after SS19 - end of Day 3:

Pos.DriverCarTime
01 Sébastien LOEB Citroën C4 WRC 3h59m38.3s
02 Dani SORDO Citroën C4 WRC +51.3s
03 Sébastien OGIER Citroën C4 WRC +2m13.3s
04 Jari-Matti LATVALA Ford Focus WRC +2m33.9s
05 Petter SOLBERG Citroën C4 WRC +6m47.7s
06 Matthew WILSON Ford Focus WRC +8m46.7s
07 Kimi RAIKKONEN Citroën C4 WRC +8m50.5s
08 Khalid AL QASSIMI Ford Focus WRC +17m36.5s
09 Mark VAN ELDIK Subaru Impreza WRC +17m53.0s
10 Patrik SANDELL Skoda Fabia S2000 +17m58.8s
11 Martin PROKOP Ford Fiesta S2000 +18m03.5s
12 Bernhard TEN BRINKE Ford Focus WRC +19m00.6s
13 Per Gunnar ANDERSSON Skoda Fabia S2000 +21m11.4s
14 Eyvind BRYNILDSEN Skoda Fabia S2000 +21m14.0s
15 Xavier PONS Ford Fiesta S2000 +23m58.9s

WRC

Search

Motorsport news

Pics

Videos