Dakar leaders feel the heat on scorching Stage 9
The 2020 Dakar Rally served up a mammoth Stage 9 which had competitors on the road for nearly 900 kilometres. The trip east from Wadi Al-Dawasir to Haradh included a 415-kilometre timed special stage that saw race leaders come under severe pressure.
The margins were dramatically squeezed in the car race as front runner Carlos Sainz (ESP)saw his advantage significantly dented. Sainz has led the general classification since day three, but his cushion is down to a mere 24 seconds following Stage 9.
“On the first part we lost a little bit of time when we lost the way – we lost five minutes or something like that. After, I don't know what happened… the tread came off the tyre and we had to stop. It was not a good day for us.” – Carlos Sainz
It’s none other than reigning car champion Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT) who is breathing down the neck of Sainz in second overall. Also closing in is Monsieur Dakar himself, Stéphane Peterhansel (FRA) who set the fastest time today. Peterhansel stays third overall, only 6m38s behind fellow Mini Buggy driver Sainz.
“It looks like the three cars are very close together. For all three of us, it is possible that one can win the Dakar.” – Nasser Al-Attiyah
Kuba Przygonski (POL) enjoyed one of his best day at the 2020 Dakar with fourth place on the stage. 2009 Dakar winner Giniel De Villiers (ZAF) brought his Toyota Hilux home with the eighth fastest time on Stage 9.
“We had a good day and attacked from the word go. The first part was very technical and great fun. After a fast section, the route headed into the sand, where it was very rocky.” – Kuba Przygonski
The good news keeps coming for Red Bull Off-Road Team USA on the second week of the Dakar. Not only did they make it a third consecutive side-by-side stage win between Wadi Al-Dawasir and Haradh, but they also secured their first 1-2 stage result of the Dakar. Stage winner Blade Hildebrand (USA) was followed home a minute later by team-mate Mitch Guthrie Jr (USA).
“It’s always good to have those days where you can set the pace for the rest of the pack. That’s exactly what we did today.” – Blade Hildebrand
While Hildebrand and Guthrie compete for stage wins in the Dakar Experience class, it’s still all to play for in the general classification. Second placed Chaleco Lopez (CHI) trails SxS race leader Casey Currie (USA) by less than 24 minutes.
Bike race leader Ricky Brabec (USA) was another who was reeled in as the category resumed on Stage 9. Defending champion Toby Price (AUS) was the among the chasing pack who closed the gap on Brabec on the way to Haradh. Price is now 26m43s behind Brabec and has climbed to third overall.
“You have your good moments and you have your bad ones and unfortunately 2020 hasn’t quite been good for us but we’ll still keep giving it a good fight and see how we go.” – Toby Price
Price’s fellow Red Bull KTM Factory Team riders – Matthias Walkner (AUT) and Luciano Benavides (ARG) – were also placed in the Top 10 on Stage 9. These results keep Walkner and Benavides sixth and seventh overall respectively.
“It was really not the best day for me. I didn’t feel so well already at the beginning. I struggled a bit on the rocky and stony tracks with the bike. Then it got a little bit better, but, for sure, it was not one of my best days.” – Matthias Walkner
Laia Sanz (ESP) remains the highest ranked female biker in Saudi Arabia, advancing to 17th overall after another solid stage.
“I enjoyed the beginning of the stage because it was more technical. Then after the refuelling it was just flat out, full gas.” – Laia Sanz
It seems like there’s no stopping Andrey Karginov (RUS) as he marches towards his second Dakar title. The Team Kamaz Master trucker picked up his fourth consecutive stage win en route to Haradh. Karginov’s closest competitor, fellow Kamaz trucker Anton Shibalov (RUS), is nearly 40 minutes back. Two-time Silk Way Rally winner Dmitry Sotnikov (RUS)has now joined his Kamaz team-mates in the Top 5 overall.
“We finished the stage together. It was like this the whole day, we drove together with Anton Shibalov. He had a puncture at the beginning of the stage and we helped him.” – Dmitry Sotnikov
Ignacio Casale (CHI) still has control of the quad race with three stages left at the Dakar. Casale’s fourth stage win of the 2020 Dakar has stretched his lead to 45 minutes as he hunts down a third quad bike title.
“I found it difficult with the wind, it slowed me down quite a bit, but I didn’t have any real problems on the stage, no falls, no mechanical issues or navigation mistakes. We’re getting a little bit nearer to the end.” – Ignacio Casale
The challenges continue to pile up at the 2020 Dakar with tomorrow’s journey to Shubaytah being the first half of a two-part marathon stage. Competitors will be separated from their mechanics overnight and forced to make any repairs necessary themselves, and that’s after 534 kilometres of desert racing!
Top three overall in each category after Stage 9 of the 2020 Dakar Rally
Side-by-side
- Casey Currie (USA)/Sean Berriman (USA) Can-Am 43h 51m 49s
- Chaleco Lopez/Juan Pablo Latrach Vinagre (CHI) Can-Am +23m 37s
- Sergei Kariakin (RUS)/Anton Vlasiuk (RUS) Can-Am +41m 26s
Car
- Carlos Sainz (ESP)/Lucas Cruz (ESP) MINI Buggy 35h 11m 54s
- Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Mathieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota +24s
- Stéphane Peterhansel (FRA)/Paulo Fiuza (PRT) MINI Buggy +06m 38s
Bike
- Ricky Brabec (USA) Honda 31h 59m 29s
- Pablo Quintanilla (CHI) Husqvarna +20m 53s
- Toby Price (AUT) KTM +26m 43s
Truck
- Andrey Karginov (RUS) Kamaz 38h 05m 25s
- Anton Shibalov (RUS) Kamaz +38m 35s
- Siarhei Viazovich (BLR) Maz +01h 08m 36s
Quad
- Ignacio Casale (CHI) Yamaha 40h 52m 23s
- Simon Vitse (FRA) Yamaha +44m 57s
- Rafal Sonik (POL) Yamaha +01 h 32m 33s
Story and photos courtesy of RedBullContentPool.com