Hyundai’s Tanak and co-driver Martin Jarveoja were involved in rally-long battle with Toyota’s Ogier and Vincent Landais, as the WRC trailed a new shorter 48-hour format for the first time on Sardinia’s rough gravel roads.
Tanak put Ogier under pressure through Sunday’s four stages overhauling a 17.1s to snatch a stunning win by 0.2s in the final stage, after Ogier suffered a final stage puncture.
It is the joint-closest finish for the win in WRC history, matching the 2011 Jordan Rally when Ogier beat Jari-Matti Latvala.
Hyundai’s part-time driver Dani Sordo survived 16 attritional stages to complete the podium [+2m25.6], his first rostrum since last September’s Acropolis Rally.
Two stage wins from Friday’s new-look four-stage itinerary helped Ogier into 4.5s lead over Tanak heading into an eventful and long Saturday, comprising of 149 stage kilometres.
Ogier suffered a puncture on the opening test which briefly handed the lead to Tanak by 0.1s. After electing to take only one spare Ogier was forced to be careful on the brutal rocky roads where the puncture risk was high.
However, a fastest time on the next test put Ogier back in the lead, but it was short-lived as Tanak responded to lead by 3.5s at the end of the morning.
Sébastien Ogier, Vincent Landais, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1
Photo by: Toyota Racing
Ogier reclaimed the lead in the afternoon which coincided with Tanak revealing that his Hyundai team had asked him to “be safe and not push”. The Hyundai team judged the extra risk required to continue to challenge for the win was too much, after losing Thierry Neuville as he crashed from third place on stage eight.
The team instruction coupled with a drop in confidence behind the wheel of his i20 N helped Ogier into a 17.1s lead. But come Sunday Tanak unleashed a charge motivated by Super Sunday points to push Ogier all the way before eclipsing the 6.2s deficit in a dramatic final stage.
As a result, Tanak has moved to joint-second in the championship with Elfyn Evans, 18 points behind Neuville.
Sordo enjoyed solid run and climbed the leaderboard to third after Neuville and Toyota’s Takamoto Katsuta retired on Saturday. Katsuta had inherited third after Neuville lost concentration for a fraction and careered off the road, while Katsuta dropped out with a gearbox issue.
Title contender Evans finished fourth [+2m37.8s] after struggling all rally. It began with a puncture…
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