American Miller captures 1st Dakar stage

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
American Miller captures 1st Dakar stage
January 6, 2010


SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -American Mark Miller captured his first stage win in the Dakar Rally on Wednesday, winning the fifth leg to lead a Volkswagen sweep that gave Carlos Sainz the overall lead.


Miller won the grueling 300-mile run across the Atacama Desert from Copiapo north to Antofagasta, finishing 5 hours, 6 minutes, 15 seconds. Sainz was 2:10 behind and Qatar's Nasser Al-Attiyah was third, 4:27 back.

NASCAR driver Robby Gordon finished fourth in a Hummer, 4:48 off Miller's pace.

Sainz leads Al-Attiyah by 4:37 overall, and Miller is 9:39 off the pace in third.

Miller was jubilant, declaring the real race had just begun as the rally will spend five stages in the Atacama, one of the driest places on Earth.

``I would say it was the perfect day,'' Miller said. ``Today was the first big day of the Dakar. We were aware of it - all of us. The Dakar really started today and we are in the top positions. Today we stopped playing kiddies. There are still a few long days in the sand dunes.''

In motorbikes, defending champion Marc Coma's Sherco blew a rear tire while leading by six minutes, allowing Contardo Lopez to win the stage on an Aprilla in 5:52:40. Cyril Despres' KTM was 1:30 behind, allowing the Frenchman to extend his overall lead to 37:37 on Lopez.

Chile's Lopez attributed part of his victory to racing at home.

``I had had problems in Argentina and now I am really happy to win a stage on home turf,'' he said. ``Now I can think about the overall standings. In Chile all is fine - even gas is better.''

Rally great Stephane Peterhansel, who started the day as overall leader by more than 7 1/2 minutes, stalled twice with mechanical problems and finished more than two hours behind Miller, probably costing him a 10th Dakar title.

Peterhansel broke his BMW's rear axle at 84 miles and it took an hour to fix. He stopped for another half-hour after 134 miles and also got lost, ending up plunging to 10th overall, more than two hours behind Sainz.

``We lost the rally today,'' the Frenchman said. ``We stand no chance of even dreaming about victory ... that is sure.''

Sainz, the former two-time world rally champion from Spain who began his Dakar quest in 2006, had minor problems but nothing compared to Peterhansel's nightmare.

``Too bad we had a flat tire,'' he said. ``We changed the wheel and must have lost about two minutes. But I am really happy that we got through this section against the clock that was really long and really tough. Obviously the time lost by Stephane Peterhansel is an advantage for us, but it's only the fifth stage.

``Personally, I intend to keep going at my own pace, the pace I have held since the beginning - and the pace that is delivering.''

The sixth stage on Thursday takes the rally 260 miles farther north from Antofagasta to Iquique.
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
DAKAR 2010

Dakar Rally: Robby Gordon takes the lead

NASCAR star Robby Gordon--who finished third in last year's Dakar Rally--has taken his first stage win on this year's event in his Hummer, beating rally leader Stephane Peterhansel (BMW) by a mere second.

As the crews entered Chile, the strain began to tell. Owing to treacherous road conditions and the fact that many competitors had only completed the previous leg in the middle of the night, the organizers decided to shorten Tuesday's action from 126 miles to 101 miles.

Second place on the stage was enough for Peterhansel to extend his lead to more than seven minutes over Volkswagen's Carlos Sainz, who could only manage fourth place on the stage after losing his way.

His teammate, Nasser Al Attiyah, maintains third place but felt that he could have won the stage had it not been for a slow leak in a tire that forced him to stop twice to top up with air. About 10 minutes behind in fourth overall is Mark Miller, another Volkswagen driver. The American got stuck on a sand dune and had to get out of the car and jack it up to free it. He nonetheless maintains a sizeable advantage of nearly 40 minutes over Alfie Cox in fifth.

Last year's winner, Giniel de Villiers, admitted that the fight was over after losing three hours with an electrical problem on Monday. He is currently 20th overall.

"Now it's just a question of doing what we can and trying to enjoy it," he philosophically concluded. "However, I had a bad cold, and in those conditions, every pothole hurts twice as much!"

The crews continue their journey through Chile on Wednesday, moving into the Atacama desert where a mammoth 300-mile stage awaits.


dakar-gordon.jpg


GO ROBBY GO ! !
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Coma hit with 6-hour penalty in Dakar Rally

Coma hit with 6-hour penalty in Dakar Rally

Coma hit with 6-hour penalty in Dakar Rally
January 9, 2010


SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Defending motorbike champion Marc Coma was considering withdrawing from the Dakar Rally on Saturday after being hit with a six-hour penalty for illegally changing a tire during Friday's stage.


Meanwhile, quad leader Marcos Patronelli and his second-placed brother Alejandro Patronelli both withdrew on Saturday, incensed that Marcos was penalized three hours for changing a tire on Friday, which he denied. The Argentine brothers led the quads by more than three hours.

Coma, the winner in 2006 and 2009, was punished by race stewards for changing to a new tire before the start of the second half of the 370-mile seventh stage through the Atacama Desert, from Iquique back to Antofagasta.

The Spaniard finished second in the Dakar's longest stage to race leader Cyril Despres of France, and improved to second overall, more than 1 hour behind Despres. But the penalty relegated Coma to 24th overall.

The incident occurred during a neutral part of the stage, and rally rules say assistance between competitors was allowed only during racing.

Other riders warned the stewards about Coma's new wheel, and the officials made their decision after watching evidence from French TV video.

``I believe this is an injustice,'' Coma told Chile's Radio Cooperativa on Saturday. ``At no point was it possible to show that I changed wheels.''

Helder Rodrigues of Portugal moved into second place, 1:20:08 behind Despres, who looked set to win his third Dakar following the demotion of Coma.

The rally restarts on Sunday with a 293-mile run through the desert to Copiapo.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top