2012 Monte Carlo Rally

(Redirected from 2012 Rallye Monte Carlo)

The 2012 Monte Carlo Rally, officially 80ème Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo was the first round of the 2012 World Rally Championship (WRC) season. The rally took place between 18 and 22 January 2012.

2012 Monte Carlo Rally
80ème Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo
Round 1 of the 2012 World Rally Championship season
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Sébastien Loeb during Rally
Host countryMonaco Monaco
Rally baseMonte Carlo
Dates runJanuary 18 – 22 2012
Stages18[1] (433.36 km; 269.28 miles)[1]
Stage surfaceTarmac and snow
Overall distance1,772.52 km (1,101.39 miles)[1]
Statistics
Crews82[2] at start, 54 at finish
Overall results
Overall winnerFrance Sébastien Loeb
France Citroën Total WRT

Report edit

Introduction edit

The rally, which returned to the WRC calendar after a three-year absence,[3] started in Valence on Wednesday 18 January and covered over 1,339 kilometres (832.0 mi), including 433 kilometres (269.1 mi) of special stages. Stages were run in both daylight and at night, and the route included two passes through the famous Col de Turini stage on Saturday.[1] The rally became the first in the modern era of the sport to be held over the course of five days. 82 entries were registered for the event.[2]

Leg One (18 January) edit

2011 World Champion Sébastien Loeb took an early lead when he won the first stage of the rally, Le Moulinon–Antraigues. However, icy conditions on the second stage, Burzet–St Martial meant that Ford driver Jari-Matti Latvala took the lead when he adopted an unorthodox tyre strategy, using super-soft and studded tyres on opposite corners of his car. By the end of the stage, Latvala had established a thirty-second lead over Loeb.[4] Latvala's lead was short-lived, as he crashed out on the second running of Burzet–St Martial when he missed a pace note warning that a corner tightened on entry.[5] His car fell over a short drop, but could not be retrieved. Ford later confirmed that Latvala had retired from the rally, as the event was not run to "Rally 2" – formerly super-rally – regulations which would normally allow Latvala to restart the rally the next day.[6]

Latvala's accident meant that Loeb reclaimed the lead of the rally, one minute ahead of Mini's Dani Sordo and Petter Solberg in the second works Ford Fiesta. Sébastien Ogier finished the day fourth in his Škoda Fabia S2000, which he credited to the mixed conditions minimising the differences in performance between the WRC and Super 2000 cars. Evgeny Novikov was fifth, the first of the privateer WRC cars.[7]

Leg Two (19 January) edit

The second day of competition saw the running of six special stages, five of which were won by Loeb;[8] Sordo won the second run over Labatie D'Andaure–Lalouvesc. Ogier crashed out of the rally on the final stage of the day, the second pass over Lamastre–Gilhoc–Alboussière.[9] Ogier had been running sixth at the time of the accident. His co-driver, Julien Ingrassia, injured his arm in the crash, though the exact extent of his injuries was not revealed except to say that it was "not broken".[10]

At the end of the second day, Loeb's lead over Sordo was one minute and thirty-seven seconds, with third-placed Solberg a further three seconds behind.[8] Ford team principal Malcolm Wilson admitted that he felt Solberg was being "too conservative" with the car and encouraged him to chase Sordo as it was more important for Solberg to become familiar with the car's abilities than it was to score manufacturer points.[11] Loeb's team-mate Mikko Hirvonen was a further two minutes behind Solberg, holding a narrow lead over Novikov.[8]

Results edit

Event standings edit

Pos. Driver Co-driver Car Time Difference Points
Overall
1.   Sébastien Loeb   Daniel Elena Citroën DS3 WRC 4:32:39.9 0.0 28
2.   Dani Sordo   Carlos del Barrio Mini John Cooper Works WRC 4:35:25.4 2:45.5 18
3.   Petter Solberg   Chris Patterson Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:35:54.1 3:14.2 15
4.   Mikko Hirvonen   Jarmo Lehtinen Citroën DS3 WRC 4:36:46.7 4:06.8 14
5.   Evgeny Novikov   Denis Giraudet Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:38:43.3 6:03.4 11
6.   François Delecour   Dominique Savignoni Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:40:27.8 7:47.9 8
7.   Pierre Campana   Sabrina de Castelli Mini John Cooper Works WRC 4:41:11.3 8:31.4 6
8.   Ott Tänak   Kuldar Sikk Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:43:14.5 10:34.6 4
9.   Martin Prokop   Zdeněk Hrůza Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:48:50.6 16:10.7 2
10.   Armindo Araújo   Miguel Ramalho Mini John Cooper Works WRC 4:48:56.5 16:16.6 1
11.   Matthew Wilson   Scott Martin Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:51:30.9 +18:51.0 0
12.   Kevin Abbring   Lara Vanneste Škoda Fabia S2000 4:51:36.2 +18:56.3 -
13.   Henning Solberg   Ford Fiesta RS WRC 4:52:56.2 +20:16.3 -
14.   Craig Breen   Gareth Roberts Ford Fiesta S2000 4:57:06.2 +5:30.0 25*
15.   Bryan Bouffier   Xavier Panseri Peugeot 207 S2000 5:00:05.3 +8:29.1 -
S2000 / SWRC
1. (12.)   Kevin Abbring   Lara Vanneste Škoda Fabia S2000 4:51:36.2 0.0 -
2. (14.)   Craig Breen   Gareth Roberts Ford Fiesta S2000 4:57:06.2 +5:30.0 25*
3. (15.)   Bryan Bouffier   Xavier Panseri Peugeot 207 S2000 5:00:05.3 +8:29.1 -
Production Class 4 / PWRC
1. (18.)   Olivier Burri   Jean-Jacques Ferrero Mitsubishi Lancer Evo X 5:08:10.4 0.0 -**
2. (25.)   Richard Frau   Frédéric Vauclare Mitsubishi Lancer Evo X 5:21:55.6 +13:45.2 -**
3. (27.)   Stéphane Cornu   Fabrice Nedel Renault Mégane RS 5:24:15.6 +16:05.2 -**
4. (28.)   Jerôme Aymard   Sandrine Aymard Subaru Impreza WRX STi 5:27:11.8 +19:01.4 -**
5. (30.)   Michał Kościuszko   Maciek Szczepaniak Mitsubishi Lancer Evo X 5:35:14.8 +27:04.4 25
Production Class 8 / PWRC[12]
1. (42.)   Martin Rada   Jaroslav Jugas Alfa Romeo 147 5:48:32.2 0.0 -**
2. (54.)   Louise Cook   Stefan Davis Ford Fiesta ST 7:02:39.6 +1:14:07.4 18

* Only team eligible for SWRC points that was classified.

** These teams do not score points in PWRC.

Special stages edit

[1]

Day Stage Time (UTC+1) Name Length Winner Time Avg. spd. Rally leader
Leg 1
(18 Jan)
SS1 9:03 Le Moulinon – Antraigues 1 36.87 km   Sébastien Loeb 24:04.0 91.92 km/h   Sébastien Loeb
SS2 10:21 Burzet – St Martial 1 30.48 km   Jari-Matti Latvala 21:28.2 85.18 km/h   Jari-Matti Latvala
SS3 14:21 Le Moulinon – Antraigues 2 36.87 km   Sébastien Loeb 23:47.0 93.01 km/h
SS4 16:20 Burzet – St Martial 2 30.48 km   Sébastien Loeb 20:18.2 90.07 km/h   Sébastien Loeb
Leg 2
(19 Jan)
SS5 9:33 Labatie D'Andaure – Lalouvesc 1 19.00 km   Sébastien Loeb 11:22.5 100.22 km/h
SS6 10:14 St. Bonnet – St. Julien Molhesabate – St. Bonnet 1 25.22 km   Sébastien Loeb 12:37.7 119.83 km/h
SS7 11:37 Lamastre – Gilhoc – Alboussière 1 21.66 km   Sébastien Loeb 13:41.8 94.88 km/h
SS8 14:50 Labatie D'Andaure – Lalouvesc 2 19.00 km   Dani Sordo 11:14.9 101.35 km/h
SS9 15:31 St. Bonnet – St. Julien Molhesabate – St. Bonnet 2 25.22 km   Sébastien Loeb 12:29.6 121.12 km/h
SS10 16:54 Lamastre – Gilhoc – Alboussière 2 21.66 km   Sébastien Loeb 14:00.6 92.76 km/h
Leg 3
(20 Jan)
SS11 10:02 St-Jean-en-Royans – Font d'Urle 23.28 km   Petter Solberg 12:08.6 115.03 km/h
SS12 10:43 Cimetiere de Vassieux – Col de Gaudissart 24.13 km   Mikko Hirvonen 15:47.7 91.66 km/h
SS13 15:11 Montauban-sur-l'Ouvèze – Eygalayes 29.89 km   Mikko Hirvonen 17:08.7 104.60 km/h
Leg 4
(21 Jan)
SS14 15:11 Moulinet – La Bollène Vésubie 1 23.41 km   Mikko Hirvonen 15:38.4 89.81 km/h
SS15 15:54 Lantosque – Lucéram 1 18.81 km   Petter Solberg 12:57.0 87.15 km/h
SS16 19:34 Moulinet – La Bollène Vésubie 2 23.41 km   Petter Solberg 15:45.5 89.13 km/h
SS17 21:17 Lantosque – Lucéram 2 18.81 km   Petter Solberg 13:05.8 86.17 km/h
Leg 5
(22 Jan)
SS18 10:11 Ste Agnès – Col de la Madone (Power stage) 5.16 km   Sébastien Loeb 3:27.8 89.39 km/h

Power Stage edit

The "Power stage" was a 5.16 km (3.21 mi) stage at the end of the rally, held between Ste-Agnes and Col de la Madone.[1]

Pos Driver Time Diff. Avg. speed Points
1   Sébastien Loeb 3:27.8 0.0 89.39 km/h 3
2   Mikko Hirvonen 3:29.0 +1.2 88.88 km/h 2
3   Evgeny Novikov 3:30.4 +2.6 88.29 km/h 1

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Supplementary Regulations" (PDF). www.acm.mc. Automobile Club de Monaco. 22 November 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-01-13. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  2. ^ a b "Engagés 2012". www.acm.mc. Automobile Club de Monaco. Archived from the original on 2012-01-07. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
  3. ^ "WRC calendar for 2012 confirmed". World Rally Championship. International Sportsworld Communicators. 26 September 2011. Archived from the original on 22 September 2013. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  4. ^ "Jari-Matti Latvala flies into Monte Carlo Rally lead as tyre gamble pays off". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 18 January 2012. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  5. ^ Evans, David; Beer, Matt (18 January 2012). "Jari-Matti Latvala crashes out of Monte Carlo Rally lead". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  6. ^ Evans, David (18 January 2012). "Ford confirms Jari-Matti Latvala cannot continue in Monte Carlo Rally". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  7. ^ "Sebastien Loeb leads Monte Carlo Rally after Jari-Matti Latvala's crash". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 18 January 2012. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  8. ^ a b c "Sebastien Loeb in charge after second day of Monte Carlo Rally". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 19 January 2012. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  9. ^ Evans, David (19 January 2012). "Sebastien Ogier crashes out of Monte Carlo Rally". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  10. ^ Evans, David (19 January 2012). "Sebastien Ogier's co-driver Julien Ingrassia hurts arm in Monte Carlo Rally crash". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  11. ^ Evans, David (19 January 2012). "Ford gives Petter Solberg green light to fight for second in Monte Carlo". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. Retrieved 20 January 2012.
  12. ^ Official final classification[permanent dead link]

External links edit