Eryk Goczal claimed a shock win for Toyota buyer Energylandia in Stage 9 of the Dakar Rally, as Nani Roma surged from fourth place to imagine the general lead.
The 410km check from Wadi ad-Dawasir to Bisha turned Dakar on its head, with in a single day chief Nasser Al-Attiyah and a number of other key contenders dropping important time attributable to navigation points.
Early on, reigning World Rally-Raid champion Lucas Moraes managed proceedings in his Dacia Sandrider, constructing a slender 1m30s benefit over Toyota’s Man Botterill by the 271km mark. However catastrophe struck for each drivers quickly after, throwing them each out of competition and selling 21-year-old Goczal into the digital lead.
Beginning deep within the order, the Polish driver benefitted from clear tracks specified by entrance of him, cruising to the end line with a margin of seven minutes to clinch his maiden stage win within the Final class.
His uncle Michal Goczal additionally prevented the drama that befell their rivals to attain an excellent 1-2 for the household, as Energylandia outshone its manufacturing unit counterparts.
The most effective producer entrant was two-time bikes champion Toby Worth in third, with the Toyota driver ending 11 minutes down in a dramatic stage.
Guillaume de Mevius introduced his X-Raid Mini residence in fourth, whereas Cristina Gutierrez emerged as the highest Dacia driver in fifth in any case her team-mates dropped time.
#205 Energylandia Rally Group Toyota: Eryk Goczal, Szymon Gospodarczyk
Photograph by: A.S.O.
Ford’s star driver Carlos Sainz Sr additionally misplaced over quarter-hour by means of the day, together with 1m10s attributable to an overspeeding penalty, however nonetheless beat most of his direct rivals to complete the stage in sixth forward of team-mate Roma and Mini’s Lionel Baud.
Whereas Energylandia put collectively a shock, Toyota’s manufacturing unit workforce largely endured a depressing day, with Seth Quintero, Botterill and Henk Lategan all dropping over 20 minutes to complete ninth, tenth and eleventh respectively. Lategan, Toyota’s essential title hope, was hampered by energy steering points on a stage the place navigation proved significantly difficult.
It was additionally a disastrous outing for the Japanese producer’s former celebrity Al-Attiyah, with the present Dacia driver getting misplaced round 280km into the stage. He ultimately reached the end line in twelfth, conceding 26 minutes to the stage winner.
However the day’s largest casualties had been Ford duo Mattias Ekstrom and Mitch Guthrie. Ekstrom haemorrhaged over half-hour on the run to the Refuge Bivouac in Bisha, whereas Guthrie’s losses prolonged to over an hour, ending any hopes of total competition.
The dramatic flip of occasions in Stage 9 has fully shaken up the general order, with two-time Dakar winner Roma now main a 1-2 for Ford, simply 57 seconds forward of team-mate Sainz. The 1m10s restored after his dashing penalty was overturned proved decisive in separating Roma and Sainz on the prime.
Al-Attiyah has slipped from first to 3rd within the rating, however solely 1m10s off the lead, with Lategan an extra 5 minutes adrift in fourth. Ekstrom, who had been sitting second in a single day, is now categorized in fifth, with WRC legend Sebastien Loeb cementing his grip on sixth regardless of dropping half an hour himself on Tuesday.
Worth holds seventh forward of early Stage 9 chief Moraes, whose troubles had been compounded by a whopping 15-minute penalty. Century’s Matthieu Serradori and Dacia driver Gutierrez spherical out the provisional prime 10.
Dakar Rally – General outcomes after Stage 9:
Pos
Driver
Automobile
time/Hole
1
Nani Roma
Ford
36h44m01s
2
Carlos Sainz
Ford
+57s
3
Nasser Al-Attiyah
Dacia
+1m10s
4
Henk Lategan
Toyota
+6m13s
5
Mattias Ekstrom
Ford
+11m19s
6
Sebastien Loeb
Dacia
+21m06s
7
Toby Worth
Toyota
+26m49s
8
Lucas Moraes
Dacia
+36m49s
9
Mathieu Serradori
Century
+41m04s
10
Cristina Gutierrez
Dacia
+49m22s
We would like your opinion!
What would you wish to see on Motorsport.com?
Take our 5 minute survey.
– The Motorsport.com Group



















