Showing posts with label Dakar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dakar. Show all posts

Monday, December 18, 2023

2023 For the Love of Indy Awards

There were plenty of historic moments in motorsports in 2023. Records were shattered. We saw achievements for the first time in decades. There were standout races and racers from all around the globe. New formats were adopted and new places were visited. There were tears for those that came short, and cheers for those clutching silverware. It was a complete year with plenty of reasons to celebrate what happened over the last 12 months. 

We close another year recognizing the best that made up this motorsport season, from those competing to the races themselves. There are many moments that standout in our heads from this year and we will do our best to capture what was the best of the 2023 season.

Racer of the Year
Description: Given to the best racer over the course of 2023.
And the Nominees are:
Ritomo Miyata
Max Verstappen
Jett Lawrence
Ben Keating
Álex Palou

And the winner is... Max Verstappen
Max Verstappen had already made a fair amount of history in 2022. Off a second consecutive championship, one that was convincing and left little doubt who the best driver was that season, it was going to be difficult to follow that up with something better.

Verstappen did just that. He didn't just put 2022 to shame, he made us forget about it entirely. The Dutchman's 2023 season was historic beyond belief. 

Everyone knew Red Bull would be the team to beat. I don't think anyone thought Red Bull would be this untouchable. The manufacturer won 21 of 22 races, but Verstappen was the clear top dog in the team, winning 19 times, a record. He won ten consecutive races, every race from Miami in May to Italy in September, another record. He was only a few days away from a perfect summer when he finished fifth in Singapore. 

It wasn't just the victories, but the way he was winning. He left the field in his dust most of the time. 

11.987 seconds in Bahrain. 
27.921 seconds in Monaco.
24.090 seconds in Barcelona.
33.731 seconds in Hungary.
22.305 seconds in Spa-Francorchamps. 
19.387 seconds in Suzuka. 
10.073 seconds in Austin.
13.875 seconds in Mexico City.
17.993 seconds in Abu Dhabi. 

Nearly half of his victories were by more than ten seconds! At one point, he led 248 consecutive laps from lap 48 in Miami through lap 24 in Austria, nearly two full months later. It is the third longest streak in Formula One history. Verstappen led 1,003 laps total in 2023. He led 75.70% of the laps run this season. Both are records. Verstappen started on pole position 12 times this season and won all 12 times. Again, another record. 

It will be hard to look back and find a more flawless season in Formula One history. Verstappen never finished worse than fifth. He was on the podium in 21 of 22 races, another record. 

At no point did Verstappen step over the line. At no point did a mistake cost him precious seconds or a position or, more importantly, a victory. While a fair number attempt to discredit his ability and boil it down to just the race car, Verstappen makes it hard to ignore the driver. He has shown us an incredible ability to stomp the competition. While he was gone, the rest of the field was close. Teammate Sergio Pérez found himself among Mercedes, Ferrari, Aston Martin and McLaren more times than not. The Red Bull was an incredible car, but only Verstappen could extract its highest potential. 

Verstappen might not be the most lovable personality, but he comfortably expressed himself throughout the season as a race car driver, unafraid to voice dissatisfaction with course selection as more street courses going the schedule, nor when questioning the existence of sprint weekends. He might not be the most sociably driver, but Verstappen does have a passion for racing, and he believes it is the most important part of Formula One. 

I would hate to say we will never see this again, but knowing Verstappen and Red Bull, it feels unlikely their dominance will vanish in 2024. For all the records broken in 2022 and then broken again in 2023, Verstappen is poised for another staggering run in 2024, and no one would be surprised if Verstappen ended up surpassing himself. At the moment, he looks like the only person who possibly could. 

On the other nominees:
Miyata had a breakout year in Japan. In Super Formula, he picked up his first career victory, but better than that he won twice and never finished worse than fifth in a race. With 114.5 points to his name, Miyata claimed the champion, the first title for a Team TOM'S driver since Nick Cassidy in 2019. In Super GT, Miyata and co-driver Sho Tsuboi won three races, including the final two events, claiming the GT500 title with 89 points. Miyata became the fifth driver to win the Super Formula and Super GT championships in the same year. Now, he will be off to Formula Two, competing with Carlin in 2024, while also running in the European Le Mans Series. 

Lawrence has been an outstanding motocross rider for the last few years now, but 2023 saw the Australian move from the 250cc class to the 450cc class. After winning the 250 West Supercross championship with six victories and an average finish of 1.44, Lawrence swept the 2023 AMA Motocross 450 season, winning all 22 races, the third rider to ever go undefeated in a season, and he did it in his rookie year. He closed out the season taking the inaugural SuperMotocross 450 championship. At 20 years old, he has already made a place for himself in history, and there is still a long time to go.

Gentlemen drivers are not thrown into the mix as ever being the best, but Keating has stood out as one of the best amateur drivers in the world today. Keating returned to the FIA World Endurance Championship to defend his GTE-Am championship, but this time driving a Corvette instead of an Aston Martin. In IMSA, Keating drove full-time in an LMP2 entry. In WEC, Keating with co-drivers Nicky Catsburg and Nicolás Varrone won the championship with two races to spare. The trio won three races, including the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Keating's second consecutive victory in the event. In IMSA, Keating and PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports co-driver Paul-Loup Chatin won once and finished no worse than fourth over the six championship races, taking the LMP2 championship. 

Despite it appearing his IndyCar career would be heading elsewhere in 2024, Palou put together one of the most dominant championship performances the series has seen since reunification. The Spaniard went on a tear, opening the season with nine top five finishes in the first ten races, including four victories, three of which were on the spin from June into July. With a worst finish of eighth, Palou was able to claim the championship in style, winning in Portland and clinching the trophy with a race to spare. Palou ended with the lowest average finish for a champion since reunification, and he will continue onward with Chip Ganassi Racing into 2024 and beyond. 

Past Winners
2012: Kyle Larson
2013: Marc Márquez
2014: Marc Márquez
2015: Nick Tandy
2016: Shane van Gisbergen
2017: Brendon Hartley
2018: Scott Dixon
2019: Marc Márquez
2020: Lewis Hamilton
2021: Kyle Larson
2022: Max Verstappen

Race of the Year
Description: Best Race of 2023.
And the Nominees are:
Dakar Rally - Bike Class
Portland ePrix
12 Hours of Sebring
Singapore Grand Prix
World Superbike at Portimão, Race Two

And the winner is... 12 Hours of Sebring
This year's 12 Hours of Sebring could not get anymore chaotic. All five of the classes were close for majority of the race. In the final hour, at least four of the five were nail-bitters. 

For the overall victory, every manufacturer was in the mix. For most of the race, it was Acura and Cadillac trading the lead, with the #01 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac and the #60 Meyer Shank Racing Acura being the main players. Wayne Taylor Racing got in the mix with the #10 Acura, and then #01 Cadillac retired due to a mechanical issue. As the sun started to set, the Germans arrived on the season. Both Porsches and the #25 BMW led the race.

Late cautions bunched the field, and it set up for a wild dash to the finish. Mathieu Jaminet and Filipe Albuquerque came together heading into turn three while battling for the lead. Albuquerque slid through the inside of the corner and hit Jaminet again. As those two cars came to a halt, the #7 Porsche of Felipe Nasr had nowhere to go and hit Albuquerque, taking out the third-place runner as well. 

This allowed Pipo Derani to inherit the lead with only minutes remaining in the #31 Whelen Engineering Racing Cadillac. The only other car on the lead lap was the #25 BMW, but the BMW could not match the Cadillac, and Derani along with Alexander Sims and Jack Aitken took the victory. 

That would normally be enough, but in LMP2, Tower Motorsport overcame an accident halfway through the race to win the class with Scott McLaughlin holding off Mikkel Jensen and Paul-Loup Chatin in the final hour. 

In LMP3, the class leading #30 Jr. III Racing Ligier-Nissan of Garett Grist hit some debris, damaging the car and allowing Riley Motorsports with Gar Robinson, Felipe Fraga and Josh Burdon to take the victory. 

In GTD Pro, six cars from six different manufacturers were on the lead lap. Pfaff Motorsports held over the VasserSullivan Lexus with the WeatherTech Racing Mercedes-AMG in third. Iron Lynx brought a Lamborghini in fourth ahead of the factory Corvette and the Risi Competizione Ferrari. 

BMW went 1-2 in GTD with Paul Miller Racing ahead of Turner Motorsport as the top ten in the pro-am class finished on the lead lap. 

For 12 hours, some of sports cars and motorsports best drivers slugged it out and when it got to the finish, nearly nothing separated any of them. It forced drivers into errors and left many wondering what could have been if it was for one or two different decisions. For 12 hours, you could not look away from this race, and it did not disappoint. 

On the other nominees:
One of the most grueling races in the world, the Dakar Rally separates the weak from the strong. This year in the bike class, the strong were many. Halfway through the rally, less than eight minutes covered the top eight riders. The class lead had already changed four times in the first eight stages. In the second half of the race, it became a three-way battle between Skylar Howes, Kevin Benavides and Toby Price. The class lead changed four more times over the final six stages, with Benavides overcoming a 12-second deficit in the final stage to win the Dakar Rally over Price and Howes.

For the first time in the United States, Formula E raced on a permanent circuit, the 1.967-mile Portland International Raceway, famous for its IndyCar racing. The track produced the liveliest Formula E race to date. Due to the nature of the circuit, and lack of opportunities for regeneration, drivers looked to remain in the draft, and not in the lead. A total of 403 passes took place, an average of 12.6 a lap, as drivers kept cycling through positions. It was about positioning for the final run to the line. Nick Cassidy ended up winning from tenth on the grid ahead of Jake Dennis and António Félix da Costa. Mitch Evans went from 20th to fourth, Sébastien Buemi from 16th to fifth. The top ten points finishers were covered by 4.3 seconds. Different from every previous Formula E race, this one had everyone in contention for the entire 32-lap affair. 

It was the one race Red Bull got wrong, and it opened the door for an intense battle between Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes at Singapore. Carlos Sainz, Jr. led from pole position, but he had Lando Norris and teammate Charles Leclerc keeping him honest. The Mercedes went for the two-stop strategy, going to the medium tire compounding, allow George Russell and Lewis Hamilton to carve their way forward. The Mercedes drivers were up to third and fourth, but Sainz, Jr. backed up Norris to slow the Mercedes drivers' progress with fresher rubber while putting Norris within DRS range and canceling out the benefit to the Mercedes drivers. On the final lap, the top four were all within two seconds. Russell brushed the entering turn ten, allowing Hamilton to slide up to third, but Sainz, Jr.'s driving was enough to hold off Norris for the victory. 

It was a two-man race in the World Superbike Championship in 2023, but they put on a few shows for us, most notably, the capper to the Portimão weekend. Toprak Razgatlioglu was on pole position and hoping to take some points out of the gap to Álvaro Bautista before heading to the final round at Jerez. Razgatlioglu started on pole position and led the first four laps, but he could not shake Bautista. The Spaniard took the lead on lap five and led the next five circuits. Over the final 11 laps of the race, neither rider led more than two consecutive laps and the lead changed seven times. Bautista went on to beat Razgatlioglu to the checkered flag by 0.126 seconds, Bautsita's fifth sweep of the weekend and one that added some cushion to his championship lead.

Past Winners
2012: Indianapolis 500
2013: British motorcycle Grand Prix
2014: Bathurst 1000
2015: Australian motorcycle Grand Prix
2016: Spanish Grand Prix
2017: All the races at the World Superbike/World Supersport weekend at Phillip Island
2018: Petit Le Mans
2019: Honda 200 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
2020: Turkish Grand Prix
2021: Monaco ePrix
2022: British Grand Prix

Achievement of the Year
Description: Best success by a driver, team, manufacture, etc.
And the Nominees are:
Max Verstappen breaking the record for highest winning percentage in a Formula One season
Every manufacturer in IMSA's GTP class winning in the first year of the class
Jett Lawrence's Perfect Motocross Season
The NASCAR Garage 56 Effort
Revival of North Wilkesboro Speedway

And the winner is... Max Verstappen breaking the record for highest winning percentage in a Formula One Season
There were many records we could have chosen this year from Verstappen and Red Bull Racing, but this one stands out because of its longevity. It almost felt unreachable. 

With 19 victories from 22 races, Verstappen ended the year having won 86.363% of the Formula One races this season. That didn't just break a record, it shattered the previous mark, and one that stood since the early days of Formula One. 

In 1952, Alberto Ascari won six of eight races, a 75% winning percentage. For 71 years, that record stood, and looked a little unobtainable. Plenty of great drivers had come since Ascari and fallen short. 

Jim Clark. Jackie Stewart. Alain Prost. Ayrton Senna. Michael Schumacher. Sebastian Vettel. Lewis Hamilton. 

They all had great seasons, some had expectations that they would break Ascari's record and fallen short. It almost felt like 75% was just too much to beat. Then Verstappen and Red Bull put together the most dominant season in Formula One history. 

Verstappen didn't just eek over the line with 17 victories, earning him 77.27% and the lowest victory total possible to get the record in 2023. Verstappen crushed the record. He went over 11% better than Ascari's mark. He bypassed the 80% club and started the 85% club. He had a winning streak of ten races and a winning streak of seven races in the same season! 

If Ascari's mark looked untouchable, Verstappen's record is as distant as the stars in Orion's Belt. It will take something truly remarkable to beat Verstappen's 86.363%. It appears like the only thing that will beat it is perfection.

On the other nominees:
It was a banner year for IMSA, as its GTP class debuted and provided close competition across all four manufacturers. It was not a one-make runaway in year one. A few manufacturers struggled, but they all worked through the issues. Each became competitive, and all four won. At one point, each won once in a four-race stretch. There were many reservations about this season, and there could have been a lot of work to do before year two, but IMSA and the manufacturers (Acura, Cadillac, Porsche and BMW), could not have started on a better note.

Perfect season. No defeats. Only victories. That is what Jett Lawrence accomplished in the 450cc AMA Motocross season, and it was his rookie season! Lawrence had mastered the 250cc machinery. He was ready for the next step, and he showed how talented he is at such a young age. The moment was not to grand for him, and the veteran competition did not spook Lawrence. A perfect rookie season does not leave many places for him to go, but it suggests we will see more great things to come. 

Announced in March 2022, the Garage 56 effort for the 100th anniversary 24 Hours of Le Mans would be an adapted NASCAR Cup car. There was much interest in this effort. A NASCAR stock car had competed at Le Mans before, but it was almost 50 years removed, and the current generation of vehicle differs greatly. Under Hendrick Motorsports operation, the NASCAR Garage 56 effort modified the Chevrolet Camaro body style used in the Cup Series to maximize aerodynamics and mechanical grip on the eight-plus mile Circuit de la Sarthe. Weighing 525 pounds less than a normal Cup car, the Garage 56 effort ended up qualifying over 4.5 seconds faster than the GTE-Am pole-winning Corvette. With Jimmie Johnson, Jenson Button and Mike Rockenfeller, the car ran toward the front of the GTE-Am class the entire race until a gearbox issue put it in the garage for an extended period. It was able to return to the circuit and completed 285 laps.

North Wilkesboro Speedway was left for dead after the last NASCAR Cup race there in 1996. With races moving to Texas Motor Speedway and New Hampshire International Raceway, North Wilkesboro was shuttered and slowly was grown over. Nothing was torn down, but Mother Nature did her work, collapsing ceilings and snapping bleacher seating. Weeds grew through the surface. For nearly 30 years, the track was left to die. However, in 2022, after receiving funding from the state of North Carolina, North Wilkesboro began a renovation projection that led to an announcement to bring the NASCAR All-Star Race to the facility in May 2023. After months of work, NASCAR returned to a North Wilkesboro that looked brand new and yet still possessed a charm of yesterday. Arguably the hottest ticket of the NASCAR season, each night of All-Star weekend was full, and they even got to see some racing despite some rain. It appears after being left for dead, North Wilkesboro has a long, second life ahead of it on the NASCAR calendar. 

Past Winners
2012: DeltaWing
2013: Sebastian Vettel for winning nine consecutive races on his way to a fourth consecutive title
2014: Marc Márquez: Setting the record for most wins in a premier class season.
2015: Justin Wilson Memorial Family Auction
2016: Jimmie Johnson for his seventh NASCAR Cup championship
2017: Jonathan Rea: For becoming the first rider to win three consecutive World Superbike championships.
2018: Robert Wickens for winning IndyCar Rookie of the Year despite missing the final three races.
2019: Joe Gibbs Racing setting single-season record for most Cup victories by a in NASCAR's modern-era.
2020: Donald Davidson for 55 years of service to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indianapolis 500
2021: Team WRT's championship success across multiple series and disciplines
2022: Max Verstappen achieving the most grand prix victories in a single season

Moment of the Year
Description: The Most Memorable Moment in the World of Racing during the 2023 season.
And the Nominees are:
Ferrari wins the 24 Hours of Le Mans
Robert Wickens with the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge TCR Class championship with Harry Gottsacker
Kyle Kirkwood's tire flying over the catchfence at the Indianapolis 500
Shane van Gisbergen winning the NASCAR Cup race at the Chicago street course
Jack Harvey making the Indianapolis 500

And the winner is... Shane van Gisbergen winning the NASCAR Cup race at the Chicago street course.
NASCAR's first street race in its modern era was not off to a dream start. Heavy rainstorms washed out half of Saturday's action and significantly delayed the proceedings on Sunday. Many were worried about what would happen if the rain did not let up to allow for competition on Sunday. 

There was a break in the weather, and NASCAR was able to get the Cup race started. One of the drivers competing, making his Cup debut, was Shane van Gisbergen. The Supercars champion made a highly anticipated cameo with Trackhouse's Project 91 effort meant to bring international drivers to NASCAR. While van Gisbergen had only had a brief shakedown of the car at Charlotte, many were curious to see how the New Zealander would do, as the current generation Cup car shared more similarities with a Supercars machine than any ever before. Van Gisbergen's had a wealth of street course experience while a street course was foreign to nearly every other driver competing in Chicago. 

Van Gisbergen topped the Saturday practice session and was third in qualifying. He kept the car pointing in the correct direction at the start of the race in wet conditions. However, van Gisbergen was coming to life as the track dried out. He did suffer a setback when he made his pit stop at the end of the second stage and NASCAR announced the race would be shortened to 75 laps from the scheduled 100 laps to do pending darkness. With 26 laps remaining, van Gisbergen restarted in the middle of the field, but he went to work. 

In 16 laps, van Gisbergen drove up to third. He clearly had more speed than the leader Justin Haley and Chase Eliott in second. A caution for Martin Truex, Jr. getting into the tires erased the deficit, but van Gisbergen didn't need the help. With the disadvantage gone, van Gisbergen took no time taking the lead in turn two. 

A few more late incidents set up a green-white-checkered finish, a prime moment for van Gisbergen to lose the race due to another driver's tactics, but van Gisbergen was untouchable. He drove away from the field in the final two laps and became the first debutant winner in the NASCAR Cup Series since Johnny Rutherford in 1963. 

It was one of the greatest performances in NASCAR history. Van Gisbergen had tremendous pace in a car he had little time driving, and he found a way to be blindingly quicker than the competition, especially in the back-half of the circuit from turn seven through turn 11. His turned everybody's head, and even had Max Verstappen left in awe. 

On one July Sunday evening, the motorsports world was left astonished when a highly respected talent went out and won in a different discipline against unknown competition. It was a humbling moment on one end, but a defining moment on the other.

On the other nominees:
Ferrari is the most recognizable automobile company in the world. Nearly 60 years had passed since its most recent Le Mans victory, and in the 100th anniversary 24 Hours of Le Mans, the Italian manufacturer was back looking to recreate past Le Mans glory. The Ferrari 499P had the pace, but had the tried-and-true Toyota to battle, which had won five consecutive years at Le Mans. At the end of 24 hours, the #51 Ferrari of James Calado, Alessandro Pier Guidi and Antonio Giovinazzi was on top, a historic result for a monumental race. 

There were plenty reasons to celebrate in 2022 with the return of Robert Wickens to full-time competition nearly four years after his spinal injury. In the IMSA's Michelin Pilot Challenge series' TCR class, Wickens won two races and showed competitive speed on a regular basis. What did Wickens do for an encore? He won the TCR championship with Gottsacker. The duo did not win a race, but they finished runner-up in six of ten races with another third mixed in and the team's worst finish was sixth! It was another case of Wickens dazzling us and showing there is no limit to what is possible.

This year's Indianapolis 500 was an incredible race. It was open for any of about ten drivers to win, and in the closing laps, it felt like we were set up for a grandstand finish. There had been only two cautions in the first 184 laps, and the race was in a full sprint to the finish. Felix Rosenqvist was running in the top five when he brushed the barrier exiting turn one. It brought out a caution, but Rosenqvist was trying to keep the car straight. The Swede's Dallara broke loose into the path of Kyle Kirkwood. Kirkwood attempted to avoid Rosenqvist, and mostly did, only for Rosenqvist's car to catch the left rear tire of Kirkwood. The tire was sheared from the chassis and flew over the catchfence. For a brief moment, it felt like this was about to be the final Indianapolis 500, as we prepared to see a tragedy amongst the spectators. However, the greatest relief was finding out the tire went over the catchfence, but missed the grandstand and all it did was damage a car in the parking lot. No one was hurt. There was a great sigh of relief, but it was closer than anyone hoped for. 

There was much drama in Speedway, Indiana long before we even got to race day. With 34 entries, one car would miss the race, and the four cars relegated to the last row qualifying session on the final qualifying day were the #45 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda of Christian Lundgaard, the #51 Dale Coyne Racing Honda of Sting Ray Robb, the #30 RLLR Honda of Jack Harvey, and the #15 RLLR Honda of Graham Rahal. RLLR had its back against the wall with three of its four cars in this session, and it looked highly likely one of its cars would miss the race. Graham Rahal sat in the 33rd spot after the first run through while Jack Harvey was on the outside. Harvey made a second attempt late and did not have the speed to bump his way in. When he pulled into the pit lane, Harvey still had a few minutes left on the clock. After a quick adjustment, Harvey went back to the track in a desperation attempt. It worked. Harvey made the race with a four-lap average at 229.166 mph compared to Rahal's 229.159 mph. Harvey was joyous. Rahal was despondent. We were all left stunned.

Past Winners
2012: Alex Zanardi
2013: 24 Hours of Le Mans
2014: Post-race at the Charlotte and Texas Chase races.
2015: Matt Kenseth vs. Joey Logano
2016: Toyota Slows at Le Mans
2017: Fernando Alonso announcing his Indianapolis 500 ride
2018: Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson battle at Chicagoland
2019: Kyle Kaiser and Juncos Racing knocking out Fernando Alonso and McLaren and Penske Purchasing Hulman & Co.
2020: March 12-13
2021: The entire Formula One season
2022: Ross Chastain's final corner at Martinsville

Pass of the Year
Description: Best pass of 2023.
And the Nominees are:

And the winner is... António Félix da Costa on Jean-Éric Vergne in turn eight of the final lap of the Cape Town ePrix
This was the toughest category to select this year. All five nominees could have won. Da Costa's move stands out because of how close to disaster it could have been. 

In the closing laps of the Cape Town ePrix, da Costa was on the heels of Vergne. On the penultimate lap, da Costa had a run down the straightaway out of turn seven. However, turn eight was a slight and quick right-hander just prior to a quick correction to the left for turn nine. 

Da Costa went to the outside of turn eight and then squeezed his car ahead of Vergne on the inside of turn nine and made it stick on exit.

This could have been a gnarly accident if da Costa was a half-inch further to the left going through turn nine. Clipping the inside of the barrier takes him out and takes out Vergne. If da Costa was too quick on exit of turn nine, he likely would have slapped the outside barrier and Vergne would have taken the victory. Da Costa had to be pinpoint precise to make this move work. He was. 

There was another lap after da Costa made this pass. The opportunity presented itself for Vergne to duplicate the move da Costa had just pulled off. Vergne never took a chance attempting it, and da Costa was able to hang on for the victory.

On the other nominees:
The Barber IndyCar race might have been the best of the season, and for most of that race it was Romain Grosjean against Scott McLaughlin. After the final round of pit stops, McLaughlin leapfrogged ahead of Grosjean, but Grosjean had the preferred tire at the opening of the stint. Grosjean hounded McLaughlin. The Frenchman could not get to McLaughlin's inside in turn 13, but Grosjean backed off early in the corner to increase acceleration into turn 14. He got to McLaughlin's outside which allowed Grosjean to have the inside in to the 15th and final corner. Grosjean exited with the lead with such a daring move. Of course, McLaughlin had the tires over the long run and would overtake Grosjean and eventually win the race, but Grosjean gave it his all.

Unexpectedly, DeFrancesco qualified fifth for the second IndyCar race on the IMS road course. We have seen some quizzical qualifying performances before at that track, but Andretti Autosport also had a good track record at the circuit, so perhaps it should not have been a surprise. What was a surprise was the move DeFrancesco made at the start of the race. He settled back in fifth position, but approaching turn one, DeFrancesco went to the outside and kept up his speed. He passed three cars and was on Graham Rahal's outside on corner exit. DeFrancesco was able to get the power down before turn two and take the lead. It was incredible, something no one expected from DeFrancesco. Unfortunately, DeFrancesco must have used up everything to make that one pass because he soon started to fall down the order and ended up finishing 19th, one lap down, with no apparent issue with the car. 

The inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix proved to be a spine-tingling race with cars able to make numerous overtakes down the fast straightaways. Leclerc had battled most of the race with Max Verstappen for the lead, but Red Bull had the power and the strategy to not only put Verstappen in first but placed Pérez in second in the closing stages. Verstappen pulled away but Leclerc was making a push for second on Pérez. Driving down the Las Vegas Strip toward turn 14 on the final lap, Leclerc had the DRS advantage on Pérez and took his chance. Leclerc braked later than imaginable and went up the inside of Pérez. The Ferrari stuck on exit and Leclerc had the spot. The Monegasque driver held off the counter move from Pérez on the run to the line and Leclerc dispatched the Red Bull 1-2. 

After 24 hours, the LMP2 class at Daytona saw the first two cars within touching distance. Ben Hanley had the #04 CrowdStrike Racing by APR Oreca-Gibson in front while James Allen chased in the #55 Proton Competition Oreca-Gibson. Exiting the chicane for the final time, Allen had the benefit of the draft, which was increased thanks to an LMP3 car also on the banking. Exiting the banking, momentum was on Allen's side as he picked up the tow off Hanley. Entering the tri-oval, Allen slipped to the outside and had enough speed to beat Hanley to the line by 0.016 seconds, the sixth closest finish in IMSA history. Talk about timed to perfection. 

Past Winners
2012: Simon Pagenaud at Baltimore
2013: Robert Wickens at Nürburgring and Peter Dempsey in the Freedom 100
2014: Ryan Blaney on Germán Quiroga
2015: Laurens Vanthoor from 4th to 2nd on the outside in the Bathurst 12 Hour
2016: Scott McLaughlin on Mark Winterbottom at Surfers Paradise
2017: Renger van der Zande: From second to first on Dane Cameron at Laguna Seca
2018: Alexander Rossi for all his passes in the Indianapolis 500
2019: Álex Rins on Marc Márquez in the final corner at Silverstone in the British motorcycle Grand Prix
2020: Pipo Derani on Ricky Taylor into turn one at Road Atlanta
2021: Shane van Gisbergen from fourth to second at Sandown
2022: Ross Chastain's final corner at Martinsville

The Eric Idle Award
Description: "When You're Chewing on Life's Gristle, Don't Grumble, Give a Whistle, And This'll Help Things Turn Out For The Best, and...  Always Look On The Bright Side of Life."
And the Nominees are:
Nyck de Vries
Eli Tomac
Robert Mau
Stefan Wilson
Chase Elliott

And the winner is... Eli Tomac
Eli Tomac was on the precipice of his third Supercross championship. With two races remaining in the season, Tomac had an 18-point lead over Chase Sexton in the championship and he had a chance to lock up the championship in his home race in Denver if he left with a 26-point lead. Even with a good day in Denver, Tomac could leave with at least a hand on the trophy heading to the Salt Lake City season finale. 

Denver's main event started out in Tomac's favor. He had an early lead while Sexton was running in third. However, three minutes into the race, Tomac pulled off course and rode straight to the medical truck. He ruptured his Achilles tendon, ending his race. Sexton ended up winning the Denver race, taking a seven-point championship lead and effectively winning the championship as his closest competitor, Tomac, was done for the season. 

Without the injury, Tomac likely takes the title in his backyard with a race to spare. Even if he had fallen behind Sexton in the Denver main event, he likely would have gone to the finale just needing to 12th or better, something he had easily done in every race prior to the penultimate round. This injury caused Tomac to miss the Motocross season and the inaugural SuperMotocross championship. He will return in 2024 and look to make up for the championship lost.

On the other nominees:
After scoring points on an unexpected Formula One debut in 2022, de Vries earned a call from AlphaTauri to be the full-time driver for 2023. If he could score points with Williams in a cameo, what could he do as a full-time AlphaTauri driver? Well... unfortunately, the 2019 Formula Two champion did not score any points. He was only unclassified in one of the first ten races. Teammate Yuki Tsunoda only had two points in that span, but AlphaTauri had seen enough, and de Vries was out of the rider before Formula One had even reached the summer break.

The name Robert Mau might sound familiar, but you cannot place where you heard it. Mau was the LMP3 driver that plowed into the back of the #6 Porsche while behind the safety car at the 12 Hours of Sebring. The #6 Porsche was able to be repaired and continue in the race, but it was a setback. On the other hand, Mau did not compete in another IMSA race in 2023.

Wilson cannot seem to have a peaceful experience at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He famously sacrificed his seat in the 2017 Indianapolis 500 to allow Fernando Alonso to attempt in a fifth Andretti Autosport entry. After a two-year hiatus, he returned in 2021 with Andretti Autosport, only to have an accident entering the pit lane. In 2022, Wilson was the 33rd and final entry as there was a scramble to materialize a entry with DragonSpeed. The car didn't get on track until late in the week and the engine failed morning of qualifying, leaving Wilson as the default 33rd starter. How did 2023 go? Wilson qualified comfortably in 25th. Everything was looking fine until Monday practice when a collision between Katherine Legge and Wilson led to an accident in turn one. Wilson suffered a fractured vertebra and had to withdraw from the race. Can Wilson ever have a normal month of May?

It is not easy being the most popular driver in NASCAR. It is worse when you break your leg two days prior to the third race of the season in a snowboarding accident, which is what Elliott did, forcing him to miss six races. It happened early enough in the regular season that Elliott still had a good chance of making the playoffs either through victory or points. He returned and had good results, until he intentionally wrecked Denny Hamlin in the Coca-Cola 600, leading to a one-race suspension. Elliott was unable to win a race, nor could he amass enough points to make the playoffs. A consolation victory in the final ten races did not come either, and 2023 marks the low point for his still relatively young career. 

Past Winners
2012: Ben Spies
2013: Sam Hornish, Jr.
2014: Alexander Rossi
2015: McLaren
2016: Toyota
2017: Nick Heidfeld
2018: Brett Moffitt
2019: Dennis Lind
2020: Marc Márquez
2021: Liam Lawson
2022: Linus Lundqvist

Comeback of the Year
Description: The Best Comeback in the 2023 season.
And the Nominees are:
Eli Tomac in the Anaheim Supercross season opener
McLaren's 2023 Formula One Season
Enea Bastianini: From Injury to Victory
Tower Motorsports winning LMP2 at the 12 Hours of Sebring
Dani Pedrosa: Finishing seventh and fourth in two MotoGP races, five years removed from last competing full-time.

And the winner is... McLaren's 2023 Formula One Season
The 2023 season did not begin on a great note for McLaren. At the opening round in Bahrain, Oscar Piastri could not get out of the first round of qualifying and Lando Norris could not get through round two. Piastri retired and engine issues plagued Norris' race. McLaren continued to struggle for points. There were a few good races, but McLaren was not close to a competitive car. 

Through the first nine races, McLaren had one top five finish and had 29 points. McLaren was averaging 3.222 points per race and on pace for 70 points for the entire season. 

In the final 11 races, McLaren had seven runner-up finishes and nine total podium finishes. Piastri and Norris went 1-2 in the Qatar sprint race. After having one race in the first nine where both cars finished in the points, both McLaren drivers scored points in eight of the final 11 events. 

When the season was over, McLaren finished on 302 points and fourth in the constructors' championship, ahead of Aston Martin. McLaren went from averaging 3.222 points per race to 13.727 points per race. At its original pace, McLaren was looking at seventh in the constructors' championship. Instead, McLaren ended up with its highest points per race since the 2012 season.

On the other nominees:
Tomac had opened a respectable lead in the Anaheim season opener. However, on lap eight, he took a spill and dropped back to fifth, over eight seconds off the lead. Tomac clawed his way back and reclaimed the lead on lap 18. He held on to win the season opener despite being down in the dirt nearly halfway through the race. 

There were plenty of reasons for Bastianini to be excited before the start of this season. After winning multiple races with Gresini Racing, he moved to the factory Ducati outfit. However, his season was plagued with injuries, missing the first five races and then injuring himself on the initial start at Barcelona and forced to miss four more races. Many thought Ducati would move on from Bastianini, especially as Jorge Martín was putting up a championship fight. However, Bastianini ended his season with five points finishes in the final six grand prix, including a victory in Malaysia, and Bastianini will continue with Ducati for another season.

Halfway through the 12 Hours of Sebring, Tower Motorsports was done. Kyffin Simpson had a massive accident exiting turn one. However, Simpson was able to drive back to the pit lane and most of the damage was cosmetic. The Tower crew kept the car in the race and with John Farano and Scott McLaughlin and the #8 Oreca was back in the lead for the final hour. McLaughlin held off late challenges from Paul-Loup Chatin and Mikkel Jensen to win the LMP2 class and finish third overall. 

Pedrosa was once one of the best riders in MotoGP, but he stepped away from full-time competition after the 2018 season. Outside of a wild card appearance at the Red Bull Ring in 2021, Pedrosa had not seen much competition, but he returned as a wild card for the Spanish Grand Prix at Jerez. He qualified sixth, finished sixth in the sprint race and was seventh in the grand prix, only 6.371 seconds off the winner Francesco Bagnaia. Pedrosa returned for a second wild card appearance at Misano, and he finished fourth in both races that weekend, only a few weeks before his 38th birthday.

Past Winners
2013: Michael Shank Racing at the 24 Hours of Daytona
2014: Juan Pablo Montoya to IndyCar
2015: Kyle Busch
2016: Max Verstappen from 15th to 3rd in the final 18 laps in the wet in the Brazilian Grand Prix
2017: Kelvin van der Linde: From third to first after a botched pit stop in the final 20 minutes in the 24 Hours Nürburgring
2018: Billy Monger: Returning to racing after losing his legs and finishing sixth in the BRDC British Formula 3 Championship with four podium finishes and a pole position at Donington Park.
2019: MotoE: For getting to the grid after fire destroyed every motorcycle prior to the first round of the season
2020: The #7 Acura Team Penske: Coming from last in the championship to winning the IMSA DPi championship
2021: Kyle Busch's victory at Pocono
2022: Robert Wickens

Most Improved
Description: Racer, Team or Manufacture Who Improved The Most from 2022 to 2023.
And the Nominees are:
Jorge Martín: From ninth on 152 points to second on 428 points with four victories and eight sprint victories in MotoGP
Marco Bezzecchi: From 14th on 111 points to third on 329 points with three victories and a sprint victory in MotoGP
Chris Buescher: From 21st on 729 points with one victory to seventh with three victories in the NASCAR Cup Series
Nick Cassidy: From 11th on 68 points with one victory to second on 199 points with four victories in Formula E
Fermín Aldeguer: From 15th on 80 points to third on 212 points with five victories in Moto2

And the winner is... Jorge Martín
Through his first two MotoGP seasons, Martín had shown bursts of speed. As a rookie, he won a few pole positions and even won at the Red Bull Ring in a season where he missed four races due to injury. In his sophomore season, Martín again had mostly good days and scored a fair number of points, but of the eight Ducati riders, he finished fifth best of that group, and he was fourth best of the five riders on the 2022 bike. 

With Ducati's success in 2022, it was going to be a tough season for any Ducati rider to stand above the best in 2023, no matter which bike the rider was on. For Martín, he started slow with two retirements in the first three races, but took his consistency to a new level as the season went on. He scored five consecutive top five finishes for the first time in his career after his previous longest streak was two. His sprint race results lifted him up the championship as well.

Martín kept the pressure on Francesco Bagnaia as the season wore on, and it did not appear as if Martín would slip up. For a brief moment, in Indonesia, the championship lead was Martín's, but an accident saw the lead go back to Bagnaia. Martín stayed in the fight to the final round. A poor set of tires in Qatar forced himself to face an even greater uphill battle in Valencia. It may not have ended the way Martín had hoped, but even without a championship trophy, he earned greater respect and appreciate for his 2023 season.

On the other nominees:
Bezzecchi had a great sophomore season in MotoGP. He struggled to score points in sprint races, and that might have held him back in a championship push. But Bezzecchi was one of the most competitive riders for most of this season. He made an early push for the championship, and while it did not stick, he was one of the top three riders this season.

Buescher led a bounce back for RFK Racing in the NASCAR Cup Series this season. The turnaround started in late 2022 with a victory at Bristol, but it carried into 2023. Along with three victories, Buescher tripled his best season in top five finishes from three to nine. He had 17 top ten finishes, his most ever in a season. He had his best average finish in a season, 12.1, over five positions better than his previous best. It led to Buescher making the semifinal round and finishing seventh in the championship, the first top ten championship finish for the team since 2014.

Cassidy had some success in his first two Formula E season, but far from the lofty success he experience in Japan. Year three saw Cassidy make great strides. After scoring four podium finishes in his first two seasons, the New Zealander had eight podium finishes in 2023 alone. He was in the points in 12 of 16 races and he went to the final round with a chance at the championship, finishing second to Jake Dennis.

Aldeguer had some good moments, but had some rough moments in his first full season in Moto2 in 2022. In 2023, Aldeguer made incredible strides, and he ended on the highest notes. Victory and 11 points finishes in the first 13 races aside, Aldeguer ended with four consecutive victories and six consecutive podium finishes. In the final six races, he went from 11th on 88 points to third on 212 points.

Past Winners
2012: Esteban Guerrieri
2013: Marco Andretti
2014: Chaz Mostert
2015: Graham Rahal
2016: Simon Pagenaud
2017: DJR Team Penske
2018: Gary Paffett
2019: Cooper Webb
2020: Joan Mir
2021: Francesco Bagnaia
2022: Scott McLaughlin

And that will do it. What a tremendous year this was! While it felt like 2023 went a little quicker than previous years, 2024 will be here soon enough. Competition will begin shortly and soon another batch of spectacular memories will be made. There will be plenty of new things we will see as well as historic moments we will be grateful to witness. For now, let's enjoy this holiday season. 

Soon, we will be making predictions and handing out some Christmas presents. 


Friday, March 31, 2023

Best of the Month: March 2023

March breathes some life into the season. Nearly every championship has started. A few historic events have taken place. The weather is getting nicer. Coats are becoming thinner. Daylight is more abundant in the Northern Hemisphere. It is a good time. There are a few cooler days, but nothing that is freezing to the core. There is a sense that we have made it.

Best So Far
In terms of events, the first quarter of the calendar year is the appetizer, a small sample size of what is to come. Though there are fewer events than what we will see over the second and third quarter of the year, there are still a few notable moments that should be highlighted and will likely still be on the highlight reel when the year is coming to a close. 

This is a chance to look at the best of what has happened so far in 2023, and some stuff that is good now but could fade as the year wears on. 

Clubhouse Leaders
António Félix da Costa's passes Jean-Éric Vergne in the Cape Town ePrix
Da Costa made a few noteworthy passes in the inaugural Cape Town ePrix, but the most head-turning of them came with two laps to go when the Portuguese driver slipped up the inside of Jean-Éric Vergne in the fast turn eight. 

It was a move where the gap was closing and if da Costa waited a slip-second longer, Vergne  shuts that space off, forces da Costa to lift and the Frenchman would likely hold on for victory. Instead, da Costa took the lead and was able to close out the race, taking his first victory of the season and first victory with Porsche.

Fernando Alonso-Lewis Hamilton battle in the Bahrain Grand Prix
The Fernando Alonso revival at Aston Martin has been talk of the first two rounds this Formula One season, but the first sign of Alonso's specialness came in the opening round of the season in Bahrain. 

Alonso found himself behind Lewis Hamilton in sixth position on lap 38. The Spaniard had been hounding his former teammate for a few laps. A pivotal point for Alonso's final result, it appeared Hamilton may to keep Alonso at bay, which would have kept Alonso off the podium.

When there was an opening on the inside into the tight left-handed turn ten, Alonso went for it and took the position, moving up to fifth and allowing Alonso climb into third in the final result. It was a move that looks tempting at Bahrain, but no one tries it, and most of those who do end up taking out the car ahead of them, likely leading to a reprimand. In this case, Alonso pulled it off.

Eli Tomac's comeback victory in Anaheim I
The 2023 Supercross season opener looked to be settled early. Eli Tomac was running away from the field, and it looked like he was set to begin his title defense in convincing fashion. Then Tomac took a tumble on lap nine, lost the lead and was down to fifth, eight seconds off the leaders. 

In many cases, the victory is gone. Perhaps a podium position could be salvaged, but any damage to the bike or hurt pride could cause a rider to slip further down the field and make the night even worse. 

Instead, Tomac stayed up. He kept clawing out time as other riders fell into trouble. Tomac clawed back the lead at the end of lap 18. In ten laps he went from eight seconds back to the top position. Tomac went on to win by over four seconds. The night was lost but Tomac's recovery made it appear it was never in doubt.

Winward Racing's comeback at the 24 Hours of Daytona
Winward Racing looked to be one of the cars to beat in the GTD class for the 24 Hours of Daytona. The team qualified on pole position in class and was faster than the entire GTD Pro field as well. All of the Mercedes-AMG were threatening, but Winward led the way. 

In opening practice on the Thursday before the race, Lucas Auer spun the #57 Mercedes-AMG into the inside wall separating pit lane exit and the infield portion of the course. The accident caused a fractured lumbar for Auer. The car was destroyed.

Despite being down a driver and a car, Winward scrambled and had the back-up car delivered from Pasadena, Texas to Daytona. Daniel Morad was drafted into the lineup. Winward spent all of Friday preparing the new car for the race. The car was moved to the back of the grid for the 24 Hours of Daytona.

In an un-tested car, Winward drove to the front and was one of the best GTD cars the entire race. The team looked set to possibly win the class, at least finish on the podium, but contact with the #3 Corvette in turn one put the #57 Mercedes-AMG into the same interior wall that Auer hit in practice. Winward had suspension damage and its race was over with less than an hour remaining. 

The race did not end as Winward had hoped, but the team displayed incredible determination and resilience over the entire Daytona weekend. They deserve recognition though the final result was not spectacular.

2023 Dakar Rally - Bike Class
The bike class in this year's Dakar Rally was remarkably competitive. At the halfway point, stage eight, the top eight riders were covered by less than eight minutes. In the first eight stages, the overall lead change in bikes changed four times.

In the final half of the rally, the bike class became a three-rider race. Skyler Howes was on top at the halfway point but Kevin Benavides and Toby Price remained on his heels. Benavides took the overall lead after stage ten, a minute and 29 seconds ahead of Howes and 2:10 clear of Price At the end of stage 12, Price took a 28-second lead over Howes and Benavides was 2:40 back. 

Price's gap was down to 12 seconds ahead of Benavides and 1:31 ahead of Howes after the penultimate stage. In the final stage, Benavides came back and won the Dakar Rally by 43 seconds over Price. Howes dropped to 5:04 behind Benavides, settling for third. 

After thousands of miles of competition over two weeks, for less than a minute to decide the winner is stunning. Benavides deserves all the praise, but Price and Howes put up valiant efforts in their respective defeats.

Good for Now
12 Hours of Sebring
There were a pair of races this month that were good, but flawed. There were memorable moments, but the entire race was not without blemish. 

Case #1: The 12 Hours of Sebring. 

The shocking finish that saw the top three overall runners taken out with 15 minutes to go when the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Acura was knocked off course and collided with the #6 Porsche and collected the #7 Porsche was something unseen in the seven-plus decade of the great endurance race. With the dominoes down, the #31 Whelen Engineering Racing Cadillac of Pipo Derani, Alexander Sims and Jack Aitken took an unexpected victory. 

Sebring had some wonderful moments in every class. The last two hours were brilliant. However, Sebring had a lull in the middle. All five classes were spread out, there was not much action. It is an endurance race. It happens, but it felt dull. Even the finish is shaky. Once the top three were taken out, the race was decided. There were two cars left on the overall lead lap. It was the #31 Cadillac and the #25 BMW, which somehow made it that far, but the #31 Cadillac was not going to face much of a challenge.

NASCAR Cup Race at Austin
Case #2: NASCAR's third race at Circuit of the Americas saw a slight change from the other two. 

The recent Austin race was the first NASCAR Cup event without a scheduled stage caution since the 2016 Homestead season finale, as NASCAR made a rules amendment removing the stage caution for road courses in hopes of having an increase variety in strategies. 

For the first 90% of the race, it was fantastic. Tyler Reddick ran a three-stop strategy to perfection, overtaking William Byron and the rest of the two-stoppers for the lead on the racetrack, and giving Reddick control of the race despite deciding to make an extra pit stop. It was a refreshing change of pace from the monotony of strategy with stage cautions forcing teams to either stop before the caution or under the caution. 

Strategy aside, there was some really good racing between cars and respectable racing. 

Then the final ten laps happen, and by final ten laps, I mean the final 18 laps because this race saw three overtime attempts. The race devolved into a demolition derby. At the front, drivers were rather courteous and not plowing into one another, but from about ninth on back, drivers were making wistful dive-bomb moves hoping to get from 26th to sixth in a corner. Instead, it led to accidents and debris littering the course from destroyed vehicles limbing around the circuit. 

With each restart, it felt inevitable Reddick was going to lose this race despite having been the fastest car all race. Fortunately, Reddick held on and won. It was a good race, arguably a great race, until it wasn't.   

April Preview
In the United States, Easter Monday is not a holiday. People return to work on that Monday and life continues onward until the next holiday, Memorial Day weekend in May. 

However, in Europe, Easter Monday is a holiday and many regional or national series will hold races on Easter Monday. I always enjoy putting on a race or two that morning. It changes the pace of what is just another Monday on this side of the pond. 

This year, the British GT Championship all be racing at Oulton Park. There will be two races on Easter Monday. The first will be at 5:50 a.m. ET and the second will be at 10:50 a.m. ET. Each race will be one hour in length.

If you are thinking, "Why should I tune in for British GT?" You will know a few drivers. Jules Gounon, Ross Gunn and Jonny Adam will all compete and have raced in IMSA and/or the FIA World Endurance Championship before. Gounon just won in the 24 Hours of Daytona in the GTD Pro class. Raffaele Marciello will also be in this race. Martin Plowman, who won in Indy Lights and made a few IndyCar starts, including the 2014 Indianapolis 500, runs in British GT. Plowman also won the LMP2 class at the 2013 24 Hours of Le Mans. 

Those are a few notable names to keep an eye on should you tune in on Easter Monday, and you may learn a name or two as well. 

Other April events of note:
Formula One will run in Melbourne and then take three weeks off before running in Azerbaijan. 
IndyCar has Texas, a week off, Long Beach, a week off and then Barber.
NASCAR is short track heavy, Richmond, Martinsville and then the Bristol dirt race. Talladega and Dover close out the month. 
Formula E returns to Berlin. 
MotoGP visits the Americas, Argentina and the United States specifically, before returning to Spain. 
The European Le Mans Series starts its season in Barcelona. 
The Japanese racing season begins with the Super Formula and Super GT seasons getting underway. 


Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Best of the Month: January 2023

One month down and 11 remain in the year 2023. For the first month of the year, there are a number of significant events. It is a smashing start to the year, especially as many more of our favorite events are still to come. A few endurance races are behind us, as are a few rallies. However, things could be better in some areas, and we start this year with a few new ideas.

Dakar's Green Jersey
Another Dakar Rally concluded this month, and the bike class was a sensational battle from start to finish. Halfway through the race, there were eight riders within eight minutes of one another at the top. The bike battle went to the final day with the top three entering the final stage with only a minute and 31 seconds covering them, and on the final stage, Kevin Benavides came from behind to win the Dakar Rally. 

Not every class was that thrilling, and that is part of the Dakar. It is a two-week endurance race. There is a lot of time to lose over the competition, and if one team limits its stoppages and mistakes, it can be a runaway. That was the case in the car class. Nasser Al-Attiyah won by over an hour and 20 minutes over Sébastien Loeb, and Al-Attiyah's lead was over an hour for the final nine stages. 

In the quad class, Alexandre Giroud led by 35 minutes and 31 seconds after the third stage and that was the closest it was over the final 12 stages. Light prototypes, SSV and Trucks were rather class for most of the race only for the tide to turn late, but I think there is a way can turn each stage into more of a competition. 

Loeb won six consecutive stages in the second week of this year's Dakar, but over those six stages, Loeb never got closer than an hour and 21 minutes to Al-Attiyah. All credit to Al-Attiyah, but there is a way to make those stage victories mean something. 

In the Tour de France, there is a green jersey for a points classification. Each stage awards points to the top finishers and there are intermediate points over the course of a stage where points are awarded. It is a competition within a competition. The Tour de France and Dakar have the same organizer, Amaury Sport Organisation. The Dakar could easily adopt this concept, using the FIA points system to award the top ten finishers at each stage and give competitors a chance to compete for something to the very end without have one or two disastrous stages leave them racing for pride alone. 

Here is what the points classifications would look like based on the 2023 Dakar results for bikes and cars.

Bikes (Difference to overall finish):
1. Toby Price - 151 (+1)
2. Kevin Benavides - 134 (-1)
3. Skyler Howes - 129 (-)
4. Daniel Sanders - 113 (+3)
5. Luciano Benavides - 110 (+1)
6. Pablo Quintanilla - 97 (-2)
7. Adrien Van Beveren - 87 (-2)
8. Mason Klein - 81 (Withdrew)
9. Joan Barreda - 67 (Withdrew)
10. Ross Branch - 64 (+13)

Cars:
1. Sébastien Loeb - 223 (+1)
2. Nasser Al-Attiyah - 176 (-1)
3. Guerlain Chicherit - 154 (+7)
4. Mattias Ekström - 111 (+10)
5. Yazeed Al-Rajhi - 108 (+32)
6. Henk Lategan - 100 (-1)
7. Carlos Sainz - 88 (Withdrew)
8. Jakub Przygoński - 62 (+9)
9. Lucas Moraes - 57 (-6)
10. Vaidotas Žala - 54 (Withdrew)

There would be some changes. Price and Loeb would each have won green jerseys. Benavides and Al-Attiyah would each be second. Some forgotten performances would get highlighted. Audi was not that bad in the car class as the overall results suggest. There were a few accidents and mechanical problems, but the Audi was quick. Ekström was in the top four of the final six stages. Sainz was in the top three in five of the first eight stages prior to his retirement. 

In 2022, Seth Quintero won 12 of 13 stages, but 17 hours lost in stage two due to mechanical failures and penalties meant that he was 16th overall and was left with nothing more than a spot in the record books. Not a bad place to be, but not necessarily receiving the recognition one should get in the moment. 

We would still have the overall classification, and that would remain the big prize, but something else to play for could bring more intrigue into those final stages, and give the competitors something else to shoot for.  

Can we find a better date for the Race of Champions?
Race of Champions took place this past weekend. One problem? It was the same weekend as the 24 Hours of Daytona. 

The Race of Champions once had a good place for itself in the middle of December. The Formula One season had been over for a few months, and testing for the next season wouldn't start until the start of January. IndyCar was in its offseason. NASCAR had just finished its season. Sports cars had been off for months. The World Rally Championship would be in the middle of its offseason, closer to the next season opener, Rallye Monte-Carlo, than the previous season finale. It was a great time. 

Then the world changed. Formula One's schedule expanded. The end of the season inched closer to December and then into December. The FIA World Endurance Championship developed and would race into November in some cases. Formula E emerged and would stage races of its own in December. ROC now takes place after the Dakar Rally, not before. The World Rally Championship doesn't have the same pull. Touring car racing doesn't have the same pull. The December date got squeezed out, and ROC was moved into the new year for some breathing room, but here it was taking place on the same weekend as another major event in the motorsports calendar. 

This year's event took a step back in quality of entrants. For the last seven or eight editions, the field is becoming more dependent retirees. Tom Kristensen has run 15 consecutive Race of Champions. David Coulthard has competed in 15 of the last 16 ROCs, missing only 2010. Mika Häikkinen ran this year. Petter Solberg is an ROC regular. All have been successful drivers, champions in their own right, but in 2023, are they the champions of the moment? 

There were six champions in this year's ROC, in line proportionally with most years since the event moved to stadiums in 2004, but the W Series, Extreme E, eTouring Car World Cup and Nitro Rallycross champions aren't really the upper-echelon of the motorsports world. 

The Formula One title-holder has not competed since 2012, same as the MotoGP title-holder. The most recent WRC title-holder to compete was Sébastien Loeb in 2010! The only WEC title-holder to compete was Timo Bernhard in 2018. The only Formula E champion to compete was the first Formula E champion, Nelson Piquet, Jr. in 2015, oh, and there happened to be a Formula E doubleheader to clash with this year's ROC weekend as well. Australia's Supercars champion hasn't appeared since 2014 and the NASCAR Cup champion hasn't appeared since 2007! That was Jimmie Johnson's second Cup title in case you wanted some context how long ago that was. 

Race of Champions has never been a collection of all the top champions from that season. It averages about five title-holders, about 27.8% of the field, a good mix. Not all great drivers end up being champion that year, but some good ones are being missed, and this weekend didn't help. Location might also be a problem. As fun as it might be to race on ice, it is hard to sell anyone on a trip toward the Arctic Circle this time of year. 

It is difficult to place Race of Champions when the winter has become cluttered with other series, but avoiding one of the biggest endurance races in the world, one that has been held at the same time of year for over six decades, would be a wise first choice. 

This event has incredible potential, it always has and once was a buzzing event, but in the last 20 years, it lives down to what it could be, and that is a great shame. Hopefully once everyone thaws out they can reassess and improve for 2024.

February Preview
The Bathurst 12 Hour returns to February after being canceled in 2021 and moved to May in 2022. After travel restrictions made last year's race less international, this year's race sees the return of many notable drivers and teams.

SunEnergy1 Racing won last year and it will be back with Jules Gounon, Luca Stolz and Kenny Habul in the #75 Mercedes-AMG, looking to become the first drivers to win this race in consecutive years since Christopher Mies and Darryl O'Young in 2011 and 2012. Mies will be in this race in the pro-am #777 Audi for Team MPC with Ricardo Feller and Yasser Shahin. 

Mercedes-AMG has a deep bench of entries alongside the SunEnergy1 team. Triple Eight race has Shane van Gisbergen and Broc Feeney paired with Maximilian Götz in the #888 Mercedes, and the #88 Mercedes has Jamie Whincup, Richie Stanaway and Prince Jeffri Ibrahim in a pro-am entry. Craig Lowndes leads another pro-am Mercedes, this being the #222 Scott Taylor Motorsports entry with Alex Daivson, Geoff Emery and Mr. Scott Taylor himself. 

There are also a few international heavy lineups. Philip Ellis, Nicky Catsburg and Daniel Juncadella will drive the #77 Mercedes for Theodore Racing with Craft-Bamboo while GruppeM Racing has entered the #999 Mercedes for Maro Engel, Mikaël Grenier and Raffaele Marciello. Ellis replaces Lucas Auer, who suffered a back injury in practice ahead of the 24 Hours of Daytona. 

Last year was Mercedes-AMG's second Bathurst 12 Hour victory, nine years after its first. 

Porsche's only Bathurst 12 Hour victory was in 2019, and it will have two cars entered. Manthey EMA Motorsport is the lone pro-class Porsche, the #912 for Matt Campbell, Mathieu Jaminet and Thomas Preining. Earl Bamber Motorsport and Grove Racing will run the #4 Porsche for Anton De Pasquale, Brenton Grove and Stephen Grove in pro-am.

Audi has three Bathurst 12 Hour victories and it looks to tie Mazda for the all-time lead in this race. Beside the #777 Audi, Team MC has the #74 Audi in the pro-class with Christopher Haase, Patric Niederhauser and Mattia Drudi entered. A pair of pro-am Audi to watch will be the #9 Hallmarc Racing entry with Lee Holdsworth, Dean Fiore and Marc Cini, and the #55 Schumacher Motorsports Fuchs Racing Audi with Frédéric Vervisch, James Golding and Brad Schumacher.

Audi's most recent victory came in 2018 with Team WRT, and Teams WRT is back but this time fields a pair of BMWs. Dries Vanthoor was one of the winning drivers five years ago and he will drive the #32 BMW with his usual GT World Challenge co-driver Charles Weerts and 2022 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters champion Sheldon van der Linde. Team WRT's other car sees the debut of Valentino Rossi at Mount Panorama with Augusto Farfus and Maxime Martin joining the two-wheel legend in the #46 BMW. 

BMW has never won the Bathurst 12 Hour in the GT3-era. The Bavarian constructor's most recent victory in 2010 was with a BMW 335i touring car.

Bathurst again hosts the opening round of the Intercontinental GT Challenge championship on February 5. It will be a quick turnaround as the second round of the championship is the Kyalami 9 Hour February 25. Round three takes place over July 1-2 at the 24 Hours of Spa. The Indianapolis 8 Hour is the penultimate round on October 7 with the Gulf 12 Hours from the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi hosting the finale for the second consecutive year on December 10.

This year's Bathurst 12 Hour will begin at 1:45 p.m. Eastern on February 4 in the United States.

Other events of note in February:
NASCAR is back in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for the Clash and then it has the Daytona 500.
Formula E has two races scheduled for new venues, Hydrabad and Cape Town.
World Superbike season begins in Philip Island.


Monday, January 20, 2020

Musings From the Weekend: Are We That Different?

After having zero Americans win in the first 41 editions of the Dakar Rally, Americans Ricky Brabec and Casey Currie won in the Bike class and Side-by-Side class respectively. In the Car class, Carlos Sainz picked up his third Dakar Rally victory. Ignacio Casale won the Quad class for the third time. Andrey Karginov won the Truck class for the second time. Brabec's victory ended KTM's streak of 18 consecutive Dakar victories and it was Honda's first Dakar victory since 1989. Elsewhere in the world of motorsports, the NASCAR Grand National Series race at Indianapolis will be on the road course, James Hinchcliffe has a sponsor for the Indianapolis 500 but not a team (his sponsor will also cover the Grand Prix of Indianapolis), Formula E returned from nearly two months off and made history. In other news, I read a book and here is a run down of what got me thinking.

Are We That Different?
Over the Christmas season I got some time to read The Limit by Michael Cannell, which tells the story of Phil Hill and Wolfgang von Trips over the 1950s into the 1961 season when the two drivers were Ferrari teammates and rivals for the World Drivers' Championship.

Though sold as telling the story of "life and death on the 1961 grand prix circuit," the 1961 season is a small portion of the story, which is fine, because the story of how Hill and von Trips got to that season paints a clearer picture of who these men were and also a clearer picture of motorsports during that time period.

Their careers sprout up during motorsports' most dangerous era, earmarked with the 1955 Le Mans disaster and continuing through the 1960s with funerals occurring at a regular rate and fatal accidents occurring from Formula One to Formula Two, IndyCar to sports cars and every series in-between.

In 2020, the era of Hill, von Trips and death is held in high regard as the gold standard. It was the era of Jim Clark, A.J. Foyt, Mario Andretti, Graham Hill, Jackie Stewart, John Surtees and Bobby Unser. It was the era of the roadster to rear-engine car, turbine innovations, wing sprouting and increased speed.

When put up against that era it is done to diminish motorsports in the 21st century. The lack of danger, the lack of consequence, the lack of innovation, the lack of career diversity, what we have today is automatically viewed as lesser, today's drivers as lesser to the those who raced nearly 60 years ago.

We get the old line "back when men were men."

However, The Limit paints a different image of how the time period was perceived.

Hill was traumatized seeing the horrors of motorsports. At the 1954 Buenos Aires 1000km, Hill made an effort to remove Eric Forrest-Greene from a burning Aston Martin. Forrest-Greene would die the following day from his injuries. Already suffering from heart flutters, Hill developed an ulcer early in the 1954 season and led him to step away from racing for most of the year. He would be back in 1955 and made his Ferrari debut at Le Mans later that year.

After the infamous 1955 Le Mans accident that claimed 84 lives, Mike Hawthorn was distraught about the accident. Phil Walters stepped away from racing after Le Mans despite having won at Sebring earlier that year and having an offer to drive for Ferrari in Formula One.

Spaniard Alonso de Portago had finished second sharing a car with Peter Collins in the 1956 British Grand Prix. Portago had also contested the Carrera Panamericana, a race that was known for its lethalness to not only drivers but spectators. He was also an Olympian bobsledder and had finished third in the two-man competition at the 1957 world championships. Despite these exploits, he had no desire to run the Mille Miglia. As he put it, "there are too many places where a car can go off the road and kill a dozen people."

Once signed for Ferrari, Portago had to run the Mille Miglia and his words would tragically come true, as he lost his life spinning off the road, severing his body in half and killing nine spectators as well.

After the accident, the public pushed back on the race. L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, wrote after Portago's accident:
The massacre which occurred this week confirms the responsibility of those who don't prevent other meant from exposing themselves to an atrocious death... There is an insistent demand that these racing exhibitions be prohibited because they are not necessary to the progress of the machine... All racing, which is a race to death, must be abolished.
Juan Manuel Fangio stated after the race, "I shall never run in the Mille Miglia in the future because it a race that is really too dangerous. I have tired it five times, and I have always seen that risk is too great."

Under public demand to abolish the Mille Miglia and the Italian government did so after the 1957 race.

Luigi Musso died after an accident in the 1958 French Grand Prix. L'Osservatore Romano published an editorial declaring racing "a ruthless idol that demands increasingly heavy sacrifices of blood."

Peter Collins would be killed less than a month later at the German Grand Prix. Prominent German commentator Horst Peets argued in an article for Die Welt that automotive improvements through racing could no longer justify the deaths:
A number of motor sports – mostly men who are in offices, or men who represent a particular sphere of this industry – make it sound like horsepower and cylinder pressure go together with death on the racetrack the way a collar-button fastens to the collar. They take this kind of death as a function: someone must be ready to die in order for us to live a little bit better...
After von Trips' fatal accident in the 1961 Italian Grand Prix, which also took the life of 14 spectators, Pope John XXIII published a statement saying, "It would be criminal to allow absurd performances of death like this to repeat themselves."

Reading about the past and then looking at the present, a time when people are still debating the safety measures in motorsports, whether or not it is necessary for IndyCar to race on ovals and drivers express disinterest in racing an IndyCar because of ovals, it doesn't sound all that different.

There was always a limit, even for heralded legends Fangio. In the 1950s, it was events like the Carrera Panamericana and the Mille Miglia. Portago expressed nerves over the Mille Miglia. It is no different then what we see now from drivers and IndyCars on ovals. Jimmie Johnson and Lewis Hamilton are not going for it.

Spectators feel the same way. There is a contingent who no longer see the appeal of IndyCar at places like Pocono, Texas and so on but will allow the Indianapolis 500 because it has survived for over a century. It is hypocritical and understandable all at once.

The one difference is many of these accidents that were condemned included spectator fatalities and that is something that has greatly decreased to the point they have almost disappeared, especially in major motorsports series. When innocent lives are taken in a form of collateral damage and are in constant danger the level of displeasure and criticism is understood. As for deaths of competitors, it is still split.

Motorsports will always be dangerous and there is always a chance of fatality for all those competing. There will always be people who not accept people doing something that can get them killed. That is fine. It is understandable that people are not ok with other people dying. That isn't some 21st century, Millennial creation. It has always been there the only difference is what death is left occurs in a form of motorsport that was once tame in comparison to what existed in the so-called golden-era.

Yes, there was death in IndyCar, Formula One and sports cars and so on but individual driver fatalities paled in comparison when multiple people were killed at once. One driver dying was easier to swallow than when a half-dozen people, most of which were not even competing, were killed.

Take away the Le Mans tragedy, the Carrera Panamericana and Mille Milega, add fuel cells, HANS devices, SAFER barriers, catchfencing and better built race cars and we are left with what we have today: A motorsports landscape where we have very few fatalities, very few serious injuries, hardly ever any incidents involving fans and what is left gets just as much attention as the horrid occurrences from almost six decades ago.

The goalposts have narrowed. There are no longer city-to-city races with high-end sports cars doing 150 MPH on residential roads with the only thing separating a Ferrari from a pack of school children being a hay bale. Without those types of incidents, other incidents that kill spectators and with a decrease in driver fatalities across the board, an accident that claims the life of one person or an accident that significantly injuries one person gets a greater level of scrutiny than it would have 60 years ago.

Those incidents just happen to frequently involve IndyCar on an oval. Although, we still have the Isle of Man TT but that seems to live on its own little island and is free from this kind of attention.

Are we that different?

No.

The golden-era was not a tougher time. People had just a strong disdain for the blood sport nature of motorsports as we have today. The heroes, who many claim no one can touch because of their fearlessness and desire to jump into anything, expressed fear and openly said what races were crazy and not worth participating in. Those drivers were just as shaken by what was happening around them as the people who spoke out against what was occurring.

Today's drivers are not weaklings. The writers are not being any more melodramatic than they were back then. The sanctioning bodies are not incompetent. The mind set is not really changing. It was always there. It is always going to be there. There will always be a crowd against activities that can take the lives of others the same way there will always be a crowd who can accept that men and women put themselves in danger doing such a thing as race automobiles and motorcycles.

What is different is motorsports is safer than it has ever been and that is a good thing. Though it is called the golden-era nobody is clamoring for it to return. Even the most brutish and stubborn of today's flock do not have the stomach for it.

Winners From the Weekend
You know about the Dakar Rally but did you know...

Maximilian Günther won the Santiago ePrix, his first career victory and he is the youngest winner in Formula E history at 22 years and 200 days old.

Eli Tomac won the Supercross race from Anaheim.

Kyle Larson won the Chili Bowl.

Liam Lawson took the first and third Toyota Racing Series races from Highlands Motorsports Park. Yuki Tsunoda won the second race of the weekend.

Coming Up This Weekend
The 24 Hours of Daytona
Rally Monte-Carlo
Supercross will be in Glendale, Arizona.
Toyota Racing Series heads to Teretonga Park.


Saturday, January 18, 2014

Final Stage of the Dakar Rally

Today marked the thirteenth and final stage of the Dakar Rally and it saw two classes go to the wire.

Giniel de Villiers won the final stage in the car class by twenty-three seconds over Krzystof Holowczyc with Russian Vladimir Vasilyev rounding out the podium forty-one seconds back but the story was the driver who finished fourth.

Nani Roma finished fourth, a minute and forty-second behind de Villiers but six minutes and four seconds ahead of Stéphane Peterhansel, more than enough to over come the deficit the Spaniard face entering the final stage and give Roma his first in the car class and ten years after winning in the bike class. Roma joins Peterhansel as the only two participants to win in multiple disciplines.

The final standings will show Roma won by five minutes and thirty-eight seconds over Peterhansel, who won the most stages in the car class in 2014 at four, with Nasser Al-Attiyah finishing third, fifty-six minutes and fifty-two seconds back. de Villiers finished fourth with Argentine Orlando Terranova rounding out the top five.

The truck class saw just as much drama. It appeared Dutch driver Gérard de Rooy was going to overcome a seven minute and twenty-five second gap to Russian Andrey Karginov but that wasn't the case. Czech Aleš Loprais won by two minutes and twenty-five seconds over de Rooy with Eduard Nikolaev finishing two minutes and fifty-three seconds back in third. Karginov finished six minutes and thirty-nine seconds back in seventh.

Karginov held off de Rooy by three minutes and eleven seconds with Nikolaev finishing more than ninety-minutes back his fellow Russian driver. This is Karginov's first career Dakar Rally victory after leading the truck class with four wins in 2014.

Cyril Despres will not make it back-to-back years as Dakar champion but he ends the 2014 edition with his third stage victory. The Frenchman defeated Joan Barreda Bort by two minutes and thirty seconds with Olivier Pain giving France a second representative on the podium, three minutes and ten seconds back of Despres. Hélder Rodrigues finished fourth, forty-three seconds back of Pain with Spaniards Juan Pedrero and Jordi Viladoms taking the next two positions.

Marc Coma finished eighteenth on the day, eighteen minutes and twenty-three seconds back of Despres but the Spaniard had a large enough gap entering the final stage that he has won his fourth Dakar Rally. Coma won by one hour fifty-two minutes and twenty-seven seconds over Viladoms. Pain finished third two hours and three seconds back. Despres finished fourth, thirty-five seconds back of Pain. Rorigues finished fifth ahead of Pole Kuba Przygonski and Barreda Bort. Barreda Bort won the most stages in the bike class with four.

Coma's victory extended KTM's winning streak in the Dakar to thirteen consecutive races.

American Mike Johnson finished the final stage sixty-first, thirty-three minutes and fifty seconds back. Johnson finished the Dakar Rally in seventy-fourth, nearly forty and a half hours back of Coma.

In the quad class, Ignacio Casale won his first career Dakar Rally in style. Not only did he win on home soil but took his seventh stage victory in this year's race. The Chilean defeated Dutchman Sebastian Husseini by fifty-four seconds to take the stage. Rafał Sonik finished three minutes and seven seconds back in third.

Overall Casale won by one hour twenty-six minutes and forty-nine seconds over Sonik. Husseini finished third, over five hours and forty minutes back. This is the first Dakar victory for a Chilean and Yamaha's undefeated record in the Dakar quad class remains intact, having won all six runnings of the quad class.

And that does it for the 2014 Dakar Rally. Spain see two victors while the quad and truck class each see first time winners. Congratulations to all who were able to finish this year's race. It is truly an accomplishment in of itself.


Friday, January 17, 2014

Stage Twelve of the Dakar Rally

France took two victories on the penultimate stage of the 2014 Dakar Rally and there was a change in position atop the car class.

Stéphane Peterhansel not only took the stage victory but finds himself leading the car class entering the final stage. The 11-time Dakar winner won by three minutes and thirty-eight seconds over teammate Nasser Al-Attiyah with Nani Roma finishing five minutes and fifty-eight seconds back of Peterhansel in third.

Peterhansel will enter the final stage with a twenty-six second lead over Roma. Al-Attiyah is fifty-four minutes and seven seconds back in third. Giniel de Villiers finished fourth on the stage and is fourth overall nearly an hour and twenty-one minutes back. Orlando Terranova is fifth overall just over six minutes back.

One day after losing the truck class lead, Gérard de Rooy won stage twelve but still finds himself seven minutes and twenty-five seconds back of Andrey Karginov. De Rooy defeated Karginov by thirty-one seconds to take stage twelve. Eduard Nikolaev finished third on the stage, three minutes and eighteen seconds back of de Rooy. Nikolaev is third overall, over an hour and a half back of Karginov.

Cyril Despres won his second stage of the 2014 Dakar Rally by two minutes and seventeen minutes over overall leader Marc Coma. Olivier Pain finished third, five minutes and fifty-three seconds back. Hélder Rodrigues and Jordi Viladoms rounded out the top five. Joan Barreda Bort had a disastrous day, finishing sixty-third, two hours twenty-nine minutes and thirty-five seconds back.

Coma enters the final stage with nearly a two hour lead over Viladoms. Pain is just over ten minutes back of Viladoms in third. Despres is fourth just under four minutes back. Rodrigues is over six minutes back of Despres in fifth. Barreda Bort's terrible stage dropped him down to to seventh, over three hours back of Coma. Polish rider Kuba Przygonski moves up to sixth over twenty-seven minutes ahead of Barreda Bort.

Ignacio Casale won his second consecutive stage and sixth stage of the 2014 Dakar Rally. Casale defeated Sebastian Husseini by five minutes and five seconds with Sergey Karyakin seventeen minutes and thirteen seconds back in third. Rafał Sonik finished fourth, nineteen minutes and ten seconds back.

Following the withdrawal of Sergio Lafuente in stage eleven, Casale holds a one hour twenty-three minute and forty-two second lead over Sonik. Husseini moves up to third but he is over five and a half hours back of the Chilean. Should Casale hold on to take victory, he will become to first Chilean to win a class in the Dakar Rally.


Thursday, January 16, 2014

Stage Eleven of the Dakar Rally

A Spaniards and a Chilean extended their class leads in stage eleven while one class changed as we enter the final days of the Dakar. There was also a penalty that changed the result in the bike class.

It appeared Marc Coma was going to extend his lead by winning stage eleven by two minutes and fifty-one seconds over Cyril Despres but the Spaniard was assessed a fifteen minute penalty dropping him to tenth on the day.

Despres won the stage by two minutes and thirty-seven seconds over Olivier Pain. Jordi Viladoms finished third, twenty-five seconds back of Pain with Joan Barreda Bort and Hélder Rodrigues rounding out the top five.

With the penalty, Coma leads Barreda Bort by thirty-seven minutes and thirty-six minutes overall. Viladoms remains third, an hour and fifty-two minutes back of Coma. Pain is under fourteen minutes back of Viladoms in fourth. Rodrigues finished fifth on the day and is fifth overall with Despres now less than a minute behind the Portuguese rider in sixth place.

Mike Johnson finished sixty-fourth on stage eleven, three hours one minute and nineteen seconds back of Despres. Johnson is sixty-sixth overall, over thirty-eight hours behind Coma.

Orlando Terranova won by ten minutes and fifty-seven seconds over Nani Roma but Roma was able to extend his lead after losing a lot of ground to Stéphane Peterhansel since the rest day. Giniel de Villiers finished third, twelve minutes and thirty-eight seconds back with Peterhansel coming back in fourth, fourteen minutes and fourteen seconds back.

Roma's lead over Peterhansel is now five minutes and thirty-two seconds with two stages to go. Nasser Al-Attiyah is third, fifty-six minutes and one second back after finishing fifth place today. Terranova is fourth is seven minutes and thirty-eight seconds back of Al-Attiyah.

Ignacio Casale won his fifth stage of the 2014 Dakar Rally and his first Dakar victory seems inevitable. Fellow Chilean Victor Manuel Gallegos Lozic made it a Chile 1-2 in class as he finished five minutes and twelve seconds back of Casale. Qatari rider Mohammed Abu-Issa finished third sixteen minutes and nine seconds back. Rafeł Sonik finished fourth, nineteen minutes and twenty-seven seconds back with Sebastian Husseini a minute and forty-nine seconds back of Sonik in fifth.

Casale leads Sonik by one hour four minutes and thirty-two seconds. Husseini is nearly five hours back in third.

Andrey Karginov won his fourth stage and third of the last four and has taken the overall lead in the truck class. Karginov finished fourteen minutes and eighteen seconds ahead of Eduard Nikolaev and fifteen minutes and fifty-one seconds ahead of class leader entering the day Gérard de Rooy.

Karginov leads de Rooy by seven minutes and fifty-six seconds with two days to go. Nikolaev is over a hour and half back in third. Karginov is going for his first Dakar victory and would become the fourth different Russian to win the truck class in the history of the Dakar Rally.