Mitsubishi
Wins Rain Soaked APRC Rally of Hokkaido
Japanese driver
Katsu Taguchi won a dramatic Rally of Hokkaido taking victory
in the final stages from his countryman Hiroshi Yanagisawa
in the Cusco Subaru by 2.3 seconds and moving into the drivers
championship lead with 43 points, 3 points in front of last
years APRC champion Australian Cody Crocker.
Based in the
city of Obhiro, Rally of Hokkaido takes place in the forests
around Rikebetsu 100 kilometres to the north. Months of dry
weather ended a few hours before the start, turning the previously
dry and dusty route into treacherously slippery tracks, especially
in the forestry stages that sit under a canopy of trees.
While Crocker
lead APRC after the first short Rikebetsu stage, Taguchi moved
ahead on stage 2 and after 5 stages held a 15 second advantage
over fellow Japanese driver Hiroshi Yanagisawa, with Crocker
5 seconds further back in third. Early casualties were Scott
Pedder out with gearbox problems and Kamada who crashed big
time in his Subaru – the damage so bad that he won’t
be a starter in the next APRC round in Indonesia.
While the morning
stages were run cool and dry conditions the weather changed
dramatically in the afternoon, when a huge rain-storm rolled
over the mountains near Rikebetsu just as the drivers entered
Puray 2- a 30km stage and the longest of the event. Amidst
flashes of lightning, booming thunder and torrential rain
the drivers did their best to race in the atrocious conditions,
fighting to control their cars in the channels of running
water.
The leading
competitors were slowed by having to push through huge amounts
of water and the biggest looser was Crocker who lost over
a minute and dropped to 5th, while Taguchi dropped from 1st
to 3rd. The biggest mover was Taguchi's MRF team-mate Gaurav
Gill who charged into 2nd place in APRC benefitting partly
from his lower start position but also proving that the young
Indian has huge potential for the future.
At final service
Gill said 'Thank goodness we made it back here in one piece.
Very pleased with my finish position today and quite surprised
we made up so much time on the other guys, but I guess they
were clearing the road of all the water, so its a bit of luck
and that's what rallying can be about - especially on a day
like today”.
Moving into
a 15 second lead was Yanagisawa, benefitting from his 4th
on the road start position but still setting an amazing time
on Stage 6 considering that the CUSCO driver had a rear tyre
puncture 10 kilometres from the end of the stage. Sitting
in third at the finish of day was Yanagisawa’s CUSCO
team-mate Dean Herridge.
Starting the
day in the lead and finished in 5th was not a position Crocker
is used to “That was a hell of an afternoon, a bit like
the weather it got deteriated as we went on. Stage 6 was diabolical,
far worse than anything I have ever driven in before, it was
just like driving through a lake. We lost a lot of time in
that stage, being the first car on the road we had literally
rivers in each wheel track and as we pushed all that out,
the roads obviously got a bit better for the cars behind.
We dropped positions today, but that might give us an advantage
tomorrow - have our competitors sweep the roads for us!”.
Taguchi second
on the road also dropped a heap of time "The roads were
like a river, even on a long straight we could only get to
100kph because of the water pressure, incredible!. We loose
alot of time but still we are in third place and only 21 seconds
from the lead".
With better
weather on day two Taguchi's challenge to regain the lead
started well, taking 4 and 5 seconds off Yanagisawa and at
the mid-day service the gap was down to only 4 seconds. However
in the afternoon stages the final few seconds proved hard
to get. Yanagisawa was equally determined to get his first
APRC win and pushed to the limit but gradually Taguchi whittled
the time down – a half second on one stage and a second
on the next. Finally on Stage 16 Taguchi inched ahead but
only by .1 of a second. Next stage that lead increased to
1 second and finally at the finish the gap to Yanagisawa was
a mere 2.3 seconds.
Both drivers
can be happy with their efforts especially in the final stages
when each was on the absolute limit. For Taguchi it was his
2nd international win on home ground in a year, after taking
Group N honors in last years Rally of Japan, “ "In
the afternoon Yanagisawa-san was pushing really really hard
and we can only catch him by a half second here and there.
It was very close in the end - very tough but a good race.
The whole event was very fast, as everyone knows the roads
very well - even me. I won Group N here in Rally Japan last
year, but then the gap was over one minute, this time only
a few seconds - finally we could win this rally, I’m
very happy".
Motor Image’s
Crocker managed to salvage something from the event taking
fastest time for day 2 and earning himself 3 bonus points
“That was a hell of fight, I wanted to beat Katsu and
Hiroshi today and we managed to do that just - by 4 or 4.5
seconds, that's really close. The biggest fight we've had
for along time - just for three bonus points, but a great
day. Yesterday was a big disaster, its disappointing that
the weather could that to us!! But not much you can do about
it, otherwise today was fantastic the roads were great”.
Taguchi's win
takes him to the top of the APRC drivers championship points
but Crocker is only 3 points behind and has one extra event
up his sleeve to get the extra points to win his third title.
The next event on the APRC calendar is the Rally of Indonesia,
an event known for extreme heat and thick dust. MRF Mitsubishi
won there last year, while Motor Image had a shocker –
it will be an interesting event.
Article
sourced from www.fiaaprc.com |