Posts Tagged ‘2009’

2009 – the turning point, 2010 – the start of the climb, 2011 – the start of the success?

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

On the 2nd of January this year, I wrote (WRC is melted – let’s shape it) that I think 2009 will be the big turning point for rallying and the WRC – and looking back on that text and the past year I think I was right. With IRC and Eurosport upping the bids for media coverage already in Monte, with ground breaking live TV, it seems like North One TV has realised that much needs to be done on the WRC coverage. On that part, there is a long way to go – but looking at the competition things must happen. Just a few days ago Niel Duncanson and Simon Long told about their thoughts about digital media as a key to WRC growth – and finally I think they’re starting to get it… In lack of arenas (superspecials may be good, but the core of WRC isn’t really about that) – maps, GPS tracking, a big selection of live incar video feeds, etc. is the stuff that will make the audience pay for WRC coverage. Not TV summarys with bad commentators, at least 2-3 hours after the drama has finished…

Besides good tendencies on the coverage, the competition has really seen a boost this year. Of course I’m much thinking of the superb performance of Mikko Hirvonen, who managed to maintain really thrilling competition until the very last round of the WRC. It was quite a few years since we saw that – and no matter what happens in 2010, we know that 2011 will be a hell of a year when all the current drivers will need to adapt to new cars – the WRC1.6T spec.

Also, Petter’s new team has been a great success. He hasn’t been on the top of the podium, but honestly noone expected that – especially not in the Xsara (I’ve written a lot about this, for example: Xsara WRC – Petter’s smart disappointment). But what does that matter? In the media and on the TV coverage, Petter has been a regular and his new team has been a good injection to the championship. I’m the first one to admit I’m impressed by what he has put together!

So, that’s just a few of the highlights in 2009, but to sum it up everybody expected a middle-year – and in many aspects it was. But it was also a starting point where the championship reached it’s bottom somewhere in the shift 2008-2009, and then a lot of good things started to happen.

For 2010 I’m looking forward to having Kimi Räikkönen in rallying. Of course he will struggle a bit before he starts to set really decent results, but his star-quality is exactly what the WRC needs. We must admit that even if Loeb may be the best driver in the world to us, a Formula 1 driver attracts 10 times the coverage. Let’s hope that Kimi succeeds to such an amount that he decides to stay in rallying. Actually, I’d be surprised if we wouldn’t see him back in 2011…

In 2010, we will also see the comeback of Marcus Grönholm for a one time outing in Sweden – that will rock. Added to that, FIA has started the S-WRC championship for Super2000 cars. I guess this isn’t ground-breaking, but it’s a good thing to help some drivers keep their names up until 2011 – when they can compete (with money and skills) about a WRC1.6T seat. At the same time, IRC will probably go for a new all time high this year, as I’m sure many drivers will take the chance to do the same thing there.

Well, that’s a few good points looking back at 2009 and forward to 2010. I’ve left a lot out, I know that, so feel free to add your highlights and thoughts in the comments. As always, it’s much about money. We need to get even the good drivers into the WRC1.6T in 2011, not just the rich ones. All kinds of coverage must get better, and let’s hope that we get to see effects such as the Meeke-effect in GB after his superb IRC performance in more countries.  In total, I think a lot of steps has been taken this year to allow for that. 2010 may be the second year-in-between and a start of the climb up, so let’s use it to start even more good things to make the sport better. I think the future of rallying is bright, and it will start for real in 2011…

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I’m back!

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

At least to a certain amount. I’m sorry about the really, really silent second part of the year 2009, but I’ve been so busy with work and other things that I haven’t had the time to entertain all my blog readers. It has really been a shame and it’s been disturbing me, while I haven’t found any time to do good posts. At the same time, preserving good quality requires time, and I’ve never had the intention to do any half-measures or posts without good research. So, I’m really sorry for being away so long.

Now I’m taking a new step, and I hope to come back with MaxAttack on a good level. However, I don’t know how much time I’ll have – so I really can’t make any promises. In numbers I think a good guess is a few weekly posts, compared to the daily posts that was my goal in the first half of this year. Here, you are really welcome to help me by e-mailing me your news tips, rumours, thoughts and insights that may save me some time; rasmus [ at ] maxattack.net.

I’ll be back really soon looking back at the 2009 season and a look forward to 2010.

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The truth about the Suzuki rumours – no comeback in sight

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

One week ago I wrote about the potential Suzuki comeback rumoured in an Estonian newspaper and quoting former Suzuki driver Urmo Aava. The information sounded trustworthy and it was well in line with what I had previously heard, but now I know better. The rumours are mostly bullshit, the quotes are quite far from correct and a Suzuki comeback seems to be quite far away. My source is close to Urmo Aava and has a very big hand in his WRC bid, so this time information should be right, I’m afraid…

Last weeks rumour comes from the Estonian newspaper Postimees, and is written by a guy called Peep Pahv. Pahv called Urmo asking questions about the matter, and Urmo told he had no comments. Pahv chose to interpret that as if he was right in whatever information/ideas he had about a Suzuki comeback – and wrote the article. So, basically Urmo said nothing but Pahv still rendered a big article on the Suzuki comeback.

Quite opposite to the comeback rumours – Nobuhiro “Monster” Tajima has brought Suzuki to court after a conflict starting with Tajima’s retirement from the Suzuki WRT top position last year and the retirement of the team. My contact, who has very good insight into the WRC scene, believes that Suzuki is very tired of rallying after all problems related to the WRC assault, and that a comeback to rallying is really far away.

So, I guess the conclusion is that we shall forget about the Suzuki rumours and go back into the position we were two weeks ago, when a Suzuki comeback was still quite far away. Not very good news to the WRC, I’m afraid.

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Rally Argentina – the #5 event

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

Rally Argentina’s number this year is five. It was the fifth event of the year, it was Loeb’s fifth win of the year and it was Loeb’s fifth consecutive win in Argentina. It sounds cool – but I’m afraid it’s more bad than good.

After a first day with Sordo, Latvala and Hirvonen still in the fight about the lead, Loeb went into his common leading position on Saturday and kept it for the rest of the rally. For a long time, Jari-Matti Latvala looked to take a good position after his disappointing results recently – but on the 19th stage he got some problems with the fuel pressure, making him finish the rally i 6th position. Almost the same happened to Petter Solberg, who lost his fuel pressure on the next stage dropping him out of the rally. All this meant that Loeb won followed by his team-mate Dani Sordo and with Henning Solberg on third place. However, I’m not very worried about Latvala since he managed to finish, the fault wasn’t his – and I still think he has potential to be a good driver. Malcolm Wilson will have to take this error on his account and keep his confidence in Latvala.

In P-WRC Al-Attiyah won in front of Ligato, very much taking Ligato out of the discussion of a P-WRC win, while it made Al-Attiyah highly actual for the same thing. He’s now in second place of the championship, having only Armindo Araujo ahead and having Patrik Sandell just one point behind.

I must say… Let’s hope for a more interesting result in the same rally  – and hopefully a one where Loeb doesn’t win, Ford takes big points and the fight is a little bit better. The Loeb/Citroen domination is killing the WRC…

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Video: Cyprus Rally 2009

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

Check out a few nice clips from the Cyprus rally:

Shakedown:
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Nice clip from the rally:
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Cyprus has always been a rally with safety and quality lackings – here Ogier is close to hit a car on the stage:
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Patrik Sandell made a good performance in Cyprus – here is his own video:
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Thanks to mazdacupra, eWRC.cz, patriksandell.com and Anavian.

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Cyprus 2009: Loeb, Solberg, Sandell – and what happened with Wilson?

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

The 2009 Cyprus Rally is over, and it went much as expected. Loeb cruised to the win – despite his crying about having to go with gravel tyres on tarmac during the Friday stages, something that seemed to go pretty much just fine. Hirvonen in second is not a big surprise, much has happened since his Subaru struggle in 2004 and he now seems to be the only one really able to be even close to Loebs pace.

Another Subaru struggler that is happy is probably Petter Solberg. After some hard years and a retired works team, Petter is now back on the podium with a third place and two stage wins in Cyprus. To be honest, even this isn’t very unexpected. Cyprus is a rally where cautiousness, experience and reliability pays off – something that the Solberg+Xsara combination have quite a lot of. I expected Petter to be in the top 4-5, and he was – he even overshot my expectations a little. That’s fine – but in Portugal speeds will be much higher and the requirements are quite different. If I were Petter – I would make sure to switch from the Xsara now, despite the podium position. But switch to what…? Actually, I don’t think it matters wether he goes for a C4WRC or a Focus WRC. He will never get the absolutely hottest stuff if he’s not a works driver – and the cars are probably quite equal. Petter’s driving style should judge that choice. But one thing is clear – the Xsara wont be of much use in the upcoming, fast rallies of the season.

The PWRC fight was quite awesome, where Portugese driver Armindo Araujo made a stunning performance leading the rally into the last day. However, on the penultimate, super-long stage of the Sunday he was overtaken by Patrik Sandell who had followed him closely during the weekend. No matter that fact, I think Araujo should be really happy about the weekend and consider the fact that group N cars usually have no chance against the Super2000 cars – something that have been proven both in the PWRC and in the IRC. For Sandell, the victory is the second PWRC victory in a row, placing him in a pleasant championship lead 7 points ahead of Araujo and 12 points ahead of Brynhildsen. For PWRC, I still miss another Super2000 driver – preferrably a Skoda driver – that can provide a measure to prove the quality of Sandell’s performances. Sandell has always been a smart driver, but not the fastest – and to see a driver like Mikkelsen as his teammate would be really, really interesting.

A funny thing during the weekend was to follow Matthew Wilson, a guy that has been a real slow-runner in the championship for the last few years. For this rally, he seems to have adopted a conservative approach from the beginning increasing his self-confidence and experience – and then increasing speed to set good times. The result was a quite low average of placings on the stages (7 in average, to be exact), but a quite good fifth position in the final standings and also a stage win on the final stage.

So, of course most drivers probably backed off on the last stage opening the way for Wilsons win – but one certainly didn’t, and in fact he makes all pieces fall into place to understand both Matthew Wilson’s stage win and other things. With most other positions in the rally settled, Sebastien Ogier overtook Wilson on the penultimate stage – giving him a 5 second lead over Wilson. Ogier’s performance has been criticised by many people, but I think his performance until the 13th stage was very good – with an average stage position of 5,5. It’s far better than Wilson, who has been doing full championships for a few years with a car well as good as Ogier. Anyway, of course both Wilson and Ogier wanted that fifth place badly – and both put in an extensive attack on the final stage. For Ogier, it all ended beside the road just 200 meters from the finish – while it ended up with a stage win and a good rally performance for Wilson. Life isn’t really fair – and of course it’s hard for Ogier now. Anyway, if it helps, when praising Wilsons performance – I think one should keep in mind that Ogier made a far better performance despite less experience – if he just would have kept on the road for another 200 meters. I think Ogier will slowly get better when gaining more and more experience, and he may surely be podium contender within a year or two.

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Urmo Aava’s season in jeopardy because of budget trouble

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Just a bit more than a month ago, Urmo Aava presented his plans for 2009 with a drive in Stobart Ford. Aava has struggled during the first two rallies of the season. In Ireland he went off after an initial impressive performance, and in Norway he finished quite low down the standings after struggling the whole weekend.

Now, it also seems that Aava’s budget is far from complete – and Stobart is just paying a small amount of Aava’s budget this year. From what I know, the rest is mostly paid by some local Estonian companies and the Estonian tourism authority. Obviously, Aava is having problems to get enough money out there, which may cause him to miss some or all of the remaining rallies in the season.

Aava’s schedule until now has been Rally Ireland, Rally Norway, Rally of Portugal, Rally Italia-Sardinia, Rally Poland, Tour de Corse (France), Spain and Wales Rally GB.

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Video: Patrik Sandell test

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Patrik Sandell is good in handling media and provides the right tools for journalists, that has always been one of his advantages trying to get a drive on the super-close market. Good for you, because he and Red Bull provided me with video material from his test this weekend. I made a fast cut (please, sorry for not being TV-king) and now it’s here – for you.

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Rally Norway final entrylist

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Yesterday was the last day for local entries in Rally Norway – and now the final list is published. Find it here: 
http://static.rallynorway.no/files/2009/Entrylist040209.pdf

The list isn’t very long, but I think that’s what we can expect from this years WRC – and it’s at last quite high quality so it wont be a big problem. However, you can’t avoid wondering about overseas rounds such as Argentina and Australia – what will they look like? I think we can be down in as low as around 30 competitors there, and that wont be really good.

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Flodin took snow victory in Russia

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

Patrik Flodin spent his weekend in Russia doing Rally Peno as a warm-up before Rally Norway 2009 and took the victory in a very snowy, icy and partially very fast rally. Of course the competition in Russia isn’t as good as in the WRC or in many other championships, but anyway this is a sign of the Uspenskiy taking good care of the cars and technology. Patrik won in Wales in the end of last year and now he’s winning again. I don’t know if it’s just luck that makes the cars fast and reliable, but it’s the best possible sign going into the PWRC season. Patrik has struggled a few years but his potential as a driver is huge, and I think he may be a contender for the PWRC title if the team is as good as it seems.

A dream scenario to us swedes would be a close fight with both Patrik (Flodin) and Patrik (Sandell) in the top in the PWRC during the year – and one of them taking the title. Will it happen? It’s not impossible…

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