Posts Tagged ‘ford focus wrc’

Cyprus entrylist with 50% Fords in the WRC-class

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

The start list for the upcoming Cyprus Rally was released today, but didn’t show any positive surprises. No negative either, though.

The common works squad will be competing and Citroen Junior Team arrives with full crew, including Rautenbach, Novikov and Ogier – but without Atkinson. The later one of them has financial problems making him stay away from the wheel until the situation changes. Khalid Al-Qassimi is back for his second WRC start of the year in his BP Ford Abu Dhabi entered Ford Focus WRC, but most important is probably that Federico Villagra will do Munchis WRTs first WRC start of the year in a Ford Focus WRC. Munchis is registered as a manufacturer this year, following a change of rules allowing for manufacturers teams consisting of only one car. Stobart lines up Henning Solberg and Matthew Wilson – making the Ford guys a solid 50% of the A8 class. I saw someone talking about a manufacturers championship where all cars of a given brand would score manufacturers points – like in the IRC. This is a perfect example of why that’s a bad idea for the WRC!

Petter Solberg’s entry, given the Xsara a second chance, is interesting. As I’ve already ruled out, I think sticking to the Xsara in Cyprus is wise by Petter. People have asked why I didn’t predict Petter higher in Norway (see my prediction here) – and that’s just because the Xsara isn’t good enough, especially not since I know Citroen would never release it with it’s full engine capacity. But Cyprus is different. It’s a really, really rough rally where consistency counts – not speed. That opens up for Petter, and since the Xsara is known to be quite consistent I guess Petter can do good. If he manages to stay on the road without major problems, I think he’ll be in the top five or maybe four – you just need to get through the rally to get quite high. But honestly, after Cyprus I’d switch no matter what – because Citroen will neeeever give out a really good spec.

Read the entrylist (PDF): 
http://www.cyprusrally.com.cy/documents/entry_list.pdf

Video: Ford testing on Sardinia

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Ford has tested on Sardinia earlier this week, including tests of the Pirelli Scorpion gravel tyre on tarmac roads (since this combo will be used on Cyprus). Here are a few videos:

Ford on tarmac with gravel tyres:
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Jari-Matti Latvala on gravel, Capoterra, 24 feb:
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Mikko Hirvonen on gravel, Capoterra, 21 feb:
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One more video, including some service shots:
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Video: Henning Solberg test in Gol, Norway

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

As I wrote yesterday, Henning Solberg has tested his Stobart Ford Focus WRC for the upcoming Rally Norway. Here is a video from the test:

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Thanks to Styylie for the nice video.

Everything as expected on Ireland – Atkinson and Henning show their cards

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

Sebastien Loeb - winning again in Ireland

It became a weekend exactly as expected as anyone could fear in Ireland. Loeb first and Sordo second. Hirvonen trying to challenge – but ending up in third and Jari-Matti Latvala failed to finish. One of the few surprises was that Pirellis Sottozero winter-tyres in many situations proved to be better suited to the conditions than the tarmac tyres because of the extremely heavy rain. Once again, tyre choices on tarmac proved crucial – but in the end of the first day everyone had learnt about the Sottozero advantage – and everything was back to normal in the results table.

Before the rally I hoped that Chris Atkinson would show new strength landing in a new car – the Citroen C4 WRC. Partially he did, as he showed some good speed on the second day. However, he also proved that he wants too much by making two off road excursions. One was a really serious high-speed accident on day one where the crew should be really happy to escape uninjured – and one happened on the last day. The later one was really a disappointment, since it happened while Atko was battling Henning Solberg for fourth place. Looking back in Atkinson’s records he has gone off way too many times while battling for places. By now, he really should have learnt to keep high speed while staying exactly within the limit. However, I still hope that Atko can get the finances ready for more rallies to show his speed. Subaru was a really bad car and it’s not easy to get into a new car and deliver immediately – especially not in the Irish conditions this weekend – so he should get a few chances more. Atko himself named Greece and Australia as possible rallies to drive.

Unfortunately, also Urmo Aava proved to be the same old Urmo as ever. He is really fast and for a short while in the beginning he led the rally. I hoped for him to stay on the road, but already on SS6 he ended up somewhere off the stage. He got back into the rally an ended 10th, but that doesn’t mean too much. I don’t know why it happens, but now that Urmo has a fast car to drive for almost a whole season he really needs to switch focus. He should start off slow (many others go embarassingly slow, so why not him?) and then slowly increase the speed until he reaches that limit where he can’t go faster without going off. Everyone in the business knows that he can be fast – but everyone also knows that he rarely stays on the road. I think he could do really good results even if he stayed at 98-99% of his capacity – and then with much lower risk to go off.

Luckily, Rally Ireland also offered some small but still good surprises. Reigning JWRC champion Sebastien Ogier only did his second rally in a WRC car but managed to finish sixth, scoring three championship points. Even though Ogier wasn’t very fast I consider this very promising. If he can manage to score sixth place in his second WRC rally, there should be no problem finding the speed when he has collected some more WRC experience. But by finishing such a difficult rally as Ireland, he shows a mature and serious approach. In two weeks Ogier has scored an IRC win in difficult Monte Carlo and then a sixth place in Ireland – which is a really, really impressive performance.

Second happy surprise was Henning Solberg, finishing the rally just outside the podium. Henning has consistently been a catastrophe on tarmac, but on the gravel-like bumpy tarmac in Ireland he found his pace. With the new, top-spec Ford Focus he managed to do some okay stagetimes and most important he stayed cold in the battle with Chris Atkinson. After seeing Henning do such a decent result on tarmac, you can’t keep from wondering what he will be up to in Norway in two weeks? I’ve seen him on snow a number of times – and even since I don’t consider Henning top notch WRC material I think he can really battle for the win in Norway. I would be really, really surprised if he didn’t beat Petter – at least if he manages to stay on the road with an intact car. We’ll see in two weeks – in a rally that hopefully is a little bit less predictable than Ireland…

Video: Urmo Aava testing Focus WRC

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Until today there has been a lot of testing going on for Rally Ireland. Ford has been testing with their works team, Citroen tests and now even the Stobart team has tested. Urmo Aava did ca 100 km’s yesterday in Cooley Mountain on Ireland before going into todays and tomorrows recce for the event. Here is a video:

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Video by Mitybuck20. Thanks!

Xsara WRC – Petter’s smart disappointment

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Petter just confirmed that he will be doing Rally Norway in a Citroen Xsara WRC of -06 spec. A lot of details regarding the start are still unknown, but still it’s obvious that it’s a disappointment. Here is why:

  • The Xsara WRC is quite old. Launched in 2002 and left by the works team after 2005, it’s now been more than three years since it was a works car (even though it seemed to be semi-works ran in 2006).
  • Citroen has been very greedy when it comes to parts on the private Xsara’s. Daniel Carlsson and Manfred Stohl was nothing else than swindled going into the Kronos team for 2007 in the Xsara. They got old parts and had a car that – no matter what driver – wasn’t even close to winning speed for most of the season. Petter will fit some new parts to it himself, and maybe he has also got better luck, but I can’t imagine Citroen releasing parts good enough to have a chance to beat their C4′s. He will have to do a lot himself…
  • Petter has been first driver in front of Atkinson since 05 – now Atkinson sits in a C4 and Petter in a Xsara. Petter has a big ego (as a rally driver should have) and it will barely fit into the car now. He doesn’t expect to have winning speed – he just want to do a showoff to his home public. Probably he will go hard, but he will always have the excuse that it’s just a showoff. Not a good mental start…

So, why did Petter choose this quite faded car? Well, it starts in the last point up there. He wants to do a showoff. Safe sources tell that Petter tested in northern Värmland in Sweden this weekend – and both the Citroen and Ramsport (Ford, close to MSport) teams were there. Petter tested the Xsara for sure, maybe a C4 (but I don’t think so) and a Focus, probably a 07 or 08 spec. Of course the Ford is better than the Xsara – and the C4 too – if that was a choice. But… If he chose them – he would have been compared to Hirvonen, Latvala, Loeb, Sordo – and all the Citroen Juniors including Atko. For sure they would all have better parts than Petter (maybe he could have got the same as the Citroen juniors though). Also, Petter would have gone straight into the car without many km’s of testing, while Loeb, Sordo, Hirvonen and Latvala has already done seasons in their cars. Considering his struggling the last few years in Subaru, it would have been a catastrophe to his brand to fail in a car directly compareable to the best. Everyone would wonder “Now that Petter is in a good car – can he match the others?” an it would of course be unfair to him – as many WRC privateers have unfair chances in every rally they do.

The Xsara is quite the opposite… Even though it’s a disappointment to me and the rest of the rally community – Petter himself can only win. If he – in some strange manner – has managed to get good parts, he can become an underdog and strike from behind. Then it wont be “considering he’s in a good car” – instead it will be “despite he’s in a bad car”. And if he hasn’t, he will still just be bad because of the car. Not a big problem.

So, I’m quite sure the Xsara wasn’t the fastest option Petter could choose – just the best to himself. And I understand him. Probably he’ll do a good showoff, get somewhere in the top 10 and maybe even score some points. Then he can do what really matters to him – find a good, long term, solution.

Super2000 and Dakar too much for van Merksteijn – cancels MSport order

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Van Merksteijn Motorsport – expected to run 2 Ford Focus WRC in the 2009 World Rally Championship – has cancelled their order of a 3rd Focus WRC’s from MSport according to Turbo Magazine. The whole thing seems to be caused by driver Peter van Merksteijn competing in the Dakar combined with the fact that FIA decided in December that Super2000 would replace the World Rally Cars as the main class of the WRC.

Van Merksteijn’s Dakar adventure ended early, but the Rally Raid formula seems to have made a strong impression him causing him to cancel the order of a 3rd WRC car from MSport. Van Merksteijn says that world rally cars are at a dead end street and that Super2000 doesn’t attract him after having driven WRC. However, it seems that Van Merksteijn will still be able to spend some of his money, since he’s now about to enter more Rally Raid competitions as preparations for Dakar 2010.

Henning’s lucky day

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

A little bit more than a week ago Henning Solberg presented his deal: he pay’s 11M NOK (ca €1,15M) to drive with Ford/Stobart’s M2 team in all 12 rallies of the WRC season. A golden deal, considering that Henning according to himself will have a lot of testing and some extra priority included in the deal.

However, it’s quite a cheap price for the whole championship. What happened? In fact, Henning’s deal is more golden than you can imagine. Just the day before he announced his plans for 2009, he still thought he would do the season in a Peugeot 307WRC. Then – in the last hours – he got a call from Ford, offering him a drive 50% financed by Stobart (of course this means there will be some Stobart branding on the car), with testing, etc etc.

So, for Henning – that already had a car and just waited for his sponsors to commit – the decision must have been very easy. Switch back to the car he has already used for two years (before he had even left it), but in an even better deal, and save some money and problems. Crystal clear.

Galli and Duval may both enter the Stobart team

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

Two of the more experienced WRC drivers out there that have not yet confirmed their plans for 2009 are Italian Gigi Galli and Belgian Francois Duval. Both of them competed parts of the 2008 WRC in Ford Focus WRC with the Stobart team. Now the Ford boss Malcolm Wilson admit that they may still be back in the team for 2009 – much depending on how the impact of the financial crisis develops.

Confirmed and potential drivers in Ford are now:

  • Mikko Hirvonen
  • Jari-Matti Latvala
  • Khalid Al-Quassimi
  • Matthew Wilson
  • Urmo Aava
  • Henning Solberg
  • Federico Villagra
  • (Potentially another 2nd driver in the Munchis team – may still be one of above though)
  • Peter van Merksteijn
  • Peter van Merksteijn Jr
  • Gigi Galli
  • Francois Duval
  • Petter Solberg (?)

From what I know all these entries except(?) for father and son Merksteijn is to be entered and served by MSport. Seems like a huge job for MSport to drive up to 9-10 drivers per event, but they have previously proved with a lot of entries that they seem to have the capacity.

Let’s now hope that both Galli and Duval get their pieces together!

Now confirmed: Aava in Ford/Stobart

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

There have been rumours, and in my recent post “Who drives what in WRC 2009?” i predicted it, but reading the Rally Ireland 2009 entrylist it’s now confirmed: Urmo Aava from Estonia will drive a Ford Focus WRC for the Stobart team in 2009. He is also confirmed to be driving Norway, Portugal, Italy, Poland, Finland, Spain and GB in the team.

What’s quite interesting is that Henning Solberg, who announced a his deal with the Ford boss Malcolm Wilson just a few days ago, is not nominated as a points scorer for Stobart in the rally. Instead, Matthew Wilson is nominated (as usual) and Aava. That’s strange, considering the fact that Henning presented his deal as a really good one including a lot of testing and highest priority in the Stobart team. The later is now very unlikely to be true, as I’m sure Wilson Sr (Malcolm, team boss) will put his focus on the drivers that scores points for the team. Of course, Henning will probably be nominated in rallies later – for sure in Norway – but it’s still not good for him to be set aside for a young driver as Aava.

Other things to note is that Khalid Al-Quassimi, as expected, drives a third works Ford and that Chris Atkinson has been nominated along with reigning junior champion Sebastien Ogier to score points for the Citroen team. That means that the Citroen bosses sets mediocre-driving-but-well-paying Conrad Rautenbach aside, which is probably a good decision for both the team and the sport.