The New Zealand Herald

Paddon confirms NZ Rally campaign as Aussie mate looks to join in

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Dale Budge

World rally star Hayden Paddon has his eyes set on winning the New Zealand Rally Championsh­ip this season but he might have some world class opposition in his way.

Paddon confirmed yesterday that he would compete in five of the six rounds domestical­ly — missing only June’s Rally Canterbury because of a clash with his Hyundai WRC commitment­s.

But also trying to put together a full campaign is leading Australian driver Brendan Reeves, who won Rally Coromandel in a one-off drive last season, beating Paddon in the process. The two are good friends and Reeves works with Paddon as part of his gravel crew in the WRC.

If the Australian could confirm a full schedule, it would be a huge boost to the sport locally.

“I am talking with Brendan every week,” Paddon told the Herald. “We are trying to find ways to get him over here because I want to see it happen as well. It would be good for the championsh­ip to have that transtasma­n rivalry even though we are good mates. It’s almost a bit like the Neal Bates and Possum Bourne days — it would be nice to re-create that on this side of the Tasman.”

It would also put some pressure back on Paddon to perform. He won every stage at last year’s Rally New Zealand but with Reeves in the mix, it would replicate some of the pressure he gets in the WRC.

“I rate Brendan very highly as a driver and as we saw at Coromandel last year, he is definitely capable,” Paddon said. “It would be nice to have that sort of competitio­n.”

Paddon has won the NZRC three times — the last in 2013 — and is eyeing the chance of adding a fourth this year despite missing a round.

“It is certainly a possibilit­y, especially when you consider you drop one of the first five rounds, so it means if we finish all the rallies, we don’t miss out on any point-scoring opportunit­ies,” Paddon said.

“It is always hard when you come back home because that is what is expected and in these sorts of situations from a competitio­n point of view, you have nothing to gain and everything to lose.”

It has been a busy few months for Paddon and his team. He struggled with the Hyundai New Zealand i20 at Rally Coromandel in August but made changes for Rally New Zealand. Those changes worked as he blitzed the field in November but they have since stripped the car and given it a full overhaul.

“We have done a full ground-up rebuild, changed a few components on the car and what not,” Paddon said. “The guys have been busy over the last few months.

“We made some good progress in the last half of last year. At least we knew from that we had a base to work with.

“I guess you could say that coming from what I have been doing overseas, my standards are quite high, so we are just trying to continuous­ly develop it.

“We have changed the steering system, we have changed a few things in the transmissi­on and suspension; a little bit in line with what I have been learning overseas. We are trying to replicate some of those ideas into this car as well.

“We have a test in the South Island in a couple of weeks and then we will turn it around in time for Dunedin.”

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