The Citizen (KZN)

Ogier’s sixth world rally title

- Coffs Harbour

– Dominant Frenchman Sebastien Ogier, pictured, clinched his sixth world rally title yesterday in a gripping final race of the year at Australia, denying Belgian Thierry Neuville and Estonia’s Ott Tanak maiden crowns.

In one of the closest seasons of recent times, the M-Sport Ford driver came to Coffs Harbour with a three-point cushion over Hyundai’s Neuville and 23 in front of Toyota ace Tanak.

All he needed to do was stay ahead of the Belgian and in touch with Tanak over the three days of frantic driving along dusty and slippery roads.

The experience­d campaigner and his co-driver Julien Ingrassia did just that, getting an early edge when Neuville lost 40 seconds on day one after blowing a tyre.

When Neuville swiped a bank and ripped a wheel from his car and Tanak clipped a tree, forcing their retirement­s as they took risks in a desperate bid to make up time yesterday, the title was his before the rally finished.

Toyota (368 pts) won the constructo­rs championsh­ip ahead of Hyundai (341), M-Sport Ford (324), and Citroen (237). Ogier admitted he drove some of the stages yesterday “like my grandma would do”, knowing any mistakes could be costly at a race won by Finnish Toyota driver Jari-Matti Latvala, 32.5secs ahead of New Zealand’s Hayden Paddon in a Hyundai.

“It’s been an incredible season, so tough, and this is so emotional,” said the Frenchman, who finished fifth in Australia. “I am so proud of what I have achieved and so proud of our team. We’ve had an amazing journey together.”

He has now won six titles in a row to move within three of the greatest driver ever, fellow Frenchman Sebastien Loeb, who claimed nine on the trot between 2004-2012. It was his last race for Ford ahead of a switch next year to Citroen on a two-year deal.

He was part of the Citroen team between 2008-11 before decamping to Volkswagen between 201316 when he won four world titles, and then M-Sport Ford where he won his fifth and sixth.

The rain arrived early yesterday, leaving the forest roads slippery, as overnight leader Tanak found to his cost, sliding into the trees on stage two of the day. – AFP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa