Global Times - Weekend

Peterhanse­l eyes 14th Dakar win

Starts in Lima, Peru, ends in Cordoba, Argentina

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Stephane Peterhanse­l will target a 14th victory on the Dakar Rally, played out over 9,000 kilometers of gruelling terrain which includes criss-crossing the Andes and confrontin­g the unique physical demands of Bolivia’s thin air.

The 40th edition of the classic endurance event, the tenth to be held in South America since it was shifted from terrorhit sub-Sahara Africa, starts in the Peruvian capital of Lima on Saturday and ends in Argentina’s second city of Cordoba on January 20.

Peterhanse­l has won on four-wheels seven times, including the last two for Peu- geot, and scorched to six titles on a motorbike since his event debut in 1988.

The veteran 52-year-old led a podium sweep in the car race for the French manufactur­er in 2017 and this year will be favorite again alongside teammates Carlos Sainz, a two-time world rally champion and 2010 winner at the Dakar, Cyril Despres and Sebastien Loeb, a nine-time world rally champion.

“Peru is the country that comes closest to Africa, with many dunes and big off-track spaces,” said Peterhanse­l.

“The mix between Peru, Bolivia and Argentina will probably be one of the most beautiful races in South America. They will be special – long and hard.”

He added, “We have to get out of Peru well placed. With all the dunes, we must try not to get bogged down. The rally will not be decided before the finish line in Argentina.”

Loeb, meanwhile, was runner-up last year.

“It’s difficult to predict as there are so many variables on the Dakar,” Loeb said when asked of his title prospects this year.

Peugeot’s main rival will again be Toyota who will be represente­d by Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah (2011 and 2015 Dakar winner) and South Africa’s Giniel De Villiers (the 2009 champion).

The two-week race will also see Portuguese soccer manager Andre Villas-Boas taking part.

Villas-Boas, who coached Porto, Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur, Zenit St Petersburg and Shanghai SIGP, will drive a Toyota Hilux as he revives a family link – his uncle Pedro Villas-Boas drove in the race in 1982 in a 4x4.

Villas-Boas, 40, said that he had originally thought of riding a motorcycle on the Dakar but then changed his mind after talking to one of the motorbike teams.

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