Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

A new path for India’s off-road racing

FORWARD GEAR The inaugural India Baja, with ambitions to grow into a Dakar challenge, is an interestin­g new domestic experiment

- SUKHWANT BASRA NATIONAL SPORTS EDITOR

Indian off-road racing has been on simmer for quite some time now.

The national rally championsh­ip comes and goes and so do a few cross-country events but these hardly create a ripple beyond the borders. Essentiall­y, the same bunch of guys continue to beat another bunch which has been around for a very, very long time. Few fresh faces emerge, there is limited support and interest from automobile majors and overall sponsor interest stays muted. To put in bluntly, the Indian off-road scene is akin to a puny merry-goaround which keeps chasing its own tail; it seems stuck going around in circles.

Last weekend the beautifull­y languorous city of Bikaner — which doesn’t really jump off the map when it comes to excitement — hosted an event which has been by far the most exciting thing in Indian off-road racing for quite some time. The India Baja was a short 500-km affair that looks to grow into something similar to the cult Mexican Baja 1000 which is a non-stop 24-hour race.

Organising club Northern Motorsport aspires to make this a Dakar challenge event. That will allow winners a free entry into an event which in turn offers winners a free entry for the actual Dakar. The Dakar is the mother of all off-road events and takes place in Argentina and neighbouri­ng countries.

COST MATTERS

Now, a free entry is no small thing for a competitor as the Dakar asks 14,800 euros (`11.3 lakh) in the bike category and 25,100 euro (`19.17 lakh) for a two-man car entry. However, to get the Dakar branding, the club will have to pay 25,000 euro (`19.09 lakh). Given the limited amount of sponsor interest and the fact that the entry fee for events in India is a few thousand rupees (`4900 for moto-quad and ` 12,900 for cars at the India Baja) it will be difficult for organizers to even recover costs, forget making a profit.

Northern Motorsport folk are confident they will raise the game next year. The Dakar branding would mean entries from abroad and a hefty dose of competitio­n that is bound to shake up the lethargic Indian field. To take on the foreign invaders, Indian automobile companies may also wake up from their slumber. In fact Mahindra has already done detailed costing for participat­ing in an event like the Dakar and if a qualifying event is happening in the company’s own backyard, it may just be the kind of push that Mahindra needs.

After all, the auto major’s factory team has dominated events in India and now needs to showcase its ability abroad. South America, where the Dakar unfolds, is a key market for Indian automobile­s. Completing the Dakar gives a manufactur­er genuine bragging rights and can certainly be a marketing plus for any Indian company that manages to tame the sprawl it forces competitor­s to negotiate.

Of course, arcane Indian rules like civilian helicopter­s being forced to land only on designated helipads (which in turn scuttles the very idea of a rescue chopper), the hassles of operating a sat phone (with many security aspects involved) and no clarity on registrati­on of special vehicles purpose-built for such abuse do make holding an internatio­nallevel Baja difficult. PLEASANT SURPRISE While Northern Motorsport ponders on whether it can muster enough support and will to bring in a Dakar Challenge event, as of now the Baja still serves as an ideal weekend event for the motorsport enthusiast. This writer has been long skeptical about the way speed events are conducted in our country but the Baja made for a pleasant surprise with its loopy format allowing for easy service access, and empathetic organizers.

Just how this event grows remains to be seen but the reintroduc­tion of night rallying over desert sand is already taking Indian off-road racing into an altogether new realm. After all, just how long can things just keep simmering? Indian motorsport needs to explode out of its narrow confines and the Baja is a step in the right direction. That this was the first Indian event with live-tracking of every vehicle and enhanced safety as the loopy circuit allows for quicker hospital access, is all the more heartening.

 ?? PHOTO: VIVEK MUKHERJI ?? India’s premier off-road biker and Dakar finisher CS Santosh beat the rest of the field by almost an hour to claim the inaugural India Baja.
PHOTO: VIVEK MUKHERJI India’s premier off-road biker and Dakar finisher CS Santosh beat the rest of the field by almost an hour to claim the inaugural India Baja.

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