Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2008 Rally of Turkey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2008 Rally of Turkey
9th Rally of Turkey
Round 8 of the2008 World Rally Championship
← Previous eventNext event →
Host country Turkey
Rally baseAntalya
Dates runJune 12 – 15 2008
Stages19 (360.74 km; 224.15 miles)
Stage surfaceGravel
Overall distance1,263.74 km (785.25 miles)
Statistics
Crews60 at start, 38 at finish
Overall results
Overall winnerFinlandMikko Hirvonen
BP Ford Abu Dhabi World Rally Team

The9th Rally of Turkey, the 8th round of the2008 World Rally Championship season took place between June 12–15, 2008. The event returned after a year sabbatical and was held in the south west of Turkey, with the rally headquarters and service park based in the seaside resort ofKemer. Thespecial stages are held on gravel mountain roads to the south west ofAntalya.[1] The rally was won by Finland'sMikko Hirvonen, withJari-Matti Latvala finishing second andSébastien Loeb third. With this result Hirvonen took a three-point lead over Loeb in the drivers world championship going into the six-week summer break.

Event

[edit]

Day one

[edit]

The event kicked off with a short superspecial stage on Thursday evening, which was won bySébastien Loeb. On Friday - the first full day of the rally - he was due to run first and 'clean' the roads. This had a big impact on his performance (his stage times were up to 29 seconds quicker on the second pass through the stages) and meant that he would only win one stage on the day. Despite this he would still be leading the end of day one as theFord drivers all took a tactical approach to the final stage of the day in order to secure a more advantageous road position for day two[2] - a tactic criticised by theCitroën Total team bossOlivier Quesnel.[3] Behind Loeb were the drivers for theBP-Ford Abu Dhabi World Rally Team and theStobart VK M-Sport team, with the last of the Ford quartet, fifth place manMikko Hirvonen, a mere 6.2 seconds behind Loeb at the end of day one. Ahead of Hirvonen wasGigi Galli in fourth place. Galli won three stages, with his teammateHenning Solberg winning one stage and finishing the day in second place. The remaining Ford driver wasJari-Matti Latvala who ended the day in third place after an astonishing performance that saw him take two stage wins (one by a margin of 15 seconds) and pick up two punctures.

Behind the leaders wasSubaru driverPetter Solberg. The new Subaru was more disappointing than on its debut inGreece with Petter Solberg nearly 50 seconds off the pace.Matthew Wilson was in seventh spot, just over a minute behind despite suffering with a cold.[4] In the final points paying position wasDani Sordo. Sordo was running in fifth until suspension damage on stage 7[5] put him back into 8th place.

Day two

[edit]
Daniel Elena and Sébastien Loeb

The Citroën teams fears about road sweeping were confirmed throughout the day as Loeb lost time to both factory Ford drivers. By the end of the day Loeb was 34 seconds adrift of new rally leader Mikko Hirvonen, yet Loeb still believed that "anything was possible[6]". Hirvonen had earlier said that he needed a lead of 50 seconds[7] to hang on to his lead throughout Sunday. With a lead of only 16 seconds over his teammate Latvala - there was still everything to play for going into Sunday. Behind the three leaders, the two Stobart drivers both had a less successful day. After starting brightly, Gigi Galli suffered turbo problems throughout stages 12 and 13[8] which dropped him to 8th place by the end of the day. Galli had to retire from the rally at this stage as he was suffering from dehydration and exhaustion. Henning Solberg had a quiet day and gradually dropped time, finishing up just over two minutes off the pace in 4th place with Dani Sordo looming large, only 7 seconds behind. Petter Solberg and Matthew Wilson continued their steady runs in 6th and 7th place respectively.

Day three

[edit]
Rally winner Mikko Hirvonen

With over sixty five kilometres of special stages still to go, the rally was still wide open. The tension was increased further after the first special stage of the day as Hirvonen stalled at the start line and lost nine seconds of his advantage to Latvala.[9] Everything had looked settled after special stage 18, with Latvala making a small mistake and losing the advantage he had gained at the previous stage, but the final thirty kilometre stage saw drama right to the end. Both the challengers to Hirvonen's lead were making significant inroads at the mid way split. Latvala was 4.3 seconds faster than Hirvonen, with Loeb 11.3 seconds faster[10] and putting both Ford drivers under enormous pressure - pressure that was increased when Hirvonen suffered a puncture near the end of the stage.[11] However, Latvala and Loeb's tyres were also very worn and they could not maintain their final stage attack. At the end Hirvonen hung on to win by 7.9 seconds from Latvala, with Loeb 25 seconds back in third.

Behind the podium finishers, Citroën's Dani Sordo easily picked off Henning Solberg to claim fourth place. Henning's brother Petter Solberg maintained his sixth position, never really being in a position to challenge theStobart Ford driver. Matthew Wilson shrugged off his cold to finish in seventh with eighth place going to privateerConrad Rautenbach, scoring his second points finish of the season.Federico Villagra andBarry Clark finished ninth and tenth, thus earning theMunchi's Ford team three valuable manufacturer points.

Results

[edit]
Pos.DriverCo-driverCarTimeDifferencePoints
WRC
1.FinlandMikko HirvonenFinlandJarmo LehtinenFord Focus RS WRC 074:42:07.10.010
2FinlandJari-Matti LatvalaFinlandMiikka AnttilaFord Focus RS WRC 074:42:15.07.98
3FranceSébastien LoebMonacoDaniel ElenaCitroën C4 WRC4:42:32.825.76
4SpainDani SordoSpainMarc MartiCitroën C4 WRC4:44:32.72:25.65
5NorwayHenning SolbergNorwayCato MenkerudFord Focus RS WRC 074:44:40.82:33.74
6NorwayPetter SolbergUnited KingdomPhil MillsSubaru Impreza WRC 20084:44:55.32:48.23
7United KingdomMatthew WilsonUnited KingdomScott MartinFord Focus RS WRC 074:46:31.34:24.22
8ZimbabweConrad RautenbachUnited KingdomDavid SeniorCitroën C4 WRC4:49:53.87:46.71
PCWRC
1AustriaAndreas AignerGermanyKlaus WichaMitsubishi Lancer Evo 95:02:21.60.010
2SwedenPatrik SandellSweden Emil AxelssonPeugeot 207S20005:03:10.348.78
3ItalyMirco BaldacciItalyGiovanni AgneseMitsubishi Lancer Evo 95:05:22.63:01.06
4EstoniaMartin RaumEstoniaSilver KuttMitsubishi Lancer Evo 95:07:52.65:31.05
5ItalyArmindo AraujoItalyMiguel RamalhoMitsubishi Lancer Evo 95:08:45.46:23.84
6RussiaEvgeniy VertunovRussiaGeorgy TroshkinSubaru Impreza5:09:14.66:53.03
7ItalySimone CampedelliItalyDanilo FappaniMitsubishi Lancer Evo 95:14:40.712:19.102
8ItalyGiorgio BaccoSan MarinoSilvio StefanelliSubaru Impreza5:25:14.322:52.71

Retirements

[edit]

Special stages

[edit]

All dates and times areEEST (UTC+3).

DayStageTimeNameLengthWinnerTimeAvg. spd.Rally leader
1
(12/13 JUN)
SS117:25Antalya SSS 12.60 kmFranceS. Loeb2:07.673.4 km/hFranceS. Loeb
SS208:38Perge 122.43 kmEstoniaU. Aava16:03.683.8 km/hFinlandM. Hirvonen
SS309:21Myra 124.15 kmFinlandJ. Latvala21:05.368.7 km/h
SS409:59Kumluca 19.90 kmItalyG. Galli7:47.476.3 km/h
SS512:57Perge 222.43 kmItalyG. Galli15:42.885.6 km/h
SS613:40Myra 224.15 kmFinlandJ. Latvala20:46.069.8 km/hFinlandJ. Latvala
SS714:18Kumluca 29.90 kmFranceS. Loeb7:38.977.7 km/hFinlandM. Hirvonen
SS817:01Chimera 116.94 kmItalyG. Galli12:21.582.2 km/h
SS917:47Phaselis 122.40 kmNorwayH. Solberg17:49.375.6 km/hFranceS. Loeb
2
(14 JUN)
SS1009:28Chimera 216.94 kmFinlandM. Hirvonen11:57.385.0 km/h
SS1110:16Silyon 127.36 kmFinlandM. Hirvonen21:53.575.0 km/hFinlandM. Hirvonen
SS1212:59Kemer 120.50 kmEstoniaU. Aava15:06.981.4 km/h
SS1313:49Silyon 227.36 kmFinlandM. Hirvonen21:36.875.9 km/h
SS1416:32Kemer 220.50 kmFinlandJ. Latvala14:49.483.0 km/h
SS1518:23Phaselis 222.40 kmFinlandM. Hirvonen
FranceS. Loeb
17:19.277.6 km/h
SS1619:01Antalya SSS 22.60 kmFranceS. Loeb2:06.374.1 km/h
3
(15 JUN)
SS1709:38Olympos 131.03 kmEstoniaU. Aava25:07.574.1 km/h
SS1812:04Camyuva5.50 kmFranceS. Loeb4:11.278.8 km/h
SS1913:07Olympos 231.03 kmFinlandJ. Latvala24:48.975.0 km/h

Championship standings after the event

[edit]

Drivers' championship

[edit]
PosDriverMON
Monaco
SWE
Sweden
MEX
Mexico
ARG
Argentina
JOR
Jordan
ITA
Italy
GRC
Greece
TUR
Turkey
FIN
Finland
GER
Germany
NZL
New Zealand
ESP
Spain
FRA
France
JPN
Japan
GBR
United Kingdom
 Pts 
1FinlandMikko Hirvonen2245123159
2FranceSébastien Loeb1Ret.111011356
3FinlandJari-Matti Latvala121315737234
4AustraliaChris Atkinson3212236Ret.1331
5SpainDani Sordo116173255430
6NorwayPetter Solberg5412Ret.Ret.102620
7ItalyGigi Galli63Ret.784Ret.Ret.17
8NorwayHenning Solberg9135Ret.478516
9United KingdomMatthew Wilson10Ret.6Ret.5126712
10ArgentinaFederico Villagra766141398
11ZimbabweConrad RautenbachRet.1616426131086
EstoniaUrmo Aava18Ret.84Ret.6
13BelgiumFrançois Duval45
14NorwayAndreas Mikkelsen5Ret.194
15FranceJean-Marie Cuoq72
FinlandToni GardemeisterRet.7Ret.Ret.Ret.Ret.9Ret.2
17SwedenPer-Gunnar Andersson8Ret.Ret.24Ret.911Ret.1
FinlandJuho Hänninen81
FranceSébastien Ogier811221
AustriaAndreas Aigner31814111
PosDriverMON
Monaco
SWE
Sweden
MEX
Mexico
ARG
Argentina
JOR
Jordan
ITA
Italy
GRC
Greece
TUR
Turkey
FIN
Finland
GER
Germany
NZL
New Zealand
ESP
Spain
FRA
France
JPN
Japan
GBR
United Kingdom
Pts
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleDid not finish (Ret)
BlackExcluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
BlankWithdrew entry from
the event (WD)

Manufacturers' championship

[edit]
RankTeamEventTotal
points
MON
Monaco
SWE
Sweden
MEX
Mexico
ARG
Argentina
JOR
Jordan
ITA
Italy
GRC
Greece
TUR
Turkey
FIN
Finland
GER
Germany
NZL
New Zealand
ESP
Spain
FRA
France
JPN
Japan
GBR
United Kingdom
1United KingdomBP Ford World Rally Team81811713141018-------99
2FranceCitroën Total World Rally Team11410169141511-------90
3JapanSubaru World Rally Team106986383-------53
4United KingdomStobart M-Sport Ford88337534-------41
5ArgentinaMunchi's Ford World Rally Team00644203-------19
6JapanSuzuki World Rally Team23010130-------10

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Rally of Turkey".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 12 June 2008. Retrieved13 June 2008.
  2. ^"Ford team plays its tactical aces on SS9".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 1 July 2008. Retrieved2008-06-13.
  3. ^"Citroen Team boss critical of Ford's tactical game".wrc.com. Retrieved2008-06-13.
  4. ^"SS4: Hirvonen leads after the morning loop".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved2008-06-13.
  5. ^"Hirvonen back on top after SS7".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 1 July 2008. Retrieved2008-06-13.
  6. ^"SS15: Decisive stage proves tactics-free".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 15 June 2008. Retrieved2008-06-15.
  7. ^"Manufacturers' points the priority for Ford".wrc.com. Retrieved2008-06-15.
  8. ^"SS12: Galli loses third".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved2008-06-15.
  9. ^"Lead battle intensifies on SS17".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved2008-06-15.
  10. ^"SS19 Olympos 2 Split times".wrc.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved15 June 2008.
  11. ^"Hirvonen leads Ford 1-2 in Turkey".autosport.com.Archived from the original on 16 June 2008. Retrieved2008-06-15.

External links

[edit]
Rallies
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2008_Rally_of_Turkey&oldid=1304088234"
Categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp