Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge III: Attiyah top, Sunderland regains

Russian Vasilyev sidelined with injury; Schott and Gomshiashvili roll

QASR AL SARAB 5 April 2017: Qatar’s Nasser Saleh Al Attiyah stormed to a fourth successive stage victory in the car category at the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge, as Dubai-based Sam Sunderland won the motorcycle special to regain the advantage on two wheels on Tuesday.

Starting sixth on the road for the 288.73km passage along gatch tracks and through the towering dunes of the UAE, Sunderland delivered another stunning performance on his factory Red Bull KTM 450 Rally and now holds an advantage of 3min 06.7sec over Chilean rider Pablo Quintanilla.

Frenchman Pierre Alexandre Renet knew it would never be easy to open the road with such top class competition and the Husqvarna rider finished the stage in fifth and holds a similar position in the rankings behind the leading duo, KTM’s Matthias Walkner and Honda’s Paolo Goncalves. Emirati Mohammed Al Balooshi climbed to seventh position.

Sam Sunderland on the crest of further success at the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge.

Sunderland said: “It was a good day. I started back in sixth and I caught all the guys before the refuel, which I was really happy about. At the start I couldn’t see everyone after the start and I started to feel a little nervous so see whether I was catching them or not. You don’t know. I got to the refuel and I saw them just before me. After that it was good and I kind of cruised back. It was a bit windy out there. It all looks the same. There are thousands of dunes. You recognise landmarks from before and bits and pieces, but it gives you no advantage because every dune is different. I feel happy. I felt fast this morning.”

Al-Attiyah and French co-driver Matthieu Baumel stormed to the car stage win in cooler and windier conditions in their Overdrive Racing Toyota Hilux. The Qatari now heads Abu Dhabi Racing’s Sheikh Khalid Al-Qassimi by 39min 38sec with two days remaining.

“Today, the same,” said Al-Attiyah. “The car is working very well – a perfect stage for us. There is no advantage to coming here before. This is the desert. It is always changing. Saying that, it was much cooler today in the car. We do not have air conditioning. We saw 51 degrees yesterday. Today was better and it also gives more performance from the engine. Two days to go, but we will drive at the same pace. It’s a good pace.”

Al-Qassimi was upbeat after his first four days in the new Peugeot 3008 DKR. “It was not easy terrain and the organisers told me to go a certain way and we got stuck over there. We did not lose much time and deflated the tyres. It was very difficult to drive in that area. We lost some time until we found the route. After passing the bivouac we made a mistake when we took a different line and we drove inside the fence. We made another mistake about 50km from the end. It was windy and we went off the piste that you could see. You could not see the track and we tried to find a better way. We are still second overall today and for the rally. The most important thing for me is to gain the experience and the mileage and to benefit more and more.”

Czech driver Martin Prokop is on course for a career-best cross-country rally finish. The former WRC star clocked the fourth fastest time and holds third place. Emiratis Khalid Al-Jafla and Ahmed Al-Maqoodi produced stunning performances to claim the third and fifth fastest times in their respective Chevrolet and Polaris RZR 1000, but Qatar’s Mohammed Abu Issa got stuck, lost a jack and dropped to fourth. Yayha Al Helai and Mark Powell were running well in an unofficial seventh and eighth positions.

Sheikh Khalid Al-Qassimi (1)

Russian Vladimir Vasilyev lost his chance of maintaining a top five placing when he withdrew from the race at the end of the second stage with a back injury. The Mini All4 Racing driver decided to return to Russia, although his car developed engine issues the day before as well.

Poland’s Rafal Sonik stormed to the top of the quad rankings, despite ceding the stage win to Dutchman Kees Koolen. The multiple world champion leads the section by 2min 08.6sec on his Honda TRX 700 from fellow countryman Kamil Wisniewski. Kuwait’s Fahad Al-Musallam is third. “We have had some problems and delays on the rally and it was nice to have a good stage and a clean run,” said Sonik.

“It’s been another dramatic day on the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge,” said event founder and ATCUAE President Mohammed Ben Sulayem. “This race is one of the toughest in the world for good reason and we see many competitors with various issues to contend with. The temperatures are set to come down by several degrees over the next two days after the very hot spell we endured and that should be a respite for everyone.”

The Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge is taking place under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, the Ruler’s representative in Al-Dafra region, and has invaluable support from Al Dafrah Region Municipality, Abu Dhabi Municipality, the UAE Army, Abu Dhabi Police, National Ambulance Service, Yas Marina Circuit, ADNOC, Abu Dhabi Aviation, Al-Ain Water, Abu Dhabi Waste Management, Rotana and Centro Hotel – Yas Island, the Qasr Al-Sarab Resort and Al-Forsan Circuit.

Tuesday – as it happened

Walkner was awarded a one-minute time penalty in the bivouac on Monday evening for speeding in a control zone at PC3 yesterday and that meant he lost the overall lead to Gonçalves at the start of day three. Mohammed Jaffar also dropped from eighth to ninth overall after being docked 44 minutes for excessive speeding.

FIA World Cup leader Aron Domzala had pulled out of the previous day’s leg after suffering a severe bout of dune sickness in the punishing heat, but he continued into the hardest day of the event. The T2 battle was hotting up. Saudi Arabia’s Ahmed Al-Shegawi had won the previous day’s special, but Yasir Saeidan led overall after ongoing clutch plate issues for Emil Khneisser dropped the Nissan driver out of contention.

Al-Attiyah led the car entourage into the desert for the third day, but injury meant that Vladimir Vasilyev was forced to miss the rest of his event in his Mini All4 Racing. Germany’s Stephan Schott lost sixth place at the Moreeb dune when he tipped his Mini All4 Racing on to its roof. Neither Schott nor co-driver Andreas Schulz were injured and the sweep car was on the scene quickly. Numerous competitors suffered issues at Moreeb and Ian Barker called it a day after wife Sheila suffered a bout of motion sickness.

Sunderland benefited from his starting position to take command of the motorcycle stage. He passed the opening passage control behind his rivals on the track but well ahead on stage times. The Briton went on to win the special by 6mi 01sec from Quintanilla and leads the Chilean by 3min 06.7sec. Kevin Benavides suffered mechanical issues after the second passage control and fell out of contention.

Al-Attiyah romped to another stage win in the cars and increased his lead over Al-Qassimi to just under 40 minutes. Georgy Gomshiashvili was not so fortunate and rolled his Predator X18S in the dunes.

Tomorrow (Wednesday), is the penultimate stage of the event and the last of the loops through the Rub Al-Khali. The 250.25km special features three passage controls and starts to the west of the road between Mezaira’a and Madinat Zayed, before heading south-west and turning east to a refuelling point and PC at Al-Birer. The remainder of the special skirts the Saudi frontier and the dunescapes south of Moreeb before finishing 4.25km west of Hameem.

2017 Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge – positions on leg 3 (Tuesday – unofficial @ 14.50hrs):
Cars
1. Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 3hr 48min 31sec
2. Khalid Al-Qassimi (ARE)/Khaled Al-Kendi (ARE) Peugeot 3008 DKR 4hr 05min 06sec
3. Khalid Al-Jafla (ARE)/Ahmed Malik (ARE) Chevrolet Silverado 4hr 25min 35sec
4. Martin Prokop (CZE)/Jan Tomanek (CZE) Ford F-150 Evo 4hr 36min 02sec
5. Ahmed Al-Maqoodi (ARE)/Obaid Al-Kitbi (ARE) Polaris RZR 1000 4hr 49min 01sec

Bikes
1. Sam Sunderland (GBR) KTM 450 Rally Factory 3hr 55min 23.7sec
2. Pablo Quintanilla (CHI) Husqvarna 450 Rally 4hr 01min 24.0sec
3. Matthias Walkner (AUT) KTM 450 Rally Factory 4hr 04min 25.0sec
4. Paolo Gonçalves (PRT) Honda 450 CRF Rally 4hr 07min 26.2sec
5. Pierre Alexander Renet (FRA) Husqvarna 450 Rally 4hr 10min 24.2sec
6. Antoine Meo (FRA) KTM 450 Rally Factory 4hr 13min 06.0sec

Quads
1. Kees Koolen (NED) Barren Racer One 690 4hr 34min 43sec
2. Rafal Sonik (POL) Honda TRX 700 4hr 36min 21sec
3. Alexis Hernande Ponce (PER) Yamaha Raptor 700 R 4hr 39min 29sec
4. Khalifa Al-Raeesi (ARE) Honda TRX 700 4hr 47min 55sec
5. Rodolfo Schippers (GUA) Yamaha Raptor 700 R 4hr 50min 58sec
6. Fahad Al-Musallam (KUW) Yamaha Raptor 700R 4hr 52min 14sec
7. Kamil Wisniewski (POL) Yamaha Raptor 700 R 4hr 53min 00sec

2017 Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge – positions after Leg 3 (Tuesday – unofficial @ 14.50hrs):
Cars
1. Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT)/Matthieu Baumel (FRA) Toyota Hilux Overdrive 11hr 07min 08.7sec
2. Khalid Al-Qassimi (ARE)/Khaled Al-Kendi (ARE) Peugeot 3008 DKR 11hr 46min 46.8sec
3. Martin Prokop (CZE)/Jan Tomanek (CZE) Ford F-150 Evo 12hr 51min 44sec
4. Mohammed Abu Issa (QAT)/Xavier Panseri (FRA) Mini All4 Racing 13hr 52min 06.7sec
5. Ahmed Al-Maqoodi (ARE)/Obaid Al-Kitbi (ARE) Polaris RZR 1000 14hr 41min 40.6sec
6. Khalid Al-Feraihi (SAU)/Ali Hassan Obaid (ARE) Nissan Patrol 15hr 06min 32.3sec
7. Yayha Al-Helai (ARE)/Nasser Al-Kuwari (QAT) Nissan Pick-Up 15hr 37min 48.6sec
8. Mark Powell (GBR)/Quin Evans (GBR) Fast & Speed Buggy 16hr 02min 18.5sec

Bikes
1. Sam Sunderland (GBR) KTM 450 Rally Factory 11hr 41min 20.5sec
2. Pablo Quintanilla (CHI) Husqvarna 450 Rally 11hr 44min 27.2sec
3. Matthias Walkner (AUT) KTM 450 Rally Factory 11hr 46min 34.6sec
4. Paolo Gonçalves (PRT) Honda 450 CRF Rally 11hr 49min 07.8sec
5. Pierre Alexander Renet (FRA) Husqvarna 450 Rally 11hr 53min 18.3sec
6. Antoine Meo (FRA) KTM 450 Rally Factory 12hr 34min 11.1sec
7. Mohammed Al-Balooshi (ARE) KTM 450 Rally Replica 12hr 49min 59.7sec
8. David McBride (GBR) KTM 450 Rally Replica 13hr 55min 39.6sec

Quads
1. Rafal Sonik (POL) Honda TRX 700 14hr 46min 59.8sec
2. Kamil Wisniewski (POL) Yamaha Raptor 700 R 14hr 49min 08.4sec
3. Fahad Al-Musallam (KUW) Yamaha Raptor 700R 14hr 54min 05.2sec
4. Rodolfo Schippers (GUA) Yamaha Raptor 700 R 14hr 56min 50.9sec
5. Camelia Liparoti (ITA) Yamaha Raptor 700 R 15hr 41min 30.4sec
6. Maxim Antimirov (KAZ) Honda TRX 700 15hr 43min 44.4sec
7. Khalifa Al-Raeesi (ARE) Honda TRX 700 15hr 44min 10.8sec

For live timing and tracking during the race:
http://timing.sporttraxx.com/races/
http://tracking.sporttraxx.com/races/addc-2017/splits/
Spectator vantage points

Wednesday, April 5 – SS4 (ADNOC)
Start SS4 – 08.00hrs N23 28.925 E53 41.713 Fodder Farm – on MZ road 36km north of Liwa City.

PC1 – 08.45hrs N23 07.953 E53 17.843 U/pass (S) – 19km up Ghiyathi Rd Acc.

PC2 – 10.15hrs N22 53.173 E53 24.923 Bike refuel. Old village west of Arada

PC3 – 11.50hrs N22 50.936 E54 05.675 PC on Gatch road south of Khis.

Finish SS4 – 12.05 N22 56.742 E54 14.690 4.25km west of Hameem ADNOC at Farmer’s Services building.

Bivouac – 12.15hrs N23 53.057 E54 20.702 Qasr al Sarab

 – By Sports Staff