Fourmaux Leads The Way In Saudi Arabia

Adrien Fourmaux led Rally Saudi Arabia on Thursday night after a chaotic opening leg in the desert, while Sébastien Ogier moved narrowly ahead of Elfyn Evans in the FIA World Rally Championship title race.

Fourmaux climbed to the front after a bruising afternoon in which drama reshuffled the order on the second pass of Khulays. The Frenchman stayed clear of major issues across all seven stages to end the day 6.0 seconds ahead of Toyota’s Sami Pajari, with early pacesetter Mārtiņš Sesks just 0.9 seconds further back in third.

The rally lead had changed hands several times through the day. Sesks dominated the morning loop with two stage wins and built a strong advantage before a right-rear puncture on the repeat of Moon Stage cost him more than 15 seconds. Pajari then moved ahead after winning SS6, only for a front-right delamination on the final stage to drop him back behind Fourmaux. Both remain firmly in the fight heading into Friday.

“I’m really pleased with the day,” Fourmaux said. “To be fair, I’m always thinking that we could push more and gain a bit more time, but it’s always playing with the balance between pushing and saving the car and the tyres, so I think we did it quite well. The gaps are small, so nothing is done for sure, but it’s positive to finish the day like that – the road position is important here and I’m pleased to have a good road position for tomorrow.”

The biggest shift, however, came behind them. Championship leader Evans, running first on the road, fought poor grip all day as he swept loose sand and rocks for the field behind. A minor overshoot in the morning added to his deficit and he ended the day ninth, more than a minute adrift after further time loss on the abrasive afternoon loop.

Ogier, who trailed his GR Yaris Rally1 team-mate by three points coming into this final round, managed the conditions more effectively and avoided the issues that delayed several rivals. The Frenchman reached the overnight service in seventh and, with Evans struggling, moved into the provisional championship lead by a single point.

Kalle Rovanperä’s hopes of a third world title narrowed further after two punctures restricted him to eighth, slotting him between Ogier and Evans at the day’s end.

Evans will start fourth in the road order on Friday, with Ogier sixth – two places further back and directly behind Rovanperä – handing the Frenchman a small but meaningful advantage.

“You can’t see it on the classification, but we’ve been doing a pretty good job today,” Ogier said. “My main target anyway is Elfyn and Kalle, and on that side we have done what we had to do – we are in front of them.”

Ott Tänak sits fourth overnight after winning the penultimate stage despite reporting possible suspension damage. His i20 N Rally1 colleague Thierry Neuville is fifth after a day marked by a cracked windscreen and a slow puncture, while Takamoto Katsuta holds sixth following a cautious, tyre-protecting approach.

Grégoire Munster and Oliver Solberg completed the top 11, while Munster’s M-Sport Ford team-mates Josh McErlean and Nasser Al-Attiyah were both delayed by tyre deflations – the latter losing more than seven minutes when his jack became stuck.

 

 

SPEED SPORT Staff
SPEED SPORT Staff
With a heritage dating back to 1934, SPEED SPORT's experienced staff carries on that tradition by providing accurate, timely and credible news and information 24/7.

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