Story from www.wrc.com
The duel between the two was finally settled in the Poles favour by just 12.9sec, while Hayden Paddon from New Zealand was third, 3min 47sec further back.*
The ex-Formula 1 driver was the early pace-setter in his Citroen DS3 RRC, fending off Evans Fiesta R5 until stage nine on Saturday when the reigning WRC Academy champion edged ahead.
The class lead swapped four times that day, with Kubica emerging with a 7.8sec advantage ahead of todays final two stages. The win was Kubicas third in his debut WRC 2 season - his first on tarmac - and moves him into the lead of the championship with four rallies remaining.
It has been a good rally and a completely different type of tarmac to what Im used to, said Kubica, who revealed that it nearly all went wrong on the last stage.*
I was very nervous because we heard some noise in the transmission. I got distracted and missed a braking point, he said. Also the brake pedal wasnt so good so we had some diff or transmission problems. Fortunately we are here - so all good. *
Evans, 24, was one of the first to congratulate his rival at the finish control. It's been great, he said. Okay, weve had a few ups and downs and weve lost a few seconds here and there with various issues, but its been a fantastic fight with Robert and Im looking forward to France very, very much.*
Paddon was satisfied with third in his S2000 specification Skoda Fabia especially after a broken alternator belt almost took him out of the competition on the opening day. Overall it's been a good weekend, and I think even if we didnt have the problem would have finished in the same position, he said.
Weve achieved everything we can. We cant compete with the guys with turbos at this stage but Im pleased with our pace. Ive driven one of those cars and I know the difference - so its encouraging for the future I think.*
Local favourite Sepp Wiegand was fourth in another Skoda Fabia, but more than 10 minutes behind the lead trio after going off into a tree on Stage 12 and breaking his cars suspension. Despite the incident, Wiegand remained positive about his weekend.*
I think it was good especially the fight with Hayden yesterday, he said. After my crash I didnt fight because it made no sense with such a big gap. Fourth place is better than nothing *
Karl Kruuda, who became the rallys first retirement when his car fell off the start ramp on Thursday, was fifth.*Rashid Al Ketbi was sixth, with Ricardo Trivino seventh, Marco Vallario eighth and Carlos Fessman the final WRC 2 runner in ninth.*
More...
The duel between the two was finally settled in the Poles favour by just 12.9sec, while Hayden Paddon from New Zealand was third, 3min 47sec further back.*
The ex-Formula 1 driver was the early pace-setter in his Citroen DS3 RRC, fending off Evans Fiesta R5 until stage nine on Saturday when the reigning WRC Academy champion edged ahead.
The class lead swapped four times that day, with Kubica emerging with a 7.8sec advantage ahead of todays final two stages. The win was Kubicas third in his debut WRC 2 season - his first on tarmac - and moves him into the lead of the championship with four rallies remaining.
It has been a good rally and a completely different type of tarmac to what Im used to, said Kubica, who revealed that it nearly all went wrong on the last stage.*
I was very nervous because we heard some noise in the transmission. I got distracted and missed a braking point, he said. Also the brake pedal wasnt so good so we had some diff or transmission problems. Fortunately we are here - so all good. *
Evans, 24, was one of the first to congratulate his rival at the finish control. It's been great, he said. Okay, weve had a few ups and downs and weve lost a few seconds here and there with various issues, but its been a fantastic fight with Robert and Im looking forward to France very, very much.*
Paddon was satisfied with third in his S2000 specification Skoda Fabia especially after a broken alternator belt almost took him out of the competition on the opening day. Overall it's been a good weekend, and I think even if we didnt have the problem would have finished in the same position, he said.
Weve achieved everything we can. We cant compete with the guys with turbos at this stage but Im pleased with our pace. Ive driven one of those cars and I know the difference - so its encouraging for the future I think.*
Local favourite Sepp Wiegand was fourth in another Skoda Fabia, but more than 10 minutes behind the lead trio after going off into a tree on Stage 12 and breaking his cars suspension. Despite the incident, Wiegand remained positive about his weekend.*
I think it was good especially the fight with Hayden yesterday, he said. After my crash I didnt fight because it made no sense with such a big gap. Fourth place is better than nothing *
Karl Kruuda, who became the rallys first retirement when his car fell off the start ramp on Thursday, was fifth.*Rashid Al Ketbi was sixth, with Ricardo Trivino seventh, Marco Vallario eighth and Carlos Fessman the final WRC 2 runner in ninth.*
More...
Source: http://www.motorsportforums.com/wrc-news/159633-kubica-win-nets-championship-lead.html
No comments:
Post a Comment