Al-Rajhi wins first Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge for KSA as Loeb extends lead in title race 

Saudi's Yazeed Al-Rajhi and German partner Timo Gottschalk celebrate winning the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge. (Twitter/@Yazeed_AlRajhi)
Saudi's Yazeed Al-Rajhi and German partner Timo Gottschalk celebrate winning the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge. (Twitter/@Yazeed_AlRajhi)
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Updated 03 March 2023
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Al-Rajhi wins first Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge for KSA as Loeb extends lead in title race 

Saudi's Yazeed Al-Rajhi and German partner Timo Gottschalk celebrate winning the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge.
  • Frenchman puts Bahrain Raid Xtreme firmly in pole position in World Rally-Raid Championship

 

ABU DHABI: Sebastien Loeb extended his lead in the World Rally-Raid Championship today as Yazeed Al-Rajhi became the first Saudi Arabian driver to win the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge.

Al-Rajhi and German partner Timo Gottschalk finished top with a a time of 16 hours, 28 minutes ands six seconds.

Partnered by Fabian Lurquin in the Bahrain Raid Xtreme Prodrive Hunter, Loeb produced a measured drive through the final 206 km stage, settling for the second best time on the day to open up a 16-point W2RC advantage over Nasser Al-Attiyah.

The Qataris’ exit from the Desert Challenge following a heavy crash on Wednesday paved the way for Al-Rajhi’s outright win in a Toyota. The Saudi reached the finish in Abu Dhabi with a cushion of 12 minutes 31 seconds over Czech Martin Prokop in a Ford Raptor.

Meanwhile, after his victory on the penultimate stage, Loeb adopted a safer approach to the final day, knowing that one bad landing could block his path to the finish, and wipe out all points won the hard way this week in the impressive BRX Prodrive Hunter.

While mechanical issues on the opening stage had brought huge time penalties, costing him his chance of a first win in the UAE, the nine-time world rally champion is now firmly in W2RC pole position in the Hunter.

Loeb said: “We are at the end of the rally, we finally finished it. Some good points for the championship. That’s the best we could expect when we were unlucky (on stage 1). We just hoped we could still be leading the championship, and we’ve increased our lead, so we’re happy.”

American Seth Quintero in a CAN-AM Maverick X3 claimed the third podium spot in the Desert Challenge, with Argentinian Juan Yacopini in a Toyota, fellow-countryman Sebastian Halpern in a Mini, and the UAE’s Khalid Al-Qassimi in another Mini rounding off the top six.

South African Henk Lategan in a Toyota was today’s stage winner, and the World Rally-Raid Championship now heads towards its third of five rounds in Mexico in April.