Top 4 set for big tussle as Bahrain Raid Xtreme team aim to tighten grip on title race

Top 4 set for big tussle as Bahrain Raid Xtreme team aim to tighten grip on title race
Bahrain Raid Xtreme’s Sebastien Loeb and Fabian Lurquin in action during the Prologue of the Sonora Rally 2023. (DPPI)
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Updated 24 April 2023
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Top 4 set for big tussle as Bahrain Raid Xtreme team aim to tighten grip on title race

Top 4 set for big tussle as Bahrain Raid Xtreme team aim to tighten grip on title race
  • Saudi Arabia’s Yazeed Al-Rajhi was quickest in Sunday’s 10km prologue by 1 second from Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah

HERMOSILLO, Mexico: The stage has been set for a fascinating battle in the desert heat of Mexico as Sebastien Loeb looks to tighten the grip held by Bahrain Raid Xtreme on the World Rally Raid Championship.

On Sunday’s 10-kilometer prologue which determined the Sonora Rally starting order, Loeb and Fabian Lurquin in the BRX Prodrive Hunter set the fourth-fastest time alongside their three biggest rivals for victory in the third round of the championship.

Saudi Arabia’s Yazeed Al-Rajhi was quickest on the day by one second from Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah, who trails Loeb by 16 points in the WRRC title race, with Guerlain Chicherit and Alex Winocq third in another Prodrive Hunter.

The day ended with the last four rally winners on the championship circuit being grouped together for the start of the rally’s first big stage later on Monday, a 170-km loop into the desert south of Hermosillo.

Loeb, who won last season’s final round in Andalucia, opened the road on the prologue and will start first again ahead of Chicherit, who recorded a maiden rally victory for the Prodrive Hunter in Morocco last October.

Dakar champion Al-Attiyah and the winner last time out in Abu Dhabi, Al-Rajhi, follow the two Hunters away in their Toyotas for what promises to be a titanic struggle for victory.

Loeb, who has six World Rally Championship wins to his credit in Mexico, completed the prologue and said: “It was a nice stage, quite slippery for 10 kilometers with a lot of loose gravel on the top.

“As the first car on the stage we were making the line, so we will pay a few seconds for that, but it’s not too bad. It was important to do a good stage and to now start the rally properly.”

Chicherit had been forced to withdraw from the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge in February because of dizziness among the dunes.

He said: “After I was ill there, I took it steady today, trying to be careful. I was maybe a little bit too cautious … but I was not really in the rhythm quite yet.”

The opening stage returns the rally to Hermosillo, where it has been based for the past three days, before Tuesday sees the event move north to Puerto Penasco, on the shores of the Sea of Cortez, for three nights, prior to Friday’s finish at San Luis Rio Colorado on the Mexican US border.