Having never competed there previously, Rovanperä and co-driver Jonne Halttunen were not originally due to include Poland’s first FIA World Rally Championship round since 2017 on their partial programme this season. That was until Tuesday this week when they received the call to stand in for their team-mates Sébastien Ogier and Vincent Landais, who were unable to take part after they were unfortunately involved in a road traffic collision during reconnaissance.
Without any pre-event test or the other preparation typically carried out by WRC crews before an event, the reigning world champions undertook an intense recce schedule during Wednesday and Thursday to make pacenotes for the fast gravel stages, while three runs in shakedown were their only chance to get up to speed in the GR YARIS Rally1 HYBRID before the start.
They were fourth overall after a challenging first full loop of stages on Friday morning, but Rovanperä soon started to bely his lack of preparation and show the speed he’s famed for on flat-out gravel roads. He was just 1.8 seconds from the lead at the end of Friday, then won Saturday’s first two tests to take over at the top of the leaderboard.
Quickest in six out of seven stages across the longest day of the rally, Rovanperä took an advantage of 9.4s into Sunday’s final day over Andreas Mikkelsen (Hyundai), who then dropped away after incurring damage while trying to keep the pressure on. Third-fastest in the rally-ending Power Stage, he took victory by 28.3s: the 13th and perhaps most impressive WRC victory yet for the driver of car #69 on what was his 69th start in the series.
Evans and co-driver Scott Martin were also firmly in the fight for the win for much of the weekend with a strong performance. They were only 0.4s behind their team-mates on Saturday lunchtime, before suffering a tyre issue in the first stage of the afternoon loop that cost them several seconds and dropped them to third place. Evans reclaimed second on Sunday morning as he pushed to maximise their Sunday score, though he would sustain a tyre deflation in the Power Stage that left him seventh-quickest there and fourth in the Super Sunday classification. Nonetheless, he reduces the gap to the leader of the drivers’ championship to 15 points.
On his first rally in Poland, Takamoto Katsuta built his confidence and feeling with the car at the start of three consecutive events on fast gravel. He set strong times already on Friday afternoon, before experiencing tough conditions at the front of the road order and ultimately finishing eighth overall.
In the manufacturers’ championship, TGR-WRT took the most points from the weekend, moving to within 10 points of the lead.
The GR Yaris Rally2 continues to perform strongly in its debut season, taking a third consecutive WRC2 victory in Poland in the hands of Sami Pajari and Enni Mälkönen, who scored their second successive win in their Printsport-run car.
“It’s incredible that Kalle and Jonne have been able to win this rally. When I called Kalle on Tuesday afternoon and asked him to drive here in Poland, I told him that I was not expecting him to win. I knew that his natural driving could at least get him inside the top five, which would still help us for the championship. I know it wasn’t the nicest way for a crew to start a rally with no preparation, so thanks to them for thinking about the team and doing everything to support and bringing us lots of points. Thanks also to Elfyn and Scott, who were also doing what they could to support Kalle and Jonne this weekend, and a 1-2 result could hardly be better. Elfyn was unfortunate not to score more points for the championship, but altogether it’s a positive result for us.”
“It has been an amazing week and quite a tough week: we have been working hard and I feel quite tired now! With the limited preparation we had, it was not so easy on this kind of fast rally where you need to keep pushing. I think we did everything we could, working all the time with the tight schedule that we had and keeping to our plan on the stages, and it all paid off in the end. Sunday was still an important day with many kilometres and technical stages. We tried to keep the pace we had yesterday, be safe enough to bring home the win but also grab some more points. At the finish we managed to bring quite a lot of points for the team, which was the aim for us when we got the call from the team on Tuesday, so I think it was a good idea to come!”
“At the end of the rally our overall position is good. The Sunday points are almost just as important and we tried to get as many as we could today. It was all going OK, but unfortunately we had an issue in the Power Stage with a puncture: there was a rock on the line and there was not a lot I could do. We only lost a few seconds, but with this points system a small issue like that can penalise you a lot, so it was disappointing to finish the rally this way. Our speed this weekend was not bad: Friday was good with the road position we had and Saturday was also going well until the tyre issue. It’s definitely the case that the feeling in the car is much better than in the previous rallies. We need to carry that forward, build on what we learned here and look to do a good job in Latvia.”
“Congratulations Kalle, Jonne and the whole team for this result. For me, it has been a difficult rally. I was struggling a lot on Friday morning and this cost me afterwards, with a more difficult starting position for Saturday and Sunday. It was hard to do much on this final day and get the good result we wanted for the team. At the same time, I was learning a lot about how to drive well in this kind of condition. We had some good sections and some good feelings and we need to bring that to the next rally in Latvia, and also improve the things that were not so good so that we can be better there.”
1 | Kalle Rovanperä/Jonne Halttunen | (Toyota GR YARIS Rally1 HYBRID) | 2h33m07.6s |
2 | Elfyn Evans/Scott Martin | (Toyota GR YARIS Rally1 HYBRID) | +28.3s |
3 | Adrien Fourmaux/Alexandre Coria | (Ford Puma Rally1 HYBRID) | +42.7s |
4 | Thierry Neuville/Martijn Wydaeghe | (Hyundai i20 N Rally1 HYBRID) | +1m10.8s |
5 | MÄrtiņš Sesks/RenÄrs Francis | (Ford Puma Rally1) | +1m47.0s |
6 | Andreas Mikkelsen/Torstein Eriksen | (Hyundai i20 N Rally1 HYBRID) | +2m16.6s |
7 | Grégoire Munster/Louis Louka | (Ford Puma Rally1 HYBRID) | +2m18.0s |
8 | Takamoto Katsuta/Aaron Johnston | (Toyota GR YARIS Rally1 HYBRID) | +2m26.7s |
9 | Sami Pajari/Enni Mälkönen | (Toyota GR Yaris Rally2) | +7m50.7s |
10 | Oliver Solberg/Elliott Edmondson | (Škoda Fabia RS Rally2) | +8m12.7s |
(Results as of 16:30 on Sunday, for the latest results please visit www.wrc.com)
1 | Thierry Neuville | 136 points |
2 | Elfyn Evans | 121 |
3 | Ott Tänak | 115 |
4 | Sébastien Ogier | 92 |
5 | Adrien Fourmaux | 91 |
6 | Kalle Rovanperä | 63 |
7 | Takamoto Katsuta | 58 |
8 | Andreas Mikkelsen | 29 |
9 | Dani Sordo | 27 |
10 | Esapekka Lappi | 23 |
1 | Hyundai Shell Mobis World Rally Team | 311 points |
2 | TOYOTA GAZOO Racing World Rally Team | 301 |
3 | M-Sport Ford World Rally Team | 156 |
Rally Latvia (July 18-21) is a brand-new event for the WRC, featuring more high-speed gravel roads. While the service park is located in the southern coastal city of LiepÄja, the rally will begin from the capital city Riga.