The 24th edition of the Rallye du Maroc was a real roller-coaster. Nasser Al Attiyah was leading the race after winning the first two stages when a mechanical dashed his hopes on the eve of the finish. Sébastien Loeb (Bahrain Raid Xtreme) had been giving him a run for his money and would have been able to capitalise on this turn of event… if he himself had not had to withdraw a few kilometres earlier. Stéphane Peterhansel emerged victorious from the obstacle course between Zagora and Merzouga and seemed the odds-on favourite to take the title until he too succumbed to a mechanical, this time in the final stage. In the end, it was Yazeed Al Rajhi —a paragon of speed, consistency and skill— who stood on top of the podium. This was his second season win, following the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge. Overdrive swept the podium of W2RC entrants, with Denis Krotov second at 34′17″ and Juan Cruz Yacopini third at 57′08″. The FIA championship podium remained unchanged: Al Attiyah secured his second consecutive title, Al Rajhi was the runner-up and Yacopini took bronze. Baumel had already sealed the deal in the co-drivers’ championship, as had Toyota in the constructors’ ranking.
T3 was the nail-biter of the FIA season, with three crews still in the running for the title in Morocco. Mitch Guthrie was 3 points ahead of Austin Jones and 9 clear of Seth Quintero. As expected, every stage counted! Quintero put on a remarkable display of consistency to finish second overall, sandwiched between the Polish winner, Marek Goczał (BBR), and third-placed Cristina Gutiérrez (Red Bull Can-Am Factory). This result catapulted the American 5 points ahead of Guthrie and 11 clear of Jones. In T4, João Ferreira gave a masterclass in rallies en route to his maiden victory, beating the FN Speed duo of Sebastián Guayasamín (second) and Rebecca Busi (third).Shinsuke Umeda (Xtreme Plus Polaris CST) came in fourth and achieved his goal of completing each of the five rounds that made up the series. His perseverance propelled him to second place overall, between the champion, Rokas Baciuška (Red Bull Can-Am Factory) and the whiz kid Eryk Goczał (Energylandia Rally), who became the youngest Dakar winner ever at the age of 18 back in January. Janus van Kasteren (Boss Machinery) won the T5 title.
PRICE TAKES VICTORY AS BENAVIDES REIGNS SUPREME
Luciano Benavides landed in Morocco at the top of the RallyGP standings, but with a razor-thin margin of 9 points over Toby Price and 14 over Adrien Van Beveren. Sparks already flew in the press conference, heralding a ferocious battle that would electrify the Moroccan leg. Price got off to a better start than Benavides and upped the stakes when he soared to the rally lead in stage 3. At the time, the man from Down Under was the virtual champion because the Argentinian was struggling in fourth place. Price built up an unassailable lead to bag the Rallye du Maroc for the third time, but the Husqvarna rider got his act together with a win in stage 4 and a rock-solid performance in the finale. The high-octane drama saw Benavides take second in the rally and claim the world championship by 4 points over Price! VBA was not his usual self in Morocco, but finishing sixth was enough to save his third place in the championship. The Frenchman did his bit for Honda’s successful campaign for the constructors’ championship. The Japanese maker finished 8 points ahead of KTM, which lost Matthias Walkner to a crash during the race. He was just one of several riders to throw in the towel: Ricky Brabec ran into mechanical troubles, while Sam Sunderland (Red Bull GasGas Factory) pulled out complaining of blurred vision. Skyler Howes (Monster Energy Honda) also crashed out of the rally during the prologue, which was his very first appearance on an HRC. Pablo Quintanilla flew the flag for Honda in third place. His teammate Ignacio Cornejo came in fifth, right after Ross Branch and his Hero.
In Rally2, Romain Dumontier, a mere 13 points ahead of Paolo Lucci at the start of the rally, showed that the best defence is a good offence. The Frenchman finished second in the rally, ahead of Lucci in third place, and outgunned the Italian in the fight for the title. Jean-Loup Lepan (Duust Diverse Racing) took the bottom step of the podium. Bradley Cox triumphed in the rally and moved up to fourth in the W2RC thanks to this new success, which came a month after his victory in the Desafío Ruta 40. The South African ended the race firing on all cylinders and laid down a marker for the future. In Rally3, the Africa Rallye Team, backed by some of the race sponsors, lit up the fireworks from A to Z, winning four out of five stages with Cheikh-Yves Jacquemain (2) and Souleymane Addahri (2). The Senegalese rider vanquished the Hungarian Richárd Hodola in the fight for the rally, while his Moroccan brother in arms finished third on home soil. Ardit Kurtaj (Xraids Experience) wrapped up the title in fourth place. In the quad competition, Juraj Varga (Varga Motorsport) and Rodolfo Guillioli still had a narrow path to victory over Laisvydas Kancius (Story Racing). They gave it their all and finished first and second among the W2RC entrants after a dramatic week of racing, but the Lithuanian, fourth overall, bagged enough points to keep them at bay in the championship.