Veteran Carlos Sainz Extends Dakar Rally Lead After Winning 10th Stage
15th January 2020
The 57-year-old Mini driver clocked 2hr 03min 43sec on a stage shortened by high winds to a 233km special between Haradh and Shubaytah
- Spanish veteran Carlos Sainz stretched his lead atop the overall Dakar Rally standings by winning the 10th stage through the dunes of Saudi Arabia's Empty Quarter on Wednesday
- Sainz took full advantage of navigational problems by closest rivals Nasser Al-Attiyah, the defending champion, and France's 'Mr. Dakar', Stephane Peterhansel.
- Peterhansel, who has won the Dakar 13 times (seven times in a car and six times on a bike), finished 11min 48sec off Sainz's pace, while Qatar's Al-Attiyah was further back, at 17:46.
SHUBAYTA, Saudi
Arabia- Spanish veteran Carlos Sainz stretched his lead atop the overall
Dakar Rally standings by winning the 10th stage through the dunes of Saudi
Arabia's Empty Quarter on Wednesday.
The 57-year-old Mini driver clocked 2hr 03min 43sec on a
stage shortened by high winds to a 233km special between Haradh and Shubaytah,
finishing ahead of Poland's Jakub Przygonski (mini) and South African Giniel de
Villier (Toyota).
Sainz took full advantage of navigational problems by
closest rivals Nasser Al-Attiyah, the defending champion, and France's 'Mr.
Dakar', Stephane Peterhansel.
Peterhansel, who has won the Dakar 13 times (seven times in
a car and six times on a bike), finished 11min 48sec off Sainz's pace, while
Qatar's Al-Attiyah was further back, at 17:46.
The result means Sainz, with two stages to go, now sits
18:10 ahead of Al-Attiyah and 18:26 in front of Peterhansel.
Dakar debutant Fernando Alonso, the two-time former Formula
One champion, lost more than an hour after double rolling his Toyota, an
accident that saw the Spaniard carry on driving with no windscreen.
American Ricky Brabec increased his lead in the general
standings of the motorbike category with a second-placed finish.
The HRC rider now leads Chilean Pablo Quintanilla
(Husqvarna) by 25 minutes and stage winner Joan Barreda of Spain by 27 minutes.
Thursday's penultimate stage 11 sees competitors negotiate
744km, featuring a 379km special, from Shubaytah back to Haradh.