Toby Price kept within touching distance of Dakar Rally glory after his makeshift repair – using cable ties to fix his back wheel – held on a marathon stage eight. And in the car class, Nasser Al-Attiyah took a fifth stage victory to close the gap on Stéphane Peterhansel.
Price’s hopes of continuing looked under threat with no support crews overnight and competitors left to make their own running repairs. But the two-time winner’s efforts after a massive gash appeared in his rear tyre with no spare available held together for the 375-kilometre timed section between Sakaka and Neom.
– The Australian explained: “I tried to fix the issue as much as I could. By the time I got to refuel at 229 km I was down to one cable left on my rear tyre, the rest had come off. I did my best to keep momentum, not accelerate hard and ride smart.”
– His running repairs helped him hold onto second place a minute behind Nacho Cornejo. Price’s Red Bull KTM Factory teammate Sam Sunderland is third after a punishing stage.
– At the end of stage eight, Sunderland said: “It looks like my bike is beat up but, if you saw the terrain it’s been through, it’s really not that bad. Two days with the same tyres and wheels and no service.”
– Dakar debutant Daniel Sanders’s body rather than his bike took a beating following a fall in the dunes but he is fit enough to carry on. As he put it, “I didn’t cut any bones…but the cut needed some stitches.”
In the car class, Qatari Al-Attiyah moved to within five minutes of the race lead with four final days in which to attack. He said: “We kept the car in one piece which is good because, in some places, we were pushing a lot. We get three minutes back on Stéphane today and we will keep going day by day.”
– Peterhansel blamed himself for losing time on his closest rival. He said: “In the last 50 km, I did one or two mistakes. I didn’t follow the information of my co-driver Edouard and we had to turn around. Here we probably lost one or two minutes. At the end, we’re still in the fight.
– Stage runner-up was Carlos Sainz with Cyril Despres in the top five and describing the stage as “one of the top three most beautiful stages on the last 20 Dakars I have done”. Kuba Przygónski was sixth on the stage while Giles de Villier’s tyre issues continued. Plus, there were mechanical issues for Sébastien Loeb, who spent hours in the desert trying to repair his Hunter BMX.
Teenager Seth Quintero is in second and within 10 minutes of Austin Jones’ lead in the lightweight vehicles race. And the 18-year-old Quintero said: “It’s going to be a long four days but hopefully we can be there at the end.”
– But it was a day to forget for his fellow Red Bull Off-Road Junior Team driver Cristina Gutiérrez, whose gearbox trouble stopped her from starting stage eight. The stage win went to Chaleco López.
In the truck class, Anton Shibalov led home a Russian one-two-three on the stage with Dmitry Sotnikov still in the lead. Meanwhile, former Dakar quad race winner Ignacio Casale enjoyed a top-five finish against his more experienced truck rivals.
The Dakar resumes on Today (Tuesday) for a 465 km loop around the Neom bivouac against the clock for stage nine.
Overall standings after Stage Eight
Car
1. Stéphane Peterhansel (FRA) X-Raid Mini 29h 36m 49s
2. Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT) Toyota Gazoo +00h 04m 50s
3. Carlos Sainz (ESP) X-Raid Mini +00h 38m 55s
Bike
1. Jose Ignacio Cornejo Florimo Honda 32h 00m 11s
2. Toby Price (AUS) Red Bull KTM +00h 01m 06s
3. Sam Sunderland (GBR) Red Bull KTM +00h 05m 57s
Truck
1. Dmitry Sotnikov (RUS) Kamaz Master 32h 34m 18s
2. Anton Shibalov (RUS) Kamaz Master +00h 43m 28s
3. Ayrat Mardeev (RUS) Kamaz Master +01h 13m 15s
Lightweight vehicle
1. Austin Jones (USA) Can-Am +36h 13m 48s
2. Seth Quintero (USA) Red Bull Offroad +00h 09m 31s
3. F Lopez (CHL) Can-Am +00h 19m 51s
Credits : Photos and content courtesy of Red Bull Media House