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Sainz win thrilling finale at Hail Baja 2

Sainz win thrilling finale at Hail Baja 2

Alkass Digital

Toyota’s Nasser Saleh al-Attiyah and Matthieu Baumel delivered a text book performance to secure what they thought would be their respective FIA Drivers’ and Co-drivers’ titles, after a thrilling finale to the 2020 FIA World Cup for Cross-Country Bajas at Hail Baja 2 yesterday.

However, a protest was lodged by Vladimir Vasilyev’s VRT Team and the outcome was decided by the FIA Stewards late yesterday evening. Time penalties for excess speed were imposed on four drivers inside the top eight and the two minutes handed to al-Attiyah was enough to overturn the 54 seconds he had earned over Carlos Sainz, and the win was duly handed to the Spaniard, even though he too was also awarded a one-minute punishment.

Worse still for al-Attiyah, was the loss of seven points — the difference between winning and finishing second — that gifted the world title to Vasilyev and saw al-Attiyah’s Toyota teammate Tom Colsoul tie for the co-drivers’ crown with Baumel, before the latter took it unofficially on a tie-break.

Trailing overnight leaders Carlos Sainz and Lucas Cruz by 2min 20sec at the restart, al-Attiyah began to eat into the stage-opening Spaniard’s lead, knowing that outright victory should give him the Drivers’ title. Over the day’s short desert section of 180.38km to the north-west of Hail, 33 seconds of Sainz’s overnight lead was eroded after 69km and 46 seconds had gone by 95km.

After 121km, 68 seconds of the advantage had been devoured but al-Attiyah was running out of kilometres to overturn the deficit. As Sainz agonisingly lost vital seconds trying to find a tricky late waypoint, the Toyota driver stormed through the closing kilometres to claim a 54-second win, not realising at the time that the result would be overturned hours later.

Sainz’s X-raid teammate Stéphane Peterhansel settled for third place on the podium in the new Mini John Cooper Works Buggy, the Frenchman taking the second fastest time on the day’s stage.

Saudi driver Yazeed al-Rajhi was third on the day in his Overdrive Toyota and reached the finish in fourth place, while Poland’s Jakub Przygonski recovered strongly from a disappointing Hail Baja 1 to confirm fifth overall on the second event.

Russian Vasilyev (Mini) celebrated his title at the 11th hour, but Dutchman Bernhard Ten Brinke (Toyota) fell short in the goal of winning the championship. Vasilyev reached the finish in sixth to seal the Drivers’ Championship and Ten Brinke was seventh.

Saleh al-Saif missed out on the FIA T3 title to Vasily Gryazin but the Saudi driver had the consolation of winning T3 at both of the Bajas. Guillaume de Mevius came home in third place but missed out on second in the championship to the Saudi.

Dutchman Kees Koolen snatched the FIA T4 title from Aron Domzala’s grasp after finishing second overall and fourth on the day’s stage. Khalifa al-Attiyah claimed outright victory in the second Baja in his South Racing Can-Am Maverick X3. Portugal’s Lorenço Rosa was third and Domzala came home in fourth.

Frenchman Adrien Van Beveren cruised to a second Hail Baja victory with a fourth successive fastest time on his Yamaha WRF 450. Troubled only by one navigational misjudgement throughout the two events, Van Beveren took the opportunity to fine tune his navigational skills and improve his confidence before taking on the might of KTM, Honda, Husqvarna and Sherco at the Dakar Rally in January.

Abdulmajeed al-Khulaifi gained revenge on Riyadh Saud al-Shammeri for the latter beating him at Hail Baja 1 and the multiple Hail International Rally winner sealed the quad category win by 1min 54sec. Both riders fell foul of the vagaries of the road book at the 140km point and incurred 15-minute time penalties.