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RallySport Magazine December 2016

RallySport Magazine December 2016, featuring: Full 2016 Rally Australia coverage Latest news: * New AP4 Mini Cooper for Eli Evans * Subaru back for more in 2017 ARC * Quantock wins Paddon scholarship * Mixed news for top ARC crews * Ogier, Tanak confirmed at M-Sport Feature stories: * Frank Kelly - the mad Irish Escort star, Part 2 * We drive a one-make series Ford Fiesta * Remembering the PNG Safari * Travelling man: Hayden Paddon * The history of pace notes explained * Hayden Paddon column * The Inside Line with Martin Holmes Interviews: * 5 minutes with Molly Taylor * Hyundai’s Michel Nanden Event reports: * Kennards Hire Rally Australia * Rally of India APRC * Classic Adelaide Rally * Begonia Rally * Silver Fern Rally * NSW Rally Championship * Southern Cross Rally

RallySport Magazine December 2016, featuring:

Full 2016 Rally Australia coverage

Latest news:

* New AP4 Mini Cooper for Eli Evans
* Subaru back for more in 2017 ARC
* Quantock wins Paddon scholarship
* Mixed news for top ARC crews
* Ogier, Tanak confirmed at M-Sport

Feature stories:

* Frank Kelly - the mad Irish Escort star, Part 2
* We drive a one-make series Ford Fiesta
* Remembering the PNG Safari
* Travelling man: Hayden Paddon
* The history of pace notes explained
* Hayden Paddon column
* The Inside Line with Martin Holmes

Interviews:

* 5 minutes with Molly Taylor
* Hyundai’s Michel Nanden

Event reports:

* Kennards Hire Rally Australia
* Rally of India APRC
* Classic Adelaide Rally
* Begonia Rally
* Silver Fern Rally
* NSW Rally Championship
* Southern Cross Rally

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Issue #8 - <strong>December</strong> <strong>2016</strong><br />

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4 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


CONTENTS - #8 DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

FEATURES EVENT REPORTS REGULARS<br />

FOLLOW<br />

US ON:<br />

MANAGING EDITOR<br />

PETER WHITTEN<br />

peter@rallysportmag.com.au<br />

CONTRIBUTORS<br />

Martin Holmes, Luke Whitten,<br />

Blair Bartels, Geoff Ridder,<br />

John Doutch, Jeff Whitten,<br />

Craig O’Brien, John Crouch<br />

20 SPECTATOR HEAVEN<br />

FANS FROM AROUND THE WORLD<br />

VENTURED TO RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

32 THE VOICE OF RALLY<br />

LUKE WHITTEN SPENDS A DAY WITH<br />

WRC RADIO’S COLIN CLARK<br />

34 THE ONLY WAY IS SIDEWAYS<br />

PART 2 OF OUR FEATURE WITH IRISH<br />

SUPERSTAR FRANK KELLY<br />

38 FIESTA TIME<br />

RSM’S PETER WHITTEN TEST DRIVES<br />

A FORD FIESTA IN VICTORIA<br />

42 PNG SAFARI<br />

TOM SMITH LOOKS BACK ON PNG’S<br />

MOST SUCCESSFUL RALLY<br />

44 HYUNDAI I20 WRC<br />

MICHEL NANDAN CHATS ABOUT<br />

HYUNDAI’S 2017 CHALLENGER<br />

60 HISTORY NOTED<br />

PACE NOTES DIDN’T START HOW<br />

YOU MAY IMAGINE THEY DID<br />

COVER PHOTO: Red Bull Content Pool<br />

The passion for rallying ....<br />

SENIOR WRITER<br />

12 RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

MIKKELSEN SENDS VOLKSWAGEN<br />

OUT ON A HIGH<br />

24 RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

THE ARC CROWNS ITS FIRST FEMALE<br />

DRIVERS’ CHAMPION<br />

49 RALLY OF INDIA<br />

GAURAV GILL WINS ON HOME SOIL<br />

50 CLASSIC ADELAIDE<br />

BUSBY MASTERS THE TARMAC<br />

51 BEGONIA RALLY<br />

RAIN SHORTENS VRC FINALE<br />

54 SILVER FERN RALLY<br />

ESCORTS, ESCORTS AND MORE<br />

ESCORTS IN THE NZ CLASSIC<br />

✸<br />

DID<br />

TOM SMITH<br />

tom@rallysportmag.com.au<br />

PUBLISHED BY:<br />

Peter Whitten<br />

<strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

peter@rallysportmag.com.au<br />

www.rallysportmag.com.au<br />

Don’t miss an issue of <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> ....<br />

ADVERTISING<br />

Dominic Corkeron, 0499 981 188<br />

dominic@rallysportmag.com.au<br />

06 EDITORIAL<br />

ANOTHER EXCITING MONTH HAS<br />

FLOWN BY<br />

07 LATEST RALLY NEWS<br />

NEWS FROM AROUND THE SPORT<br />

22 HAYDEN PADDON COLUMN<br />

MORE STEPS FORWARD FOR THE<br />

KIWI AT RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

30 FIVE MINUTES WITH ...<br />

MOLLY TAYLOR IS THE ARC’S<br />

YOUNGEST EVER WINNER<br />

46 HOLMES COLUMN<br />

OUR WRC EXPERT DELVES INTO THE<br />

LATEST HAPPENINGS<br />

62 PHOTO OF THE MONTH<br />

THIS MONTH’S “TOP SHOT”<br />

YOU KNOW?<br />

You can click on an advert or website address to<br />

go directly to an advertiser’s website?<br />

COPYRIGHT:<br />

No material, artwork or photos may be reproduced in<br />

whole or in part without the written permission of the<br />

publishers. <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> takes care in compiling<br />

specifications, prices and details but cannot accept<br />

responsibility for any errors. The opinions expressed by<br />

columnists and contributors to this magazine are not<br />

necessarily those of <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>.<br />

Click the covers to read<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 5


EDITORIAL<br />

HIGHS AND LOWS ON SHOW<br />

By PETER WHITTEN<br />

To say the past month has been<br />

action packed would be an<br />

understatement, as rally fans the<br />

world over eagerly scoured the internet<br />

for the latest news on where the redundant<br />

Volkswagen drivers will end up.<br />

It seems not a day went by without<br />

Sebastien Ogier being linked to one<br />

team or another, after which his former<br />

team-mates Jari-Matti Latvala and<br />

Andreas Mikkelsen are slotted into the<br />

remaining WRC seats.<br />

More locally, the Australian Rally<br />

Championship has received a major<br />

shot in the arm with news that threetime<br />

champion, Eli Evans, will return to<br />

the series next year in a new Mini built<br />

to AP4 specifiations.<br />

With a Toyota Yaris already under<br />

construction in Canberra for Harry<br />

Bates, Australia will finally get a firsthand<br />

look at the exciting new AP4<br />

category that has already taken New<br />

Zealand by storm.<br />

After a few years in the doldrums,<br />

the ARC is finally start to kick some<br />

goals again, and Subaru’s imminent title<br />

defence only strengthens the series<br />

further.<br />

But not everything is sweet and<br />

rosy, and social media’s reaction<br />

to Molly Taylor’s Australian Rally<br />

Championship victory has seen the<br />

highs and lows of rallying displayed in a<br />

public forum for everyone to see.<br />

Some of the comments regarding<br />

the unfortunate error co-driver Dale<br />

Moscatt made on the final day of Rally<br />

Australia have been disgraceful, and<br />

false allegations thrown in all directions<br />

Both the NZRC and ARC have<br />

had successful seasons in<br />

<strong>2016</strong>. (Photos: Geoff Ridder)<br />

6 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

It may be the end of the season, but that’s just meant that<br />

the rally news has come thicker and faster ....<br />

have been not only disrespectful, but<br />

detrimental to the sport.<br />

We all respect the public’s right to<br />

have their say, and we all love the<br />

ability we now have to interact with<br />

the world on matters that interest us,<br />

thanks to the beast that is social media.<br />

However, giving opinions that are just<br />

that – opinions – rather than basing<br />

comments on real facts can be harmful<br />

to those involved.<br />

Let’s retain that incredible passion<br />

for the sport, but let’s also be mindful<br />

of the downside to social media<br />

comments, and think long and hard<br />

before you press the ‘Enter’ key.<br />

The wheels often turn slowly at<br />

a managerial level, and 10 days<br />

before Christmas we’re still<br />

awaiting news on the Australian Rally<br />

Championship’s new<br />

tyre supplier for<br />

2017.<br />

It’s probably no<br />

secret that the<br />

expected multi-year<br />

deal will be with a<br />

tyre manufacturer<br />

based in Asia, but<br />

other than that we<br />

can’t say much more<br />

at this stage.<br />

<strong>RallySport</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong><br />

understands that a<br />

six-year contract is<br />

waiting to be signed<br />

that will offer all<br />

sorts of benefits to<br />

the sport over the coming years.<br />

In New Zealand, Hayden Paddon’s<br />

success in the WRC sees the sport<br />

continue to grow, and it’s fantastic<br />

to see the likeable star putting just as<br />

much back into the sport as he’s taken<br />

out of it.<br />

The launch of the Hayden Paddon<br />

Rally Foundation and the recently<br />

completed scholarship competition will<br />

be key ingredients to the success of NZ<br />

rallying for many years to come and<br />

may well unearth the country’s next<br />

WRC regular.<br />

The Trans Tasman neighbours may<br />

be well removed from the ‘home’ of<br />

rallying in the Northern Hemisphere,<br />

but recent happenings (Rally Australia<br />

included) prove that we still punch well<br />

above our weight.<br />

With Christmas nearly upon<br />

us, I’d like to thank all our<br />

advertisers, contributors and<br />

you, the readers, for your support of<br />

<strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> over the past eight<br />

months.<br />

It’s been an exciting year for rallying<br />

in Australia and New Zealand, and the<br />

future is looking even brighter.<br />

The next issue of <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

will be available on February 2, but<br />

in the meantime, keep checking the<br />

website for all the latest news – and<br />

given recent events, there’s sure to be<br />

plenty of that.<br />

I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a<br />

safe and prosperous New Year.


NEWS@RALLYSPORTMAG.COM.AU<br />

MINI PROGRAM MASSIVE FOR ARC<br />

Three times Australian Rally<br />

Champion, Eli Evans, will<br />

return to the 2017 Australian<br />

Rally Championship in a new car<br />

to be run by the Evans Motorsport<br />

Team.<br />

The team will build a brand<br />

new MINI Cooper AP4 rally car<br />

to support the new and exciting<br />

regulations.<br />

“The ARC’s new set of rules has<br />

huge potential so the decision was<br />

easy. The hardest part was deciding<br />

on what is the best car to build to<br />

give us every chance for the title,”<br />

team boss, Peter Evans said.<br />

Team manager Jesse Robison<br />

added: “We have been discussing<br />

which car we thought was best<br />

suited to the new AP4 rules. The<br />

team wanted a car that is light, fast<br />

and easy to work on, and the MINI<br />

Cooper was at the top of the list.”<br />

The car is currently under<br />

construction at Force Motorsport in<br />

New Zealand, the company behind<br />

many of the AP4 cars already<br />

running in the NZRC, including<br />

Hayden Paddon’s Hyundai i20.<br />

“I’m extremely excited for the<br />

2017 season,” Eli Evans said.<br />

“It’s going to be a huge challenge<br />

getting back in a 4WD rally car, but<br />

that’s what I’m looking forward to<br />

most of all.<br />

“Glen (Weston) and I had great<br />

success in the 2WD formula with a<br />

record of 12 straight wins in 2012<br />

and 2013, and at one point we had<br />

won 16 of 20 rallies that we had<br />

entered.<br />

“Fingers crossed, the skill set I<br />

have learnt in driving a front-wheel<br />

drive rally car to its limit will aid us<br />

in chasing the success that I want<br />

now that I’m in 4WD.<br />

“I also plan to extract as much<br />

knowledge as I can from my big<br />

brother Simon. He knows a couple<br />

of things about driving a 4WD and<br />

is extremely good at getting the<br />

most out of a rally car.”<br />

The MINI will debut at the first<br />

round, the Eureka Rally, in March.<br />

Evans’ new MINI under<br />

construction in New<br />

Zealand. (Photos: Geoff<br />

Ridder, Gary Boyd)<br />

SUBARU BACK FOR MORE IN ‘17 AS TAYLOR DEFENDS TITLE<br />

Although a decision won’t be<br />

officially made until mid-January,<br />

Subaru Australia is set to return<br />

to defend their Australian Rally Championship<br />

title in 2017.<br />

Molly Taylor’s season of consistency<br />

culminated in her first championship title<br />

at Rally Australia, as well as being the first<br />

female winner, and the youngest ever<br />

holder of the title.<br />

Subaru management will meet next<br />

month to rubber-stamp the 2017<br />

program, however there is already<br />

speculation that next year’s car will be<br />

up-specced from the Group N machine<br />

run this season.<br />

Les Walkden Rallying currently has a<br />

new WRX STI being built, and it is thought<br />

that car – with more modifications – will<br />

be the vehicle Taylor uses to defend her<br />

title, starting at Victoria’s Eureka Rally in<br />

March.<br />

- PETER WHITTEN<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 7


NEWS@RALLYSPORTMAG.COM.AU<br />

NZ news<br />

Job Quantock (left)<br />

co-driver Alan<br />

Steel and Hayden<br />

Paddon.<br />

By BLAIR BARTELS<br />

Second Toyota<br />

Photo: Geoff Ridder<br />

A second Toyota has been confirmed<br />

for the 2017 NZ season, to be piloted by<br />

Carl Davies and Tracey Millar.<br />

The car has had AP4 work done by<br />

Force Motorsport before heading to<br />

PF Automotive in Tauranga for the<br />

remainder of the build.<br />

While the Shannon Chambers car will<br />

utilise a 4AGE engine, Davies’ example<br />

will use a 2ZR engine found in the late<br />

model Corollas, de-stroked to 1600cc,<br />

and will use a single plane rear wing to<br />

be fully AP4 compliant.<br />

The car is expected to be completed<br />

well before the start of the season to<br />

allow Davies plenty of seat time before<br />

the season starts.<br />

Inkster and Allport<br />

Glenn Inkster (above) will team up with<br />

three-time national rally champion, Neil<br />

Allport, for the 2017 season.<br />

Inkster returned to gravel rallying<br />

in <strong>2016</strong> with a Skoda Fabia AP4+<br />

car after a four-year lay-off and set<br />

some impressive stage times, but a<br />

fourth place at the final round, Rally<br />

Coromandel, represented his only finish<br />

in a frustrating season.<br />

Allport will not only take over car<br />

preparation and on-event running of<br />

the car, but will also act as a mentor to<br />

Inkster throughout the season.<br />

JOB’S BIG BREAK<br />

Canterbury’s Job Quantock has<br />

won the biggest rally driver<br />

development package on offer<br />

in New Zealand motorsport by being<br />

selected as the winner of the inaugural<br />

Hyundai NZ Young Driver Shootout and<br />

Scholarship.<br />

Quantock, 22, will now benefit in a<br />

range of ways from the programme<br />

designed to boost his motorsport<br />

career aspirations, including the<br />

opportunity to drive the Hyundai<br />

NZ AP4 i20 rally car run by Paddon<br />

Rallysport in two rounds of the 2017<br />

New Zealand Rally Championship,<br />

as well as testing and training with<br />

Paddon.<br />

There is also the potential for an<br />

expanded programme in 2018 for<br />

Quantock.<br />

Quantock is relatively new to rally<br />

competition, having contested his first<br />

full season this year, yet he took second<br />

overall in the <strong>2016</strong> Mainland Rally<br />

Series and finished second in two other<br />

regional rallies.<br />

He impressed Paddon and other<br />

judges to win the two-day shootout.<br />

He and the other four finalists went<br />

through fitness assessments and<br />

classroom sessions from Paddon and<br />

other guest experts on sponsorship<br />

planning, nutrition, media presence,<br />

career planning, writing pace notes and<br />

car set-up, before enjoying time behind<br />

the wheel of the Hyundai AP4 car.<br />

The scholarship attracted over 180<br />

applicants with the other four finalists<br />

being:<br />

· Max Bayley, 20, Hawke’s Bay<br />

· Sloan Cox, 24, Rotorua<br />

· Matt Summerfield, 24, Rangiora<br />

· Dylan Thomson, 21, Waiuku<br />

“It’s amazing; a surreal feeling to win.<br />

There was always a chance of winning,<br />

but I wasn’t too sure how big a chance<br />

we had, being relatively new to the<br />

sport.<br />

“It was whoever had the best package<br />

that Hyundai was looking for; luckily<br />

that was us,” Quantock said.<br />

“Job is definitely the most<br />

inexperienced of the crews in the final,<br />

but he showed a lot of potential in all<br />

aspects,” Paddon said.<br />

“He fits the whole philosophy of the<br />

Hyundai brand to foster new talent. I<br />

think Job can be a great ambassador<br />

for rallying, a great ambassador<br />

for Hyundai, and he has a lot of<br />

potential to learn and improve. We<br />

believe he can be a New Zealand<br />

champion and potentially compete well<br />

internationally.”<br />

Paddon said the shootout judging<br />

was almost harder than a rally. “It was<br />

made even harder with how good and<br />

how close everyone was when we came<br />

to actually pick a winner. “<br />

Find us at: www.chicane.co.nz<br />

Call us o<br />

8 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


PICTURE PERFECT<br />

M-Sport’s 2017 Fiesta WRC has<br />

got the rally world talking with its<br />

striking good looks.<br />

MIXED NEWS FOR TOP ARC CREWS<br />

syncro gearbox and more of a PRC<br />

By PETER WHITTEN<br />

Tom Wilde (left)<br />

package, rather than in a heavier Group may sit out 2017.<br />

N car.”<br />

The <strong>2016</strong> season is done and<br />

dusted, and most competitors Having said that, Wilde still only<br />

have already set their sights on gives himself a 20 per cent chance of<br />

2017.<br />

contesting next year’s ARC.<br />

But as is the norm for an expensive Fellow West Australian, Brad<br />

sport like rallying, there are some who Markovic, has more solid plans,<br />

have firm plans, and others who are however.<br />

madly searching for the funds to enable “We are currently working with our<br />

them to chase their dreams.<br />

partners to confirm our plans for next<br />

West Australian Tom Wilde is one year,” Markovic said. “At this stage we<br />

driver set to sit out much of next<br />

will run in our current Subaru and will<br />

season unless significant sponsorship compete at all rounds.”<br />

dollars can be found.<br />

Canberra’s Adrian Coppin has only<br />

Wilde was sitting only a point behind committed to his home event, the<br />

eventual ARC winner, Molly Taylor, after National Capital Rally, next season,<br />

three rounds this year, but a shortage thanks to support from his sponsor,<br />

in his budget meant that was where DOMA Hotels.<br />

the season ended, and it was a familiar However, in a cryptic twist, Coppin<br />

story of “what if”.<br />

hinted that he might make a trip or two<br />

“I’ve been working hard on trying to Europe – but wouldn’t expand on Toyota is playing its cards close to<br />

to find the funds to compete in 2017, whether that would be on holiday or to their chest regarding the new AP4 Yaris<br />

but at the moment it’s looking very rally ….<br />

that he’ll drive next year, with Bates<br />

unable to further enlighten the rallying<br />

unlikely,” Wilde said.<br />

Harry Bates has confirmed his<br />

public with any new details about the<br />

“If we were to compete it would be participation in 2017, rather than<br />

car.<br />

no doubt in a Maximum Motorsport heading to Europe, although he admits<br />

Subaru again, although with a non-<br />

that’s something planned for the future. More details will emerge soon.<br />

HJC MOTORSPORTS<br />

n: AU 1800 CHICANE or NZ 0800 CHICANE<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 9


WRC DRIVER UPDATES<br />

2017 DRIVER<br />

LINE-UPS ....<br />

HYUNDAI<br />

CITROEN<br />

M-SPORT<br />

TOYOTA<br />

Hayden Paddon<br />

Thierry Neuville<br />

Dani Sordo<br />

Kris Meeke<br />

Craig Breen<br />

Stephane Lefebvre<br />

Sebastien Ogier<br />

Ott Tanak<br />

Jari-Matti Latvala<br />

Juho Hanninen<br />

Esapekka Lappi<br />

OGIER, TANAK TO<br />

HEAD M-SPORT’S<br />

2017 ATTACK<br />

Sebastien Ogier and Ott Tanak will<br />

be M-Sport’s lead drivers in the<br />

2017 FIA World Rally Championship.<br />

This ends weeks of indecision by<br />

Ogier about his future after the sudden<br />

withdrawal of the official Volkswagen<br />

team.<br />

The brief announcement did not state<br />

the length of the agreement with the<br />

four-time world champions, though<br />

Ogier stated he was only looking for a<br />

one year agreement.<br />

Nor does the communique state who<br />

will be the third driver in the WRC team<br />

in 2017.<br />

Also notably absent from the<br />

announcement was the future for the<br />

M-Sport team leader Mads Ostberg,<br />

who in <strong>2016</strong> amassed the most<br />

championship points for a Fiesta WRC<br />

driver, or the long-time M-Sport protégé<br />

driver Elfyn Evans.<br />

There has so far been no mention<br />

about Red Bull being involved with the<br />

Ogier agreement with M-Sport, or the<br />

opportunity to fund a private team<br />

running the 2017 Polo World Rally Cars.<br />

Under current FIA rules, the new Polo<br />

cannot be homologated unless the cars<br />

are run in a registered WRC team.<br />

- MARTIN HOLMES<br />

10 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


ALL FINNISH AFFAIR<br />

Toyota has snapped up Finnish star Jari-Matti Latvala<br />

to lead its return to the World Rally Championship,<br />

confirming another key move in the sport’s<br />

biggest driver shake-up in years, just five weeks before<br />

the 2017 season starts.<br />

Toyota Gazoo Racing’s signing of Latvala and new<br />

WRC2 champion, Esapekka Lappi, to join existing team<br />

member, Juho Hänninen, was announced in Finland on<br />

<strong>December</strong> 13.<br />

L ro R: Janne Ferm, Kaj Lindström, Mikka Anttila, Jari-Matti Latvala, Juho<br />

Hänninen, Esapekka Lappi and Tommi Mäkinen.<br />

OGIER COULD JOIN THE WRC GREATS<br />

At the completion of the<br />

2017 season we may finally<br />

have more of an idea as to<br />

whether Sebastien Ogier<br />

deserves to be ranked higher on the ‘all<br />

time greats’ list than his countryman,<br />

Sebastien Loeb.<br />

Now before you rightly point out that<br />

Loeb has won more than twice as many<br />

WRC titles as Ogier, hear me out.<br />

Many believe Loeb deserves the title<br />

as the best driver of all time, given he’s<br />

won 78 WRC events, yet there’s one<br />

main asterisk against his record.<br />

The man from Alsace only ever drove<br />

for Citroen. All 78 of his wins, all 9 titles,<br />

all 116 podium finishes, and all 905<br />

stage wins came in a Citroen.<br />

Not so Ogier. Already, seven of his 38<br />

wins have been in Citroens, the other<br />

31 in Volkswagens, and with his move<br />

to M-Sport and the Ford Fiesta WRC, he<br />

has the chance to join the rarefied air<br />

of those drivers to have won in three or<br />

more different brands of cars.<br />

Tommi Makinen and Ari Vatanen<br />

won for two different makes. Juha<br />

Kankkunen, Carlos Sainz, Didier<br />

Auriol and Bjorn Waldegard for four.<br />

And the great Hannu Mikkola took<br />

victories for an incredible five different<br />

manufacturers.<br />

If Ogier can join these ranks, having<br />

developed a brand new car for a<br />

new team, then he will deservedly be<br />

spoken about in similar terms as those<br />

legendary drivers above.<br />

Fasten your seat belts, it’s going to be<br />

a cracker 2017 season.<br />

- PETER WHITTEN<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 11


FINAL F<br />

VW ended their WRC reign as exp<br />

on the of step of the podium wasn’t<br />

REPORT: RALLY AUSTRALIA - WRC 13<br />

By MARTIN HOLMES<br />

Photos: PETER WHITTEN<br />

Mikkelsen’s timely win was<br />

his most impressive WRC<br />

success yet.<br />

12 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


LING<br />

ected, although the man<br />

Sebastien Ogier ....<br />

Andeas Mikkelsen rounded off<br />

Volkswagen’s four-year WRC<br />

campaign with the team’s ninth,<br />

and his second, win of the year, beating<br />

the champion Sebastien Ogier, who<br />

suffered again from a running order<br />

disadvantage.<br />

Andreas, however, was beaten in the<br />

race to second place in the <strong>2016</strong> World<br />

Drivers’ Championship by Hyundai’s<br />

Thierry Neuville.<br />

Hyundai drivers suffered a collection<br />

of troubles, including a time penalty<br />

for Dani Sordo after a navigation<br />

confusion, a bold but wrong tyre choice<br />

for Hayden Paddon and Neuville, and a<br />

late puncture for Paddon as well.<br />

Skoda driver Esapekka Lappi walked<br />

away with the WRC2 category, clinching<br />

the FIA title, the last remaining major<br />

rally honour to be won this year.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 13


REPORT: RALLY AUSTRALIA - WRC 13<br />

Hayden Paddon was really<br />

cooking, with his best Rally<br />

Australia performance yet.<br />

Photo: Geoff Ridder<br />

Hot and abrasive stage conditions<br />

due to a new later calendar date<br />

for the event forced surprising<br />

tyre choices which helped Ogier minimise<br />

his handicap, but an uncharacteristic<br />

spin three stages from the end<br />

denied him the hope of a final win.<br />

The conditions also blunted DMack<br />

driver Ott Tanak’s challenge, leaving<br />

sixth placed Mads Ostberg as the top<br />

M-Sport driver in the rally, and the<br />

series.<br />

The news that VW was withdrawing<br />

from the WRC came only after the end<br />

of Wales Rally GB and threw a new<br />

prospect on to Rally Australia.<br />

Suddenly there were unexpected<br />

collateral consequences through the<br />

sport, not only for the drivers and<br />

personnel concerned at VW, but with so<br />

many unknown futures in the sport, on<br />

the whole emotional experience of the<br />

event.<br />

People had a sudden need to reidentify<br />

themselves in the sport.<br />

Anyway, this event was always<br />

expected to be a three-way<br />

battleground between VW, Hyundai and<br />

M-Sport, with Citroen having decided<br />

“Ogier was driven<br />

to extremes, the only<br />

top driver to choose<br />

soft tyres for the early<br />

morning stages on<br />

Day 2.”<br />

that the long-haul rallies were outside<br />

their agenda this year.<br />

There were no special driver line ups,<br />

no special technical developments,<br />

just one final time to see the best rally<br />

drivers in the world battle it out at the<br />

wheel of the best rally cars in the WRC<br />

in <strong>2016</strong>.<br />

The main objective for Volkswagen<br />

has always been the opportunity of<br />

scoring second place for Mikkelsen<br />

in the Drivers’ championship, which<br />

largely depended on the performance<br />

of Neuville, but they had a big shock on<br />

the first stage when Latvala damaged<br />

his suspension after touching a bridge.<br />

This dropped him down to 17th place<br />

and well over seven minutes behind the<br />

leader. He did well not to lose heart<br />

and fought back, eventually finishing in<br />

ninth place.<br />

Ogier was driven to extremes, the<br />

only top driver to choose soft tyres<br />

for the early morning stages on Day<br />

2, when the gravel coverage was at its<br />

worst for fast driving.<br />

Mikkelsen, however, was going well,<br />

losing the lead only on the second stage<br />

when fourth running Paddon had a run<br />

clear of hanging dust and took the lead.<br />

Mikkelsen’s only crisis came seven<br />

stages from the end on Saturday<br />

afternoon when the underneath of his<br />

car was damaged, leading to damage to<br />

the foot pedal unit, in which the clutch<br />

pedal jammed the brake pedal in the<br />

down position.<br />

This cost him around 10 seconds<br />

and by the end of Day 2 his lead of<br />

12 seconds had been reduced to two,<br />

leading to an exciting morning on the<br />

final day.<br />

On the final morning Ogier had an<br />

uncharacteristic spin and lost a quarter<br />

of a minute, giving Mikkelsen the<br />

breathing space he needed for victory.<br />

Find us at: www.chicane.co.nz<br />

Call us o<br />

14 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


There were scenes of emotion around<br />

the team when the rally came to an<br />

end.<br />

Hyundai achieved everything it<br />

could hope for when Neuville<br />

took a podium position at the<br />

end and had sufficient points to maintain<br />

his second place in the Drivers’<br />

championship. But the team had a<br />

muddled event, largely because of the<br />

difficulty of deciding the correct tyre<br />

choices.<br />

Second running Neuville found the<br />

tracks so challenging that he drastically<br />

changed his driving style, finding<br />

sideways driving gave him better<br />

grip, while Paddon used a mixture<br />

of soft and hard tyres when every<br />

other Michelin driver used softs in the<br />

morning stages, and found he could<br />

barely drive his car in a straight line.<br />

Just when he was safely in a podium<br />

place within sight of the leaders, he<br />

punctured on the final morning.<br />

Sordo had a miserable first day<br />

when he incurred a 20 second penalty<br />

on a very short WRC event, when the<br />

top runners stayed closely bunched<br />

together, and it would cost him a<br />

podium place.<br />

It was unusual for Mads Ostberg to<br />

enjoy a rally without the countless time<br />

consuming problems that have been<br />

plaguing him during the season. He<br />

finished sixth overall, after lying fifth<br />

The four-time World<br />

Champion almost pulled off<br />

an incredible victory.<br />

during a long battle with Dani Sordo,<br />

despite two poor times on the long<br />

50km Nambucca stages, suffering firstly<br />

from dust and then handling difficulties<br />

after he had suggested a change in his<br />

set-up.<br />

His teammate Eric Camilli was driving<br />

a steady event and lying seventh, close<br />

behind Ostberg, when he then rolled<br />

his car three stages from the end and<br />

did not finish.<br />

After some excellent performances<br />

during the season on his new<br />

generation range of DMacks, these<br />

tyres did not work well for Tanak in the<br />

extreme hot and abrasive conditions of<br />

Australia. He bravely battled on after<br />

he dropped back after a spin on Friday<br />

morning, and then was stopped by<br />

police on the Saturday, after which led<br />

to a 40 second time control penalty.<br />

Once again Ostberg finished a season<br />

with the top championship score in his<br />

team, but it was widely wondered if he<br />

was being squeezed out of the M-Sport<br />

team.<br />

The race for the WRC2 title was<br />

finally won by Esapekka Lappi in the<br />

official Skoda team Fabia R5, while his<br />

championship rival, Teemu Suninen (in<br />

the private Oreca team Skoda), waited<br />

to see if his earlier efforts had been<br />

enough – they weren’t.<br />

Suninen tied on points with Fiesta<br />

R5 driver Elfyn Evans for second place,<br />

but Suninen took the position under tie<br />

deciding rules. Simone Tempestini had<br />

already done enough to take the WRC3<br />

title, but nevertheless Michel Fabre<br />

went to Australia and his walkover<br />

result brought him to within just one<br />

point of the title.<br />

Mads Ostberg was the best<br />

of the M-Sport runners,<br />

despite never challenging.<br />

HJC MOTORSPORTS<br />

n: AU 1800 CHICANE or NZ 0800 CHICANE<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 15


REPORT: RALLY AUSTRALIA - WRC 13<br />

25th Kennards Hire Rally Australia <strong>2016</strong> - Coffs Harbour 18-20/11/<strong>2016</strong> Round 13/13<br />

1 Andreas MIKKELSEN/Anders Jaeger Volkswagen Polo R (M) 2h.46m.05.7s<br />

2 Sebastien OGIER/Julien Ingrassia Volkswagen Polo R (M) 2h.46m.20.6s<br />

3 Thierry NEUVILLE/Nicolas Gilsoul Hyundai NG i20 (M) 2h.47m.18.3s<br />

4 Hayden PADDON/John Kennard Hyundai NG i20 (M) 2h.47m.32.4s<br />

5 Dani SORDO/Marc Marti Hyundai NG i20 (M) 2h.47m.34.0s<br />

6 Mads OSTBERG/Ola Floene Ford Fiesta RS (M) 2h.47m.47.2s<br />

7 Ott TANAK/Raigo Molder Ford Fiesta RS (DM) 2h.49m.10.0s<br />

8 Esapekka Lappi/Janne Ferm Skoda Fabia R5 (M) 2h.53m.38.0s<br />

9 Jari-Matti LATVALA/Miikka Anttila Volkswagen Polo R (M) 2h.54m.02.6s<br />

10 Lorenzo Bertelli/Simone Scattolin Ford Fiesta RS (P) 2h.54m.05.8s<br />

32 (5 WRC2/1 WRC3) starters. 25 (5 WRC2/1 WRC3) finishers.<br />

Tyres: DM=DMack, M=Michelin, P=Pirelli. Winner’s average speed over stages: 102.37km/h.<br />

Leading retirements:<br />

(6) Eric CAMILLI/Benjamin Veillas Ford Fiesta RS (M) Accident, stage 20<br />

Rally leaders: Mikkelsen stage 1, Paddon 2, Mikkelsen 3-23. Weather: hot and dusty.<br />

Leading Special Stages<br />

positions: 1 2 3 4 5 6<br />

Mikkelsen 10 3 7 - 1 1<br />

Ogier 8 6 4 2 - 1<br />

Neuville 3 3 3 4 2 1<br />

Latvala 2 5 1 1 2 2<br />

Paddon 2 3 3 6 2 4<br />

Sordo 1 1 2 6 4 2<br />

Ostberg - 1 1 2 5 10<br />

Tanak - 1 1 1 4 2<br />

Camilli - - 1 - 1 3<br />

WRC2/RC2 Lappi won 22 stages, Fuchs 1.<br />

WRC3/RC3 Fabre won 23 stages.<br />

16 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

Final positions in World Championship for Rallies (WCR):<br />

Volkswagen WRT 377 points, Hyundai WRT 312, Volkswagen WRT II 163,<br />

M-Sport 162, Hyundai N WRT 146, DMack 98, Jipocar Czech National<br />

Team 18, Yazeed Racing 4.<br />

Final leading positions in World Championship for Drivers (WCD):<br />

Ogier 268 points, Neuville 160, Mikkelsen 154, Paddon 138, Sordo 130,<br />

Latvala 112, Ostberg 102, Tanak 88, Meeke 64, Breen 36, etc.<br />

Final leading positions in WRC2 (4WD)(Best 6 of 7 scores count):<br />

Lappi 130(132) points, Suninen & Evans 120, Kopecky 92, Tidemand 85,<br />

etc.<br />

Final leading position in WRC3 (2WD)(Best 6 of 7 scores count):<br />

Tempestini 123 points, Fabre 122(126), Andolfi 91, Koci 87, Veiby 73, etc.


Esapekka Lappi scored a<br />

well deserved WRC2 title.<br />

Tyre wear was an issue for<br />

Ott Tanak and his Fiesta.<br />

Thierry Neuville flew<br />

into third place, while<br />

Mads Ostberg (right) is<br />

interviewed for WRC TV.<br />

PHOTOS: Peter Whitten<br />

Warm weather brought the<br />

locals out in force.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 17


RALLY AUSTRALIA: WHAT THEY SAID<br />

Highlights<br />

from the<br />

post-event<br />

press<br />

conference<br />

Andreas Mikkelsen<br />

Q: Andreas what a hot weekend, how do you<br />

feel now?<br />

AM: Everything else other than cool!<br />

I feel amazing! There are some really<br />

mixed emotions sitting here, for sure<br />

I have probably done my best ever<br />

rally and to finish my career with<br />

Volkswagen with a win is an amazing<br />

feeling. To be able to give this to the<br />

team, I can’t be more proud. But I’m<br />

also sad to see it all disappear, already<br />

in the last stage I was telling Anders –<br />

in the last one kilometre of the Power<br />

Stage: “Wow, I am going to miss this car<br />

and this team!”<br />

For sure, it will be strange not to<br />

tackle any more WRC rallies with this<br />

amazing crew. The weekend was also<br />

amazing and I had a great time in the<br />

Polo. It was maximum attack from the<br />

start. When I woke this morning, I knew<br />

we had a big fight and we just gave it<br />

everything and it was enough. I’m really<br />

happy and really proud to sit here in<br />

the middle of these fantastic drivers. I<br />

don’t think anybody expected the three<br />

of us would sit here with these running<br />

positions.<br />

Q: How does this win rate against the others?<br />

AM: I would say my IRC win when<br />

I won the championship felt better<br />

than Poland and the first WRC win,<br />

but this one was so special. I know<br />

it’s the last one with Volkswagen and<br />

that makes it special, but to fight off a<br />

four-time champion in terms of pace<br />

and performance, with no mechanical<br />

problems… I’m really proud of that.<br />

Q: Will this help for next season?<br />

AM: I think this one is a bit different.<br />

Going into this year, me and my team<br />

set a plan to drive for the championship<br />

by being fast but consistent and not<br />

taking any risks. We made a good pace<br />

and we finished all the events with<br />

nothing drastic. I feel like I’m driving<br />

in a way that I’m really comfortable<br />

with the pace, but coming here we had<br />

18 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

nothing to lose. The only chance we had<br />

to finish second in the championship<br />

was with the win. I did the best job I<br />

could and I think we really showed we<br />

have the top pace. And I never felt so<br />

comfortable at that pace – we had no<br />

big moments. It felt really, really good.<br />

In that way, it’s been a great rally for us.<br />

Sébastien Ogier<br />

Q: Seb it started well, then in the second stage<br />

this morning you had a spin. Tell us about that…<br />

SO: I think first I will say I am happy,<br />

OK not completely happy. We had the<br />

last day of our career with this team<br />

and it was with a big fight and that<br />

helped us go through all this emotion.<br />

For me and Julien, we were close to a<br />

pretty unique performance to win by<br />

opening the road.<br />

That would have been amazing, but<br />

we failed today. We had two great<br />

days on Friday and Saturday and to be<br />

only two seconds behind Andreas and<br />

Anders was really great. The plan was<br />

to try to catch them. I knew it would<br />

not be easy, I knew they would fight,<br />

and we were at pretty much the same<br />

speed when I did my mistake. It was<br />

only the second spin of the year – I<br />

cannot complain much for that. Two<br />

spins in the season? I would sign for the<br />

same in the future.<br />

There was a bit of frustration when<br />

we did that, but I am still proud of what<br />

we have done this year and this week<br />

with Julien. A one-two for the team


made us happy.<br />

Q: There was a lot of emotion this week, did<br />

you find that distracting today?<br />

SO: It’s hard to put the right words on<br />

that. It’s nice to see what this sport and<br />

this job brings in terms of emotions and<br />

it’s hard to watch all the team at the last<br />

service with tears in their eyes, knowing<br />

we have all done this together and this<br />

was the last time.<br />

It’s a difficult time now, but we have<br />

to look ahead. Sometimes things you<br />

don’t expect are coming. But OK, I will<br />

cherish this year and remember it<br />

forever. Who knows what the future will<br />

bring for us.<br />

Q: You have a busy week ahead?<br />

SO: Definitely. I’m glad you didn’t ask<br />

me [about the future]: I have nothing<br />

more to say, but it’s urgent and in the<br />

next days and next weeks, hopefully<br />

I will be able to tell you something as<br />

soon as possible.<br />

Thierry Neuville<br />

Q: Thierry, congratulations on third place and<br />

runner-up in the championship. How do you feel?<br />

TN: I feel quite well. I couldn’t<br />

imagine that I would be fighting my<br />

mate Andreas to be second in the<br />

championship. I expected a more calm<br />

weekend. I was pretty sure the road<br />

positions, well, I did not expect to be on<br />

the podium and not expect Andreas to<br />

be there.<br />

After two or three stages, I realised if I<br />

want to be second in the championship<br />

then I have to push hard and I have<br />

done that. Andreas has done very<br />

well, leading nearly all the time. I had<br />

no other choice but to go as fast as<br />

possible.<br />

I’m happy with this performance, we<br />

achieved our goal and for Andreas it<br />

doesn’t change much. He wins the rally<br />

and this is important for him for next<br />

year. I’m really happy to be with these<br />

guys on the podium.<br />

Q: How are the next few weeks looking for you?<br />

TN: My agenda is more clear than<br />

these guys. I am testing in the new<br />

car for the first time on Tarmac next<br />

Sunday, then we have our presentation<br />

of the new car at Monza, a champions<br />

day in Belgium where we race cars –<br />

this will be fun.<br />

There’s also a race show in Italy – I<br />

enjoy every second of it. Sometimes<br />

you realise how nice is our job, it<br />

was the biggest dream for me to be<br />

here. I have been twice second in the<br />

championship and now there is only<br />

one more place to go – I don’t know<br />

when this will happen, but I’m working<br />

on it.<br />

Q: What have you learned about fighting for the<br />

title?<br />

TN: To be honest, I have learned a<br />

lot. I have been working on myself for<br />

the last couple of years. When I came<br />

here [to Hyundai] the team’s objectives<br />

were not always the same as mine: I<br />

was ready for winning, but the team<br />

was still learning. I made huge progress<br />

with this at the end of last year and this<br />

season I was back on pace.<br />

We kept calm and when the car was<br />

more reliable, we have been consistent.<br />

This rally is five times in a row we have<br />

been on the podium and we’ve gone<br />

from eighth to second place in the<br />

championship since the start. In my<br />

driving, I’ve learned a lot. Here, I was<br />

the first to follow Seb, so I could see<br />

his lines. I have seen some interesting<br />

things!<br />

Sven Smeets<br />

Q: Sven, this feels like the end of an era…<br />

how are you feeling?<br />

SS: A bit like the drivers… I am very<br />

happy to end it like this. They gave us a<br />

big battle. We hoped it would go to the<br />

Power Stage, but it ended in the long<br />

stage today.<br />

This (Volkswagen’s decision to depart<br />

the WRC) happens. When you work<br />

for the big companies, they can make<br />

these decisions. We will not be there for<br />

the next three years, we have to look<br />

forward.<br />

Q: There’s been great support for Volkswagen<br />

from all around the WRC…<br />

SS: Fantastic. The WRC is always<br />

the big family. We have done it when<br />

Hyundai got their first victory in<br />

Germany three years ago and they did<br />

it for us today. Everybody is invited<br />

to our farewell drinks tonight to be<br />

together with us.<br />

Q: How can you sum up Volkswagen’s<br />

contribution to the WRC?<br />

SS: Maybe we need a few Five hours! titles, I but<br />

Dunkerton<br />

don’t know. I hope we left a mark, the<br />

doesn’t make<br />

results speak for themselves. I hope in<br />

Gover’s Top 10.<br />

other ways, like the marketing, I hope<br />

we will never be forgotten.<br />

I want to add something quickly… I<br />

just didn’t mention one thing. I made<br />

my mistake, but I want to say a big well<br />

done to Andreas and Anders, this was a<br />

proper win and I didn’t say it.<br />

If it helps them to be with us next<br />

year – although also I don’t know if I<br />

will be there! But these guys need to be<br />

there.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 19<br />

PHOTOS: Peter Whitten


RALLY AUSTRALIA SPECTATOR TOUR<br />

EXCLUSIVE SPECTATING<br />

After what seemed like months<br />

of waiting, Kennards Hire Rally<br />

Australia finally arrived, and<br />

fans from Australia, New Zealand, Finland,<br />

Japan and the UK arrived in Coffs<br />

Harbour for <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>’s<br />

annual spectator tour.<br />

After checking in at the Aanuka<br />

Beach Resort, guests had a few<br />

hours to unwind before the tour got<br />

underway with a welcome dinner on<br />

Wednesday night.<br />

Guest speaker at the dinner was<br />

WRC TV presenter and end of stage<br />

Photos: PETER WHITTEN<br />

reporter, Julian Porter, who kept<br />

everyone entertained for nearly 90<br />

minutes with stories from the WRC<br />

and, most importantly, where he<br />

thought the VW drivers might end up.<br />

With buses loaded we headed<br />

for shakedown early on Thursday<br />

morning with a brisk walk up the hill<br />

to the Wedding Bells jump, where<br />

the WRC crews quickly got into their<br />

stride. Both Ott Tanak and Lorenzo<br />

Bertelli almost pushed too hard and<br />

were lucky not to damage their Fiestas<br />

after very heavy landings.<br />

A visit to the service park and the<br />

Rally Show completed the day – with<br />

some time in between for swimming<br />

in the ocean or making the most of<br />

Aanuka’s beautiful pools.<br />

Day 1 was the longest day of all<br />

for the tour guests, with a 4.50am<br />

departure time testing even the<br />

earliest of risers! The buses drove<br />

some of the magnificent Baker’s Creek<br />

stage to our exclusive tour location,<br />

where we watched the whole field<br />

from a private spectator point.<br />

The afternoon saw us take in the<br />

Lorenzo Bertelli was the only<br />

privateer running a World<br />

Rally Car, and did it in style.<br />

20 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


Baker’s Creek stage again before<br />

heading back into Coffs Harbour for<br />

the first running of the super special<br />

stage on the jetty, where we had<br />

grandstand seats close to the action.<br />

Another early start on Saturday<br />

morning led to another two exclusive<br />

locations, the first high up on the long<br />

Nambucca stage, the second towards<br />

the end of the stage on the second<br />

running of ‘Valla’.<br />

We gave the SSS a miss on day two,<br />

with most keen for an early night and<br />

to prepare for the final day of the rally<br />

– and the fight for victory between<br />

Mikkelsen, Ogier and Paddon.<br />

Sunday was spent at the Flooded<br />

Gums Rally Village with a dedicated<br />

RSM tour area at the famous Wedding<br />

Bells jump, before watching the cars<br />

negotiate the watersplash on the<br />

second running of the stage.<br />

From there it was back into Coffs<br />

Harbour to take up our grandstand<br />

seats at the podium finish, where<br />

Andreas Mikkelsen and Anders Jaeger<br />

celebrated a brilliant victory.<br />

Most took to the pool again late on<br />

Sunday afternoon to wash the dust off,<br />

before the tour concluded with a buffet<br />

dinner at Aanuka Beach on Sunday<br />

night.<br />

The official Rally Australia tour was<br />

once again a great success, and many<br />

of the guests have already started<br />

planning their holidays for next<br />

November, when the event once again<br />

hits the NSW coast. With new cars set<br />

to debut in 2017, it promises to be an<br />

event not to miss.<br />

- PETER WHITTEN<br />

Tour guests were up close to<br />

the action, but taking much<br />

needed shade when possible.<br />

PHOTOS: Peter Whitten<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 21


COLUMN: HAYDEN PADDON<br />

The dust has finally settled following<br />

the final round of the <strong>2016</strong><br />

WRC - Rally Australia. It was a rally<br />

we had been looking forward to for<br />

a long time and the huge Kiwi support<br />

made it a special event for us.<br />

Unfortunately what should have<br />

been a podium finish was dashed<br />

by a puncture on the final day, but<br />

fourth for the rally and fourth for the<br />

championship is nothing to turn our<br />

nose up at.<br />

We took a lot of lessons from the rally<br />

last year and put them into practice this<br />

year. The target going into the rally was<br />

to focus on a good performance, and<br />

while this was not quite up to my high<br />

standards, it was an improvement on<br />

last year.<br />

There are still key stages and road<br />

surfaces that we are struggling on that<br />

we must address before next season,<br />

as at this level you simply cannot afford<br />

to have ‘off’ stages.<br />

We always targeted Friday as a ‘setup’<br />

day, Saturday as ‘moving’ day and<br />

Sunday as ‘consolidation’ day. The plan<br />

almost played out well.<br />

At the end of day 1 we were P4, 22<br />

seconds back. While we would have<br />

liked to be a little closer, it was still<br />

a position we could fight back from,<br />

which we did on Saturday morning.<br />

The bulk of Saturday was made up of<br />

two runs of the iconic 50km Nambucca<br />

stage. On the morning pass we had a<br />

good run (despite huge dust inside the<br />

car) and we leapt from fourth to second<br />

in one stage – while also halving the gap<br />

to the leader.<br />

In the afternoon we knew tyre<br />

consumption was going to be a big<br />

problem in the 30-degree air temps,<br />

and we knew from 2015 that you<br />

cannot not attack the stage in order to<br />

keep the tyres for the whole stage.<br />

So for the first 25-30km we<br />

took a more steady approach, but<br />

unfortunately we took it a little too easy<br />

and despite a fastest final spilt on the<br />

stage, we lost seven seconds which<br />

halted our charge.<br />

Going into the final day in P3 and<br />

just 12 seconds from the lead, we<br />

had to keep the pressure on the<br />

two VWs ahead. While we missed a<br />

little speed, we were not content to<br />

settle for a safe third, as in the future<br />

settling for position will not win you<br />

championships.<br />

So we had a go, and unfortunately it<br />

bit back as we ran a little wide, touched<br />

the bank slightly on the outside, which<br />

pushed the tyre off the rim.<br />

We continued through the final 20km<br />

of the stage with a puncture, dropping<br />

nearly one minute and from third to<br />

fifth. We were able to then recover to<br />

fourth by the rally end.<br />

22 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

HAYDEN<br />

PADDON<br />

COLUMN<br />

While it was a missed opportunity<br />

for a podium, we have no regrets as<br />

we wanted to give it a nudge to maybe<br />

climb further up the leaderboard.<br />

More importantly, there were a lot of<br />

lessons taken from the weekend which<br />

will help us come back stronger next<br />

year.<br />

While we would have hoped for a<br />

little more from the second half of<br />

the year, we can be proud that we<br />

have been consistent and have shown<br />

significant improvements on each event<br />

and each stage compared to last year.<br />

2018 is the focus, and if each year<br />

and rally we can continue to make<br />

the planned steps, then we will be on<br />

target.<br />

Of course none of this would be<br />

possible without our amazing Hyundai<br />

Motorsport team who I am forever<br />

thankful to. Also, our close-knit support<br />

team of my co-driver John, Katie,<br />

Engineer Rui and our car mechanics,<br />

our NZ partners Hyundai New Zealand,<br />

Z Energy and Pakn’Save, and everyone<br />

involved within HPRG.<br />

There are too many people to thank,<br />

but a huge thank you to each and every<br />

one. This is a team sport!<br />

A huge thanks to all the Kiwis that<br />

travelled across the Tasman to support<br />

us – including our tour group of 110.<br />

It’s really a special feeling representing<br />

your country and seeing the same<br />

enthusiasm and passion that we have<br />

for our sport shared by so many other<br />

people.<br />

We look forward to hosting many<br />

more guests at different events around<br />

the world in the future. A huge thanks<br />

to Katie who worked tirelessly putting<br />

the tour together.<br />

After Rally Australia, the WRC hosted<br />

a Gala dinner in Sydney. Unfortunately<br />

due to some PR commitments, we were<br />

unable to make it, but it was humbling


to win the Certina Timing Award for<br />

our performance on the final stage<br />

of Rally Argentina.<br />

It’s quite an honor to be<br />

recognised and thanks to everyone<br />

that voted. Also congratulations to<br />

John who, on the same day, won<br />

Marlborough Sports Person of the<br />

Year award.<br />

We now have a huge couple<br />

of months ahead – and the term<br />

‘off season’ seems to be quite<br />

misleading, as it is anything but!<br />

We have a lot of PR activities here<br />

in NZ, the Young Driver NZ Shootout<br />

this month, more details soon being<br />

released about the Paddon Rally<br />

Foundation, and of course, returning<br />

to Europe for winter testing in<br />

preparation for Monte Carlo. We will<br />

keep you posted.<br />

A huge thank you to you all for<br />

your continued support. We will<br />

have more news, which we will<br />

update you on before the end of the<br />

year.<br />

Best regards,<br />

Hayden.<br />

A last day puncture cost<br />

Paddon a podium finish.<br />

Photos: Geoff Ridder<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 23


REPORT: KENNARDS HIRE RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

MOLLY’s<br />

WRX-ellent adventure<br />

24 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


Story: TOM SMITH<br />

Photos: PETER WHITTEN<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 25


REPORT: KENNARDS HIRE RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

Simon Evans’ hopes of a fifth<br />

ARC title were dashed with two<br />

punctures on the same stage.<br />

The story has been written many<br />

times over, but there is only one<br />

way to say it. Molly Taylor is the<br />

<strong>2016</strong> Australian Rally Champion driver.<br />

The <strong>2016</strong> Kumho Tyre Australian Rally<br />

Championship had received plenty<br />

of media coverage, and in the weeks<br />

leading up to, and after Kennards Hire<br />

Rally Australia, specialist motorport and<br />

social media brought the impending<br />

three-way battle for championship<br />

honours to an absolute crescendo.<br />

The tussle during the <strong>2016</strong><br />

competition year had been more<br />

interesting than many in recent<br />

memory, and the genuine rally-byrally<br />

fight for supremacy and points<br />

culminated in the incredible scenario at<br />

Coffs Harbour where any of the three<br />

protagonists could have become ARC<br />

champ.<br />

What started as a six point difference<br />

between Simon Evans, Harry Bates<br />

and Molly Taylor, ended up as an eight<br />

point blanket over the three - with<br />

Taylor and co-driver Bill Hayes in top<br />

spot, clinching their first Australian Rally<br />

Championship title.<br />

Molly also became the first female<br />

ARC driver’s champion, and in the<br />

process became the youngest ever<br />

driver’s title-holder.<br />

The intensity of the challenge was<br />

ever-present, and no-one was mistake<br />

free, although Taylor and Hayes<br />

continued their confident strategy<br />

behind the wheel of the Les Walkdenprepared<br />

‘Subaru do Motorsport’ Group<br />

N WRX STI.<br />

Evans and co-driver Ben Searcy<br />

brought out ‘old faithful’ – the black<br />

ETS Racing Fuels GC8 Subaru Impreza<br />

– and as usual, drove the wheels off<br />

the car. During Saturday’s stages, word<br />

filtered through that the team was<br />

chasing a replacement centre diff, and<br />

local contacts were dragged out of<br />

the address book in an effort to locate<br />

spare parts.<br />

Harry Bates ended day two in a<br />

dominant position, staring down the<br />

barrel of the potential top spot, when<br />

an early puncture in the hard, dusty<br />

stages north-east of Coffs Harbour<br />

ripped the mudguard off the S2000<br />

Corolla, tore off a brake line and caused<br />

the loss of many precious minutes.<br />

Molly Taylor and Bill Hayes<br />

secured their first Australian<br />

Rally Championship.<br />

Mixing it with the best of them<br />

and showing his best performance<br />

all year, Mark Pedder and co-driver<br />

Dale Moscatt drove determinedly and<br />

quickly in the Pedders Peugeot 208<br />

Maxi to seriously challenge for the<br />

outright win and spoil the party.<br />

While media focus and most<br />

attention was centred on<br />

what was becoming an enthralling<br />

final round of the World Rally<br />

Championship, and with it, the final<br />

rally for the mighty Volkswagen factory<br />

team – locally the fight for the ARC title<br />

was genuinely the closest it has been in<br />

recent history.<br />

With the battle literally coming down<br />

to the wire, it was a rare and unusual<br />

error which saw a one-minute penalty<br />

26 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


applied to the Pedders Peugot<br />

for late arrival at the penultimate<br />

stage.<br />

This tiny 60 second notation on<br />

the route card – which in many<br />

other rallies would not have even<br />

been the difference between first<br />

and second placing – caused a reshuffle<br />

of the placing and outright<br />

point scores.<br />

Had the time penalty not been<br />

applied, or been overturned, the<br />

championship winner would have<br />

been Simon Evans and co-driver<br />

Ben Searcy.<br />

With so much at stake, cordial<br />

relationships were tested after the<br />

event as confusion and conjecture<br />

overtook the importance of the<br />

occasion.<br />

In the end, Taylor and Hayes<br />

finished on top of the ARC table,<br />

beating Evans and Searcy by just<br />

two points. The win adds to Subaru<br />

Australia’s victories that include<br />

10 consecutive ARC titles from<br />

1996 to 2005, before the team<br />

withdrew from domestic rallying,<br />

re-emerging this year under the<br />

‘Subaru do Motorsport’ campaign.<br />

“We knew we had to beat Mark<br />

Pedder, but we weren’t 100 per<br />

cent certain what the result of the<br />

penalty was going to be - whether<br />

Mark would get a one minute or<br />

10 second penalty - we were given<br />

that information just minutes<br />

before we started the final stage,”<br />

explained Subaru co-driver Bill<br />

Hayes.<br />

“It wasn’t until 9pm that we were<br />

told with absolute certainty that<br />

we’d won the championship.”<br />

As the results showed, a devastated<br />

Evans and Searcy<br />

clinched fifth place after a<br />

double puncture and differential<br />

problems in the first two days of<br />

the event, which was enough for<br />

them to hold onto second place<br />

in the ARC title race, a mere two<br />

points behind Taylor and Hayes.<br />

Much has also been said and<br />

written about the maturity of<br />

Harry Bates and co-driver John<br />

McCarthy. Considering that <strong>2016</strong><br />

was only Bates’ second full year in<br />

top-level rallying, his approach to<br />

the season and this event sounds a<br />

gong for his future at a youthful 21<br />

years of age.<br />

Harry offered an insight when<br />

interviewed for the Rally Australia<br />

crowds: “It’s a little surreal<br />

being here challenging for the<br />

championship in a car which my<br />

father used to win the ARC eight<br />

years ago.”<br />

The event was not just a three<br />

A final day puncture robbed<br />

Harry Bates of the national<br />

championship.<br />

There was heartache for<br />

Mark Pedder who was denied<br />

a first ARC event win.<br />

After a troubled season, Brad<br />

Markovic finished sixth at<br />

Rally Australia.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 27


REPORT: KENNARDS HIRE RALLY AUSTRALIA<br />

Molly Taylor is the first female<br />

driver to win the Australian<br />

Rally Championship.<br />

car rally however, and recognition goes to Brad Markovic for<br />

a superb top-six result, co-driven by the experienced Glenn<br />

MacNeall.<br />

Markovic recovered from a 100% loss when his car burnt<br />

to the ground in the opening round of the series in WA.<br />

Struggling to regain confidence, his finish at Rally Australia<br />

was an apt reward for a challenging year.<br />

Mick Patton and Bernie Webb put in a mature drive to take<br />

fourth place in their Repco sponsored Mitsubishi Lancer Evo<br />

X.<br />

Rallying was the overall winner out of this unusual series<br />

of events, with much mainstream media attention being<br />

directed to the sport and, of course, Australia’s ‘maiden’<br />

female rally champ.<br />

Subaru’s return to the sport on a national basis was<br />

carefully considered and smoothly applied, as expected, by<br />

the Subaru Australia team and Les Walkden’s workshop, who<br />

delivered speed, consistency and a 100% finishing rate.<br />

With speculation that 2017 may deliver a renaissance<br />

in Australian rallying, Molly Taylor’s continuing role as a<br />

professional driver is guaranteed.<br />

The Neal Bates Motorsport workshop has revealed that<br />

a new AP4 Toyota Yaris is under construction for the new<br />

season, and recent announcements from Harry Bates that he<br />

intends to focus on the national series (instead of a potential<br />

push overseas) also bodes well for a continuation of the new<br />

Bates/Taylor era.<br />

Final results, Kumho Tyre Australian Rally Championship:<br />

1. Molly Taylor/Bill Hayes, Subaru Impreza RX STi, 3:08:06.5<br />

2. Mark Pedder/Dale Moscatt, Peugeot 208 Maxi, + 39.3<br />

3. Harry Bates/John McCarthy, Toyota Corolla S2000, + 1:46.7<br />

4. Mick Patton/Bernie Webb, Mitsubishi Evo X, +2:52.5<br />

5. Simon Evans/Ben Searcy, Subaru Impreza WRX, +0:31.6<br />

6. Brad Markovic/Glenn Macneall, Subaru Impreza WRX Sti,<br />

+06:17.5<br />

Australian Rally Championship driver standings (final):<br />

1. Molly Taylor 329, 2. Simon Evans 327, 3. Harry Bates 321<br />

Adrian Coppin jumps his<br />

pretty Toyota Corolla S2000.<br />

TAILOR-MADE PACKAGES TO<br />

28 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


BATES MASTERS KENNARDS KLASSICS<br />

The Toyota man was<br />

in a class of his own<br />

at Coffs Harbour,<br />

reports Tom Smith.<br />

With a battle raging in the final<br />

round of the <strong>2016</strong> World Rally<br />

Championship at Kennards<br />

Hire Rally Australia, and a new dramatic<br />

chapter simultaneously unfolding in<br />

the Australian Rally Championship,<br />

the Classic category delivered results<br />

headed once again by the Neal Bates<br />

Motorsport Toyota Celica RA40.<br />

Bates and long-time co-driver,<br />

Coral Taylor, focussed on the task at<br />

hand, undistracted by their respective<br />

offspring challenging for ARC<br />

prominence on the rally roads ahead.<br />

Bates and Taylor were pleasingly<br />

challenged by the newly-arrived BDA<br />

Escort of Irish visitors McCormack/<br />

Mitchell and the crowd favourite S1<br />

Quattro replica of Mal Keogh/Pip<br />

Bennett.<br />

After three long days of competition<br />

in hot, dry and dusty conditions, it<br />

was the ex-Alistair McRae Escort of<br />

Dermody/Moynihan which clinched a<br />

sound second place behind the Bates<br />

Celica, and Badenoch/Kelly in the sister<br />

Celica who grabbed the last spot on the<br />

podium.<br />

The tough event saw a large number<br />

of retirements including the muchfancied<br />

local Wayne Hoy (Datsun 1600),<br />

and motorsport entrepreneur Tony<br />

Quinn in his BMW M3.<br />

With the Australian 2WD Classic Rally<br />

Challenge all over bar the shouting,<br />

Neal Bates celebrated the outright win<br />

with 263 points, over clay Badenoch<br />

on 196 in the second Toyota, and Tom<br />

Dermody taking third in the brilliant red<br />

Escort.<br />

Coral Taylor took top Co-Driver’s spot,<br />

from Eoin Moynihan (with Dermody)<br />

and Cate Kelly (with Badenoch).<br />

Keogh and Bennett were the 4WD<br />

winners in the beautiful Quattro replica.<br />

The <strong>2016</strong> Classic Rally Challenge<br />

delivered stronger fields throughout the<br />

year, proving again that the category<br />

is growing in competitor popularity,<br />

and continues to be a drawcard for<br />

spectators.<br />

Local star Wayne Hoy was great to<br />

watch in his Datsun 1600.<br />

It was a good<br />

event for the<br />

Toyota Celicas<br />

of Bates and<br />

Badenoch.<br />

SUIT YOU<br />

To advertise in <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> call Dominic on<br />

0499 981 188 or email dominic@rallysportmag.com.au<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 29


FIVE MINUTES WITH ....<br />

5<br />

minutes with ...<br />

MOLLY TAYLOR<br />

In her first year as a factory driver, Molly Taylor was hoping for a<br />

top three finish in the ARC. She did better than that ....<br />

First of all, congratulations on winning your first Australian title.<br />

Has it all been a bit of a blur since the rally?<br />

Thank you! Yes, to be honest none of it has sunken in yet.<br />

It’s always been my dream, but I honestly didn’t expect it to<br />

happen this year.<br />

Your Subaru ran faultlessly all season, and you didn’t put a mark on<br />

it - was your number one goal to be consistent all year?<br />

This season was my first year as a factory driver and also<br />

in an all-wheel-drive car, so my main focus was making sure I<br />

did the very best job I was capable of.<br />

After working for so long for an opportunity like this, it was<br />

very important to me to grab this with both hands and put<br />

everything into it.<br />

I think running as the only Group N car in most events<br />

actually forced us to concentrate on our own race and tick<br />

every box we could as a team.<br />

We knew we had a strong, reliable and well built car, so of<br />

course we had to play to our strengths. The team, and what<br />

we are all here to achieve, is so much bigger than me trying<br />

to satisfy my ego on one stage, I am just one piece of a jigsaw<br />

puzzle and it only works if we all fit together.<br />

Presumably you were confident in yourself and your car heading into<br />

Rally Australia, but did you ever let yourself look ahead and think what<br />

could be on Sunday afternoon?<br />

I didn’t want to entertain the idea of winning during Rally<br />

Australia. Our plan was the same as every rally, to do what<br />

we could to put ourselves in the best position possible, but<br />

coming into the event I thought that if we could finish the<br />

year in the top three it would have been a fantastic result for<br />

our first season together.<br />

I was so happy with the whole team’s performance during<br />

the rally and how hard we all worked. Coming into the final<br />

day I thought, whatever the result, we can be happy knowing<br />

we have done the best job we could have.<br />

Les Walkden (left) built a strong a<br />

reliable car for Subaru.<br />

30 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


What does it mean to bring Les Walkden and Subaru an Australian<br />

title?<br />

It’s incredibly special. Subaru and Les took a chance with<br />

me and I’ll always be so grateful for that.<br />

From our very first test we all gelled really well and have<br />

become a family. I think this has been one of the reasons for<br />

our success, and it also makes it all the more special when<br />

you share this journey with a group of people all working for<br />

the same dream.<br />

Is the plan to campaign the same Group N Subaru in 2017, or is it all<br />

still up in the air? Could the car be up-specced for next year?<br />

It’s something we will discuss, but we haven’t confirmed<br />

any plans for 2017 yet.<br />

The last three factory Subaru drivers to win the Australian title are<br />

Possum Bourne, Cody Crocker and Molly Taylor. Has does that feel?<br />

That’s the first time I have seen our names together and,<br />

wow!<br />

I remember Possum used to stay at our house when I was<br />

little and he really was a hero figure, even if he was Mum and<br />

Neal’s rival too!<br />

I’ve also looked up to Cody a lot and his incredibly<br />

consistent success. They have set the benchmark within<br />

Subaru and helped develop the brand’s fantastic culture.<br />

I certainly still have a long way to go before I’m confortable<br />

with having my name in the same sentence ...<br />

What will you be doing over the off-season?<br />

We have a busy few weeks now with the upcoming launch<br />

of the all-new Impreza, which I am really excited to be a part<br />

of.<br />

An incredible amount of development has gone into this<br />

car and it’s already had rave reviews from everyone who’s<br />

driven it so far.<br />

We are also planning some other events and activities over<br />

January and February, so it’s going to be a busy summer :)<br />

Can Subaru do Motorsport make it two in a row, and can Molly<br />

Taylor go back-to-back?<br />

Well, we are certainly going to give it a crack!<br />

- LUKE WHITTEN<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 31


FEATURE: A DAY WITH COLIN CLARK<br />

A DAY WITH THE VOICE OF RALLY<br />

Dmack technicians check<br />

Tanak’s tyre temperatures.<br />

Broken rear suspension<br />

for Lorenzo Bertelli on the<br />

Nambucca stage.<br />

32 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

As a gap year student in<br />

<strong>2016</strong>, I have been trying<br />

to get as much work experience<br />

as I can to best decide a<br />

career path for myself, so in the<br />

lead up to Kennards Hire Rally<br />

Australia, I got in contact with<br />

Colin Clark, enquiring about the<br />

possibility of some work experience<br />

at the final round of the<br />

championship.<br />

The opportunity would let me<br />

explore what goes on to produce<br />

World Rally Radio from the stage<br />

end itself - right in the thick of the<br />

action. Much to my delight, the<br />

well-known ‘Voice of Rally’ was all<br />

too happy to have me along.<br />

So, after the day was arranged,<br />

I was dropped in the pretty town<br />

of Bowraville early on Saturday<br />

morning by one of the <strong>RallySport</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong> tour buses and met<br />

Colin at the Old Coach Inn for<br />

breakfast.<br />

Talking rallying, careers,<br />

marketing and more rallying, we<br />

chatted over breakfast.<br />

Colin got into rally radio by<br />

coincidence. Taking an open<br />

mind into everything and taking<br />

up opportunities can play in your<br />

favour immensely. A huge fan<br />

of rallying first and foremost,<br />

he now travels the globe doing<br />

something he loves.<br />

While it’s difficult to give a<br />

blow-by-blow description of what<br />

‘A day in the life of Colin Clark’<br />

looks like, here’s a few highlights<br />

of my day ….<br />

Ott Tanak’s mysterious run<br />

ins with the local police<br />

were a talking point, as<br />

were tyres for the morning’s loop<br />

of stages (including Nambucca).<br />

World Champion Sebastien<br />

Ogier’s surprising choice to take<br />

a majority of soft tyres set up an<br />

interesting loop of stages. It was<br />

agreed, however, that if anyone<br />

could pull it off, it was Ogier.<br />

Time would tell.<br />

Arriving at the stop control of<br />

Nambucca on rapidly heating<br />

bitumen, we immediately<br />

felt welcome by the fantastic<br />

volunteers that met us - a<br />

testament to the people of the<br />

rally.<br />

The hospitality at the stage<br />

end was unbelievable, both for<br />

the drivers and the WRC media.<br />

Water, lollies and a friendly smile<br />

Story & Photos:<br />

LUKE WHITTEN<br />

greeted everyone in attendance.<br />

The timing board, in particular,<br />

had a great showing of a<br />

personal Australian touch.<br />

Colin, now live on air, would<br />

pace up and down the stop<br />

control talking to Becs Williams<br />

back at Rally Radio HQ in the<br />

service park.<br />

On this morning, he was armed<br />

with a New South Wales police<br />

hat and badge, which had been<br />

‘loaned’ to him from a local<br />

officer.<br />

Unlike other sports<br />

commentators, the action is not<br />

followed play-by-play or ballby-ball,<br />

so it is difficult to bring<br />

excitement and anticipation for<br />

a commentator, who, for the<br />

majority of his time on air- is<br />

seeing no action.<br />

Relating it to cricket, Colin gives<br />

excitement when needed, fills in<br />

time on appropriate topics, but<br />

all in all, commentates off the<br />

bat and as he sees it – there is<br />

no plan, and no manufactured<br />

excitement.<br />

It was business as usual for the<br />

WRC media. Julian Porter was<br />

atop of all things regarding split<br />

times, and the stage went hiccup<br />

free on radio.<br />

Unsurprisingly, Hayden Paddon<br />

won the stage he had targeted,<br />

albeit with dust billowing into his<br />

i20. Ogier’s soft tyre gamble had<br />

also paid dividends through the<br />

first stage of the morning. The<br />

surprising choice was the right<br />

one.<br />

A dozen or so cars passed<br />

through before we set off to the<br />

Raleigh Raceway Super Special<br />

Stage.<br />

We were on track with plenty of<br />

time to spare, but with hundreds<br />

of spectator cars halting our<br />

entry into the stage, it was touch<br />

and go whether we would make<br />

it.<br />

Conveniently, we could just<br />

sneak up the right hand side of<br />

the road and made it with only a<br />

couple of minutes to spare.<br />

To further inconvenience us,<br />

we struggled to transmit at the<br />

stop control. This led to me being<br />

thrust in as chief aerial holder.


<strong>RallySport</strong> Mag’s Luke<br />

Whitten with Colin Clark.<br />

Colin chats to Ogier at<br />

the end of the Raleigh<br />

Raceway stage.<br />

“Colin commentates off the bat and<br />

as he sees it – there is no plan, and<br />

no manufactured excitement.”<br />

I was to hold the aerial up<br />

as high as possible, with the<br />

hope of improving the signal.<br />

A minor inconvenience to<br />

me, but it meant I had to be<br />

up close and personal, as<br />

Colin interviewed the world’s<br />

best drivers.<br />

The issue was a hassle, and<br />

rather frustrating as we could<br />

hardly be heard speaking to<br />

some drivers.<br />

As there were no troubles<br />

at this location on Friday, it<br />

was thought to be an issue<br />

with the second ‘back up’<br />

aerial in use.<br />

Just like the competitors<br />

themselves, I found out first<br />

hand that one of a number<br />

of things can go wrong at any<br />

time.<br />

A quick lunch stop was had<br />

back in Bowraville, and with<br />

the heat now beaming off<br />

the tarmac at 44 degrees, we<br />

were back at the second run<br />

of Nambucca - perhaps the<br />

most critical stage of the rally.<br />

As they were in the<br />

morning, the DMack guys<br />

were gathering tyre data from<br />

their man, Ott Tanak, in what<br />

was some of the harshest<br />

conditions of the season.<br />

Ogier, now on equal road<br />

conditions, showed his<br />

class and won comfortably<br />

against his closest rivals. Yet<br />

surprisingly, he was the only<br />

driver to get out and inspect<br />

his tyres.<br />

In a failed effort to be fast<br />

and save his tyres, Lavala’s<br />

ploy to ‘push, then calm<br />

down,’ did not work ideally,<br />

but a stage win gave him<br />

some consolation.<br />

Italian, Lorenzo Bertelli,<br />

unbeknowns to him and his<br />

small army of fans at the<br />

stage end, entered with a<br />

broken suspension arm, while<br />

Hubert Ptaszek suffered a<br />

right rear puncture on the<br />

marathon stage.<br />

You simply cannot<br />

match the human<br />

drama of a rally and<br />

the excitement that it brings.<br />

Being there in the thick of the<br />

action was a real thrill.<br />

All too soon the day’s<br />

stages had come to an<br />

end, as had my time with<br />

Colin. As he headed back to<br />

his accommodation, I was<br />

dropped at the end of the<br />

Valla stage where I was soon<br />

reunited with the <strong>RallySport</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong> tour group and the<br />

trip back to Coffs Harbour. It<br />

had been a day I’ll not soon<br />

forget.<br />

In closing, I’d like to<br />

thank Colin Clark for the<br />

opportunity - it may well<br />

change my career path.<br />

Seb Ogier checks his tyres<br />

on the crucial second day<br />

at Rally Australia.<br />

A dusty Paddon after he<br />

won the first run through<br />

the Nambucca stage.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 33


FEATURE: FRANK KELLY<br />

“THE ONLY WAY IS SIDEWAYS”<br />

PART 2<br />

This month in <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> we continue with<br />

part 2 of the Frank Kelly story. As a skilled and entertaining<br />

rally driver, we invited Frank to introduce<br />

himself to the southern hemisphere a little more personally.<br />

We found that Frank could turn a phrase very well and his<br />

own story of his early years in a range of small Fords has<br />

proven to be extremely entertaining.<br />

This story, combined with an amazing range of photos of<br />

Frank in action, adds further to the legend status of the man<br />

behind the wheel of ‘Baby Blue’.<br />

Special mention is made, and recognition given, to the<br />

various photographers who provided these spectacular<br />

photos to Kelly Motorsport.<br />

At Kennards Hire Rally Australia in November, Aussie<br />

spectators were introduced to another Irish Escort driver,<br />

Marty McCormack, who brought his amazing Escort out to<br />

compete in some local events.<br />

<strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> and Australian spectators hope that an<br />

opportunity may arise for Frank Kelly to show his own special<br />

talents in an Australian or New Zealand event in the near<br />

future.<br />

Read on, as Frank Kelly brings readers up to speed with his<br />

more recent achievements and future plans.<br />

- TOM SMITH<br />

“Around this time I discovered DMS<br />

suspension in Australia. Jamie<br />

Drummond was keen to develop a<br />

set-up for the Mk2 and I was guinea pig.<br />

What a revelation they were - without<br />

34 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

doubt the single biggest improvement<br />

I have ever felt. Straight out of the box<br />

we were flying, literally. I now had a<br />

set-up that could move from gravel to<br />

tarmac with only minor adjustments,<br />

and this opened another rally chapter<br />

for us.<br />

2011 was a complete change for me.<br />

With shipping still out of the question,<br />

Liam suggested we do a few tarmac<br />

rallies to see what it was like. I thought<br />

he was bonkers, but we decided to give<br />

it a go.<br />

Although I did a few tarmac rallies<br />

over the years, I was always more<br />

comfortable on gravel. We signed<br />

up for the Dunlop National Tarmac<br />

Championship and had a go at Class 13<br />

with a 2-litre JRE engine installed.<br />

It took us a couple of rallies to get<br />

adjusted to the surface change, but we<br />

were much closer to the pace than I<br />

expected.<br />

With brake upgrades, suspension<br />

tweaks and the feel you get from the<br />

Kumho tyre, it all started to click. By the<br />

end of the season we clinched Class 13<br />

and just missed out on the overall 2WD<br />

title by one point!<br />

It was a “no brainer” to come back


in 2012 and give it another go, this<br />

time with a 2.5 JRE under Baby Blue’s<br />

bonnet. It turned out to be the season<br />

of our lives. It seemed we could do no<br />

wrong.<br />

Victories on the Mk2 challenge in<br />

Carlow, the Ulster National Rally, Cork<br />

20 National Rally and outright victory on<br />

the GSMC Mini Stages Rally were high<br />

points, and our only big disappointment<br />

was the Donegal International when<br />

we retired on SS2. We were able to fit<br />

in some gravel rallies and won 2WD on<br />

every one we did.<br />

It would be very difficult to pick a<br />

single highlight from the year but<br />

Carlow, with the nature of the stages<br />

and the battle that we had that day,<br />

will live with me for a long time to<br />

come. We ended the season with the<br />

2WD Rally Championship, Mk2 Escort<br />

Champions and overall Top Part West<br />

Coast Champions.<br />

Following a very successful 2012<br />

season I gave Baby Blue a complete<br />

rebuild with a development<br />

version of JREs 2.5 Vauxhall engine<br />

installed. With Liam taking a year out<br />

to get married, I didn’t commit to any<br />

championships and decided to pick and<br />

choose events.<br />

We won the coveted Mk2 Challenge<br />

in Carlow again and became “Master of<br />

the Woods” in the Cork Forest Rally.<br />

The year was rounded off with being<br />

voted “Driver of the Year” by the ANICC.<br />

For 2014 I built a brand new outright<br />

tarmac Mk2 (Baby Blue 3). We did a<br />

deal with Millington to run their new<br />

2.5Ltr Series 2+ engine - 350bhp of pure<br />

insanity!<br />

We planned to use the year to<br />

develop the car and didn’t expect much<br />

success, but things went well and with<br />

Liam back in the passengers’ seat we<br />

won the Dunlop National 2WD and Mk2<br />

championships again.<br />

We also sent Baby Blue 2 to Trinidad<br />

after an invite. It was an amazing<br />

experience on excellent gravel<br />

roads. First 2WD and fifth overall<br />

was a great bonus.<br />

In 2015 we set out to retain our<br />

championships, but on the first<br />

round we had a massive accident<br />

when we aquaplaned in heavy<br />

rain. BB3 was a mess, but Liam<br />

and I were unhurt.<br />

BB2 was on her second trip<br />

to Trinidad, so it took a while<br />

to rebuild and our season was<br />

patchy. Trinidad was fantastic<br />

again and when we got BB3 back<br />

on the road we had a couple of<br />

great results.<br />

Then came another BIG<br />

off on the Laois Heartlands<br />

Rally two weeks before our<br />

scheduled outing on the Donegal<br />

International.<br />

We rolled three times at<br />

high speed and it wasn’t good.<br />

Immediately my thoughts went to<br />

BB2. She was at sea on her way<br />

back from the Caribbean.<br />

Rosemarie tracked her<br />

down while I stripped what was<br />

salvageable from the tarmac<br />

car. With nine days to Donegal,<br />

BB2 arrived home. She was very<br />

tired after a tough Trinidad and<br />

needed a rebuild.<br />

The tarmac engine, gearbox and axle<br />

from BB3 all went into her to get to<br />

Donegal. Amazingly we made it, and<br />

even more amazingly, we completed<br />

the three-day marathon and came<br />

second overall in the national. BB2<br />

finished off the season with three more<br />

2WD victories.<br />

For <strong>2016</strong> BB3 was fully rebuilt just<br />

in time for the AutoSport show in<br />

January, where she was a big hit. We<br />

did selected events with Paul Twomey<br />

in the hot seat, but had a lot of bad luck<br />

with engine problems and differential<br />

failures.<br />

We cut a few rallies and channelled<br />

all our efforts towards Donegal. It was<br />

a fantastic weekend with Mick Coady<br />

navigating. The crowds were massive<br />

and the buzz was unreal.<br />

We led going into the third and final<br />

day, but unfortunately the diff let go<br />

again and we were demoted to second,<br />

but it was still an epic weekend.<br />

As a result of being the first Irish crew<br />

home, we won an all-expenses paid trip<br />

to compete in the Mull Rally in Scotland<br />

for our efforts.<br />

The Galway Summer Rally in August<br />

is always a good fast event. We were<br />

in a great battle, but on the last stage<br />

it all went wrong and there I was again<br />

hanging upside down after a 120mph<br />

accident. So the season was over there<br />

and then.<br />

Rallying has become a complete<br />

family obsession at this stage.<br />

Our lives revolve around the<br />

rally calendar and most of the banter at<br />

the dinner table is rally talk.<br />

I am very lucky in that regard to have<br />

the support at home. There is never an<br />

argument about lack of money because<br />

rallying has gobbled it all up.<br />

I enjoy building and developing<br />

my Mk2. I spend a minimum of two<br />

or three hours every night in the<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 35


FEATURE: FRANK KELLY<br />

workshop after work fixing what I’ve<br />

broken, and trying to improve the car.<br />

Rallying in Ireland has such a cult<br />

following it’s hard not to get sucked in.<br />

Competition among the modified<br />

Mk2s is fantastic. Any event we turn<br />

up at you can count at least 10 or 12<br />

men capable of winning, and no matter<br />

where you go on this island you will<br />

bump into rally people.<br />

We have some of the best, most<br />

challenging roads in the world and<br />

some of the most dedicated clubs,<br />

clubmen and supporters in the world as<br />

well, who pull the whole thing together.<br />

Sometimes I have to pinch myself<br />

when we are hurtling down a closed<br />

public road and revel in the fact that we<br />

get to do this.<br />

Having said all that, my first love is<br />

gravel. Being brought up on the loose<br />

it will always be my favoured surface.<br />

Real good gravel roads are getting<br />

difficult to find and maintain around<br />

home. We find ourselves having to<br />

travel more or do more tarmac instead.<br />

It probably explains my way of<br />

driving. I only really feel comfortable<br />

when the car is sliding as if it’s on<br />

gravel. It’s high risk and there are those<br />

who keep telling me to tidy up to go<br />

faster.<br />

Sometimes I set out to do just that,<br />

but something takes over when the<br />

flag drops and that tingle feeling starts<br />

at the back of my knee, and next thing<br />

we are sideways or 10 feet in the air,<br />

or both, at a ridiculous speed. It’s<br />

addictive, so I’ve given up trying to<br />

change.<br />

None of this would be possible<br />

without the Kelly Motorsport team.<br />

My brother Gary has kept me running<br />

through all my rally seasons, with onevent<br />

servicing and pep talks when I’ve<br />

lost the plot.<br />

Rosemarie (my wife) hasn’t said<br />

a word when I have spent endless<br />

hours at night preparing the car for<br />

the next event. She takes care of our<br />

“My first love is<br />

gravel. Being bought<br />

up on the loose it<br />

will always be my<br />

favoured surface.”<br />

merchandising both on events and<br />

online, she’s a diamond.<br />

Both my kids, Lauren and Jack, clean<br />

the car and make sure it is looking good<br />

for the next rally.<br />

Lauren is gifted when it comes to film<br />

editing and she makes me look good<br />

on screen, which can’t be easy. She<br />

navigated for me for the first time on<br />

the Glens of Antrim gravel rally last year<br />

and did such a brilliant job. I was so<br />

proud of her that day.<br />

But it’s Liam that I owe the biggest<br />

debt to. For a large period I struggled to<br />

get anyone to rally with me, and when<br />

it was becoming impossible he stepped<br />

in.<br />

I’ve tried to kill him several times, but<br />

he has always kept the faith and has<br />

never said: “You made a mistake Frank,”<br />

even when I have dropped some<br />

serious clangers!<br />

He is world class and most of all, a<br />

great friend, and I don’t say that lightly.<br />

Sponsors have also played a big part<br />

in keeping us rallying and they include,<br />

Bathshack.com, Jefferson Tools,<br />

Charlie McEnery Motor Services, GRP4<br />

Fabrications, PH Shotblasting, Campbell<br />

Contracts, 1st Alert Alarm Systems Ltd<br />

& MM Graphics.<br />

Close working relationships with<br />

Samsonas Transmissions, Millington<br />

race engines and DMS suspension has<br />

been very important in the quest to find<br />

those extra few seconds.<br />

Right now I have a busy winter ahead<br />

with two cars to rebuild, but I’ll put the<br />

head down and we will get there.<br />

We will look at the opportunities<br />

we have to rally abroad in 2017, and<br />

maybe even get to rally down under.<br />

It would be a dream come true to rally<br />

some of those iconic gravel roads in NZ<br />

or Oz.<br />

The retirement plan is to build an<br />

historic BDA in gravel spec (Baby Blue<br />

4), fit a tow-bar, buy a caravan, sell the<br />

house and tour the world from rally to<br />

rally! Sounds like a plan?<br />

36 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


FOOTNOTE: Kelly Motorsport<br />

Merchandise is looked after by<br />

Rosemarie (Frank’s wife) and is available<br />

to purchase from most events, as well<br />

as online.<br />

Lauren (Frank’s daughter) and Ciaran<br />

(Frank’s nephew) take care of the media<br />

side of things.<br />

Lauren, who operates LK Media, is<br />

responsible for capturing the day’s<br />

footage and posting it onto YouTube, as<br />

well as looking after the team’s Twitter<br />

page.<br />

Ciaran, an up-and-coming<br />

photographer, snaps away to capture<br />

“baby blue” at her finest so that his<br />

images can be shared via the team’s<br />

Facebook page, as well as his own page<br />

CMG Pics.”<br />

<strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> thanks Frank Kelly for<br />

sharing his incredible story with us.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 37


TEST DRIVE: FORD FIESTA<br />

FIESTA TIM<br />

It’s obvious that there’s a world of difference between a standard<br />

Ford Fiesta and the World Rally Car version that tears up the<br />

WRC stages. One looks purposeful and mean, the other …. well,<br />

let’s just say it doesn’t look like a rally car.<br />

Story: PETER WHITTEN<br />

Photos: GREG BROWNE<br />

38 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


E<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 39


TEST DRIVE: FORD FIESTA<br />

So when the opportunity arose for<br />

me to test drive one of the cars<br />

earmarked for next year’s Ford<br />

Fiesta Rally Series in Victoria, I jumped<br />

at the chance. But to be honest, I wasn’t<br />

sure what to expect.<br />

I’d seen plenty of Fiestas in various<br />

trim running in events across Australia<br />

and New Zealand, and while they<br />

looked to be reliable and fun to drive,<br />

they didn’t look like something that<br />

would get me out of a rear-wheel drive<br />

Escort and into a front-wheel drive<br />

shopping trolley.<br />

Luckily for me, preconceived ideas<br />

can be quickly thrown out the window.<br />

Victorian rallying stalwart, John<br />

Carney, had offered me a drive of a car<br />

that he’d recently purchased to run in<br />

the series that he and Col Hardinge are<br />

the brains behind. Also the founders<br />

of Victoria’s Hyundai Excel one-make<br />

series, John and Col thought the time<br />

was right to expand on their idea.<br />

While the Excel series will continue as<br />

a true entry-level category in the sport,<br />

the Fiesta series will be for those with<br />

either a little more coin in their pockets,<br />

or the desire to go faster in a more<br />

modern car.<br />

My test drive was held on Brendan<br />

Reeves’ own test track, which he also<br />

uses for his driver training courses<br />

throughout the year. About a kilometre<br />

and a half in length, it offers a wide<br />

variety of conditions and cambers, and<br />

is ideal to test a car’s capabilities.<br />

Carney’s Fiesta really is a wolf in<br />

sheep’s clothing. It looks racey from the<br />

outside with a great colour scheme, but<br />

when you open the door and sit in the<br />

driver’s seat you can tell that it’s more<br />

than a standard Fiesta.<br />

The most notable addition is a<br />

sequential five-speed Sadev gearbox. I’d<br />

used a sequential box many moons ago<br />

in Simon Evans’ VW Golf Kit Car, so was<br />

looking forward to blasting through the<br />

gears with clutch-less changes.<br />

By the time I got my chance behind<br />

the wheel, Carney and Reeves had<br />

already ensured that the front tyres<br />

were shot, but with dry and dusty<br />

conditions that wouldn’t prove to be<br />

much of a problem.<br />

After a sighting lap around the track,<br />

and with Reeves sitting shot-gun, I put<br />

my foot down and was immediately<br />

amazed by the power of the Fiesta’s<br />

1.6-litre engine. The engine seemed to<br />

pull right through the rev range, and<br />

hitting fifth gear on the short straights<br />

was achieved effortlessly.<br />

Once the brakes warmed up I could<br />

keep the car turned in with left-foot<br />

braking, and while the seating position<br />

was less than ideal (I struggled to<br />

reach the pedals!), it gave you great<br />

confidence that the car would do what<br />

you asked of it.<br />

The handling was also impressive,<br />

despite the lack of grip from the front<br />

tyres.<br />

The Fiesta series regulations allow for<br />

some variations in specification, and<br />

with a sequential box and a computer<br />

management system installed this car<br />

is at the higher end of those regs, but<br />

it was clear to see that even a standard<br />

Fiesta would be incredibly enjoyable to<br />

drive.<br />

With only a few laps in the car it is<br />

difficult to give a detailed impression<br />

on the car’s good and bad points,<br />

particularly as it is still being developed<br />

by Carney and his Gunnawyn<br />

Motorsport team, but it’s obvious it has<br />

huge potential.<br />

And perhaps the most telling<br />

question I’ve been asked since is<br />

“Would I buy one?”. The answer is a<br />

definite yes.<br />

While my heart lies in a rear-wheel<br />

drive car that you can power slide<br />

through corners, the lure of a modern,<br />

front-wheel drive car that would leave<br />

most of its ‘rooster tailing’ rivals in its<br />

wake is difficult to ignore.<br />

My two rally-mad sons are already<br />

scouring eBay and Gumtree looking for<br />

possible project cars …..<br />

40 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


To the winners,<br />

the spoils.<br />

Also doing laps of the track on the day was Nathan Berry in his magnificently<br />

prepared R2-spec Fiesta (pictured above) that he’s spent<br />

three years building.<br />

Formerly a Lancer Evo punter, Berry’s Fiesta build had taken longer than<br />

expected, but the announcement of the new Fiesta one-make series was<br />

the shot in the arm he needed to get the car completed.<br />

After purchasing a complete R2 kit from M-Sport in the UK (including roll<br />

cage, suspension, engine management and gearbox), the car is at the top of<br />

the price scale, but is a real work of art and is indecently fast.<br />

At Rally Australia last month I took more of an interest in the R2-spec<br />

Fords running in the event, and while they looked painfully slow compared<br />

to the WRC cars, I now know from experience that looks can be VERY<br />

deceiving.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 41


RETROSPECTIVE: PNG SAFARI<br />

PNG<br />

SAFARI<br />

Story:<br />

TOM SMITH<br />

While Australia battled for recognition in its efforts<br />

to obtain international rally status in the late 80s<br />

with Rally Australia, another international event<br />

was on its doorstep, and it wasn’t New Zealand.<br />

Papua New Guinea, to the north of Australia, enjoys a<br />

large expatriate Australian contingent of residents and<br />

workers, and with a largely undeveloped country it’s no<br />

surprise that rallying found a home as one of the few<br />

motorsport options.<br />

The South Pacific Motor Sports Club, whilst providing a<br />

social hub for rally nuts in Port Moresby, has a rich history,<br />

founded in 1965.<br />

While the club may have initially been formed more for<br />

social gatherings than motorsport competition, members<br />

combined resources to develop events based out of Port<br />

Moresby.<br />

The club has been famous for staging the original Papuan<br />

Safari, renamed to the ‘Independence Safari’ after PNG<br />

gained independence in 1975.<br />

The first major competition on the calendar was a 300<br />

mile rally that became the annual Papua Safari of 500 miles.<br />

The Safari took place over mainly wartime roads and at<br />

its peak it attracted works teams from Australia, including<br />

Australian rally champions, and Brian Culcheth, who was<br />

flown in from the U.K. to drive a works Leyland for PNG<br />

Motors.<br />

Australian drivers were attracted north in the early years,<br />

including Colin Bond, Evan Green, Bob Riley and Ross<br />

Dunkerton. During the late 80s and early 90s the event<br />

continued to attract quite a lot of interest from leading<br />

Australian drivers, including Murray Coote, Doug Briscoe<br />

and Richard Anderson, who was a two-time Safari winner in<br />

1993 and ’94.<br />

In the latter years of the Safari, the event was held over<br />

42 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


four days and somewhere in the region of 40<br />

special stages. What was equally challenging<br />

for the crews were the ‘rally’ stages – liaison<br />

or transport to those elsewhere – which were<br />

so testing, crews were just as likely to incur<br />

time penalties on ‘open’ roads as they were on<br />

closed stages.<br />

Perhaps not surprisingly, a number of<br />

ex-works cars found their way into the<br />

hands of PNG ex-pats who could afford<br />

such machinery.<br />

Japanese manufacturers also had a strong<br />

presence in the country, with local Boroko<br />

Motors prominent in the PNG market. One<br />

advertisement offered a free pig with the<br />

purchase of a Datsun 1200 ute, such was the<br />

value of the livestock in the country.<br />

Long-time supporter of the event and Clerkof-Course<br />

many times over, Mike Ryan, was<br />

a favourite of the Australian contingent with<br />

whom he forged very strong friendships.<br />

When Mike unfortunately passed away in<br />

the late 90s, a close-knit group of his closest<br />

Queensland rally mates instituted the Michael<br />

Ryan Memorial Trophy, a medal which was<br />

awarded to a competitor judged to have<br />

shown the spirit of rallying that Mike aspired<br />

to in his life.<br />

Most often awarded to the Championshipwinning<br />

co-drivers each year, the <strong>2016</strong> winner,<br />

Neill Woolley (Qld Champion Co-Driver), was<br />

awarded the 20 th and final ‘Mike Ryan Trophy’.<br />

Sadly, the PNG Safari is no longer a feature<br />

on the international rally calendar, but the<br />

South Pacific Motor Sports Club is alive and<br />

well.<br />

The club’s website and Facebook pages<br />

reveal some of the history of this important<br />

rallying community. See more at www.spmsc.<br />

org.pg/index.html<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 43


FIRST LOOK: 2017 HYUNDAI I20 WRC<br />

Hyundai’s presentation of their<br />

2017 World Rally Car was the<br />

first opportunity for the media<br />

to inspect a car built to the new<br />

WRC regulations, and a chance<br />

to understand the significance<br />

and the challenge that the new<br />

regulations presented.<br />

Martin Holmes reports ...<br />

Michel Nandan doubles up not<br />

only as Hyundai Motorsport<br />

Team Principal, but is also<br />

head of the engineering side of the project<br />

to build not only their third World<br />

Rally Car model in three years, but a<br />

winning car evolved in what in many<br />

respects is uncharted territory.<br />

And, of course, living up to<br />

expectations of being a favourite for<br />

the 2017 championship title, having<br />

finished second behind the now absent<br />

Volkswagen this year!<br />

Of the three main factors about the<br />

2017 regulations – aero work, central<br />

differentials and more powerful<br />

engines - Nandan is sure that the<br />

biggest challenge with the new<br />

technical regulations is to judge how far<br />

to go with aerodynamic work.<br />

MN: These cars are being driven on<br />

gravel roads and a lot of parts can<br />

be damaged which will change the<br />

balance of the car. It is a compromise<br />

but we cannot go too far in some<br />

areas because the car is not driving on<br />

smooth circuits.<br />

So it is probably one of things that<br />

has been difficult. Also, because the<br />

car is riding on gravel the effect of the<br />

aerodynamics is a little bit less - the ride<br />

height is not constant even before the<br />

pieces become damaged.<br />

MH: What is the main change caused by the<br />

aerodynamic changes?<br />

Jari Ketomaa took second in his<br />

Mitsubishi Mirage.<br />

MN: Well, it provides downforce to<br />

44 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

keep the balance from front to rear.<br />

When we had just the rear wing, it was<br />

not possible to do so much.<br />

Now with wings front and back it<br />

is possible to balance the car a bit<br />

more, even though the effect of the<br />

downforce for cornering is still limited.<br />

And regarding the increased drag we<br />

now have 80 more horsepower, so the<br />

extra drag is compensated easily.<br />

MH: What about improving the balance side to<br />

side?<br />

MN: This is a bit trickier but the new<br />

skirts help. They can help increase<br />

downforce, but the pieces can also be<br />

damaged. We have tried to reduce<br />

damage to the parts that are under<br />

the car, the front splitter and the rear<br />

diffuser for example.<br />

They all have to be made stronger<br />

just to resist all this abrasive effect of<br />

flying stones and impact damage.<br />

MH: What about drag? Is the total amount<br />

of drag from the car now higher than it has been<br />

before?<br />

MN: Because the car is wider and the<br />

rear wing is higher you have more drag,<br />

but it is not something which is really<br />

changing the car because, as I told<br />

you, we have more power so we can<br />

compensate easily.<br />

MH: Many aspects of your aero changes are<br />

very old. They had Kamm tails before the war<br />

(WWII). The Americans used Naca ducts just<br />

after WWII. These double scoops that you’ve got<br />

on the wings remind us of the Lancia S4 in 1995.<br />

Is there anything new about the aero work or has<br />

it really gone back to original days?<br />

MN: A lot of the new things they do<br />

in Formula 1 are forbidden in rallying,<br />

so it is quite conservative when you<br />

look at the car. You have a rear wing,<br />

a diffuser, a splitter in the front, things<br />

that were used 30 years ago, but I think<br />

a lot of these things are also still used<br />

on circuit cars!<br />

MH: Regarding engine changes, Sebastien Ogier<br />

was saying that the character of the Volkswagen<br />

2017 engine was a lot more power but not much<br />

more torque. Is that the same for you (for the<br />

Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC)?<br />

MN: I think it will be the same for<br />

everybody because the increase of the<br />

restrictor size is giving more power, but<br />

we still have the limit on boost, so we<br />

cannot increase the torque a lot more.


So torque is similar to what we already<br />

had and it is only the power that is<br />

different.<br />

MH: How does the bigger restrictor affect<br />

areas of design of the car?<br />

MN: Transmission is not affected<br />

so much because we did not have so<br />

much torque. The transmission is not<br />

affected and that is why we keep 80%<br />

of the components from the previous<br />

transmission (on the NG i20 <strong>2016</strong> WRC).<br />

The fact that you have more power<br />

and that the power is coming a bit more<br />

quicker means it affects the tyre wear,<br />

so you need to work much more on the<br />

suspensions, really to get more grip.<br />

But I have to say that the effect of the<br />

extra power is not affecting the balance<br />

of the car, but it really affects the grip,<br />

especially on gravel.<br />

So we need to be more careful with<br />

tyre wear and work constantly on the<br />

suspension for that.<br />

MH: There is only a marginal increase in the<br />

number of tyres that you can use next year (by<br />

being able to reuse the shakedown tyres). Isn’t<br />

the extra power going to mean that tyre wear is<br />

going to become more difficult than ever?<br />

MN: Well I think in some stages in<br />

some events it could be crucial. Not in<br />

all the events, but in some.<br />

Even this year (<strong>2016</strong>) you already<br />

had quite a big tyre wear like in Rally<br />

Australia, with warm temperature and<br />

everything, when tyre wear was already<br />

quite significant.<br />

For sure next year with more power<br />

if we have almost the same number of<br />

tyres it has to be more difficult.<br />

One other change in 2017 was<br />

about the kinematic positions of the<br />

suspension, now all the kinematic<br />

points are free. On<br />

the <strong>2016</strong> car our<br />

problem with the<br />

front suspension<br />

was that we had to<br />

stick with standard<br />

position. Now we<br />

can really optimise<br />

the travel and the<br />

footprint on the<br />

stage.<br />

MH: What changes<br />

to design and to driving<br />

will the newly allowed<br />

central differential<br />

make?<br />

MN: It could<br />

make those things<br />

very complicated,<br />

especially for<br />

the engineers! I<br />

think in terms of<br />

driveability and<br />

adaptation to the<br />

driver it is helping a<br />

bit because we can<br />

try to reduce the<br />

oversteering effect<br />

we have to turn in.<br />

It can also<br />

optimise the traction between the front<br />

and the rear axle, but I think the main<br />

change is you can reduce the normal<br />

understeering.<br />

As for the effect on tyre wear, it can<br />

have a small effect because of the<br />

improvement in turning in to corners,<br />

but maybe distribute better the tyre<br />

wear.<br />

MH: Anything new electronically?<br />

MN: Nothing really new because we<br />

use the same ECU, in fact with the ECU<br />

we have we can do a lot of things, but<br />

it is not allowed, so we just add central<br />

differential on it, but everything is<br />

driven by the ECU.<br />

Traction control is completely<br />

forbidden. Okay, you could get some<br />

traction control benefit in other ways,<br />

but all the time what you are doing in<br />

the car it is recorded in an FIA box, so<br />

they can control the parameter and<br />

it is very easy to see if you are doing<br />

traction control.<br />

Plus, the fact that software is checked<br />

and controlled by FIA, approved by FIA.<br />

- MARTIN HOLMES<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 45


HOLMES COLUMN<br />

HOLMES<br />

INSIDE<br />

LINE<br />

WHAT’S IN A NAME?<br />

Story:<br />

MARTIN HOLMES<br />

Sometimes I feel that rallysport<br />

unnecessarily makes life difficult<br />

for itself!<br />

The arrival of the 2017 World Rally<br />

Car rules are some of the most exciting<br />

days in recent decades. We not only<br />

have countries and drivers to get<br />

excited about, we have new cars!<br />

The FIA has broken away from the era<br />

of stagnation in its rally cars – however<br />

well meaning for financial aspects<br />

– and offered us fresh rules, fresh<br />

technologies, and a fresh team. But<br />

what to call these new cars, that is not<br />

so easy for the teams.<br />

When a new family member arrives<br />

in our world and the gender is<br />

established, the first thing to choose is<br />

the name. When a new rally car arrives,<br />

it is almost the last. One glance at the<br />

world of colleagues in Formula 1, the<br />

name of new cars is the first thing to<br />

be defined. Each new car follows a<br />

numerical sequence. Not so in rallying.<br />

For Citroen a problem does not<br />

arise. It had been decided long ago<br />

that the name DS was to disappear<br />

from Citroen’s products and eventually,<br />

even though reluctantly, the name C3<br />

was spoken about publicly in corporate<br />

circles. The rally car name C3 WRC was<br />

straightforward.<br />

Hyundai also has a new basic<br />

model for 2017, the Coupe, so the<br />

name Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC was<br />

also obvious, and a welcome escape<br />

from the <strong>2016</strong> car that was called the<br />

cumbersome New Generation i20 WRC.<br />

Toyota, however, is venturing into<br />

new territory completely, not just in<br />

the cars but also with the name of<br />

their team. Who dreamed up the<br />

name Gazoo? Is it true that Toyota’s<br />

worldwide sport carries the name of a<br />

Flintstones character?<br />

Among the many elements of<br />

Japanese life that the western world<br />

find hard to comprehend, Gazoo is right<br />

there high in the list.<br />

For years we baffled over Lancia’s use<br />

of the title HF in their cars. The only<br />

coherent explanation offered by Italy<br />

was the name originated from early<br />

days of High Fidelity high quality sound<br />

reproduction, a spirit pursued by Lancia<br />

for their more sporting range of cars, a<br />

name that then stuck.<br />

When it comes to the Toyota<br />

Yaris WRC, we have a long<br />

history of confusion. Yaris<br />

cars were long considered as possible<br />

competition cars by Toyota Motorsport<br />

GmbH. A project in world championship<br />

rallying was one of them.<br />

TMG built prototypes, leading to<br />

conjecture that they were first off the<br />

blocks in developing 2017 cars. Actually<br />

it was not correct. As soon as Toyota’s<br />

global managers could see what was<br />

happening, the TMG project was<br />

canned and the Toyota Gazoo Racing<br />

operation took it over, moving from<br />

Germany to Finland.<br />

These TMG prototype cars were<br />

never real World Rally Cars, being built<br />

before the 2017 rules were written, so<br />

the TMG car could truly be called Yaris<br />

WRC.<br />

That brings us to Ford… Their 2017<br />

rally car has no new name, even though<br />

it was based on the latest version Fiesta<br />

production car. It is called Ford Fiesta<br />

WRC.<br />

Familiar? Partially. The name they<br />

used from the start of the Fiesta WRC<br />

era was Ford Fiesta RS WRC. Ford’s way<br />

to honour the most exciting looking<br />

top-level rally car is to drop the “RS”<br />

part of the name!<br />

Ford has never been good at names,<br />

a problem right from the top. Who is<br />

responsible for the un-scintillating car<br />

name? Who doesn’t want this car fondly<br />

remembered in history?<br />

It was a corporate decision. Any<br />

surprise? The corporate supremo went<br />

to Dovenby recently to indicate the<br />

support of Ford to the latest project.<br />

His name was Henry Ford III.<br />

Ford have dropped the ‘RS’<br />

name from the new Fiesta WRC.<br />

46 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


The grand father of Henry Ford III<br />

is famous for two quotations. One for<br />

speaking fervently about the colour<br />

black, and then for saying that history<br />

was bunk.<br />

Who controls rallying? Who are<br />

the most powerful people?<br />

If there was ever doubt, the<br />

most accomplished rally driver of the<br />

moment is certainly Sebastien Ogier.<br />

He had the chance to capitalise on his<br />

opportunity to develop the Volkswagen<br />

Polo R WRC cars to his personal taste<br />

and four straight championship titles<br />

were the result.<br />

Power? That did not become evident<br />

until VW announced they were stopping<br />

their world championship programme,<br />

leaving their competition personnel<br />

potentially looking for different<br />

employment. That was the moment<br />

that the sport stood still.<br />

Ogier announced he would like to test<br />

the four various prototype cars being<br />

prepared by other teams, so he would<br />

know which team to approach for<br />

future employment.<br />

Two of the teams (Toyota and<br />

M-Sport) complied, Hyundai had<br />

already scheduled their 2017 team<br />

launch date, while Citroen sat back and<br />

said nothing. Both Hyundai and Citroen<br />

considered their teams were already<br />

full of drivers for 2017.<br />

So what stopped Ogier from<br />

negotiating with Citroen? The strained<br />

circumstances in which Ogier left<br />

the team at the end of 2011 were<br />

presumed to be the basis of a lack<br />

of enthusiasm at the idea of Ogier’s<br />

return.<br />

And as for Hyundai? Obviously that<br />

was the power of promotion people,<br />

or did Hyundai feel they are already<br />

favourites for the 2017 titles without<br />

Ogier and his Volkswagen cars?<br />

For all Ogier’s impressive performances,<br />

the only unanswered<br />

question is knowing how<br />

much of Ogier’s success was down to<br />

Volkswagen.<br />

Without the power of the promotion<br />

people, rally drivers of Ogier’s level<br />

have nowhere they can go! So far<br />

the situation, however unusual, was<br />

understandable.<br />

Then Volkswagen, who had publicly<br />

stated that their 2017 cars were<br />

prematurely due for museums, said it<br />

would be a pity not to rent these cars<br />

out to a team, so long as the project did<br />

not cost them money.<br />

For Ogier, that statement must have<br />

come as an even greater shock than<br />

the original withdrawal! Suddenly there<br />

was one more dimension to Ogier’s<br />

puzzle.<br />

Happy 80th<br />

Andrew Cowan<br />

If the world championship is all that<br />

matters in the world of rallying,<br />

one of Britain’s finest rallying stars<br />

would slide into obscurity.<br />

All to do with the fact that rally life, as<br />

we know it now, did not start until the<br />

Monte Carlo Rally in 1973.<br />

Cynics could say that Andrew Cowan<br />

was born at the wrong time, which is<br />

why we talk about him again, now.<br />

He is 80 years old this week. His<br />

professional rally career embraced a<br />

huge variety of manufacturers not seen<br />

on the stages these days.<br />

They included Sunbeam, Rover,<br />

Hillman, BMC, Triumph, Alpine Renault,<br />

Polski-Fiat, Chrysler, Mercedes and<br />

Mitsubishi. All teams absent from the<br />

stages these days.<br />

It was his achievements rather<br />

than his opportunities which are best<br />

remembered.<br />

In WRC terms, all the driver Cowan<br />

could be remembered for are podium<br />

positions on the Safari and in the Ivory<br />

Coast.<br />

But in the vast, timeless world<br />

of rallying, his three huge victories<br />

were winning the London to Sydney<br />

Marathons in 1968 and 1977, then the<br />

20,000 miles Tour of South America in<br />

1978, as well as five times winner of<br />

Australia’s premier event, the Southern<br />

Cross, and New Zealand’s vast Heatway<br />

Rally in 1972.<br />

WRC people, however, best<br />

remember Andrew for leading the<br />

world championship Mitsubishi Ralliart<br />

team which won the 1998 world<br />

championship for Manufacturers, and<br />

provided Tommi Makinen with four<br />

straight titles in the Drivers’ world<br />

championship.<br />

For his family, and especially his wife<br />

Linda, he is just a Scottish farmer.<br />

- MARTIN HOLMES<br />

Andrew Cowan at home<br />

on his farm in Scotland in<br />

1995. (Photo: Holmes)<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 47


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REPORT: INDIA RALLY<br />

Skoda’s Fabia R5 driver, Gaurav Gill,<br />

won his country’s event, the Coffee<br />

Day Rally India, the final round<br />

of the <strong>2016</strong> Asia Pacific Rally Championship,<br />

scoring maximum points on all six<br />

rounds of the series and winning five of<br />

the events outright.<br />

His teammate, Fabian Kreim,<br />

lost stages after damaging his car’s<br />

suspension, but ended up as the FIA’s<br />

Pacific Cup Champion and was second<br />

in the APRC series.<br />

Kreim took the initial lead on Friday’s<br />

super-special, but on the narrow roads<br />

of the nearby coffee and banana<br />

estates Gill moved into a commanding<br />

lead on the remaining three days. He<br />

was aided by Kreim’s problem when he<br />

blocked the stage and the German was<br />

out for the rest of the day.<br />

When Kreim fell back, Cusco team<br />

driver, Yuya Sumiyama, took over<br />

second place but fell back with brake<br />

trouble in his Group N Subaru, and<br />

eventually went off the road.<br />

Fellow Cusco driver, the New<br />

Zealander Mike Young, was struggling<br />

with a down on power engine and<br />

over-heating brakes on his Subaru but<br />

moved up to second place, which he<br />

kept despite power-steering trouble on<br />

the final morning.<br />

GILL WINS AT HOME<br />

Third place went to another Indian<br />

driver, Sanjay Takale, also driving a<br />

Cusco team Subaru.<br />

Takale also won the India Rally<br />

Championship round run concurrently<br />

with the APRC event.<br />

The event was based at Chikmagalur<br />

in the Indian state of Karnataka.<br />

Final results:<br />

1. Gill/Macneall, Skoda Fabia R5, 3h<br />

39m 37.9s<br />

2. Young/Read, Subaru WRX STI, 3h<br />

51m 10.3s<br />

3. Takale/Takeshita, Subaru WRC STI,<br />

4h 03m 51.0s<br />

APRC points: Gill 230, Kreim 157,<br />

Young 110, Takale 93.<br />

- MARTIN HOLMES<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 49


REPORT: CLASSIC ADELAIDE RALLY<br />

BUSBY’S CLASSIC WIN<br />

Michael Busby and John<br />

Caldicott won a sensational<br />

Shannons Classic Adelaide<br />

Rally, powering their Mazda RX7 home<br />

to victory by just over 30 seconds after<br />

two days of competition.<br />

They extended their margin on<br />

Saturday morning as the rally launched<br />

into the incredible driving roads that<br />

made up the Adelaide Hills stages.<br />

Despite losing five seconds on the next<br />

stage (Mount Bold), they rebounded on<br />

SS17 (Scott Bottom) to take their third<br />

stage win of the day to consolidate their<br />

margin, before slamming home their<br />

advantage with another win on the last<br />

hills stage - at Mount Lofty - to all but<br />

secure their victory.<br />

Conservative runs through the two<br />

Adelaide City Council night stages that<br />

concluded the rally saw their margin<br />

reduced to a slim, yet ultimately safe 31<br />

seconds at the end of the rally.<br />

Behind the leader, an intense fight<br />

for second and third was decided<br />

in the favour of Craig Haysman and<br />

Julie Boorman, their Triumph TR7 V8<br />

just beating the Toyota AE86 of Oscar<br />

Matthews and Darren Masters for the<br />

final two spots on the outright podium.<br />

“That was a really hard rally,” Busby<br />

said. “We suffered some mechanical<br />

dramas on the way to Anstey’s Hill<br />

(on Saturday) by losing the power<br />

steering, and once we did lose the<br />

power steering we actually had a pretty<br />

hard charge and managed to gap the<br />

competition.<br />

“We just drove hard and fast and flat<br />

out all weekend.”<br />

Behind them the fight for second and<br />

third was the most intense of the entire<br />

rally, with the Haysman and Matthews<br />

never split by more than 10 seconds<br />

throughout the entire day.<br />

50<br />

Photos: | RALLYSPORT<br />

Red<br />

MAGAZINE<br />

Bull Content<br />

- DECEMBER<br />

Pool<br />

<strong>2016</strong><br />

The margin between Haysman and<br />

Matthews was only four seconds after<br />

Gorge Road, while Matthews took<br />

two seconds back on the run through<br />

Castambul early in the afternoon.<br />

Haysman dragged that time back on<br />

the run through Mount Bold, the TR7<br />

back to four seconds adrift as the field<br />

regrouped ahead of the final two hills<br />

stages of the day.<br />

It was on the final hills stage up<br />

Mount Lofty where the Triumph made<br />

its biggest break of the entire event,<br />

gapping the Toyota by 22 seconds<br />

heading into the final two sprint stages<br />

in the city.<br />

The final margin of 48 seconds<br />

between the pair belied how close the<br />

battle was for most of the event. The<br />

Matthews / Masters Toyota would also<br />

ultimately win the Late Classic handicap<br />

competition.<br />

Nick Streckeisen and Mike Dale had<br />

held fourth outright until the final hills<br />

stage, their Porsche 944 Turbo in touch<br />

with the leaders for much of the rally<br />

before mechanical failure saw them<br />

stop just before the end of the Mount<br />

Lofty stage.<br />

Their misfortune elevated Cameron<br />

and Tania Wearing’s Triumph TR7 to<br />

fourth place, the long-time Classic<br />

Adelaide Rally<br />

competitors<br />

enjoying a<br />

consistent run<br />

throughout the<br />

entire event.<br />

A tight battle<br />

for the Early<br />

Classic handicap<br />

went the way of<br />

the Datsun 240Z<br />

driven by Roger<br />

Lomman and<br />

Annie Bainbridge, who also finished a<br />

strong fifth outright.<br />

The Datsun duo edged out the Glenn<br />

Dean / Jacob Streckeisen Ford Escort by<br />

less than 30 seconds for Early Classic<br />

honours, with Guy Standen and Andrew<br />

Coles third in their Alfa Romeo.<br />

Martin Farkas and Tristan Catford<br />

stormed to a comfortable victory in the<br />

GT Sports Trophy, driving a BMW M3,<br />

winning the rally by three minutes over<br />

Kristian Downing and Clayton Webber,<br />

driving a Subaru WRX. Michael Lowe<br />

and Kerry Chevis finished third in their<br />

Alfa.<br />

In the Thoroughbred Trophy, Porsche<br />

911 driver Tim Pryzibilla and Dainis<br />

Sillins fought a close battle with the<br />

BMW M3 of Phil Peak and Sam Hackett,<br />

the pair split by less than 30 seconds at<br />

the end of the day. Karl vanSanden and<br />

Alexander Visintin were third.<br />

Finally, the TSD Trophy went to<br />

the stunning Jaguar F-Type driven by<br />

Christoper Waldock and Christine Kirby.<br />

Final results:<br />

1. Busby / Caldicott (Mazda RX7)<br />

2. Haysman / Boorman (Triumph TR7)<br />

+31s (pictured below)<br />

3. Matthews / Masters (Toyota AE86)<br />

+48s


REPORT: BEGONIA RALLY<br />

MUD MASTER<br />

Story:<br />

CRAIG O’BRIEN<br />

In atrocious weather, Andrew<br />

Pannam and Tim Batten (Subaru)<br />

reigned supreme, winning the Bully<br />

Zero Begonia Rally on November 13,<br />

ahead of Andrew Daniell/Emily Leech in<br />

a Datsun Stanza.<br />

Luke Sytema and Adam Wright<br />

rounded out the podium with third in a<br />

Ford Escort RS1800.<br />

Following heavy overnight rain,<br />

37 crews set out under threatening<br />

skies for the fifth and final round of<br />

the Focus on Furniture Victorian Rally<br />

Championship.<br />

Based in Ballarat the event was to<br />

consist of 10 stages divided into two<br />

heats, using the technical forestry<br />

tracks of Caralulup Forest and the more<br />

open roads near Creswick.<br />

In becoming the first back-to-back<br />

drivers’ champion since Mark Fawcett<br />

in 2008/09, at last months’ Akademos<br />

Rally, Darren Windus came into the final<br />

round targeting a win on home soil to<br />

cap off two dominant seasons.<br />

His bid was short lived when a broken<br />

driveshaft ended his day on SS3.<br />

Pannam and Batten, who were only<br />

one second off Windus after the two<br />

opening stages, then seized the lead.<br />

Behind them another classic battle<br />

for 2WD supremacy was unfolding.<br />

Coming into Begonia, Neil Schey/Scott<br />

Middleton held a slender lead over<br />

Michael Conway/Jenny Cole and Grant<br />

Walker, all in Ford Escorts, while Daniell<br />

and Sytema ultimately battled it out for<br />

2WD event honours.<br />

Young gun Andrew Daniell<br />

impressed again in his<br />

Datsun Stanza.<br />

Conway held a nine second<br />

advantage over Schey following the two<br />

Begonia winners Andrew<br />

Pannam and Tim Batten.<br />

Mike Conway and Jenny<br />

Cole push their Escort hard.<br />

opening stages, before extending his<br />

lead when Schey dropped more than a<br />

minute on the long challenging SS3, and<br />

maintained his position over the next<br />

two stages to end Heat 1 ahead of his<br />

two rivals.<br />

In the Our Auto Rally Series for<br />

Hyundai Excels, Stephen Eccles/<br />

Simon Pilepich in a borrowed car,<br />

having seriously damaged theirs at the<br />

Akademos, comfortably won the heat<br />

ahead of Luca Giacomin/Brett Williams.<br />

With persistent rain becoming<br />

torrential at the completion of Heat 1,<br />

event director Arron Secombe made<br />

the decision to cancel Heat 2 under<br />

safety grounds, and avoid any further<br />

road damage.<br />

The cancellation resulted in Conway/<br />

Cole securing the 2WD championship,<br />

Eccles/Pilepich the Excel series, and Joe<br />

Brick outright co-driver.<br />

Photos: Greg Browne, John Doutch<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 51


NEWS@RALLYSPORTMAG.COM.AU<br />

KAHLER’S<br />

MEMORIES<br />

Peter Kahler, son of George,<br />

contacted <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> and<br />

offered his own recollections of the<br />

story which featured in last month’s<br />

edition.<br />

“Dad did have a laugh at the<br />

missed sponsorship opportunity<br />

when he lost his daks. Here’s a<br />

bit of background as to how it<br />

happened.....<br />

“He went through the water splash<br />

and flicked on the windscreen wipers<br />

on the dash, but accidently flicked<br />

off the fuel pump switches as well<br />

.... That is why the car stopped! He<br />

had no idea why the car stopped and<br />

didn’t realise the switches were off.<br />

“Now the pants - he had a long<br />

waist so would undo the Velcro on<br />

his racing pants when sitting in the<br />

seat to be more comfortable ... he<br />

jumped out of the car to push it, and<br />

down they came!<br />

“They were only 180 metres from<br />

the timing marker so he drove the<br />

car on the starter motor - holding the<br />

key on with one hand and steering<br />

with the other. There were no other<br />

hands to hold up his pants -. what a<br />

sacrifice!!<br />

“Duckhams, his sponsor, were<br />

furious they didn’t get worldwide<br />

coverage and Murray Coote thought<br />

his name would have looked good<br />

blazed across Dad’s butt as car<br />

builder!<br />

“The family was mortified, but<br />

Dad thought it was hilarious! He was<br />

famous. Or is that infamous?”<br />

Thanks to Peter for sharing these<br />

memories.<br />

STONIE CLASSICS<br />

SIX ROUNDS FOR ‘17 NZRC<br />

An exciting six round calendar has<br />

been announced for the 2017 Brian<br />

Green Property Group New Zealand<br />

Rally Championship. Otago, Whangarei,<br />

Canterbury, Coromandel, a new<br />

addition of the Waitomo Rally and<br />

the return of Rally New Zealand as<br />

the season Grand Finale, form the six<br />

rounds of the 2017 championship.<br />

The 2017 calendar includes an even<br />

balance of two day (Otago, Whangarei<br />

and Rally New Zealand), and one day<br />

events (Canterbury, Coromandel and<br />

Waitomo), and with all six rounds<br />

to count for the overall title the<br />

championship is set to be wide open to<br />

the final round.<br />

The class titles (2WD and Classic)<br />

will continue to be contested over five<br />

rounds (allowing competitors to drop<br />

their worst score from the opening five<br />

rounds) and the Gull Rally Challenge will<br />

continue the popular four round format.<br />

The iconic Otago Rally will host the<br />

opening round of the championship<br />

over the weekend of 8-9th April and<br />

includes the hugely popular Otago<br />

Classic Rally. The International Rally<br />

of Whangarei which also doubles as a<br />

round of the FIA Asia Pacific Rally moves<br />

to the later date of 28-30th April as<br />

round two of the championship.<br />

Queen’s Birthday long weekend<br />

on 4th June, will take crews back to<br />

the South Island for the Lone Star<br />

Canterbury Rally, a true winter forest<br />

rally that has featured snow and ice in<br />

recent editions.<br />

Following an 11 week mid-season<br />

break the championship then returns<br />

to action at the beachside holiday<br />

destination of Whitianga, the venue for<br />

the Gold Rush Rally of Coromandel on<br />

26th August. The challenging roads of<br />

the Coromandel ranges have become a<br />

driver and fan favourite.<br />

The penultimate round of the<br />

championship sees a return to the<br />

gravel roads of the Waikato for Rally<br />

Waitomo on 14th October.<br />

The season will then culminate<br />

with the return of Rally New Zealand<br />

at the new host venue of Tauranga<br />

as the organising team continue to<br />

prepare for the future return of a World<br />

Championship event in 2018.<br />

The <strong>2016</strong> Brian Green Property Group<br />

NZ Rally Championship attracted one<br />

of the most competitive fields in recent<br />

years and with continued growth in the<br />

new generation AP4 style rallycar at<br />

least 10 different manufacturers are set<br />

to contest the overall championship in<br />

2017.<br />

2017 Brian Green Property Group NZ Rally Championship Calendar<br />

8-9th April – Otago Rally - Dunedin<br />

28-30th April – International Rally of Whangarei<br />

4th June - Lone Star Rally Canterbury - Christchurch<br />

26th August – Goldrush Rally of Coromandel - Whitianga<br />

14th October – Waitomo Rally - Waikato<br />

25-26th November - Rally New Zealand – Tauranga<br />

52 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


TRAVELLING MAN ...<br />

At the end of a very exhausting<br />

season in which every journey<br />

back home between rallies<br />

involves travelling around the world<br />

again, New Zealand’s Hyundai WRC<br />

driver, Hayden Paddon, gave some<br />

insights into his unseen expertise in<br />

travelling, during Hyundai’s rally car<br />

launch in Monza, Italy.<br />

Hayden lives not just in New Zealand,<br />

but well down the South Island at<br />

Wanaka. The first question fans always<br />

ask is his secret in overcoming jetlag.<br />

“There is no secret unfortunately. I<br />

think the more you do it the easier it<br />

becomes and you just don’t think about<br />

it, you hop on a plane and hope to<br />

sleep and wake up at the other end,” he<br />

says.<br />

So does he go to sleep on planes<br />

easily?<br />

“Actually no. I try to, but I quite enjoy<br />

long plane rides because it gives you a<br />

good chance to do a lot of work and not<br />

be interrupted. It’s a good chance to<br />

catch up on things.”<br />

Can you give any advice about jetlag<br />

to people who don’t travel as much as<br />

you and don’t get used to it?<br />

“There is no secret, really. I’ve<br />

tried all the things under the sky, the<br />

medications, the tricks and all sorts.<br />

Probably the biggest thing I’ve found<br />

useful is to drink lots of water, drink like<br />

a fish, and make sure you are hydrated<br />

all the time. And try to have some<br />

sleep. Just try and be as rested as you<br />

can.”<br />

Is going to sleep helped or made<br />

worse by alcohol?<br />

”I don’t drink alcohol so I’m not the<br />

Your<br />

say ...<br />

I<br />

know this is being pedantic, but while<br />

Molly is the first female to win the<br />

Australian Rally Championship as<br />

a driver, her mum, Coral, has been a<br />

multiple ARC Champion co-driver.<br />

Please do not diminish the<br />

importance of rallying as a team sport<br />

which demands as much of the codriver<br />

as it does the driver.<br />

Have always enjoyed RSM and hope<br />

to for many years to come.<br />

- Malcolm Hobrough<br />

By MARTIN HOLMES<br />

best judge of that. Another good thing<br />

when you get to your destination is<br />

to go out immediately and do some<br />

exercise.<br />

“If you arrive at 3, 4, 5 o’clock in the<br />

afternoon and you want to go to sleep,<br />

you must put on your running shoes<br />

and go for a run or a bike ride. That<br />

keeps you awake. You’ve just got to<br />

stay awake and make sure you don’t<br />

go to bed too early.<br />

“Physically you have to fight to do it.<br />

You have to do it when it’s very easy<br />

to fall asleep. You just have to keep<br />

telling yourself mentally and physically<br />

that you must not fall asleep!”<br />

Does global travelling give you a<br />

buzz?<br />

“The novelty of it has all worn off.<br />

A lot of people say you’re so lucky to<br />

travel the world and do what we do, but<br />

we’re lucky to drive the rally cars and go<br />

to some pretty amazing countries, but<br />

you get over the thrill of actual travel, of<br />

the airports, of the planes.<br />

“I spend more time in airports and<br />

planes than what people do at home.<br />

The motivation is that you get to hop<br />

into a rally car when you get to the<br />

other end. That’s what keeps me going!”<br />

How long do you think you will<br />

continue all this travelling with living in<br />

New Zealand? Will you permanently<br />

move over to Europe some time?<br />

“At the moment we have a base<br />

in Europe so we spend more time in<br />

Europe than in New Zealand, but our<br />

sponsor commitments back in New<br />

You’re right Malcolm. Coral, and<br />

before her, Kate Officer (Hobson) are<br />

pioneers of Australian rallying and<br />

deserve plenty of credit for breaking<br />

down the ‘male only’ barriers.<br />

I<br />

first met Molly Taylor at her<br />

motorkhana debut in Armidale when<br />

she was a 14-year old student at New<br />

England Girls School.<br />

On the Friday at the WRC rally I was<br />

Stage Commander at Bakers Creek,<br />

Stage 2.<br />

When she was waiting at the time<br />

control, I went to the Subaru and said<br />

that this is an endurance event, get<br />

to a pace where you and the car are<br />

comfortable, maintain that and watch<br />

as the other contenders crash and<br />

burn.<br />

She and Bill both nodded.<br />

Zealand means we have to go back five<br />

or six times a year for PR and media<br />

commitments.<br />

“And of course I like going home. For<br />

me it’s the best place in the world, so<br />

any opportunity I get to go back to New<br />

Zealand I’ll take it.”<br />

And the weirdest aspect of Hayden’s<br />

work is that his regular co-driver, New<br />

Zealand bred John Kennard, actually<br />

lives in Finland!<br />

“John’s wife is Finnish. Together they<br />

export a lot of their wine business<br />

products in New Zealand to Finland, so<br />

I guess travel for John is a bit business<br />

and personal.<br />

“He has got to go back to New<br />

Zealand where they grow the wine so<br />

he can actually sell it in Finland. They<br />

have a cottage in Finland where they<br />

can base themselves, especially during<br />

the mid part of the European season,<br />

but he goes back and forth between<br />

New Zealand and Finland.”<br />

And therefore I am claiming a teeny<br />

bit of assistance in Molly and Bill’s<br />

result.<br />

- Richard Opie<br />

A<br />

huge thank you to <strong>RallySport</strong><br />

<strong>Magazine</strong> for making our first<br />

(won’t be the last) visit to a WRC<br />

event such an amazing experience.<br />

We were able to get immersed in this<br />

amazing motorsport from some truly<br />

awesome exclusive viewing points,<br />

without having to worry about the<br />

logistics of getting from point to point,<br />

all the while sharing the company of a<br />

great group of people from around the<br />

globe.<br />

Couldn’t recommend them more<br />

highly!<br />

- Matthew Spriggs<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 53


REPORT: SILVER FERN RALLY<br />

ESCORT SERVICE<br />

Story: ROSS MACKAY<br />

Photos: JOHN CROUCH<br />

54 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


Stewart Reid had Kiwi Dave<br />

Neill calling the corners.<br />

Watch all the Silver Fern Rally video highlights HERE<br />

New Zealand’s biennial Silver Fern Rally - the sixth edition having<br />

just been run and won - is a celebration of everything that was, and<br />

by all accounts still is, good about long-distance marathon-style<br />

events in the Shaky Isles.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 55


REPORT: SILVER FERN RALLY<br />

Derek Ayson won the<br />

Silver Fern Challenge in his<br />

Nissan-powered Escort.<br />

In theory it is a revival event, but<br />

in practice it is much more, as<br />

the winner of this year’s 2,700km<br />

odyssey in the country’s South Island,<br />

Ford Escort RS1800-driving Welshman<br />

Meirion Evans, confirmed on the final<br />

day.<br />

“It’s been an adventure, a challenge<br />

and overall just absolutely brilliant,” he<br />

said.<br />

The current run of events (which<br />

started in 2006) was created to<br />

commemorate New Zealand’s original<br />

Silver Fern Rally held in 1969. And<br />

this year 45 crews came from all over<br />

the world to sample its unique mix of<br />

sublime roads, state-of-the-art timing/<br />

car tracking logistics and laid-back, ‘cando/not-a-problem-mate’<br />

Kiwi spirit.<br />

History will record that Welsh pair,<br />

Meirion Evans and co-driver Iestyn<br />

Williams, won this year’s event by<br />

just 45 seconds from Aussie Stewart<br />

Reid and co-driver, Dave Neill, in what<br />

effectively is a sister car to the Evans/<br />

Williams one.<br />

There was more – much more – to<br />

the story of this year’s event than that,<br />

however.<br />

Stuart McFarlane, Porsche 911<br />

For a start, Challenge category<br />

winner Derek Ayson and co-driver<br />

Gavin McDermott from Gore in rural<br />

Southland were first home – by almost<br />

four minutes to boot. Their MK2 Ford<br />

Escort was outwardly virtually identical<br />

to the RS1800s of Evans and Williams<br />

and Reid and Neill, but ineligible for the<br />

main Historic class.<br />

The Ayson Escort has a well-worked<br />

FJ20 Nissan four-cylinder engine under<br />

the bonnet, so was running in the<br />

Challenge class against contemporary<br />

cars like Aucklander Dave Strong’s<br />

Honda Civic Type R, the Toyota 86 of<br />

Brent Taylor, and later model (but not<br />

quite) classics like Aussie veteran Ed<br />

Mulligan’s E30 BMW 325i.<br />

Reid and Neill were also quicker -<br />

on the road at least - than Evans and<br />

Williams.<br />

The trans-Tasman pair were second<br />

to the Mk2 RS1800 of 2014 event<br />

runner-up, Simon Tysoe and co-driver<br />

Paul Morris, after the first day, and led<br />

Evans and Williams at the end of the<br />

fourth.<br />

But it was always going to be an uphill<br />

battle for the popular Queensland ace<br />

after problems on the first stage on the<br />

second day saw him copping a 4m10s<br />

time penalty for arriving late at the start<br />

of the next stage.<br />

By the time Evans and Williams finally<br />

got, and managed to stay in front of,<br />

Reid and Neill (on the sixth day), only<br />

a crash or catastrophic car failure<br />

was going to change the result on the<br />

seventh.<br />

The Evans/Williams Escort led home<br />

Reid and Neill by under a minute, with<br />

the first local duo home, Allan Dippie<br />

and Paul Coghill from Wanaka, 10<br />

minutes back in Dippie’s Porsche 911S.<br />

The Porsche 911s of Dippie and<br />

Coghill, and Hamilton father and<br />

son Stuart and Brad McFarlane (who<br />

Stewart Reid, Ford Escort<br />

56 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


finished sixth), were the<br />

exceptions that proved the<br />

rule in this year’s event,<br />

dominated numerically<br />

and on the road by Mk 2<br />

Ford Escort RS1800s<br />

Brit pair Phil Squires and<br />

Nigel Hutchinson were<br />

fourth, Aussie husbandand-wife<br />

duo Keith and<br />

Mary-Anne Callinan fifth<br />

(after losing out in a fight<br />

for third with the Dippie/<br />

Coghill Porsche when a<br />

ball joint broke on the final<br />

day), and Brent Rawstron<br />

and co-driver Ian McKee<br />

seventh.<br />

Quick, but out of overall<br />

contention, were former<br />

national champion Brian<br />

Stokes and co-driving wife<br />

Anne, who ended up 13 th<br />

overall after a couple of<br />

off-road excursions, and<br />

2014 event winner, Vince<br />

Bristow and co-driver<br />

Tim Sayer, who finished<br />

17 th after a combination<br />

of mechanical issues and<br />

(spectacular!) trips off the<br />

road.<br />

No-one finishes an event<br />

as long and arduous as the<br />

Silver Fern without some<br />

sort of heart-stopping<br />

moment (or two), and for<br />

Derek Ayson and Gavin<br />

McDermott theirs came<br />

on the final day when a<br />

rose joint in the car’s rear<br />

suspension cried enough,<br />

forcing them to slow down<br />

for two stages before they<br />

could replace it at the<br />

lunchtime service.<br />

Once the rose joint<br />

and a wheel stud were<br />

replaced, they were back<br />

on the front-running pace,<br />

however, to claim line and<br />

class honours, just over<br />

half-an-hour up on the<br />

BMW of Ed Mulligan and<br />

Tony Brandon, and almost<br />

three-quarters-of-an-hour<br />

ahead of the Mk 2 Escort<br />

of Dunedin duo Brodie<br />

Anderson and Brad Lyon.<br />

<strong>2016</strong> Silver Fern Rally -<br />

Final classification<br />

Historic<br />

1. Meirion Evans/Iestyn<br />

Williams (Ford Escort Mk2<br />

RS1800) 9:48:03.4<br />

2. Stewart Reid/Dave Neill<br />

(Ford Escort Mk2 RS1800)<br />

9:48:49.2 +0:45.8<br />

3. Allan Dippie/Paul Coghill<br />

(Porsche 911) 9:58:41.2<br />

+10:37.8<br />

4. Phil Squires/Nigel<br />

Hutchinson (Ford Escort<br />

Mk2 RS1800) 10:02:01.6<br />

+13:58.2<br />

5. Keith & Mary-Anne<br />

Callinan (Ford Escort<br />

Mk2 RS1800) 10:07:25.8<br />

+19:22.4<br />

Challenge<br />

1. Derek Ayson/Gavin<br />

McDermott (Ford Escort)<br />

9:44:09.7<br />

2. Ed Mulligan/Tony<br />

Brandon (BMW E30 325i)<br />

10:18:03.7 +33:54.0<br />

3. Brodie Anderson/Brad<br />

Lyons (Ford Escort Mk2)<br />

10:26:12.6 +42:02.9<br />

4. Darryl Campbell/Phil<br />

Walker (Toyota Altezza)<br />

10:32:13.1 +48:03.4<br />

5. Charlie Evans/Sue<br />

O’Neill (Honda Civic 1800)<br />

10:32:59.0 +48:49.3<br />

Craig Salter, Ford Escort Mk1<br />

Keith Callinan, Ford Escort RS1800<br />

Dennis Green<br />

(BMW) passes<br />

James Shand<br />

(Escort).<br />

John Spencer was spectacular<br />

in his Datsun 1600, but things<br />

didn’t always go his way (right).<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 57


REPORT: NSW RALLY CHAMPIONSHIP<br />

QUINN CROWNED<br />

NSW CHAMPION<br />

PHOTOS: PETER WHITTEN<br />

Nathan Quinn has taken out the<br />

Gary’s Motorsport Tyres NSW<br />

Rally Championship, following<br />

his win in the final round at Rally<br />

Australia.<br />

For the second consecutive<br />

year, Quinn has narrowly won the<br />

championship over Peter Roberts, who<br />

finished the event in third place.<br />

The duo were trading times at each<br />

event throughout the year in a tightly<br />

fought battle.<br />

The final round of the championship<br />

saw Roberts hampered by dust early in<br />

the first pass of the 50km Nambucca<br />

stage, giving Quinn a 49 second lead,<br />

which he went on to extend to 1 minute<br />

18 seconds by the end of the day.<br />

With Adrian Coppin finishing second<br />

in the NSWRC field, Roberts collected 36<br />

points from the event, Quinn 40, giving<br />

the Coffs Harbour local the title.<br />

Peter Roberts’ co-driver, Andrew<br />

Crowley, scooped enough points on<br />

the day to give him the title of first<br />

outright co-driver in the championship.<br />

Suffering from heatstroke during<br />

the event, Crowley’s efforts to guide<br />

Roberts through the challenging stages<br />

were commendable, and the title is a<br />

fitting result.<br />

Competing in a Citroen DS3, Tony<br />

Sullens and Kaylie Newell finished the<br />

event in third place, elevating Sullens to<br />

third outright in the championship.<br />

Heading into the final round at<br />

Coffs Harbour, Tim Wilkins led the<br />

pointscores, with Tom Clarke narrowly<br />

behind. A broken gearbox towards the<br />

end of the first stage put to bed any<br />

of Wilkins’ hopes of a podium finish,<br />

unfortunate after a near-flawless year<br />

competing in his Nissan S15 Silvia.<br />

Clarke was driving to impress at the<br />

58 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

event, but was unable to catch the Evos<br />

of Quinn and Roberts, and had to settle<br />

for seventh place in the rally.<br />

Tom Dermody and Eoin Moynihan<br />

in the red Escort once again took out<br />

the Pocket-Rocket class, and Moynihan<br />

finished the year with enough points to<br />

see him finish third overall co-driver.<br />

Rally Australia was included in the<br />

<strong>2016</strong> Gary’s Motorsport Tyres NSW<br />

Rally Championship following a lengthy<br />

collaboration between the NSW Rally<br />

Panel and the event organisers.<br />

The NSWRC<br />

component of the<br />

event was designed<br />

to provide statelevel<br />

competitors<br />

an opportunity to<br />

compete at the<br />

most prestigious<br />

and exciting event<br />

on the Australian<br />

rally calendar,<br />

without the typical<br />

time and cost<br />

commitments<br />

required by such an<br />

event.<br />

The NSWRC was<br />

conducted over<br />

the six Saturday<br />

stages of Rally<br />

Australia only,<br />

giving crews 130<br />

tough, competitive<br />

kilometres.<br />

Competitor<br />

feedback from the<br />

event has been<br />

extremely positive,<br />

and the event will<br />

remain on the NSW<br />

rally calendar for<br />

2017.<br />

Information on the presentation for<br />

the NSW Rally Championship will be<br />

released shortly on www.rallynsw.com.<br />

au<br />

The <strong>2016</strong> pointscores have<br />

been finalised, and the outright<br />

championship winners are:<br />

Driver<br />

Co-driver<br />

1st Nathan Quinn Andrew Crowley<br />

2nd Peter Roberts Katie Fletcher<br />

3rd Tony Sullens Eoin Moynihan<br />

Nathan Quinn, Tom Dermody<br />

and Tony Sullens in action at<br />

Rally Australia.


REPORT: SOUTHERN CROSS RALLY<br />

MORE ‘CROSS MEMORIES MADE<br />

The Historic Rally Association<br />

added another iconic event to its<br />

portfolio of revived classics when<br />

it ran the Southern Cross Gold Anniversary<br />

Rally in November.<br />

The club has previously revived<br />

the classic BP Rally of South Eastern<br />

Australia and the Alpine Rally that dates<br />

back to 1922.<br />

The 3000km Southern Cross event,<br />

run to celebrate the 50 th anniversary<br />

of the inaugural ‘Cross in 1966, started<br />

in Albury on Tuesday, November 8<br />

with a welcome BBQ function at Lake<br />

Hume Resort, attended by special guest<br />

George Fury (pictured right), winner<br />

of the 1978 and 1979 Southern Cross<br />

events.<br />

The course for the first half of the<br />

event generally followed the route<br />

of the 1966 event south through<br />

Mansfield, Pakenham and Sale, then<br />

north over the scenic and challenging<br />

Barry Way along the Snowy River to<br />

Jindabyne, Cooma and Canberra to<br />

Sydney.<br />

Sadly Ian Reddiex and Mike Mitchell,<br />

all the way from Queensland, had an<br />

engine failure in their highly favoured<br />

Datsun 1600 before the start, and<br />

took no part in the rally. Apart from<br />

this, reliability among the field was<br />

pleasingly high.<br />

Fittingly, the first touring stage of<br />

the event followed one of the sections<br />

of the notorious 1966 Bethanga<br />

Stampede, where four competitive<br />

loops were run into and out of<br />

the tiny town in an atmosphere of<br />

absolute pandemonium. The locals still<br />

remember it.<br />

The rally was run as a Touring Road<br />

Event, which allowed vehicles not fitted<br />

with roll over protection to compete,<br />

lowering costs for competitors.<br />

Competition included several timed<br />

sections each day, mixing closed road<br />

forest sections, autocross tracks, hill<br />

climbs and other venues with touring<br />

stages along the original Southern<br />

Cross route. To reflect the retrospective<br />

By BOB WATSON<br />

nature of the event a night navigation<br />

stage was held in the Mullungdung<br />

forest south of Sale.<br />

A dinner was held in Sydney to<br />

farewell Albury to Sydney sector<br />

competitors and welcome those<br />

competing from Sydney to Coffs<br />

Harbour. Highlight of the evening was<br />

a live TV cross to six times Southern<br />

Cross Rally winner, Andrew Cowan, who<br />

chatted with former team mates Dave<br />

Johnson, Barry Ferguson, Bob Riley and<br />

John Bryson about Southern Cross days<br />

(pictured below left).<br />

Commentator Will Hagon gave<br />

an excellent retrospective of the<br />

significance of the original Southern<br />

Cross events, which placed Australia<br />

firmly on the international rally scene.<br />

Winners of the Albury to Sydney<br />

sector were Steve Blair and Dave<br />

Johnson in the ex-Shekhar Mehta<br />

Datsun PB210 from the 1977 ‘Cross.<br />

From Sydney the rally headed<br />

north to Coffs Harbour via Taree, Port<br />

Macquarie and Kempsey, to join in the<br />

activities of Rally Australia, the final<br />

round of the World Rally Championship.<br />

Another night navigation stage was<br />

thrown in near Kempsey, and the route<br />

followed many of the famous Southern<br />

Cross roads of the 1970s. The event<br />

gave a true taste of what the original<br />

events were like.<br />

The Southern Cross cars took part<br />

in WRC forest stages at Lower Bucca<br />

and the WRC Super Special stages at<br />

Coffs Harbour and Raleigh Raceway.<br />

Iconic venues such as the site of South<br />

Australian Tom Barr-Smith’s hair raising<br />

high speed crossing of the Pacific<br />

Highway, the Taylor’s Arm Hotel (Slim<br />

Dusty’s ‘pub with no beer’) and the<br />

Gordonville ford near Bellingen were<br />

included in the route.<br />

Winners of the Sydney to Coffs<br />

Harbour segment were Mark Pickering<br />

and Dave Boddy in Mark’s Peking to<br />

Paris Rally winning Datsun 240Z. The<br />

sound of this car’s engine is like a<br />

mechanical symphony!<br />

Overall winners in a Datsun 1600<br />

were the experienced combination<br />

of five times Aussie rally champ and<br />

1980 Southern Cross winner, Ross<br />

Dunkerton, navigated by wife Lisa, but<br />

the win was far from easy.<br />

Hot competition from Steve and<br />

Benjamin Marron in a beautifully built<br />

and driven Mitsubishi Galant, Darryn<br />

Snooks in an immaculate George Fury<br />

replica Datsun 710 Violet, and John<br />

Rawson and Jenny Pollock in a very<br />

Husband and wife teams were a feature of the<br />

Southern Cross Gold Anniversary Rally.<br />

rapid Datsun Stanza all took fastest<br />

times on occasions, and in fact the<br />

Marrons scored more fastest stage<br />

times than the winners.<br />

Mike Batten/Steuart Snooks (Datsun<br />

1600) and Ian and Val Swan in the much<br />

rallied Volvo 242 kept them all honest,<br />

and Andrew White’s beautifully restored<br />

Volvo 122S (an original Southern Cross<br />

Rally car) was jaw droppingly quick and<br />

sounded magnificent.<br />

The finale was another outstanding<br />

dinner at the Sawtell Golf Club where<br />

trophies were presented, tall tales told<br />

and another brilliant live TV cross, this<br />

time to George Fury’s navigator Monty<br />

Suffern in Texas, was again organised<br />

by communications guru Mike Ward.<br />

The SCGAR was a fitting<br />

commemoration of the first Southern<br />

Cross Rally. The format of touring,<br />

mixed with short, sharp speed tests and<br />

plenty of socialising time is popular with<br />

competitors and officials.<br />

We look forward to the concept,<br />

originated by Australia’s best road<br />

finder and road director, Graham<br />

Wallis, leading to more of such events.<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 59


RETROSPECTIVE: AUGUST 2005<br />

History noted<br />

We take them for granted now,<br />

but pace notes have a unique<br />

history that may surprise you.<br />

By JEFF WHITTEN<br />

It would be easy to assume that<br />

pace notes were a relatively new<br />

invention, particularly from the<br />

Australian point of view.<br />

It wasn’t all that many years ago that<br />

pace notes were introduced after years<br />

of using tulip instructions and route<br />

charts and, even earlier, map-based<br />

navigation.<br />

However, it may come as some<br />

surprise to realise that pace notes were<br />

first used not by a rally driver but by a<br />

racing<br />

The ‘Supreme Rat Traps’<br />

Vanguard stuck in a bog in<br />

the 1955 Redex Trial.<br />

The original notes were very basic, but<br />

they did the job and set the scene for<br />

rallying of the future.<br />

60 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong><br />

driver, as<br />

far back as<br />

1955 in the<br />

annual Mille<br />

Miglia race<br />

in Sicily.<br />

The first use of pace notes is credited<br />

to Stirling Moss and Denis Jenkinson,<br />

who used the system to win this high<br />

speed annual event that was held on<br />

the mountainous roads of southern<br />

Italy.<br />

First, a bit of background. Stirling<br />

Moss was a well-known driver in the<br />

Formula 1 grands prix of the 50s<br />

and had heard about the famous<br />

Mille Miglia (which literally means<br />

1000 miles in Italian) race, which<br />

had been running since 1903.<br />

The event was more often<br />

than not won by Italian drivers,<br />

simply because of their intimate<br />

knowledge of the route, which<br />

they were able to drive whenever<br />

they chose.<br />

Moss was friendly with Denis<br />

Jenkinson, a small, bearded,<br />

gnome-like man who was editor<br />

of the English Motor Sport<br />

magazine. Jenkinson was no<br />

stranger to motorsport either<br />

– he was a former motorcycle<br />

sidecar World Champion<br />

passenger.<br />

The pair had been discussing<br />

the event and Jenkinson<br />

mentioned to Moss that he<br />

would like the chance to<br />

compete in the event and beat<br />

the locals at their own game.<br />

Jenkinson (or ‘Jenks’ as he<br />

was commonly known) also<br />

mentioned his desire to an<br />

American driver, John Fitch, a<br />

former fighter pilot who had<br />

driven a Nash-Healey in the<br />

1953 Mille Miglia.<br />

Fitch claimed that the only<br />

way that a non-Italian could<br />

be beaten was by applying<br />

science to make up for the<br />

lack of local knowledge.<br />

Jenkinson went away and<br />

thought about what Fitch<br />

had said. He already had knowledge of<br />

much of the route through his many<br />

trips through the country chasing<br />

motorcycle events, while Moss had<br />

competed in the event itself four times<br />

in a Jaguar, without success.<br />

Although Moss had accumulated<br />

a great deal of knowledge about<br />

the hazards on the route – the<br />

bumps, the blind corners, the railway<br />

level crossings – there was still no substitute<br />

for local knowledge.<br />

Between them they believed that they<br />

had a reasonable amount of knowledge<br />

of about a quarter of the Mille Miglia<br />

course.<br />

Early in 1955, Moss secured a drive in<br />

a Mercedes 300SLR for the forthcoming<br />

event, so the pair soon got serious<br />

about their preparation for the big<br />

event.<br />

They decided that route notes that<br />

described every straight, every bend,<br />

every geographical feature or landmark,<br />

should be prepared.<br />

But covering a 1000 mile route was<br />

no mean task, so over a period of time<br />

the pair drove the course at speed,<br />

while Jenks took notes.<br />

Eventually, Jenkinson had recorded<br />

around 17 pages of detailed notes and<br />

Moss was confident that he could take<br />

many blind brows at 100mph, still well<br />

below the speed that the locals drove.<br />

With his comprehensive hand written<br />

notes massaged into some sort of<br />

order, the next problem was how he<br />

was going to be able to deliver them<br />

to Moss in an open-top sports car at<br />

speeds of up to 170mp/h.<br />

After much thought, Moss came<br />

up with the idea of building a small<br />

aluminium box to hold a continuous roll<br />

of pace notes.<br />

The box contained two shafts around<br />

which the pace notes were rolled, and<br />

there was a clear Perspex window on<br />

the top through which the appropriate<br />

notes could be read.<br />

The box was sealed with adhesive


Moss and Jenkinson on<br />

their way to victory in the<br />

1955 Mille Miglia.<br />

Things have changed a lot.<br />

This is a page of Neal Bates and<br />

Coral Taylor’s pacenotes.<br />

tape so that rain could not get in and<br />

obscure the penciled notes.<br />

Jenks spent hours in his hotel rooms<br />

over a period of weeks transcribing the<br />

notes he had taken on the recce run<br />

onto the continuous roll that would be<br />

used in the event.<br />

Finally, race day arrived and Moss<br />

and Jenkinson rolled the big Mercedes<br />

out in readiness for the race start at<br />

6am.<br />

The race attracted tens of thousands<br />

of people as it raced through towns and<br />

villages, up and down mountains and<br />

through straw-baled corners.<br />

As Moss drove his Mercedes<br />

absolutely flat out, Jenkinson called out<br />

instructions to his driver as he inched<br />

the rolled notes slowly through that<br />

famous aluminium box as each feature<br />

along the route came and went.<br />

Using a mixture of yelled instructions<br />

and hand signals, they were able to<br />

avoid crashing and keep all the other<br />

competitors at bay.<br />

By the time they reached the finish<br />

later that day, the pair had beaten all<br />

the local drivers to win the prestigious<br />

event. Amidst all the popping<br />

champagne corks and wild celebrations,<br />

Moss and Jenkinson emerged as<br />

champions, thanks not only to Moss’<br />

superb driving, but to Jenkinson’s<br />

painstaking preparation of his route<br />

notes.<br />

On Sunday, May 1, 1955, pace notes<br />

were officially born, thanks not to a<br />

rally crew, but to an F1 driver and a<br />

motorcycle sidecar champion.<br />

Truth is often stranger than fiction.<br />

NEWS<br />

Hayden Paddon’s new 2017 helmet design<br />

features a striking green and gold look.<br />

Lucky escape for Ross<br />

Kaikoura driver, Regan Ross, had<br />

a lucky escape during the recent<br />

earthquakes that have devastated his<br />

home region.<br />

His high-revving Ford Escort RS1800<br />

was sitting underneath the hoist<br />

supporting brother Nigel’s Fiesta ST,<br />

which thankfully stayed in place.<br />

A large collapsing tool box narrowly<br />

missed the back of the car, thanks to<br />

the fact the car had been wriggled<br />

forward by a couple of feet.<br />

- BLAIR BARTELS<br />

DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 61


PHOTO OF THE MONTH<br />

Matthew Robinson and Sam Collins tackle<br />

Dansey’s Pass in their Fiat Abarth 131 during<br />

the Silver Fern Rally.<br />

Photo: John Crouch<br />

62 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>


DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong> - RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE | 63


NEXT MONTH IN RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE<br />

NEXT<br />

ISSUE<br />

FEATURE STORY<br />

No ordinary Gemini<br />

✸ Full Monte Carlo Rally preview ... who wins?<br />

✸ Where are they now: Adrian Morrisby<br />

✸ Interview: Dale Moscatt<br />

✸ We look at <strong>2016</strong>’s state champions<br />

✸ And much, much more!<br />

AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2<br />

BUY NOW: Pace Note books<br />

l 80 pace note pages plus cover page and contents page.<br />

l 250mm high x 200mm wide (easier to handle in the car than A4)<br />

l 110gsm paper is more durable when using an eraser and if it is<br />

a wet rally.<br />

l Books are bound using plastic spiral binding which allows the<br />

books to fold back fully with no interference from the binding<br />

or any chance of pages coming loose.<br />

l Exclusive to <strong>RallySport</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

l Order now for the 2017 season<br />

Click here to order your copies<br />

$20<br />

per book<br />

64 | RALLYSPORT MAGAZINE - DECEMBER <strong>2016</strong>

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