WRC Monte Carlo: Final stage showdown set as Ogier hangs onto lead


The World Rally Championship Monte Carlo opener is ready for last stage showdown with 22.2s overlaying the highest three after changeable climate situations shook up the leaderboard.

Toyota’s Sebastien Ogier is pursuing a record-extending tenth Monte Carlo win and managed to outlive difficult icy situations throughout the 2 morning levels, however his lead has been reduce to 18.1s by team-mate Elfyn Evans.

Hyundai’s Adrien Forumaux nevertheless is firmly within the hunt for victory simply 22.2s behind, however the Frenchman’s tyre gamble to take 4 slicks may show pivotal. The Frenchman used his Hankook rubber to blitz stage 17 Digne-les-Bains/Chaudon-Norante, taking 23.9s out of chief Ogier on winter tyres.

If the afternoon’s last stage is dry and never coated in snow as forecast, he could possibly be within the field seat to say a maiden WRC win given his nearest rivals have opted to take extra snow tyres than slicks.

Hyundai’s Ott Tanak briefly climbed to 3rd after stage 16 however dropped again to fourth [+45.5s] after struggling on winter tyres on stage 17.

Two-time world champion Kalle Rovanpera opted of the identical tyre name as Fourmaux, taking 4 tremendous softs and solely two snow tyres. After surviving the ice patches in stage 16, the Finn was the one driver in the identical time bracket as Fourmaux, simply 4.5s slower than the Hyundai.

Rovanpera’s tempo put the Toyota driver firmly within the struggle with Tanak for fourth general, sitting 3.1s adrift heading into the ultimate stage.

Adrien Fourmaux, Alexandre Coria, Hyundai World Rally Crew Hyundai i20 N Rally1

Picture by: McKlein / Motorsport Pictures

Reigning world champion Thierry Neuville leapt from eighth to sixth general [+5m28.4s] following drama within the extraordinarily tough stage 16 that put Toyota pair Takamoto Katsuta and Sami Pajari into retirement.

Katsuta, who had been sitting in sixth, was first to hit hassle when he slid off the highway 1.8km into the stage. Spectators tried to push the GR Yaris again onto the highway however their efforts weren’t profitable.

Moments later Pajari misjudged the entry right into a bridge clipping the concrete which resulted in a big effect and an instantaneous retirement. Pajari and co-driver Marko Salminen had been reported OK following the crash.

The misfortune continued on stage 17 when M-Sport-Ford’s Gregoire Munster turned the third Rally1 automobile to retire. The Luxembourger understeered into rockface, pitching his automobile right into a violent spin together with his Puma partially blocking the highway.

M-Sport Ford Rally1 debutant Josh McErlean managed to outlive the situations to inherit seventh general [+9m33.3s], whereas WRC2 chief Yohan Rossel moved into eighth forward of Nikolay Gryazin, who suffered a puncture, and Gus Greensmith.

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