DAKAR DAY 2 | Axle smash scuppers Peterhansel's chances

02 January 2022 - 21:16 By Reuters
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Navigator Édouard Boulanger and driver Stéphane Peterhansel in the Audi RS Q E-Tron Dakar racer.
Navigator Édouard Boulanger and driver Stéphane Peterhansel in the Audi RS Q E-Tron Dakar racer.
Image: Supplied

Stephane Peterhansel's hopes of defending his Dakar Rally title effectively disappeared on Sunday after the Frenchman's electric Audi suffered a smashed rear axle on the first stage in the Saudi desert and he lost more than five hours.

While Qatar's Nasser Al-Attiyah continued his form from Saturday's prologue to stretch his lead to 12 minutes, 44 seconds, 14-times Dakar winner Peterhansel had to wait for assistance.

The French veteran had been in second place at the first waypoint but the challenge fell apart some 153km into the 333km loop around Ha'il.

Toyota driver Al Attiyah's closest rival is now Frenchman Sebastien Loeb, a nine-times world rally champion, for the Bahrain Raid Xtreme team.

Triple champion Al Attiyah thanked co-driver Matthieu Baumel for keeping him on the right track over the rocky and sandy stage.

"Really it was a very difficult stage," said the Qatari. "It's not easy... Mathieu did a really good job in navigation. We saw a lot of lines gone too much to the right and Mathieu said 'no, you need to be left'."

Peterhansel's teammate Carlos Sainz, a three-times Dakar winner who was second after Saturday's prologue, lost his way in the desert and ended the day more than two hours adrift of Al Attiyah.

Audi, who also have Sweden's Mattias Ekstroem an hour and a half off the pace, were seeking to become the first manufacturer to win the Dakar with an electrified powertrain but the challenge looks over for this year.

Their Audi RS Q E-Tron also features a petrol engine to charge the car's batteries during the longer stages of the two-week endurance event.

In the motorcycle category, Australian Daniel Sanders remained the overall leader for the GasGas team after winning the stage more than three minutes clear of Chilean rival Pablo Quintanilla.

The International Automobile Federation (FIA) meanwhile expressed support for French driver Philippe Boutron, recovering from injuries sustained in an unexplained explosion involving a team support vehicle in Jeddah last week.

"The FIA trusts the local authorities to get to the bottom of what happened and to continue to ensure the safety of the race in link with the organisers," the governing body said in a statement.

Monday's second stage is a 338km timed run featuring a chain of dunes on the way to Al-Artawiya.



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