Lategan still leads Dakar but Al-Rajhi closes gap

Lategan, who finished seventh on the day, said he prioritised safety in the difficult route

12 January 2025 - 09:08 By Reuters
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Overdrive Racing's Yazeed Al-Rajhi and Timo Gottschalk in action.
Overdrive Racing's Yazeed Al-Rajhi and Timo Gottschalk in action.
Image: Reuters

Henk Lategan's overall Dakar Rally lead was cut to seven minutes and 16 seconds as Yazeed Al-Rajhi closed the gap to the South African despite issues with his car, while Mini's Guillaume de Mevius and Joao Ferreira were the first two to finish stage 6 in Saudi Arabia.

Five-time Dakar winner Nasser al-Attiyah, who was denied a first stage win due to a 10-minute penalty in the previous stage, finished third on Saturday and sits fourth overall with the Renault-owned Dacia brand, trailing Toyota's Lategan by 30 minutes and 25 seconds.

“A long stage ... the dunes weren't easy, but we did a great job,” al-Attiyah said after finishing the 829km route from Ha'il to Al Duwadimi.

Lategan, who finished seventh on the day, said he prioritised safety on the difficult route.

“This morning getting into the first bit of dunes and especially these rough tracks in the dunes was a little bit tricky. We did not push really hard, we tried to be safe today,” added the Toyota Gazoo Racing Hilux driver.

Saudi local favourite Al-Rajhi (Overdrive Hilux) who was the rally leader at the halfway point, finished fifth on the day after receiving a spare wheel from Saood Variawa (Gazoo Hilux).

“It was not an easy stage. We opened the special for about the first 200km without taking any risks because we could hear a small noise coming from the back of the car,” Al-Rajhi said.

“It was the hardest first week of my career on the Dakar ... today, we were close to the lead, with just a 10-minute gap, which is nothing. In the dunes, we are capable of doing very well.”

Belgian De Mevius (X-Raid Mini) was delighted after clinching his first stage win, as he improved to 18th in the overall standings.

“We had a good stage, finally! Our goal was to claw back some time and pick up points for the championship, so we gave it everything we had,” he said.

“My car still bears a few scars from last week and today we did a bit of flying, but thankfully we didn't hit anything.”

In the motorcycle category, reigning champion Ricky Brabec claimed his first stage win of the race, as he slashed his gap with overall leader Daniel Sanders to 23 minutes and 18 seconds.

Brabec signalled for help when he discovered Ross Branch after a crash. Branch, who was fourth overall, was forced to withdraw from the race with an injury.

“I saw Ross on the ground, pushed the rescue button, saw the helicopter just up ahead landing on the ground,” Brabec said after he improved to fourth in the overall standings.

“But before I even got to Ross, there was police already with them and he was conscious. So yeah, once I did that, kept going on my way.”

Stage 7 of the Dakar Rally takes place on Sunday.


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