The Central Europe Rally was a rally raid endurance race held in Romania and Hungary, and served as the relocated 2008 edition of the Dakar Rally, marking the 30th running of the event.[1]
2008 Central Europe Rally | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
Host country | Hungary Romania | ||
Stages | 7 (1,092 km; 679 mi) | ||
Overall distance | 2,671 km (1,660 mi) | ||
Results | |||
Cars winner | Carlos Sainz and Michel Périn Volkswagen Race Touareg 2 | ||
Bikes winner | David Casteu KTM | ||
Trucks winner | Hans Stacey, Eddy Chevaillier, Bernard der Kinderen, MAN |
The Amaury Sport Organisation created this event as the relocated Dakar Rally for 2008 after 2007 killing of French tourists in Mauritania (the event is owned by a French organisation) less than two weeks before the originally scheduled start of the race, and the decisions of organisers to defer all Dakar entrants to this event technically made this part of the Dakar.[2]
In the Cars category, Carlos Sainz Sr. won his first Dakar by 2:01 over Stéphane Peterhansel.
In the Trucks division, Hans Stacey won his second Dakar.
In the Bikes division, David Casteu won his first Dakar.
Route
editThe event began in Budapest on April 19 and finished at Lake Balaton in Hungary on April 26, 2008.[1]
Below is a table with the locations of the start and finish points of each stage of the Rally, as well as each stage's distance.[3]
Date | Stage | Start | Finish | Special Stage (km) | Road Section (km) | Total | Stage winners | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bikes | Quads | Cars | Trucks | |||||||
20 April | 1 | Budapest | Baia Mare | 63 | 468 | 531 | M. Coma | L. Szabo | C. Sainz | H. Stacey |
21 April | 2 | Baia Mare | 152 | 140 | 292 | D. Casteu | R. Irimescu | S. Peterhansel | H. Stacey | |
22 April | 3 | Baia Mare | Debrecen | 152 | 285 | 437 | J. Katriňák | R. Irimescu | G. de Villiers | A. Loprais |
23 April | 4 | Debrecen | Veszprém | 150 | 430 | 580 | C. Despres | H. Deltrieu | C. Sainz | H. Stacey |
24 April | 5 | Veszprém | 210 | 107 | 317 | D. Casteu | N. Nemeth | C. Sainz | H. Stacey | |
25 April | 6 | Veszprém | 210 | 107 | 317 | C. Despres | H. Deltrieu | C. Sainz | H. Stacey | |
26 April | 7 | Veszprém | Balatonfüred | 155 | 42 | 197 | J. Katriňák | C. Declerck | C. Sainz | H. Stacey |
1,092 | 1,579 | 2,671 |
Results
editMotorcycles
edit1. David Casteu (KTM) 12:21:14[4]
2. Francisco López (KTM) +2:58[4]
3. Alain Duclos (KTM) +19:39[4]
4. José Manuel Pellicer (Yamaha) +21:20[4]
5. Cyril Despres (KTM) +22:50[4]
Cars
edit1. Carlos Sainz/Michel Périn, Volkswagen Race Touareg 2, 11h18m08s[5]
2. Stéphane Peterhansel/Jean-Paul Cottret, Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution, + 2.01m[5]
3. Dieter Depping/Timo Gottschalk, Volkswagen Race Touareg 2, + 6.34m[5]
4. Luc Alphand/Gilles Picard, Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution, + 7.28m[5]
5. Carlos Sousa/Andreas Schulz, Volkswagen Race Touareg 2, + 33.45m[5]
6. Bruno Saby/Alain Guehennec, BMW X3 CC, + 46.30m[5]
7. Robert Baldwin/Kevin Heath, Hummer H3, + 56.02m[5]
8. Philippe Gache/François Flick, SMG, + 1h07m08s[5]
9. Miroslav Zapletal/Valdimir Nemajer, Mitsubishi L200, + 1h12m19s[5]
10. Robby Gordon/Andy Grider, Hummer H3, + 1h25m38s[5]
Trucks
edit1. Hans Stacey, Eddy Chevaillier, Bernard der Kinderen, MAN TGA, 11:43:20[6]
2. Wulfer van Ginkel, Daniël Bruinsma, Richard de Rooy, GINAF X2222, +0:33:43[6]
3. Aleš Loprais, Ladislav Lála, Milan Holáň, Tatra T815-2, +0:53:18[6]
4. Marek Spáčil, Jiří Žák, Zdeněk Němec, LIAZ 151154, +1:27:42[6]
5. Marco Dono, Andrea Bettiga, Angelo Fumagalli, Iveco, +1:28:27[6]
References
edit- ^ a b Central Europe Rally 2008: 2008 Edition > The Route Archived 2008-04-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Central Europe Rally 2008: 2008 Edition > Sporting Aspects Archived April 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "The route". Archived from the original on 2008-04-28. Retrieved 2008-04-30.
- ^ a b c d e Central Europe Rally – Victory for Sainz and Casteu - Yahoo! Eurosport UK
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "RallySport Magazine – Sainz wins Central Europe Rally". Archived from the original on 2017-08-01. Retrieved 2008-04-30.
- ^ a b c d e "Motorsport.com: News channel". Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2008-04-30.