After SS18: Afternoon flourish puts Latvala clear

Rally Finland

By Franck Drui

1 August 2015 - 19:05
After SS18: Afternoon flourish (...)

Three consecutive stage wins on Saturday afternoon put Jari-Matti Latvala in control of Neste Oil Rally Finland after a titanic battle with Volkswagen team-mate Sébastien Ogier.

With only two tests and less than 30km remaining on Sunday, Latvala led by 13.2sec after a brave attack in treacherous conditions gave him the upper hand over Ogier and left the Finn on the verge of a third victory in his home rally.

The two have dueled for supremacy since Thursday night, and the margin never rose above a handful of seconds. Latvala began today’s eight tests covering 131.04km with a 2.6sec lead, and eked it out to 3.0sec after the duo claimed two stage wins each this morning.

Despite torrential rain, Latvala attacked in the 21.14km Jukojärvi and more than doubled his lead as Ogier clipped a rock with his Polo R. Fearing a puncture, the Frenchman eased his pace and it gave Latvala the break he needed.

He added two more victories in Surkee and Horkka to stretch the lead into double figures and leave Ogier virtually conceding victory.

“I knew it was time to attack this afternoon and it went well, despite the rain,” said Latvala. “That was the turning point of the rally. You have to take risks at the speeds we’re at here. Some sections were wet and some dry, and it wasn’t easy when you’re at the maximum.”

Ogier paid tribute to his team-mate. “Jari-Matti has done a fantastic job. I drove as hard as I could and have no regrets. Even if I finish second it’ll be a great result for the championship. I had a chance in the rain but missed it when I thought I had a puncture,” he said.

Mads Østberg held a lonely third, 1min 14.8sec behind Ogier and almost two minutes clear of Thierry Neuville. The Norwegian inherited the place when Citroën team-mate Kris Meeke crashed at the same bend as Ogier’s escape and broke his DS 3’s front left suspension.

Neuville’s Hyundai i20 ran intermittently on three cylinders this afternoon, a problem traced to a faulty sensor. The Belgian was 52.6sec ahead of Ott Tänak, who climbed from 10th to fifth in a Ford Fiesta RS restored to health after yesterday’s damper problems.

Juho Hänninen completed the top six after losing position to Tänak in the final stage. Martin Prokop was seventh, despite twice going off the road and overshooting a junction this morning, with WRC 2 leader Esapekka Lappi, Pontus Tidemand and Lorenzo Bertelli completing the leaderboard.

Dani Sordo dropped from sixth to 11th after going off for five minutes, while Robert Kubica (below) rolled heavily 300 metres from the finish of the final stage.

Sunday’s final leg comprises two passes over the 14.13km Myhinpää, the second of which forms the live TV Power Stage with bonus points to the fastest three drivers.

Pos.#DriverTimeDiff / PrevDiff / 1st
1. 2 LATVALA 2:20:20.6
2. 1 OGIER 2:20:33.8 +13.2 +13.2
3. 4 OSTBERG 2:21:48.6 +1:14.8 +1:28.0
4. 7 NEUVILLE 2:23:47.1 +1:58.5 +3:26.5
5. 6 TANAK 2:24:39.7 +52.6 +4:19.1
6. 15 HANNINEN 2:24:41.6 +1.9 +4:21.0
7. 21 PROKOP 2:26:01.8 +1:20.2 +5:41.2
8. 42 LAPPI 2:26:53.2 +51.4 +6:32.6
9. 40 TIDEMAND 2:28:16.5 +1:23.3 +7:55.9
10. 37 BERTELLI 2:29:17.4 +1:00.9 +8:56.8
11. 8 SORDO 2:29:43.1 +25.7 +9:22.5
12. 32 LEFEBVRE 2:29:56.5 +13.4 +9:35.9
13. 39 PROTASOV 2:31:24.5 +1:28.0 +11:03.9
14. 5 EVANS 2:31:51.2 +26.7 +11:30.6
15. 74 PEDDER 2:33:06.1 +1:14.9 +12:45.5
16. 70 GRONDAL 2:34:21.2 +1:15.1 +14:00.6
17. 12 AL QASSIMI 2:35:38.0 +1:16.8 +15:17.4
18. 60 GILBERT 2:40:19.2 +4:41.2 +19:58.6
19. 62 HAAPAMAKI 2:40:42.0 +22.8 +20:21.4
20. 83 ERONEN 2:41:40.0 +58.0 +21:19.4

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