Magalhães lands dramatic Azores victory

His first victory in the Intercontinental Rally Challenge

By Franck Drui

17 July 2010 - 22:55
Magalhães lands dramatic Azores victory

Bruno Magalhães has claimed his first victory in the Intercontinental Rally Challenge following a thrilling finish to Sata Rally Acores today.

The Peugeot Sport Portugal driver took the lead on Friday’s first stage but dropped out of top spot on stage 15 with a gearbox problem and feared his chances of winning were over. But in a dramatic turn of events, Juho Hänninen lost first place with a puncture on the penultimate stage before Jan Kopecký, who started the last test leading by 6.4s, crashed out four kilometres from the finish to hand Magalhães an emotional win in front of thousands of enthusiastic fans.

Magalhães had driven without fault throughout the event but his once commanding lead had slowly been eroded by the flying Hänninen, who started Saturday’s final seven stages a mere 2.2s behind his Portuguese rival. A faster time through the opening stage of the day for Hänninen elevated him into the joint lead of the event. With stage 14 cancelled after a herd of cows had wandered into the road, Hanninen had to wait until the following test to move in front of Magalhães although his task was eased when Magalhães’ gearbox lost its oil and coated the windscreen of his 207 in liquid.

A heroic effort by Magalhães’ mechanics to change his gearbox in the allotted 20-minute service time kept him in the battle for a podium finish before despair turned to joy in the closing stages of the last test when Kopecký crashed out.

Peugeot UK’s Kris Meeke, saddled by a high-speed spin on stage six and several punctures, started the final leg first on the road in fifth overall and conceded that overhauling Andreas Mikkelsen for fourth on Saturday’s opening stage would be as good as it would get. But he refused to give up and moved into third when Hänninen had to stop to change a front-right puncture, before seizing second when Kopecký stopped, despite a minor electrical glitch.

Hänninen, driving a factory Skoda Fabia S2000, made up for the disappointment of losing out on his third win of the season by claiming third to extend his lead of the IRC drivers’ standings to nine points over Kopecký with Magalhães moving ahead of the absent Guy Wilks into third after becoming the sixth different winner from seven events.

For Hänninen’s team-mate Kopecký, his retirement marked the first time this season that he had failed to score points. It was also poor reward for a strong performance by the Czech resident who was fastest on three stages.

Andreas Mikkelsen, who claimed his maiden IRC stage victory on Thursday evening, survived a dramatic scare on stage 14 when he encountered a herd of cows in the middle of the road. Despite veering off the stage he was unable to avoid striking two cows, which left his M-Sport Ford Fiesta S2000 with extensive bodywork damage. He was able to continue and eventually finished fourth despite his powersteering failing two stages from the end.

“We were flat-out in sixth gear and 50 metres after a big crest there was eight or 10 cows in the middle of the road,” said the Norwegian driver. “We had to put the car into the ditch where we hit two of the cows. It was a scary moment.”

Portuguese championship leader Bernardo Sousa was set for sixth overall only to damage his M-Sport Ford Fiesta S2000’s right-rear suspension striking a bank on stage 18. He limped to the finish a disconsolate 10th overall.

There were strong performances by several local drivers most notably Azores champion Ricardo Moura who recovered from a puncture on the first stage to take fifth overall in his Ralliart Mitsubishi Lancer. Vitor Pascoal completed the top six in his Peugeot 207 with Pedro Vale and Sérgio Silva, the leading Subaru Impreza finisher, seventh and eighth respectively.

Rafael Tulio secured IRC 2WD Cup honours following a dominant display in his Peugeot 206. The Brazilian’s second victory of the season elevates him to the top of the drivers’ standings ahead of Pierre Campana, who wasn’t contesting the island event.

As well as picking up the overall honours, Bruno Magalhães secured the inaugural Colin McRae IRC Flat Out Trophy, which will be presented to the most spectacular driver on all remaining rounds of this year’s IRC as part of the association between Eurosport Events, promoter of the IRC, and the Colin McRae Vision charity. Magalhães was chosen as the winner by IRC’s Jean-Pierre Nicolas, Eurosport’s Gilbert Roy and Jim McRae, Colin’s father.

Bruno Magalhaes (Portugal), Peugeot 207 S2000, first overall: "It’s like a dream and I think we deserved it after the problem with our gearbox. We pushed from the first metre of the first stage, we led for a long time and won many stages and didn’t make any mistake. When I saw the car of Jan Kopecky I could not believe what was happening and I drove very slowly to the finish. It’s a fantastic feeling."

Kris Meeke (United Kingdom), Peugeot 207 S2000, second overall: "We have to be realistic because we were gifted a second place. We’ll take the points whenever we can get them but we can’t be satisfied because we didn’t have the pace to win. We were competitive on some stages but we need to do more."

Juho Hanninen (Finland), Skoda Fabia S2000, third overall: "I couldn’t see any rock and if I’d really hit something then I could blame myself. It’s so frustrating and difficult to say how bad it was. Ten points was so close and with 10 points it would look quite good for the championship but with only six points it’s still very open."

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