South Africa’s Giniel de Villiers maintained his stranglehold on the Dakar Rally on Sunday when he took victory in the eighth stage.
Race leader De Villiers, driving a Volkswagen, finished ahead of French Mitsubishi pair Stephane Peterhansel and Luc Alphand on the stage from Atar to Tichit.
Spaniard Marc Coma, riding a KTM, took the motorbike honours ahead of Frenchman Cyril Despres and Pal Anders Ullevalseter of Norway.
”It was a very hard day,” said De Villiers, who now has a lead of 31 minutes and 13 seconds over Peterhansel in the overall standings.
”The first dunes were very soft, whereas at the briefing we had been told that it would mainly be the second series that would be a problem. We just barely managed not to get stuck.
”Then, for the second set of dunes, we stopped to deflate out of caution but it was not really necessary. It’s a pity, because we must have lost five or six minutes there. After that it was really difficult to have a clean driving on very curvy and rocky trails. Of course it’s good that we stole some time from Mitsubishi.
”In the overall rankings, 30 minutes land does not mean much. We saw today with Carlos Sainz that problems can be costly real quick.”
Sainz, the former world rally champion, lost more than an hour on the stage because of a power-steering failure on his Volkswagen, and plummeted to fourth overall. He is now more than an hour behind the South African after having led the race in its early stages.
Coma won his third stage of this year’s race, 10 minutes ahead of KTM teammate Despres, and has a 54-minute overall lead.
”It was a difficult stage, which became even more difficult due to the sandstorm. I got a good starting position in the first part of the stage,” said Coma. — Sapa-AFP