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Statoil Galway International Rally - 21-22 Feb '98Posted: February 28, 1998 2:55 PM - 8190 Hits
McHale wins after huge dice with Bertie in Slippery Conditions Posted: February 28, 1998 2:55 PM
CARS
Stephen Murphy and Eamonn Boland came to Galway with their new M-Sport
Escort WRC's, the second WRC for Boland in less than a year!
Both cars sporting the latest 6 speed seq. Gear Boxes, as well as being
Right hand drive examples.
McHale/Murphy and Nesbitt came to Galway with their well developed Ex-TTE Celicas (ST185 Examples); waiting for new Corrolla WRCs perhaps??, while David Greer was on a rare outing in his example. Jimmy McRae (a past winner of the event) was out in a Porsche 911 4WD. Nesbitt had Cork Man James O'Brien on the notes. Charlie Donnely and Ian Greer were in ST165 Celicas this being Greer's last outing before switching to an ST185 Example. Just outside the Top 10 was Paul Harris in his Subaru Legacy, and John McClusky in the highest seeded Escort Cosworth. Group N in Ireland over the past number of years has been Subaru dominated. However, were things about to Change? Pat Kirk and Eugene Meegan were just 2 drivers to start the event in Mitsubishi Lancer Evo IV's, a total of 4 starting the event. Derek McGarrity started the event in a Group N Escort Cossie, waiting for the Evo V to be Homologated before taking the wheel of one of the beasts. Brendan Kelly was in David Greer's Black Impreza for the event. 2 Metro 6R4s started this years event, Seeded 18 and 19 in the hands of Ray Breen/Podge Newe and Declan Wilmott/Jim Casey.
Route
SS1, Seanaféistín, the longest stage of the event at 12 miles was also the
bumpiest, this was followed by Cashel and the Ultra fast Lough Inagh
Stage, followed by Service in Maam Cross. After service in the Car park of the Galway Shopping Centre, the Sunday action began with the short Spectator stage on the outskirts of Galway City, followed by 3 stages repeated, Laragh, Elm, and Tiaquinn, with service after the first loop in Athenry Mart. These stages were similar to the stages used last year, being fast but very slippery.
Saturday dawned overcast and wet. It didn't seem to bother Bertie
Fisher
as he was fastest on a very bumpy first stage with a time of 9:45, even
passing
Austin McHale on the stage. For McHale the opening stage was a disaster,
when the wiper on the drivers side came off after only 3 miles of the
stage - he was lucky to lose only 36 seconds to Fisher.
Second fastest was a surprise - Paul Harris seeded at number 11 found
himself the only other driver to break the 10 min mark, he set a time
of 9:59, to Boland on 10:06, Donnelly on 10:11. Over the next 2 stages McHale started his charge back, although with the top cars breaking the bogey time on SS2 and 4, his caused wasn't helped. Also on a charge was Stephen Murphy, on his first rally since last May, a slow start not helped by a bad tire choice left the Statoil WRC on the wrong side of the top ten. Jimmy McRae was showing that he is still a force in Rallying firmly in the Top ten. In Group N after a slow Start, Brendan Kelly passed the early leader Pat Kirk to lead over night. By second service McHale was back up to second, 32 seconds behind the flying Fisher. It might have been more, on SS6 Fisher spun fishing the stage with a time of 8:45 to McHale 8:36. Harris was still third, holding off Nesbitt and Boland. Nesbitt with new co-driver James O'Brien on the notes, was taking it easy, after a troublesome '97, he needed to start '98 with a finish. With SS7 not run due to spectator problems and Fisher taking 3 seconds off McHale on SS8 despite both spining on the same Hairpin, McHale might have thought that his wouldn't be able to make it a sixth win. However on the last stage of the day (A re-run of SS1) he took 6 seconds off Fisher and was over a minute faster than his run a few hours earlier, the Toyota stopping the clocks on 9:13. However, the stage ended Paul Harris' Great run, the Donegals Man's Legacy didn't finish the stage, the Engine in his Legacy cried enough. This gave Nesbitt third place and Boland 4th overnight. For Don Wilmott the rally will be remembered for the wrong reason, a huge off left the Metro 6R4 upside down in a Connamera bog!
At service in Galway on Sunday Morning, a slight water leak was found on Fisher's Impreza, which may result in a power loss. Another Impreza with problems was Hugh Martin Doherty's Example, a small leak from a crack in the Gearbox casing was letting fumes into the Car. It's been said that "McHale always goes better on the second Day". Despite losing 2 more seconds to Fisher on the Spectator Stage, once the real stages started Fisher's lead started to fall. Despite a spin or 2 on the slippery conditions, McHale pulled back 8 seconds on SS11 and 9 on SS12. On SS13 the pressure paided off when on a very slippery square right, the Silver Impreza slid wide, and hit a pillar, breaking a wheel and the damaging the suspension. A minute and the lead was lost. Murphy was also on a charge, fifth over night, and now on Bolands tail. In Group N, Brendan Kelly hit a pole with his Impreza, this gave Pat Kirk the lead, but Turbo Problems sidelined his Evo IV to leave the Escort of Derek McGarrity the class winner.
As if the huge crowds who followed the stages on Sunday hasn't had enough
drama, there was more to follow.
Going into the last corner, Boland had only 1 second to spare over Murphy -- only Stephen Murphy when off on the last corner dropping 4 mins and 3 places to Eight.
Topics:
Galway International Rally
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