SAUDI ARABIA'S YAZEED AL-RAJHI TAKES VICTORY IN KUWAIT'S RALLYING RETURN
Posted: March 20, 2008 3:45 PM
Second place for Qatar's Misfer Al-Marri
Engine failure robs Sheikh Suhail of Kuwait victory
Saudi Arabia's Yazeed Al-Rajhi and British co-driver
Steve Lancaster clinched victory in an action-packed 2008 Kuwait
International Rally, which was organised by the Kuwait Motor Sports Club
and was an official candidate event for inclusion in the 2009 FIA Middle
East Rally Championship.
The lead swapped and changed throughout the two days and Sheikh Suhail Bin
Khalifa Al-Maktoum, partnered by co-driver Wael Marjan, returned to the
driver's seat for the first time in over a year and a half and looked set
to clinch a straightforward win until engine problems forced him out on the
final desert stage. Qatar's Misfer Al-Marri and Yousef Al-Asmar eventually
finished second overall in their Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution.
There were cases of accidental short-cutting and time penalties were
imposed on several drivers, including Al-Rajhi and Al-Marri. Both Al-Rajhi
and his Qatari rival incurred 10 minutes of penalties, but the Saudi held
on to take the win.
The first international rally to be run in Kuwait for 13 years attracted
entrants from seven countries, but a fascinating final day tussle developed
between Sheikh Suhail and Al-Rajhi. There were a couple of changes to the
overnight results when time penalties and time card corrections were
established and imposed by rally officials.
Sheikh Suhail Bin Khalifa Al-Maktoum actually began the final day with a
two-second lead over Al-Rajhi - initial results had Al-Rajhi ahead by five
seconds - and Al-Marri was handed third place, from David Scialom, Eid
Falah, Saleh Bin Eidan, Khalid Al-Suwaidi and Mohammed Al-Marri. Bin Eidan
dropped eight minutes on the final stage of the leg.
Michel Saleh was unable to repair his Subaru's engine and eight cars
started the final seven special stages on Saturday, which consisted of
three desert tests repeated twice and a second run through the 3.5km super
special stage that had been used on Thursday evening.
Initially it looked as though Al-Rajhi had moved back into the overall lead
by setting the pace through the opening 14.07km of the Sulibikhat special,
but the Saudi driver was deemed to have taken a short cut and was
immediately penalised by 10 minutes, as Al-Marri and Al-Maktoum set the
fastest times. The Saudi was legitimately on the pace in the Al Metlaa
stage, but the unofficial results showed him to be 6m 47s behind Sheikh
Suhail once the penalties had been imposed. Misfer Al-Marri was third and
Scialom and Eid Faleh completed the top five, although the Qatari was also
given a 10-minute penalty for taking an alleged shortcut.
Kuwait's Saleh Bin Eidan fell by the wayside and was joined by Qatar's
Mohammed Al-Marri, who retired with mechanical problems in the 10th stage.
Al-Rajhi was comfortably quickest again in this test and reduced Sheikh
Suhail's unofficial lead to 6m 33s, as the six surviving cars headed into
service.
But drama unfolded after service when Al-Maktoum was forced out with engine
problems and the heavily-penalised Misfer Al-Marri found himself in the
outright lead. "These long straights are killers for our engines," admitted
Sheikh Suhail. Al-Maktoum had been fastest in the Sulibikhat stage to
extend his overall lead to 7m 06s and Al-Rajhi had beaten him by 14 seconds
in the second run through Al Metlaa, but the engine cried enough in Al
Atraff where Al-Marri set the fastest time of the five surviving cars.
Al-Rajhi headed into the final timed super special stage with a 5m 27s
overall lead and there were no major dramas, as the Saudi clinched the
biggest win of his career.
"I would like to thank everyone who made our return to the international
rallying scene possible," said Sheikh Ahmad Al-Dawood Al-Sabah, President
of the Kuwait Motor Sports Club (KMSC). "It is now in the hands of the FIA
whether we are granted a place in the calendar next season, but our club is
delighted to have run this event and put Kuwait back on the international
motor sporting calendar."
The candidate event for inclusion in the 2009 FIA Middle East Rally
Championship was organised by the Kuwait Motor Sports Club (KMSC) under the
patronage of His Excellency Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah,
the Prime Minister of the State of Kuwait.
Positions at end of leg 2 (unofficial @ 16.40hrs):
1. Yazeed Al-Rajhi (KSA)/Steve Lancaster (GB) Subaru Impreza WRX
2h 28m 50s
2. Misfer Al-Marri (QA)/Yousef Al-Asmar (UAE) Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution
VIII 2h 34m 20s
3. David Scialom (GB)/Thomas Matthias (GB) Subaru Impreza WRX 2h
39m 39s
4. Eid Falah (KT)/Khalid Khalifa (KT) Subaru Impreza WRX N10
2h 40m 56s
5. Khalid Al-Suwaidi (QA)/Rashid Al-Sulaiti (QA) Subaru Impreza WRX
2h 55m 45s
Posted: February 26, 2008 7:18 PM
- HOST OF INTERNATIONAL TEAMS SET TO
SUPPORT KUWAIT INTERNATIONAL RALLY
- UAE RALLY LEGEND MOHAMMED BEN SULAYEM SET
TO DRIVE COURSE OPENING CAR IN KUWAIT RALLY
26/02/08
HOST OF INTERNATIONAL TEAMS SET TO
SUPPORT KUWAIT INTERNATIONAL RALLY
Drivers from Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Lebanon, England,
Jordan, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates have pledged their support for
the 2008 Kuwait International Rally, an official FIA sanctioned candidate
event for the 2009 FIA Middle East Rally Championship, which takes place
between February 28th and March 1st.
The 2008 Kuwait International Rally is being organised by the Kuwait Motor
Sports Club (KMSC) and will run under the patronage of His Excellency
Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, the Prime Minister of the
State of Kuwait.
As officials at the KMSC put the finishing touches to the route for
Kuwait's three-day return to international rallying, entrants are preparing
to travel to Kuwait. The event has attracted some of the most popular names
in the FIA Middle East Rally Championship, with Qatar sending four of its
top drivers to support the rally.
Leading the way will be the recent Qatar Rally runner-up Misfer Al-Marri in
his Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX. The Doha driver will be joined in
Kuwait by Khalifa Saleh Al-Attiyah and his French co-driver Matthieu
Baumel, who finished third in Qatar last month. Mohammed and Ali Al-Marri
will drive a Mitsubishi and Khalid Al-Suwaidi and Rashid Al-Suwaidi
complete the four-car Qatari line-up.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia will be represented by the up and coming Yazeed
Al-Rahji and his British co-driver Steve Lancaster. The Saudi could be one
of the closest challengers for victory. Lebanon's Michel Saleh intends to
use the event to debut his new Subaru Impreza N14, but one of the biggest
names on the entry list is Sheikh Suhail Bin Khalifa Al-Maktoum, the
championship regular returning to the regional rallying scene after injury
and a year-long lay-off.
Sheikh Suhail looks set to drive a Subaru Impreza WRX STi. He has been one
of the fastest drivers in the region for many years and enjoyed a
fascinating tussle with Nasser Saleh Al-Attiyah and Sheikh Khalid
Al-Qassimi a couple of years ago.
The international contingent is completed by British chemist David Scialom,
the UAE's Mohammed Tamjeed and Jordanian Ammar Hijazi, with Scialom driving
a Subaru and the Emirati and the Jordanian wheeling out a pair of
Mitsubishi Lancer Evolutions. Kuwait will be represented by rally veteran
Eid Falah and his co-driver Khalid Khalifa in a Subaru Impreza N10.
Nasser Khalifa Al-Attiyah, the President of the Qatar Motor and Motorcycle
Federation, will be joined in Kuwait by Mishaal Al-Sudairy, the Chairman of
the Saudi Motor Sports Committee. Both officials have offered their support
to Kuwait's bid to join the 2009 FIA Middle East Rally Championship.
Mohammed Ben Sulayem, the Chairman of the ATC of the UAE, will already be
in Kuwait on course car duties.
"We are delighted that Nasser and Mishaal are joining us in Kuwait and are
pleased that so many overseas drivers have pledged their support to the
rally," said Sheikh Ahmad Al-Dawood Al-Sabah, president of the Kuwait Motor
Sports Club. "We all want to see the ongoing success of the FIA Middle East
Rally Championship and it is important that the rally is a success this
year and is granted its place in next year's championship calendar."
The event will be based at the Kuwait Shooting Club and competitive action
gets underway with a timed super special stage at the Jaber Al Ahmad
International Circuit on Thursday, February 28th.
17/02/08UAE RALLY LEGEND MOHAMMED BEN SULAYEM SET
TO DRIVE COURSE OPENING CAR IN KUWAIT RALLY
The UAE's Mohammed Ben Sulayem, the Arab world's most
successful rally star, will drive the official course opening car in the
2008 Kuwait International Rally, an official FIA sanctioned candidate event
for the 2009 FIA Middle East Rally Championship, between February 28th and
March 1st.
Sulayem has not driven competitively since winning the 2002 Dubai
International rally after dominating the sport in the Middle East for 17
years. In that time he secured an unprecedented 14 FIA Middle East Rally
Championship titles (1986-1991, 1994 and 1996-2002), scoring 61 individual
international rally wins in the process, including 15 in Dubai, 12 in
Jordan, nine in Qatar and six in Oman. His record is unlikely ever to be
beaten in the highly-competitive modern discipline of Group N rallying. He
secured his first regional title in 1986 and his last in 2002.
Born in November 1961, the UAE driver is now the highly-active President of
the Automobile and Touring Club for the UAE, the official representative in
the Emirates of the FIA and the FIM. He is also the chairman of the
organising committee for the UAE Desert Challenge, the final round of the
FIA Cross-Country Rally World Cup and the FIM Cross Country Rallies World
Championship.
Sulayem is no stranger to rallying in Kuwait and was a leading contender
for outright success back in the 1980s. He won the rally outright in 1985
and repeated the feat against arch Qatari rival Saeed Al Hajri in 1988 and
1989. When the rally was reinstated into the regional calendar after the
first Gulf War, Ben Sulayem returned to winning ways to confirm his fourth
Kuwait Rally title in 1996.
"Going back to Kuwait will bring back so many good memories for me,
especially from the early part of my career," said Sulayem. "Kuwait helped
establish international rallying in this region and I would love to see it
return to the Middle East Championship."
The 2008 Kuwait International Rally is being organised by the Kuwait Motor
Sports Club (KMSC) and will run under the patronage of His Excellency
Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, the Prime Minister of the
State of Kuwait.
"We are delighted to welcome Mohammed Ben Sulayem back to Kuwait to run as
course car in our new candidate event," said Sheikh Ahmad Al-Dawood
Al-Sabah, president of the Kuwait Motor Sports Club. "He has been an
ambassador for rallying in the Middle East for many years and his rally
successes across the region speak for themselves."
Kuwait's return to the international calendar will be based at the Kuwait
Shooting Club and competitive action gets underway with a timed super
special stage at the Jaber Al Ahmad International Circuit on Thursday,
February 28th.