Stage 2 - Thursday 2 January 2003 - NARBONNE / CASTELLÓN
Liaison 21 km - Special 43 km - Liaison 510 km. Total 574 km
Tension is mounting as
the Dakar crawls closer to Africa. A highly technical endurance
type of circuit, somewhat of a curved ball, was thrown at the
competitors on the second day of the 2003 Telefonica Dakar Rally,
when it was announced quite late that a 43km special stage was
included in today’s 574km between Narbonne in France and
Castellón in Spain.
Motorcycles
Alfie Cox (2) on his 660 Gauloises Natro Freight Nashua KTM
finished second, a mere 15 seconds behind his teammate Richard
Sainct (3) of France, ahead of Cyril Despres (7), his other French
teammate. Cox was ecstatic and could hardly believe his position: “I prefer the tough dunes and the difficult long
stages, not the enduro racing on this big 660, but I am very happy
to be well placed amongst the front riders”.
Last year's winner, Gauloises KTM team member Fabrizio Meoni,
was satisfied with his 6th place. “I’m not an Enduro
specialist so I didn’t go fast in the technical tight stuff. For
me the race really starts in Africa. Every year I’m behind the
others in Europe. It doesn’t matter. If I could ride quickly
here I would. There is time to be won but so much you can lose. My
bike and myself, we prefer Africa."
Cars
Giniel de Villiers (217) and his French navigator, Pascal
Maimon, surprised many when he
finished second overall in the car category with his Proudly South
African Nissan Hardbody. He was 17 seconds behind Stephane
Peterhansel (206) in a Pajero, who drove a Nissan last year. De
Villiers made it very clear that he is determined to finish the
race next to the Red Sea, but he admits that finishing second
today puts him in a good pscychological position.
Four of the Nissans are in the top ten currently, with the
other places shared by Mitsubishi, and BMW. With one of the best
navigators next to him, and his fine touch and gut-feel for a car,
Giniel de Villiers has the skill to perform well for South Africa
in this race.
Former Dakar winner and World Rally Champion, Ari Vatanen (204)
from Finland and his navigator Tina Thorner proved their point by
finishing fifth, three places better than their teammates Thierry
Delavergne (210) of France and his navigator Jacky du Bois.
Kenjiro Shinozuka (201) of Japan, and navigator Thierry
Delli-Zotti drove cautiously, deciding on the no-risk strategy
through the muddy track, and finished 10th.
Quads
In the Experimental Class Vicus van Deventer (171) on a DHL DS
650 Bombardier quad gained another south African second place,
1min 39sec behind Czechoslovakian Josef Machacek (170) racing an
850 CZE Yamaha Fire Blade quad. “The battle will be in the
desert and the endurance and reliability of the Bombardier should
definitely prove superior,” said a very confident Van Deventer.
The stage is set for a battle of the quad giants.
Trucks
The Truck category was completely dominated by the De Rooy
family. Johannes De Rooy (DAF – 409) finished the special in a
final time of 51min28s, beating his son Gerardus (DAF – 417) by
38 seconds. Third place went to Germany’s Klaus Bauerle
(Mercedes – 403).
OVERALL POSITIONS after Stage 2
Motorcycles
| Place |
Rider |
Team |
| 1 |
Sainct (France) |
Gauloises KTM |
| 2 |
Cox (S Africa) |
Gauloises KTM |
| 3 |
Després (France) |
Gauloises KTM |
| 4 |
Roma (Spain) |
Telefonica KTM |
| 5 |
Coma (Spain) |
Telefonica KTM |
| 6 |
Meoni (Italy) |
Gauloises KTM |
Cars
| Place |
Rider |
Team |
| 1 |
Peterhansel/Cottret |
Mitsubishi |
| 2 |
DeVilliers/Maimon |
Nissan |
| 3 |
Masuoka/Schulz |
Mitsubishi |
| 4 |
DeMevius/Guehennec |
BMW |
| 5 |
Vatenen/Thorner |
Nissan |
| 6 |
Biasion/Siviera |
Mitsubishi |
Have fun.
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