Is anyone else following the Dakar Rally?
Having long since left Africa, due to the threat of terrorism, the Dakar now races through the rocks & sands of Saudi Arabia (yet another case of sports-washing by the oil rich kingdom).
Daily Highlights packages are shown at 5pm on SBS. Due to time zone differences, we get the highlights the following day (i.e. today's highlights will show yesterday's racing).
This year is a real changing of the guard, with many of the "old guard" drivers & riders having either retired, crashed out, or falling off the pace.
In the cars, "Mr Dakar" Stephane Peterhansel is MIA for the first time since 1995. Former winners Carlos Sainz Snr & Ginel de Villiers have crashed out, as has Sebastien Loeb (who seems destined never to win the Dakar). Past contenders such as Nani Roma and Martin Prokop are well off the pace. Four time winner Nasser Al-Attiyah is one of only 2 "Dakar Legends" inside the top-10, and he's 30+ min behind the leader, having failed to win a single stage this year.
In their stead we have rising youngsters Seth Quintero, Rokas Baciuska, Yazeed Al-Raji and Henk Lategan winning stages, with Lategan & Al-Raji currently sitting in 1st and 2nd.
It's a similar story in the bikes, where former 2-time winners Toby Price & Sam Sunderland were sacked by KTM (switching to the cars as a result), while perennial underachiever Juan "Bang Bang" Barreda is MIA completely. Another KTM 2-time winner, Kevin Benavides, pulled the plug mid-race, having struggled with the pace, coming into the race only partially fit due to an injury suffered last May. Only 4 of the top-10 are Dakar Legends, the best of whom (Adrien Van Beveren) sits in 3rd, 20+ min behind the leader.
Instead, the race is being led by Australian Daniel Sanders, who has won 5 stages, including every stage where he wasn't opening the road.
The Trucks are much more competitive too these days, with the previously dominant blue Kamaz wagons excluded due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Martin Macik leads the category by 2 1/2 hours, but Mitchel Van den Brink and Ales Loprais have also posted stage wins - Van den Brink led the early stages, before mechanical problems saw him fall back to 2nd.
Having long since left Africa, due to the threat of terrorism, the Dakar now races through the rocks & sands of Saudi Arabia (yet another case of sports-washing by the oil rich kingdom).
Daily Highlights packages are shown at 5pm on SBS. Due to time zone differences, we get the highlights the following day (i.e. today's highlights will show yesterday's racing).
This year is a real changing of the guard, with many of the "old guard" drivers & riders having either retired, crashed out, or falling off the pace.
In the cars, "Mr Dakar" Stephane Peterhansel is MIA for the first time since 1995. Former winners Carlos Sainz Snr & Ginel de Villiers have crashed out, as has Sebastien Loeb (who seems destined never to win the Dakar). Past contenders such as Nani Roma and Martin Prokop are well off the pace. Four time winner Nasser Al-Attiyah is one of only 2 "Dakar Legends" inside the top-10, and he's 30+ min behind the leader, having failed to win a single stage this year.
In their stead we have rising youngsters Seth Quintero, Rokas Baciuska, Yazeed Al-Raji and Henk Lategan winning stages, with Lategan & Al-Raji currently sitting in 1st and 2nd.
It's a similar story in the bikes, where former 2-time winners Toby Price & Sam Sunderland were sacked by KTM (switching to the cars as a result), while perennial underachiever Juan "Bang Bang" Barreda is MIA completely. Another KTM 2-time winner, Kevin Benavides, pulled the plug mid-race, having struggled with the pace, coming into the race only partially fit due to an injury suffered last May. Only 4 of the top-10 are Dakar Legends, the best of whom (Adrien Van Beveren) sits in 3rd, 20+ min behind the leader.
Instead, the race is being led by Australian Daniel Sanders, who has won 5 stages, including every stage where he wasn't opening the road.
The Trucks are much more competitive too these days, with the previously dominant blue Kamaz wagons excluded due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Martin Macik leads the category by 2 1/2 hours, but Mitchel Van den Brink and Ales Loprais have also posted stage wins - Van den Brink led the early stages, before mechanical problems saw him fall back to 2nd.