WRC- Neuville Snatches Sweden Lead In Eventful Opening Day

WRC- Neuville Snatches Sweden Lead In Eventful Opening Day

Thierry Neuville grabbed the lead of Rally Sweden in Friday night’s closing kilometres after an extraordinary opening leg in which five drivers topped the leaderboard.

The Belgian demoted Elfyn Evans in the concluding snow and ice-coated speed test on the edge of host city Umeå to overnight with a 4.3sec advantage in his Hyundai i20 N.

Neuville was fifth with two of the seven special stages remaining, but as darkness fell he delivered his best pace of the day to climb the order.

Kalle Rovanperä, Evans and Esapekka Lappi completed a leading quartet blanketed by 8.8sec after more than 125km of furious forest road action.

“It’s been a very strong afternoon,” Neuville explained. “We knew conditions wouldn’t be very good being second on the road, but our tyre management worked quite well and we were able to catch back time in the last two stages. We did some small set-up changes in midday and I felt very comfortable.”

Rovanperä’s equally skilled tyre management paid off. Having led after the morning loop, the Finn lost time opening the roads this afternoon in the worst of the conditions, but careful tyre usage allowed him to climb from sixth to second in his Toyota GR Yaris.

Evans struggled with the handling of his GR Yaris initially. The Welshman snatched the lead by winning the afternoon’s opening stage, but tired tyres cost him in the closing test and he fell to third, 7.4sec off the lead.

On his first start with Toyota Gazoo Racing since 2018, Lappi made a stunning return. He led after two stages but a stall at the start of the next dropped him down the order. He found grip hard to come by in the closing kilometes but ended just 1.4sec behind Evans.

Oliver Solberg ran as high as second and remained in the fight for the lead until the closing test when he overshot a junction in his Hyundai i20 N and ended almost half-a-minute off the lead in fifth.

Takamoto Katsuta was sixth in another GR Yaris after losing time in a snowbank, with Ford Puma drivers Adrien Fourmaux and Gus Greensmith next up. Greensmith had a fraught day as an overshoot, a trip into the snow and problems with the hybrid system and gearbox delayed him.

FIA WRC2 leader Andreas Mikkelsen, in a Škoda Fabia Evo, and Ole Christian Veiby, in a Volkswagen Polo GTI, completed the leaderboard. The Toksport driver was handed the class lead when Veiby stalled his car in the final Umeå Sprint test and lost 20.3sec. Mikkelsen’s teammate Nicolay Gryazin finished the day on the category’s provisional podium.

Ott Tänak led after the opening stage but luck was against the Estonian and he retired this afternoon after an impact triggered the warning system on his car’s hybrid unit.

Craig Breen was the other major retirement. The Irishman dived into a snowbank early in the second stage. He regained the road but a second visit into the snow proved terminal as his car came to rest on top of a bank.

Lauri Joona ended Friday with a comfortable lead in an all-Ford Fiesta Rally3 WRC3 category. After championship leader Sami Pajari retired with fuel pump failure before SS2, Joona chalked up an impressive four stage victory to lead by a hefty 36.7sec overnight.

His nearest challenger was Motorsport Ireland Rally Academy youngster William Creighton, who stole the fastest time on the final test. East African debutant Mcrae Kimathi completed the leaderboard a hefty 29min 0.1sec further back after dropping almost 17min stuck on a snowbank at Kamsjön.

Saturday features two identical loops of three stages, which are split by service, covering 82.30km. The Brattby and Långed tests west of the rally base in Umeå are followed by a final test on the edge of the city.

The provisional ranking can be consulted here.

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