Monday 20 May 2013

Global Rallycross in Europe: DNF

Global Rallycross in Europe: DNF
by Martijn Kösters

What should have been round two of the Global Rallycross Championship ended in a major farce as rain made the track service undriveable. Question on everyone's minds (drivers, fans, organizers): how could this happen to a major and professional sporting event. Because let's be honest, the X Games aren't a primary school sports day.

Both Global Rallycross / X Games tracks in Foz de Iguacu and Barcelona have been under a lot of criticism. In Brazil it was a poor lay-out, dust and a gripless track surface which hampered the experience for drivers and viewers. The narrow and straight-forward layout did not promote overtaking, and even if drivers were planning too, huge amounts of dust and a lack of grip made sure that they couldn't see or feel where they would end up.

With little competitive running in Barcelona, it's difficult to say how the action would have ended up. But taking a look at the track lay-out, it seems like similar design mistakes have been made. Although partly explained by the minimum around of room in the Estadio Olympic, designers definitely shouldn't have opted for a large infield section because of that. Tight and narrow hairpins wouldn't have promoted any overtaking action.

Then there was the major issue, something which wouldn't come to mind of everyone's mind. The facility was excellent, especially from an audience point of view, no doubt that the off track facilities were up to scratch. Yet the surface and particularly the ability of it to disperse water, well.

Let me explain this thoroughly before anyone rushes to conclusions, clay is a tricky surface, for many reasons. Unlike sand or gravel, it is very dense in structure, so it does not let through much or any water. That's why there was so much standing water on track this Sunday, and I doubt much could have been done to make the water drain, although banking would have been part of the solution.

Second is that clay, and especially wet clay is one of the least grippy surfaces you'll find in nature. If you have ever seen a tractor stuck in a field you can understand why racing was out of the question once it rained in Barcelona. Wet clay is miserable stuff to walk, cycle or drive on. Its very density and stickiness makes that when you spin the wheels on it it doesn't fly up in a rooster tail like you see on sand or gravel, but wraps itself around the spinning wheel. This downward spiral of grip makes it worse and worse.

Back to Barcelona and to what the organizers could have done. Another track surface would have been an easy fix but given the fact that the Stadium also served as the Motocross venue that is easier set than done, as you can't have bikers flying through the air when crashing into tarmac is a possibility. Yet, running Rallycross after the motorcyclists was an unwise decision. The Rallycross event had been postponed by two hours in order to let the track modifications take place. Because Rallycross started two hours later, the rain had started to fall down. I am by no means a Motocross expert but the bikes were better equipped to mud and rain than the cars. Someone in the X Games organizers could and should have seen the weather coming.

Another point is made by the cars not being ready for wet, muddy clay. This was the cause that sparked most outrage along Rallycross fans. For the simple reason that drivers were equipped with Tarmac-spec Rallycross tyres, with a much slicker and shallower thread. Although these tyres would have been perfectly suitable for the GRC events at NASCAR speedways they proved tricky enough in the Brazilian dust, let alone the wet mud in Spain. It seems awfully similar to what happened at the F1 United States Grand Prix, where a majority of the cars running on Michelin tyres found out they were not built for the oval conditions in Indianapolis.

To me, however, the saddest point of all is that the fine Global Rallycross Championship once again got squashed in between other extreme sports, in Foz de Iguacu TV-viewers had to sit through a lot of skating before a brief Rallycross segment came along. In Barcelona, the GRC had to wait for Motocross to finish their act and the track to be reconfigured. By the time GRC took to the stage, the proverbial janitor was out mopping the floor (quite literally). Does Rallycross want to be a part of the extreme sports ensemble when it means it is moved to the back of the stage and to adapt to motocross surroundings? Or should Rallycross move back to being a dessert after a NASCAR event, where fans of four-wheeled motorsports can stick around for some more action. It's the NASCAR-GRC combination that I envied and I wished would exist here in Europe.

As long as Rallycross can't stand on it's own legs, it should still try to stand out from other sports, rather than blend in with others at the cost of its own characteristics, don't you think?

The Global Rallycross Championship continues June 29th, at X Games Munich

Monday 6 May 2013

Rally Review WRC Argentina: Loeb is in Argentina, so Loeb wins in Argentina

Rally Review WRC Argentina: Loeb is in Argentina, so Loeb wins in Argentina
By Martijn Kösters

Another one of those statistics unlikely to be broken, the amount of wins in the Rally of Argentina by Sebastien Loeb. Eight, eight WRC victories in a row in Argentina. It will take at least till 2022 before someone can break that record, unless Tommi Makinen comes back and wins another six.
But the action. Rally got underway with a short street stage on Thursday, with Ogier taking the early lead of 1.9s over Sordo and 2.2 over Loeb. Latvala, Mikkelsen and Hirvonen followed. Day two saw much longer stages and much more gravel. Two stages were run twice, Santa Catalina and Ascochinga. In the morning loop it was Ogier who held on to his lead despite the slippy and foggy conditions. Loeb meanwhile struggled with understeer and was not happy with his rhytm. More severe issues for Neuville and Ostberg, who both had poorly or non-functioning wipers. Dani Sordo, who was running 7th after two stages, rolled his car on the third stage, dropping a heap of time and out of the points. He did complete the stage but without power steering. Due to Sordo’s crash, Ogier got held up since Dani was blocking the road, yet Ogier still managed to be third fastest after SS3.
Second run of day two saw Ogier extend his lead on Hirvonen and later Loeb to 16.5 seconds, with both Citroën drivers close to one-another. Meanwhile Mads Ostberg became the First retirement when a steering arm broke during SS4. After SS4 it was Ogier from Loeb (12.5) from Hirvonen (16) from Latvala (27.5), Mikkelsen (1.20), Novikov (1.23).
SS5 threw more tricky conditions at the drivers, namely drizzle and fog. Both Citroën drivers weren’t happy with the circumstances, Hirvonen having troubles with a misty windscreen and Loeb with false weather info. Latvala struggled with a faulty handbrake.

Day three then, 2x2 stages plus a city super special. First stages were drive non a muddier surface then before after some overnight rain, yet this didn’t bother any of the Sebs who went fastest, the younger one edging out the older by 1.4s. Ostberg rejoined the rally again under rally2 rules. Stage 7 saw Ogier making a rare mistake in foggy conditions. Combined with some water pools on the road conditions were very tricky. Eventually it turned out Ogier went straight at a corner and needed to reverse his way out, costing him 40 seconds.
After SS7: Loeb, Hirvonen (8.9), Ogier (26.3), Latvala (44.8), Novikov (1.55), Mikkelsen (2.34)

The second run saw puncture emerge for the First time in the rally, this time it was Hirvonen’s and Ogier’s turn. Loeb increased his lead to 30 seconds whil Hirvonen and Ogier swap places. Mikkelsen thought he had a puncture, but lateron the damage seemed to be rather to the suspension than to the rubber and Andreas had to retire for the day.
The final major stage of the day sees Hirvonen encounter even more problems, an electrical glitch means the car’s master switch turns the car off completely at random intervals. Unlike a road car restarting costs more effort and more time. He drops six minutes and into sixth place. Latvala was also iun trouble on stage 9, a puncture added two minutes to what was a good run. Problems for the two finns meant that Novikov was promoted to a podium spot and Neuville found himself in 5th.
After day three: Loeb, Ogier (39.8), Novikov (2.43), Latvala (2.51), Neuville (3.32), Hirvonen (6.43)

The Final day of the rally still has some potential in it, Novikov and Latvala being very close to eachother and the battle for the lead still not over should see interesting action. Latvala and Novikov went flat out on the First stage of the day, yet the Finn only gained 0.9s in the battle for third. Also Loeb took another 15 seconds on Ogier, who admitted he treated the final day as a recce, looking after the car in the rough terrain. No need to push anyway since Loeb is no championship contender. Second stage this Saturday saw Latvala quickest again, taking 3.9 out of Novikov  with the gap now being 3.4 seconds. Part reason for this is Novikov having run the stage in Road Mode unintentionally. Further down Prokop, Sordo and Mikkelsen are within 8 seconds of 8th place. Another stage win for Latvala on SS13, and this time with a reward: 3rd place. Latvala drove Unlimited and uninformed as he didn’t have splits in the car. Further down in the battle for 8th Sordo and Mikkelsen both moved up a place on behalf of Prokop who is now 10th by 18 seconds.

The Power stage was 16km long this time and only could go to one man: Jari-Matti Latvala, who completed all four stages on Saturday fastest. Ogier and Hirvonen took the remaining PS points and Mikkelsen passed Sordo by two tenths for 8th place.
Final: Loeb, Ogier(2), Latvala(3), Novikov, Neuville, Hirvonen(1), Ostberg, Mikkelsen, Sordo, Prokop
Points: Ogier 122, Loeb 68, Hirvonen 57, Latvala 49, Ostberg 38, Neuville 35, Sordo 29, Novikov 27, Prokop 21, Al-Attiyah 20