2011 Rally Australia Explained

2011 Rally Australia
Native Name:21st Rally Australia
Round:10
Championship:2011 World Rally Championship season
Previous Round:2011 Rallye Deutschland
Next Round:2011 Rallye de France
Rallybase:Coffs Harbour, New South Wales
Startdate:8 September
Enddate:11 2011
Stages:26
Stagekm:368.96
Stagekm Note:[1]
Overallkm:1246.78
Surface:Gravel
Driver1: Mikko Hirvonen
Team1: Ford World Rally Team
Teamsstart:29
Teamsfinish:24

The 2011 Rally Australia was the 21st Rally Australia and the tenth round of the 2011 World Rally Championship season. The rally took place over 8–11 September, and was based in Coffs Harbour, a coastal city in the New South Wales state of Australia.[1] The rally was also the fifth round of the Production World Rally Championship. Rally Australia returned to the WRC calendar after a year's hiatus, and after demonstrations marred the 2009 running of the rally, held north of Coffs Harbour in the Northern Rivers area. Residents' concerns for the event meant that the rally was moved for the foreseeable future to Coffs Harbour.[2]

Ford World Rally Team's Mikko Hirvonen took his third successive Rally Australia victory, after team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala slowed tactically on the penultimate stage, in order to aid Hirvonen's chances for the drivers' championship title.[3] The Ford drivers had moved into the top two placings on the opening day of the rally after Citroën's Sébastien Loeb and Sébastien Ogier both had to retire from the day's proceedings and return to the rally the following day under the SupeRally regulations.[4] Loeb recovered to score a tenth-place finish with the Power Stage victory, to extend his championship by four points over Ogier, who slowed on the last two stages to drop from eighth to eleventh behind Loeb.

Petter Solberg finished third behind the Ford pairing, 44.8 seconds in arrears, but finished over seven minutes clear of the fourth-placed driver Matthew Wilson, who matched his career-best placing from Rally Japan in 2007. Khalid Al Qassimi scored a career-best fifth place, ahead of a quartet of PWRC competitors. Hayden Paddon was the best of the PWRC competitors with sixth place overall, securing his fourth PWRC victory in succession, and the championship title as Martin Semerád – who elected not to compete at the event – could only tie Paddon on points and lose on countback.[5] Michał Kościuszko, Oleksandr Saliuk, Jr. and Benito Guerra also scored overall championship points by finishing in the top ten.

Results

Event standings

Pos.DriverCo-driverCarTimeDifferencePoints
1. Mikko Hirvonen Jarmo LehtinenFord Fiesta RS WRC3:35:59.00.025
2. Jari-Matti Latvala Miikka AnttilaFord Fiesta RS WRC3:36:13.714.7
3. Petter Solberg Chris PattersonCitroën DS3 WRC3:36:43.844.8
4. Matthew Wilson Scott MartinFord Fiesta RS WRC3:44:44.28:45.212
5. Khalid Al Qassimi Michael OrrFord Fiesta RS WRC3:48:32.312:33.310
6. Hayden Paddon John KennardSubaru Impreza WRX STI3:53:28.317:29.38
7. Michał Kościuszko Maciej SzczepaniakMitsubishi Lancer Evolution X3:55:00.319:01.36
8. Oleksandr Saliuk, Jr. Pavlo CherepinMitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX3:57:07.521:08.54
9. Benito Guerra Borja RozadaMitsubishi Lancer Evolution X3:58:47.922:48.92
10. Sébastien Loeb Daniel ElenaCitroën DS3 WRC4:06:01.930:02.9
PWRC
1. (6.) Hayden Paddon John KennardSubaru Impreza WRX STI3:53:28.30.025
2. (7.) Michał Kościuszko Maciej SzczepaniakMitsubishi Lancer Evolution X3:55:00.31:32.018
3. (8.) Oleksandr Saliuk, Jr. Pavlo CherepinMitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX3:57:07.53:39.215
4. (9.) Benito Guerra Borja RozadaMitsubishi Lancer Evolution X3:58:47.95:19.612
5. (12.) Valeriy Gorban Andrey NikolayevMitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX4:06:21.112:52.810
6. (16.) Gianluca Linari Nicola ArenaSubaru Impreza WRX STI4:14:49.221:20.98
7. (17.) Brendan Reeves Rhianon SmythSubaru Impreza WRX STI4:17:19.223:50.96
8. (18.) Nathan Quinn David GreenMitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX4:17:53.624:25.34
9. (20.) Harry Hunt Robbie DurantCitroën DS3 R34:25:40.932:12.62
10. (21.) Bader Al Jabri Stephen McAuleySubaru Impreza WRX STI4:29:41.236:12.91

Special stages

DayStageTimeNameLengthWinnerTimeAvg. spd.Rally leader
Leg 1
(8–9 September)
SS119:15Coffs Jetty Precinct 13.77 km Sébastien Ogier2:46.181.71 km/halign=left rowspan=2 Sébastien Ogier
SS219:30Coffs Jetty Precinct 23.77 km Sébastien Loeb2:41.184.25 km/h
SS310:03Shipmans 129.03 km Sébastien Loeb15:17.0113.97 km/h Sébastien Loeb
SS410:58Brooklana 112.78 km Petter Solberg10:01.976.44 km/halign=left rowspan=2 Sébastien Ogier
SS511:29Ulong 112.45 km Jari-Matti Latvala6:37.9112.64 km/h
SS614:42Shipmans 229.03 km Jari-Matti Latvala16:15.2107.17 km/halign=left rowspan=5 Mikko Hirvonen
SS715:37Brooklana 212.78 km Mikko Hirvonen10:23.173.84 km/h
SS816:08Ulong 212.45 km Jari-Matti Latvala6:55.1107.97 km/h
SS918:30Coffs Jetty Precinct 33.77 km Jari-Matti Latvala2:51.079.37 km/h
SS1018:45Coffs Jetty Precinct 43.77 km Mikko Hirvonen2:49.979.88 km/h
Leg 2
(10 September)
SS118:33Welshes 121.10 km Jari-Matti Latvala12:10.2104.03 km/halign=left rowspan=14 Jari-Matti Latvala
SS129:21Grace 119.77 km Jari-Matti Latvala11:10.9106.08 km/h
SS1310:14Valla 114.84 km Jari-Matti Latvala8:56.299.63 km/h
SS1410:54Urunga 113.79 km Jari-Matti Latvala8:41.895.14 km/h
SS1514:02Welshes 221.10 km Sébastien Ogier11:55.2106.21 km/h
SS1614:50Grace 219.77 km Sébastien Ogier10:56.0108.49 km/h
SS1715:43Valla 214.84 km Sébastien Ogier8:39.7102.80 km/h
SS1816:23Urunga 213.79 km Sébastien Loeb8:28.897.57 km/h
SS1918:30Coffs Jetty Precinct 53.77 km Sébastien Loeb2:34.987.62 km/h
SS2018:45Coffs Jetty Precinct 63.77 km Sébastien Ogier2:33.888.24 km/h
Leg 3
(11 September)
SS216:56Bucca 114.83 km Mikko Hirvonen7:18.3121.81 km/h
SS228:19Plum Pudding 130.00 km Jari-Matti Latvala16:26.3109.50 km/h
SS239:32Clarence 14.58 km Sébastien Loeb2:22.8115.46 km/h
SS2412:03Bucca 214.83 km Mikko Hirvonen7:10.6123.99 km/h
SS2513:26Plum Pudding 230.00 km Mikko Hirvonen16:07.8111.59 km/halign=left rowspan=2 Mikko Hirvonen
SS2615:30Clarence 2 (Power stage)4.58 km Sébastien Loeb2:18.1119.39 km/h

Power stage

The "Power stage" was a live, televised 4.58km (02.85miles) stage at the end of the rally, held in Clarence.

PosDriverTimeDiff.Avg. speedPoints
1 Sébastien Loeb2:18.10.0119.39 km/h3
2 Jari-Matti Latvala2:19.3+1.2118.36 km/h2
3 Petter Solberg2:19.4+1.3118.28 km/h1

Standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Sébastien Loeb196
2 Mikko Hirvonen181
3 Sebastien Ogier168
4 Jari-Matti Latvala119
5 Petter Solberg110
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
1 Citroen Total World Rally Team347
2 Ford Abu Dhabi World Rally Team285
3 M-Sport Stobart Ford World Rally Team117
4 Petter Solberg World Rally Team98
5 Ice 1 Racing48

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Itinerary. 8 September 2011. Rally Australia. World Rally Championship
    International Sportsworld Communicators
    . 2 September 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111025091631/http://www.wrc.com/resources/110902_raitinerary.pdf. 25 October 2011. dead.
  2. News: Rally Australia moves to new location. David. Evans. Autosport. Haymarket Publications. 29 September 2010. 8 September 2011.
  3. News: Hirvonen moves into top spot. 11 September 2011. 11 September 2011. World Rally Championship. International Sportsworld Communicators. https://web.archive.org/web/20120320091138/http://wrc.com/news/ss25-hirvonen-moves-into-top-spot/?fid=15379. 20 March 2012. dead.
  4. News: Ogier not giving up on top 10 in Australia. 10 September 2011. 11 September 2011. World Rally Championship. International Sportsworld Communicators. 25 September 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120925031835/http://www.wrc.com/news/ogier-not-giving-up-on-top-10-in-australia/?fid=15357. dead.
  5. News: Paddon wins rally, claims title. 11 September 2011. 11 September 2011. World Rally Championship. International Sportsworld Communicators. 1 November 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111101080055/http://wrc.com/pwrc/news/pwrc-wrap-paddon-wins-rally-claims-title/?fid=15385. dead.