Rally Japan Explained

Rally Japan
Genre:Rallying
Frequency:Annual
Location:Chūbu region
Country:Japan
First:2004

Rally Japan (ラリージャパン) is a rally competition held in Hokkaidō, Japan. The event made its debut in the FIA World Rally Championship during the 2004 season. From 2004 to 2007, the event was held on the twisty and narrow gravel roads of the Tokachi region near Obihiro. For the 2008 season, the event was moved to the region close to Sapporo, Hokkaidō's main city. Rally Japan was not held in 2009, but returned in 2010 for one year. Rally Japan was planned to return in 2020 to the new location of Nagoya, but was cancelled on August 19 due to COVID-19 pandemic in Japan. It was cancelled again in 2021, and returned as the last rally of the season in 2022.[1]

History

Rally Hokkaido was first organised as part of the 2002 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship on the northern island of Hokkaidō. After two successful rallies the event was renamed Rally Japan and promoted to the 2004 World Rally Championship schedule. The rally was won by the 2003 world champion Petter Solberg of the Subaru World Rally Team. For 2005 the World and Asia-Pacific Rally events were split into two separate event with the APRC round returning to the Rally Hokkaido name.

The 2005 Rally Japan was held on September 30 through October 2. Headquarters and the service park were located in and near Obihiro, Hokkaidō. The rally was won by Marcus Grönholm in a Peugeot 307 WRC 1:22.1 ahead of Sébastien Loeb in a Citroën Xsara WRC. This was the last of the three world rally wins for the 307 WRC, and also the last win for the Peugeot factory team. The 2006 event was won by Loeb 5.6 seconds ahead of Grönholm.

Rally Japan was the fourteenth rally on the World Rally Championship schedule for the 2007 season. It featured 27 special stages, and was won by Mikko Hirvonen of BP Ford World Rally Team. This win was third in Hirvonen's career as a top level rally driver. The 2007 edition of the event was also remarkable for the retirements of both 2007 title contenders on the same rally; Marcus Grönholm retired on the first day of the rally after heavily damaging the roll cage of his Ford Focus RS WRC 07 on stage four. Sébastien Loeb retired on the next leg of the rally after his co-driver Daniel Elena called out the wrong pace note instruction for the first time in ten years.

In December 2007, Rally Japan organisers announced that for the 2008 WRC season the event will move from Obihiro to Sapporo, the biggest city in Hokkaidō. The 2008 Rally Japan featured 29 stages, including five super specials at the Sapporo Dome. The event saw Hirvonen take his second win in Japan in a row, ahead of his teammate Jari-Matti Latvala and Citroën Total's Sébastien Loeb, who secured a record fifth title with his third-place finish. The rally also featured a bad crash by François Duval, which injured his co-driver Patrick Pivato.[2]

The 2022 Rally Japan saw the event returns to the calendar for the first time since . The rally moved its headquarters from Hokkaidō to a new base in Nagoya and is run on tarmac rather than gravel.[3]

Past winners

SeasonDriver
Co-driver
CarEvent report
2004 Petter Solberg
Phil Mills
Subaru Impreza WRC 2004Report
2005 Marcus Grönholm[4]
Timo Rautiainen
Peugeot 307 WRCReport
2006 Sébastien Loeb[5]
Daniel Elena
Citroën Xsara WRCReport
2007 Mikko Hirvonen[6]
Jarmo Lehtinen
Ford Focus RS WRC 07Report
2008 Mikko Hirvonen[7]
Jarmo Lehtinen
Ford Focus RS WRC 08Report
2010 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Citroën C4 WRCReport
2011–2019Not held
2020–2021Cancelled
2022 Thierry Neuville
Martijn Wydaeghe
Hyundai i20 N Rally1Report
2023 Elfyn Evans
Scott Martin
Toyota GR Yaris Rally1Report

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Excitement builds following 2022 calendar announcement. 2022-01-23. WRC - World Rally Championship. en.
  2. Web site: Patrick Pivato injury update . 6 November 2008 . walesrallygb.com . 2018-10-18.
  3. News: Belgium gets WRC round for the first time after Rally Japan axed. Jamie. Klein. autosport.com. Motorsport Network. 19 August 2020. 19 August 2020.
  4. Web site: World Rally Championship – Rallies . WRC . 2008-07-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080605221445/http://www.wrc.com/jsp/index.jsp?lnk=410&season=2005 . 2008-06-05 .
  5. Web site: World Rally Championship – Rallies . WRC . 2008-07-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080214180437/http://www.wrc.com/jsp/index.jsp?lnk=410&season=2006 . 2008-02-14 .
  6. Web site: World Rally Championship – Rallies . WRC . 2008-07-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080606043625/http://www.wrc.com/jsp/index.jsp?lnk=410&season=2007 . 2008-06-06 .
  7. Web site: World Rally Championship – Rallies . WRC . 2008-11-03 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081112013210/http://www.wrc.com/jsp/index.jsp?lnk=400&season=2008 . 2008-11-12 .