Wales Rally GB explained

Wales Rally GB
Status:Defunct
Genre:Motor sporting event
Frequency:Annual
Location:Wales
Country:United Kingdom
First:1932
Last:2019
Website:https://www.rallyuk.org/

Wales Rally GB was the most recent iteration of the United Kingdom's premier international motor rally, which ran under various names since the first event held in 1932.[1] It was consistently a round of the FIA World Rally Championship (WRC) calendar from the inaugural 1973 season until the rally's final running in 2019, and was also frequently included in the British Rally Championship.[2] [3]

The first rallies in the 1930s were simply known as Royal Automobile Club (RAC) Rallies and did not necessarily require leaving England.[4] [5] In 1951 the club organised the first annual RAC International Rally of Great Britain to tour the island, and until the 53rd event in 1997 this was still commonly known as the RAC Rally.[6] [7] In 1998, amidst a restructuring of the club and its commercial activities, the event lost its RAC identity and became known as the Rally of Great Britain or Rally GB, with title sponsorship from the Government of Wales since 2003.

The last planned Wales Rally GB was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the Welsh Government withdrew sponsorship support.[8] Attempts were made to replace it with a Rally UK or Rally Northern Ireland, held entirely in Northern Ireland, however no such event has run .[9]

History

Royal Automobile Club Rallies

1930s

The inaugural event was the 1932 Royal Automobile Club Rally, which was the first major rally of the modern era in Great Britain. Of the 367 crews entered, 341 competitors in unmodified cars started from nine different towns and cities (London, Bath, Norwich, Leamington, Buxton, Harrogate, Liverpool, Newcastle upon Tyne and Edinburgh.)

The Official Programme explained:Completing the routes held no other competitive element other than following them within the time schedules, which were deliberately made easy by the RAC so that everybody made it to Torquay. However, competitors performed tests at the finish in Torquay, involving slow running, acceleration and braking. There was no official winner declared, although Colonel A. H. Loughborough in a Lanchester 15/18 was recorded as having the fewest penalty points in the decisive tests at the finish.[10] He completed the 100-yard slow driving test at an average speed of, which was found to be less punishing under the scoring system than Donald Healey found by being fastest in the 100yard acceleration test, completing it in 7.6 seconds.

The following year's RAC Rally followed a similar format, but with Hastings as the chosen finish. Over three hundred competitors entered, and this time Miss Kitty Brunell, driving an AC four-seater sports,[11] [12] was the driver with the fewest penalties. Over the next few years the rallies finished at various towns including Brighton and Blackpool. The rally was run annually until 1939, after which the outbreak of the Second World War forced its suspension.

RAC International Rallies of Great Britain

1950s: Rallies of the Tests

The first post-war RAC rally was the RAC International Rally of Great Britain 1951 and included an 1800 mile itinerary with tests of speed, hill-climbing and regularity. Although the rally still started from multiple points, the cars were convened at Silverstone racing circuit for a high speed test, and from there followed a common itinerary around Scotland, Wales and England, finishing in Bournemouth. Cars had to be standard production models and sold in quantities greater than 50. Many motor manufacturers wanted to enter teams and pressed the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders to approve the event to remove taboo surrounding the event being only for privateers.[13] [14]

The 1953 event was included as the third round of the inaugural European Touring Championship and included nine tests and part of the route was a secret.[15] The tests included acceleration and braking held at Silverstone, night driving at Castle Combe, a night climb of Prescott Hill, a speed test at Goodwood and a new 'garaging' test at Llandrindod Wells which involved driving into a garage and parking, leaving the garage on foot then proceeding to return and reverse out of the garage, all against the clock.[16] [17] An official winner was declared for the first time, Ian Appleyard, driving a Jaguar XK120.

In 1954 and the years that followed, the rally received criticism for being "no more than a navigational treasure hunt" in comparison to the rallies being held in Europe at the time such as the Alpine or Liege-Rome-Liege. These demanded exceptional driving skill, endurance or had itineraries that required a higher speed over their entire route to avoid harsher penalties. No event was held in 1957 due to the Suez Crisis,[18] but by 1958 no foreigner entered the rally at all. This didn't stop the award for best foreign driver being awarded, to Paddy Hopkirk of Northern Ireland.

For 1959, the rally was moved to November in the hope of making the rally more of a driving test in wintry weather, attempting to address concerns that the touring, regularity, road-rally wasn't necessary or worthy anymore.[19] [20]

1960s: Introduction of special stages

In 1960, organising secretary Jack Kemsley negotiated with the Forestry Commission to use a closed two-mile (3 km) gravel road named Monument Hill in Argyll, Scotland as a speed test. Times were still converted to points for the purposes of the rally competition and were based on an average speed of 40 mph.[21] Swede Eric Carlsson won the rally and was the only driver not to accrue any penalty points at all. His co-driver Stuart Turner is quoted on the Monument Hill stage in the 1987 book RAC Rally by Maurice Hamilton, saying: "there is no doubt that was the point at which the RAC Rally shifted from a traditional "Find Your Way" on the public roads rally to the type of event we know today".

In the following year, 1961, rough gravel forestry roads all over the country were opened up to the drivers and the sealed surfaces such as Oulton Park made a tiny fraction of around 200 miles of special stages. With so many, the results of the rally were based more on what happened on these stages.[22] This, with the introduction of special timing clocks and seeding of entries, secured the rally's future and appeal to international competitors, and the beginning of its reputation as one of the most gruelling and unpredictable fixtures on the calendar.[23]

By 1965 there was over 400 miles across 57 special stages held on a mix of War Department roads, racing circuits and other private venues but the majority were in the forests. In 1966, the Forestry Commission increased the compensation requested for the use of its roads and the rally gained a sponsor in The Sun newspaper to help cover the costs, which were already being assisted by Lombank.[24] From 1965, penalties accrued on the public road sections were being applied in units of time instead of points, with the total time measured on the special stages classifying the results of the rally.[25]

The 1967 event was cancelled on the eve of the event due to the outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease, so competitors staged a mock rally at the Bagshot proving ground as consolation for the press and television (ATV had been persuaded to provide major coverage with in-car cameras for the first time).

1970s: Sponsorship and spectator special stages

Until 1970 there had been no title sponsorship, but in that year the rally plates on all cars carried advertising of the event's newspaper sponsor after the name (RAC International Rally of Great Britain sponsored by the Daily Mirror). In 1971, the event's full title itself changed to become known as the Daily Mirror RAC International Rally of Great Britain.[26] This deal lasted for two further events before finance company Lombard North Central, then known as Lombank, took over title rights in 1974. The event became known as the Lombard RAC Rally, and Lombard's name became synonymous with the event for almost two decades. In 1972 Unipart were sponsoring all the 72 individual stages.

In 1971, ticketed 'spectator stages' were introduced and by 1975 had become an important part of the event's profile and source of revenue. These stages were usually short stints at stately homes or other public venues, such as Chatsworth House and Sutton Park. They were popular with spectators as they were closer to large population centres than the forests in Wales or Scotland, and organisers saw them help control the growing numbers of spectators crowding the forests.

The first day became devoted to these stages, in 1976 over 350 miles of road sections for just 14 miles of simple stages. They were often referred to as "Mickey Mouse stages" because of the lack of challenge they offered.[27] [28] Competing driver and columnist Chris Lord used the term and said he understood their purpose, but they were putting drivers off entering. Speaking of itineraries, Roger Clark said he'd rather have longer road sections than have "Mickey Mouse" stages to break them up. Nonetheless, they contributed to the results.

The seventies also saw change in the administration of organisation and authority of the sport. In 1975, the RAC's Competitions Committee was replaced by a Motor Sports Council, which was absorbed by the RAC Motor Sports Association in 1979. The legally independent association was created in December 1977 to organise motorsport events, one of which was the RAC Rally.[29] [30]

1980s

The 1985 event was the longest RAC Rally to date, with a total length of 3465km (2,153miles), with 79 hours of driving and 33 hours of rest over six days. Following the death of Henri Toivonen in 1986, limits on overall event length and stage length were put in place.[31] Night stages were still permitted, however minimum break times prevented stages taking places through the night.The 1986 RAC Rally was the last European event for Group B vehicles. These highly tuned turbocharged cars were to be banned as they were deemed too powerful and dangerous, in light of the various accidents in which they were involved. In the end, the Peugeot 205 T16 Evo. 2s of Timo Salonen, Juha Kankkunen and Mikael Sundström took three of the top four places, with only Markku Alén's second position in the Lancia Delta S4 preventing a monopoly of the podium.[32]

There were 83 finishers out of 150 starters in 1986, compared to year of worst attrition in 1981 when only 54 of the 151 starters reached the end. This was in stark contrast to the early years: in 1938, there were only 6 retirements from 237 starters.

1990s

During the 1990s, the length of the rally was gradually reduced, in line with other international rallies. 1989 was the last event to take place over 5 days, with 1995 the last event to take place over 4 days. The 1990 event was the first to allow crews to use pacenotes, as previous editions did not allow crews to perform reconnaissance runs through the route beforehand.[33]

1996 would be the last time to-date that forest stages would be run outside of Wales, with the opening leg taking place in Kielder Forest and the Scottish Borders.

Rallies of Great Britain

In 1998, 'RAC' disappeared from both the name of the rally and its organising body (RAC MSA). Earlier that year the Club had begun a lengthy process of restructuring and altering its constitution in order to sell its commercial motoring services operation to Cendant.[34] [35] [36] This sale was ultimately blocked by the state on monopoly concerns, but a sale was made early in 1999 to Lex Group.[37]

It's possible that 'RAC' was dropped by request of the existing title sponsor of the rally Network Q, who offered similar commercial services to both Cendant and Lex Group. It's more likely, though not explicitly proven, that use of RAC branding was sold as part of the motoring services deal.

2000s: New formats

In 2000, the WRC's commercial rights holder International Sportsworld Communicators was sold to a consortium led by David Richards, who revolutionised the series into a TV and spectator friendly series whilst cutting costs. One of the biggest changes implemented was to condense the rallies into a more compact area rather than touring the country, reducing 'dead air' road sections that provided little value to anybody.[38] This was quickly followed by a reduction of services, ultimately to just one central service park;[39] and the double-running of stages in a 'cloverleaf' format was supposed to provide more value for the organisers, competitors, media production and spectators.[40] Additionally, all WRC rallies followed a format of starting on a Thursday evening or Friday morning, to finishing on a Sunday afternoon.

The 2000 Rally GB could no longer start on a Sunday with a day of 'spectator stages' at the traditional stately homes or venues. Instead, tickets were needed for all special stages for the first time,[41] and all stages were run on gravel 'in the forests', with the exception of a short head-to-head super-special held at a purpose-built spectator arena in Cardiff Docks.[42] The rally started and ended in Cardiff and at no point left South or Mid-Wales,[43] the first time in the event's history it had not covered roads in England or Scotland. 2001 saw just one central service area employed at Felindre, near Swansea,[44] then in 2002 every special stage was run more than once.[45]

After 10 years of sponsorship by Network Q, the Welsh Assembly became the title sponsor in 2003, helping to cement the rally's foothold in Wales.The 2005 rally included the first indoor super special stage at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. The rally was overshadowed by a death on the final day. On stage fifteen, Peugeot driver Markko Märtin crashed heavily into a tree, and while he was unharmed his co-driver Michael Park sustained fatal injuries. It was the first death in the WRC in over a decade. The final two stages were cancelled and Sébastien Loeb, who would have won the event and the championship, voluntarily incurred a two-minute time penalty in order not to win under such circumstances, leaving Petter Solberg to be declared the victor. A memorial for Park was unveiled in Märtin's homeland of Estonia and the damaged tree on the Margam Park stage of the rally where he died bears a plaque in memorial of him.

2010s

After being centred in South Wales since 2000, the 2011 edition of the rally started in Llandudno in North Wales and then heading south towards Cardiff during the rally.[46] From 2013, the rally was centred in North Wales, with a service park located in Deeside, near Chester.[47] [48] In 2016 an agreement was reached between the MSA and Natural Resources Wales to continue to use Welsh forest stages for three years.[49]

2020s

Rally GB was one of several World Championship rallies cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, marking the first time in the history of the series that a round in Britain had not been held. A proposed move to Northern Ireland[50] was scrapped for 2021 after the prospective organisers failed to reach an agreement with local government to host the rally. As a result Rally GB was replaced by the Belgian Ypres Rally on the 2021 calendar.[51] Despite further attempts by Motorsport UK to organise a rally,[52] it did not appear on the 2022, 2023 or 2024 calendars.[53]

Character

Road Profile

British forest stages are known to feature relatively high average speeds, although for the most part not as fast as those of Scandinavia. The crests are also not as sharp and there are little-to-no natural jumps or yumps.

The stages throughout the country are known to alternate between more natural long, sweeping corners and others with manmade long straights and angular corners.

The roads are commonly smooth and all feature a hard base and minimal loose surface material. That being said Kielder stages are known to be rougher and more abrasive, as well as being heavily built-up in the centre and cambered towards the edges.

Road width varies throughout the country. Stages in North Wales and the Lake District are typically narrow, whilst those of South Wales and Kielder are much wider.

Weather

Typically run in November, rainfall is almost guaranteed and wet and muddy road conditions have become the defining characteristic of the rally throughout its history. Temperatures at this time of year rarely exceed double digits. Therefore the ideal road position is viewed to be one of the earlier cars through the stage, as the road becomes more polished or cut-up by every passing car.

Ice and snow are also not an uncommon occurrence for Britain at this time of year, and varying levels have affected the rally over the years. Editions such as 1971, 1988 and 1993 featured heavy snow conditions, particularly in the Northern-most sections of the route. The most recent edition to be affected by freezing conditions was 2008, when several stages on the opening day had to be either shortened or cancelled due to substantial ice. The issue of freezing is further complicated by the outlaw of studded tyres in British forests by the Forestry Commission, in order to prevent damage to the roads.

The unique weather conditions encountered on the rally have been viewed as a major put-off for several top drivers. Double world champion Walter Röhrl perhaps being the most high profile competitor to state his dislike for the event.

Title showdowns

For many years the rally has traditionally been the last round of the World Championship, and therefore has staged many famous down-to-the-wire showdowns.

In 1991 the world championship came down-to-the-wire in the British forests, with Lancia driver Juha Kankkunen edging out Toyota's Carlos Sainz after the Spaniard suffered engine issues and went off the road in Kielder Forest and damaged his car.[54]

One year later and Sainz and Kankkunen returned to the RAC along with Frenchman Didier Auriol to fight for the 1992 title. Auriol's challenge would end with engine failure, and Kankkunen's hopes were also dashed when he went off and damaged his steering on the final day of the rally in southern Scotland. Sainz eventually won the rally and with it claimed his second world title.[55]

In 1995, it was estimated that around 2 million fans lined the forests to witness Scotsman Colin McRae win his second consecutive RAC Rally. In the process he beat teammate Carlos Sainz to take his first and only world title in front of thousands of fans at Chester Racecourse.[56]

McRae would have less fortune in future years; despite winning again in 1997, he was pipped to the title by Finn Tommi Mäkinen by just one point.[57] The Scot would come up short again in 2001 when he crashed out of an early lead, gifting the championship to his English rival Richard Burns.[58]

One of the most dramatic showdowns was 1998, when championship leader Tommi Mäkinen crashed out on one of the first day's spectator stages after his Mitsubishi hit a patch of oil, slid and tore a wheel off. This seemingly handed the title to Toyota's Carlos Sainz. However, in a cruel twist of fate Sainz's engine let go just 300 meters from the finish line of the final stage, meaning that Mäkinen claimed the championship title, with Luis Moya famously throwing his helmet through the car's rear window in frustration.[59]

In 2003, a four-way title fight was narrowed down to just two when Burns was forced to withdraw from the event for medical reasons, which would tragically claim his life two years later, and Carlos Sainz crashed out. In the end, Norwegian Petter Solberg would win the rally ahead of Sébastien Loeb, and consequently beat the Frenchman to claim his only world rally title by just one point.[60]

Nordic successes

Nordic drivers have enjoyed rich pickings in the RAC Rally through the years. Home drivers won the first six runnings of the race from 1953, when an outright winner was first declared. However, in 1960 Erik Carlsson of Sweden drove his Saab 96 to a hat-trick of victories in 1960–1962. Of the nine drivers to have won three or more rallies, five have been Swedes, Finns or Norwegians. The record for most victories is currently five, won by Sébastien Ogier (2013–2016, 2018), who surpassed Finnish Hannu Mikkola (1978–79, 1981–82) and Norwegian Petter Solberg (2002–2005). Though, last time a Nordic driver won Rally GB, was in 2012 (Jari-Matti Latvala).

Title sponsors

Until 1970 there had been no title sponsorship, but in that year the rally plates on all cars carried advertising of the event's newspaper sponsor after the name (RAC International Rally of Great Britain sponsored by the Daily Mirror). In 1971, the event's full title itself changed to become known as the Daily Mirror RAC International Rally of Great Britain. This deal lasted for two further events before finance company Lombard North Central, then known as Lombank, took over title rights in 1974. The event became known as the Lombard RAC Rally, and Lombard's name became synonymous with the event.

Following Lombard's withdrawal of sponsorship after nineteen years, the rally became known as the Network Q RAC Rally and later, the Network Q Rally of Great Britain. The rally moved its operational base to Cardiff in 2000 and competitive stage mileage was concentrated in Wales. With sponsorship from the Welsh Government, the event was known as the Wales Rally GB.

However, with such an extensive history covering the whole country, there were demands for the "glory days" of the old RAC Rally. In this spirit, two events have recently been established, and cover the same classic stages which are no longer part of the WRC itinerary. The RAC Revival Rally uses modern, but less powerful cars, while the Roger Albert Clark Rally is a historic event using only pre-1972 machinery, and named after the first home winner of the race as a World Championship event.

Past winners

YearEventFinishWinner(s)Vehicle
1932Torquay Rally[61] Torquay Col. LoughboroughLanchester
1933RAC RallyHastings Miss Kitty BrunellAC four-seater sports
1934RAC RallyBournemouth F R G SpikinsSinger Le Mans
1935RAC RallyEastbourneNo winners announced
1936RAC RallyTorquay C E A WestcottAustin 7
1937RAC RallyHastings Jack HarropSS Jaguar 100
1938RAC RallyBlackpool Jack HarropSS Jaguar 100
1939RAC RallyBrighton Abiegeg FaneBMW 328
1940–50Not held
19511st RAC RallyBournemouth Ian Appleyard
Mrs. Pat Appleyard
Jaguar XK120
19522nd RAC RallyScarborough Godfrey Imhof
Mrs. Barbara Frayling
Allard-Cadillac J2
19533rd RAC RallyHastings Ian Appleyard
Mrs. Pat Appleyard
Jaguar XK120
19544th RAC RallyBlackpool John Wallwork
Harold Brooks
Triumph TR2
19555th RAC RallyHastings Jimmy Ray
Brian Horrocks
Standard Ten
19566th RAC RallyBlackpool Lyndon Sims
Rupert Jones
Tony Ambrose
Aston Martin DB2
1957Not held
19587th RAC RallyHastings Peter Harper
Dr Bill Deane
Sunbeam Rapier
19598th RAC RallyLondon Gerald Burgess
Sam Croft-Pearson
Ford Zephyr Six
19609th RAC RallyBrands Hatch Erik Carlsson
Stuart Turner
Saab 96
196110th RAC RallyBrighton Erik Carlsson
John Brown
Saab 96
196211th RAC RallyBournemouth Erik Carlsson
David Stone
Saab 96
196312th RAC RallyBournemouth Tom Trana
Sune Lundström
Volvo PV544
196413th RAC RallyLondon Tom Trana
Gunnar Thermanius
Volvo PV544
196514th RAC RallyLondon Rauno Aaltonen
Tony Ambrose
BMC Mini Cooper S 1275
196615th RAC RallyLondon Bengt Söderström
Gunnar Palm
Lotus Cortina
1967Cancelled due to outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease
196816th RAC RallyLondon Simo Lampinen
John Davenport
Saab 96 V4
196917th RAC RallyLondon Harry Källström
Gunnar Häggbom
Lancia Fulvia 1.6 Coupé HF
197018th RAC RallyLondon Harry Källström
Gunnar Häggbom
Lancia Fulvia 1.6 Coupé HF
197119th Daily Mirror RAC RallyHarrogate Stig Blomqvist
Arne Hertz
Saab 96 V4
197220th Daily Mirror RAC RallyYork Roger Clark
Tony Mason
Ford Escort RS1600
197321st Daily Mirror RAC RallyYork Timo Mäkinen
Henry Liddon
Ford Escort RS1600
197422nd Lombard RAC RallyYork Timo Mäkinen
Henry Liddon
Ford Escort RS1600
197523rd Lombard RAC RallyYork Timo Mäkinen
Henry Liddon
Ford Escort RS1800
197624th Lombard RAC RallyBath Roger Clark
Stuart Pegg
Ford Escort RS1800
197725th Lombard RAC RallyYork Björn Waldegård
Hans Thorszelius
Ford Escort RS1800
197826th Lombard RAC RallyBirmingham Hannu Mikkola
Arne Hertz
Ford Escort RS1800
197927th Lombard RAC RallyChester Hannu Mikkola
Arne Hertz
Ford Escort RS1800
198028th Lombard RAC RallyBath Henri Toivonen
Paul White
Talbot Sunbeam Lotus
198129th Lombard RAC RallyChester Hannu Mikkola
Arne Hertz
Audi Quattro
198230th Lombard RAC RallyYork Hannu Mikkola
Arne Hertz
Audi Quattro
198331st Lombard RAC RallyBath Stig Blomqvist
Björn Cederberg
Audi Quattro A2
198432nd Lombard RAC RallyChester Ari Vatanen
Terry Harryman
Peugeot 205 Turbo 16
198533rd Lombard RAC RallyNottingham Henri Toivonen
Neil Wilson
Lancia Delta S4
198634th Lombard RAC RallyBath Timo Salonen
Seppo Harjanne
Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 E2
198735th Lombard RAC RallyChester Juha Kankkunen
Juha Piironen
Lancia Delta HF 4WD
198836th Lombard RAC RallyHarrogate Markku Alen
Ilkka Kivimäki
Lancia Delta Integrale
198937th Lombard RAC RallyNottingham Pentti Airikkala
Ronan McNamee
Mitsubishi Galant VR-4
199038th Lombard RAC RallyHarrogate Carlos Sainz
Luis Moya
Toyota Celica GT-Four ST165
199139th Lombard RAC RallyHarrogate Juha Kankkunen
Juha Piironen
Lancia Delta Integrale 16V
199240th Lombard RAC RallyChester Carlos Sainz
Luis Moya
Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD
199349th Network Q RAC RallyBirmingham Juha Kankkunen
Nicky Grist
Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD
199450th Network Q RAC RallyChester Colin McRae
Derek Ringer
Subaru Impreza 555
199551st Network Q RAC RallyChester Colin McRae
Derek Ringer
Subaru Impreza 555
199652nd Network Q RAC RallyChester Armin Schwarz
Denis Giraudet
Toyota Celica GT-Four ST205
199753rd Network Q RAC RallyCheltenham Colin McRae
Nicky Grist
Subaru Impreza WRC 97
199854th Network Q Rally of Great BritainCheltenham Richard Burns
Robert Reid
Mitsubishi Carisma GT Evolution V
199955th Network Q Rally of Great BritainCheltenham Richard Burns
Robert Reid
Subaru Impreza WRC 99
200056th Network Q Rally of Great BritainCardiff Richard Burns
Robert Reid
Subaru Impreza WRC 2000
200157th Network Q Rally of Great BritainCardiff Marcus Grönholm
Timo Rautiainen
Peugeot 206 WRC
200258th Network Q Rally of Great BritainCardiff Petter Solberg
Phil Mills
Subaru Impreza WRC 2002
200359th Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Petter Solberg
Phil Mills
Subaru Impreza WRC 2003
200460th Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Petter Solberg
Phil Mills
Subaru Impreza WRC 2004
200561st Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Petter Solberg
Phil Mills
Subaru Impreza WRC 2005
200662nd Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Marcus Grönholm
Timo Rautiainen
Ford Focus RS WRC 06
200763rd Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Mikko Hirvonen
Jarmo Lehtinen
Ford Focus RS WRC 07
200864th Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Sébastien Loeb
Daniel Elena
Citroën C4 WRC
200965th Rally of Great BritainCardiff Sébastien Loeb
Daniel Elena
Citroën C4 WRC
201066th Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Sébastien Loeb
Daniel Elena
Citroën C4 WRC
201167th Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Ford Fiesta RS WRC
201268th Wales Rally of Great BritainCardiff Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Ford Fiesta RS WRC
201369th Wales Rally of Great BritainDeeside Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Polo R WRC
201470th Wales Rally of Great BritainDeeside Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Polo R WRC
201571st Wales Rally of Great BritainDeeside Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Polo R WRC
201672nd Wales Rally of Great BritainDeeside Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Polo R WRC
201773rd Wales Rally of Great BritainDeeside Elfyn Evans
Daniel Barritt
Ford Fiesta WRC
201874th Wales Rally of Great BritainDeeside Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Ford Fiesta WRC
201975th Wales Rally of Great BritainLlandudno Ott Tänak
Martin Järveoja
Toyota Yaris WRC
202076th Wales Rally of Great BritainDeesidealign=center colspan=2Cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns

Multiple winners

WinsDriver
5 Sébastien Ogier
4
3
Sébastien Loeb
Erik Carlsson
2
Carlos Sainz
WinsManufacturers
15 Ford
9 Subaru
6 Lancia
5 Saab
Toyota
4 Volkswagen
Jaguar
3
Audi
2 Lotus
Mitsubishi

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History of the Rally – Rally UK . 2022-09-03 . Official history.
  2. Web site: Wales Rally GB - Motorsport UK - The beating heart of UK motorsport . 2022-09-03 . Motorsport UK . en-GB.
  3. Web site: Shacki . Rally of Great Britain - eWRC-results . 2022-09-03 . eWRC-results.com . en . ewrc.
  4. Web site: 18 Dec 1931, 6 - The Daily Telegraph at Newspapers.com . 2022-09-03 . Newspapers.com . en.
  5. Web site: 1 Jan 1932, 8 - The Kensington News and West London Times at Newspapers.com . 2022-09-03 . Newspapers.com . en.
  6. Book: ROBSON, GRAHAM . GREAT BRITISH RALLY : rac to rally gb - thecomplete story. . 2020 . VELOCE PUBLISHING . 978-1-78711-736-5 . [S.l.] . 1198556633.
  7. Book: Gardiner, Tony . RAC rally action! . 2005 . Veloce . 978-1-903706-97-8 . Dorchester . 163614703.
  8. Web site: 2020-06-09 . Why inevitable Rally GB decision is still a hammer blow . 2022-09-03 . DirtFish . en-US.
  9. Web site: 2023-10-19 . WRC reveals 13-round 2024 calendar . 2023-10-23 . www.autosport.com . en.
  10. http://www.ukmotorsport.com/networkq/1997/history.html "History of the RAC Rally"
  11. https://web.archive.org/web/20140826191534/http://www.acheritage.co.uk/History4.html Charles and William Hurlock...and still the finest!
  12. https://www.gettyimages.no/detail/news-photo/kitty-brunell-and-her-winning-ac-4-seater-tourer-rac-rally-news-photo/615476276 Kitty Brunell and her winning AC 4-seater tourer, RAC Rally, March 1933
  13. Web site: 25 Jan 1951, 5 - Herald Express at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-22 . Newspapers.com . en.
  14. Web site: 20 Apr 1951, 13 - The Daily Telegraph at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-22 . Newspapers.com . en.
  15. Web site: Shacki . Season 1953 rally - eWRC-results . 2022-08-22 . eWRC-results.com . en.
  16. Web site: 23 Mar 1953, 5 - Birmingham Post at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-22 . Newspapers.com . en.
  17. Web site: 24 Mar 1953, 6 - Herald Express at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-22 . Newspapers.com . en.
  18. Web site: History of the Rally – Rally UK . 2022-08-22.
  19. Web site: 11 Nov 1959, 13 - The Daily Telegraph at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-22 . Newspapers.com . en.
  20. Web site: 17 Nov 1959, 1 - Coventry Evening Telegraph at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-22 . Newspapers.com . en.
  21. Web site: 23 Nov 1960, 31 - The Birmingham Post and Birmingham Gazette at Newspapers.com . 2022-09-10 . Newspapers.com . en.
  22. Web site: 11 Nov 1963, 13 - The Daily Telegraph at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-24 . Newspapers.com . en.
  23. http://www.carkeys.co.uk/columns/ross_finlay/1501.asp "Jack Kemsley And The Forests"
  24. Web site: 4 Aug 1966, 7 - Birmingham Evening Mail and Despatch at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-24 . Newspapers.com . en.
  25. Web site: 23 Sep 1966, 4 - Retford Gainsborough and Worksop Times at Newspapers.com . 2022-08-24 . Newspapers.com . en.
  26. Web site: Shacki . Rally of Great Britain - eWRC-results . 2022-12-24 . eWRC-results.com . en.
  27. http://www.rallynews.net/~rallynews.net/public_html/2001/kent01/rally_news_no8.htm Francois Duval, "Unofficial Leaderboard after Stage 16 (final stage), Rally of Kent (Formula Rally)"
  28. Web site: 7 May 2013 . Mickey Mouse stage and Michael Park . 23 September 2022 . Scivi.air-nifty.com . Autosport.
  29. Web site: History of Governance . . 8 March 2021.
  30. Web site: MOTORSPORT UK ASSOCIATION LIMITED overview - Find and update company information - GOV.UK . 2022-09-16 . find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk . en.
  31. Web site: 2020-04-12 . WRC History: RAC Rally 1985 . 2023-10-23 . It Gets Faster Now! . en.
  32. Web site: Lombard RAC Rally 1986 Results . eERC Results .
  33. News: Phillips . Gerry . December 1990 . RAC Rally Preview - Rallyman's Radar . . 22 November 2020.
  34. Web site: Sale of RAC to be finalised in September? . FleetNews.co.uk . 19 August 1998.
  35. Web site: dls . 2022-05-06 . Re RAC Motoring Services Ltd: ChD 8 Jul 1998 . 2022-09-16 . swarb.co.uk . en-US.
  36. Web site: Board dispute won't affect our services, says RAC .
  37. Web site: The History Of The RAC Timelines and Services RAC . 2022-09-16 . www.rac.co.uk.
  38. Web site: 2009-04-01 . Can rallying grab the FIA's lifeline? An analysis: AutoWeek Magazine . https://web.archive.org/web/20090401233046/http://www.autoweek.com/article/20090326/wrc/903269971 . 2009-04-01 . 2022-09-21 .
  39. Book: Holmes, Martin . FIA In Motion - Mosley's Rallying Achievement . 2009 . 45.
  40. Book: Næss, Hans Erik . A sociology of the World Rally Championship : history, identity, memories and place . 2014 . 978-1-137-40544-9 . Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire . 892339979.
  41. Web site: History of the Rally – Rally UK . 2022-09-21.
  42. Web site: Shacki . Itinerary Network Q Rally of Great Britain 2000 . 2022-09-21 . eWRC-results.com . en.
  43. Web site: Maps Rally of Great Britain 2000 [WRC] ]. 2022-09-21 . Rally-Maps.com . en.
  44. Web site: Shacki . Itinerary Network Q Rally of Great Britain 2001 . 2022-09-21 . eWRC-results.com . en.
  45. Web site: Shacki . Itinerary Network Q Rally of Great Britain 2002 . 2022-09-21 . eWRC-results.com . en.
  46. News: 2011-11-13 . Wales Rally GB in £1.4m Welsh government boost for 2012 . en-GB . BBC News . 2023-10-23.
  47. Web site: 2013-04-25 . Rally GB picks Deeside as new base in moves to north Wales . 2023-10-23 . www.autosport.com . en.
  48. Web site: 2020-02-12 . Wales Rally GB will return to Deeside after one year in Llandudno . 2023-10-23 . www.autosport.com . en.
  49. News: 21 September 2016 . Forest rallying deal reached with Natural Resources Wales . BBC News . 21 September 2016.
  50. News: Pontin . James . 20 Dec 2020 . Wales Rally GB: Event set to move around the UK from 2021 . en-GB . BBC Sport . 2023-10-23.
  51. https://www.motorsport.com/wrc/news/ypres-rally-uk-round-cancelled/4943710/?ic_source=home-page-widget&ic_medium=widget&ic_campaign=widget-6 Belgium replaces UK on 2021 WRC calendar
  52. Web site: 2023-04-26 . WRC Rally UK 2024 bid deadline extended . 2023-10-23 . www.autosport.com . en.
  53. Web site: 2023-06-29 . UK “unlikely” to secure 2024 WRC round, Argentina vying for Americas spot . 2023-10-23 . www.autosport.com . en.
  54. Web site: Remember When 1991 . wrc.com . WRC.
  55. Web site: Carlos Sainz and the 1992 World Championship . Boxrepsol.com . 10 October 2020 . Repsol.
  56. Web site: When Colin McRae won the 1995 title . www.motorsportmagazine.com/ . 3 October 2016 . Motorsport Magazine.
  57. Web site: 1997 World Rally Championship . Motorsports Stats . motorsportstats.com.
  58. Web site: Subaru's Richard Burns - 2001 World Rally Champion . Motorsport.com .
  59. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgn9_s-SUMo WRC 1998 - Review (English)
  60. Web site: 2003 World Rally Championship . Motorsports Stats .
  61. Book: Hamilton . Maurice . RAC Rally 1932-1986 . 1987 . Partridge . 1852250291.