Poland WRC: Thierry Neuville seals victory 8 stage win of the rally


Thierry Neuville closed the gap on WRC points leader Sebastien Ogier by sealing his third victory of the year with a straightforward run through the final two stages of Rally Poland.

Neuville began the final loop of the rally with a massive advantage of 1m03.3s over Hyundai teammate Hayden Paddon following Ott Tanak’s off on SS21, which forced the Estonian to retire from the rally on the following road section.

On SS22, the second run through the 11km Orzysz test, Neuville extended his lead further still with his eighth stage win of the rally, taking an advantage of 1m13s over Paddon into the Power Stage.

The Belgian took few risks on the 18km final stage, Paprotki 2, setting the fifth-fastest time to secure his maiden Rally Poland win and a fifth victory of his WRC career.

“I’m really happy, we’ve been really strongest again the last couple of events,” said Neuville. “We’re closing the gap to Ogier and this is a good achievement.

“It was really tough this weekend, I was happy to finish the final stage relaxed with a big margin.”

Paddon maintained second, 1m23s behind teammate Neuville, securing his best finish of the year so far and his best since his Rally Argentina win last year.

Dani Sordo also suffered problems on SS22, picking up a front-right puncture three kilometres from the end of the stage, but managed to hang on to fourth in the third Hyundai.

Making his top-line debut, M-Sport’s Teemu Suninen began the final stage in fifth, but a Power Stage spin dropped the 23-year-old Finn behind of the best of the Citroens, Stephane Lefebvre, into sixth. 

Mads Ostberg held seventh in his privateer Fiesta, ahead of Elfyn Evans’ DMACK Ford, while the second Citroen of Andreas Mikkelsen leapfrogged the Toyota of Juho Hanninen for ninth on the Power Stage.

Jari-Matti Latvala, whose Toyota stopped on Saturday with a technical problem, scored maximum bonus points in the finale to move ahead of Tanak into third in the points, albeit now 48 behind Ogier.

In WRC2, Skoda privateer Ole Christian Veiby took his first-ever victory in the category, ahead of the works Fabia R5 of Pontus Tidemand.

Thierry Neuville closed the gap on WRC points leader Sebastien Ogier by sealing his third victory of the year with a straightforward run through the final two stages of Rally Poland.

Neuville began the final loop of the rally with a massive advantage of 1m03.3s over Hyundai teammate Hayden Paddon following Ott Tanak's off on SS21, which forced the Estonian to retire from the rally on the following road section.

On SS22, the second run through the 11km Orzysz test, Neuville extended his lead further still with his eighth stage win of the rally, taking an advantage of 1m13s over Paddon into the Power Stage.

The Belgian took few risks on the 18km final stage, Paprotki 2, setting the fifth-fastest time to secure his maiden Rally Poland win and a fifth victory of his WRC career.

"I'm really happy, we've been really strongest again the last couple of events," said Neuville. "We're closing the gap to Ogier and this is a good achievement.

"It was really tough this weekend, I was happy to finish the final stage relaxed with a big margin."

Paddon maintained second, 1m23s behind teammate Neuville, securing his best finish of the year so far and his best since his Rally Argentina win last year.

Dani Sordo also suffered problems on SS22, picking up a front-right puncture three kilometres from the end of the stage, but managed to hang on to fourth in the third Hyundai.

Making his top-line debut, M-Sport's Teemu Suninen began the final stage in fifth, but a Power Stage spin dropped the 23-year-old Finn behind of the best of the Citroens, Stephane Lefebvre, into sixth. 

Mads Ostberg held seventh in his privateer Fiesta, ahead of Elfyn Evans' DMACK Ford, while the second Citroen of Andreas Mikkelsen leapfrogged the Toyota of Juho Hanninen for ninth on the Power Stage.

Jari-Matti Latvala, whose Toyota stopped on Saturday with a technical problem, scored maximum bonus points in the finale to move ahead of Tanak into third in the points, albeit now 48 behind Ogier.

In WRC2, Skoda privateer Ole Christian Veiby took his first-ever victory in the category, ahead of the works Fabia R5 of Pontus Tidemand.

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