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2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 12 – Rally New Zealand (3-6 October) 
Sunday 6 October 2002 
News Release #5



MITSUBISHI BUOYED BY GRAVEL PROGRESS



The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup finished Rally New Zealand in ninth position after 26 special stages and 411.40 competitive kilometres. Team-mates Jani Paasonen and Arto Kapanen had enjoyed a sensational pace over the weekend, underlining the potential of the Lancer Evolution WRC2, however the Finnish pair were forced onto the sidelines
during the second leg. 

Rally New Zealand was won by Marcus Gronholm who registered his fourth victory of the season in the Peugeot 206WRC. More significantly, the Finn and co-driver Timo Rautiainen have clinched the Drivers' Championship after nearest rivals
Richard Burns and Colin McRae crashed out of the event. The Drivers' crown therefore returns to Finland for the 12th time in the 25-year history of the Championship. In another crushing display of domination, Peugeot's Harri Rovanpera finished second, recording the French manufacturers' eighth maximum points haul of the year, assuring them the FIA World Rally Championship for
Manufacturers for the third consecutive year. 

After one of the longest days in the FIA World Rally Championship and one of the shortest overnight halts of the year - courtesy of the clocks moving forward one hour last night - 46 bleary eyed crews left Auckland at 06:00 hrs for the final leg of
Rally New Zealand. The route, which was the shortest of the three, was still no cruise to the finish however and the contenders faced eight special stages and 90.16 kilometres of competition. Weather conditions remained dry, clear blue skies
and 24 degree temperatures adding to the spectacular scenery around the southern base of Te Kauwhata, 75 kilometres south of the city. 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup maintained position throughout the leg to return to Auckland in ninth position. "There was a lot of loose gravel on the stages this morning and the long one (SS20) was the most difficult stage of the rally because there was so much dust and the roads are very narrow," commented François. "Running just one car back
makes a difference, although we were still cleaning the roads of loose gravel. We backed off in the last couple of stages because there was no sense in pushing to the very end. Having looked at the data to analyse Jani's driving style here, we've
now learned more about the technique that works best with the Mitsubishi in these conditions."  

Adding to François' comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team manager Derek Dauncey said: "Jani's performance and his series of exceptional stage times has been the highlight of the season so far. He approached the event with a very mature attitude and did exactly what the team asked of him, and more. His brief was to set competitive stage times and he performed that task perfectly. Obviously it was disappointing to lose him, but we've now shown the car is competitive, with
Jani consistently beating the Fords and Subarus. François lacked confidence in his driving in the first leg; he was happy with the car but his stage times didn't reflect that. This meant he was first on the road for leg two, which obviously had a
huge effect from there on. However, he used the rest of the event to gain knowledge and experience that he and the team can take forward to Australia." 

Meanwhile… 

Just 10 of the FIA World Rally Championship contenders finished Rally New Zealand, some of the event's legendary winners crashing out, including Colin McRae (Ford) and Richard Burns (Peugeot). Marcus Gronholm (Peugeot) however
went on to win for the fourth time this year. Team-mate Harri Rovanpera maintained
second position but a late scare with hydraulic problems in stage 24 slowed the Finn significantly and he was relieved to make the finish. Third-placed Petter Solberg was forced into a heart-wrenching retirement in the penultimate stage, the engine in the Subaru expiring after the Norwegian was almost guaranteed a podium
position for the fourth time this year. Team-mate Tommi Makinen therefore inherited third, notching up his fourth points finish of the season. Carlos Sainz (Ford) too had a scare in stage 24, the Spaniard going off the road, hitting a tree
and damaging the suspension. Fortunately repairs were facilitated at the end of the stage and the Madrid-based driver finished fourth overall. Hyundai recorded its best performance of the year, the Korean manufacturer claiming points with Juha
Kankkunen and Freddy Loix, both of whom also picked up the last drivers' points. 

Coming next … 

The FIA World Rally Championship contenders remain in the Southern Hemisphere
for the penultimate round, Rally Australia (31 October-3 November). Based in Perth, the remotest city in the world, the event is one of the highlights of the year, despite the exacting challenge of precision car control over fast narrow stages covered in unique marble-shaped gravel. 

Rally New Zealand – Final Results 

1. Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 3hr 58min 45.4sec 
2. Harri Rovanpera/Voitto Silander Peugeot 4hr 02min 33.0sec 
3. Tommi Makinen/Kaj Lindstrom Subaru 4hr 03min 11.7sec 
4. Carlos Sainz/Luis Moya Ford 4hr 04min 34.3sec 
5. Juha Kankkunen/Juha Repo Hyundai 4hr 05min 55.6sec 
6. Freddy Loix/Sven Smeets Hyundai 4hr 06min 37.9sec 
7. Gilles Panizzi/Herve Panizzi Peugeot 4hr 07min 09.8sec 
8. Toni Gardemeister/Paavo Lukander Skoda 4hr 07min 41.5sec 
9. François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 4hr 09min 29.0sec 
10. Armin Schwarz/Manfred Hiemer Hyundai 4hr 10min 20.2sec 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers 

Marcus Gronholm 67 points 
Richard Burns 34 points 
Colin McRae 33 points 
Gilles Panizzi 31 points 
Carlos Sainz 29 points 
Harri Rovanpera 24 points 
Petter Solberg 23 points 
Tommi Makinen 19 points 
Sebastien Loeb 18 points 
Markko Martin 12 points 
Philippe Bugalski 7 points 
Thomas Radstrom 4 points 
Alister McRae 2 points 
Toni Gardemeister 2 points 
Bruno Thiry 2 points 
Juha Kankkunen 2 points 
Kenneth Eriksson 1 point 
Jesus Puras 1 point 
Freddy Loix 1 point 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers 

Peugeot 147 points 
Ford 89 points 
Subaru 50 points 
Mitsubishi 9 points 
Hyundai 9 points 
Skoda 8 points 
2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 11 – Rallye Sanremo (19-22 September) 
Sunday 22 September 2002 



DELECOUR SCORES A POINT FOR MITSUBISHI 



The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup scored a point for Mitsubishi in the 2002 Rallye Sanremo when they brought their Lancer Evolution WRC2 home in 10th position, sixth of the registered crews. 

Gilles Panizzi notched up his third consecutive victory on Italy's asphalt roads and remarkably Peugeot scored yet another one-two points haul - it's seventh of the season - when Marcus Gronholm finished second. The French manufacturer now
holds a commanding 45 point advantage over Ford with 48 points left to claim. In the Drivers' Championship, Marcus Gronholm continues to lead, the Finn 23 points ahead of team-mate Richard Burns. Colin McRae slips to third, just one point
behind his fellow countryman, with Gilles Panizzi moving up to fourth. 

Just 36 of the original 53 crews contesting Rallye Sanremo took the re-start in the Riviera resort early this morning for the final day of competition in the Ligurian mountains. Today's route included two loops of two stages totalling 88.02 kilometres which brought the crews back to Sanremo for the finish at 15:00 hrs (local GMT-2). Weather conditions have, contrary to forecasts earlier in the week,
remained dry, clear and sunny, providing a consistent surface for the drivers as they powered over the twisty roads high above the Mediterranean coastline. 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup maintained their 10th position throughout the day, the deficit to rivals ahead too great to overcome in just four stages. 

"The first stage was quite good, the surface was very smooth with no bumps - very fast, like a circuit," commented François. "We were flat-out in both stages this morning, but we eased off this afternoon since the gap was realistically too big to
close and we didn't want to take any risks. It's been a tough rally with so many competitive cars and drivers, and I think if we hadn't lost time on the first leg with  the turbo problem we would have had a big fight with Colin (McRae) through most
of the event. However, we've definitely seen an improvement with the car, especially from the engine, and although we need to carry on developing it and moving forward, this has given us yet more information and idea of which direction to move. Also I'm really pleased to have got another point for Mitsubishi." 

Adding to his comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart Team Director John Easton said: "With the troubles we had at the beginning of the event and the time lost, to come away with a manufacturer point is very pleasing. The stage times are showing that we've improved the performance of the car, and we're looking forward to continuing this development for the remaining three events of the season." 

Meanwhile… 

The face of the leaderboard remained unchanged during the final leg, Gilles Panizzi (Peugeot) maintaining a steady pace to guarantee victory, his third of the season. Team-mate Marcus Gronholm drove with a degree of caution, again to secure
maximum points for Peugeot. Petter Solberg (Subaru) was delighted to finish on the podium in third position, his highest-ever finish on an asphalt rally. Having lost the position to the Norwegian yesterday, Richard Burns (Peugeot) maintained his
fourth position and the final two points-scoring positions were claimed by Ford's junior driver Markko Martin and Jesus Puras (Citroen). Cedric Robert, a regular S1600 driver in the French Rally Championship, scored an impressive seventh in a
semi-works Peugeot 206WRC, finishing ahead of 1995 World Champion, Colin McRae (Ford). Harri Rovanpera finished ninth to fill the top 10 leaderboard with no fewer than six Peugeots and Citroens. 

Coming next … 

The FIA World Rally Championship contenders now head to the most southerly event in the series, Rally New Zealand (3-6 October). The fast and flowing roads on the North Island are viewed as some of the best in the world, allowing drivers to exploit their cars' performance to the full. 

Rallye Sanremo - Final Results 

1. Gilles Panizzi/Herve Panizzi Peugeot 4hr 10min 15.6sec 
2. Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 4hr 10min 36.5sec 
3. Petter Solberg/Phil Mills Subaru 4hr 11min 22.0sec 
4. Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 4hr 11min 34.5sec 
5. Markko Martin/Michael Park Ford 4hr 12min 10.5sec 
6. Jesus Puras/Carlos Del Barrio Citroen 4hr 12min 54.9sec 
7. Cedric Robert/Gerald Bedon Peugeot 4hr 13min 16.9sec 
8. Colin McRae/Nicky Grist Ford 4hr 15min 33.1sec 
9. Harri Rovanpera/Voitto Silander Peugeot 4hr 16min 34.5sec 
10. François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 4hr 17min 40.0sec 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers 

Marcus Gronholm 57 points 
Richard Burns 34 points 
Colin McRae 33 points 
Gilles Panizzi 31 points 
Carlos Sainz 26 points 
Petter Solberg 23 points 
Sebastien Loeb 18 points 
Harri Rovanpera 18 points 
Tommi Makinen 15 points 
Markko Martin 12 points 
Philippe Bugalski 7 points 
Thomas Radstrom 4 points 
Alister McRae 2 points 
Toni Gardemeister 2 points 
Bruno Thiry 2 points 
Kenneth Eriksson 1 point 
Jesus Puras 1 point 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers 

Peugeot 131 points 
Ford 86 points 
Subaru 46 points 
Mitsubishi 9 points 
Skoda 8 points 
Hyundai 6 points 
2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 11 – Rallye Sanremo (19-22 September) 
Thursday 19 September 2002 
News Release #2 



MITSUBISHI READY FOR LAST ASPHALT RUN OF THE SEASON



Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart completed its final preparations for the 2002 Rallye Sanremo today when the team's registered crews ran the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution WRC2s for the final time ahead of tonight's ceremonial start in the centre of the old Riviera resort of Sanremo. 

A five-day test two weeks ago on representative asphalt roads near Monte Carlo assisted the team in its preparations for the final sealed surface rally of the season and, while there has only been a three week break in the calendar, Marlboro
Mitsubishi Ralliart is encouraged by on-going progress with the Lancer Evolution WRC2. Conditions can however be unpredictable at the start of the Mediterranean autumn, making Rallye Sanremo another tough event for the FIA World Rally Championship contenders. 

"The test was actually quite difficult because conditions were wet and very changeable, but we now have a good set-up for that eventuality and there is always a possibility of rain here in the Italian mountains where conditions can change so
quickly," commented Chief Engineer Bernard Lindauer. "Since Germany we have reduced the weight of the car by over 35 kilos and done more engine development work and this, combined with the fine-tuning of the set-up, means the drivers are a bit more confident and the car seems to be more positive." 

François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup completed just five runs over the two kilometre shakedown road 80 kilometres to the northeast of Sanremo, the French pair satisfied with their preparatory work. "Although the test was wet it gave us a
chance to fine-tune the set-up for these conditions, and hopefully these roads should suit the car quite well," commented François. "The engine is feeling very different here with more lower and mid-end torque, which suits my style of driving quite well. The stages are in quite good condition, although maybe we will see them very dirty on the second leg when they are run in reverse. Hopefully we can
build on the progress we made in Germany and have a good three days of solid competition." 

Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior similarly only completed four runs and the British duo are looking forward to reaping the benefits of the work put in bythe team on the Tarmac-specification Lancer Evolution WRC2. "I never really had a chance to show the potential in Germany after all the development work we'd done, so I'm looking forward to a good clean run and the opportunity to hone the settings
further," said Alister. "I am much more confident with the car now and think we keep making small steps forward, which is obviously good." 

Adding to their comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart Team Manager Derek Dauncey said: "Tyres and weather crews are vital here and we've seen in the past that good information from the stages can reap huge rewards. Conditions can change extremely quickly, but we have an experienced team of people and can hopefully look forward to a good weekend of competition." 

The 44th Rallye Sanremo kicks off tonight with a ceremonial start in the Riviera resort at 20:30 hrs however it is not until early tomorrow following morning that the contenders head into the mountains for high-speed action. The opening leg, run to the north of Sanremo, includes eight special stages over 147.25 kilometres. 

4 September 2002 



Mitsubishi Motors and Marlboro to part company



Mitsubishi Motors Corporation ( " MMC " ) today announces that the Marlboro sponsorship of the Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team would cease at the end of the 2002 FIA World Rally Championship season. The decision was taken mutually between Mitsubishi Motors and Marlboro, both of whom feel the time has come for the two organisations to move in different directions. Marlboro has been the principal sponsor of the team since the beginning of the 1999 season. 

Commenting on the announcement, Andrew Cowan, Team Chairman, says "Through its WRC team, Mitsubishi Motors and Marlboro have worked together very closely over the last four years and have enjoyed much success during that time. However, we now feel that the time has come to move on and we wish them well for the future ." He adds : "This new direction will give us the possibility to help
building further direct awareness for the Brand through motor sports, at a time where it is being revisited and revitalised ". 

Describing the new spirit and attitude at Mitsubishi Motors through the very motor
sports oriented " Speed - Passion – Commitment – Teamwork " analogy, at this
year's Geneva Auto Show, Rolf Eckrodt – President and CEO of MMC emphasized
indeed the sport as an essential element of MMC's Brand and Corporate Turnaround strategy, be it WRC or Cross Country. 

Mitsubishi Motors has been involved in motor sports since 1962 and is one of the
most successful manufacturers of all time, with four drivers WRC titles and one manufacturer WRC title in the last six years. In Cross Country, Mitsubishi has won Paris-Dakar seven times and four world titles. And with machines like the road legal Lancer Evolution VII or just revealed concept car-turned cross country racer MPR10, it is more than ever committed to success in motor sports. 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team will continue business as usual for the remainder of the 2002 FIA World Rally Championship, which culminates with the Rally of Great Britain on November 15-17. 
2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 10 – Rallye Deutschland (22-25 August) 
Sunday 25 August 2002 
News Release #5 



DELECOUR CLAIMS POINT FOR MITSUBISHI



The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup claimed a point in the Manufacturers' Championship for Mitsubishi today when they brought their Lancer Evolution WRC2 home in ninth position on Rallye
Deutschland, round 10 of the FIA World Rally Championship. 

The first World Championship round of Rallye Deutschland was won by Citroen's Sebastien Loeb, the 28-year-old Frenchman claiming his first victory at this level and the French manufacturer's only win of the season. While Loeb claims 10
points for himself, Peugeot once again claims maximum points in the Manufacturers' Championship, Richard Burns and Marcus Gronholm finishing second and third of the registered makes. In the series, Peugeot therefore extends its lead to 34 points over second placed Ford. In the Drivers' Championship, Gronholm and Colin McRae remain first and second, with Richard Burns moving ahead of Carlos Sainz into third position. 

Fifty of the original 86 competitors started the final leg this morning, the crews heading southeast of Trier for seven special stages and 102.93 competitive kilometres. The action was centred around the picturesque city of St. Wendel, near
the tranquil Bostalsee, but dramas began early and battles raged throughout the day. 

François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup fared less well today, the French pair down on power for most of the leg. They managed to maintain eighth position until being overhauled by Ford's Carlos Sainz in stage 21. 

"At the beginning of the day the engine started to lose boost and therefore power," commented François. "The team couldn't really find the problem and it gradually got worse and felt more like the WRC1 engine because it was less responsive.
Overall the feeling from the event has been better. We did some very good times yesterday and have managed to improve the car further, step by step, throughout the event. We've now got some ideas to develop before Sanremo, which hopefully
will allow us to show more of the car's potential on an event that should suit us reasonably well." 

Adding to his comments, co-driver Daniel Grataloup said: "We're happy to have got
through the event without making any mistakes, as that would have been costly.
We're glad to have scored a point for Mitsubishi, but of course we would like to have got one for ourselves as well." 

Commenting on the performance of the Lancer Evolution WRC2 in its debut competitive outing on asphalt, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart chief engineer Bernard Lindauer said: "The car has definitely progressed on Tarmac and we're getting
closer to the top of the leaderboard. We must also remember that this is still an early stage of development for the WRC2 on this surface and we believe there's more to come for Sanremo. We have a one week test planned beforehand, where
we hope we can use the experience gained here to push the car's performance even further forward." 

Echoing those comments, team manager Derek Dauncey said: "We're very pleased with the car's performance. It's been a difficult event for cars and crews alike, and François' times during leg two, in particular, were very rewarding for the
whole team. Overall we've come away from the event very pleased and looking forward to further improvements for Sanremo. Generally, for the first running of Rallye Deutschland in the World Championship, the organisation has coped
reasonably well with the challenges." 

Meanwhile… 

Few could have imagined the drama that would unfold in the opening stages of the final leg, three of the leading crews hitting problems almost immediately. Armin Kremer, 10th overnight in the Focus, went off the road and into retirement in the
opening stage of the day and Harri Rovanpera - who lost the rear wing on the 206WRC in stage 18 - ultimately retired in stage 19, the lack of stability and downforce causing him to go off the road. Carlos Sainz (Ford) also lost two minutes, the Spaniard's Ford refusing to fire-up on the start line of stage 17. Sebastien Loeb claimed a maiden victory, despite some controversy over the route
he took on the super special stage at the end of leg two. Richard Burns pushed the Frenchman hard, but the Peugeot driver was ultimately unable to match the pace of the Citroen. Marcus Gronholm claimed third, recording Peugeot's seventh
one-two finish of the season in the Manufacturers' Championship. Colin McRaebrought the lead Focus home in fourth, with Makinen and Eriksson, in the sole remaining Subaru and Skoda, seventh and 10th respectively. 

Coming next … 

The FIA World Rally Championship remains in Europe but takes a three-week break before heading to north-western Italy for the final asphalt round in the series, Rallye Sanremo (20-22 September). The green wooded mountains above the Riviera resort are criss-crossed by a maze of twisty roads that wind over narrow passes and through tranquil villages, providing spectacular action for the thousands of fans who passionately follow the event. 

Rallye Deutschland – Provisional Final Results 

1. Sebastien Loeb/Daniel Elena Citroen 3hr 47min 17.3sec 
2. Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 3hr 47min 31.6sec 
3. Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 3hr48min 36.4sec 
4. Colin McRae/Nicky Grist Ford 3hr 51min 02.6sec 
5. Bruno Thiry/Stephane Prevot Peugeot 3hr 52min 36.1sec 
6. Markko Martin/Michael Park Ford 3hr 52min 50.3sec 
7. Tommi Makinen/Kaj Lindstrom Subaru 3hr52min 56.5sec 
8. Carlos Sainz/Luis Moya Ford 3hr 53min 34.3sec 
9. François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 3hr 53min 53.2sec 
10. Kenneth Eriksson/Tina Thorner Skoda 4hr00min 51.5sec 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers 

Marcus Gronholm 51 points 
Colin McRae 33 points 
Richard Burns 31 points 
Carlos Sainz 26 points 
Gilles Panizzi 21 points 
Petter Solberg 19 points 
Sebastien Loeb 18 points 
Harri Rovanpera 18 points 
Tommi Makinen 15 points 
Markko Martin 10 points 
Philippe Bugalski 7 points 
Thomas Radstrom 4 points 
Alister McRae 2 points 
Toni Gardemeister 2 points 
Bruno Thiry 2 points 
Kenneth Eriksson 1 point 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers 

Peugeot 115 points 
Ford 81 points 
Subaru 42 points 
Skoda 8 points 
Mitsubishi 8 points 
Hyundai 6 points 
Finland 2002


2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 9 – Rally Finland (8-11 August) 
Sunday 11 August 2002 
News Release #5



STRONG PERFORMANCE BY PAASONEN



The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of Jani Paasonen and Arto Kapanen brought their Lancer Evolution WRC2 to the finish of the 2002 Rally Finland in eighth position, narrowly missing out on a point for Mitsubishi in the debut competitive outing of the car. Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior were forced into retirement in stage 18. 

Marcus Gronholm took his third consecutive victory on home soil, the flying Finn thrilling his home supporters with a fantastic display of mastery in the Peugeot 206WRC. He takes the maximum 10 points for the third time this season and extends his advantage over second-placed Colin McRae to 17 points. Peugeot also scooped maximum points in the Manufacturers' Championship, Richard Burns
picking up six points for second position, rewarding the French make with its fifth
maximum points haul this season. It now has a 25 point lead over Ford with five rounds remaining. 

The third and final day of Rally Finland started early this morning, just 36 of the original 77 crews leaving Paviljonki in Jyvaskyla at 07:20 hrs. The 362.77 kilometre route included six special stages - three run twice - and 94.36 competitive kilometres and while it was the shortest of the three legs, it was no less
challenging and the result was never guaranteed until the end of the final stage. 

Paasonen set a blistering pace in today's opening 11.80 kilometre Keuruu stage,
the Finn fourth quickest in the Evolution WRC2 and just 1.1 seconds adrift of stage winner Burns. Consistent times in the remaining stages saw Jani and co-driver Arto Kapanen maintain eighth but, without crews ahead hitting problems, the deficit was simply too great. 

"The first stage today, that was my stage - everything came together and worked perfectly," said Jani. "I feel good to have finished eighth. We were hoping to be in
the points, but ended up just outside them. Overall I'm pleased with the way it's gone though. We had no problems, I didn't really make any mistakes and the car
felt perfect all the way through the rally." 

Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior retired in stage 18, the British pair out with damaged right rear suspension. While able to continue slowly, the team elected to withdraw the crew, all too aware of speeding cars approaching from behind.  

"Three kilometres into the second stage this morning I felt something go at the back end," said Alister. "We stopped to have a look, and a stone had obviously hit the rear wishbone mount. Carrying on would have been difficult for us and following crews, so we pulled over. It's a shame for it to end like this; the car is definitely a step forward. Now we're looking to Germany and hopefully we'll see that the
development work on the new car can move us forward again." 

Adding to the drivers' comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart Team Director, John
Easton said: "We are pleased the car has shown its potential here and that we
have made steps forward. This is always going to be a difficult rally to debut a new car, but this is the kind of result we'd hoped for. We were aiming to get into the manufacturer points and finished the event just one position away from that goal. 
Jani's performance on his home rally was good; he's driven consistently, quickly and caused no damage to the car. Obviously it was disappointing to lose François and Alister, but the event has been encouraging and highlighted some further areas of development for the next gravel rally." 

Meanwhile… 

Marcus Gronholm scored victory for Peugeot, its fifth win of the season, and the Finn retains his advantage at the head of the leaderboard. Second position for team-mate Richard Burns also notched up the French manufacturer's fifth
maximum points haul of the season, an  impressive feat in the face of stiff opposition. Peugeot was however in a league of its own in this rally, the following crews 'the best of the rest'. Colin McRae maintained third position throughout the morning, however the Scot was forced into a disappointing retirement after stage 20 when his Focus caught fire, a heavy landing dislodging a hydraulic pipe and
causing a fluid leak. Petter Solberg (Subaru) overhauled Carlos Sainz to take third
position once McRae had retired, and Sainz and Martin, who finished fourth and fifth respectively, both claimed points for Ford. A jump-start from Sainz was the first slip-up of this nature for the Spaniard in 15 years and those 10 seconds of penalty ultimately proved decisive. Tommi Makinen (Subaru) finished sixth after a seemingly lacklustre performance. Freddy Loix brought the sole remaining Hyundai back to Jyvaskyla in ninth position and Sebastien Loeb finished 10th for Citroen in
its debut outing in Finland. Team-mate Thomas Radstrom ultimately retired, the Swede off the road and into the trees. 

Coming next… 

The FIA World Rally Championship now leaves gravel for two consecutive asphalt events in Europe, the first of which is Rallye Deutschland (22-25 August). Formerly a round of the European Rally Championship, this is the first year the German event has qualified for the World Championship, and therefore very few of the teams and drivers have experience of the asphalt roads in the southwest of the country.
François Delecour did however contest the event last year, finishing third overall. 

Rally Finland – Final Results 


1. Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 3hr 17min 52.5sec 
2. Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 3hr 19min 19.8sec 
3. Petter Solberg/Phil Mills Subaru 3hr 20min 42.1sec 
4. Carlos Sainz/Luis Moya Ford 3hr 20min 46.3sec 
5. Markko Martin/Michael Park Ford 3hr 21min 02.5sec 
6. Tommi Makinen/Kaj Lindstrom Subaru 3hr 22min 26.6sec 
7. Sebastian Lindholm/Timo Hantunen Peugeot 3hr 23min 28.9sec 
8. Jani Paasonen/Arto Kapanen Mitsubishi 3hr 23min 47.8sec 
9. Freddy Loix/Sven Smeets Hyundai 3hr 24min 00.3sec 
10. Sebastien Loeb/Daniel Elena Citroen 3hr 24min 06.1sec 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers 

Marcus Gronholm 47 points 
Colin McRae 30 points 
Carlos Sainz 26 points 
Richard Burns 25 points 
Gilles Panizzi 21 points 
Petter Solberg 19 points 
Harri Rovanpera 18 points 
Tommi Makinen 15 points 
Markko Martin 9 points 
Sebastien Loeb 8 points 
Philippe Bugalski 7 points 
Thomas Radstrom 4 points 
Alister McRae 2 points 
Toni Gardemeister 2 points 
Kenneth Eriksson 1 point 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers 

Peugeot 99 points 
Ford 74 points 
Subaru 40 points 
Skoda 8 points 
Mitsubishi 7 points 
Hyundai 6 points 
Cyprus 2002

DELECOUR SURVIVES THE CARNAGE!



The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup survived the punishing Cyprus Rally, round 5 of the World Rally Championship, returning to Limassol in 13th position this afternoon. Lancer Evolution WRC
team-mates Alister McRae/David Senior and Jani Paasonen/Arto Kapanen found themselves on a long list of retirees, the Britons out with a broken gearbox and the Finns with broken steering. 

Marcus Gronholm claimed his first win of the season, rewarding Peugeot with its fourth consecutive victory this year, an outstanding performance by the French manufacturer. With team-mate Richard Burns inching ahead of Tommi Makinen in the closing stages, the team again takes a resounding one-two, also for the fourth
time this season. In the Drivers' Championship, Gronholm extends his lead to 11 points and Peugeot has romped ahead in the series for Manufacturers claiming a 41 point advantage. 

The Cyprus Rally has decimated the field of entrants and, of the original 60  competitors, just 33 took the restart in Limassol this morning and only 32 made it to the finish. Having experienced a severe winter, the Cypriot roads have been
rougher than previous years and, with the rally now held in April rather than June, rain has also been a feature. Yesterday, torrential downpours turned previously dry stages into ones awash with thick mud, running water and big watersplashes and, while the sun shone again this morning, the roads still bore the scars. Whatever the weather, local fans mixed with holidaymakers, braving the elements to witness the stars in action, many of whom battled on with mechanical failures. The crews have also had an unprecedented amount of rolls, cars tipping onto their roofs in the  deep ruts on slow corners, struggling back to service with significant bodywork damage and making the slick rally paddock look like a vehicle graveyard. 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup were one of the few to pick their way through the stages unscathed, incurring just one puncture in the first three stages and 40.94 competitive kilometres. Having swept the roads clean this morning, the French crew were then able to mount a more serious assault this afternoon on the repeated stages, fourth fastest time in stage 18 underlining their earlier handicap, before the rain came. 

"It's been a very difficult rally and I think if we hadn't had the problem yesterday with the wipers not working in the heavy rain, we could comfortably have been in the top ten" said François. "During the course of the event we've learned a lot about the car, which has given us good knowledge and experience for Argentina,
Acropolis and the Safari, and hopefully we'll eliminate the problems and show that the car is competitive." 

Adding to his comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team manager Derek Dauncey said: "When we got some clear stages we had some competitive times, but then we had some technical problems and had to work round these during the
event. Jani was doing well, but it was unfortunate he slid wide and paid the price for a small mistake. It was extremely unfortunate to have Alister retire as a result of quite a large impact on the front of the car which broke the gearbox, either caused
by hitting something or landing heavily after a jump. François carried on determinedly and was almost rewarded with a top ten finish. Overall it's a
disappointing result, but we've learned a lot about the car on gravel and will go to Argentina with a revised specification for the test." 

Meanwhile… 

Colin McRae's hopes of a second consecutive victory in Cyprus started to end when he rolled his Focus in stage 16, damaged the steering and lost the power assistance in stage 17. The Scot, who claimed the lead on stage 4, then threw away second position with a bigger roll in stage 18 dropping him down the leaderboard to seventh. Conditions were however tricky this afternoon, rainfall resulting in a lottery on start positions. Behind victor Marcus Gronholm, team-mate
Richard Burns powered past Tommi Makinen (Subaru) in stage 18, the weather marginally favouring the Briton. As a consequence, Peugeot claimed another one-two and Burns took six points for the second consecutive event. 

With a 14 second cushion going into the final nine kilometre stage, Makinen's position was relatively safe and the Finn finished on the podium in third and got to the finish of a rally for the first time in four events. Harri Rovanpera brought his 206WRC to the finish in fourth position, one minute ahead of Norway's Petter Solberg, the Subaru driver rolling earlier in the day but still managing to overhaul Armin Schwarz (Hyundai) for fifth position in the closing stages. From his seventh position, Colin
McRae powered into sixth on the final stage, claiming points for himself and Ford, albeit a grim reward after leading the event for 11 consecutive stages. Armin Schwarz's seventh position gave Hyundai the final manufacturer point. Markko
Martin (Ford) has set an impressive pace, claiming the lead in a World Championship rally (after SS3) for the first time in his career, but the Estonian also
hit problems today and, like McRae, rolled in stage 16 and lost the power steering. 
Kenneth Eriksson was in the lead Skoda, the Swede and co-driver Tina Thorner returning to Limassol in ninth position having damaged the right rear wheel and brakes, also in stage 16. Gilles Panizzi, Peugeot's fourth driver, finished 10th with
Carlos Sainz (Ford) 11th. 

Coming next … 

The FIA World Rally Championship now makes the long journey to South America for Rally Argentina (16-19 May), the only event hosted in the Americas and the second of five consecutive gravel rallies. It is another rough event, albeit faster than Cyprus, and Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart will be conducting a four-day test prior to the recce for regular drivers François Delecour and Alister McRae. 

Cyprus Rally - Final Results 

1 Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 4hr 21min 25.7sec 
2 Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 4hr 22min 22.5sec 
3 Tommi Makinen/Kaj Lindstrom Subaru 4hr 22min 24.7sec 
4 Harri Rovanpera/Risto Pietilainen Peugeot 4hr 22min 44.4sec 
5 Petter Solberg/Michael Park Subaru 4hr 23min 43.6sec 
6 Colin McRae/Nicky Grist Ford 4hr 24min 11.2sec 
7 Armin Schwarz/Manfred Heimer Hyundai 4hr 24min 13.1sec 
8 Markko Martin/Michael Park Ford 4hr 25min 48.3sec 
9 Kenneth Eriksson/Tina Thorner Skoda 4hr 28min 43.4sec 
10 Gilles Panizzi/Herve Panizzi Peugeot 4hr 29min 37.9sec 
13 François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 4hr 33min 43.0sec 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers 

Marcus Gronholm 31 points 
Gilles Panizzi 20 points 
Richard Burns 19 points 
Tommi Makinen 14 points 
Harri Rovanpera 9 points 
Carlos Sainz 9 points 
Philippe Bugalski 7 points 
Petter Solberg 7 points 
Sebastien Loeb 6 points 
Colin McRae 6 points 
Alister McRae 2 points 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers 

Peugeot 68 points 
Subaru 27 points 
Ford 27 points 
Mitsubishi 6 points 
Hyundai 2 point 
Skoda 0 points 

Rally Catalunya 2002
MITSUBISHI LOOKING TO BUILD ON FIRST ASPHALT POINTS


Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart concluded its final preparations for the 38th Rallye Catalunya-Costa Brava today when François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup and Alister McRae/David Senior ran the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution WRCs for the final time before this evening's ceremonial start. 

With the full complement of seven FIA World Rally Championship teams contesting this all-asphalt event, the shakedown test - fifty kilometres to the northwest of the coastal town of Lloret de Mar - was swarming with thousands of fanatical supporters, many just out to witness national hero Carlos Sainz. Located under what is now the famous viaduct where fans hang over the bridge to watch the cars, few were disappointed with the
world-class action, the 20 degree temperatures and clear blue skies adding to the already warm atmosphere which makes the event one of the most popular in the series. 

Having undertaken a three-day test earlier in the week, the Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crews used the morning to confirm specifications for the Lancer Evolution WRC, the team having again moved forward despite only a week since the last event in Corsica. "Between them the drivers covered another 700 kilometres at the weekend on roads around Vic and Tarragona which are very representative of what we will see on the rally," commented Spanish team engineer, Roger Estrada. "The car is working better with small improvements to the brakes, differential mappings and general set-up and François and Alister are happy we're making progress all the time." 

Frenchman Delecour echoed Estrada's comments: "We did a lot of work with the centre and front diffs, the car has a lot less understeer now and is much easier to drive. Sure, it's going to be difficult to match the Peugeots and Citroens, but I think that's the same for many of the teams, but we have certainly made progress since Corsica. At shakedown we just confirmed all our findings and tried three different compounds of tyre, again to
check what is working best." 

Marlboro Yamaha Moto GP rider Carlos Checa also joined the team at shakedown, the Spaniard swapping two wheels for four when he co-drove François for a run through the stage. Despite being used to the power of his Yamaha M1 4-stroke GP bike, Checa couldn't fail to be impressed by the handling of the Lancer Evolution on asphalt. "That was one of the best experiences of my life!" he said. "It's completely impossible to compare the
bike and the rally car and I feel like I need to digest the experience before I can say too much. It all happened so fast… one minute the brake the next the throttle and as I was looking at the entry to the corner we were already in the exit! Fantastic, a great experience." 

Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior are also happy with the team's progress amid a string of asphalt rallies early in the season. "Fine-turning the diff mappings has reduced the understeer and allows us to commit much earlier," said Alister. "All the time there is more work to do, but we're in the right
direction and making improvements every time." 

Rallye Catalunya-Costa Brava starts this evening with a ceremonial start in the centre of the seaside resort of Lloret de Mar, but the action begins in earnest on Friday when the crews head west down the coast to Tarragona for six stages and 176 competitive kilometres. For some of the teams the dramas have already started, national hero Carlos Sainz forced to start with a new co-driver in Marc Marti, regular partner Luis Moya out with injuries
after a testing accident at the beginning of the week. Their Ford team-mate Colin McRae is also contesting the rally with a broken little finger after his accident in Corsica, and the Hyundai crew of Tomasz Kuchar and Maciej Szczepaniak are also out of the rally after a truck toppled onto their recce car, narrowly avoiding a serious disaster but leaving both Poles shaken and injured. 

.

Corsica 2002                                                              last update: 09 march 2002

myevo.com was there!
FINAL RESULTS

Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart drivers François Delecour and co-driver Daniel Grataloup scored their first 
points with Mitsubishi today when they brought their Lancer Evolution WRC to the finish of the Rallye de 
France - Tour de Corse in seventh position. Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior finished tenth.

Peugeot claimed an emphatic one-two-three, asphalt expert Gilles Panizzi leading the trio of 206 WRCs back 
to Ajaccio ahead of team-mates Marcus Gronholm and Richard Burns. As a consequence, Gronholm takes 
the lead in the Drivers' Championship ahead of Tommi Makinen and Gilles Panizzi both equal second, despite 
Makinen failing to finish. In the Manufacturers' Championship, maximum points for Peugeot for the second time this season gives it an impressive 16 point advantage over nearest rivals Ford.

In contrast to yesterday's wet weather, the third and final leg of the Rallye de France - Tour de Corse 
dawned bright and sunny, warm weather and drier roads greeting the crews as they left Ajaccio. Forty-three of the original 61 crews remained and while today's route to the south-east covered just four stages, the 112 competitive kilometres took their toll and saw the retirement of no fewer than three of the leading crews. 

François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup maintained their overnight 8th position after the first group of two 
stages, the French crew comfortably ahead of their nearest rival, despite a puncture in stage 13. However, 
following the retirement of Ford's Colin McRae in stage 15, the duo moved up into seventh position, fifth of 
the registered crews.

"The conditions this morning were very slippery and we got a puncture in the first stage, although the ATS 
mousse worked well," said François. "The tyres we chose were not Michelin's latest construction but despite the puncture, this tyre combined with our suspension worked well. Progress has been made since Monte Carlo but it's not been an easy rally. It's obviously good to get to the end and get points for Mitsubishi, but a shame to be so close in the drivers and not get a point."

Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior also sustained a puncture on the Lancer Evolution WRC in 
stage 13 but moved up the leaderboard to 11th after François Duval retired his Focus. Benefiting from his 
brother's retirement in SS15, Alister then slipped into the top ten, despite dropping time when the 
anti-deflation tyre mousse broke up in stage 16. 

"We had a bad vibration on the front of the car in the last 10 kilometres of the stage which was making the 
car understeer and difficult to drive in the twisty stuff," he said. "Overall we've been trying hard throughout 
the event and have made progress, but there's more to come for the future. It's good to make it to the finish 
and, apart from the brake problems in the first leg, we've pretty much had a clean run."

Adding to their comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team manager Derek Dauncey said: "It's good to get 
points, which is what we came here for. We've got more experience of the car in changeable conditions and are now looking to use that knowledge to make further improvements for Spain. What is also very heartening is to maintain our one hundred percent finishing record this year."

Meanwhile…

It may have only covered four stages, but today's leg saw more action and leading retirements than any day 
of the rally. Colin McRae (Ford) was the biggest name on the list, the Scot hitting a patch of mud in stage 15 
that resulted in him going off the road and into a tree. But for the strength of the Focus it could have been a 
lot worse, but even so, McRae was jammed in the car before being airlifted to hospital in Ajaccio. He is 
reported to have sustained a broken finger and concussion during his second big accident on the 
Mediterranean island. Ford's woes were compounded when François Duval went off when a tyre exploded, 
and Kenneth Eriksson (Skoda) also retired before the start of stage 14 with differential problems.

In contrast to Ford's misfortune, Peugeot brought all three of its 206 WRCs to the finish and took a 
clean-sweep of the podium. Asphalt expert Gilles Panizzi claimed ten points for victory, with 2000 World 
Champion Marcus Gronholm second and Richard Burns third. Philippe Bugalski snatched fourth position 
following McRae's retirement, a fine result for the Frenchman in the privately-run Xsara WRC. Petter 
Solberg (Subaru) got ahead of Carlos Sainz (Ford), the Spaniard claiming the final point in sixth position.

Coming next…

There's little respite for the FIA World Rally Championship contenders. The fourth round of the series, 
Rallye Catalunya - Costa Brava, starts in less than two weeks time (22-24 March) and is another fast asphalt 
rally, the stages twisting their way through the mountains around Girona, Barcelona and Tarragona in 
north-east Spain. It is also a round of the FIA Junior World Rally Championship.

Tour de Corse - Final Results

1 Gilles Panizzi/Herve Panizzi Peugeot 3hr 54min 40.3sec
2 Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 3hr 55min 20.8sec
3 Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 3hr 55min 32.7sec
4 Philippe Bugalski/Jean-Paul Chiaroni Citroen 3hr 56min 42.5sec
5 Petter Solberg/Phil Mills Subaru 3hr 57min 08.5sec
6 Carlos Sainz/Luis Moya Ford 3hr 57min 13.1sec
7 François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 3hr 59min 48.1sec
8 Markko Martin/Michael Park Ford 4hr 00min 00.3sec
9 Freddy Loix/Sven Smeets Hyundai 4hr 00min 54.1sec
10 Alister McRae/David Senior Mitsubishi 4hr 01min 12.8sec

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers

Marcus Gronholm 18 points
Tommi Makinen 10 points
Gilles Panizzi 10 points
Carlos Sainz 9 points
Richard Burns 7 points
Sebastien Loeb 6 points
Harri Rovanpera 6 points
Colin McRae 4 points
Petter Solberg 3 point
Philippe Bugalski 3 points 
Alister McRae 2 points

2002 FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers

Peugeot 36 points
Ford 20 points
Subaru 16 points
Mitsubishi 5 points
Hyundai 1 point
Skoda 0 points
2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 3 – Rallye de France-Tour de Corse (8-10 March) 
Saturday 9 March 2002 
News Release #4 



DELECOUR & McRAE MAKE PROGRESS

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup have powered up the Rallye de France - Tour de Corse leaderboard into eighth position at the end of the second leg. Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior have also improved in their Lancer Evolution WRC, the British pair slotting into 12th position after 245 competitive kilometres. 

Yesterday's opening leg saw just 10 competitors retire, but the remaining 51 crews were greeted with very
different conditions when they left Ajaccio early this morning. Overnight rain left previously dry roads damp and as rain continued to fall throughout the day, the conditions became more and more of a lottery. Ominous low cloud hung over the distant mountains, making the job of the weather crews all the more important and tyre choice a constant talking point. The leg, with seven stages and 150 competitive kilometres to the north-east of Ajaccio, was the longest of the event and included a repetition of the longest stage (SS6), and two groups of three stages run twice. 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup started the day in 11th position, however the French duo have progressively worked their way up the leaderboard, powering ahead of rivals and also benefiting from the retirement of Finland's Tommi Makinen. Like all the other crews, François has chosen his moments to conserve the tyres over the dry sections and has made adjustments to the Lancer Evolution WRC to improve its handling in wet conditions. Holding eighth overall and sixth of the registered manufacturers, the Frenchman is on course to score his first points with Mitsubishi. 

"It's been a good day - we've moved from 11th to eighth and that's what we wanted to achieve," he said. "With points for Mitsubishi, our aim is to now get into the top six for drivers' points. We wondered about our tyre choice once we got into the first of the last three stages because it was raining, but it turned out to be right over the whole group of stages and everything worked well." 

Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior have also moved up the leaderboard from 18th to 12th and have the potential to fight with no fewer than  four rivals ahead of them. With a reasonably comfortable lead over 13th placed Freddy Loix in the Hyundai, the Scot can concentrate on attacking over the final stages tomorrow. 

"We've climbed six places today which we're pleased about and it'd be nice to do the same again tomorrow!" said Alister. "The car's been working well and we've had no problems other than a broken damper at the start of stage 12, which cost us a bit of time. The stages have been very difficult today and there was a lot of mud and water in stage 10 in particular. Tomorrow we'll push as hard as we can and see what happens." 

Adding to their comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team manager Derek Dauncey said: "It seems that the car is more competitive in wetter conditions and adjustments we've made throughout the day have resulted in a string of top 10 stage times. On that basis, hopefully the conditions will stay the same tomorrow. As a team, it's good to be in a point-scoring position again." 

Meanwhile… 

Peugeot continue to dominate the leaderboard and have staked a claim on the top three positions. Asphalt expert and rally leader Gilles Panizzi has however extended his advantage over second-placed Marcus Gronholm despite
brake problems in SS9, but the Finn and reigning World Champion Richard Burns are split by just 21 seconds
after 145 kilometres of competition. First of the non-Michelin runners was Tommi Makinen in fourth position, however the Finnish Subaru driver aquaplaned into retirement in stage 10, damaging the front suspension beyond repair. Philippe Bugalski has catapulted up the leaderboard today, the French driver in the non-manufacturer supported Citroen Xsara climbing from eighth to an overnight fourth. Former winner of the Tour de Corse, Colin McRae (Ford), holds fifth, the Scot - like  all the other crews - finding it difficult to chose tyres down in the service park on the seafront for stages that are 20 kilometres away in the mountains. Team-mate Carlos Sainz has slipped down the order to sixth this afternoon. The Spaniard's advantage over Petter Solberg (Subaru) is however
marginal, despite the Norwegian being the only driver seemingly capable of snatching two stage victories (SS6 and SS10) from one of the Peugeot drivers. Behind François Delecour in eighth, Armin Schwarz has upheld honours for Hyundai, the German posting fourth and fifth fastest times in stages 10 and 11 respectively to move into ninth. François Duval (Ford) holds the last position in the top 10. Subaru was the only manufacturer to have lost a car today and the only other leading retirement was that of Bruno Thiry in a privately-entered Peugeot 206 WRC. 

Still to come… 

The third and final leg of the Rallye de France - Tour de Corse starts at 08:20 hrs (local) on Sunday and takes the contenders to the south-east of Ajaccio. It includes just four stages and 56 competitive kilometres, however nothing will be guaranteed until the crews return to Ajaccio for the podium finish at 14:36 hrs (local). 

Tour de Corse - Leg 2 results 

1 Gilles Panizzi/Herve Panizzi Peugeot 2hr 45min 22.2sec 
2 Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 2hr 46min 03.9sec 
3 Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 2hr 46min 24.3sec 
4 Philippe Bugalski/Jean-Paul Chiaroni Citroen 2hr 47min 21.7sec 
5 Colin McRae/Nicky Grist Ford 2hr 47min 27.2sec 
6 Carlos Sainz/Luis Moya Ford 2hr 47min 42.4sec 
7 Petter Solberg/Phil Mills Subaru 2hr 47min 46.5sec 
8 François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 2hr 49min 14.3sec 
9 Armin Schwarz/Manfred Hiemer Hyundai 2hr 49min 39.9sec 
10 Francois Duval/Jean-Marc Fortin Ford 2hr 49min 56.8sec 
12 Alister McRae/David Senior Mitsubishi 2hr 50min 12.9sec 

 

2002 FIA World Rally Championship 
Round 3 – Rallye de France-Tour de Corse (8-10 March) 
Friday 8 March 2002 
News Release #3



MIXED DAY ON CORSICA

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crews of François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup and Alister McRae/David Senior finished the opening leg of the 46th Rallye de France - Tour de Corse in 11th and 18th positions respectively. 

Sixty-one crews departed Ajaccio this morning for this third round of the FIA World Rally Championship and the second Tour de Corse in less than five months. Dry and warm conditions greeted them ahead of today's five special stages and 95 competitive kilometres to the north-east of the island's capital, the distance for stages 2/5 having been reduced to avoid the section where Tommi Makinen crashed heavily in 2001. Today's leg also included the longest stage of the rally (SS3) and then as rain fell in the last two stages this afternoon, crews took more or less of an advantage depending on their position on the road. It has however been a relatively incident-free day with no major problems for any of the leading crews and only one retirement between the six competing manufacturers. 

Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart drivers François Delecour and Daniel Grataloup lead the team's assault, the French pair confirming that progress has been made on the Lancer Evolution WRC asphalt specification since Monte Carlo. They were running as high as ninth earlier in the day but as Citroen driver Philippe Bugalski went on the attack, and rain fell this afternoon, François dropped back down the order. 

"The car is a major step forward from Monte Carlo and we're much closer to the Peugeots, which are obviously
the asphalt benchmark, and also on a par with the Fords," said François at the final service in Ajaccio this
evening. "In the wet this afternoon the car was a bit of a handful, but our aim is to get towards the top six and
points." 

Team-mates Alister McRae and David Senior have had a frustrating opening leg, losing time this morning with a combination of oversteer and brake problems. "The car is better for sure, but we suffered with a bit of understeer this morning in the longer corners," commented Alister. "Before the start of the long stage the brakes didn't feel quite right and about seven kilometres into the stage, when it started to go downhill, we began to lose them. That meant backing off, and we've had similar problems this afternoon. I reckon we also got the worst of the weather in
stage 4; rain starting just as we began the stage and then finishing when we did!" 

Adding to their comments, Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart team manager Derek Dauncey said: "We've taken the data from the test which has given us a good direction to go in, and we've tried a few different options today which has given us useful feedback. The wetter weather this afternoon hindered us a bit though. Looking at the split times in the long stage (SS3), the car is competitive in certain sections and basically we now need to use that information to make sure it's competitive throughout each stage and therefore the whole rally." 

Meanwhile… 

Despite rain this afternoon, the Panizzi brothers, Gilles and Herve, established a predictable lead from the outset, the Peugeot 206 crew fastest on all but one of today's stages to pull out a slim three second advantage over team-mate Marcus Gronholm. The French manufacturer is also enjoying a 1-2-3 with reigning World Champion Richard Burns holding third position. Tommi Makinen (Subaru) has had a trouble-free day and holds fourth, although the Finn admits to spending the day getting into the rhythm of the rally, the 36 kilometre stage the longest he has ever contested in the Impreza WRC. His team-mate Petter Solberg was holding a fine third overall
until spinning at the start of stage 4 and damaging the rear suspension. The Norwegian dropped around a minute, but after strapping the suspension together for the final stage, went on to set sixth fastest time to end the day sixth overall. Sandwiching the Subarus is Carlos Sainz in the leading Ford, the Spaniard losing a handful of seconds in the opening two stages when he had problems selecting first gear. His team-mate Colin McRae lies seventh, his only problem an engine stall at the start of SS5, while Philippe Bugalski, in the privately run Citroen Xsara WRC, is eighth. Hyundai was the only manufacturer to lose a car today, former Polish Formula 2 Champion Tomasz Kuchar forced out in the first stage when the accelerator jammed open and he burnt out the brakes. 

Still to come… 

The second leg of the Tour de Corse takes the remaining contenders to the east and north-east of Ajaccio for a further seven special stages and 150 competitive kilometres. It is the longest leg of the event and starts with an early morning wake-up calls for the crews - a repetition of the 36.73 kilometre run from Petreto to Ampaza, the longest stage of the rally. 

Tour de Corse - Leg 1 results 

1 Gilles Panizzi/Herve Panizzi Peugeot 1hr 02min 28.5sec 
2 Marcus Gronholm/Timo Rautiainen Peugeot 1hr 02min 31.5sec 
3 Richard Burns/Robert Reid Peugeot 1hr 02min 53.6sec 
4 Tommi Makinen/Kaj Lindstrom Subaru 1hr 03min 07.8sec 
5 Carlos Sainz/Luis Moya Ford 1hr 03min 17.9sec 
6 Petter Solberg/Phil Mills Subaru 1hr 03min 29.0sec 
7 Colin McRae/Nicky Grist Ford 1hr 03min 32.2sec 
8 Philippe Bugalski/Jean-Paul Chiaroni Citroen 1hr 03min 41.5sec 
9 Markko Martin/Michael Park Ford 1hr 03min 42.3sec 
10 Harri Rovanpera/Risto Pietilainen Peugeot 1hr 03min 54.5sec 
11 François Delecour/Daniel Grataloup Mitsubishi 1hr 03min 55.6sec 
18 Alister McRae/David Senior Mitsubishi 1hr 04min 45.4sec 

San Remo 2001                                                         last update: 07 october 2001

myevo.com was there!

 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of Freddy Loix/Sven Smeets finished 12th in Rallye Sanremo,an event dominated by the French manufacturers who historically excel and develop cars on asphalt.

As predicted, the event was won by one such car, the Peugeot of Gilles Panizzi, the Frenchman also  winning here last year in similar machinery. Four-times FIA World Rally Champion Tommi Makinen and co-driver Risto Mannisenmaki retired in the penultimate stage while in a point-scoring position for Mitsubishi.

Of the original 73 competing crews, only 47 took the re-start for the final leg this morning. The route,again high up in the hills above the coastal town of Sanremo, took the contenders over four stages and 87.66 competitive kilometres and, while it was the shortest of the three legs, there was no respite for the crews as they jostled for the final positions. Clouds moved in today and temperatures dropped, rain and fog falling in the mountains making tyre choice critical, visibility difficult andsurfaces even less predictable. Despite the weather however, the fanatical Italians revelled in the high-speed action, cheering their heroes all the way.

 

more on our SAN REMO pics Gallery and on our fantastic video

Mitsubishi wins his seventh consecutive World title

Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution driver Gabriel Pozzo claimed the FIA World Cup for Drivers of Production Cars today (subject to FIA confirmation), becoming the first Argentinean driver to command such an accolade. 

Gustavo Trelles (MRT by Nocentini) and Alex Fiorio (Group N winner) fighted along all the rally stages with enourmous precision and fairness. Sadly, Gustavo went off on the very last kilometers, as unexpected rain and fog caused the exit of Tommi Mäkinen and his brand new Lancer Evo VII WRC. Mirco Virag (MRT by Nocentini) made his debut on the world rally stages and finished with his Lancer Evolution VI enjoying this spectacular rally feeling. 

> more news coming soon: 

- the most exilarating myevo VIDEO

- exclusive details on the all new Lancer Evolution VII WRC, Focus WRC, Hyunday WRC...

- the pics gallery

- many trailers ready to download

 

Kenya 2001                                                                 last update: september 2001

world rally championship 
Richard Burns (Subaru) retired in CS1 - front left suspension. Carlos Sainz (Ford) stopped to change a puncture.

Carlos Sainz (Ford) stopped to change a puncture in CS2.

Richard Burns (Subaru) is now up in the helicopter acting as spotter for team-mate Petter Solberg.

Colin McRae (Ford) retires with clutch failure, following earlier steering problems and an accident (CS3).

Freddy Loix (Mitsubishi) lost time when he stopped to change a broken compression strut (CS3)

Petter Solberg (Subaru) lost time with damaged right rear suspension (CS3).


Toshi Arai (Subaru) retires - unconfirmed front suspension damage (CS4).


Freddy Loix (Mitsubishi) had a broken drive-shaft in the section (CS4).

Marcus Gronholm (Peugeot) retired - lost a wheel (CS4).

Carlos Sainz (Ford) retired - engine (CS5).


Francois Delecour (Ford) has a puncture and broken drive-shaft (CS5).

CS10 delayed as, due to the weather, the helicopters are unable to fly.

Freddy Loix (Mitsubishi) lost turbo boost in the CS10 and has now stopped. More information to follow.


Petter Solberg (Subaru) has a wheel bearing problem in CS10.
Petter Solberg (Subaru) has retired in CS10.

CS11 cancelled to get the rally back on schedule.

Freddy Loix (Mitsubishi) got a puncture as he was forced off the road to pass a second car in the section (CS12).

Harri Rovanpera (Peugeot) - transmission problems. Bruno Thiry (Skoda) - crashed but unhurt (CS13).

 

Mäkinen winns! After kilometers of outragious hard roads Tommi wins with his Lancer Evolution VI Group A the Safari Rally leaving no chance to the other drivers from the beginning of the rally till the end. Loix finish 5th and in the Group N the Lancers of Pozzo and Ligato finish first and second.

CS1: Schwarz 55.05; Makinen+4s; McRae+28; Solberg+33; Sainz+1.49; Gronholm+2.07; Rovanpera+3.05; Arai+3.42; Thiry+4.07; Loix+4.25

CS2: Makinen/Loix 24.06; McRae+9; Solberg+18; Auriol+26; Schwarz+30; Sainz+44; Gronholm+50; Rovanpera+55; Delecour+1.37

CS3: Sainz 48.40; Makinen+17; Auriol+18; Delecour+38; Rovanpera+57; Gronholm+2.20; Thiry+4.23; McRae+5.21; Schwarz+6.2

CS4:Sainz 35.42; Makinen+40; Solberg+57; Rovanpera+1.20; Delecour+2.04; Loix+8.19; Schwarz+8.26; Thiry+10.23; Dor+18.31; Pozzo+19.02; 

Leg1:Makinen 2.44.34; Sainz+1.32; Rovanpera+5.16; Solberg+7.15; Delecour+9.20; Schwarz+14.20; Thiry+19.43; Loix+27.24;

CS5: Solberg 1.00.05; Rovanpera+26; Makinen+32; Schwarz+50; Thiry+2.58; Delecour+6.38; Ligato+10.09; Pozzo+10.25; 

CS6: Makinen 46.23; Rovanpera+29; Schwarz+33; Delecour+1.20; Solberg+2.35; Thiry+3.56; Loix+5.02; Pozzo+8.13; Ligato+9.56; Anwar+11.38

CS7: Solberg 41.16; Rovanpera+5; Delecour+39; Makinen+48; Schwarz+1.18; Loix+2.18; Thiry+6.04; Ligato+6.42; Pozzo+6.56; Anwar+12.06

CS8: Solberg 27.27; Delecour+2; Makinen+11; Rovanpera+16; Schwarz+18; Thiry+1.53; Loix+3.29; Ligato+4.44; Pozzo+7.54; Anwar+9.23

CS9: Makinen 45.40; Rovanpera+1.13; Schwarz+1.30; Loix+2.02; Solberg+2.05; Thiry+3.38; Delecour+4.21; Ligato+10.14; Pozzo+11:30; Green+16.03

Leg 2: Makinen 6.27.06; R'pera+6.14; Solberg+10.24; Schwarz+17.08; Delecour+22.09; Thiry+36.31; Loix+1.01.01; Pozzo+1.30.10; Ligato+1.31.32; Green+2.13.54

CS10: Makinen 1.01.02; Rovanpera+25; Delecour+39; Schwarz+1.07; Thiry+7.12; Ligato+11.44; Pozzo+14.10; Green+15.04; Anwar+16.43; Rose+22.45; Loix+38.54

AfterCS10:Makinen 7.28.08; R'pera+6.39; Schwar+18.15; D'cour+22.48; Thiry+43.43; Loix+1.40.45; Ligato+1.43.16; Pozzo+1.44.20; Green+2.28.58; Anwar+2.46.55

CS12:Delecour 50.09; Makinen+1.27; Schwarz+1.37; Rovanpera+2.53; Loix+3.59; Thiry+10.45; Pozzo+11.32; Green+13.15; Ligato+14.13; Anwar+14.45

AfterCS12:Makinen 8.19.44; R'pera+8.05; Schwar+18.25; D'cour+21.21; Thiry+53.01; Loix+1.43.17; Pozzo+1.54.25; Ligato+1.56.02; Green+2.40.46; Anwar+3.00.13

CS13:Delecour 38.08; Schwarz+25; Makinen+45; Loix+1.30; Rovanpera+5.17; Ligato+12.33; Pozzo+13.16; Anwar+13.35; Green+15.55; Stohl+21.30

Leg 3:Makinen 8.58.37; R'pera+12.37; Schwarz+17.35; D'cour+20.36; Loix+1.44.02; Pozzo+2.07.26; Ligato+2.07.50; Green+2.55.56; Anwar+3.13.03; Stohl+4.41.23

Drivers: Makinen 40; McRae 30; Sainz 26; R'pera 20; Burns 15; D'cour 14; Auriol 10; Loix 9; Solberg 9

Makes: Mitsubishi 66; Ford 60; Subaru 28; Peugeot 26; Skoda 15; Hyundai 10

 

 

 

 

 





WRC Akropolis Rally

Friday 15 June 2001:

The world rally battle goes on. In this tremendous rally Colin Mc Rae dominated the race from the beginning. Sainz left on the Leg 3, very disappointing for him. Mäkinen got a 4th place and now leads in the drivers championship togheter with Colin McRae!

In the Group N Pozzo and Trelles showed that the time gap between the Group N Mitsubishi Lancers and the WRC cars is a matter of few seconds /kilometer!

 

Didier Auriol (Peugeot) is reported to have a clutch problem (SS1)

Didier Auriol (Peugeot) retired - clutch.

Tommi Makinen (Mitsubishi) - left rear puncture. Alister McRae (Hyundai) - lack of turbo boost.

Marcus Gronholm (Peugeot) retired - holed sump.

Kenneth Eriksson (Hyundai) - no turbo boost or power steering (SS3)

Toshi Arai (Subaru) retired - under bonnet fire.

SS5 cancelled - spectators.

Kenneth Eriksson (Hyundai) retired - turbo. Markko Martin (Subaru) retired - puncture/suspension

Francois Delecour (Ford) - power steering failure in SS11

 

Gilles Panizzi (Peugeot) has stopped in SS14 with a broken suspension arm.

Richard Burns (Subaru) went off the road in SS15.

Gilles Panizzi (Peugeot) retired - OTL.

Freddy Loix (Mitsubishi) - front right puncture (SS18).

Richard Burns (Subaru) retired - broken propshaft (SS19).

Carlos Sainz (Ford) retired - no oil pressure (SS20).

Petter Solberg (Subaru) only has 3rd gear on the road section into service.


Makes: Ford 60; Mitsubishi 53; Subaru 28; Peugeot 20; Skoda 11; Hyundai 10

Drivers:Makinen/McRae 30; Sainz 26; Burns 15; R'pera 14; Delecour 11; Auriol 10; Solberg 9; Loix 7

In the Group N Pozzo got a first place followed by a superb fighing Gustavo Trelles.

1. G.POZZO
D.STILLO

MITSUBISHI
LANCER Gr.N
4.40.17.9
2. G.TRELLES
J.DEL BUONO

MITSUBISHI
LANCER Gr.N MRT by Nocentini
4.41.14.6
+56.7
3.M.LIGATO
R.GARCIA
MITSUBISHI

LANCER Gr.N
4.48.49.8
+8.31.

SS1:Burns 19.14.0; Solberg+0.1; Gronholm+0.2; C.McRae+2.7; Martin+6.6; Sainz+7.3; Eriksson+21.4; Makinen+23.9; Arai+24.8; Radstrom+27.2; Loix+30.5

SS2:Solberg 8.07.8; Gronholm+0.7; Sainz+2.0; Burns+2.6; Radstrom+4.1; Arai+4.4; Loix+5.8; Eriksson+7.2; Rovanpera+7.2; C.McRae+8.1; Makinen+9.1

After2:Solberg27.21.9; G'holm+0.8; Burns+2.5; Martin+6.9; Sainz+9.2; C.Mc+10.7; Panizzi+25.7; E'son+28.5; Arai+29.1; R'strom+31.2; Makinen+32.9; Loix+36.2

SS3:Martin 18.27.1; Panizzi+4.2; Solberg+4.4; Radstrom+4.8; C.McRae+9.0; Burns+10.3; Sainz+11.0; Delecour+11.5; Bugalski+14.9; Loix+15.9; Makinen+28.7(13)

SS4:C.McRae 20.17.2; Delecour+0.1; Panizzi+0.5; Solberg+1.2; Martin+4.1; Radstrom+7.4; Burns+9.3; Sainz+10.8; Loix+15.9; Bugalski+18.1; Makinen+22.9 (12)

AfterSS4:S'berg 1.06.11.8; Martin+5.4; C.Mc+14.1; Burns+16.5; P'zi+24.8; Sainz+25.4; R'trom+37.8; Loix+1.02.4; B'ski+1.10.0; R'pera+1.14.8; Makinen+1.18.9

SS6:C.McRae 19.14.2; Sainz+9.8; R'pera+13.6; Makinen+15.2; Loix+19.8; Burns+30.6; D'Cour+38.0; A.McRae+40.1; Schwarz+44.8; Martin+52.3

Leg1:C.McRae 1.25.40.1; Sainz+21.1; Burns+33.0; Martin+43.6; Solberg+58.1; Panizzi+1.05.3; Loix+1.08.1; R'pera+1.14.3; Makinen+1.20.0; Schwarz+1.57.5


SS7: Delecour 19.46.0; Rovanpera+8.7; Solberg+9.2; C.McRae+10.7; Burns+11.2; Sainz+17.1; Makinen+17.2; A.McRae+25.6; Bugalski+25.9; Loix+31.9

SS8: Delecour 12.12.8; Burns+6.7; Makinen+8.7; Rovanpera+8.7; Sainz+10.2; Solberg+10.4; A.McRae+11.8; C.McRae+13.5; Bugalski+14.7; Loix+18.1

AfterSS8: C.McRae 1.58.03.1; Sainz+24.2; Burns+26.7; Solberg+53.5; R'pera+1.07.5; Makinen+1.21.7; Loix+1.33.9; Panizzi+1.47.3; D'cour+1.53.9; B'ski+2.22.8


SS9: Sainz 9.26.2; Delecour+1.0; Rovanpera+1.6; Burns+2.7; C.McRae+5.0; Solberg+7.5; Loix+9.0; Schwarz+12.6; Makinen+13.0; Panizzi+13.8

SS10: Delecour 1.57.3; Sainz+0.1; Makinen+0.2; C.McRae+0.6; Burns+1.0; Solberg+2.0; Schwarz+3.0; Loix+4.4; Rovanpera+4.9; Panizzi+6.3

SS11: Sainz 13.17.3; Burns+3.0; C.McRae+5.1; Rovanpera+7.5; Makinen+7.6; Bugalski+9.1; Solberg+11.7; Schwarz+15.8; Jean-Joseph+16.0; Loix+21.9

AfterSS11:C.McRae 2.22.54.6; Sainz+13.6; Burns+22.7; Solberg+1.04.0; R'pera+1.10.8; Makinen+1.31.8; Loix+2.18.5; P'zzi+2.40.5; B'ski+2.42.9; D'cour+2.51.6

SS12: Delecour 18.13.2; Sainz+0.3; Solberg+2.2; Burns+3.0; Rovanpera+4.3; C.McRae+4.8; Loix+9.1; Makinen+13.3; Bugalski+16.5; A.McRae+17.6

SS13:Burns 12.03.4; Delecour+1.1; Solberg+5.4; C.McRae+6.1; Sainz+6.8; Rovanpera+9.4; Bugalski+12.8; Loix+14.0; Makinen+22.6; Schwarz+40.1

Leg 2:C.McRae 2.53.22.1; Sainz+9.8; Burns+14.8; Solberg+1.00.7; R'pera+1.13.6; Makinen+2.06.8; D'cour+2.41.8; B'ski+3.01.3; Schwarz+3.42.4; Panizzi+4.14.6

SS14:Burns 4.49.6; C.McRae+2.0; Sainz+2.8; Solberg+4.0; Rovanpera+4.1; Makinen+4.8; Delecour+5.1; A.McRae+9.1; Loix+10.9; Bugalski+11.9

SS15:Solberg 25.37.5; C.McRae+4.9; Delecour+7.1; Sainz+9.1; Rovanpera+18.0; Loix+18.2; Bugalski+19.1; Makinen+21.7; A.McRae+25.9; Jean-Joseph+39.4

SS16:Burns 9.19.2; Sainz+0.2; Rovanpera+1.0; Delecour+1.6; Solberg+2.2; C.McRae+4.6; Makinen+4.7; Bugalski+10.4; Loix+11.5; Schwarz+12.0

SS17: Sainz 1.55.6; Burns+0.3; C.McRae+0.4; Solberg+1.6; Makinen+1.9; Delecour+2.2; Rovanpera+2.4; Loix+2.6; A.McRae+2.8; Bugalski+3.3

SS18: Sainz 13.03.2; Delecour+2.3; C.McRae+2.5; Rovanpera+3.6; Burns+4.5; Solberg+5.5; Makinen+8.0; Bugalski+11.4; A.McRae+13.4; Schwarz+14.0; Loix+3.04.8

After18:McRae 3.48.21.6; Sainz+7.5; S'berg+59.6; R'pera+1.28.3; Mak+2.33.5; D'cour+2.45.7; Burns+2.58.1; B'ski+3.43.0; Sch+4.52.8; J-J+6.38.9; Loix+7.54.3

SS19: Sainz 4.49.2; Makinen+0.3; C.McRae+1.6; Solberg+3.5; Delecour+4.8; Rovanpera+6.3; A.McRae+7.9; Loix+8.8; Thiry+12.1; Bugalski+13.1

SS20: Makinen 25.32.6; Delecour+3.4; Solberg+4.4; Loix+16.3; C.McRae+16.9; Rovanpera+19.6; Bugalski+22.6; Thiry+43.3; Jean-Joseph+47.9; Schwarz+58.8

Leg 3: C.McRae 4.19.01.9; Solberg+49.0; R'pera+1.35.7; Makinen+2.15.3; D'cour+2.35.4; B'ski+4.00.2; Schwarz+5.56.7; J-J+7.27.1; Loix+8.00.9; Thiry+8.35.7

WRC Cyprus Rally  

 

The Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart crew of Freddy Loix/Sven Smeets upheld Mitsubishi honours by
finishing the Rally of Cyprus - the sixth round of the FIA World Rally Championship - in fifth position.
Team-mates Katsuhiko Taguchi/Derek Ringer suffered huge disappointment when they were forced to retire in stage 20 after an impressive performance and a potential top ten finish. 

In a thrilling battle to the end, no fewer than three drivers were in with a chance of victory, however Britain’s Colin McRae powered his Ford Focus to a second successive victory, moving him up the Championship leaderboard into third position. Despite retiring from the event, Marlboro Mitsubishi
Ralliart driver Tommi Makinen maintains his lead in the FIA World Rally Championship, such was his advantage, however, despite Freddy’s three points, Mitsubishi slips to second in the manufacturers’ series, trailing Ford by just three points. The Mitsubishi Carisma GT crew of Loix and Smeets started on a charge from the outset and
leading stage times enabled them to slash the deficit to Subaru’s Toshi Arai. With the retirement of Peugeot’s World Champion Marcus Gronholm, the pair moved up into fifth but could simply push no harder as a balance between speed and tyre durability was imperative. 

"I’m very happy with fifth but disappointed to have lost so much time yesterday", said Freddy. "This
afternoon we were trying quite a bit but with the rough conditions it was impossible to push too hard. We could have gone quicker on individual stages and perhaps got a fastest time, but we were having to preserve the tyres. Still, we got some points on a very difficult rally, but we still have some work to do for the Acropolis and Kenya".