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French star shines for Bahrain Raid Xtreme as Sainz takes stage win in Saudi

Jeddah, Sebastien Loeb believes this could be the year that he leads Bahrain Raid Xtreme to victory in the Dakar Rally, and he underlined his intentions today on the first real test of the 45th edition in Saudi Arabia.

The nine-time World Rally Champion is nicely placed in second position following the 367-km opening special stage, just 23 seconds away from stage winner Carlos Sainz, with two other Prodrive Hunters in the top seven.

Partnered by Fabian Lurquin in his BRX Hunter, Loeb finds himself in between Audi team-mates Sainz and Mattias Ekström, but has strong support close at hand following a stage on which the five quickest drivers were separated by just over two minutes.

Winners of the Rallye du Maroc in October, Guerlain Chicherit with co-driver Alex Winocq set the fifth fastest time in their Prodrive Hunter, just five seconds adrift of Saudi’s Yazeed Al Rajhi in a Toyota.

Loeb’s BRX team-mates, Orly Terranova and Alex Haro, took their Prodrive Hunter to seventh place, one ahead of Qatar’s four-times winner and defending champion, Nasser Al Attiyah.

It all added up to a highly satisfying leg for the Prodrive-run BRX team in Saudi, which has 67 people, 14 nationalities and 27 vehicles supporting the Hunters, each running on EcoPower fuel which reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 80% compared to petrol.

After edging Loeb by one second on the previous day’s prologue, Ekström led for much of today’s stage before the Frenchman stepped up the pace in his Prodrive Hunter, as did Sainz, to surge past him over the last 100kms.

The performance of the Prodrive Hunters is no surprise following back-to-back victories in last year’s inaugural World Rally Raid Championship (W2RC).

Following Chicherit’s historic first rally success for the car in Morocco, Loeb gave BRX a splendid win in the Andalucia Rally, and has started the 2023 W2RC in Saudi determined to go one better than his overall runner up spot last year.

The Dakar continues tomorrow with a 430km stage from Sea Camp to Alula.

Source: Voice of America

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