Picture by Volkswagen Motorsport/DPPI.

On this last special stage of the Personal Dakar Argentina Chile, Marc Coma reached his third Dakar victory by keeping Cyril Despres under control. The easy route turned into a nightmare for “Chaleco” who lost a third place on the podium and in the standings to Helder Rodrigues due to mechanical breakdowns. In the car category, Nasser Al Attiyah gets his very first final victory in a Dakar way ahead of Giniel De Villiers.

Bikes:
Avoid trembling was the motto of the day. En route to Santiago de Baradero, Marc Coma started with more than 16′ lead in the general standings on his long-term contender Cyril Despres. The risk of seeing this lead go to waste for title holder was almost nil for the title holder, so the big challenge of this special stage was to stay focused. On the long straight stretches of trail, the Catalan who was opening the road went in clean and fast. Despres could only follow and was never able to catch up with the expected winner. The leader of the general standings since stage 4 only had to keep his opponent under control and only lost 1’30 to Despres on the finish line of the stage. The total time gap between the two men in the standings is 15’04”; finishing second, Despres will have a hard time coming to terms with the 10′ lost for a silly penalty. As for Coma, he can claim “paternity” of the perfect race: his riding craft brings him a third Dakar victory, the same number of final victories as Despres.

The third place on the podium seemed to be promised to Chilean rider Francisco Lopez, who had also finished third last year. With a 43-minute lead on his closest pursuant it was a sure deal. Unfortunately, fate hit hard on “Chaleco” who broke the rear shock absorber of his bike on km 159, i.e. just 22 km shy of the end. On the finish line, Helder Rodrigues, who just made the second fastest time of the special stage, just 5” behind Verhoeven is counting the minutes. Despite the help of Alain Duclos, who is now towing his leader, “Chaleco” only crossed the finish line at 13:23. Much too late – actually 29 minutes too late – to save his third place now occupied by the Portuguese rider. After Aprilia in 2010, it is therefore a Yamaha bike that finishes right behind the two lead KTM bikes. For Rodrigues, who finished 4th last year, it is a dream come true.

Cars:
Suspense was not on the agenda in the car race and battle. Small but repeated mistakes had already relegated Carlos Sainz further away from first place in the standings in the past few days. Hence, Nasser Al Attiyah became a better and better Dakar leader. With a 48-minute lead on Giniel De Villiers, who proved to be the steadiest of his team mates and opponent, the Qatari driver did nevertheless start with fear gripping his insides. Focused and steady, the Qatari driver wins his first Dakar after missing this victory by a very short 2 minutes in 2010. After the game of musical chair that took place for most of the two weeks, Carlos Sainz finishes third and gives a triple victory to the Race Touareg. In the process, the Spaniard also wins his 7th stage in the 2011 Dakar. This brings him to an impressive total of 24 stage victories in the Dakar; one more than Stéphane Peterhansel in his Dakar career.

The Frenchman, leader of the X-Raid team, mainly regrets losing his chances of getting to a 10th Dakar victory so early on! Finishing fourth today, “Peter” never managed to leave his fourth place in the overall standings. Fourth was also his place at the end of the 2010 Dakar. Then, further down the standings, way behind, Krzysztof Holowczyc, finishes fifth behind the wheel of a BMW X3 as well, but some 4h10 behind Nasser Al Attiyah.

Trucks:
At the time of publishing this article, the Trucks were still in the stage and had not completed the stage.
– Credit: www.dakar.com

Final Category Classification:
Bikes:
01) Coma (KTM) – 03hr 25m 00s
02) Despres (KTM) + 15m 04s
03) H. Rodrigues (Yamaha) + 01hr 40m 20s
04) Lopez Contardo (Aprilia) + 02hr 09m 45s
05) Pedrero Garcia (KTM) + 03hr 07m 03s
06) Ullevalseter (KTM) + 03hr 32m 56s
07) De Azevedo (KTM) + 03hr 59m 38s
08) Faria (KTM) + 04hr 13m 01s
09) Cody (Honda) + 04hr 52m 10s
10) Czachor (KTM) + 06hr 13m 41s

Cars:
01) Al-Attiyah (VW) – 21hr 16m 16s
02) De Villiers (VW) + 49m 41s
03) Sainz (VW) + 01hr 20m 38s
04) Peterhansel (BMW) + 01hr 43m 48s
05) Holowycz (BMW) + 04hr 11m 21s
06) Miller (VW) + 04hr 54m 42s
07) Leal Dos Santos (BMW) + 06hr 50m 07s
08) Lavielle (Nissan) + 07hr 57m 18s
09) Spinelli (Mitsubishi) + 08hr 23m 37s
10) Kahle (SMG Buggy) + 15hr 11m 56s

HANDBRAKES & HAIRPINS will run a full event review in next week’s issue 166 as well as featuring high quality photographs for your viewing entertainment.

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