KTM Racing News Dakar 2012 Final Report
Tuesday 17 January: I stayed away from the whole Dakar 'thing' as daily reports from KTM, Honda, Yamaha and the event organisers. Sharing this final one from KTM as it's was their 11th consecutive win.
Firstly ... KTM's Chris Birch (NZ and SA - pictured right) rode the final
stage of the Dakar
2012 with concussion and a suspected broken nose. After two big crashes he
still finished overall 27th for a heroic ride.
This is Chris's comments on Facebook: "To
all you good people who have been following and supporting me over the
last two weeks thank you!! Its been an incredible adventure. I don't have
the words to describe this race. Numbers help, fifteen days, nine
thousand k's, literally millions of spectators, one very sore arse, two
big crashes and one very stoked motorbike rider! A massive thank you to
Comsoll, KTM ,Red Bull, Kini, Adrial Petro, Kiwi Rider, and the hundreds
of people who helped me make the journey."
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Red Bull KTM factory rider Cyril Despres on Sunday rode into Lima in
triumph to seal his fourth career Dakar title and to present KTM with
its eleventh consecutive win in this, the toughest event on the annual
motorsports calendar.
His KTM teammate Marc Coma finished second overall in what was one of the most epic two-way battles in the rally’s history.
KTM
has now won the motorcycle division of the Dakar rally every year since
2001, with
the exception of 2008 when it was canceled because of
security threats. In the 2012 edition, eight of the top 10 finishers and
15 of the top 20 rode KTM machines underlining the dominance of the
Austrian brand’s sports bikes.
The race was a personal triumph
for French-born Despres who first won in 2005 and repeated the victory
in 2007, 2010 and again in 2012. His KTM factory teammate Marc Coma, who
won the rally in 2006, 2009 and 2011 finished second after one of the
Dakar’s most historic and closely fought battles. Both riders set the
scene for a two-way competition right from the first stage and remained
minutes apart until the penultimate stage on Saturday. Coma won five
stages in the 2012 edition and Despres four but it was the turn of the
Frenchman to ride in triumph into Lima.
Cyril Despres: "Today
we won and it's simply fantastic. This is without a shadow of a doubt
the toughest Dakar I've ever raced in. It was difficult physically, but
even more psychologically. Challenging yourself every morning and
fighting on the course takes its toll on your mind. It's not like a
42-kilometer marathon; here, you have to earn your place every morning.
All victories are beautiful, but this one is special because it came
down to the wire and was decided at the last minute. This was an
unimaginable scenario, with the leaders separated by mere seconds. I've
done 90 or 85 rallies throughout my life, and this one was the one where
I had to fight the hardest. Today will leave its mark on me.”
The
final stage from Pisco to Lima was largely ceremonial with a 254 km
liaison section along the Pacific coastline of southern Peru and a brief
29 km timed special, a final
encounter with the coastal dunes in the
middle of the liaison section. Riders started in reverse order for the
final stage that completed this marathon, almost 9,000 km ride from Mar
del Plata in Argentina to Lima. Along the way they encountered vastly
different terrain ranging from the Argentinean pampas to the high Andes,
the daunting Atacama Desert of Chile and finally the southern coastal
plains and rios of Peru. It was the first time that the rally had
included Peru and the first time it represented a dash from the Atlantic
coastline to the Pacific
The last timed special went to Pal
Anders Ullevalseter of Norway (KTM) who finished ahead of Coma in second
place. Despres, who said after the penultimate stage that the effort to
stay ahead of Coma had cost a huge amount of physical and mental energy
coasted home in tenth place.
Only minutes had separated the two
KTM leaders going into the penultimate stage and the competition was
fierce. Since the beginning of the rally both riders had never let up in
speed and determination. But in the heat of the battle on Friday, Coma
made a huge jump on the bike and when he landed he knew he had gearbox
problems. He nursed the bike back to the bivouac but also made a
navigational error in the process and this was enough to give his rival
the lead he needed.
A new Dakar rule in 2012 penaliszes riders 15
minutes for the first change of engines and 45 minutes for the second.
As the factory team had decided to change out both engines in the lead
riders bikes one stage into the second half of the rally this meant that
when Coma’s engine was changed a second time he was given another 45
minutes penalty, effectively handing the title to his teammate.
Alex
Doringer, Team Manager for KTM’s factory team said he was delighted
that his top two riders had taken first and second place. "The battle
between them was amazing,” he said from the finish in Lima, adding the
team was also very happy that Johnny Aubert from the KTM Enduro Factory
Team finished in overall fourteenth place in his rookie Dakar ride.
Johnny rode a standard series model KTM 450 Rally Replica and went into
the rally with a mission to learn and enjoy.
KTM’s motorsports
expert Heinz Kinigadner, himself a former Dakar rider said it was a
great day for the company. "This battle between Cyril Despres and Marc
Coma was one of the tightest and one of the most interesting in the
history of the rally. They were virtually wheel on wheel in almost every
stage. They both gave everything both physically and mentally and they
both deserve to go into the Dakar record books for this great effort. It
is naturally unfortunate that Marc had some gearbox problems in the
penultimate stage and picked up a 45-minute penalty for the engine
change. Otherwise their times at the finish line would have been only
minutes apart.”
Overall Results after final Stage 14
- Cyril Despres, France, KTM, 43 hours 28 minutes and 11 seconds
- Marc Coma, Spain, KTM at 53:20
- Helder Rodrigues, Portugal, Yamaha at 1:11:17
- Jordi Viladoms, Spain, KTM at 1:40:56
- Stefan Svitko, Slovakia, KTM 1:47:28
Other significant KTM
- 14th Johnny Aubert, France, KTM at 4:39:39
-
27th Chris Birch, NZ & SA, KTM