Staff, Monday November 27, 2006.
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Newly-crowned FIA World Rally champions BP-Ford aim to complete the most successful season in their history by ending a long winless streak on next week’s Wales Rally GB (30 November – 1 December). After securing the manufacturers’ world title earlier this month for the first time since 1979, BP-Ford drivers Marcus Grönholm and Timo Rautiainen and team-mates Mikko Hirvonen and Jarmo Lehtinen have their sights set on giving Ford a first British win since the same year.

After two seasons when the rally was held in September, Rally GB has reclaimed its traditional winter date as the final round of the 16-event championship. And the date switch, which extends the championship into December for the first time since 1986, throws up the prospect of unpredictable wintry weather – the single most difficult challenge faced by drivers in the hilly speed tests in the south Wales forests.
Apart from a spectacular spectator-friendly indoor special stage in Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium, all 17 tests are held on tough privately-owned gravel tracks. Most roads are in regular use, either by military vehicles on the most northerly stages or by lorries transporting logs to timber yards. Accordingly large log piles are a common sight by the edge of the tracks, adding an additional hazard for drivers.
Narrow tree-lined section high in the Vale of Neath forests contrast with vast open sections, both on the military land and where forestry work has removed the trees. If the weather is wet and gloomy, fog tends to hang between the trees in the forests while throwing a white blanket across the exposed areas on higher land. The roads are fast and flowing and invite drivers to attack, but in the wet they can be treacherously slippery and become rutted during the second pass.

Grönholm has won six rounds and Hirvonen one as the Ford Focus RS World Rally Car powered to championship success. With both the manufacturers’ and drivers’ titles now settled, BP-Ford World Rally Team director Malcolm Wilson has ensured both pairings that they are free to fight for victory.
Grönholm has plenty of experience in Britain, having started nine times and won once. “It can be an extremely difficult rally,” said 38-year-old Grönholm. “When the conditions are OK then the stages are fine but when it is wet, foggy, muddy and icy – sometimes all together – then the roads can be really hazardous. Fog is something that we don’t encounter on many rallies during the season, but you can guarantee that with the rally back at the end of the season, at some point we will have fog and that’s horrible.
“I’m looking forward to a good battle and I’m sure that Mikko will be one of my biggest challengers. He has increased his pace as the season has progressed and I know that he wants to try to prove himself in Britain so it should be good fun,” added Grönholm, assured of second in the drivers’ standings.
Hirvonen has started in Britain on three occasions and the 26-year-old is relishing the opportunity to attack. “There will be no pressure through having to score points so I’m looking forward to giving it a real go and driving as fast as I can. The stages in Wales are good but it’s not an easy event in which to bring the car home to the finish because of the conditions. In the dry the stages are quite simple but in December we can expect temperatures below zero with ice and fog. Fog is the worst. The roads are so fast that when it’s foggy you can’t see well.
“I will try to win but I know that to do that I need to beat Marcus at least. I hope that I can match his pace and put pressure on him through the whole weekend,” added Hirvonen, who is already assured of third in the drivers’ championship.
Team News


Rally Route
The rally is again based entirely in the forests of south Wales and although the start and finish are in Cardiff, the single service park is based on the edge of Swansea, 70km to the west. Each leg comprises two identical loops of tests in the morning and afternoon. Friday’s opening leg is centred on the Vale of Neath forests and includes the classic Resolfen and Rheola tests. Saturday’s competition is located further north, close to the Epynt military land, near Brecon. The day ends with a spectacular test inside Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium and, like last year, the arena’s sliding roof will be closed. The final leg takes competitors west to the Brechfa Forest complex for stages which have traditionally formed the opening day’s action in recent years. Drivers tackle 17 stages covering 355.92km of competition in a route of 1206.67km.
*Subject to the official publication of the results by the FIA
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