South Africa's Variawa becomes youngest Dakar stage winner
Nine-time world rally champion Sebastien Loeb rolled his Dacia in the Saudi desert on Tuesday as the Dakar Rally continued to take a toll of the big names after the exit of 2024 winner Carlos Sainz.
Sainz turned his Ford upside down on Sunday, dealing too much damage to the car's roll cage to continue after just two stages.
Loeb, who had started the day sixth, and co-driver Fabian Lurquin were unhurt in the incident 12km into the third 327km stage from Bisha to Al-Henakiyah and resumed after making repairs.
They stopped again at the 63km mark, however, and finished the stage trailing South Africa's overall leader Henk Lategan by an hour and 14 minutes and dropping out of the top 15 in a big blow to their hopes of a first Dakar win.
South African Saood Variawa won the day for the Toyota Gazoo factory team, at 19 the youngest Dakar stage winner in the top car category, ahead of Mini's Guerlain Chicherit and Toyota's Seth Quintero.
🏆 With Saood Variawa's stage victory at just 19 years old, he becomes the youngest ever stage winner in the car category.
— DAKAR RALLY (@dakar) January 7, 2025
🥇 So along with Seth Quintero and Rokas Baciuška all three Ultimate stage winners at this year's Dakar are 25 or younger.
🚀 The new generation is here,… pic.twitter.com/84qNOwm4dX
"Towards the end, in the last five kilometres, we hit a big rock and got a puncture, but nonetheless it was a really good drive on our side," said Variawa.
Want to see some powerful cars absolutely flying across the terrain of the #Dakar2025❓
— DAKAR RALLY (@dakar) January 7, 2025
Then tune in for out Ultimate Top Moments of Stage 3️⃣ presented by @CatrionGlobal 🔝 pic.twitter.com/37tQlkiB3k
Lategan, only 12th fastest on the stage, leads Qatar's five-time winner Nasser Al-Attiyah, Loeb's teammate, in the category by seven minutes and 17 seconds with Ford's Mattias Ekstroem third.
Overall leaders Henk Lategan (co-driver Brett Cummings) provides an update after Stage 3, including an issue with the ERTF system early in the special.
— Junaid #JB17 (@JunaidSamodien_) January 7, 2025
🎥Toyota Gazoo Racing SA pic.twitter.com/oVkSqerw2K
Saudi Arabia's Yazeed Al-Rajhi dropped from second to fourth overall while double Dakar motorcycle champions Toby Price of Australia and Sam Sunderland of Britain slid from fourth to sixth in their first Dakar on four wheels.
In the motorcycle category, Spanish Sherco rider Lorenzo Santolino took his first stage win but Australian Daniel Sanders retained the overall lead, a minute and 57 seconds clear of American Skyler Howes.
🏍 Here are our Top Moments from the Bikes after another exciting day at #Dakar2025
— DAKAR RALLY (@dakar) January 7, 2025
Presented by @CatrionGlobal 👍 pic.twitter.com/mmP29siTL1
Wednesday's fourth stage is a 415km special from Al-Henakiyah to Al Ula.
The two-week rally, regarded as the world's toughest endurance event and now held entirely in Saudi Arabia, ends on January 17.
Advertisement