South African Lategan wins Dakar stage 8 to consolidate lead
South African Henk Lategan (Toyota) consolidated his lead atop the driver standings of the Dakar Rally by winning the eighth stage on Monday.
The 30-year-old, in his fourth Dakar outing, covered the 487km special between Al-Duwadimi and Riyadh in 4hr 51min 54sec.
Lategan, who also won the January 3 prologue, extended his lead over home hope Yazeed al-Rajhi to 5min 41sec in the general classification.
Despite a two-minute penalty for speeding on the stage, Lategan finished the day's driving 1min 47sec ahead of compatriot Guy Botterill, also in a Toyota.
What a power performance by Henk and Brett today!!! An absolutely stunning stage win, even with the 2min penalty for speeding (!). This has put them in a very strong position for the following stages, and we can’t wait to see how this unfolds. A shout-out also to Guy and Dennis,… pic.twitter.com/q7mImf8gLR
— Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa (@TGRSouthAfrica) January 13, 2025
"There was one canyon where everybody was getting lost," said Lategan. "And we were a little bit nervous going into there because you see cars coming from the front and cars coming from all angles out the mountains.
"At the end, we went all the way out the canyon and then finally found our way. So we hopped from, let's say, seventh or so on the road all the way to first. And then we were opening for quite a while.
"And then we made one or two small navigation errors. We had a puncture earlier on. So, not a bad day. We're happy to have found that one waypoint, but not the perfect day."
France's Mathieu Serradori (Century) prevented an all-South African podium by finishing third, five seconds ahead of Brian Baragwanath.
Qatar's five-time champion Nasser al-Attiyah completed the stage 12min 17sec off Lategan's pace and now sits fourth in the standings, at 34min 14sec. Sweden's Mattias Ekstrom is third.
Let's go! 🚀
— DAKAR RALLY (@dakar) January 13, 2025
Feel the adrenaline and power of the Ultimate class with today's TOP MOMENTS presented by @CatrionGlobal 🔝#Dakar2025 pic.twitter.com/Yn6yXckd8q
"It was a very tough day," said Attiyah, who has seen fancied rivals Carlos Sainz and Sebastien Loeb withdraw from the gruelling race. "Sometimes when we were opening it was very difficult.
"Yazeed had a good line and when he passed we just followed him, until the dunes when we passed him, but it was really difficult. I am happy to finish this day. We still have four days left and we'll see. The navigation was very hard. Sometimes we were lucky, other times not, but we made it here."
Tosha Schareina won the bike category, the Spaniard clawing back 3min 30sec on Australian leader Daniel Sanders, who now leads by just over 11 minutes.
"I tried to push hard at the start and from the refuelling point several of us rode together," Schareina said.
"The first part was sandy but with the rain that fell yesterday it was quite nice. After that, there was plenty of dust, which made things difficult. Now I feel I'm ready for tomorrow."
Just next level riding ability 🔝
— DAKAR RALLY (@dakar) January 13, 2025
Here are the TOP MOMENTS from the riders on Stage 8️⃣ with more stunning skill on the tracks and dunes 🏍
Presented by @catrionglobal #Dakar2025 #DakarInSaudi pic.twitter.com/Vf5wtgUXya
Tuesday's stage nine features a 357km special from Riyadh to Haradh.
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