Second
day of action at Rally Poland concluded with a repeat
passage upon the 30 kilometres of the Wydminy stage,
a fast-paced itinerary moving in and out of the woodlands
of the Mazurian Lake region.
It was a day of determined flat-out racing for the
event's top three drivers: with Dani Sordo pushing
very hard to catch up to Jari-Matti Latvala, the latter
had no choice but to speed up the pace as well, and
that forced rally leader Mikko Hirvonen to drive as
fast as possible in order to retain his place at the
top of the standings.
At the end of the day all three
remained in the same overall positions, but to do so
they spent enormous amounts of effort. All were more
than satisfied with their respective performances – and
with good reason.
On the attack this morning, Dani Sordo halved the
gap between himself and Latvala by midday, also diminishing
the distance to Hirvonen.
After the service break,
by then quite aware of the danger represented by Sordo,
the Ford drivers decided to seriously push their limits.
The
tactic worked: both succeeded in bringing the gaps
between themselves and Sordo back to what they were
in the morning, and Hirvonen even added a few extra
seconds to his lead. The battle is not over however
as five tests remain tomorrow.
On today's final run,
Sebastien Loeb took the stage victory with a running
time of 15:26.9. Racing today under Super Rally rules
following his accident yesterday, the Citroen team
driver signed a top two result on every stage today,
including four wins.
After puncturing in Sardinia, crashing
in Greece and again in Poland, five-time champion Loeb
admitted that he needed to do well here performance-wise
if only to keep his confidence high: "I
try to finish this rally and have a new start in Finland."
Second-quickest on this stage, Ford's Mikko Hirvonen
was just as amazed as satisfied regarding his performance
today: "This afternoon
was absolutely insane."
"It's been a long time since we were this flat-out.
It's been a good day, even though I didn't expect this
level of battle. I thought it could be a bit easier,
but since the second stage today we've been absolutely
flat-out," he said. "It's
been fantastic. Absolutely fantastic!"
Hirvonen's approach today was straightforward: "You
just go flat-out no matter what's coming!"
Third-best on this stage, teammate Jari-Matti Latvala
explained his logical conclusion regarding Sordo's
constant pressure: "We
have no choice but to go flat-out."
After
losing time earlier this afternoon by stalling twice,
the Citroen Junior Team's Sebastien Ogier had promised
to do better on the day's concluding stage.
His fourth-fastest
time allowed him to add a few needed seconds to his
battle against the Solberg brothers in the general
standings.
Dani Sordo came next in the sixth spot on this stage,
relinquishing a few seconds to the determined Ford
teammates.
The Citroen driver is however comfortably
set on the third step of the provisional podium, so
tomorrow the team will decide if he continues to apply
pressure to the Ford duo ahead in an attempt to gain
extra points, or rather safekeep what has been almost
secured.
Petter Solberg tried all day to regain his position
in the overall top five, and he accomplished that goal
on today's final stage when he set the sixth-best result
ahead of CJT driver Evgeny Novikov and – more
importantly – ahead of his battling sibling,
Stobart Ford's Henning Solberg.
However, Petter Solberg
pushed himself and his privateer Citroen Xsara very
hard over the course of the day: "Too
much on the limit to keep dong that all the time!"
He
will surely have to continue doing so however, as brother
Henning intends to regain his lost position in the
standings. When told the gap to his brother was 1.3
seconds, he quickly quipped: "It's
not much!"
It was a formation finish for the Stobart Ford outfit
as Henning Solberg was followed by teammates Krzysztof
Holowczyc and Matthew Wilson, who rounded out the top
ten on this stage.
In the general rankings at the end of Day Two, Mikko
Hirvonen holds a 12-second lead on teammate Jari-Matti
Latvala while third-placed Dani Sordo has been pushed
back 26.5 seconds away from the closest Ford driver.
Over
a minute further down the line in fourth overall, Sebastien
Ogier has increased the gap to the pursuing Petter
Solberg to 7.4 seconds. Having lost his former top
five position, Henning Solberg remains close by and
ready to recuperate it tomorrow.
Day Three at Rally Poland offers two loops featuring
a pair of gravel stages each, followed by a closing
super special stage. The action resumes tomorrow morning
at 07:51 local time.