Jari-Matti
Latvala has completed the first day of the Rally Australia
just 2.2s ahead of the flying Sebastien Ogier, but with
a comfortable gap back to the title contenders.
Latvala
and Ogier benefited from better road conditions than
the likes of Mikko Hirvonen and Sebastien Loeb - who
were first onto the extremely dusty roads today - and
chose to push flat-out at the front and build a lead
rather than back off and down drop the order in a bid
for a better road position tomorrow.
Latvala said he was quite happy with Ford's plan of
letting him pull away at the front and try to build a
lead before running first on the road on Saturday.
"I'm quite satisfied with today," he said. "For
sure I want to help Mikko, but of course I enjoy the
fact that it's been going quite well today. I didn't
want to play tactics. It's important now that we are
first on the road and Mikko has a better position for
tomorrow."
Although Ford driver
Latvala edged away from Citroen Junior's Ogier on this
afternoon's full-length gravel stages, the young Frenchman
struck back on the two runs through the asphalt Tweed
superspecial that ended the leg, clipping 5.2s from his
rival's lead around the Murwillumbah streets having based
his tyre strategy around these stages.
"It's been a good day," said Ogier, who is enjoying
his best start to a rally since leading on his World
Rally Car debut in Britain last winter. "I
could have been quicker [on gravel] because we chose
to start with old tyres on the back for the superspecial."
Hirvonen will start leg two in fifth place but third
on the road.
He was passed by both works Citroens on
the superspecials, where he confessed to being "terrible" on
Thursday, but the running order for Saturday had been
decided by positions at the end of the last normal
stage.
However having feared he might lose a huge amount
of time today, he will be relieved to be just 0.9s
behind title rival Loeb, who has struggled so far on
this event.
"I'm doing my best," said the world champion prior
to the superspecials. "I
was slower than Mikko all afternoon. We'll have to
see tomorrow. I didn't have any grip at all today,
which might have been due to the set-up. Also we had
old tyres on the rear ready for the super-stage, and
that might have cost us on these stages."
Loeb's team-mate Dani Sordo had deliberated slowed
on SS13 to fall behind Hirvonen in the Saturday running
order, before also repassing the Ford on the Tweed
stages, although he lost a place to Loeb at the same
time, albeit by a tiny 0.1s. The closely-matched Loeb,
Sordo and Hirvonen pack is now 22.7s behind rally leader
Latvala.
Behind the top five, Stobart Ford's Henning Solberg
and Matthew Wilson have established themselves in comfortable
sixth and seventh places, and Munchi's Ford's Federico
Villagra has pulled away from Conrad Rautenbach (Citroen
Junior) in their battle over eighth.
An eventful opening day in the Production class saw
Armindo Araujo lead until damaging his exhaust, then
Martin Prokop and Bernardo Sousa both hit the front
briefly before being delayed by the same rock on the
Kidney Health stage.
That put New Zealander Richard
Mason into the lead in 10th place overall. The Subaru
driver is 15s clear of a huge battle for second in
which the recovering Prokop, Sousa and local driver
Cody Crocker are covered by just 0.2s.