Tag Archives: Dakar 2022

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2022 ProMX supplementary regulations

The Supplementary Regulations for the 2022 Penrite ProMX Championship, presented by AMX Superstores (ProMX), are now available to download on the ProMX website on the competitor info page and Team app, in preparation for the 2022 season.

Australian ProMX returns in 2022

ProMX artwork for Jerseys and Number Plates is also displayed on the ProMX Website on the competitor info page as well.

It is a condition of entry that each bike in the championship must run the series Penrite ProMX logo header on the front number plate, and competitors who choose not to run the Penrite ProMX Logo will not be permitted to participate in the round.

All competitors will also be required to run an ProMX Logo on their jerseys. The required placement is on the upper torso area. The .eps version of logo are available on the website. The logo must be a minimum of eight centimeters wide by three centimeters high.

Competitors who choose not to run the ProMX Logo while contesting a round of the Championship forfeit their right to any prize money.

Rider Number applications are open and lists are available on the competitor info page of the website and team app. It is the riders responsibility to confirm their number was carried over from 2021, please check the 2022 ProMX Rider Number Allocation document to ensure this has been completed. Riders must have a reserved number to compete in the 2022 Championship.

Round 1 entries are opening soon, stay tuned.

Australian ProMX Championship – Image by RBMotoLens

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Dakar 2022 run & won: Next stop Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge

The Dakar was the opening round of the World Rally-Raid Championship (W2RC) for the RallyGP riders and has come to an end after 12 stages in which those riders fought to get their hands on the famous Bedouin trophy, as well as earning the first points towards a ranking that will continue to take shape in the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge in March, followed by the Kazakhstan Rally in April, the Andalucía Rally in June and, finally, the Rallye du Maroc in October.

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

16 bikers signed up for the W2RC in the RallyGP category. Credit where credit is due: Sunderland leads the Championship with 38-points, ahead of Quintanilla with 30 and the reigning world champion Walkner, with 24.

Adrien Van Beveren, runner-up to Walkner in 2021 and fourth in the Dakar, picked up 20-points. The competition is still wide open after the first round of the 2022 season. Kevin Benavides is dead last, with a single point to his name, after his engine gave up the ghost in stage 10 of the Dakar.

Honda can find solace in the constructor ranking after letting the Dakar title slip away. It now tops the leader board after placing its four motorbikes in the top 10. The Japanese maker has accumulated 47 points, while GasGas got 38 exclusively from Sunderland’s performance. KTM is nipping at their heels with 36, while Sherco is fourth with 14, one length ahead of Hero with 13 and Husqvarna with 9.

Toby Price
Toby Price

In the Rally2 competition, Mason Klein holds the pole position in the battle for the World Cup with 38 points to Camille Chapelière’s 30. Bradley Cox spent many days in second place, but a crash sent him plummeting down the standings. Alfie’s son is fifth with 17 points. Another Frenchman, Romain Dumontier, is third with 24 points, while Jan Brabec is fourth with 20.

In the fight for the Junior title, Mason Klein (38 points) will come up against Bradley Cox (30 points) and Konrad Dąbrowski (24 points). Jean-Loup Lepan (20 points), Mike Wiedemann (17 points) and Leonardo Tonelli (15 points) are also favourites, bringing the number of promising young riders up to six.

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Riders talk AMA Supercross Round 2
2022 Monster Energy AMA SX RingCentral Coliseum Round 2

Report by Trevor Hedge – Images by Jeff Kardas

450 Main

Adam Cianciarulo scored the holeshot ahead of Shane McElrath and Ken Roczen when the gates dropped for the 450 Main.  Roczen lost positions to Jason Anderson and Justin Barcia early on the opening lap.

Adam Cianciarulo – Image by Jeff Kardas

Jason Anderson moved up to second place to make it a Kawasaki 1-2 as he chased Cianicarulo.  Aaron Plessinger moved past fellow KTM rider McElrath to take third place with 18-minutes still left on the shot clock. Barcia split the KTM men to move up to fourth place, while Roczen was sixth ahead of team-mate Sexton and new Yamaha signing Tomac.

Aaron Plessinger
Aaron Plessinger – Image by Jeff Kardas

With just under 17-minutes remaining Roczen ended up in the tough blocks and his CRF450R on the deck. By the time he was back up and running he was outside the top ten, all the way down in 14th place. The German only managed to improve on that by one place at the flag, a disappointing 13th place finish for the Factory Honda rider.

Ken Roczen – Image by Jeff Kardas

Meanwhile Jason Anderson had moved past Cianciarulo to take the race lead. Two laps later Plessinger pushed Cianciarulo further back to third place.  Two more laps and Cianciarulo was down to fourth after being passed by Barcia, a lap later Tomac also went through to push Cianciarulo further back to sixth. The Kawasaki man clearly struggling as the race progressed with his recovering shoulder and continued to lose places before eventually finishing 12th.

With seven-minutes left on the shot clock Plessinger was chasing Anderson hard, the gap was 1.8-seconds.  Barcia was a further four-seconds back in third, and Tomac equidistant in fourth.

Chase Sexton and Eli Tomac – Image by Jeff Kardas

Anderson responded to the challenge though and with three-minutes left his lead was back out to over four-seconds while Barcia was closing on Plessinger to try and challenge the KTM man for second place. Tomac was fourth, Malcolm Stewart fifth and Ferrandis sixth.

At the last lap flag Anderson was maintaining his four-second buffer over Plessinger, who in turn now had more breathing room over Barcia. And that was how they finished, Anderson a clear winner over Plessinger and Barcia.

Eli Tomac set the fastest lap of the race on his way to fourth ahead of Malcolm Stewart, Dylan Ferrandis, Cooper Webb and Marvin Musquin.

Dylan Ferrandis – Image by Jeff Kardas

Chase Sexton was the first Honda home in ninth ahead of Dean Wilson and Joey Savatgy.

Justin Barcia will take a three-point lead over Jason Anderson and Cooper Webb to San Diego next weekend.

450 Rider Quotes

Jason Anderson – P1

“It’s been a long time since I’ve had a win, but I never stopped believing in myself. I always knew I could be back up here on the top step, I just needed to put it all together. The track was tricky tonight with how beat up it got, but I feel super comfortable on the KX450SR and that was a huge factor in getting across the finish first. There are a lot of races left and I hope to stay here fighting for wins throughout the season.”

Jason Anderson – Image by Jeff Kardas
Aaron Plessinger – P2

“The opening round was a little rough for me but I re-grouped and had a really good week with the team. We did some testing with the whole crew and spent some time at the track and man, did it turn things around. I’m stoked! This is my second podium ever in the 450 class and I can’t thank these guys enough. It’s my first year on this bike, so I’m stoked on Red Bull KTM and everybody out there. Thank you!”

Justin Barcia – P3

“I was just riding my race and having fun out there. I got a little tight in the middle but I was able to regroup. I saw Eli coming so I knew I needed to put the hammer down and I really wanted those two in front of me but they rode awesome, AP and Jason. I want to dedicate this race to Fed [Ryan Fedorow], he unfortunately passed away last week, so this is for him and I feel like he would be proud of me tonight. I can’t thank the whole team enough. We’re going to keep coming up here, it was fun tonight!”

Justin Barcia – Image by Jeff Kardas
Eli Tomac – P4

“Overall, it was a good day with a really good qualifying result and a great heat race. It was a good track all day, and I enjoyed riding it and racing it. We worked on starts all week, and I was able to put myself in a good position in the heat race and got the win. I was feeling really good going into the main event. I was a little bit farther back on the start but made some good passes early on, and I was doing everything I could to push, but I couldn’t quite get to the podium spot. I made big improvements from the first round, and I know we’ll get there. It’s just a matter of fine-tuning at this point.”

Eli Tomac – Image by Jeff Kardas
Malcom Stewart – P5

“I think the night was actually kind of quiet for me, I’m stoked on the way I’ve been riding but starts are holding me back a little bit. It’s part of racing and we can take what we’ve learned from here and move forward. We’re still in a really good position for points so I’m stoked on that and just the whole program I’ve been on, I’ve never had this much fun! It’s only the second race and I feel like I’ve been racing for so long. The whole vibe and happiness has been great, so I’m looking forward to another great week.”

Malcom Stewart – Image by Jeff Kardas
Dylan Ferrandis – P6

“I felt good all day. We had a really good lap time during practice, but we got a really bad start in the heat race and had to fight my way up to fifth. Then in the main event, I got a little better start, but it was still not very good. I had another big fight to come back to the front and gave everything I had to come back to sixth. I think I could’ve got a top-five finish, but I made a mistake and missed a big double on the track, so I lost a lot of time. I closed the gap to fifth and finished on their rear wheel, but it was not enough. We’ll take this; it’s better than last weekend for sure, but it’s not really where we want to be. Step-by-step, we need to move our way up each race.”

Dylan Ferrandis – Image by Jeff Kardas
Cooper Webb – P7

“Tonight was a tough one, to say the least. I came down with a cold yesterday and fought through it the best we could today but definitely didn’t feel great at all. Practice went pretty good with third but I just tried to save as much as I could for the Main Event. I had a terrible start in the main and I made my way forward as best I could. It was definitely tough battling the sickness but I’m going to get healthy this week and go into San Diego with a fresh body and fresh slate. As far as the championship goes, we’re still in a good spot so we’ll see where it ends up.”

Marvin Musquin – P8

“In the heat race, I didn’t get a good start and unfortunately it didn’t work out. In the Main Event, I was on the outside gate and I actually had a better start but it was difficult in the first few laps mid-pack. I got a little bit better after four or five laps and I was trying to attack Cooper but I started tightening up and I didn’t keep that momentum until the end. I know I need to do better, so we’ll work on some things this week.”

Marvin Musquin – Image by Jeff Kardas
Chase Sexton – P9

“Round 2 in Oakland started off good; the first couple of qualifying sessions were good and then everything kind of went downhill. Ken and I got together in the final session and both of us went down pretty hard. After that, I actually ended up winning my heat race but besides that I kind of just felt uncomfortable in the whoops and with the track in general. It was a tough day for me, but I’m hopeful for a better finish in San Diego. I’m excited to get back to work this week and get ready for next weekend.”

Dean Wilson – P10

“Overall, tonight was better than the first round, I got a good start in the heat race but I rode tight out there. In the Main Event, I didn’t get a great start but I ended up getting 10th. It’s not what we want but only can keep striving to be better and fight with those guys to get to the next step I need to be.”

Adam Cianciarulo – P12

“This was another challenging weekend for us, but we have a number of positives to take away from it. I got out to two holeshots and was feeling comfortable up front early in the Heat Race and again in the Main Event. I did the best I could with my situation tonight and that’s what I’ll continue to do each day going forward. We are still on track with our goal of getting healthier every week and progressing back to full form as the condition of my shoulder improves.”

Adam Cianciarulo
Adam Cianciarulo – Image by Jeff Kardas
Ken Roczen – P13

“Not really much to say about Oakland. I feel like the day already started off kind of weird and we weren’t really feeling that great on the track, but we did the best we could. Chase [Sexton] and I went down pretty dang hard in the last qualifying practice. I got really lucky that nothing worse happened, as Chase kind of used my head as a whoop! It all happened so quickly and it was ultimately just me going down and falling into the wrong spot. The heat race was decent; I got second there. Going into the night show I put everything aside and tried to stay calm. We got off to a decent start, but I was probably around fourth or fifth and just struggled in the whoops; we’re just not good enough in them and we have to get better. That was a spot that bit me again, and after that there really wasn’t that much I could do. I finished 13th, but I’m going to keep my head up and charge hard again next weekend.”

Ken Roczen – Image by Jeff Kardas
Brandon Hartranft – P16

“In the main event I didn’t really have that strong of a start, but I fought hard through the whole race. I got into 16th and just tried to put in as many solid laps as I could, especially for how gnarly that track was. One of the sets of whoops – I’ve never seen a goat trail down the middle so deep! – I personally like it when the track’s beat like that. That’s when I feel like I ride my best. I’m working hard and the team’s working hard and I want to show more potential and better results.

Adam Enticknap

“The dirt was super tacky, it was just absolute traction everywhere. In heat one I didn’t ride like I wanted to ride, but I learned the lines. In the LCQ, got a great jump out of the gate, it was awesome. I poked it in there coming into the first corner, then passed into third on the first lap. A few laps in another rider came across the track and just took me out, up over the hay bales. I’m not really sure what was going on considering we were in third and fourth. That ended my night. I wish I could have that LCQ back. I’m looking forward to a great stadium and a great city next weekend.”

450 Main Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jason Anderson Kawasaki KX450SR 21 Laps
2 Aaron Plessinger KTM 450 SX-F  +03.366
3 Justin Barcia GASGAS MC 450F +06.165
4 Eli Tomac Yamaha YZ450F +09.919
5 Malcolm Stewart Husqvarna FC 450  +13.951
6 Dylan Ferrandis Yamaha YZ450F +14.779
7 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F  +16.649
8 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F  +34.013
9 Chase Sexton Honda CRF450R +37.714
10 Dean Wilson Husqvarna FC 450  +48.582

450 Championship Standings (Round 2 of 17)

Pos Rider Rnd1 Rnd2 Points
1 Justin Barcia 21 21 42
2 Jason Anderson 13 26 39
3 Cooper Webb 23 16 39
4 Aaron Plessinger 14 23 37
5 Ken Roczen 26 10 36
6 Eli Tomac 17 19 36
7 Marvin Musquin 19 15 34
8 Malcolm Stewart 16 18 34
9 Chase Sexton 18 14 32
10 Joey Savatgy 15 12 27
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250 Main

Jo Shimoda scored the holeshot in the 250 Main on the Pro Circuit Kawasaki to take the early lead from Christian Craig, Vince Friese, Seth Hammaker and Michael Mosiman.  Hunter Lawrence was sixth at the end of lap one but already had his work cut out for him in his quest for a podium.

Jo Shimoda

Shimoda stalled the KX250F late on the second lap, which allowed Craig to sweep through to the lead and push the Japanese rider back to second place. Shimoda recovered to fend off Friese who then made a mistake and fell back to sixth place as Hammaker moved up to take third, Mosiman fourth and Lawrence fifth.

Shimoda then made a mistake in the whoops two laps later and went down. By the time he got going again he had been relegated all the way down to ninth.

Michael Mosiman also made a mistake and lost a number of positions, allowing Hunter Lawrence to capitalise and move up to third place.

Meanwhile Christian Craig was unflustered up front and led by six-seconds with nine-minutes remaining.  Hammaker was second, and Lawrence a further three-seconds behind in third place but with four-seconds over fourth place Nate Thrasher.

Lawrence chased Hammaker hard and was in position to capitalise when the Kawasaki man made a small mistake in the whoops with just over two-minutes left on the shot clock.  Once past, Hunter pulled away to take a strong second place.

Hunter Lawrence
Hunter Lawrence

Christian Craig the dominant victor, the Yamaha man backed things off in the final laps but his winning margin was still more than five-seconds to make it two-from-two so far in AMA Supercross 2022.

Michael Mosiman was fourth ahead of Nate Thrasher and Vince Friese, while Jo Shimoda recovered from his early mistakes to claim seventh place.

AMA Supercross will reconvene next weekend in San Diego.

250 Rider Quotes

Christian Craig – P1

“The day was solid. I qualified first and then backed it up in the heat race and then got off to a good start in the main. I was second-place, and then the guy in front of me stalled it, so I made the pass and just never looked back. It was a pretty basic win, but it was nice to score my first back-to-back win. I was coming off a good weekend at Anaheim 1 and then had a good week at the practice track. So I came in here with confidence and just rode like I did last week, and like I do at the practice track every week, which is basically just having fun, and it’s been showing in my riding lately. It’s great to start the season off like this. I have a great support group and people that push me every day to be where I am. I’m really looking forward to my hometown race in San Diego next weekend, so let’s keep it going.”

Christian Craig
Christian Craig
Hunter Lawrence – P2

“Oakland wasn’t a bad night; we got second overall. Still, I’m definitely a bit frustrated. I had a few more laps than last weekend to work on Seth [Hammaker], and we had a good battle. He was riding really well in the beginning, so I had to keep just pushing through. My start wasn’t ideal, so we’re going to be working on that this week, but we’re fit and healthy. Next weekend we’re moving on to San Diego, so hopefully that will be a good race.”

Hunter Lawrence
Seth Hammaker – P3

“Now that I’ve been on the podium twice this year, I’m not satisfied with second or third, I want that win and we’ll be working hard for it. Last week I was able to minimize the mistakes, but I just had a few moments on Saturday that cost me some time. I’m really looking forward to going to San Diego. It has always looked like a cool stadium with a tighter, technical track.”

Seth Hammaker
Michael Mosiman – P4

“It was so good to be back at my hometown race in Oakland representing NorCal, the fans were awesome! It was a fun weekend with the team and a lot of really good racing. I’m a little disappointed with the result but I’m focusing on the positive. I had great speed, my race craft has significantly improved from years past and I think I am one of the best – if not the best – guy in the whoops and that feels good. If you don’t consider the finishes, it’s been fun to mix it up with the guys and I look forward to replicating some of that heat race magic in the main. It’s coming soon, I think everyone knows it and I look forward to the upcoming races.”

Nate Thrasher – P5

“I rode well all day; I’ve just got to work on my starts. It was a solid fifth-place, but I feel like I should’ve been on the podium. I came from the back and got up to fourth but got a little tired. I’m ready to go back to work. I feel like the speed’s there to be second and try and sneak in a win on Christian; he’s riding so well. We’ve just got to get a start and put ourselves in a situation to win, and right now, we are not doing that. Let’s go back and have a good week of training and keep swinging next week.”

Jo Shimoda – P7

“There were a lot of positives that we had in Oakland, but I wasn’t able to get the result I know we are capable of. It’s frustrating, but at least I know there are things that can be adjusted. The start was awesome and I felt good. I just made a mistake that cost me a good result. We know what we can work on this week and we’ll be ready for San Diego.”

Jo Shimoda
Carson Mumford – P14

“The day was a struggle for me. It was my first-time racing in Oakland. I had a big crash in the first practice but was okay and ended up getting sixth in my heat race. In the main I was in eighth and crashed. I had to pull into the mechanics area to get my throttle fixed before going back out, so only caught back up to 14th.”

250 Main Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Christian Craig Yamaha YZ250F 16 Laps
2 Hunter Lawrence Honda CRF250R +05.698
3 Seth Hammaker Kawasaki KX250 +09.954
4 Michael Mosiman GASGAS MC 250F +14.809
5 Nate Thrasher Yamaha YZ250F +23.244
6 Vince Friese Honda CRF250R +40.386
7 Jo Shimoda Kawasaki KX250 +49.493
8 Garrett Marchbanks  Yamaha YZ250F +52.899
9 Chris Blose GASGAS MC 250F +54.645
10 Robbie Wageman Yamaha YZ250F +58.012

250 West Championship Standings (Round 2 of 10)

Pos RIder Rnd1 Rnd2 Points
1 Christian Craig 26 26 52
2 Hunter Lawrence 21 23 44
3 Seth Hammaker 23 21 44
4 Michael Mosiman 17 19 36
5 Vince Friese 18 17 35
6 Garrett Marchbanks 19 15 34
7 Jo Shimoda 16 16 32
8 Nate Thrasher 11 18 29
9 Robbie Wageman 15 13 28
10 Chris Blose 12 14 26

Source: MCNews.com.au

The final wrap up from Dakar 2022 – Results, reflections and regrets…

Dakar 2022


After leaving the shores of the Red Sea on 1 January, 109 riders made it back to Jeddah with 8,000 kilometres under their belts.

With less than three-and-a-half minutes between Sam Sunderland and Pablo Quintanilla it was the slimmest margin at the top of the leader board since 1994, when Orioli finished just over a minute ahead of Arcarons. Sunderland back to his winning ways after a drought stretching back to 2017.

In the Original by Motul category for bikers without assistance, the 2022 podium was almost the same as last year’s. Lithuanian Arūnas Gelažninkas retained the title, while the battle-hardened Czech Milan Engel was runner-up and Frenchman Benjamin Melot defended his third place.


How the Aussies fared

Toby Price looks set to play the long game in the 2022 FIM World Rally-Raid Championship this year, having never really recovered from his opening stage navigation issue, which was compounded by a waypoint that failed to register in Stage 11. However, a strong performance in the final stage saw the Australian finish second for the stage to end Dakar 2022 on a high note despite a lowly, for him, tenth place outright. Without those earlier issues Toby would have been well placed to battle for victory, but as they, that’s racing and anything can happen…

Toby Price
Toby Price

Price now looks ahead to the remainder of this year’s FIM World Rally-Raid Championship.

Toby Price – P10 (Stage P2)

“I’m always happy to reach the finish here at the Dakar, it’s been a really tough race this year. Losing time on that first day put me on the back foot a little for the rest of the stages, and the way things are now, any mistakes can lose you a lot of time on the others because things are so close. The terrain here in Saudi makes for a really fast race too, a lot of the stages are sprints to the finish, but the atmosphere is good and it’s a good place to be. I’m excited for 2023 already!”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Toby was the only Aussie to successfully finish the event while countrymen Daniel Sanders and Andrew Houlihan were forced to watch the latter half of Dakar from the sidelines after sustaining injuries.

With two stage wins to his name at this year’s event, Daniel Sanders still unquestionably stamped his mark on Dakar 2022. Sanders was third in the provisional standings up until stage seven when the Aussie fractured his elbow and wrist in a fall on the transport run to the start of the special stage in the dark. He’ll be back at the Dakar in 2023 for another run at the title.

Countryman Andrew Houlihan was forced to withdraw from the event after the fifth stage by medical officials refused him start clearance on the back of his previous rib injuries being dangerously inflamed.


Sam Sunderland wins 2022 Dakar Rally

Sam Sunderland and GasGas Factory Racing won the 2022 Dakar Rally after delivering a mature, considered performance, that ended with a measured eighth-place finish in Friday’s final stage, handing the manufacturer their first overall victory at the event at the 44th Dakar Rally.

Sam Sunderland – 2022 Dakar Rally Champion

“Wow. What a feeling! That 10-minute period waiting at the end of the final stage to see if I’d won felt like a lifetime. But this feeling, knowing I’ve won a second Dakar, will stay in my memory forever. This win feels better than the first as this victory was anything but easy. The times were so close this year and there was no time to let off the gas, it was a really close race, right to the end. All of the hard work, the sacrifices, and everything that the GasGas team has done for me makes it all worthwhile. It’s been five years since my first Dakar win, and it’s been a long time to wait! I’m super happy to get another win and claim the first one for GasGas. Everyone on the team has worked so hard to achieve this and it’s a true team effort – together we got the job done. Amazing.”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Leading the race from stage two through to the end of stage six, the Dakar began perfectly for Sam. Riding flawlessly throughout the two-week event, he delivered the goods on multiple occasions when the pressure was well and truly on.

Sam’s second Dakar victory is not just an incredible personal achievement, it also marks the return of the title to the KTM AG Company after Honda wrestled the mantle from their grasp a couple of years ago.


Pablo Quintanilla wins final stage for Honda

Monster Energy Honda Team’s Chilean rider Pablo Quintanilla wrapped up the Dakar Rally on Friday in Jeddah with a well-deserved second place. Quintanilla, who started Friday morning in second place in the general standings, 6’52” behind Sam Sunderland, attempted to close the gap over the 150 kilometres of timed special that involved some tricky, fast-paced navigation. Pablo earned the final stage victory, finishing 3’27” short of clinching the outright Dakar 2022 title.

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Pablo Quintanilla joined Monster Energy Honda Team last May, finishing on the Andalucía Rally podium in his first outing. Later, in October, he would clinch top honours in the Rallye du Maroc. Today’s runner-up position marks a third finish on the Dakar podium for Quintanilla. Furthermore, Honda took a total of five stage victories (Barreda 2, Cornejo 2, Quintanilla 1) in this edition.

Pablo Quintanilla – P2 (Stage P1)

“I am very happy with the result and my performance throughout the whole race, especially during the second week, which I managed well, making up time with a steady performance. I am very pleased and I wish to thank the whole Monster Energy Honda Team for their incredible work over these weeks. It was a really tough race, with a lot of tension, but I’m happy. Today there was second place at stake and there was even a chance of winning the race. It didn’t turn out that way, but I’m still happy with the second place finish. Now it’s time to enjoy this moment.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Lying third going in the final day of racing, Matthias Walkner put in a superb performance on Friday’s stage to finish seventh fastest and secure an overall podium result.

Matthias Walkner – P3 (Stage P7)

“I feel super happy and also lucky to be here healthy at the finish line. It feels great to be back on the podium too after a couple of difficult Dakars the past two years. It’s been a super long and hard Dakar as always, but this year has been special because of the level of navigation needed every day. We saw right from the first day that you can win or lose so much time on each stage. Because of that I really tried to focus on my roadbook, and concentrate on my navigation for the whole race. The first week went really well for me, and then into the second week, everyone was pushing really hard, so you had to give your best every day as the times were so close. The new bike has been brilliant, and the team have put so much effort into making sure we had the performance needed to finish on the podium, so thank you to them. Now it’s time to celebrate!”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Equalling his best overall finish at the Dakar, Adrien Van Beveren placed an impressive fourth overall at the 2022 edition of the iconic event. Leading the race on two separate occasions this year and placing no lower than fourth overall throughout the entire rally, the Frenchman was undoubtedly in fine form throughout the competition. Delivering pin-point accuracy with his navigation day-after-day, Adrien delivered one of the stand-out performances in the motorcycle category.

Adrien Van Beveren – P4 (Stage P15)

“The race is over and I have mixed feelings about it, but on the whole it has been a really positive race for myself and the team. I’m really happy to have finished the race, the first time since 2017, so I’m really pleased about that. But on the other hand, it looked certain that I would podium or maybe even take the win. But with the issue yesterday, that’s just part of rally racing and it wasn’t meant to be. I’m really happy for the team. Everyone has worked super hard and my bike was amazing. I have no regrets about anything and I gave it everything that I had. To be fighting for the win at the Dakar, it was an amazing experience and now I’m looking forward to the future.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

Spain’s Barreda, fourth on the final stage, finished fifth overall, equalling the result he achieved in 2017.

Joan Barreda – P5 (Stage P4)

“The result of this Dakar is a fifth place with a broken collarbone from a week ago and after losing 40 minutes at a waypoint on the first day. I’ve kept the mentality and the ambition that I’ve had all year, in spite of the adversities. Not giving up and going all the way to the finish. In racing sometimes things go well and other times not so well. But the important thing for me has been to be able to show all the hard work that’s been done. We’ve been working for seven months for the Dakar, now it’s time to rest a bit and then we’ll think about the new goals, knowing that the ambition and motivation has to be 100%. In this Dakar, every day that I’ve been on the bike I’ve had unique sensations.”

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

‘Nacho’ Cornejo, third on Friday’s stage, consolidated his sixth place in the final rally classification.

José Ignacio Cornejo – P6 (Stage P3)

“We finished the Dakar with a good stage; I am very happy with this final stage, without any mistakes and marking some good pace. I am satisfied to have finished the Dakar like this, but not in the overall balance, because, although I recovered several positions this last week, the mistake early in the race conditioned the end. I think I should have been further ahead. This year it was our turn to suffer, but we will be back again. The team in general was very solid and I want to congratulate all my team-mates for the great work done these days.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

Brabec took seventh spot overall in this edition of the Dakar.

Ricky Brabec – P7 (Stage P21)

“The last day we tried to push. There was navigation and a lot of rocks. He hoped to make up time and see if someone else stumbled. We didn’t give up until the end. I’m happy and healthy and ready to go home. There was not much else we could do. We tried to come back from an hour down. The first stage killed us. After the first week it was definitely hard to pick up the pieces. We’ll be back next year to try and win this thing. Anything else other than winning is unacceptable. We’re going to come back next year and hopefully try to win.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec

If not for a frustrating navigational error on stage one, which affected him as well as many of his rivals, Andrew Short may well have joined Adrien in the top five overall. After losing considerable time early on, the 39-year-old was faultless through the remaining stages at the Dakar as he worked his way up the leaderboard. At the end of 12 stages and almost 40 hours of racing, Andrew secured eighth overall, narrowly missing out on placing seventh by just five seconds.

Andrew Short – P8 (Stage P13)

“I’m so happy to have reached the finish line. The Dakar is such a crazy race that finishing is a great achievement in itself. The final stage was pretty cool, a bit tight a twisty with some nice terrain. Before the rally I hoped to finish higher and it wasn’t through lack of effort – it was solely down to the issue I had on stage one. I did the best I could after that but that’s just how rally is sometimes. The team have been amazing. They built a great bike for me, which didn’t miss a beat all race and I’m happy that we had two guys in the top 10.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short
Mason Klein P9 as top rookie

Completing his 2022 Dakar campaign with an excellent fifth-place result on stage 12, KTM-supported privateer Mason Klein not only finished as top rookie, but also claimed an outstanding ninth overall. The 20-year-old American has shown incredible navigation and roadbook skills over the course of this year’s event, as well as the speed to back it up.

Luciano Benavides successfully completed the Rally with a strong performance in 13th overall, claiming sixth fastest on the short timed special.

Luciano Benavides – P13 (Stage P5)

“I’m really happy to complete this year’s Dakar, it’s been a really tough event both mentally and physically. It was hard to lose time on the first stage, but since then I have been giving my all to work my way back up the standings. The bike has been great and with a few changes as the race has gone on, I’ve found a setting I feel comfortable with and because of that the results have been improving throughout the rally. Getting to the finish of such a long and intense event feels amazing. It would have been good to get inside the top 10 by the finish, but I’m still happy with my performance. The result and the finish have really improved my confidence and now I’m looking forward to the rest of the year and seeing what we can do in the world championship, before preparing for Dakar 2023.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Kevin Benavides showed impressive speed throughout the whole 2022 Dakar Rally. Unfortunately, after suffering a technical issue on stage 10, the Argentinian was forced to withdraw. Returning to complete the final two stages of the race, Benavides was immediately back up to speed, claiming a stage win on day 11 and finished the final stage in P12.

Kevin Benavides – (Stage P12)

“I have enjoyed this final day at the Dakar – I opened the stage, which was great, and it feels good to finally get to the finish. Obviously, it’s frustrating to have had the problem on stage 10, up until that point my race had gone really well, and I believe I had the pace to challenge for the podium. These last two days have shown that, too. There are many positives I can take from this year’s race and I’m really happy with how I rode and navigated through the stages. Part of the Dakar is all about learning and improving and so I’ll take that away from this year and try to come back even stronger in 2023.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Making not only his Dakar debut, but also his first ever competitive rally-raid appearance at the 2022 Dakar, Danilo Petrucci raised a few eyebrows around the paddock with his consistent display of speed and skill on his Tech3 KTM 450 Rally, including taking a stage win after being unable to finish a stage and being ineligible to be counted in the final standings.

Danilo Petrucci

“I am so happy to finally reach the finish line and to complete the goal I set out to do. It’s been a tough time both leading up to the event and the race itself, but to complete my first ever Dakar feels amazing. I’m really happy with my performance but over the last couple of days I have had some crashes and feel quite sore at the moment. Thanks to all the team for their hard work, it has been an amazing experience and one of the hardest things I have ever done.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Dakar 2022 Stage 12 Results

Pos Rider Nat. Man. Time/Gap
1 QUINTANILLA Pablo CHI Honda 1:40’00
2 PRICE Toby AUS KTM 00:00’18
3 CORNEJO José Ignacio CHI Honda 00:00’29
4 BARREDA Joan SPA Honda 00:01’13
5 BENAVIDES Luciano ARG Husqvarna 00:02’38
6 WALKNER Matthias AUT KTM 00:02’57
7 SUNDERLAND Sam GBR Gas Gas 00:03’25
8 SANTOLINO Lorenzo SPA Sherco 00:04’18
9 BENAVIDES Kevin ARG KTM 00:05’08
10 GONÇALVES Rui POR Sherco 00:05’20
11 SHORT Andrew USA Yamaha 00:05’53
12 MICHEK Martin CZE KTM 00:06’17
13 VAN BEVEREN Adrien FRA Yamaha 00:06’36
14 RODRIGUES Joaquim POR Hero 00:07’44
15 DE SOULTRAIT Xavier FRA Husqvarna 00:08’04

Dakar 2022 Final Standings

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap Penalty
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 37h04m05
2 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h06m52 00h01m00
3 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM  +00h7m15
4 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  + 0h15m30
5 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h27m54 00h03m00
6 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h37m24 00h02m00
7 Jose Ignacio Cornej MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h41m02
8 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA +00h43m40
9 Mason Klein BAS WORLD KTM RACING +00h51m09
10 Toby Price RED BULL KTM  +00h52m27 00h06m00
11 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h53m38 00h15m00
12  Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h57m33 00h15m00
13 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY  +01h11m06 00h01m00
14 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +01h11m25 00h15m00
15 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA +01h21m46 00h07m00
16 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS T +01h38m51 00h10m00
17 Daniel Nosiglia Jager RIEJU – FN SPEED TEAM +02h07m21
18 Maciej Giemza ORLEN TEAM +02h18m16
19 Camille Chapeliere TEAM BAINES RALLY +02h30m03 00h05m00
20 Joan Pedrero Garcia RIEJU – FN SPEED TEAM +02h34m00 00h01m00

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Toby Price P28 after waypoint issue on penultimate Dakar 2022 stage

Dakar 2022 – Stage 11


After his win on day 10, Toby Price had the unenviable task of opening the penultimate and extremely tough Stage 11 of the 2022 Dakar Rally. The stage win had left him sitting sixth overall, with a 28 min gap to the overall lead, however today’s stage only saw that gap widen, almost doubling.

Stage 11 featured the loop to the Bisha bivouac, featuring a total of 346 kilometres of timed section out of the 501-kilometre total stage with 155 kilometres of liaison sections.

It was a tough day for Toby Price who started out opening the stage before a waypoint issue
It was a tough day for Toby Price who started out opening the stage before a waypoint issue

An issue early on where a waypoint didn’t validate correctly for the Australian put him on the back foot for the rest of the special. However, using his skill and speed, the twice Dakar Champion was able to regroup and keep pushing through the arduous terrain. Ultimately completing the stage in 28th, Toby now lies 10th in the overall standings with one day left to race.

Toby Price – P28

“It was super dusty today and navigation was tough, but I had a frustrating problem early on at kilometre four where one waypoint didn’t validate, even though I’m pretty sure I was in the right place. I had to zig-zag back and forward and thankfully in the end, even though I was on the same track, it activated. Hopefully we can have that checked, but other than that the day went ok, I felt good on the bike and arrived safely at the finish line. One more day to go tomorrow, and that will be the 2022 Dakar complete.”


Kevin Benavides wins Stage 11

After a disappointing stage 10 yesterday in which his 2022 Dakar hopes came to an end, Kevin Benavides bounced back in style, showing impressive speed to top today’s results. Putting in an incredible performance, the number one plate holder fought his way from a late, 33rd place start to ultimately win the stage by a narrow four seconds. Benavides will now lead out the event’s short, final 164-kilometre timed special on Friday’s stage 12.

Kevin Benavides – P1

“It was a really demanding day today. It’s great to get the win but I’m full of emotion because of the issue I had yesterday. Up to that point I was fighting for the overall, and now, after going fastest today I know I would have been in with a chance to win the rally. I gave it my all today, mostly to prove to myself that I could do it. I think it’s important to be able to come back from disappointment and immediately fight for a stage win. I have to thank the whole team, but especially my mechanic who worked so hard last night to give me an amazing bike for today – it felt perfect on the stage. I will now have the pleasure of opening the last stage of the race with no pressure, so I’m really looking forward to it and reaching the finish.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides

After losing a little time yesterday, the pressure was well and truly on Sam Sunderland today, who in no uncertain terms needed to deliver a flawless ride to keep his chances of a second Dakar win alive. And that’s exactly what he did. Putting together a standout performance, Sam navigated perfectly, attacked from the start, and finished second on the stage, just four seconds behind the eventual winner. Now, with just one day of racing to go, the GASGAS Factory Racing ace sits at the top of the leaderboard with a near seven-minute advantage over his nearest rival.

Sam Sunderland – P2

“Today was a really tough one. We were expecting it to be difficult and even four kilometres in there were lines everywhere in the sand. From there on I had to focus on myself and stay on top of my roadbook, it wasn’t really an option to follow the lines ahead. Through the dunes I was able to make up some time, which was good and I just missed out on another stage win. Up until now the race has gone really well, the whole team behind me has been fantastic but the race isn’t over until it’s over. All I can do is hope for a clean run through tomorrow’s stage and then we’ll see where we end up.”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Hero Motosports’s Joaquim Rodrigues picked up the third place position, 2m26 off the stage leader Benavides.

Joaquim Rodrigues – P3

“A much better day than yesterday! Yesterday was a emotional day where I wasn’t strong enough to control my emotions, but today luckily all came together and we did a good performance! Thank you team for all the support on my bad days.”

Joaquim Rodrigues
Joaquim Rodrigues

Well in the fight for the overall rally honors, Matthias Walkner had to ensure he delivered a strong stage result today with the minimum of mistakes to stay in contention for the 2022 title. Fastest to the first checkpoint, Walkner navigated superbly through the remainder of the special to complete the stage in fourth place, just under five minutes down on teammate Benavides. Moving up to third overall in the event standings, Matthias will be aiming to reduce the gap to the current leader during tomorrow’s stage and secure a podium position while also fighting for the rally win.

Matthias Walkner – P4

“It was a really long and really fast stage today. It was very dusty this morning too, which made the navigation even more difficult. I made a few small mistakes, but I really did try my best all day pushing as hard as I could. Finally I was able to make the finish with a good time and it puts me in a good position for tomorrow, so we’ll see what happens.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Ricky Brabec was the best-placed Monster Energy Honda Team rider on the day. The American finished in fifth place, moving up into six place overall, a position which he hopes to consolidate tomorrow. Brabec finished just one place ahead of team-mate Pablo Quintanilla. Pablo, sixth, performed well today – well enough to be in contention tomorrow and could improve on his current second place in this 2022 Dakar. The Chilean biker is less than seven minutes behind the overall race leader. If the full length of the final special stage goes ahead as planned tomorrow, the rider could well spring a surprise and stand a chance of scooping the world’s toughest rally.

Ricky Brabec – P5

“This year’s Dakar has been difficult for me personally, to get back into the fight after a bad start. The team didn’t let us down, so we can’t let them down…. We have tried very hard to do our best and give it our all. On this stage 11 we tried very hard to do a good job; I would have liked to make up a lot more time than I did. I’m happy with the way I’m riding and I’m happy with the team, I’ve learned a lot. Our team-mate Pablo can do it tomorrow. Unfortunately, I heard that the stage will be shortened, which in my opinion is unfair.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec
Pablo Quintanilla – P6

“It was a difficult stage. One of the hardest we’ve done on this Dakar, with a lot of wind, with sectors of very soft dunes. It was very difficult to make progress. I tried to push as hard as I could from the first kilometre; it wasn’t easy. I really let rip but without losing my concentration. In the end, it was a good day, I gave 100% and I think that’s what’s important, that I gave my best every day. There is still one day left and the race is not over until you cross the finish-line. Tomorrow we will attack again from the first kilometre.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Chilean José Ignacio ‘Nacho’ Cornejo also had a good day in spite of a minor mistake in the opening kilometres of the special. Today’s seventh place also puts him into the same position in the general rankings.

José Ignacio Cornejo – P7

“It was a good stage; not the best, but not the worst either. I made a small mistake at the start, where I lost a few minutes. Mathias passed me and we ended up riding together until the end. I think it was a solid stage. We also moved up in the overall standings, which makes me happy because we have managed to overcome a bad first stage. We are not where we wanted to be. Tomorrow the rally will be over, so we will draw our conclusions afterwards.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

Posting his eighth top-10 stage result at the 2022 Dakar Rally, Andrew Short would complete the physically demanding stage 11 in eighth place. Should the American ride with the same form tomorrow that he’s demonstrated throughout week two, a sixth-place overall finish is a strong possibility for Andrew.

Andrew Short – P8

“It was a really tough day, by far the toughest in terms of riding and the physical side of things. Plus, the navigation was pretty hard early on and after four kilometres there was a lot of riders stopped to figure things out. But after that I did a pretty good job of opening and minimising the damage. I rode with Adrien a lot today, which was pretty cool and now we’re really close to the finish. Getting across the finish line was the goal from the start and we’re close now, so it’s exciting that we’re almost there.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short

Along with many riders who struggled to validate a waypoint early on stage 11, Adrien Van Beveren lost close to 10 minutes to the overall rally leaders just four kilometres into the timed special. But without losing his focus, the Frenchman soon returned to the main racing line and began to reel in the leading riders. Continuing his charge, the Yamaha WR450F Rally racer then opened the final 60 kilometres of the special, navigating with precision and completing the stage in 15th. The penultimate day of the Dakar Rally 2022 was a frustrating day for Van Beveren, who is now fourth in the overall provisional classification.

Adrien Van Beveren – P15

“It was a hard one today. Just four kilometres in I struggled to validate a waypoint and it easily cost me 10 minutes. It was a frustrating start to the stage but then I really pushed hard, harder than at any time in the rally so far. I caught the leading group of riders with around 60 kilometres to go and then just kept pushing hard. The gap to the lead is big now, but I will fight to the end.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

The conditions were not ideal for Joan Barreda who struggled to make progress in the soft dunes of Bisha. With a fall included, the Spaniard finished sixteenth in RallyGP and is fifth in the general standings, nearly half an hour behind the race leader.

Joan Barreda – P16

“Today was a very difficult stage, I could say it was one of the most difficult I’ve ever done. I had to open the track from kilometre 4. I tried to keep a good pace, but I encountered some tough situations, with very soft sand that made it almost impossible to move forward; the bike got stuck about ten times, including one where I was thrown off completely and Toby and Luciano helped me to get the bike back upright. I want to say thanks to both. We opened the track all day long. I’m happy because I gave 100%. Some days go well and others not so well. But the best thing is to be satisfied with yourself.”

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

Continuing to impress, and despite the severity of today’s stage, Danilo Petrucci brought his Tech3 KTM 450 Rally home in a commendable 17th place, just over 23 minutes down on the eventual stage winner. With one more day remaining, the former MotoGP racer is now just 680 kilometres away from completing his first Dakar Rally.

Danilo Petrucci – P17

“It was one of the toughest days of my life today. I got a little lost early on with some other riders and then after that there were some really soft dunes. I have never seen anything like that before, it was really tiring to ride through. Then we raced through a huge sandstorm where it was really difficult to find your way and stay focused on your navigation. Luckily, after the refueling it was ok – the sand was still really soft, but it wasn’t so tricky. Unfortunately at one point I hit a piece of wood that was hidden underneath the sand and I had a big crash and hurt my shoulder. I was able to make it to the finish, but it did give me a lot of pain. We have one more day to go, so I’m looking forward to reaching the finish.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Luciano Benavides has completed the hugely demanding stage 11 of the Dakar Rally in 26th place. Following his excellent runner-up performance on Wednesday’s stage 10, the FR 450 Rally rider was the second competitor to take to today’s challenging special where he soon found himself up front and opening much of the route.

Luciano Benavides – P26

“Another stage done, and it was super tough today. Probably not the best day to start in front, but I did my best as always and I think I did a good job. The navigation was very tricky and with the dunes being so soft it would have been easy for the guys starting behind to make up time. I was able to catch up with Toby (Price) ahead of me and we took it in turns to open the stage. I lost some time, but not enough to affect my position in the overall. There is one day left so I will go out tomorrow and do my best to finish the race strong.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Tomorrow’s Stage 12

Bisha-Jeddah. The final stage of the Dakar Rally 2022 will be decided over a total of 676 kilometres, including just 163 against the clock. Leaving the dunes behind, the race will be fought over hard tracks with some sand. A lot of technical complexity is expected before the riders reach the shores of the Red Sea, with the final podium set to take place on the Bisha street circuit.

The overall standings heading into Stage 12 will see Sam Sunderland leading by almost seven-minutes, ahead of Pablo Quintanilla and Matthias Walkner, with Adrien Van Beveren a more distant fourth 15m30s off the led. Joan Barreda sits fifth, 27m54s off the lead, while Brabec, Cornejo, Short, Klein and Price complete the top 10.

2022 Dakar Stage 11 Results

Pos Rider Team/Back Time/Gap
1 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM  03h30m56
2 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h00m04
3 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +00h02m26
4 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM  +00h04m54
5 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h05m22
6 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h07m40
7 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h08m05
8 Romain Dumontier TEAM DUMONTIER RACING +00h15m00
9 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY  +00h15m46
10 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h17m51
11 Mason Klein BAS WORLD KTM RACING +00h19m23
12 Maciej Giemza ORLEN TEAM +00h20m55
13 Camille Chapeliere TEAM BAINES RALLY +00h21m03
14 Daniel Nosiglia Jager RIEJU – FN SPEED TEAM +00h21m22
15 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY  +00h21m33
16 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID  +00h21m45
17 Danilo Petrucci TECH 3 KTM  +00h23m14
18 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h23m33
19 Harith Noah Koitha  SHERCO FACTORY +00h23m38
20 Bradley Cox BAS WORLD KTM +00h24m25

2022 Dakar Overall Results After Stage 11

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap Penalty
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 37h 04m05
2 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h 06m52 00h01m00
3 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM F +00h 07m15
4 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h 15m30
5 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h 27m54 00h03m00
6 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h 37m24 00h02m00
7 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h 41m02
8 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h 43m40
9 Mason Klein BAS WORLD KTM RACING +00h 51m09
10 Toby Price RED BULL KTM F +00h 52m27 00h06m00
11 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM  +00h 53m8 00h15m00
12 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h 57m33 00h15m00
13 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY  + 01h 11m06 00h01m00
14 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +01h 11m25 00h15m00
15 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA  +01h 21m46 00h07m00
16 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS  +01h 38m51 00h10m00
17 Daniel Nosiglia Jager RIEJU – FN SPEED  +02h 07m21
18 Maciej Giemza ORLEN TEAM +02h 18m16
19 Camille Chapeliere TEAM BAINES RALLY +02h 25m03
20 Joan Pedrero Garcia RIEJU – FN SPEED TEAM +02h 34m00 00h01m00

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Toby Price wins Dakar Stage 10 | Yamaha’s Van Beveren takes lead

Dakar 2022 – Stage 10


Stage 10 saw riders entry the rally from Wadi Ad Dawasir and making a long 759 km journey to Bisha, including a 375-kilometer timed special mostly made up of fast sandy tracks, with a couple of dirt sections and dunes adding to the mix. Although navigation was relatively straightforward, it was still easy to make a costly mistake when picking a route through the stage.

Despite his relatively late start position into today’s special, Toby Price decided to remain completely focused on his roadbook throughout the stage. The tactic paid off as the two-time Dakar champ delivered a near-faultless run through the challenging stage, slowly moving up the order and taking the lead on time by kilometre 250.

Toby Price wins Stage 10
Toby Price wins Stage 10

Toby trails the current event leader by just under 28 minutes. A sizeable gap, but one the Aussie hopes to reduce over the final two days of racing.

Price came home ahead of Husqvarna’s Luciano Benavides and Yamaha’s Adrien Van Beveren, with Joan Barreda and Lorenzo Santolino completing the top five.

The overall standings also see a reshuffle with Van Beveren moving into the lead, 5m15s ahead of Pablo Quintanilla, while Sam Sunderland drops to third, 5m59s off the lead. Matthias Walkner now sits fourth, Barreda fifth and Toby Price advances to sixth.

Toby Price – P1

“It’s been a really good day for me today. I focused on my roadbook the whole way and did a good job with my navigation with only a couple of small mistakes over the whole stage. I’ve moved nicely up the order overall, but there is still a bit of a gap to the front guys. As we know, anything can happen in rally, so I’ll give it my all for these last two days and we’ll see where we end up.”

Toby Price wins Stage 10
Toby Price

Overcoming the difficulties on today’s stage, Luciano showed great maturity and skill to take maximum advantage of his seventh-place start position and pushed his way up through the field to ultimately challenge for the stage win on his FR 450 Rally. Completing the gruelling special just two minutes and nine seconds behind winner Toby Price, Benavides now moves up to 13th in the provisional overall standings.

Luciano Benavides – P2

“I’m really pleased with my day today. It feels good to be right up there near the top and putting in the sort of results I know I’m capable of. I focused a lot on my navigation today, but there were still some tricky notes on the roadbook and some parts of the route were quite confusing. I made a couple of small mistakes, but the guys up front made mistakes too and it was possible for me to make up quite a lot of time over the whole stage. We have two days left now, so I’ll keep pushing and hopefully have a good, strong finish to the rally.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Even with his less than favourable starting position on stage 10, Adrien Van Beveren set off ninth yet set a blistering pace to quickly reel in the leading riders. From there, the recently turned 31-year-old rode his own race, navigating superbly through the rocky canyons near to the end of the 374-kilometre special to post the third fastest time – his best stage result of the rally so far. Following another strong day in the desert, Van Beveren now enjoys a healthy advantage at the top of the overall standings.

Adrien Van Beveren – P3

“Like every day I focused heavily on my roadbook and rode the stage with a strong pace throughout. Navigation wasn’t easy today, especially with so many canyons in places, but I did a really good job, I think. I did struggle to find a couple of waypoints but otherwise it was another great stage for me. I went as fast as I could near the end and ended up in a good spot on the stage, and also in the overall. Tomorrow is a big day and opening will be difficult, but I’m ready for the challenge.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren
Joan Barreda – P4

“It was a complicated stage, especially in terms of navigation, where I had to turn back a few kilometres to find a waypoint. In the end I found some good pace to attack over the final kilometres. I saw that there were strategies from some other riders… I also picked up a penalty at the entrance of a controlled zone when I lost concentration. I’m not sure what the penalty will be. I’m not really sure how it all went, but it was a stage from which we had to salvage something. I don’t think I’m in a bad position for tomorrow, but it won’t be easy: there will be a lot of sand and plenty of dunes… I’m going to give it everything I’ve got for the two remaining days.”

Adrien’s Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team teammate Andrew Short also enjoyed a successful stage 10 with the American securing the sixth fastest time, earning his best stage finish at the 2022 Dakar. As the sixth rider to enter the special, Andrew did a tremendous job in maintaining his high pace through the technical stage. And with the exception of a minor navigational mistake, he successfully brought his Yamaha WR450F Rally home among the leading group of riders.

Andrew Short – P6

“Stage 10 was really fun and I’m really happy to have posted by best result of the rally. It was a cool stage that flowed well with a bit of everything, rocks, canyons, some dunes, and even some dust which we haven’t, fortunately, seen too much of this year. I did make one small mistake which cost me a little bit of time, but not too much, so maybe my result would have been better without that. We’re getting close to the finish line now so two to go and I’m excited for tomorrow.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short

Reaching the final stages of his first ever Dakar Rally, Danilo Petrucci continues to put in highly commendable results among the more established rally racers. Completing stage 10 in 11th place, the former MotoGP™ star is now fully focused on the final two stages of the event and claiming a Dakar finish at his first attempt.

Danilo Petrucci P11

“Today was tough because it became very hot as the day went on and then it’s easier to make mistakes. I’m pleased with my result, but I didn’t push too hard because I’m really close to the end now and my main goal has always been to finish the race. Two more days to go, and I’m looking forward to getting to the end.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Pablo Quintanilla, 13th on the day, moved up into second place in the overall rally standings with two days left before the rally ends in Jeddah. The Chilean carved out notable times throughout the stage, pulling ahead at the start, before eventually dropping seven minutes to the day’s winner. Tomorrow, on the Bisha loop, his goal will be to finish as far ahead as possible.

Pablo Quintanilla – P13

“I’m happy; it was a good day. Today it was important to manage the race well ahead of tomorrow’s stage which will be key to defining this Dakar. I had some references from the riders in front of me and I tried to manage it in the best way possible, so as not to lose time and to be able to start from a good position tomorrow. I think it went well. The race is still open and tomorrow will be an intense day, where we will have to push all day long. We’re going to try to rest now so that we are in good shape for tomorrow’s stage.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Ricky Brabec and José Ignacio ‘Nacho’ Cornejo had the tough task of opening the track today. The pair led for most of the day, only shedding time towards the end of the special.

Ricky Brabec – P15

“Today was good. This was stage 10, so we’re almost at the finish. I was up front with Nacho most of the day. We made a slight mistake which cost a little time, but in the end it was perfect for us because we are in a good spot for stage 11 which is supposed to be tricky. Like we said before, we don’t know which stage is tricky and which is not. It’s up in the air as far as strategy goes. Tomorrow we are in a good spot to push and see what we have to do. I’m very happy with this. The team’s doing a good job. After tomorrow we will know exactly where we’ll finish. I feel we have a lot of energy, so we’ll do our best.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec
José Ignacio Cornejo – P24

“It was difficult today. I knew that I would have to open the track and that it would be complicated. I was doing well until I arrived before the refuelling in a complex area and I lost a bit of time. Then I tried not to lose my concentration and to keep a good pace to finish the stage well, making up some of the lost time. Tomorrow will be tough and it will be good to start from behind. I think we can recover a few more positions in the general standings.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

Hot on the heels of his incredible ride yesterday, GASGAS Factory Racing’s Sam Sunderland was fired up for a repeat performance on today’s stage 10 of the 2022 Dakar Rally. Frustratingly, an unfortunate mistake in a series of rocky canyons prevented the early rally leader from featuring at the top of the timesheets today. However, thanks to his impressive stage results through the first nine days, Sam remains well-placed in the provisional overall standings in second, just under six minutes behind the current leader.

Sam Sunderland – P19

“Day 10 is in the books and it was a tough one. Early on, Mason Klein crashed so I stopped to make sure he was ok as it looked like he’d had a big one, but I think he’s ok. I then set off and things were going good. I felt strong on the bike and my pace was solid. But then I ended up in the wrong canyon near the end and lost a bit of time. With two days to go and the times so close, it’s too close to call. It’s wide open so it certainly makes for an exciting race!”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Setting off as the fourth rider to enter today’s special, Matthias Walkner caught and passed the riders ahead of him by the halfway point, and from there had the unenviable task of opening what was arguably the toughest part of the stage. A couple of small errors ended up with the Austrian losing several minutes to his rivals, but despite the setback, Matthias still lies well within the top five overall and will enjoy a strong start position for tomorrow’s penultimate stage 11.

Matthias Walkner – P28

“The Dakar is always a little bit up and down and today after I hit the front, I lost some time with a couple of small mistakes. The sun was really high today and it made visibility quite bad, which in turn made the pistes really difficult to see when you’re out front. It’s frustrating, but that’s always the way it is. Up to that point I think I was riding really well and making up good time. We still have two very long stages to go, so I’ll get some rest tonight and then be ready to attack again tomorrow.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Unfortunately for Kevin Benavides, his 2022 Dakar Rally campaign came to a close following a technical issue on stage 10. Starting the special in third, and making good time, the reigning Dakar Champion was forced to stop at kilometer 133. Unable to complete the stage, Kevin will return to the bivouac and hopefully re-start the event tomorrow, although he will not be eligible to feature in the final classification.

Tomorrow’s Stage 10

Tomorrow will undoubtedly be one of the most interesting special stages of recent years, where several riders will make their bids for a final podium place in Jeddah the day after tomorrow. The battle will be epic.

The loop to the Bisha bivouac will feature a total of 346 kilometres of timed section out of the 501-kilometre total stage with 155 kilometres of liaison sections. Large helpings of sand and dunes will be present on the menu of this, the most decisive stage of the Dakar 2022.

Dakar 2022 Stage 10 Results

Pos Rider Nat Bike Time/Gap
1 TOBY PRICE AUS KTM 03H 05′ 32”
2 LUCIANO BENAVIDES ARG HUSQVARNA + 00H 02′ 09”
3 ADRIEN VAN BEVEREN FRA YAMAHA + 00H 03′ 35”
4 JOAN BARREDA BORT ESP HONDA + 00H 05′ 21”
5 LORENZO SANTOLINO ESP SHERCO + 00H 05′ 40”
6 ANDREW SHORT USA YAMAHA + 00H 06′ 29”
7 STEFAN SVITKO SVK SLOVNAFT + 00H 06′ 29”
8 MACIEJ GIEMZA POL ORLEN + 00H 06′ 44”
9 RUI GONÇALVES PRT SHERCO + 00H 06′ 49”
10 MARTIN MICHEK CZE ORION 00H 07′ 28”

Dakar 2022 Standings After Stage 10

Pos Rider Time/Gap
1 ADRIEN VAN BEVEREN 33H 27′ 06”
2 PABLO QUINTANILLA + 00H 05′ 15”
3 SAM SUNDERLAND + 00H 05′ 59”
4 MATTHIAS WALKNER + 00H 08′ 24”
5 JOAN BARREDA BORT + 00H 08′ 47”
6 TOBY PRICE + 00H 27′ 43”
7 ANDREW SHORT + 00H 33′ 57”
8 MASON KLEIN + 00H 37′ 49”
9 RICKY BRABEC + 00H 38′ 05”
10 JOSE IGNACIO CORNEJO FLORIMO + 00H 39′ 00”
2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Cornejo wins Dakar Stage 9 as Walkner moves into lead

Dakar 2022 – Stage 9


Stage 9 saw riders completing the Wadi Ad Dawasir loop of 490 km traversing the Arabian Peninsula’s Empty Quarter with a 287 km special, mixing rocky mountain tracks and canyons in, with less sand than the previous stage.

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner now moves into the lead

Jose Ignacio Cornejo proved the fastest rider for the day, claiming the stage win from Kevin Benavides who was 1m26s in arrears, while Ricky Brabec, Matthias Walkner and Joan Barreda rounded out the top five. Toby Price finished the day in 16th, 8m35s off the lead.

The results saw Sam Sunderland shuffled back from the lead after opening the stage, which saw him finish 13th. Instead Walkner now leads, by 2m12s from Sunderland, while Adrien Van Beveren sits third, Pablo Quintanilla fourth and Kevin Benavides fifth. Toby Price now sits ninth, 35m14s off the lead, closing down that gap proving difficult.


Yesterday Nacho Cornejo had been left with a bittersweet taste after the eighth stage. A slight mistake towards the end of the special left the rider without the prize he had been ultimately seeking: that of minimising any markings for his pursuers to follow while opening the track throughout the day. Today, he returned to the Wadi Ad-Dawasir bivouac with a smile beneath his helmet after a second win in this Dakar, taking the young Chilean’s total tally to five.

José Ignacio Cornejo – P1

“I think I had a good stage. Yesterday I lost a lot of time towards the end, opening the track, and today I wanted to make up some of that time. I would have liked to make up more, but the stage was very fast and it was difficult to make a big difference. I’m pleased: I did what I had to do, which was to push. There are three days left and we will continue with the same attitude, trying to turn out solid performances and improve in the general standings.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

Right on the pace from the very start of today’s special, Kevin Benavides placed within the top three for much of the stage, despite the times being exceptionally close throughout the top 10. Steering his KTM 450 RALLY to a runner-up result, the reigning Dakar Champion moves back up the provisional rally order to fifth, just over 10 minutes behind the leader.

Kevin Benavides – P2

“Stage nine was a really good stage for me. I felt really good on the bike and was able to push a lot. I expected the navigation to be a little trickier, but in the end, it was quite easy to choose the correct way. The guys in front did a good job of navigating so in the end it just came down to speed, and all the guys at the front ended up being really close on time. I finished second today, which will make tomorrow a little tougher. But I’ll focus on my navigation and with only three days left, my plan is to push all day, every day.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides

Monster Energy Honda Team’s American rider Ricky Brabec rode a fine special, pushing hard and posting third place on the day.

Ricky Brabec – P3

“Today went well. I think I rode very well, and that’s positive. The team, the riders and the mechanics are doing an excellent job. I’m slowly realising a couple of things: sometimes there are days when you don’t lose or gain time and sometimes you can gain or lose a lot of time. It’s something we have to study… I’m happy to be able to get to the end of another day with the whole team. There are two tough days left, so we’ll have to keep pushing. I try to go fast every day, to make up time, but maybe I have to do things differently.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec

As the third rider into the stage, Matthias Walkner immediately took his time, focusing on his navigation to avoid making any costly errors. However, with the special proving to be relatively straightforward, Walkner knew he would have to push to stay in touch with his two rivals ahead of him. By catching them both by the finish, the experienced Austrian not only moved himself up into the provisional lead of the race, but also lost the minimum of time to his closest competitors while also securing himself another strong start position for Wednesday’s stage 10.

Matthias Walkner – P4

“It was quite a short stage today, but really, really fast. It wasn’t too difficult with the navigation and the boys in front did a good job, so it was quite hard to make up a lot of time. By the refueling I saw that I was a little off the pace, not too much, but I knew I would have to get my head down for the second half of the stage. It all seemed to pay off because I have taken over the lead of the overall and also my starting position for tomorrow is quite good. We’ve got three more really interesting days to come.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Joan Barreda also completed the day’s stage with a certain degree of normality, a mere 2’10 behind his team-mate. Barreda, fifth on the stage, holds sixth in the general standings, less than 11 minutes behind the race leader.

Joan Barreda – P5

“Today went quite well. I started 10th, with several riders ahead of me. I set a steady pace, making good decisions in terms of navigation. As the kilometres went by, I felt a bit better and in the final part, I was able to push harder. The truth is that the riders in front navigated really well and didn’t make any mistakes, so the pace was pretty high. We weren’t able to pull back much from the riders in front, but the positive thing is that another stage is over and I have a chance to fight for the Dakar, recovering physically by the day. The goal is to reach the finish-line giving it the maximum.”

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

Completing the high-speed special as the sixth fastest rider, Andrew Short delivered another strong stage finish at this year’s Dakar. With little to separate the riders over the easy-to-navigate terrain, the 39-year-old nevertheless gave his best effort and was rewarded with a return to 10th overall in the provisional classification at the conclusion of stage nine.

Andrew Short – P6

“Today was a really fast stage and it flowed well with a lot of sweeping turns. There was also a small section of massive dunes, which were cool with some nice jumps in there too. So, it was a big change from yesterday, which was nice as that one was long and tough. Today was pretty short, and pretty quick, and even though I had a good result I didn’t make up too much time unfortunately. It’s still tight with times around the top 10 so hopefully through the next three days I can keep doing what I’m doing and break away from the battle a little bit.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short

Completing the special four minutes and 21 seconds off the leading time, despite navigating through much of the stage on his own, Luciano’s pace shows the quality of his riding and the performance of his Husqvarna Factory Racing machine.

Luciano Benavides – P7

“Stage nine was a short, fast stage, but I really enjoyed it. It was made up mostly of rocky valleys and canyons with a few sections of dunes, too. The route was really high speed, so it wasn’t the best day to make up time on everyone else. I tried to be as consistent as I could because I think even a small mistake could end up costing you a lot of time today with everything being so close. I think I did a good job – I’m pleased to get two seventh place finishes in a row now, and again it puts me in a good starting position for tomorrow. I’m feeling good, the bike is working well with no problems, physically I am ok too. The team have also been putting in a lot of good work, so I’m really happy with how everything is going. I’m looking forward to pushing once again tomorrow.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Lastly, Pablo Quintanilla did a commendable job today to set himself up nicely for the final victory battle of this 2022 Dakar. He finished eighth on the day and lies in fourth place overall just 4’41 behind the new race leader.

Pablo Quintanilla – P8

“I’m happy. It was a good day because the goal today was to catch Sam and not to make any navigation mistakes. In the end it was a straightforward day: no mistakes, I caught up with Sam after the refuelling and we clawed back another minute in the overall. I think I have a good position for tomorrow. I won’t have to open the track but I will have fast riders in front and behind. We will try to manage the pressure well tomorrow. The times are very tight and will stay that way until the end. I’m really enjoying the race.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

For Adrien Van Beveren, a controlled ride through the fast stage nine special saw the Frenchman record the ninth fastest time. Such was the simplicity of the stage, Adrien completed the timed special just over five minutes behind the winner. Remaining third in the provisional standings, the Yamaha WR450F Rally mounted rider now looks forward to the final three stages.

Adrien Van Beveren – P9

“The day was good. It was a really fast, which I wasn’t expecting. I expected more navigation, but it wasn’t the case. Everything was ok though, nothing special today. Just a solid pace and another good result. I’m really in the fight now but I will continue with the same mindset, take things day by day and focus on one stage at a time. I’m feeling good and my bike is running perfectly, so I’ll be giving my very best effort over the final three days.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

Stage nine of the 2022 Dakar Rally was a crucial one for GASGAS Factory Racing’s Sam Sunderland. After his impressive stage win yesterday, he faced the arduous task of leading the riders out on today’s 287-kilometer timed special. Digging deep to post a 14th place finish – a result that at first glance might look anything but impressive but in reality is genuinely one hell of a performance – the Brit lost only a minimal amount of time, just over eight minutes in fact, to the eventual stage winner.

Sam Sunderland – P14

“Opening a stage only adds to the difficulty of rally racing and I’m super happy with how the day went for me. On paper you could look at the results and think it wasn’t a great stage for me, but the reality was that leading out means you’re relying solely on your roadbook. Not losing huge chunks of time today means I did a pretty good job. Since my crash last week, I’ve felt better and better every day so I’m looking forward to this continuing through the final three days.”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Another solid performance on stage nine saw Toby Price complete the timed special as 17th quickest, albeit only eight and a half minutes down on the winner. Lying just outside the top 10 overall, Toby hopes to use his start position on Wednesday’s stage 10 to elevate himself further up the rankings.

Toby Price – P16

“It was a good day, I had a couple of little mistakes, but nothing too crazy. I’m starting a little way back tomorrow, so hopefully I’ll be able to grab a little time back then. Other than that, the bike is good, I feel good, we’ll keep on pushing tomorrow.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Danilo Petrucci once again showed his speed and class on stage nine of the rally, competitive on time and running for most of the day just outside the top 10. Losing a couple of minutes in the very final kilometers of the special, Danilo completed the day as 18th fastest, less than nine minutes behind the winner.

Danilo Petrucci – P18

“I had a good day today. I’m really happy with my riding and was able to match the speed of the top guys for much of the stage. Unfortunately, I did have a small technical issue that caused me to stop a couple of times, but thankfully, I didn’t lose too much time. It might not be too much of a bad thing because I have a good start position for tomorrow now and I hope to be able to really push once again.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Tomorrow’s Stage 10

With two days to go until the end of the rally, riders can once again expect a navigation-filled day before the 759-kilometre trek is completed. About half the distance – some 375 kilometres – will be against the clock. The crossings and parallel tracks could be the undoing of more than a few bikers.

Dakar 2022 Stage 9 Results

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap
1 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 02h29m30
2 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h01m26
3 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h01m47
4 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h02m06
5 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h02m10
6 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h03m56
7 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY  +00h04m21
8 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h05m02
9 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h05m04
10 Maciej Giemza ORLEN TEAM +00h06m40
11 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +00h06m43
12 Mason Klein BAS WORLD KTM  +00h07m49
13 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY  +00h08m03
14 Martin Michek ORION – MOTO  +00h08m09
15 Rui Gonçalves SHERCO FACTORY +00h08m31
16 Toby Price RED BULL KTM  +00h08m35
17 Danilo Petrucci TECH 3 KTM  +00h08m42
18 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA  +00h10m06
19 Diego Gamaliel Llanos XRAIDS EXPERIENCIE TEAM +00h10m24
20  Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS  +00h10m35

Dakar 2022 Standings After Stage 9

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap Penalty
1 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM  30h14m03
2 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h02m12
3 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h03m56
4 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h04m41
5 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM  +00h10m22
6 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h10m57 00h01m00
7 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h32m30
8 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA +00h34m59
9 Toby Price RED BULL KTM  +00h35m14 00h06m00
10 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h35m54 00h02m00
11 Mason Klein BAS WORLD KTM RACING +00h37m24
12 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h41m54 00h 5m00
13 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h42m52 00h15m00
14 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA  +00h54m33 00h01m00
15 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +00h58m57
16 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA +01h02m45 00h07m00
17 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS  +01h16m30 00h10m00
18 Daniel Nosiglia Jager RIEJU – FN SPEED TEAM +01h47m37
19 Martin Michek ORION – MOTO +01h58m50
20 Camille Chapeliere TEAM BAINES RALLY +02h01m36

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Sunderland wins Dakar Stage 8 and reclaims lead | Price P6

Dakar 2022 – Stage 8


Sam Sunderland bounced back after a disappointing Stage 7 to claim the Stage 8 win, and in doing so reclaimed the overall lead, as Australia’s Toby Price finished the day in P6 and moved into the top-10 of the standings.

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Behind Sunderland was Pablo Quintanilla and Matthias Walkner, rounding out the top three for the stage, while Ricky Brabec and KTM mounted rookie Mason Klein completed the top five.

The overall standings now see Sunderland leading Walkner and Van Beveren, with Quintanilla fourth and Barreda fifth.

Stage 8 covered a total of 830 kilometres, as the lengthiest stage of the 2022 Dakar Rally. After setting off the Al Dawadimi bivouac, there was a liaison to reach the start of the special. The 395 kilometres of special stage saw a lot of sand and dunes through the valleys of the south of the country, arriving at the Wadi Ad-Dawasir bivouac after another very long liaison by road.

Toby Price moves into ninth overall

A sixth-place result on stage eight has moved Toby Price one place further up the provisional overall leaderboard to ninth, just over 30 minutes down on the leader. With times closing up at the top of the rankings, and four more long days left to race, the experienced Aussie knows that a podium result is still well within his reach. Earning another favourable start position, for tomorrow’s stage nine, Toby will be looking to further reduce that gap to the leaders and elevate himself higher in the overall standings.

Toby Price – P6

“It wasn’t too bad today. I got through most of the stage pretty well, I did make a couple of mistakes, but it’s hard to be absolutely perfect out there. The liaisons from today have meant it’s been a really long day in the saddle. All-in-all the bike was really good though and I’m ready for another day.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Sunderland takes GasGas back into the lead

Rolling with the punches and bouncing back in style after a difficult day yesterday, Sam Sunderland arguably delivered his best performance of the Dakar Rally so far with victory on a seriously tough stage eight. Remarkably, it’s Sam’s first stage win of the 2022 rally, and his first for GASGAS Factory Racing, with the Brit’s impressive ride seeing him return to the top of the provisional classification.

Sam Sunderland – P1

“That was a really challenging stage today. There was a lot of sand early on but then near the end there were a lot of canyons to navigate through. You had to be really patient and choose the right one as it would be so easy to get lost and lose time. The guys opening, fortunately, did a great job, which made things a little easier for me but after leading out yesterday, I know how tough that can be. Early on I was pushing hard and I was a bit too aggressive with a few small crashes in the sand so I had to settle down a bit, get into a rhythm, and it paid off as I was able to take the stage win. We have some long days ahead, but today’s result is just what I needed after everything that happened yesterday.”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Pablo Quintanilla was the best placed representative from the Monster Energy Honda Team on today’s stage, although most of the riders performed well on the eighth stage of the Dakar 2022. Pablo reached the bivouac in second place, less than three minutes behind the day’s winner.

Pablo Quintanilla – P2

“Today was a good day for me. I took advantage of the starting position that I had and I finished the stage second and knocked off some time in the general standings. I’m very pleased. In the second part of the race we have been taking it day by day and reducing the time. The times are very tight and there are still four special stages to go. I’m calm, enjoying myself and focused on having a good race each day.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Making the best use of his later start position, Matthias Walkner pushed hard right from the beginning this morning and was soon working his way through the field. Using his skill and experience, the Austrian was able to successfully complete the stage as third fastest, just over four minutes behind current rally leader Sam Sunderland. Although he will set off near the front on Tuesday’s stage nine, Matthias will start six minutes behind Sunderland and will use the opportunity to chase down his rival and make up those valuable minutes.

Matthias Walkner – P3

“Every day at the moment is critical because you can win or lose so much time on every stage. Thankfully today went well for me, I was able to push all the way from the back. I gave my all out there today – everything I had – so I’m pleased to come away with third place and close in on the overall leader again. There are four more days left to go and with things so close it is more important than ever to complete each stage without making any big mistakes. I’ll do my best to keep focused and concentrate on the days ahead.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Ricky Brabec also set a fierce pace, registering the day’s fourth best time, 6’44” behind Sunderland. Tomorrow, the American should be able to use tomorrow’s position to his advantage to gnaw into the time of his direct rivals.

Ricky Brabec – P4

“Today’s route was good, it was very fast and the longest day of this Dakar. The first part was a lot of dunes, the second part was very fast. I rode alone all day, hoping to catch the group, but I couldn’t. I wish I was at the front… I wish I was up front battling with the top five. The first seven are within six minutes of each other! For our part, we’ll keep pushing for the remaining days; tomorrow could be a good day. We’ll see what happens… anything can happen in this Dakar.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec

KTM-supported privateer Mason Klein put in another exceptional performance today, finishing the long stage as fifth fastest. The 20-year-old continues to impress on his debut Dakar with both his speed and impeccable navigation skills. Today’s result places the American 10th overall and as leading rookie.

After a steady start through the early kilometres of the stage where he focused on his navigation, Luciano was able to hold his position just inside the top 10 for the majority of the tough, mixed terrain timed special. Where some of his rivals faltered, Benavides was able to maintain his focus and bring his FR 450 Rally to the finish in an extremely commendable seventh place, nine and a half minutes down on the quickest time for the day. His result moves the 26-year-old up to 14th in the provisional overall standings.

Luciano Benavides – P7

“Stage eight was a really long day. As usual it had some tricky navigation but also had a really big mix of terrain with big plateaus and dunes, rocky tracks and valleys, and some canyons too – it was really good fun to race through. The stage was fast, and conditions were windy too, but I was able to do a good job of my navigation and so I’m really happy with that. My speed was also good considering I was up near the front. Altogether I’m very happy with how the day went and now I’m looking forward to pushing once again tomorrow.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Faced with a little adversity on stage eight of the Dakar Rally, Adrien Van Beveren’s roadbook mechanism stopped working, which forced the Frenchman to operate his navigational device by hand. Unfazed by the additional challenge, the experienced rally racer continued to maintain his high pace, resulting in a strong, ninth-place finish. After leading the rally ahead of stage eight, Van Beveren now drops a couple of spots in the overall provisional classification but remains well placed in third, just under five minutes behind the new leader.

Adrien Van Beveren – P9

“Another consistent day for me but not an easy one. The mechanism on my roadbook stopped working so I had to turn it by hand, which was tricky at times, but it was ok. Otherwise, it has been a solid day. I gave my best as always and I’m really happy with my riding so far in the rally. It’s been another good stage for me and I’m looking forward to tomorrow, which looks like it will be a lot slower speed and with more navigation.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

Joan Barreda took a tumble on a dune early in the special that left him in some pain throughout the day. The rider still managed to finish tenth with a 12 minutes deficit. The Spaniard is fifth overall, 14’38” behind the race leader.

Joan Barreda – P10

“The stage was difficult. The first part had a lot of sand and I had a fall when I jumped over a dune. I tried to stay with Nacho, who kept a very high pace today, and in the final part, with a lot of navigation, I managed to catch him. We made a mistake on a note with about 40 kilometres to go, where we lost quite a few minutes. It’s a pity because otherwise it would have been a really good stage. We have to fight every day, giving it our best. There are still days to go, so we have to grit our teeth.”

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

Continuing to move up the leaderboard throughout the Dakar Rally, Andrew Short focused on upping his pace on stage eight in order to reel in the leading riders. Frustratingly, the American couldn’t quite execute his plan as a minor detour slowed his charge. Once back on the right track, Andrew went to work, navigated with perfection, and completed the 395-kilometre special just outside the top 10 in 12th place.

Andrew Short – P12

“Today was a little rough for me. I needed to pick up my pace a little to make up a bit more time so from the start I really pushed, but after 19 kilometres I got lost. So that wasn’t a great start to the day. Once I figured out where I was I got back into it and my pace was pretty decent after that. After refuelling I really nailed the navigation so despite a bad start, I turned it around pretty good. I’m still aiming for a strong finish to the race and with four days to go there’s still a long way to the end.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short

Setting off as the second rider into today’s special, Kevin Benavides was able to maintain a strong pace despite having to open much of the stage. A small technical issue with his KTM 450 RALLY caused the Argentinian to stop to make a couple of adjustments midway through the special, but he was soon back on track and pushing to make up time. Completing the stage in 13th, Kevin now lies in an impressive sixth overall in the rally standings and will be aiming to further reduce his 14-minutes-and 47-second deficit to the leader on Tuesday’s stage nine.

Kevin Benavides – P13

“I’m really pleased with how I rode today. It’s a little frustrating that a small technical issue cost me some time but thankfully I was able to complete the stage in a good position. I did make a couple of small navigation mistakes too, but on the whole things went well. It’s encouraging that after losing so much time on the first stage I am well within the fight for the top positions, so I’ll stay motivated and do my best again tomorrow.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides

Nacho Cornejo got lumbered with the unpleasant task of opening the track today after winning yesterday’s stage. The young Chilean rode well until the latter part of the day, when a minor navigation error caused him to slip back, losing a little more time than expected.

José Ignacio Cornejo – P14

“Today was a tough stage, I knew it would be difficult because I had to open the track, but I think I was doing well until about kilometre 333, where I entered a track in a valley that was not the right one. I lost a lot of time to get back in the right place and I’m a bit upset about that because I dropped a little bit of time to the rest of the guys behind. Anyway, I still have the same attitude, the same desire for the remaining days of the race. We’ll go out with the same pace and the same concentration as in the last few days.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

Two days into the second week of his first ever Dakar Rally, Danilo Petrucci continues to impress with both his speed and consistency. The former MotoGP™ star was running well inside the top 20 throughout today’s special, only for a small error in the closing kilometres to cost him several minutes and drop him down the order. Happy with his riding, Petrucci now looks forward to tomorrow and another long day on the bike.

Danilo Petrucci – P25

“I’m happy to get to the finish as it was a very, very long day today. From the start I tried to find a good solid rhythm and then attack when it was safe to do so. I was really pleased with my navigation but just towards the end, I found myself in the wrong canyon and I had to turn around to get back on track. It’s frustrating, but it also means I have a strong starting position for tomorrow.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

After re-joining the race yesterday, Ross Branch made the difficult decision to withdraw from the Dakar this morning due to pain from the haematoma on his right leg, which was effecting his ability to ride safely, and to his full potential. With a little time needed to make a full recovery, Ross will soon be back to 100%.

Tomorrow’s Stage 9

The Wadi Ad-Dawasir loop, some 491 kilometres in total, including 287 kilometres of timed special stage, will pass through a fairly unfamiliar area: the Arabian Peninsula’s Empty Quarter. Mountains and tracks between canyons will require a radically different riding style to the approach used until now. Less sand, but higher difficulty level, especially regarding the navigation.

Dakar 2022 Results After Stage 8

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 03h48m02
2 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h02m53
3 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h04m11
4 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h06m44
5 Mason Klein BAS DAKAR KTM RACING  +00h08m08
6 Toby Price RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h08m39
7 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY  +00h09m32
8 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +00h09m58
9 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h10m21
10 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h11m43
11 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h12m11
12 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h14m22
13 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h15m02
14 Rui Gonçalves SHERCO FACTORY +00h15m15
15 Jose Ignacio Cornejo Florimo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h17m22
16 Bradley Cox BAS DAKAR KTM  +00h18m41
17 Martin Michek ORION – MOTO  +00h19m26
18 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA +00h19m30
19 Maciej Giemza ORLEN TEAM +00h19m43
20 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h20m13

Overall After Stage 8

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap Penalty
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 27h38m42
2 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h03m45
3 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM +00h04m43
4 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h05m30
5 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h14m38 00h01m00
6 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h14m47
7 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h21m09
8 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h26m51
9 Toby Price RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h32m30 00h06m00
10 Mason Klein BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM +00h35m26
11 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM +00h36m54
12 Jose Ignacio Cornejo  MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h38m21
13 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h39m58 00h02m00
14 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING +00h56m03 00h01m00
15 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM RALLY +00h58m05
16 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA RACING +00h58m30 00h07m00
17 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM RALLY +01h11m46 00h10m00
18 Bradley Cox BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM +01h29m47
19 Daniel Nosiglia Jager RIEJU – FN SPEED TEAM +01h42m36
20 Camille Chapeliere TEAM BAINES RALLY +01h51m44

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dakar riders regroup at mid-way Riyadh rest day | Aussies set for week two

Dakar 2022 – Rest Day Riyadh


With the race now at its halfway point, riders get to enjoy some downtime and a chance to take stock of the intense, event-filled first week, before setting off again tomorrow for Stage 7. The next stage includes a 402 km special, with 100 km of dunes, while navigation is likely to be a challenge, as the stakes get higher as the remaining stages dwindle.

Here’s what the riders and teams have to say, heading into the second week, with Sam Sunderland leading the standings and Australians Daniel Sanders and Toby Price sitting in third and 12th respectively.


GasGas a dominant force so far

With Sam moving into the provisional lead early on and Daniel Sanders claiming two stage victories to now lie third in the provisional standings, it’s been an incredible week for the GasGas Factory Racing competitors. Brit Sunderland has managed the race perfectly to hold onto the provisional lead for five consecutive days.

Sam Sunderland – P1

“I’m happy to have reached the rest day safely and in the lead. It’s been a great first week besides my crash on stage four. My neck and shoulder were a little sore after that one but it’s been getting better day by day and it’s not effecting my riding too much. I’m looking forward to the second week of racing. Everything to this point with my bike and navigation has been where it needs to be so the goal is for this to continue next week and then we should be somewhere handy next Friday.”

GASGAS Factory Racing
GASGAS Factory Racing

Daniel Sanders has not only impressed with two stage victories, but he’s given his all each and every day to stay up front in the overall classification. He even took a navigation tower screen to the chin after sending it a little too far off the top of a sand dune!

Daniel Sanders – P3

“It’s been a really up and down first week with a few mistakes along the way but there have been plenty of positives to come out of it. My navigation is much better this year, my bike set-up is spot on and my riding, and overall speed, has definitely improved compared to last year. I’m actually a little surprised with my speed and I’m happy with all the improvements that I’ve made so yeah, it’s been a solid first week. The ultimate goal is to win this thing but getting on the podium would be cool too so we’ll see how it goes next week.”

Daniel Sanders
Daniel Sanders
Norbert Stadlbauer – Rally Team Manager

“It’s been a great week for both Sam and Daniel and today, along with the rest of the team, we’re enjoying the event’s rest day ahead of week two. The performance that both riders have put in this week has been simply amazing. Sam has the experience and is managing the race very well at the moment, and Daniel has two stage wins, which is a great achievement. Going into week two, as a team we need to stay ready, keep doing the right things, and carry the momentum that has built this week into next week. We have great bikes, our riders are positioned very well in the standings, and so we are set to have another great week of racing.”


Matthias leads KTM Factory efforts in P2

Matthias Walkner is well-placed to attack the final six days of racing at this year’s Dakar. Lying second overall, less than three minutes behind the leader after 20 hours of racing, Matthias knows a solid finish at each and every stage of the final week will be key to securing a second victory at the iconic event.

Matthias Walkner – P2

“It’s been a good week for me. It took me a little time to get settled on the bike because I hadn’t ridden the new version so much, but with the help of the team, we made some really positive changes and I’m super happy with how things are now. I’m healthy, I haven’t had any big crashes, so I’m ready to keep pushing in the second week. It has been a tough rally so far – they always try to make things difficult in terms of navigation and slow things down a little, so I’m expecting more of the same from Sunday onwards, as it seems the terrain will be far more technical. Consistency is the most important thing, with so many riders so close on time, you can’t really afford to make a mistake that costs you 30 minutes or so. I’ve really been trying to focus on my roadbook on every stage, and so far, it’s paying off.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Stage 1B of the Dakar – the first full stage ridden by competitors – threw up a huge surprise in terms of the incredibly precise navigation required to successfully make it through the special. With one particularly tricky note in the roadbook not only catching out the experienced Kevin Benavides and Toby Price, but also half the RallyGP field, many riders lost time on that first stage and were forced to play catch-up as the event continued. Kevin and Toby currently lie eighth and 12th respectively at the Dakar’s halfway stage, but with week two promising to require even more precise roadbook skills, they could easily make up the time required to challenge the race leaders.

Kevin Benavides – P8

“It’s been a mixed first week for me, but overall, I’m happy with how I have ridden. Losing time on that first day was always going to be hard, but since then I have had a good pace and things have gone a lot better. My confidence with the bike is improving all the time, so I really believe I’m in a good position to attack the second week. If the first week was all about long, fast stages, I think these next six days will be all about the navigation. The roadbook this year has some differences in it day by day and that only makes it even tougher for us. The rain we have had here has also made the stages trickier to navigate – I think the key to doing well from here to the finish will be taking time and making less mistakes than everyone else. For me, I think that suits my style, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides
Toby Price – P12

“It’s been a very up and down first week for me. After day one I’ve been racing hard to try and get back on terms with the others, and so far, it’s going well. It’s been a tricky first week and so I’m expecting much of the same in week two – hopefully I’ve had my share of bad luck already so I can look forward to something good over the next six days. The organizers have really tried to make things tough for us this year, which is what we expected, the key is to try and stay smooth and stay on top of the roadbook and all the little changes. Looking ahead, I’m feeling good physically, I’ve only had one little tip off and that is important at the rest day – it leaves you fit and free to really attack the second half of the race. Hopefully, if all goes well, some of the others ahead will makes some mistakes as the fatigue sets in and I can capitalize on that at the right time.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Danilo Petrucci went through a lot on the run up to his first Dakar Rally. An injured ankle sustained in training, followed by a positive Covid-19 test, both looked like they might put an end to the Italian’s race before it started. However, once cleared to race, the former MotoGP™ rider immediately showed what he was capable of, demonstrating immense speed and skill on the stages. A small technical issue was enough to force his withdrawal from stage two, but the friendly racer bounced back in style, even taking an impressive stage win on day five. Looking ahead to the second week, Danilo’s goal remains the same – head out, have fun, and enjoy his time on the bike.

Danilo Petrucci – Ineligble for standings

“It’s hard to put into words my emotions after what has happened over the last few weeks. From nearly missing out on the race to taking my first stage win – it feels like I have already lived a lifetime here at the Dakar. Everything has been new – the bike, the style of race, and I have to say it has been the most demanding thing I have ever done in my life. For sure my goal is to finish the race, but I have already enjoyed an incredible experience here, and I’m so happy that I had the opportunity to do it. I’m looking forward to the next week, it’s going to be tough, every day is very tiring, and I am learning all the time with the terrain and the navigation. Already, I am the first one in history to win a MotoGP race and a stage of the Dakar, so I have completed that goal, all that is left for now, is to enjoy the rest of the race.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci
Norbert Stadlbauer – Rally Team Manager

“I’m really happy with the whole team so far at what has been an incredibly tough Dakar. The bikes are working well, and all of our riders have been impressive this year. Thankfully, everyone has arrived at the rest day physically well, but also with options going ahead. Matthias is in a really good position, lying second in the standings, hopefully he can continue doing exactly what he has been doing to the end of the race, and that should put him in with a good shout at the podium. Kevin and Toby lost some time early on, but they have both already fought their way back towards the top 10. They also both have the skill, speed, and experience to do well in the second week. Finally, Danilo has been incredible, we knew he would be able to hold his own offroad, but for him to take a stage win, is very impressive. Looking ahead to next week, the atmosphere in the team is really good and positive. We have strategies for all the riders and hopefully, if everything goes to plan, we can put them into place and earn some strong results at the end of the event. Obviously, the goal is to win, so we will give it our all on the second week.”


Van Beveren top Monster Energy Yamaha rider

The Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team had a week of mixed fortunes for the three-rider squad. Undoubtedly, the impressive form shown by Adrien Van Beveren has been incredibly positive, and after six stages he remains in contention for the overall victory thanks to his fourth place ranking in the provisional overall classification.

Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team
Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team

For Andrew Short, since having to deal with a tough first stage of the rally, the American has demonstrated exceptional rally racing skills to work his way up the leaderboard to now lie in 11th place. Frustratingly, just as Ross Branch was finding his flow, cruel luck struck with a crash on stage six ending his time at the Dakar.

Alexandre Kowalski – Yamaha Europe Off-Road Racing Manager

“The first week at the Dakar was going very well for the team until Ross had an unfortunate crash yesterday. It’s a real shame as he was just getting into his stride after placing second on stage five. It’s frustrating yet fortunately he is ok, just a big haematoma on his leg. Otherwise, with Adrien fighting for the lead all week, we cannot ask for anything more. He is riding really well, he has the experience, and he is putting together a really strong rally so far. Andrew is doing the same and is riding very well. It’s just a big shame about what happened on stage one as he has posted some really impressive stage results since then and for sure he would be much closer to the front without that problem he had. It effected many riders and it’s just unfortunate. Despite the problems, the team spirit is really high after week one and now we can all enjoy the rest day, catch up on some sleep, and relax as much as possible. The mechanics will prepare the bikes for week two, the riders will prepare themselves, and then I really believe that we will have a strong second week of racing as we make our way to the finish line in Jeddah.”

Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team
Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team

Monster Energy Honda well-placed heading into week two

Pablo Quintanilla is currently the best of the Monster Energy Honda Team bunch, fifth in the general standings, 15’43 behind the overall race leader. With one week to go, the Chilean rider is well-placed to stage an attack on the rally leadership in the coming stages.

Monster Energy Honda
Monster Energy Honda

With two stage wins and holding on to his position, Joan Barreda lies in ninth place, 26 minutes behind the leader. A manageable gap, although it remains to be seen how the Spanish rider’s shoulder injury – sustained on stage 5 – will stand up.

Monster Energy Honda
Monster Energy Honda

José Ignacio ‘Nacho’ Cornejo and Ricky Brabec are currently among the 2022 Dakar top fifteen, although with their timesheets a little too compromised to be able to close the gap on the frontrunners. Yet both riders know that the Dakar often affords the opportunity to claw back big differences from their rivals. Monster Energy Honda Team riders will be hoping that the second week of racing will be characterised by demanding navigation, that could offer the chance to whittle down time and make up places.

Ruben Faria – General Manager

“We came to the Dakar with the ambition of winning the rally for the third time in a row. We have good riders, the team is great and the bikes have been flawless. We started the rally well, but in stage 1B there was a complication with a difficult waypoint. What we have to do is try to make up the time lost by our riders. After the first day, we had to change the team’s strategy a bit and we are going to take it one day at a time. We know that results are like a rubber band, that one day you are in the front and the next you are in the back. We have arrived at this rest day with all four riders still in the race and with the bikes in perfect condition. Joan has hurt his shoulder a bit, but he is in the race. Pablo is our best-placed rider, and tomorrow he will start behind some of his rivals and try to gain some time on them. Nacho will also start behind and, if he stays focused, he could make up a lot of time. We will assess where we are each day and take it from there. Ricky is also a very strong rider who didn’t get off to the best of starts; those ups and downs don’t always agree with him, but he is improving and only time will tell. The important thing is that, at the moment, the race is at its halfway point, there is still another week to go and our riders are in good shape to stage an attack. In the Dakar things always happen and we have to be ready to take advantage of those moments.”

Monster Energy Honda
Monster Energy Honda

Luciano Benavides keeps Husqvarna’s hopes alive

Luciano has delivered strong, consistent results with the minimum of mistakes to lie 17th overall heading into the second week of racing. Top-10 results on stages four and five show that Benavides is definitely on the pace and gelling well with the latest version of the FR 450 Rally.

Luciano Benavides

Lying eighth at the close of stage four, and still very much in the hunt for an overall podium result, Skyler Howes unfortunately suffered a crash on Thursday’s stage five. Although the American was able to make it to the end of the special, medics insisted he was taken to hospital for assessment, where thankfully no serious injuries were found. Although Skyler won’t play any further part in the 2022 Dakar, he is expected to make a fast and full recovery and be back riding soon.

Luciano Benavides – P17

“Looking back over my first week at this year’s Dakar gives me a mixture of feelings. On one hand, losing so much time on the first day, with that tricky note in the roadbook, really put me on the back foot straight away. On the other hand, I’m really happy with how I have been riding and navigating through the rest of the race – if it wasn’t for that first day I would be right up there with the leaders, and that’s really encouraging going into the second week. In terms of my feeling and riding, I think it’s my best Dakar ever, so far. The bike is working good and the team are doing a great job. I also believe I am better prepared mentally this year. It has meant I’m able to keep a good rhythm for the entire stage, and in turn that means there’s less chance of making a mistake. Looking ahead to week two, I think the navigation will be the biggest challenge. From previous years the rocky sections and the canyons have always been difficult to navigate through accurately and a wrong turn can end up costing a huge amount of time. The goal for the second week is to treat it like a new race – forget about the times and put in six really strong days. Hopefully then I can get some strong stage results and prove that I am capable of fighting for the top places.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Andrew Houlihan Update

Aussie rider Andrew Joseph Houlihan was been forced to withdraw from the 2022 Dakar Rally, after a nasty obstacle on the drama-filled Stage 5 re-inflamed his pre-existing injuries, with a request for pain killers of the medical officials leading to their decision not to allow him to continue, with the health of competitors clearly a top priority.

Andrew Houlihan

“My Dakar came to an end today. Not by my choice. The medical staff and officials will not let me continue due to my rib fractures. Today’s stage started well and I was feeling really good, had perfect navigation, passed many bikes and had worked my way up in 62nd position. The track was very fast with some rocks and stones littered in the sand. I misjudged a small section with a deep hole. I hit it very hard at high speed but did not come off, just jarred my upper body really bad. It was only 20km until the refuelling point so I rode in very slowly. I asked the medical team for some pain medication and they wanted to know what I needed it for. I made the mistake of mentioning rib and chest pain. They then started feeling my rib area and poking to see were the pain was which didn’t go very well. After a long discussion / argument I had to accept their decision to not allow me to continue in the race. I argued the point with them for quite a while but their decision was final and for good reasons. This Dakar was always going to be a big challenge for me but I was getting through the days without too much trouble taking my time and trying to enjoy it.

“The terrain is so demanding you have to stay focused 100% for every second as the smallest mistake can have severe consequences and the speed you have to ride at is just crazy. The sand and dunes are like nothing we have in Australia so to train and prepare for Dakar you need to be in the sand and dunes in Africa or Saudi Arabia, something I didn’t get the chance to do prior to this Dakar, although yesterday I had a great rhythm and flow through the larger dunes and really enjoyed them. Katie and I will continue on with our Nomadas Adventure team for the remainder of the Dakar, with Pablo Guillen (#35 – KTM) and Vasileios Boudros (#147 – Husqvarna) our 2 riders still in the race. Let’s hope 2022 will be a year that I can fully recover and come back to Dakar 2023 injury free and 100 per cent fit.”

Overall after Stage 6

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap Penalty
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 19h55m59
2 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY +00h02m39
3 Daniel Sanders GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h05m35
4 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA +00h07m43
5 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h17m44
6 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h18m22
7 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h24m29
8 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h24m56
9 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h25m59 00h01m00
10 Mason Klein BAS DAKAR KTM RACING  +00h37m08
11 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h38m12
12 Toby Price RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h39m09 00h06m00′
13 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h46m54
14 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA  +00h47m25
15 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h49m20 00h02m00
16 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM  +00h55m11 00h10m00
17 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY  +01h03m36
18 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +01h05m05
19 Martin Michek ORION – MOTO RACING  +01h11m47
20 Bradley Cox BAS DAKAR KTM RACING  +01h16m45

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Daniel Sanders tops shortened Dakar Stage 6 | Price P9

Dakar 2022 – Stage 6


Stage 6 was set to see riders swap onto the route used by cars and trucks on the previous day, with Stages 5 and 6 running the classes separately and swapping routes between, however the amount of damage to the course caused by the four-wheelers meant the special had to be cut significantly shorter.

As such the initially planned 404-kilometer special on today’s stage was cut short on safety grounds and instead the day’s results were taken from the first refuelling point, at just over the 100-kilometer mark, with many riders expressing frustration at the issues which arose, particularly due to the predictability of the situation.

Daniel Sanders

That left Aussie Daniel Sanders as the Stage 6 winner, with GasGas teammate Sam Sunderland second and Matthias Walkner third. Monster Energy Honda’s Pablo Quintanilla and Ricky Brabec rounded out the top-five, while Toby Price finished the shortened day in ninth.

For the standings that left Sunderland in the overall lead, ahead of KTM’s Walkner, with Sanders moving up to third. Adrien Van Beveren sits fourth, ahead of Quintanilla, with Sherco’s Lorenzo Santolino sixth. Toby Price is now 12th, 39m09s off the leading rider.

Andrew Houlihan finished the day in 133rd, and now sits 127th.


GasGas top Stage 6

One-two in today’s shortened stage and one-three in the provisional overall, concluding a strong first week’s work for GASGAS Factory Racing’s Sam Sunderland and Daniel Sanders. Daniel claimed his second stage win of the race with the shortened Stage 6, moving up to third in the overall provisional classification.

Daniel Sanders – P1

“It was going really well for me today and I guess it ended well actually with another stage win. I started off strong, a bit like I have all week, but it was soon pretty clear that the stage was pretty chewed up from yesterday after the trucks had raced through it. So, then it was a case of trying to focus on the dangers in the roadbook but because of how the stage was, there were plenty of additional dangers to keep an eye out for. I’m a little disappointed that today was cut short, though. There was a long day ahead where it would have been possible to make up some time but I’m happy to have taken another stage win and I’m looking forward to next week.”

Daniel Sanders
Daniel Sanders

Rounding out a strong and consistent week of racing, Sam Sunderland finished as runner-up on stage six, just a couple of minutes behind Daniel. Able to accurately read the challenging terrain, the Brit applied a cautious approach throughout the abbreviated special. Safely bringing his GASGAS RC 450F Rally home on the shortened, 100-kilometer stage without any issues, Sam maintains his lead in the provisional standings.

Sam Sunderland – P2

“Ahead of today there were quite a few riders concerned about how the stage would be after the trucks had raced it yesterday, and it was unbelievable out there. So many rocks and square edges where trucks spin up the dirt and leave the rocks behind. So, on a bike, you’re basically coming up to half meter high walls of rock everywhere. You then start going offline to find smooth lines but then your roadbook isn’t quite right as you’ve ridden away from the correct line. For me it was the right decision for it to be shortened today and I’m happy to reach the halfway point still in the lead. I’m looking forward to the rest day tomorrow and a chance to recharge my batteries ahead of next week.”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Matthias Walkner came into today’s stage knowing that the rough terrain would pose a huge challenge to all riders and the chance of some unexpected dangers was very high. As such, the experienced Austrian took extra care on the heavily rutted ground and aimed for a safe finish to the stage. Despite his caution, Walkner was third fastest to the refuelling point at kilometre 100, where the stage was eventually stopped.

Matthias Walkner – P3

“Obviously it was a short day today and the tracks were really rough. You had to focus a lot and really take care – it was also very physical with the ground being cut up so badly. I’m a little disappointed that they let us race the stage only to cancel it at 100 kilometres, but I suppose it was the same for everyone. Thankfully it all went ok, and I reached the finish safely. We have a rest day tomorrow that I’m really looking forward to, so I’ll try and recharge my batteries and then attack once again next week for the final six stages.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

José Ignacio Cornejo and Ricky Brabec found themselves opening the way after the two riders ahead crashed in a dangerous, deeply rutted position. On reaching the refuelling point, the riders were instructed to continue, however, the race direction helicopter subsequently informed them that the special had been shortened to the refuelling point, and from there, competitors were directed back to the bivouac in Riyadh. Pablo Quintanilla, who had been in pursuit, also managed to reach the end of the special at kilometre 101 and later accompanied the other riders to the bivouac.

Pablo Quintanilla – P4

“The organisation decided to stop the stage because of the danger of the terrain. The ruts were very deep and there were many more dangers than there were in the roadbook and the organisation decided to stop the race. I think it was a good decision because it was very dangerous. We will wait to see today’s times, to see where the times are taken. Anyway, I have arrived at the rest day, so it’s time to get the energy back and rest well because the second week of the rally will be tough. We have to stay focused and work on the race day by day.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla
Ricky Brabec – P5

“This is the day before rest day. It was supposed to be a little over 400 km. The day was strange. The organisation is trying to do different things with different ideas, I understand that, but I don’t agree with what they did today, which was yesterday to start where the cars passed yesterday; this is not normal. It’s a big safety issue. We’re holding a lot of fuel. They are big and heavy. It’s dangerous out there. A couple of riders have fallen hard. This shouldn’t be part of the rally. The cars and tyres are getting bigger and they are creating bigger ruts. It’s more dangerous. We made it to the rest day and we’re happy. Then we are going to attack the final seven days of the Dakar.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec

Faced with a short but highly challenging stage, Adrien Van Beveren applied a cautious approach and paid close attention to his roadbook on stage six to safely complete the shortened, 100-kilometre special as the eighth fastest rider.

Adrien Van Beveren – P8

“I knew that today would be a difficult stage and I’m happy that the organisers shortened it because it was very dangerous. We were racing on the same stage that the cars and trucks raced yesterday and there were a lot of deep ruts in places. Also, in other places, the tyre tracks from yesterday were really spread out. So, it was a difficult day. At the start I was unaware that it would be shortened so I really focused on my roadbook as this was the only way to reach the finish successfully. I’m happy to have completed the stage safely and now going into the next one on Sunday I have a good starting position. Before that we have the rest day and I’m looking forward to regrouping ahead of what will be another tough week.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

As the fifth rider to enter the stage, Toby Price also soon realised that extra care was needed to avoid a crash. Despite a couple of close calls, the two-time Dakar champion safely arrived at the end of the special in ninth place. Lying 12th in the provisional overall standings, Toby trails the leader by just under 40 mins. However, with the toughest, most technical six days of the event left to race, the Australian star is confident of being able to close that deficit.

Toby Price – P9

“It was quite a short stage today. The cars and trucks had all passed through there yesterday, so we were on their stage today. I think we all went into the stage with a bit of a feeling that it wasn’t going to work and yeah, a lot of the dangers were worse than listed on the roadbook and there were a few extra hazards out there too. I think they made the right call to stop it at 100 kilometres – I had a couple of scary moments myself out there. I’m happy to reach the rest day safely, not quite the overall position I would have liked, but there’s still a long way to go, so I’ll give my all and see what I can do next week.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

A solid but safe ride saw Argentinian Luciano Benavides arrive at the refuelling point in 11th place, where he learned that the stage would be cut short. Frustrated not to have been able to make up more time on his rivals, but happy to come away from the stage without damaging himself or his bike, Luciano now looks forward to the rest day, and ahead to the second week of racing at this year’s Dakar.

Luciano Benavides – P11

“Honestly, I think the organisers made the right decision today. We knew the stage would be cut up quite badly – it always is when we follow the trucks and cars. This one seemed quite bad, and it was very easy to make a mistake, especially as a lot of the dangers weren’t listed in the roadbook. I’m happy with how I rode the stage – I chose not to push too hard, to use my brain and bring the bike home safely. Finishing 11th is ok, and it gives me a good start position for Sunday. Now, I’m looking forward to having some rest tomorrow. I feel pretty good, I think I was definitely very well prepared for this year’s race physically, but the final week is always tough and I want to be as strong as I can be to do my best.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

The shortened stage proved to be a blessing for Joan Barreda, who this morning started still visibly in pain after yesterday’s fall where he injured his shoulder. The Monster Energy Honda Team rider was able to complete today’s partial stage and will be grateful to have reached the rest day.

Joan Barreda – P12

“The goal today was to try to continue in the race after yesterday’s fall. I was in a lot of pain over the 100 kilometres, especially on the rocky and sandy parts, where I had to brake to overcome the bumps and dangers; I really suffered. We’ll see how the injury evolves. The aim is that the injury doesn’t get any worse. If it continues like this, I hope to be able to manage the situation and continue in the race. The rally has been complicated since we made the mistake on the first day, because then you try to push to make up time, then in the end I crashed and I was unlucky to injured my shoulder. Now we’re going to try to reach the finish-line, which is the main objective. Today I was able to finish the first 100 km, but I don’t know if continuing the stage would have been feasible. My shoulder hurt a lot during some movements on the bike. We’ll see how it goes in the second week.”

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

Similarly to his teammates, Kevin Benavides took a measured approach to today’s stage, ultimately completing the 100 kilometres in 15th place, less than six minutes down on the eventual winner. The reigning Dakar Champion still sits inside the top 10 overall going into week two, and with the expected rougher terrain and more technical navigation suiting the Argentinian’s strengths.

Kevin Benavides – P15

“I started off really well today but then came across Ross Branch who had had a crash early on, so I thought maybe it would be a good idea to ease off a little. We arrived at the refuelling and after that I tried my best to push on but then they stopped the stage early and took the results from 100 kilometres. I think it was the right decision as the tracks were really rough and quite dangerous for us. Finishing 15th today gives me a good position to start the second week, so I’m happy.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides
José Ignacio Cornejo – P19

“I’m happy to be back in the bivouac. Today’s stage was very dangerous. We’re coming to the rest day after an intense first week of racing. We will have to take advantage of the rest day to recover both body and mind and then give it everything for the remaining six days of racing. Today’s stage was dangerous and was stopped at the refuelling point. Unfortunately, several riders crashed and were out of the race. It could have happened to anyone because it was very dangerous after the cars and trucks passed yesterday. I’m happy to be here in one piece, with no injuries. Let’s get ready for the rest of the Dakar.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

Following on from his outstanding stage win on day six – the first ever for a former MotoGP rider – Tech3 KTM Factory Rcinag’s Danilo Petrucci was given the unenviable task of opening today’s heavily damaged special. The likeable Italian did an extremely good job, even after a crash in the opening few kilometres resulted in a few cuts and bruises. Arriving at the finish in 40th place, just under 13 minutes down, Danilo was pleased with how he had handled the all-new experience and now looks forward to a well-earned day off the bike.

Danilo Petrucci – P40

“Today was the first time in my career that I have opened a stage, and I think it was on one of the toughest stages of this year’s rally because it was used for the cars and trucks yesterday. The team did a good job of warning me about the dangers, but I was still surprised to find a big step in the middle of the track. I had quite a heavy crash and the rider behind me crashed too, but luckily, I was able to continue. I think they made the right decision and now I’m looking forward to having one day of rest before continuing on Sunday.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Branch a DNF

After narrowly missing out on the stage win yesterday, Ross Branch’s time at the Dakar came to an abrupt end early on in stage six after he was caught out by a rock ledge that pitched the Botswana native from his Yamaha WR450F Rally. Fortunate to escape serious injury during the incident, Ross’ machine was too badly damaged to continue, in addition to suffering from a heavy impact on his upper leg.

Ross Branch

“A really bad day for me and I’m so disappointed that my rally is over. Just two kilometres in I hit a ledge. I tried my best to ride it out but unfortunately I couldn’t. I guess it was the same for everyone but I wasn’t really happy about racing this stage as I know the damage that the trucks can cause. It’s frustrating as things were starting to go really well for me so to be out of the race when things are looking good, it’s tough to take. Thanks to my team, they have all been amazing and the bike ran perfectly all week so I’m disappointed for those guys too. I’d like to wish Adrien and Andrew the best of luck for next week.”

Tomorrow’s Rest Stage

There will be no race stage tomorrow. After six days of tough racing, the competitors have earned a well-deserved rest day. After arriving at the bivouac today, the riders will have the entire day to relax and prepare both physically and mentally for the second week of competition, set to recommence the day after tomorrow, on Sunday, with the seventh stage: Riyadh-Al Dawadimi.

2022 Dakar Stage 6 Results

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap
1 Daniel Sanders GASGAS FACTORY RACING 00h51m43
2 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h02m26
3 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h02m36
4 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h03m15
5 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h03m19
6 Mason Klein BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM +00h03m33
7 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +0h04m05
8 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM +00h04m10
9 Toby Price RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h04m16
10 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM RALLY +00h04m29
11 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING +00h04m46
12 Bradley Cox BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM +00h04m51
13 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h05m21
14 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h05m27
15 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h05m31
16 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM +00h05m41
17 Rui Gonçalves SHERCO FACTORY +00h06m05
18 Maciej Giemza ORLEN TEAM +00h06m46
19 Jan Brabec STROJRENT RACING +00h06m58
20 Antonio Maio FRANCO SPORT YAMAHA RACING TEAM +00h07m07

Overall after Stage 6

Pos Rider Team/Bike Time/Gap Penalty
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 19h55m59
2 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY +00h02m39
3 Daniel Sanders GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h05m35
4 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA +00h07m43
5 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h17m44
6 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h18m22
7 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h24m29
8 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h24m56
9 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h25m59 00h01m00
10 Mason Klein BAS DAKAR KTM RACING  +00h37m08
11 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h38m12
12 Toby Price RED BULL KTM FACTORY  +00h39m09 00h06m00′
13 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h46m54
14 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA  +00h47m25
15 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h49m20 00h02m00
16 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM  +00h55m11 00h10m00
17 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY  +01h03m36
18 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS  +01h05m05
19 Martin Michek ORION – MOTO RACING  +01h11m47
20 Bradley Cox BAS DAKAR KTM RACING  +01h16m45

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Petrucci wins Dakar Stage 5 after Price dropped to P5 with penalty

Dakar 2022 – Stage 5


It looked like Aussie Toby Price had Stage 5 in the bag with early results showing him well clear of the competition, however a penalty for ‘speeding in the neutralisation zone’ stole away what would have been his first stage win of the 2022 Dakar.

Toby Price looked a shoe-in for the win
Toby Price looked a shoe-in for the win with a dominant performance

Even a six-minute penalty left him only 1m46 off eventual winner and fellow KTM rider Petrucci, who no longer counts in the results due to a earlier mechanical failure. As such Ross Branch was the top RallyGP finisher.

The top five on the timesheets for the day were Petrucci, Branch, Cornejo, Brabec and Price, while the overall standings after Stage 5 still has Sunderland in the lead, ahead of Walkner, Van Beveren, Sanders and Santolino, with Price now 13th.

Fellow Australian Daniel Sanders meanwhile had to settle for 13th after a challenging day, just over eight-minutes behind the leaders, mirroring his gap to standings leader Sunderland in the overall results so far.

Andrew Houlihan meanwhile had a stellar day, racing to 83rd and sits 103rd in the standings as a result.

The first of the two looping routes in Riyadh for Stage 5 saw – for the first time in Dakar history – the motorcycle riders ride the entire stage completely autonomously from the car and truck categories. The fifth stage of the rally was battled out over a 346-kilometre special stage, covering hard and stony ground and including, towards the end of the day, a 50-kilometre stretch of dunes.


Petrucci wins Stage 5

Completing yesterday’s stage four as third fastest, Danilo was penalised 10 minutes for speeding, and was relegated to 15th. However, setting off with an advantageous start position into today’s special, and focusing on improving his roadbook skills, the MotoGP race winner was able to steadily move up through the field to ultimately take the win.

Danilo Petrucci – P1

“Today was quite a long day. I set off this morning and decided I really wanted to learn and improve my navigation, so I didn’t push too hard at the beginning. After one corner there was a large dune with a group of camels on the other side. One big camel came into the track, and I had to avoid it, but ended up crashing after going across a lot of bumps and camel grass. That was my very first crash of this Dakar. After that I eased off a bit and Kevin caught up with me and we rode together towards the finish. After catching a few more riders we came across a waypoint that didn’t validate for everyone – I lost some time there. The last 60 kilometers were all dunes and so I was very careful there to make sure I didn’t hurt my ankle. So, it’s been an interesting and tough day, but I have really enjoyed it.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Delivering his breakout performance at the 2022 Dakar Rally, Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team’s Ross Branch charged to a second-place finish on a thoroughly challenging stage five, placing just two seconds adrift of the day’s eventual winner.

Ross Branch – P2

“It’s been a great day and I was so close to the win! It was another fast stage today, especially in the middle section, that part was super-fast. But on the whole it was a good, mixed stage with a little bit of everything thrown in there and some trick navigation. From here onwards I’m going to keep on keeping on and I’m looking forward to seeing what we can do tomorrow.”

Ross Branch
Ross Branch was the first rider over the line still in the official Dakar battle

José Ignacio Cornejo’s riding had significantly improved from the previous days and this was reflected in the results. An error-free stage, with speed and deft navigation saw the rider reach the end of the special with the day’s second best time for a RallyGP rider, at 0’03 from the stage winner and leapfrogging two positions up the general standings.

José Ignacio Cornejo – P3

“Finally I was able to ride a solid stage, without mistakes and with some good pace! I felt very good. It was quite a complete stage, with fast and technical sections, with rocks, and another part with dunes, which was fun. I had a great time. I was able to hold a strong pace, without making navigation mistakes and I’m happy about that. I was able to improve a bit in the general standings, but everyone is really fast. If we can have a few more days like today, I think we could make a lot of progress. Tomorrow is the final stage before the rest day, which will be good for the body and mind. But I’m motivated and for me, I’d keep going on days like today. We’re going to keep fighting.”

José Ignacio Cornejo
José Ignacio Cornejo

American rider Ricky Brabec also turned out a satisfactory showing. The Monster Energy Honda Team rider, third on the RallyGP day class, was able to claw back several minutes from his closest rivals and, furthermore, regain the good sensations. Brabec finished 1’30” behind the day’s winner and moves up one position in the rankings.

Ricky Brabec – P4

“Day five. One day before the rest day. It was a good day. We started off a little bit slow this morning. We were a little bit cold. The navigation was really tricky in the morning. Not super tricky as far as technical goes, but a lot of quick notes and a lot of quick turns. We really didn’t start picking up the speed until kilometre 60. For me, to get going this morning was a little bit tough but I managed OK and made it to refuelling. After refuelling it started to open back up. There was a sandstorm. It was wild; you couldn’t see much. One more day to rest day. We’ll keep on fighting to the end.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec

Continuing to play catch up after losing a large chunk of time on the event’s opening stage, Toby Price rode a strong stage five, only to be penalised for speeding in a neutralisation zone. The resulting six-minute penalty dropped the Aussie down to fifth place. Heading into the final stage before the rest day, Toby lies 13th overall and will be looking to gain even more time back tomorrow.

Toby Price – P5

“Today has been a good stage, starting quite far back definitely makes things a bit easier, but today there was a bit of a dust storm, so everyone had to be on their game and focus on the roadbook. I made a couple of little errors and mistakes, but all-in-all it was a solid stage.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Andrew Short was another Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Team rider benefitting from his starting position on the fifth stage of the Dakar Rally. After setting the 13th fastest time yesterday, the American set off one place ahead of Ross and attacked the stage in a bid to make up for the time he lost earlier on in the rally. Crossing the line as the seventh fastest rider, Andrew now moves up two spots in the general ranking to 11th.

Andrew Short – P7

“Stage five was pretty good for me although it took a while for me to really get going. The early part of the stage was tricky, some roads and rocky sections, but when it opened out into sand dunes it was pretty awesome. I felt better as the stage progressed and overall, I’m really enjoying my time here. The bike is running great so if I can continue like I am throughout the rest of the rally with these good results then I’ll be happy.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short

After a strong start to stage five, Kevin Benavides was immediately in the hunt for the stage win, posting the fastest time to the checkpoint at kilometer 81. The reigning Dakar Champion maintained his top-four placing all the way to the final 60 kilometers, where a tricky-to-register waypoint ended up costing him, and others, some time. Despite the setback, Kevin was able to complete the stage safely in eighth place, and now also lies eighth in the provisional overall standings.

Kevin Benavides – P8

“So day five at the Dakar went really well for me. I felt much better first thing this morning, so I was really motivated to attack. I pushed hard all day right up until the end where one waypoint proved really difficult to validate. I had arrived in a group of riders, and it worked for some, but not for the others. I lost quite a bit of time there trying to find it. After that I pushed as hard as I could over the last section of dunes to recover some time. Hopefully the organizers will look into the problem, and we get some time back.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides

Skyler Howes had put in a superb performance on stage five, fighting his way through the field to post a time inside the top 10. However, a crash in the closing kilometres resulted in the American requiring medical checks at the local hospital. Although suffering no serious injuries, Skyler will play no further part in this year’s event.

Improving his position as the stage went on, Luciano was able to successfully navigate through a particularly tricky section that caught out many of the other competitors. From there he entered the final section of rolling dunes and raced on towards the finish. Ultimately claiming 11th place, Benavides moves up to 18th in the provisional overall standings, just over one hour behind the race leader.

Luciano Benavides – P11

“I’ve finished stage five and it was a really tricky day on the whole with some difficult navigation and some small issues towards the end. I started in fifth position and soon managed to catch and pass the two Sherco riders in front. After that there were only two riders left in front of me, and with the sandstorm that blew up halfway through the special, it was difficult to make them out, so I think I did a good job of navigating through the stage. I’m really happy with how the rally is going so far, it is frustrating that I lost an hour on day one, but since then my pace and navigation have been good, so I’m pleased with my progress. I’ll give my best again tomorrow and then I can enjoy the rest day.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Another stage, and another consistently fast performance by Matthias Walkner saw the experienced Austrian claim a 12th place finish. In doing so he cemented his second-place position in the overall standings, closing the gap on the rally leader by another 30 seconds. Ready for tomorrow’s 644-kilometer stage, Walkner will be looking to complete the first week at the 2022 Dakar strongly.

Matthias Walkner – P12

“It was a really nice day for me today. I caught Sam (Sunderland) around kilometer 90 and from there we rode together with me leading most of the way, but both of us were pushing quite hard and keeping up a good pace. There was a strange situation near the end with one waypoint that didn’t validate so easily for me. I think a few people struggled there, so the organizers will have to check the GPS. Overall, I’m happy I didn’t lose too much time and I’m becoming a lot more comfortable on the new bike. My navigation today has been good too on quite a tricky stage, so everything is going to plan.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Stage five of the 2022 Dakar Rally was anything but easy for Sam Sunderland and Daniel Sanders. Doing what they do, the GASGAS Factory Racing duo safely reached the end of the special to maintain their strong positions in the provisional overall classification. With five long and physically demanding stages now complete, Sam maintains his place at the top of the leaderboard thanks to a 12th place finish today while Daniel completed the special one spot behind in 13th to remain fourth in the general ranking.

Sam Sunderland – P12

“I knew I was in for a tough day after my crash yesterday, so it was a case of survival mode for me today. It was difficult for sure but as the stage went on I felt better and better and had a nice, strong pace through the sand near the end. Besides my crash the race is going well so far. I’m still leading, which is great, but as we’ve seen there is some tricky navigation at times so it’s important to really focus on the roadbook and keep mistakes to a minimum.

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland
Daniel Sanders – P13

“Today started off really well and I was able to make up a lot of time before the fuel stop. Then at kilometer 270 I ended up passing the same waypoint twice, so I’m not sure if that was my mistake or not. After it happened I knew that I had to just push on to the end. Unfortunately, and also fortunately, I crashed and my shoulder popped out but luckily it went back in by itself and I was able to continue on to the finish. It was a crazy day and I’m glad to have reached the finish line.”

Daniel Sanders
Daniel Sanders

Maintaining his calculated approach to this year’s Dakar, Adrien Van Beveren delivered another strong result by focusing on his roadbook, riding his own race, and minimising mistakes. Despite losing a little time through the rocky going found early on in the timed special, once into the sand dunes, the Frenchman upped his pace to secure a 15th place finish to retain third in the provisional standings.

Adrien Van Beveren – P15

“Not my best day today. The beginning of the stage had a lot of hard ground with rocks and stones so it made for some difficult navigation. I took my time to avoid mistakes and once I made my way through that section and into the sand, I was able to make up some more time so that was good. I finished with a strong pace and for tomorrow I’ll keep focused and keep working hard with the aim of ending week one with a strong stage result.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

Pablo Quintanilla and Joan Barreda were lumbered with the troublesome task of opening the track this morning in the middle of a sandstorm. At the end of the interrupted stage, race authorities are still weighing up different options on how to classify the riders who had finished and to decide what to do with the rest of the riders involved. Quintanilla and Barreda were, nonetheless, able to make it through to the end of the special. Joan suffered a fall and the Spaniard is still unsure whether he will be 100% fit to battle for another stage win.

Pablo Quintanilla – P20

“Today’s stage was very complicated in terms of navigation. In the morning there were a lot of changes of direction and the tracks were not very visible. It was very difficult to navigate in some sectors. I had a good pace until the refuelling. After refuelling I caught up with Joan and we kept pushing. We encountered a sandstorm with little visibility to find the tracks. Overall it went well, with no navigation errors. We knew that today we would lose some time when opening the track and that we would leave it to the guys behind us. It was also important not to make any mistakes with the navigation. I stopped around kilometre 250 to help Joan, who had fallen. Luckily, he was able to recover and finish the stage. In the dunes, the sun was high and we couldn’t see the depth of the dunes. We reached the end of the special stage. Tomorrow will be a new day with a new opportunity. We have some good pace, with speed, and we will have to think about the strategy a bit and reduce time in the general standings over the next few days. Anything can happen.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla
Joan Barreda – P23

“I think I rode a good stage. We opened the track with some good pace all morning even though we didn’t have very good visibility. We encountered a sandstorm and it was difficult to find the reference points in the roadbook, we were almost blind. Even so, we managed to get to the refuelling point without losing too much time. After the refuelling, around kilometre 250, we entered a river and I think I hit my rear wheel on a stone and fell hard, hitting my left shoulder, in the collarbone area. My team-mate Pablo Quintanilla helped me to get back on my feet and keep going. It was very hard to get to the end, especially in the dunes, but I made it to the end.”

Tomorrow’s Stage 6

The final stage of this first week of the Dakar takes place tomorrow. A second loop to the capital of the country north-west of Riyadh will once again put the riders to the test with 402 kilometres of timed special stage.

It will be physically demanding given that it is the same route completed by the car and truck drivers the previous day, so riders can expect churned up, rutted conditions with dust, sand and hidden stones. In the dunes, the many lines will force riders to be particularly attentive to the navigation.

At the start, there will be several track crossings and, towards the middle of the special, some forty kilometres of dunes before the fast tracks that will wrap up the day. The bike odometers will be registering 618 kilometres by the time the bikers make it back to the bivouac in Riyadh.

2022 Dakar Stage 5 Results
Pos Rider Team ASS
1 D. PETRUCCI (ITA) TECH 3 KTM FACTORY RACING 00:00:00▲
2 R. BRANCH (BWA) MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM 00:00:02▲
3 JI. CORNEJO FLORIMO (CHL) MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 00:00:05=
4 R. BRABEC (USA) MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 00:01:32=
5 T. PRICE (AUS) RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 00:01:46▼
6 M. KLEIN (USA) BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM 00:03:21▲
7 A. SHORT (USA) MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM 00:04:29▲
8 K. BENAVIDES (ARG) RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 00:04:42▲
9 S. HOWES (USA) HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING 00:06:23▼
10 M. MICHEK (CZE) ORION – MOTO RACING GROUP 00:07:07▲
11 L. BENAVIDES (ARG) HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING 00:07:25=
12 M. WALKNER (AUT) RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 00:07:32▲
13 S. SUNDERLAND (GBR) GASGAS FACTORY RACING 00:08:03▲
14 D. SANDERS (AUS) GASGAS FACTORY RACING 00:08:57▲
15 M. GIEMZA (POL) ORLEN TEAM 00:09:02▲
Overall after Stage 5
Pos Rider Team Time/Gap
1 S. SUNDERLAND (GBR) GASGAS FACTORY RACING 19:01:50
2 M. WALKNER (AUT) RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 0:02:29
3 A. VAN BEVEREN (FRA) MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM 0:05:59
4 D. SANDERS (AUS) GASGAS FACTORY RACING 0:08:01
5 L. SANTOLINO (ESP) SHERCO TVS RALLY FACTORY 0:15:27
6 P. QUINTANILLA (CHL) MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 0:16:55
7 R. BRANCH (BWA) MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM 0:18:15
8 K. BENAVIDES (ARG) RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 0:21:51
9 S. SVITKO (SVK) SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM 0:22:50
10 J. BARREDA BORT (ESP) MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 0:22:58
11 A. SHORT (USA) MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA RALLY TEAM 0:34:57
12 M. KLEIN (USA) BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM 0:36:01
13 T. PRICE (AUS) RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 0:37:19
14 JI. CORNEJO FLORIMO (CHL) MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 0:42:04
15 X. DE SOULTRAIT (FRA) HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA RACING 0:42:40

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1, 2022 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2, 2022 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3, 2022 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4, 2022 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5, 2022 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6, 2022 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7, 2022 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8, 2022 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9, 2022 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10, 2022 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11, 2022 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12, 2022 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13, 2022 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14, 2022 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au

Honda 1-2 for Dakar Stage 4 | Sanders P17 | Price P29

Dakar 2022 – Stage 4


Joaquim Rodrigues made history claiming the stage win yesterday for Hero MotoSports, however today’s Stage 4 was the longest of the 2022 Dakar Rally, including a total trek of 707 km, with a 465-kilometre special, and on Wednesday Honda and Sherco dominated.

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

Composed of a claimed 79 per cent dirt, 12 per cent dunes, 7 per cent sand and 2 per cent dried-out lake beds, the high-paced stage proved a trial by fire for those involved, with Aussie Toby Price quickly reaching the front but then having to contend with opening much of the stage and suffering as a result.

Sanders meanwhile forged ahead to a P17 result, ensuring he didn’t lose much time on the leaders and remaining within the top-five overall.

Toby Price
Toby Price

Monster Energy Honda had their best day so far, with Joan Barreda taking the stage win despite a one-minute penalty. Team-mate Pablo Quinantilla finished second and Ricky Brabec 10th, making it three riders within the top 10 for the day.

Completing the top three was Sherco Factory’s Rui Gonçalves, with teammate Lorenzo Santolino just a minute behind in fourth.

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Luciano Benavides was top Husqvarna Factory Racing finisher in fifth, ahead of GasGas’s Sam Sunderland and KTM’s Matthias Walkner. Top Monster Energy Yamaha was Adrien Van Beveren in 11th.

The overall standings after Stage 4 see Sunderland in the lead from Walkner, Van Beveren in third and Sanders fourth. Price is running 16th, 43m36s off the lead.

The Aussies

Daniel Sanders rocketed forwards from his fifth place starting position on stage four, opening the challenging special from the 158-kilometre mark. With vast, rolling sand dunes in front of him, Chucky skillfully navigated across more than 300 kilometres to successfully reach the finish line in Riyadh to complete the stage as the 17th fastest rider.

Daniel Sanders – P17

“I got off to a really good start today and caught up to the leaders pretty quickly. After refueling there was a group of us opening the stage and then after a tricky spot with navigation it was me and Skyler Howes who broke free initially. Then I pushed on to lead on my own. Near the end I jumped off the top of a dune and I landed on a grassy mound, which wasn’t ideal, and I was really lucky not to crash there. But I cracked on with it and was able to finish the stage without any further issues. So all-in-all, a decent day for me.”

Daniel Sanders
Daniel Sanders

As the third rider into the long special, Toby Price soon found himself riding at the front and opening much of the stage. Despite the difficult navigation and mixed terrain, the two-time Dakar champion was able to stay consistent and lose the minimum of time on his rivals, finishing the day 29th.

Toby Price – P29

“Stage four hasn’t gone too badly. Setting off near the front meant we lost a bit of time, but we expected that, especially after such a long stage. All-in-all I got through the stage pretty well, I made a couple of small mistakes, but was able to keep a good pace and a good rhythm, so happy days.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Andrew Houlihan’s efforts also continued with a 100th place finish, which nows sees him sitting 104th overall.

Barreda & Quintanilla Honda 1-2

The starting order for the fourth day set the stage for a promising race, particularly for Joan Barreda who came out guns blazing, firmly intent on victory, but also on improving his position in the general standings.

With flawless riding and navigational prowess, the Spanish rider reached the finish-line in Riyadh the clear winner and currently holds seventh position overall, just over thirteen minutes shy of the overall leader.

Tomorrow Stage 5 will see Barreda open the track with his rivals in hot pursuit as a result. He was penalised one minute for exceeding the speed limit in a radar zone.

Joan Barreda – P1

“I’m very happy with today. It was a very good stage and I achieved another win. We did a very good job from the first moment of the special. We had different terrains: sandy tracks, dunes, rocks and with some navigation. I tried to keep calm, follow our course, but pushing hard and I think we did a great job and I’m very satisfied and happy with it.”

Joan Barreda
Joan Barreda

Pablo Quintanilla also performed well, an advantageous starting position helped him follow the trail left by his teammate. The Chilean turned out a very steady stage, consistently among the top three, climbing up one position in the order in the latter half of the day. Quinta’ improves on his position in the table and now lies sixth overall.

Pablo Quintanilla – P2

“It was a long special, without too much navigation and with a dune sector of about 50 kilometres. I’m happy with the way I rode today, I tried to push from the back. I was expecting more complicated navigation. I felt comfortable, at ease, with good pace and focused on the roadbook, so as not to miss any tracks and be able to make up some minutes in the general standings.”

Pablo Quintanilla
Pablo Quintanilla

Claiming a top-three stage result in not only his first Dakar but his first ever rally-raid is a huge achievement and is testament to Petrucci’s skill and focus. Although the former road racer is not eligible to feature in the classification due to his DNF on stage two, he continues to take every opportunity to deliver his best results and build his experience as the race continues, even if he doesn’t feature on the results.

Danilo Petrucci (Third over line)

“It was a really fast stage today with some very fast pistes. I was able to ride in a group and had a lot of fun, I really enjoyed it. It was such a long stage but fortunately I didn’t make any mistakes and was able to find a good rhythm. I learned a lot today too, so now I’m really excited for tomorrow and the rest of the event.”

Danilo Petrucci
Danilo Petrucci

Sherco Factory’s Rui Gonçalves and Lorenzo Santolino finished the day in third and fourth respectively.

Luciano Benavides made the minimum of mistakes while moving up through the field to ultimately claim fifth place. The number 77 continues to claw back the time he lost on the tough first stage of the rally and now sits 20th in the provisional overall standings.

Luciano Benavides – P5

“Stage four was a really long stage – the longest of the rally, so I’m happy to finish well and inside the top five. I kept focused on my navigation and it paid off, I was able to catch and pass some riders ahead of me, and I was able to keep a good speed for the whole stage without any big mistakes. The result is really encouraging, especially after such a tough day on stage one where a lot of us lost a lot of time. The bike is perfect and now I’m really looking forward to pushing hard for the rest of the race.”

Luciano Benavides
Luciano Benavides

Sam Sunderland continues to lead the 2022 Dakar Rally with the British racer now enjoying a three-minute advantage over his closest rival in the provisional overall standings. Stage 4 saw him chasing down the leading riders from his 17th place starting position to ultimately complete the stage as the seventh fastest rider.

Sam Sunderland – P7

“Things were going well today until I had a small crash in a riverbed while checking my roadbook. I just clipped a rock and that was all it took to take me down. I was able to get up pretty quickly, just as Barreda came by, so I latched onto him to the finish. I’ll get some rest now and prepare myself for tomorrow.”

Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland

Matthias Walkner put in another strong ride, claiming a solid eighth place on the tough special. This result, and Matthias’ string of consistent finishes, moves the Austrian up to second overall in the rally standings – just three minutes exactly from the lead. With an advantageous starting position for Thursday’s stage five, the reigning FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Champion will be looking to further close that gap.

Matthias Walkner – P8

“The navigation was tricky today. The pace was fast and so the notes in the roadbook were coming really quickly, you had to be really precise on your heading as there were many changes of direction. In the end, I rode in a good group with Kevin Benavides and Adrian Van Beveren, and we kept good speed to the finish without making any mistakes. Overall, even though it was such a long stage it went really quickly because we were pushing for the whole time. It was fun and I enjoyed the day.”

Matthias Walkner
Matthias Walkner

Ricky Brabec, who set off from sixth this morning in Al Qaisumah, had a fairly good day, posting tenth, but also received a two-minute penalty for speeding in a controlled area.

Ricky Brabec – P10

“Today’s stage was good. It was the longest stage of the rally and was supposed to be the most difficult, but as it was the longest it was good to make up or lose a lot of time. Today was a good day for us. We did well. We caught the front group around the second refuelling, so there we rode as a group together. I did a good job. I didn’t lose too much time. I lost some time to my team-mate Joan who was wild. He was on the gas and him and Pablo are doing great. If we were to delete the first day, I think that the team would be sitting one-two-three. It’s rally things, like this happen. I suffered a speeding penalty today – my mistake. I sped into the speed zone a little bit late. I lost huge on the first day and I’m kicking myself. It’s a long race and we have many days left.”

Ricky Brabec
Ricky Brabec

José Ignacio Cornejo finished twelfth, looking more at ease on the bike as the days go by, in spite of a minor navigation mistake earlier in the special.

José Ignacio Cornejo – P12

“Today was a good stage; the longest special stage of the rally. The intention was to push to try to make up time. It was a very fast stage and the gaps were not very big. I made a slight mistake where I lost about three minutes. Apart from that, it was a solid, all-round day and I’m happy about that. I had some good pace and I feel good on the bike, which is working perfectly. We have to hope for some difficult days ahead so that we can take advantage of the navigation to try to recover and move up in the general standings.”

Dominant day for Monster Energy Honda Team at Stage 4 of the Dakar Rally
José Ignacio Cornejo

Adrien Van Beveren brought his Yamaha WR450F Rally home in a strong 11th place. Despite the relatively straightforward high-speed special offering little to separate the leading riders, the Frenchman maintained his solid pace throughout all 465 kilometres to secure another positive result.

Adrien Van Beveren – P11

“Another fast stage today and not so much in the way of navigation. It wasn’t my favourite stage, but I’m happy to have completed the longest stage of the rally. I pushed on throughout with a strong rhythm and it’s great to be in such a good position after four stages. I’m super happy with my overall performance so far and the goal is to continue like this, keep focused, and take things day by day.”

Adrien Van Beveren
Adrien Van Beveren

Following his unfortunate navigational error on stage one, which affected many of the event’s top competitors, Andrew Short has since delivered impressive results. Stage four was no different for the American who, after a calculated day of racing, secured the 13th fastest time and now advances three spots in the provisional classification to 13th.

Andrew Short – P13

“Today was a good day. Starting up front and knowing it was the longest stage, it was going to be tough. It actually turned out pretty decent though. Brabec caught me and then we navigated together for almost the whole stage, which actually worked out really well as overall I didn’t lose too much time. I feel like I managed the day really well and I’m happy with things so far. Obviously, it’s a real shame about day one, that really set me back, but if I can keep on riding like I did today then we can for sure move up the leaderboard as the rally continues.”

Andrew Short
Andrew Short

Ross Branch maintains his 11th place ranking in the provisional standings after the conclusion of stage four. Incredibly, the 35-year-old recorded the very same time as his teammate Andrew Short and will be the 14th rider to take on tomorrow’s 348-kilometre stage five special. With a very favourable starting position and rolling sand dunes forming the final 80 kilometres of the special, Branch is hopeful of delivering his breakout stage result of the rally so far.

Ross Branch – P14

“It’s nice to have completed stage four, the longest one of the race, safely and tick off another completed stage. Despite it being a long one, there wasn’t much to separate us riders as the navigation was somewhat straightforward and the terrain wasn’t too technical. Tomorrow though looks like it will be a lot slower early on and then end with a big section of sand dunes so I’m excited to get that one started.”

Ross Branch
Ross Branch

Maintaining his position inside the top 10 in the standings, Kevin Benavides also delivered a quality ride on stage four to place 16th. Using his extensive skill and experience to navigate through the technically demanding stage, Benavides kept up a strong, but measured, pace to minimize any mistakes.

Kevin Benavides – P16

“It was a really hard day today. For the first 100 kilometres it was really cold out there – my hands were frozen so I couldn’t ride so good. After that I began to feel a little better and was able to push. It was a very fast day again today, but this time with a lot of navigation. The last section of the stage was especially very tough. I think I did a good job and I’m happy with that.”

Kevin Benavides
Kevin Benavides

Faced with the task of starting fourth into the longest stage of the event, Skyler Howes knew a consistent day of racing would be necessary to lose the minimum of time to his chasing rivals. The American star was able to not only do that but also maintain a speed that placed him a commendable 21st when he reached the stage finish. Although he dropped four places in the standings, Skyler still sits in an excellent eighth overall heading into stage five.

Skyler Howes – P21

“Things went well for me today, and I’m pleased with how I rode the stage. After yesterday’s decent result, I started right near the front and the navigation was just tricky enough that we soon ended up in a group riding together. We all took it in turns to open and it meant although we didn’t make up too much time on those around us, we didn’t lose that much time to those behind. I made it to the finish line without having to correct too many mistakes, so I’m happy with that. I lost a bit of time, but that’s understandable, so I’ll regroup and push some more tomorrow.”

Skyler Howes
Skyler Howes

Tomorrow’s Stage 5

Stage 5: 214 kilometres of liaison sections, 346 kilometres of special stage, making a total of 560 kilometres on the day. Starting and finishing at the bivouac in Riyadh, competitors will face a new loop on this Dakar, although it won’t be the last one.

The changes of terrain from dirt to stone-littered tracks will put a strain on the physiques of even the toughest riders in the opening half of the special. If that were not enough, then 50 kilometres of dunes will divide the wheat from the chaff.

2022 Dakar Stage Four Results
Pos Rider Bike/Team Time/Gap Penalty
1 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA 04H 0706 00h01m00
2 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA  00h03m37
3 Rui Gonçalves SHERCO FACTORY +00h06m59
4 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h07m56
5 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING +00h08m55
6 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h09m15
7 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h10m45
8 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h12m03
9 Martin Michek ORION – MOTO RACING GROUP +00h13m18
10 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h13m34 00h02m00
11 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h14m05
12  Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h15m09
13 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h15m41
14 Ross Branch MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h15m41
15 Danilo Petrucci TECH 3 KTM FACTORY RACING  +00h15m53 00h10m00
16 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h16m42
17 Daniel Sanders GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h17m28
18 Bradley Cox BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM +00h17m41
19 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA RACING +00h17m45
20 Antonio Maio FRANCO SPORT YAMAHA RACING TEAM  00h18m16
Dakar 2022 Provisional Standings after Stage 4
Pos Rider Bike/Team Time/Gap Penalty
1 Sam Sunderland GASGAS FACTORY RACING 15h 30′ 01
2 Matthias Walkner RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h03m00
3 Adrien Van Beveren MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h04m54
4 Daniel Sanders GASGAS FACTORY RACING +00h07m07
5 Lorenzo Santolino SHERCO FACTORY +00h10m28
6 Pablo Quintanilla MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h11m13
7 Joan Barreda Bort MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h14m12 00h01m00
8 Skyler Howes HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING +00h15m16
9 Stefan Svitko SLOVNAFT RALLY TEAM +00h20m42
10 Kevin Benavides RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h25m12
11 Ross Branch MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h26m16
12 Andrew Short MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA  +00h38m31
13 Xavier De Soultrait HT RALLY RAID HUSQVARNA  +00h39m26
14 Mason Klein BAS DAKAR KTM RACING TEAM +00h40m43
15 Aaron Mare HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM RALLY +00h42m26 00h10m00
16 Toby Price RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING +00h43m36
17 Jose Ignacio Cornejo MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h50m02
18 Ricky Brabec MONSTER ENERGY HONDA +00h54m58 00h02m00
19 Joaquim Rodrigues HERO MOTOSPORTS TEAM RALLY +00h58m06
20 Luciano Benavides HUSQVARNA FACTORY RACING +01h01m54

2022 Dakar Rally schedule
Stage Date Start/Finish Distance | Special
STAGE 1A Sat, Jan 1, 2022 Jeddah > Hail 834 km | 19 km
STAGE 1B Sun, Jan 2, 2022 Ha’il > Hail 546 km | 334 km
STAGE 2 Mon, Jan 3, 2022 Ha’il > Al Artawiyah 585 km | 339 km
STAGE 3 Tues, Jan 4, 2022 Al Artawiyah > Al Qaysumah 554 km | 368 km
STAGE 4 Wed, Jan 5, 2022 Al Qaisumah > Riyadh 707 km | 465 km
STAGE 5 Thurs, Jan 6, 2022 Riyadh > Riyadh 563 km | 348 km
STAGE 6 Fri, Jan 7, 2022 Riyadh > Riyadh 635 km | 421 km
REST Sat, Jan 8, 2022 Riyadh
STAGE 7 Sun, Jan 9, 2022 Riyadh > Al Dawadimi 700 km | 401 km
STAGE 8 Mon, Jan 10, 2022 Al Dawadimi > Wadi Ad Dawasir 828 km | 394 km
STAGE 9 Tues, Jan 11, 2022 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Wadi Ad Dawasir 490 km | 287 km
STAGE 10 Wed, Jan 12, 2022 Wadi Ad Dawasir > Bisha 757 km | 374 km
STAGE 11 Thurs, Jan 13, 2022 Bisha > Bisha 500 km | 345 km
STAGE 12 Fri, Jan 14, 2022 Bisha > Jeddah 676 km | 163 km

2022 Dakar Rally schedule and map

Source: MCNews.com.au