Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

WRC Rally Monza: Ogier clinches seventh WRC title with victory

Toyota's Sebastien Ogier secured his seventh World Rally Championship title with victory on Rally Monza as Hyundai successfully defended its manufacturers crown

Pre-event points leader Elfyn Evans crashed out in snowy conditions on Saturday's SS11, opening the door for team-mate and rally leader Ogier to overturn his 14-point pre-weekend deficit.

The Frenchman's winning margin was 13.9s over Hyundai's outgoing champion Ott Tanak, with early rally leader Dani Sordo completing the podium in the third Hyundai.

It was a relatively low-key run around the Villa Reale for the surviving crews on Sunday, following the drama on Saturday's closed road stages in the mountains.

Ogier won the first stage of the day with his Toyota team-mate Kalle Rovanpera second, which helped to open up the gap to the pursuing Sordo and Tanak.

Early leader Sordo briefly slipped to third behind Tanak, before reasserting himself to win the second stage of the morning with Tanak second and M-Sport's Esapekka Lappi a strong third.

Ogier enjoyed a clean run through the Power Stage as driving rain progressively made conditions more treacherous to wrap up his seventh drivers' world title in eight years, as the fourth works Toyota of Takamoto Katsuta finished fastest to claim the maximum bonus points.

Ogier's run through the stage was far from comfortable as the windscreen wipers failing briefly and meant he was forced to kick-start them by using the screen wash before the road ahead disappeared entirely from view.

His success was also with a third different manufacturer after winning four with VW and two with M-Sport Ford.

"It doesn't sound so bad, I have to say!" he said at the finish.

"Of course we feel for Elfyn also today he has made a very strong season, very consistent, and we had really good fun to fight each other.

"But today, I'm very happy. Not jumping in the air maybe like crazy because right now we are living in a time that, you know, a lot of people are suffering all over the world and I mean, you have to be decent."

The maximum bonus points claimed by Katsuta would have been welcomed by Evans, but he pressed a little too hard and had a messy run with the car stalling twice.

The Welshman ended up third fastest, behind Katsuta and Tanak's Hyundai, the Estonian vaulting ahead of Sordo in the final classification by 1.4s.

Hyundai team principal Andrea Adamo has prioritised the manufacturers title above all else this season, and was rendered almost speechless with emotion at the achievement.

"It's complicated. So many images are passing by now," he said.

"I know how much we have fought, how much pressure we had, what I had to do to try to protect everyone.

"Everyone has been somehow personally touched (by COVID-19) and this year everyone lost someone. I also have some friends that are no more with me due to this."

Behind the podium finishers, Lappi was fourth and Rovanpera fifth.

Mads Ostberg secured the WRC2 title as the Norwegian's factory-backed Citroen C3 beat main rival Skoda's Pontus Tidemand to the class win in ninth overall, while WRC3 class winner Andreas Mikkelsen was the best non-factory WRC driver in sixth overall.

Hyundai's Jari Huttunen secured the WRC3 title with third in class.

Sweden's Tom Kristensson completed the title winners crowned on the event, claiming the Junior WRC title and a fully-funded season in WRC3 in an M-Sport Fiesta for 2021.

Results

Pos Class Driver Team Car Gap
1 RC1 Sebastien Ogier, J.Ingrassia Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota 2h15m51.0s
2 RC1 Ott Tanak, M.Jarveoja Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai 13.9s
3 RC1 Dani Sordo, C.del Barrio Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai 15.3s
4 RC1 Esapekka Lappi, J.Ferm M-Sport Ford WRT Ford 45.7s
5 RC1 Kalle Rovanpera, J.Halttunen Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota 1m11.1s
6 RC2 Andreas Mikkelsen, A.Jager Skoda 3m56.2s
7 RC2 Oliver Solberg, A.Johnston Skoda 4m12.1s
8 RC2 Jari Huttunen, M.Lukka Hyundai 5m15.4s
9 RC2 Mads Ostberg, T.Eriksen PH Sport Citroen 5m27.4s
10 RC2 Pontus Tidemand, P.Barth Toksport WRT Skoda 5m53.0s

Championship standings

Pos Driver Points
1 Sebastien Ogier 122
2 Elfyn Evans 114
3 Ott Tanak 105
4 Thierry Neuville 87
5 Kalle Rovanpera 80
6 Esapekka Lappi 52
7 Teemu Suninen 44
8 Dani Sordo 42
9 Craig Breen 25
10 Sebastien Loeb 24


Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Ogier on cusp of 2020 WRC title with Rally Monza lead as Evans crashes out
Next article Ogier not "jumping in the air" to celebrate 2020 WRC title

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe