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The list of fatal World Rally Championship accidents consists of drivers and co-drivers who have died at FIA World Rally Championship (WRC) rallies. The list also includes fatal accidents in the International Championship for Manufacturers (IMC), the predecessor to the World Rally Championship, which was contested from 1970 to 1972.
Date of accident Event Country Car During Marc Dinh Driver 1974 New Caledonian Safari New Caledonia Toyota Celica: Reconnaissance David Batty Driver 30 May 1981 Rally of Southland - New Zealand Rally Championship New Zealand Toyota Corolla: Rally Lincoln Harding Co-driver 21 April 1990 Rally of Clare - South Australia Rally Championship Australia
Rally car Mitsubishi Lancer Evo IX: Central Europe Rally Cup Championship Rallye Templice 1. Rallye Teplice 2013 Race Left the road, rolled and hit a tree [193] David Fisher (USA) 2001-01-13 Touring car BMW M3 SCCA: Phoenix International Raceway: Unknown Qualifying Crashed into wall at turn 4 [194] Jean-Antoine Fiori (FRA) 2022-03-06 Rally car
In a YouTube video posted on his channel in June 2023, Doherty revealed that the McLaren cost $202,850, and he had since wrapped the car in a custom, blue paint-splattered design.
A woman and her work truck dangled from the Second Street Bridge in Louisville, Kentucky for 40 minutes after a car unexpectedly veered into the same lane, damaging the front of the truck.
Video of the vehicular ramming that killed one person and injured 19. After the aborted rally, at around 1:45 p.m., [186] James Alex Fields Jr. drove his car into a crowd of counter-protesters, hitting several and slamming into a stopped sedan, which in turn struck a stopped minivan; both were pushed into the crowd. Fields then reversed his car ...
The remains of the car following the crash early Wednesday morning. @s1k.lou/Instagram The car went from 60 to 100 mph in 3.08 seconds before reaching 100 to 150 mph in an additional 2.97 seconds ...
After the crash, Märtin said "Park wasn't my co-driver, I was his pilot." [citation needed] Park's death was the first top-level rallying fatality since Rodger Freeth in the 1993 Rally Australia, and brought renewed attention to safety issues in the motorsport world. On 20 June 2006, a memorial for Park was unveiled in Tallinn, Estonia.