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This is a list of records in the Dakar Rally since 1979 ... 2002 Toby Price: ... 2017, 2022 Kevin Benavides: 2021, 2023 Ricky Brabec: 2020, 2024 12: Gilles Lalay ...
The 2002 Dakar Rally, also known as the 2002 Arras–Madrid–Dakar Rally was the 24th running of the Dakar Rally event. The format of the rally was revised for 2002 with the introduction of two-day stages and two stages without the use of navigation aids. [ 1 ]
Cars - 2010, 2020 Eliseo Salazar Chile: 2009 Juan Carlos Salvatierra Bolivia: 2011 Nelson Sanabria Paraguay: 2014 Laia Sanz Spain: 2011 Jean-Louis Schlesser France: 1984 Cars - 1999, 2000 Annie Seel Sweden: 2002 Kenjiro Shinozuka Japan: 1986 Cars - 1997 Paul Smith Australia: 2013 RafaĆ Sonik Poland: 2009 Quads - 2015 Dmitry Sotnikov Russia: 2014
The 2020 Dakar Rally was the 42nd edition of the event and the first edition held in Saudi Arabia. The event started in Jeddah on 5 January and finished in Al-Qiddiya on 17 January after 12 stages of the competition.
In 2019, which was the first Dakar Rally to be held in just one country (Peru), Toyota won for the first time with Nasser Al-Attiyah (in his third victory with three different manufacturers). The bike category saw the KTM works team rider, Australian Toby Price, take his first Dakar victory, winning his second title in 2019.
During the seventh stage of the rally, Djado-Agadez, on a large desert road, the Range Rover of French team René Boubet and Patrick Canado and the Mercedes-Benz 280 of Italian team Klaus Seppi and Ambrogio Azzuffi collided at full speed some 25 km from the start of Arlit. Boubet's car, as it had steering problems, suddenly swerved into the ...
In the months before Lake launched her Senate campaign in 2023, she posted on social media that “the 2020 Election Results were garbage,” wrote “81 Million Votes, My Ass,” and called to ...
The 2003 Dakar Rally, also known as the 2003 Telefónica-Dakar Rally, was the 25th running of the Dakar Rally event. [1] The rally began on 1 January 2003 at Marseille in France and finished at Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt on 19 January, with the course crossing North Africa. [2]