2008 World Rally Championship


The 2008 World Rally Championship was the 36th season of the FIA World Rally Championship. The season consisted of 15 rallies and began on 24 January, with the 2008 Monte Carlo Rally.
Frenchman Sébastien Loeb successfully retained the Drivers' World Championship, his and co-driver Daniel Elena's record-breaking fifth consecutive title, all of them attained driving Citroëns. In addition, Citroën secured their fourth Manufacturers' title, and their first since 2005, from 2006 and 2007 victors, Ford.

Rule changes

The running order for the first day is governed by championship position, with the championship leader running first on the road. For every other day of a rally, the order is decided by the previous end of day classification. The term 'leg' has been replaced by 'day' in order to sound more understandable. Extra 10-minute service prior to the finish podium has been added, intended to allow the service park to remain an attraction until the end of the event.
With the switch to Pirelli tyres, tyre mousse has been banned, and fewer compounds are available. Also the teams aren't allowed to modify tyres by themselves anymore. At the first event of the season, the available tires were the soft slick DS tire, the WX snow tire without studs, and the WX snow tire with studs. The same snow tyres were used in Sweden as well. Later on loose surface tyres were introduced: Pirelli Scorpion, available in two variants – hard compound for abrasive surfaces, such as roads in Mexico or Greece, and soft one, for more muddy stages as seen on Welsh event. Tire walls have been strengthened in order to endure long, rough gravel stages often full of sharp rocks. The tread on Scorpions is asymmetric and directional, as it has proven more efficient during the tests.

Calendar

The 2008 championship was contested over fifteen rounds in Europe, North America, the Middle East, Asia, South America and Oceania.
on a transport section of the 2008 edition of the Monte Carlo Rally.
The 2008 season included 15 rallies, which was one less than the 2007 season. Rally Norway, Rally Portugal and Rally Ireland were dropped from the calendar for 2008. Rally of Turkey returned to the schedule, and Jordan Rally was part of the calendar for the first time. Rally Australia was planned to make a return after being absent in 2007, but the organizers submitted a request to the FIA to delay the event's return to the schedule until 2009.
The events also part of the Production World Rally Championship were Sweden, Argentina, Greece, Turkey, Finland, New Zealand, Japan and GB. The seven rallies also on the Junior World Rally Championship schedule were Mexico, Jordan, Italy, Finland, Germany, Spain and France.
RoundDatesRallySupport class
124–27 January/ Monte Carlo Rallynone
28–10 February Swedish RallyP-WRC
328 February-2 March Rally MexicoJ-WRC
427–30 March Rally ArgentinaP-WRC
524–27 April Jordan RallyJ-WRC
616–18 May Rally d'Italia SardegnaJ-WRC
729 May-1 June Acropolis RallyP-WRC
813–15 June Rally of TurkeyP-WRC
931 July-3 August Rally FinlandP-WRC, J-WRC
1015–17 August Rallye DeutschlandJ-WRC
1128–31 August Rally New ZealandP-WRC
122–5 October Rally CatalunyaJ-WRC
1310–12 October Tour de CorseJ-WRC
1431 October-2 November Rally JapanP-WRC
155–7 December Wales Rally GBP-WRC

Teams and drivers

In 2008 two categories are valid to compete for the Manufacturer's championship:
Manufacturer
Manufacturer Team
The teams and drivers for the 2008 season are as follows:

P-WRC entries

Events

The Rally Finland is notable this year for having dropped its famous Ouninpohja stage. This has been done for safety reasons, however this is likely to be a huge disappointment for race fans.

Standings

Drivers' championship

Manufacturers' championship

Junior championship

DriverMEX
JOR
ITA
FIN
GER
ESP
FRA
Pts
1 Sébastien Ogier1151Ret242
2 Aaron Burkart43423534
3 Martin Prokop7101Ret1132
4 Shaun Gallagher62454430
5 Michał Kościuszko3Ret139Ret22
6 Alessandro BettegaRet2Ret32Ret22
7 Patrik Sandell5Ret725622
8 Jaan Mölder2Ret9Ret61111
9 Stefano Albertini561310799
10 Gilles Schammel3127RetRet108
11 Florian Niegel4Ret981078
12 Simone Bertolotti6Ret1058Ret8
13 Kevin AbbringRetRet661187
14 Pierre Campana36
15 Pierre Marché45
16 Andrea Cortinovis711DNS7DNSDNS4
17 Hans Weijs, Jr.Ret88RetRet122
18 Francesco Fanari8913129Ret1
19 Miloš KomljenovićRet8Ret111
DriverMEX
JOR
ITA
FIN
GER
ESP
FRA
Pts

Production championship

Points table:
DriverSWE
ARG
GRC
TUR
FIN
NZL
JPN
GBR
Pts
1 Andreas Aigner11111Ret238
2 Juho Hänninen17151Ret36
3 Jari Ketomaa23Ret36428
4 Patrik Sandell3RetRet2222
5 Martin Prokop4714DSQ1Ret17
6 Martin Rauam5DSQ43Ret15
7 Fumio Nutahara445Ret8Ret15
8 Armindo Araújo735129714
9 Bernardo Sousa882117912
10 Patrik Flodin16DSQ110
11 Mirco BaldacciRetRet3Ret6Ret9
12 Toshihiro Arai6RetRetRetRet39
13 Evgeny NovikovRet15RetRet2Ret8
14 Sebastián Beltrán28
15 Jussi Välimäki28
16 Guy Wilks36
17 Evgeny Aksakov13125Ret7Ret6
18 Evgeny VertunovRet66RetRetRet6
19 Eyvind Brynildsen15RetRet1045
20 Oscar SvedlundRet45
21 Hayden Paddon45
22 Uwe Nittel5RetRetRet4
23 Takuma Kamada54
24 Jaromír Tarabus54
25 Amjad Farrah69Ret3
26 Spyros Pavlides11Ret1063
27 Jussi Tiippana1163
28 Simone Campedelli99Ret78103
29 Katsuhiko Taguchi72
30 Giorgio Bacco138Ret1
31 David Higgins81
32 Loris Baldacci8Ret1
33 Stewart Taylor81
DriverSWE
ARG
GRC
TUR
FIN
NZL
JPN
GBR
Pts

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