2014 Dakar Rally


The 2014 Dakar Rally was the 36th running of the event and the sixth successive year that the event was held in South America. The event started in Rosario, Argentina on January 5 and finished in Valparaíso, Chile on January 18 after 13 stages of competition. Marc Coma won his fourth title in the motorcycle category riding a KTM; Ignacio Casale took his maiden title in the quad category on a Yamaha; Nani Roma clinched victory in the car category for the first time, ten years after his sole motorcycle title, driving a Mini; and Andrey Karginov took his first truck category title for Kamaz.

Entries

StageBikesQuadsCarsTrucksTotal
Start of Rally1744014770431
Rest Day85197352229
End of Rally78156150204

Bikes

ManufacturerTeamNo.Rider
Yamaha1
Yamaha6
Yamaha17
Yamaha12
KTM2
KTM4
KTM5
KTM8
KTM9
KTM20
HondaHRC Rally3
HondaHRC Rally7
HondaHRC Rally10
HondaHRC Rally14
HondaHRC Rally18
HondaHonda Brasil29
Sherco22
Sherco23

Quads

ManufacturerTeamNo.Rider
Yamaha250
Yamaha251
Yamaha252
Yamaha256
Yamaha257
Honda253
Honda255
Honda263
Honda268
Can-Am254

Cars

ManufacturerTeamNo.DriverCo-Driver
Mini300
Mini304
Mini307
Mini309
Mini301
Toyota302
Toyota323
SMG303
SMG312
Hummer305
Haval306
Haval315
Ford308
Ford329
318
320

Trucks

ManufacturerTeamNo.DriverCo-Drivers
Kamaz500
Kamaz503
Kamaz506
Kamaz545
Kamaz549
Iveco501
Iveco507
Iveco516
Iveco520
Tatra502
Tatra504
Tatra519
MAN505
MAN508
MAN510

Stages

Distance according to the official website. Competitors in the bike and quad categories will cross the Bolivian border and finish the seventh stage at Uyuni, whilst those in the car and truck categories will return to Salta. All competitors will then reconvene in Calama at the end of the eighth stage.
Notes:

Bikes

Honda rider Joan Barreda quickly established a lead in the overall classification with wins in the first and third stages, leading reigning champion Cyril Despres by 13 minutes by the end of the latter. A navigation error in the fourth stage set the Spaniard back however, eroding his advantage to just three minutes over Marc Coma as Despres lost some 28 minutes with engine failure.
Coma then assumed the lead of the rally with a resounding victory in stage five, Barreda dropping 41 minutes behind his countryman due to more navigation problems. Barreda was able to reduce the gap by four minutes over the course of the next two stages, before losing further ground on the ninth stage with a 15-minute speeding penalty.
This gave Coma a lead of 55 minutes, which Barreda was able to reduce to 37 minutes before losing two and a half hours with electrical problems on the penultimate stage. This promoted Coma's team-mate Jordi Viladoms to second, almost two hours adrift of the winner by the end of the rally, and Yamaha's Olivier Pain to third.
Despres won three stages on his comeback to fourth, ahead of top Honda rider Hélder Rodrigues. Barreda wound up seventh after taking victory on the final stage, his fifth of the rally.

Quads

Marcos Patronelli, who hit the front of the overall classification after winning the second stage, had to abandon the competition after suffering an accident in the third stage. The Argentinean saved his own life by jumping from his quad, which fell 600 metres down a cliff. The accident left fellow Yamaha rider Rafał Sonik in first place, but the pole lost time on the fifth stage with a navigational error.
This allowed Sergio Lafuente, winner of the fifth stage, to assume the lead in the standings, but three successive stage wins for Ignacio Casale allowed the Chilean rider to usurp the Uruguayan, his advantage up to almost 25 minutes when Lafuente was forced to retire due to a broken engine on Stage 11.
This allowed Sonik to retake second place, over an hour behind Casale, where he would remain until the end of the rally as Casale took victory. Two-time stage winner Sebastien Husseini, who dropped out of victory contention after losing over three hours to the leaders on the fifth stage, completed the podium finishers.

Cars

X-Raid Mini driver Stéphane Peterhansel began the defence of his title strongly by taking the lead of the overall classification with victory in the second stage of the rally, but lost 25 minutes to team-mate Nani Roma on the third stage with a navigational error and a series of punctures. Two-time World Rally champion Carlos Sainz also lost ground, but made up for it by winning the next stage in his SMG Buggy, deposing Roma from the lead of the rally.
Roma was able to re-assert himself on Stage 5 as all of his key rivals dropped time - Sainz lost an hour with an electrical problem and lost a further hour to a penalty, Peterhansel lost a further 24 minutes and X-Raid's Nasser Al-Attiyah, third after Stage 4, was hit with a one-hour penalty. Peterhansel was however able to reduce Roma's 31-minute lead over the following days with two stage victories, the Spaniard's advantage all but wiped out by the end of Stage 10.
The X-Raid team then chose to call off the fight between its drivers, effectively guaranteeing Roma victory. Peterhansel at first appeared to ignore these instructions as he won the penultimate stage to take a 26-second lead into the final day, but then dropped back to allow Roma back in front. Al-Attiyah won two stages on his recovery drive to third place, just under an hour behind Roma, giving the X-Raid team a clean sweep of the podium.
Giniel de Villiers was the best non-Mini driver in fourth place after winning the final stage, with Orlando Terranova and Krzysztof Holowczyc making it five X-Raid drivers in the top six overall. Sainz was forced to retire after suffering a heavy crash on Stage 10.

Trucks

Winning two of the first four stages, Iveco's Gerard de Rooy quickly established a healthy cushion in the overall classification of over 30 minutes from the leading two Kamaz drivers, Andrey Karginov and defending champion Eduard Nikolaev. Successive wins for Karginov on the eighth and ninth stages saw de Rooy's lead slashed to just 13 minutes, with Karginov seizing the lead of the standings by just under eight minutes after taking a fourth win on stage 11. On the final day of the rally, Karginov lost nine-and-a-half minutes to de Rooy on the road after providing assistance to a stricken car, costing him victory until race officials awarded him back the time he had spent aiding his fellow competitor. This meant de Rooy was forced to concede victory by three minutes.
Nikolaev, who took his maiden Dakar stage win on stage 7, was third, over 90 minutes away from compatriot Karginov by the end of the rally, while Kamaz men Dmitry Sotnikov, winner of stage five, and Anton Shibalov, completed the top five. The remaining Kamaz driver, Ayrat Mardeev, was an early retiree after a series of rolls on the second stage. Aleš Loprais completed the top six for Tatra with a pair of late stage wins, albeit five hours down on the victorious Karginov.

Stage results

Bikes

Notes
Notes
Notes

Final standings

Bikes

Quads

PosNo.RiderQuadTimeGap
1251 Ignacio CasaleYamaha68:28:04
2252 Rafał SonikYamaha69:54:53+1:26:49
3255 Sebastian HusseiniHonda74:08:28+5:40:24
4263 Mohammed Abu-IssaHonda78:35:15+10:07:11
5268 Victor GallegosHonda78:51:45+10:23:41
6276 Jeremías GonzálezYamaha80:18:21+11:50:17
7296 Sergey KaryakinYamaha84:08:05+15:40:01
8258 Daniel MazzuccoCan-Am86:15:52+17:47:48
9267 Santiago HansenYamaha86:19:49+17:51:45
10266 Daniel DomaszewskiHonda88:53:17+20:25:13

Cars

PosNo.DriverCo-DriverCarEntrantTimeGap
1304 Nani Roma Michel PérinMiniMonster Energy X-Raid Team50:44:58
2300 Stéphane Peterhansel Jean-Paul CottretMonster Energy X-Raid Team50:50:36+5:38-
3302 Nasser Al-Attiyah Lucas CruzQ X-Raid Team51:41:50+56:52-
4302 Giniel de Villiers Dirk von ZitzewitzToyotaImperial Toyota52:04:05+1:19:07
5307 Orlando Terranova Paulo FiuzaMonster Energy X-Raid Team52:12:42+1:27:44-
6309 Krzysztof Hołowczyc Konstantin ZhiltsovMonster Energy X-Raid Team54:40:40+3:55:42-
7328 Marek Dabrowski Jacek CzachorToyotaOrlen Team56:19:23+5:34:25
8315 Christian Lavieille Jean-Pierre GarcinHavalHaval Rally Team56:20:48+5:35:50
9332 Martin Kaczmarski Filipe PalmeiroLotto X-Raid Team57:43:10+6:58:10-
10314 Vladimir Vasilyev Vitaliy YevtyekhovX-Raid Team57:44:32+6:59:34-

Trucks

PosNo.DriverCo-DriversTruckTimeGap
1506 Andrey Karginov Andrey Mokeev
Igor Devyatkin
Kamaz55:00:28
2501 Gérard de Rooy Tom Colsoul
Darek Rodewald
Iveco55:03:39+3:11
3500 Eduard Nikolaev Sergey Savostin
Vladimir Rybakov
Kamaz56:35:20+1:34:52
4549 Dmitry Sotnikov Vyatcheslav Mizyukaev
Andrey Aferin
Kamaz58:22:38+3:22:10
5545 Anton Shibalov Robert Amatych
Almaz Khisamiev
Kamaz59:37:53+4:37:25
6504 Aleš Loprais Serge Bruynkens
Radim Pustějovský
Tatra60:04:29+5:04:01
7507 Hans Stacey Detlef Ruf
Bernard der Kinderen
Iveco60:15:25+5:14:57
8510 René Kuipers Moises Torrallardona
Jan van der Vaet
MAN61:31:36+6:31:08
9508 Marcel van Vliet Marcel Pronk
Artur Klein
MAN62:07:21+7:06:53
10534 Pep Vila Peter van Eerd
Xavi Colome
Iveco62:54:03+7:53:35

Fatalities

Belgian motorcycle rider Eric Palante was found dead on the morning of 10 January after the completion of the fifth stage. He was 50 years old.