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Rallye Deutschland

The ADAC Rallye Deutschland is a rally event held in Germany. The event was first held in 1982 and originally hosted by e.g. Frankfurt, Mainz and Koblenz. In 2000, the rally was relocated to the region around Trier. Previously part of the European and German championships, the event was in the World Rally Championship calendar from the 2002 season to 2020 season. The 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

Rallye Deutschland
Statusactive
Genremotorsporting event
Frequencyannual
CountryGermany
Inaugurated1982
A historic Porsche 924 GTS driven through a stage during the 2008 rally.
The Polo R WRC, the 2015 and 2016 winner in Germany.

History edit

 
Chris Atkinson at the 2006 event

Previously part of the European Rally Championship and the German Rally Championship, the rally was included in the World Rally Championship calendar for the 2002 season. The organisers opted for a split in locations: media center, rally headquarters and the parc ferme were placed in Trier, the parc ferme being a prominent display of all remaining cars on the Viehmarkt, surrounded by restaurants, pubs and special events such as music and the brewery festival. Start and finish ceremonies were also held in Trier in front of the Porta Nigra with the cars making their way through the spectators. Meanwhile, the service park was located roughly 60 km southeast on the shore of the picturesque Bostalsee.

The rally traditionally started with the shakedown close to the servicepark on Thursday morning, before moving to Trier for the showstart. The next three days were separated according to the three different track characteristics. Friday's leg one was held to the northeast of Trier around the Moselle in the vineyards. For afternoon and evening service the cars returned to Bostalsee before heading to Trier and parc-ferme. Saturdays' stages were held on and around the military training grounds of Baumholder, including the famous special stage "Panzerplatte". The day ended with a spectator special stage in the small town of Sankt Wendel. Leg three was held in the northern Saarland around Sankt Wendel, followed by a second pass through the spectator special stage. In the early afternoon the crews returned to Trier for the Finish ceremony.

The existing layout received criticism from fans, teams and the FIA with many complaining about the long liaison between stages, and the town of Trier, especially its small businesses, looking for more involvement by moving Trier into the center of rally.

 
Marcus Grönholm at the "Circus Maximus" SSS of the 2007 rally.

For the 2007 edition, the layout was modified accordingly. The service park along with the media center moved from Bostalsee to Trier's convention center grounds, which offer better infrastructure and are easier to reach. Fans can park in the streets nearby or make use of special shuttle services serving large parking grounds throughout Trier. Both parking and the service park itself are now mostly based on asphalt making them more weather-safe. The shakedown was relocated to the Luxembourgish border and the stages reorganised altogether, putting more focus on the vineyards close to Trier. As before, Friday consists of stages northeast of Trier. However, the second day now combines both the military grounds of Baumholder with a shortened version of Panzerplatte as well as some of the previous Saarland-stages. Sunday again moves the crews back to the vineyards, before the teams return to Trier for the newly created spectator special stage Circus Maximus. Advertised as the highlight of three days of Rally Germany, this stage is a 4.37 km run through downtown Trier around the Porta Nigra. Four cars enter the track separated by 10 to 20 seconds and drive four laps on the roads of Trier. Fans can watch the stage on specially erected grandstands or simply from the curbside. In 2008, the WRC run through stage was broadcast live on television.

 
Volkswagen's preparations for their return began in 2012, entering a Škoda Fabia S2000 throughout the season to gain experience running a team.

The revised layout received a lot of praise. 2007 saw 15,000 spectators in Circus Maximus alone, with a total attendance of more than 200,000 for all three days.[2] Due to a cutback in the number of rallies included in each season's calendar and the introduction of alternating rallies, Rallye Deutschland was not part of the 2009 calendar. It returned in the 2010 season, with Sébastien Loeb taking his eighth consecutive win; a WRC record for wins in a single event.[3]

Characteristics edit

 
François Duval takes a hairpin turn.

Rally Deutschland is entirely held on asphalt. A significant part of its attraction originates in the mixture of track characteristics encountered throughout the three-day period. This setup has earned it the description of "three rallies in one".

The vineyard stages consist of tight and twisted support roads, with short straights and hairpins in the steep mountains surrounding the Moselle. Fans particularly like the stages because of the close proximity to the cars, sitting on small walls and in between the vines, often less than 2m from the ideal line. However, this layout has also raised serious concerns with the FIA regarding spectator safety. In 2008, the final stage of leg one was cancelled after too many fans where trying to make their way through the vineyards.[4]

The roads on the military training ground, called the panzerplatte or armour flat, near Baumholder are made of rough concrete and surrounded by the dangerous "Hinkelstones" (Calque of "Hinkelstein" meaning Menhir in German) rocks up to a meter in size lining either side the roads as a restraint for military vehicles. The stages are fast and the vast military grounds offer endless spectator points, including the legendary crest known as "Gina". On this terrain small driving-errors almost automatically lead to serious damage to both car and driver, the most prominent victim being Petter Solberg in 2004. Finally, the asphalt roads in the rural northern Saarland are very fast with high-speed curves, only interrupted by some tight turns onto smaller roads.

Besides the different track characteristics, the frequently changing weather makes for additional excitement. Short but strong rainshowers can appear out of nowhere and significantly complicate the tyre-choice. In 2004, Marcus Grönholm became the prominent victim of a rainy morning when he crashed out of the introductory stage on Friday.

Past winners edit

 
Nine-time winners Sébastien Loeb and Daniel Elena celebrating the 2008 win.
Part of the German Rally Championship
Year Event Winner Vehicle
1982 1. Rallye Deutschland   Erwin Weber Opel Ascona 400
1983 2. Rallye Deutschland   Walter Röhrl Lancia 037 Rally
1984 3. Rallye Deutschland   Hannu Mikkola Audi Sport Quattro
1985 4. Rallye Deutschland   Kalle Grundel Peugeot 205 Turbo 16
1986 5. Rallye Deutschland   Michèle Mouton Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 E2
1987 6. Rallye Deutschland   Jochi Kleint VW Golf GTI
1988 7. Rallye Deutschland   Robert Droogmans Ford Sierra RS Cosworth
1989 8. Rallye Deutschland   Patrick Snijers Toyota Celica GT-Four ST165
1990 9. Rallye Deutschland   Robert Droogmans Lancia Delta Integrale
1991 10. Rallye Deutschland   Piero Liatti Lancia Delta Integrale
1992 11. Rallye Deutschland   Erwin Weber Mitsubishi Galant VR-4
1993 12. Rallye Deutschland   Patrick Snijers Ford Escort RS Cosworth
1994 13. Rallye Deutschland   Dieter Depping Ford Escort RS Cosworth
1995 14. Rallye Deutschland   Enrico Bertone Toyota Celica GT-Four
1996 15. Rallye Deutschland   Dieter Depping Ford Escort RS Cosworth
1997 16. Rallye Deutschland   Dieter Depping Ford Escort RS Cosworth
1998 17. Rallye Deutschland   Matthias Kahle Toyota Corolla WRC
1999 18. Rallye Deutschland   Armin Kremer Subaru Impreza WRC
2000 19. Rallye Deutschland   Henrik Lundgaard Toyota Corolla WRC
2001 20. Rallye Deutschland   Philippe Bugalski Citroën Xsara WRC
Part of the World Rally Championship
Year Event Winner Vehicle
2002 21. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën Xsara WRC
2003 22. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën Xsara WRC
2004 23. OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën Xsara WRC
2005 24. OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën Xsara WRC
2006 25. OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën Xsara WRC
2007 26. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën C4 WRC
2008 27. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën C4 WRC
2009 Not held
2010 28. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën C4 WRC
2011 29. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Ogier Citroën DS3 WRC
2012 30. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Loeb Citroën DS3 WRC
2013 31. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Dani Sordo Citroën DS3 WRC
2014 32. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Thierry Neuville Hyundai i20 WRC
2015 33. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Ogier Volkswagen Polo R WRC
2016 34. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Sébastien Ogier Volkswagen Polo R WRC
2017 35. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Ott Tänak Ford Fiesta WRC
2018 36. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Ott Tänak Toyota Yaris WRC
2019 37. ADAC Rallye Deutschland   Ott Tänak Toyota Yaris WRC

† — The 1994 rally only counted for the 2-Litre World Cup.

Multiple winners edit

References edit

  1. ^ Craig, Jason (26 August 2020). "Rally Germany cancelled as Italian WRC round moves to avoid Imola F1 clash". autosport.com. Motorsport Network. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  2. ^ Rally Deutschland: Sixth victory for the world championship in Trier with 210 000 spectators 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine (retrieved 2009-03-08)
  3. ^ Peacock, Anthony (23 August 2010). "Sébastien Loeb wins Rallye Deutschland". AutoWeek. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  4. ^ WRC.com: SS6 cancelled after three cars 2008-10-08 at the Wayback Machine (retrieved 2009-03-08)

External links edit

  • Official site
  • Rallye Deutschland at eWRC-results
  • Round nine of the FIA World Rally Championship will be at ADAC Rallye Deutschland on 21–24 August, Blabberpost.

rallye, deutschland, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rallye Deutschland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message The ADAC Rallye Deutschland is a rally event held in Germany The event was first held in 1982 and originally hosted by e g Frankfurt Mainz and Koblenz In 2000 the rally was relocated to the region around Trier Previously part of the European and German championships the event was in the World Rally Championship calendar from the 2002 season to 2020 season The 2020 event was cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 1 Rallye DeutschlandStatusactiveGenremotorsporting eventFrequencyannualCountryGermanyInaugurated1982 A historic Porsche 924 GTS driven through a stage during the 2008 rally The Polo R WRC the 2015 and 2016 winner in Germany Contents 1 History 2 Characteristics 3 Past winners 3 1 Multiple winners 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Chris Atkinson at the 2006 event Previously part of the European Rally Championship and the German Rally Championship the rally was included in the World Rally Championship calendar for the 2002 season The organisers opted for a split in locations media center rally headquarters and the parc ferme were placed in Trier the parc ferme being a prominent display of all remaining cars on the Viehmarkt surrounded by restaurants pubs and special events such as music and the brewery festival Start and finish ceremonies were also held in Trier in front of the Porta Nigra with the cars making their way through the spectators Meanwhile the service park was located roughly 60 km southeast on the shore of the picturesque Bostalsee The rally traditionally started with the shakedown close to the servicepark on Thursday morning before moving to Trier for the showstart The next three days were separated according to the three different track characteristics Friday s leg one was held to the northeast of Trier around the Moselle in the vineyards For afternoon and evening service the cars returned to Bostalsee before heading to Trier and parc ferme Saturdays stages were held on and around the military training grounds of Baumholder including the famous special stage Panzerplatte The day ended with a spectator special stage in the small town of Sankt Wendel Leg three was held in the northern Saarland around Sankt Wendel followed by a second pass through the spectator special stage In the early afternoon the crews returned to Trier for the Finish ceremony The existing layout received criticism from fans teams and the FIA with many complaining about the long liaison between stages and the town of Trier especially its small businesses looking for more involvement by moving Trier into the center of rally nbsp Marcus Gronholm at the Circus Maximus SSS of the 2007 rally For the 2007 edition the layout was modified accordingly The service park along with the media center moved from Bostalsee to Trier s convention center grounds which offer better infrastructure and are easier to reach Fans can park in the streets nearby or make use of special shuttle services serving large parking grounds throughout Trier Both parking and the service park itself are now mostly based on asphalt making them more weather safe The shakedown was relocated to the Luxembourgish border and the stages reorganised altogether putting more focus on the vineyards close to Trier As before Friday consists of stages northeast of Trier However the second day now combines both the military grounds of Baumholder with a shortened version of Panzerplatte as well as some of the previous Saarland stages Sunday again moves the crews back to the vineyards before the teams return to Trier for the newly created spectator special stage Circus Maximus Advertised as the highlight of three days of Rally Germany this stage is a 4 37 km run through downtown Trier around the Porta Nigra Four cars enter the track separated by 10 to 20 seconds and drive four laps on the roads of Trier Fans can watch the stage on specially erected grandstands or simply from the curbside In 2008 the WRC run through stage was broadcast live on television nbsp Volkswagen s preparations for their return began in 2012 entering a Skoda Fabia S2000 throughout the season to gain experience running a team The revised layout received a lot of praise 2007 saw 15 000 spectators in Circus Maximus alone with a total attendance of more than 200 000 for all three days 2 Due to a cutback in the number of rallies included in each season s calendar and the introduction of alternating rallies Rallye Deutschland was not part of the 2009 calendar It returned in the 2010 season with Sebastien Loeb taking his eighth consecutive win a WRC record for wins in a single event 3 Characteristics edit nbsp Francois Duval takes a hairpin turn Rally Deutschland is entirely held on asphalt A significant part of its attraction originates in the mixture of track characteristics encountered throughout the three day period This setup has earned it the description of three rallies in one The vineyard stages consist of tight and twisted support roads with short straights and hairpins in the steep mountains surrounding the Moselle Fans particularly like the stages because of the close proximity to the cars sitting on small walls and in between the vines often less than 2m from the ideal line However this layout has also raised serious concerns with the FIA regarding spectator safety In 2008 the final stage of leg one was cancelled after too many fans where trying to make their way through the vineyards 4 The roads on the military training ground called the panzerplatte or armour flat near Baumholder are made of rough concrete and surrounded by the dangerous Hinkelstones Calque of Hinkelstein meaning Menhir in German rocks up to a meter in size lining either side the roads as a restraint for military vehicles The stages are fast and the vast military grounds offer endless spectator points including the legendary crest known as Gina On this terrain small driving errors almost automatically lead to serious damage to both car and driver the most prominent victim being Petter Solberg in 2004 Finally the asphalt roads in the rural northern Saarland are very fast with high speed curves only interrupted by some tight turns onto smaller roads Besides the different track characteristics the frequently changing weather makes for additional excitement Short but strong rainshowers can appear out of nowhere and significantly complicate the tyre choice In 2004 Marcus Gronholm became the prominent victim of a rainy morning when he crashed out of the introductory stage on Friday Past winners edit nbsp Nine time winners Sebastien Loeb and Daniel Elena celebrating the 2008 win Part of the German Rally Championship Year Event Winner Vehicle 1982 1 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Erwin Weber Opel Ascona 400 1983 2 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Walter Rohrl Lancia 037 Rally 1984 3 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Hannu Mikkola Audi Sport Quattro 1985 4 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Kalle Grundel Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 1986 5 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Michele Mouton Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 E2 1987 6 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Jochi Kleint VW Golf GTI 1988 7 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Robert Droogmans Ford Sierra RS Cosworth 1989 8 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Patrick Snijers Toyota Celica GT Four ST165 1990 9 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Robert Droogmans Lancia Delta Integrale 1991 10 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Piero Liatti Lancia Delta Integrale 1992 11 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Erwin Weber Mitsubishi Galant VR 4 1993 12 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Patrick Snijers Ford Escort RS Cosworth 1994 13 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Dieter Depping Ford Escort RS Cosworth 1995 14 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Enrico Bertone Toyota Celica GT Four 1996 15 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Dieter Depping Ford Escort RS Cosworth 1997 16 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Dieter Depping Ford Escort RS Cosworth 1998 17 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Matthias Kahle Toyota Corolla WRC 1999 18 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Armin Kremer Subaru Impreza WRC 2000 19 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Henrik Lundgaard Toyota Corolla WRC 2001 20 Rallye Deutschland nbsp Philippe Bugalski Citroen Xsara WRC Part of the World Rally Championship Year Event Winner Vehicle 2002 21 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen Xsara WRC 2003 22 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen Xsara WRC 2004 23 OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen Xsara WRC 2005 24 OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen Xsara WRC 2006 25 OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen Xsara WRC 2007 26 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen C4 WRC 2008 27 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen C4 WRC 2009 Not held 2010 28 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen C4 WRC 2011 29 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Ogier Citroen DS3 WRC 2012 30 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Loeb Citroen DS3 WRC 2013 31 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Dani Sordo Citroen DS3 WRC 2014 32 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Thierry Neuville Hyundai i20 WRC 2015 33 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Ogier Volkswagen Polo R WRC 2016 34 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Sebastien Ogier Volkswagen Polo R WRC 2017 35 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Ott Tanak Ford Fiesta WRC 2018 36 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Ott Tanak Toyota Yaris WRC 2019 37 ADAC Rallye Deutschland nbsp Ott Tanak Toyota Yaris WRC The 1994 rally only counted for the 2 Litre World Cup Multiple winners edit Wins Driver 9 nbsp Sebastien Loeb 3 nbsp Sebastien Ogier nbsp Dieter Depping nbsp Ott Tanak 2 nbsp Erwin Weber nbsp Robert Droogmans nbsp Patrick Snijers Wins Manufacturers 12 nbsp Citroen 6 nbsp Ford nbsp Toyota 3 nbsp Volkswagen nbsp Lancia 2 nbsp PeugeotReferences edit Craig Jason 26 August 2020 Rally Germany cancelled as Italian WRC round moves to avoid Imola F1 clash autosport com Motorsport Network Retrieved 26 August 2020 Rally Deutschland Sixth victory for the world championship in Trier with 210 000 spectators Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 2009 03 08 Peacock Anthony 23 August 2010 Sebastien Loeb wins Rallye Deutschland AutoWeek Retrieved 18 August 2011 WRC com SS6 cancelled after three cars Archived 2008 10 08 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 2009 03 08 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rallye Deutschland Official site Rallye Deutschland at eWRC results Round nine of the FIA World Rally Championship will be at ADAC Rallye Deutschland on 21 24 August Blabberpost Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rallye Deutschland amp oldid 1145508856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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