fbpx
Wikipedia

Safari Rally

The Safari Rally is an automobile rally held in Kenya. It was first held in 1953 as a celebration of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. The event was part of the World Rally Championship from 1973 until 2002, before returning in 2021. It is historically regarded as one of the toughest events in the World Rally Championship, and one of the most popular rallies in Africa. From 2003, a historical event (East African Safari Rally) has been held biennially.

Safari Rally
StatusActive
GenreMotor Sport event
Date(s)June
FrequencyAnnual
Location(s)Great Rift Valley
CountryKenya
Inaugurated1953
Websitehttps://www.safarirally.ke/

History edit

It was first held from 27 May to 1 June 1953 as the East African Coronation Safari in Kenya, Uganda and Tanganyika,[1] as a celebration of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. In 1960 it was renamed the East African Safari Rally and kept that name until 1974, when it became the Safari Rally. From 1973, the rally was part of the World Rally Championship.[2]

The 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi) route featured a variety of roads and terrain - from fesh fesh (very fine powdered sand), fast farm tracks, and very rough roads up or down the Great Rift Valley. In heavy rain, roads would often turn into thick, deep mud.[2][3] The event was run on open roads, with all of the route being competitive mileage.[4] The driver with the lowest accumulation of penalty time between time controls was declared the winner.[4]

The rally was historically one of the fastest events in the world championship with average speeds over 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph).[5] However, the roughness of the terrain and the long stages meant that the winner was often the most reliable or the fastest cautious driver.[2][6] In later years, top rally teams would use helicopters to fly ahead of the cars to warn of animals or other vehicles on the rally route.

 
Checkpoint in the 1972 rally.

Teams built specially strengthened cars for the event, with bullbars, snorkels (for river crossings) and bright lights to warn wildlife.[6][7] In the 1990s, Toyota Team Europe had a full-time test team in Kenya, preparing and testing the rally cars for the event.[8][7] During the rally, repairs had to be regularly made to the cars, which added to the elapsed time of the competitors.[9] In later years, tyre mousse - allowing tyres to maintain functionality despite a puncture - allowed drivers to tackle the event flat out, despite the length of the event.[6]

In 1996, the event adopted the special stage format, and servicing cars from helicopters was prohibited.[2] From that edition until 2002, it featured around 2000 km of timed stages, with stages well over 60 kilometres (37 mi) long, unlike most rallies which had under 500 kilometres (310 mi) of total timed distance. This meant that the winner's total time penalty was above 12 hours in 1996 and decreased to two seconds shy of 8 hours in 2002. Despite this, the rally continued to be run on open roads.[10] The event was excluded from the WRC calendar due to a lack of finance and organisation in 2003.[2]

Modern event edit

From the 2003 edition, the event became part of the African Rally Championship.[10] The event was modernised, with shorter stages and running on closed roads - like other events in the World Championship.[11] Two editions of the rally - 2007 and 2009 - were also part of the Intercontinental Rally Challenge. In 2013, President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta announced a plan to return the Safari Rally to the world championship.[12]

On the 27 September 2019, it was announced that the 2020 edition would be part of the World Rally Championship. This event was later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3] The Safari Rally eventually made a comeback to the WRC in 2021 after an eighteen-year hiatus from the 24–27 June, with a successful event held in Kenya on the floor of the Rift Valley in Naivasha, Nakuru County.[13] Sebastian Ogier and Julien Ingrassia emerged as winners in their Toyota Yaris WRC.[11] The Safari has a WRC contract until 2026.[12]

Winners edit

Kenyan drivers Shekhar Mehta and Carl Tundo have been the most successful competitors, with five outright victories each. Mehta won first in 1973, then consecutively from 1979 to 1982 - all while the event was part of the world championship. Tundo won five editions when the event was part of the African Rally Championship - the 2004, 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2018 events. Tundo has also finished on the podium twelve times, ahead of fellow Kenyan Ian Duncan with nine podium finishes.[14]

Year Rally Name / Dates Winning Driver Co-driver Winning Car Status
1953 1st Coronation Safari Rally   Alan Dix   Johnny Larsen Volkswagen Beetle  
1954 2nd Coronation Safari Rally   D P Marwaha   Vic Preston Sr Volkswagen Beetle  
1955 3rd Coronation Safari Rally   Vic Preston Sr   D P Marwaha Ford Zephyr  
1956 4th Coronation Safari Rally   Eric Cecil   Tony Vickers DKW  
1957 5th Coronation Safari Rally   Gus Hofmann   Arthur Burton Volkswagen Beetle  
1958 6th Coronation Safari Rally   T. Brooke
  Arne Kopperud
  Morris Temple-Boreham
  Peter Hughes
  Kora Kopperud
  Mike Armstrong
Ford Anglia 100E (Impala class)

Ford Zephyr II (Lion class)

Auto Union 1000 (Leopard class)
 
1959 7th Coronation Safari Rally   Bill Fritschy   Jack Ellis Mercedes-Benz 219  
1960 8th East African Safari Rally   Bill Fritschy   Jack Ellis Mercedes-Benz 219  
1961 9th East African Safari Rally   John Manussis   Bill Coleridge
  David Bekett
Mercedes-Benz 220SE  
1962 10th East African Safari Rally   Tommy Fjastad   Bernhard Schmider Volkswagen 1200  
1963 11th East African Safari Rally   Nick Nowicki   Paddy Cliff Peugeot 404  
1964 12th East African Safari Rally   Peter Hughes   Bill Young Ford Cortina GT  
1965 13th East African Safari Rally   Joginder Singh   Jaswant Singh Volvo PV 544  
1966 14th East African Safari Rally   Bert Shankland   Chris Rothwell Peugeot 404  
1967 15th East African Safari Rally   Bert Shankland   Chris Rothwell Peugeot 404  
1968 16th East African Safari Rally   Nick Nowicki   Paddy Cliff Peugeot 404[15]  
1969 17th East African Safari Rally   Robin Hillyar   Jock Aird Ford Taunus 20M RS  
1970 18th East African Safari Rally   Edgar Herrmann   Hans Schüller Datsun 1600 SSS  
1971 19th East African Safari Rally   Edgar Herrmann   Hans Schüller Datsun 240Z  
1972 20th East African Safari Rally
(30 Mar – 3 Apr)
  Hannu Mikkola   Gunnar Palm Ford Escort RS1600 IMC
1973 21st East African Safari Rally
(19 – 23 Apr)
  Shekhar Mehta   Lofty Drews Datsun 240Z WRC
1974 22nd East African Safari Rally
(11 – 15 Apr)
  Joginder Singh   David Doig Mitsubishi Lancer 1600 GSR WRC
1975 23rd Safari Rally
(27 – 31 Mar)
  Ove Andersson   Arne Hertz Peugeot 504 WRC
1976 24th Safari Rally
(15 – 19 Apr)
  Joginder Singh   David Doig Mitsubishi Lancer 1600 GSR WRC
1977 25th Safari Rally
(7 – 11 Apr)
  Björn Waldegård   Hans Thorszelius Ford Escort RS1800 WRC
1978 26th Safari Rally
(23 – 27 Mar)
  Jean-Pierre Nicolas   Jean-Claude Lefèbvre Peugeot 504 V6 Coupé WRC
1979 27th Safari Rally
(12 – 16 Apr)
  Shekhar Mehta   Mike Doughty Datsun 160J WRC
1980 28th Marlboro Safari Rally
(3 – 7 Apr)
  Shekhar Mehta   Mike Doughty Datsun 160J WRC
1981 29th Marlboro Safari Rally
(16 – 20 Apr)
  Shekhar Mehta   Mike Doughty Nissan Violet GT WRC
1982 30th Marlboro Safari Rally
(8 – 12 Apr)
  Shekhar Mehta   Mike Doughty Nissan Violet GT WRC
1983 31st Marlboro Safari Rally
(30 Mar – 4 Apr)
  Ari Vatanen   Terry Harryman Opel Ascona 400 WRC
1984 32nd Marlboro Safari Rally
(19 – 23 Apr)
  Björn Waldegård   Hans Thorszelius Toyota Celica TCT WRC
1985 33rd Marlboro Safari Rally
(4 – 8 Apr)
  Juha Kankkunen   Fred Gallagher Toyota Celica TCT WRC
1986 34th Marlboro Safari Rally
(29 Mar – 2 Apr)
  Björn Waldegård   Fred Gallagher Toyota Celica TCT WRC
1987 35th Marlboro Safari Rally
(16 – 20 Apr)
  Hannu Mikkola   Arne Hertz Audi 200 Quattro WRC
1988 36th Marlboro Safari Rally
(31 Mar – 4 Apr)
  Miki Biasion   Tiziano Siviero Lancia Delta HF Integrale WRC
1989 37th Marlboro Safari Rally
(23–27 Mar)
  Miki Biasion   Tiziano Siviero Lancia Delta HF Integrale WRC
1990 38th Marlboro Safari Rally
(11–16 Apr)
  Björn Waldegård   Fred Gallagher Toyota Celica GT-Four ST165 WRC
1991 39th Martini Safari Rally
27 (Mar – 1 Apr)
  Juha Kankkunen   Juha Piironen Lancia Delta HF Integrale 16v WRC
1992 40th Martini Safari Rally
27 (Mar – 1 Apr)
  Carlos Sainz   Luis Moya Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD WRC
1993 41st Trustbank Safari Rally
(8–12 Apr)
  Juha Kankkunen   Juha Piironen Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD WRC
1994 42nd Trustbank Safari Rally
(31 Mar – 3 Apr)
  Ian Duncan   David Williamson Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD WRC
1995 43rd Safari Rally Kenya
(14–17 Apr)
  Yoshio Fujimoto   Arne Hertz Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD 2LWC
1996 44th Safari Rally Kenya
(5–7 Apr)
  Tommi Mäkinen   Seppo Harjanne Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution III WRC
1997 45th Safari Rally Kenya
(1–3 Mar)
  Colin McRae   Nicky Grist Subaru Impreza WRC97 WRC
1998 46th Safari Rally Kenya
(28 Feb – 2 Mar)
  Richard Burns   Robert Reid Mitsubishi Carisma GT Evolution IV (Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IV) WRC
1999 47th 555 Safari Rally
(26–28 Feb)
  Colin McRae   Nicky Grist Ford Focus WRC WRC
2000 48th Sameer Safari Rally
(25–27 Feb)
  Richard Burns   Robert Reid Subaru Impreza WRC00 WRC
2001 49th Safari Rally
(20–22 Jul)
  Tommi Mäkinen   Risto Mannisenmäki Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 6.5 WRC
2002 50th Inmarsat Safari Rally
(12–14 Jul)
  Colin McRae   Nicky Grist Ford Focus RS WRC 02 WRC
2003 51st KCB Safari Equator Rally Kenya
(9–11 Oct)
  Glen Edmunds   Titch Phillips Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI ARC
2004 52nd KCB Safari Rally Kenya
(12–14 Mar)
  Carl Tundo   Tim Jessop Subaru Impreza ARC
2005 53rd KCB Safari Rally
(15th – 17th Jul)
  Glen Edmunds   Des Page-Morris Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VII ARC
2006 54th KCB Safari Rally
(24 – 26 Mar)
  Azar Anwar   George Mwangi Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI ARC
2007 55th KCB Safari Rally
(9–11 Mar)
  Conrad Rautenbach   Peter Marsh Subaru Impreza N10 IRC & ARC
2008 56th KCB Safari Rally
(27–29 Jun)
  Lee Rose   Piers Daykin Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC
2009 57th KCB Safari Rally
(3–5 Apr)
  Carl Tundo   Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX IRC & ARC
2010 58th KCB Safari Rally
(2–4 Apr)
  Lee Rose   Piers Daykin Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC
2011 59th KCB Safari Rally
(17–19 Jun)
  Carl Tundo   Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC
2012 60th KCB Safari Rally
(8–10 Jun)
  Carl Tundo   Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC
2013 61st KCB Safari Rally
(5–7 Jul)
  Baldev Chager   Ravi Soni Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X ARC
2014 62nd KCB Safari Rally
(12–14 Sep)
  Baldev Chager   Ravi Soni Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X ARC
2015 63rd KCB Safari Rally
(4–5 Apr)
  Singh Chatthe Jaspreet   Panesar Gurdeep Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 KRC
2016 64th KCB Safari Rally
(10–11 Jun)
  Singh Chatthe Jaspreet   Panesar Gurdeep Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 KRC
2017 65th Safari Rally
(17–18 Mar)
  Tapio Laukkanen   Gavin Laurence Subaru Impreza WRX STi 4 D R4 ARC & KRC
2018 66th Safari Rally
(16–18 Mar)
  Carl Tundo   Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 ARC & KRC
2019 67th Safari Rally
(5–7 Jul)
  Baldev Chager   Ravi Soni Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 ARC & KRC
2020 68th Safari Rally
(16–19 Jul)
Cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns
2021 68th Safari Rally
(24–27 Jun)
  Sébastien Ogier   Julien Ingrassia Toyota Yaris WRC WRC
2022 69th Safari Rally
(23–26 Jun)
  Kalle Rovanperä   Jonne Halttunen Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 WRC
2023 70th Safari Rally
(22–25 Jun)
  Sebastien Ogier   Vincent Landais Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 WRC
2024 71st Safari Rally
(28–31 Mar)
  Kalle Rovanperä   Jonne Halttunen Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 WRC

Notes: IMC = International Championship for Manufacturers, WRC = World Rally Championship, 2LWC = 2-Litre World Cup, ARC = African Rally Championship, IRC = Intercontinental Rally Challenge, KRC = Kenya National Rally Championship

East African Safari Rally (classic) edit

The East African Safari Rally is a Classic rally event first held in 2003 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first running of the event. The event has since been held biennially.[10][16] The nine day event takes place over 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi), and is open to vehicles built before 1985.[17] The 2017 edition of the rally had joint winners, as both Richard Jackson and Carl Tundo had the same time.[18]

Year Dates Winning Driver Winning Co-driver Winning Car
2003 Dec 10 – Dec 19   Rob Collinge   Anton Levitan   Anton Levitan Datsun 240Z
2005 Dec 1 – Dec 10   Rob Collinge   Anton Levitan Datsun 260Z
2007 Nov 25 – Dec 3   Björn Waldegård   Mathias Waldegård Ford Escort Mk1
2009 Nov 22 – Dec 1   Ian Duncan   Amaar Slatch Ford Mustang
2011 Nov 20 – Nov 28   Björn Waldegård[19]   Mathias Waldegård Porsche 911
2013 Nov 21 – Nov 29   Ian Duncan   Amaar Slatch Ford Capri
2015 Nov 19 – Nov 27   Stig Blomqvist   Stéphane Prévot Porsche 911
2017 Nov 23 – Dec 1   Richard Jackson[20]   Ryan Champion

jointly with[18]

  Carl Tundo   Tim Jessop

Porsche 911

Triumph TR7

2019 Nov 27 – Dec 6   Kris Rosenberger[21]   Niki Bleicher Porsche 911
2022 Feb 10 – 18   Baldev Chager[22]   Drew Sturrock Porsche 911

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The name Tanzania did not exist in 1953
  2. ^ a b c d e Davenport, John; Deimel, Helmut (2003). Safari Rally 50 years of the toughest rally in the world. Reinhard Klein, Wilfried Müller, McKlein Photography Köln. Köln: Harms Verlag. ISBN 978-3-927458-08-6. OCLC 76627693.
  3. ^ a b Evans, David (17 June 2022). "Safari Rally Kenya ready to test the WRC's greatest like no other". Red Bull. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  4. ^ a b "juwra.com/About timing". Jonkka's World Rally Archive. from the original on 8 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-15.
  5. ^ "Statistics - Event average speed". www.juwra.com. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  6. ^ a b c Rhodes, Cynan (25 February 1999). "Safari Rally Kenya: Introduction". au.motorsport.com. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  7. ^ a b "What would a modern Safari Rally car look like?". DirtFish. 2020-07-14. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  8. ^ "How tape cassettes sent Sainz to a dominant Safari win". DirtFish. 2021-06-22. Retrieved 2022-08-15. Grist had been in Kenya for weeks conducting much of TTE's testing and recce preparation for the Safari. Ericsson had headed to Mombasa for a holiday before the rally, leaving Grist in Toyota's team hotel in Nairobi. "Mikael and I had done the recce," said Grist. "In fact, we'd been around the entire 5000-kilometre route four times.
  9. ^ "How Mäkinen ignored common sense to conquer the Safari". DirtFish. 2020-07-18. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  10. ^ a b c Kihaki, Mike (February 2022). "East Africa Safari Classic, a rich history of rallying". The Standard. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  11. ^ a b Howard, Tom (21 June 2022). "WRC Safari Rally: Everything you need to know". www.autosport.com. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  12. ^ a b Njenga, Peter (25 June 2022). "Safari Rally rich part of Uhuru Kenyatta legacy and Kenya's sporting history". The East African. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  13. ^ Sport (2021-12-28). "Kenya: Safari's Unique Experience Was a Sight to Behold for World Rally Teams". allAfrica.com. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  14. ^ Shacki. "Safari Rally Hall of Fame". eWRC-results.com. Retrieved 2022-08-16.
  15. ^ "Safari 68". Autocar. Vol. 129 (nbr 3777). 4 July 1968. pp. 6–9.
  16. ^ "The "adventure" that marks a driver's return to rallying". DirtFish. 2021-07-03. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  17. ^ Duggan, Briana; Page, Tom (8 April 2022). "'It's just about you, the road and your maker': Inside the East African Safari Classic". CNN. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  18. ^ a b . East African Safari Classic Rally. 2017-12-01. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25. Retrieved 2018-02-15.
  19. ^ International sportworld communication. . 29 November 2011. Archived from the original on 7 January 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
  20. ^ . East African Safari Classic Rally. 2017-12-01. Archived from the original on 2018-02-12. Retrieved 2018-02-15.
  21. ^ Shacki. "Stage times East African Safari Classic Rally 2022". eWRC-results.com. Retrieved 2022-08-15.
  22. ^ Shacki. "Baldev Chager - Drew Sturrock - East African Safari Classic Rally 2022". eWRC-results.com. Retrieved 2022-08-16.

External links edit

  • Official website (in English)

safari, rally, 1978, action, film, film, automobile, rally, held, kenya, first, held, 1953, celebration, coronation, queen, elizabeth, event, part, world, rally, championship, from, 1973, until, 2002, before, returning, 2021, historically, regarded, toughest, . For the 1978 action film see Safari Rally film The Safari Rally is an automobile rally held in Kenya It was first held in 1953 as a celebration of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II The event was part of the World Rally Championship from 1973 until 2002 before returning in 2021 It is historically regarded as one of the toughest events in the World Rally Championship and one of the most popular rallies in Africa From 2003 a historical event East African Safari Rally has been held biennially Safari RallyStatusActiveGenreMotor Sport eventDate s JuneFrequencyAnnualLocation s Great Rift ValleyCountryKenyaInaugurated1953Websitehttps www safarirally ke Contents 1 History 1 1 Modern event 2 Winners 3 East African Safari Rally classic 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editIt was first held from 27 May to 1 June 1953 as the East African Coronation Safari in Kenya Uganda and Tanganyika 1 as a celebration of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II In 1960 it was renamed the East African Safari Rally and kept that name until 1974 when it became the Safari Rally From 1973 the rally was part of the World Rally Championship 2 The 5 000 kilometres 3 100 mi route featured a variety of roads and terrain from fesh fesh very fine powdered sand fast farm tracks and very rough roads up or down the Great Rift Valley In heavy rain roads would often turn into thick deep mud 2 3 The event was run on open roads with all of the route being competitive mileage 4 The driver with the lowest accumulation of penalty time between time controls was declared the winner 4 The rally was historically one of the fastest events in the world championship with average speeds over 100 kilometres per hour 62 mph 5 However the roughness of the terrain and the long stages meant that the winner was often the most reliable or the fastest cautious driver 2 6 In later years top rally teams would use helicopters to fly ahead of the cars to warn of animals or other vehicles on the rally route nbsp Checkpoint in the 1972 rally Teams built specially strengthened cars for the event with bullbars snorkels for river crossings and bright lights to warn wildlife 6 7 In the 1990s Toyota Team Europe had a full time test team in Kenya preparing and testing the rally cars for the event 8 7 During the rally repairs had to be regularly made to the cars which added to the elapsed time of the competitors 9 In later years tyre mousse allowing tyres to maintain functionality despite a puncture allowed drivers to tackle the event flat out despite the length of the event 6 In 1996 the event adopted the special stage format and servicing cars from helicopters was prohibited 2 From that edition until 2002 it featured around 2000 km of timed stages with stages well over 60 kilometres 37 mi long unlike most rallies which had under 500 kilometres 310 mi of total timed distance This meant that the winner s total time penalty was above 12 hours in 1996 and decreased to two seconds shy of 8 hours in 2002 Despite this the rally continued to be run on open roads 10 The event was excluded from the WRC calendar due to a lack of finance and organisation in 2003 2 Modern event edit From the 2003 edition the event became part of the African Rally Championship 10 The event was modernised with shorter stages and running on closed roads like other events in the World Championship 11 Two editions of the rally 2007 and 2009 were also part of the Intercontinental Rally Challenge In 2013 President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta announced a plan to return the Safari Rally to the world championship 12 On the 27 September 2019 it was announced that the 2020 edition would be part of the World Rally Championship This event was later cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 3 The Safari Rally eventually made a comeback to the WRC in 2021 after an eighteen year hiatus from the 24 27 June with a successful event held in Kenya on the floor of the Rift Valley in Naivasha Nakuru County 13 Sebastian Ogier and Julien Ingrassia emerged as winners in their Toyota Yaris WRC 11 The Safari has a WRC contract until 2026 12 Winners editKenyan drivers Shekhar Mehta and Carl Tundo have been the most successful competitors with five outright victories each Mehta won first in 1973 then consecutively from 1979 to 1982 all while the event was part of the world championship Tundo won five editions when the event was part of the African Rally Championship the 2004 2009 2011 2012 and 2018 events Tundo has also finished on the podium twelve times ahead of fellow Kenyan Ian Duncan with nine podium finishes 14 Year Rally Name Dates Winning Driver Co driver Winning Car Status 1953 1st Coronation Safari Rally nbsp Alan Dix nbsp Johnny Larsen Volkswagen Beetle 1954 2nd Coronation Safari Rally nbsp D P Marwaha nbsp Vic Preston Sr Volkswagen Beetle 1955 3rd Coronation Safari Rally nbsp Vic Preston Sr nbsp D P Marwaha Ford Zephyr 1956 4th Coronation Safari Rally nbsp Eric Cecil nbsp Tony Vickers DKW 1957 5th Coronation Safari Rally nbsp Gus Hofmann nbsp Arthur Burton Volkswagen Beetle 1958 6th Coronation Safari Rally nbsp T Brooke nbsp Arne Kopperud nbsp Morris Temple Boreham nbsp Peter Hughes nbsp Kora Kopperud nbsp Mike Armstrong Ford Anglia 100E Impala class Ford Zephyr II Lion class Auto Union 1000 Leopard class 1959 7th Coronation Safari Rally nbsp Bill Fritschy nbsp Jack Ellis Mercedes Benz 219 1960 8th East African Safari Rally nbsp Bill Fritschy nbsp Jack Ellis Mercedes Benz 219 1961 9th East African Safari Rally nbsp John Manussis nbsp Bill Coleridge nbsp David Bekett Mercedes Benz 220SE 1962 10th East African Safari Rally nbsp Tommy Fjastad nbsp Bernhard Schmider Volkswagen 1200 1963 11th East African Safari Rally nbsp Nick Nowicki nbsp Paddy Cliff Peugeot 404 1964 12th East African Safari Rally nbsp Peter Hughes nbsp Bill Young Ford Cortina GT 1965 13th East African Safari Rally nbsp Joginder Singh nbsp Jaswant Singh Volvo PV 544 1966 14th East African Safari Rally nbsp Bert Shankland nbsp Chris Rothwell Peugeot 404 1967 15th East African Safari Rally nbsp Bert Shankland nbsp Chris Rothwell Peugeot 404 1968 16th East African Safari Rally nbsp Nick Nowicki nbsp Paddy Cliff Peugeot 404 15 1969 17th East African Safari Rally nbsp Robin Hillyar nbsp Jock Aird Ford Taunus 20M RS 1970 18th East African Safari Rally nbsp Edgar Herrmann nbsp Hans Schuller Datsun 1600 SSS 1971 19th East African Safari Rally nbsp Edgar Herrmann nbsp Hans Schuller Datsun 240Z 1972 20th East African Safari Rally 30 Mar 3 Apr nbsp Hannu Mikkola nbsp Gunnar Palm Ford Escort RS1600 IMC 1973 21st East African Safari Rally 19 23 Apr nbsp Shekhar Mehta nbsp Lofty Drews Datsun 240Z WRC 1974 22nd East African Safari Rally 11 15 Apr nbsp Joginder Singh nbsp David Doig Mitsubishi Lancer 1600 GSR WRC 1975 23rd Safari Rally 27 31 Mar nbsp Ove Andersson nbsp Arne Hertz Peugeot 504 WRC 1976 24th Safari Rally 15 19 Apr nbsp Joginder Singh nbsp David Doig Mitsubishi Lancer 1600 GSR WRC 1977 25th Safari Rally 7 11 Apr nbsp Bjorn Waldegard nbsp Hans Thorszelius Ford Escort RS1800 WRC 1978 26th Safari Rally 23 27 Mar nbsp Jean Pierre Nicolas nbsp Jean Claude Lefebvre Peugeot 504 V6 Coupe WRC 1979 27th Safari Rally 12 16 Apr nbsp Shekhar Mehta nbsp Mike Doughty Datsun 160J WRC 1980 28th Marlboro Safari Rally 3 7 Apr nbsp Shekhar Mehta nbsp Mike Doughty Datsun 160J WRC 1981 29th Marlboro Safari Rally 16 20 Apr nbsp Shekhar Mehta nbsp Mike Doughty Nissan Violet GT WRC 1982 30th Marlboro Safari Rally 8 12 Apr nbsp Shekhar Mehta nbsp Mike Doughty Nissan Violet GT WRC 1983 31st Marlboro Safari Rally 30 Mar 4 Apr nbsp Ari Vatanen nbsp Terry Harryman Opel Ascona 400 WRC 1984 32nd Marlboro Safari Rally 19 23 Apr nbsp Bjorn Waldegard nbsp Hans Thorszelius Toyota Celica TCT WRC 1985 33rd Marlboro Safari Rally 4 8 Apr nbsp Juha Kankkunen nbsp Fred Gallagher Toyota Celica TCT WRC 1986 34th Marlboro Safari Rally 29 Mar 2 Apr nbsp Bjorn Waldegard nbsp Fred Gallagher Toyota Celica TCT WRC 1987 35th Marlboro Safari Rally 16 20 Apr nbsp Hannu Mikkola nbsp Arne Hertz Audi 200 Quattro WRC 1988 36th Marlboro Safari Rally 31 Mar 4 Apr nbsp Miki Biasion nbsp Tiziano Siviero Lancia Delta HF Integrale WRC 1989 37th Marlboro Safari Rally 23 27 Mar nbsp Miki Biasion nbsp Tiziano Siviero Lancia Delta HF Integrale WRC 1990 38th Marlboro Safari Rally 11 16 Apr nbsp Bjorn Waldegard nbsp Fred Gallagher Toyota Celica GT Four ST165 WRC 1991 39th Martini Safari Rally 27 Mar 1 Apr nbsp Juha Kankkunen nbsp Juha Piironen Lancia Delta HF Integrale 16v WRC 1992 40th Martini Safari Rally 27 Mar 1 Apr nbsp Carlos Sainz nbsp Luis Moya Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD WRC 1993 41st Trustbank Safari Rally 8 12 Apr nbsp Juha Kankkunen nbsp Juha Piironen Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD WRC 1994 42nd Trustbank Safari Rally 31 Mar 3 Apr nbsp Ian Duncan nbsp David Williamson Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD WRC 1995 43rd Safari Rally Kenya 14 17 Apr nbsp Yoshio Fujimoto nbsp Arne Hertz Toyota Celica Turbo 4WD 2LWC 1996 44th Safari Rally Kenya 5 7 Apr nbsp Tommi Makinen nbsp Seppo Harjanne Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution III WRC 1997 45th Safari Rally Kenya 1 3 Mar nbsp Colin McRae nbsp Nicky Grist Subaru Impreza WRC97 WRC 1998 46th Safari Rally Kenya 28 Feb 2 Mar nbsp Richard Burns nbsp Robert Reid Mitsubishi Carisma GT Evolution IV Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IV WRC 1999 47th 555 Safari Rally 26 28 Feb nbsp Colin McRae nbsp Nicky Grist Ford Focus WRC WRC 2000 48th Sameer Safari Rally 25 27 Feb nbsp Richard Burns nbsp Robert Reid Subaru Impreza WRC00 WRC 2001 49th Safari Rally 20 22 Jul nbsp Tommi Makinen nbsp Risto Mannisenmaki Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution 6 5 WRC 2002 50th Inmarsat Safari Rally 12 14 Jul nbsp Colin McRae nbsp Nicky Grist Ford Focus RS WRC 02 WRC 2003 51st KCB Safari Equator Rally Kenya 9 11 Oct nbsp Glen Edmunds nbsp Titch Phillips Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI ARC 2004 52nd KCB Safari Rally Kenya 12 14 Mar nbsp Carl Tundo nbsp Tim Jessop Subaru Impreza ARC 2005 53rd KCB Safari Rally 15th 17th Jul nbsp Glen Edmunds nbsp Des Page Morris Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VII ARC 2006 54th KCB Safari Rally 24 26 Mar nbsp Azar Anwar nbsp George Mwangi Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution VI ARC 2007 55th KCB Safari Rally 9 11 Mar nbsp Conrad Rautenbach nbsp Peter Marsh Subaru Impreza N10 IRC amp ARC 2008 56th KCB Safari Rally 27 29 Jun nbsp Lee Rose nbsp Piers Daykin Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC 2009 57th KCB Safari Rally 3 5 Apr nbsp Carl Tundo nbsp Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX IRC amp ARC 2010 58th KCB Safari Rally 2 4 Apr nbsp Lee Rose nbsp Piers Daykin Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC 2011 59th KCB Safari Rally 17 19 Jun nbsp Carl Tundo nbsp Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC 2012 60th KCB Safari Rally 8 10 Jun nbsp Carl Tundo nbsp Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX ARC 2013 61st KCB Safari Rally 5 7 Jul nbsp Baldev Chager nbsp Ravi Soni Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X ARC 2014 62nd KCB Safari Rally 12 14 Sep nbsp Baldev Chager nbsp Ravi Soni Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X ARC 2015 63rd KCB Safari Rally 4 5 Apr nbsp Singh Chatthe Jaspreet nbsp Panesar Gurdeep Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 KRC 2016 64th KCB Safari Rally 10 11 Jun nbsp Singh Chatthe Jaspreet nbsp Panesar Gurdeep Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 KRC 2017 65th Safari Rally 17 18 Mar nbsp Tapio Laukkanen nbsp Gavin Laurence Subaru Impreza WRX STi 4 D R4 ARC amp KRC 2018 66th Safari Rally 16 18 Mar nbsp Carl Tundo nbsp Tim Jessop Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 ARC amp KRC 2019 67th Safari Rally 5 7 Jul nbsp Baldev Chager nbsp Ravi Soni Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X R4 ARC amp KRC 2020 68th Safari Rally 16 19 Jul Cancelled due to COVID 19 concerns 2021 68th Safari Rally 24 27 Jun nbsp Sebastien Ogier nbsp Julien Ingrassia Toyota Yaris WRC WRC 2022 69th Safari Rally 23 26 Jun nbsp Kalle Rovanpera nbsp Jonne Halttunen Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 WRC 2023 70th Safari Rally 22 25 Jun nbsp Sebastien Ogier nbsp Vincent Landais Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 WRC 2024 71st Safari Rally 28 31 Mar nbsp Kalle Rovanpera nbsp Jonne Halttunen Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 WRC Notes IMC International Championship for Manufacturers WRC World Rally Championship 2LWC 2 Litre World Cup ARC African Rally Championship IRC Intercontinental Rally Challenge KRC Kenya National Rally ChampionshipEast African Safari Rally classic editThe East African Safari Rally is a Classic rally event first held in 2003 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first running of the event The event has since been held biennially 10 16 The nine day event takes place over 5 000 kilometres 3 100 mi and is open to vehicles built before 1985 17 The 2017 edition of the rally had joint winners as both Richard Jackson and Carl Tundo had the same time 18 Year Dates Winning Driver Winning Co driver Winning Car 2003 Dec 10 Dec 19 nbsp Rob Collinge nbsp Anton Levitan nbsp Anton Levitan Datsun 240Z 2005 Dec 1 Dec 10 nbsp Rob Collinge nbsp Anton Levitan Datsun 260Z 2007 Nov 25 Dec 3 nbsp Bjorn Waldegard nbsp Mathias Waldegard Ford Escort Mk1 2009 Nov 22 Dec 1 nbsp Ian Duncan nbsp Amaar Slatch Ford Mustang 2011 Nov 20 Nov 28 nbsp Bjorn Waldegard 19 nbsp Mathias Waldegard Porsche 911 2013 Nov 21 Nov 29 nbsp Ian Duncan nbsp Amaar Slatch Ford Capri 2015 Nov 19 Nov 27 nbsp Stig Blomqvist nbsp Stephane Prevot Porsche 911 2017 Nov 23 Dec 1 nbsp Richard Jackson 20 nbsp Ryan Champion jointly with 18 nbsp Carl Tundo nbsp Tim Jessop Porsche 911 Triumph TR7 2019 Nov 27 Dec 6 nbsp Kris Rosenberger 21 nbsp Niki Bleicher Porsche 911 2022 Feb 10 18 nbsp Baldev Chager 22 nbsp Drew Sturrock Porsche 911See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Safari Rally Safari Rally 1978 film Safari 3000 1982 film References edit The name Tanzania did not exist in 1953 a b c d e Davenport John Deimel Helmut 2003 Safari Rally 50 years of the toughest rally in the world Reinhard Klein Wilfried Muller McKlein Photography Koln Koln Harms Verlag ISBN 978 3 927458 08 6 OCLC 76627693 a b Evans David 17 June 2022 Safari Rally Kenya ready to test the WRC s greatest like no other Red Bull Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b juwra com About timing Jonkka s World Rally Archive Archived from the original on 8 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 05 15 Statistics Event average speed www juwra com Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b c Rhodes Cynan 25 February 1999 Safari Rally Kenya Introduction au motorsport com Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b What would a modern Safari Rally car look like DirtFish 2020 07 14 Retrieved 2022 08 15 How tape cassettes sent Sainz to a dominant Safari win DirtFish 2021 06 22 Retrieved 2022 08 15 Grist had been in Kenya for weeks conducting much of TTE s testing and recce preparation for the Safari Ericsson had headed to Mombasa for a holiday before the rally leaving Grist in Toyota s team hotel in Nairobi Mikael and I had done the recce said Grist In fact we d been around the entire 5000 kilometre route four times How Makinen ignored common sense to conquer the Safari DirtFish 2020 07 18 Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b c Kihaki Mike February 2022 East Africa Safari Classic a rich history of rallying The Standard Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b Howard Tom 21 June 2022 WRC Safari Rally Everything you need to know www autosport com Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b Njenga Peter 25 June 2022 Safari Rally rich part of Uhuru Kenyatta legacy and Kenya s sporting history The East African Retrieved 15 August 2022 Sport 2021 12 28 Kenya Safari s Unique Experience Was a Sight to Behold for World Rally Teams allAfrica com Retrieved 2022 08 15 Shacki Safari Rally Hall of Fame eWRC results com Retrieved 2022 08 16 Safari 68 Autocar Vol 129 nbr 3777 4 July 1968 pp 6 9 The adventure that marks a driver s return to rallying DirtFish 2021 07 03 Retrieved 2022 08 15 Duggan Briana Page Tom 8 April 2022 It s just about you the road and your maker Inside the East African Safari Classic CNN Retrieved 2022 08 15 a b Tundo and Jackson share Safari Classic victory East African Safari Classic Rally 2017 12 01 Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Retrieved 2018 02 15 International sportworld communication Safari glory for first world champion Waldegard 29 November 2011 Archived from the original on 7 January 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2011 Final Classification Safari Classic 2017 East African Safari Classic Rally 2017 12 01 Archived from the original on 2018 02 12 Retrieved 2018 02 15 Shacki Stage times East African Safari Classic Rally 2022 eWRC results com Retrieved 2022 08 15 Shacki Baldev Chager Drew Sturrock East African Safari Classic Rally 2022 eWRC results com Retrieved 2022 08 16 External links editOfficial website in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Safari Rally amp oldid 1220404011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.