2008 Swedish Rally
2008 Swedish Rally 57th Uddeholm Swedish Rally |
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Round 2 of the 2008 World Rally Championship
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290px
Snow-covered road during the Swedish winter
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Host country | Sweden | ||
Rally base | Karlstad, Sweden | ||
Dates run | February 7 – 10 2008 | ||
Stages | 20 (340.24 km; 211.42 mi) | ||
Stage surface | Snow/Ice-covered gravel | ||
Overall distance | 1,440.08 km (894.82 mi) | ||
Results | |||
Overall winner | Jari-Matti Latvala BP-Ford World Rally Team |
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Crews | 61 at start, 49 at finish |
The 2008 Swedish Rally, officially 57th Uddeholm Swedish Rally, was the second round of 2008 World Rally Championship season. It was the season's first and only event held on snow- and ice-covered gravel roads. The rally took place during February 7–10, beginning with Super Special Stage placed in rallybase, Karlstad. The rally was also the first round of Production Car World Rally Championship this season.
Even though it snowed before the rally, eliminating the threat of calling the event off, the mild temperatures caused cancellation of stages 12 and 18, shortening the overall competitive kilometers count.[1][2]
The rally was won by BP Ford World Rally Team's 22-year-old Jari-Matti Latvala. With his debut win, Latvala became the youngest winner in the history of the World Rally Championship, breaking Henri Toivonen's record from the 1980 RAC Rally.[3] Latvala's team-mate and compatriot Mikko Hirvonen was second and Stobart VK M-Sport Ford's Gigi Galli completed an all-Ford podium. Subaru World Rally Team's Petter Solberg was fourth, followed by Andreas Mikkelsen, Dani Sordo, Toni Gardemeister, Juho Hänninen, Mads Østberg and Jari Ketomaa. Fifth-placed Matthew Wilson ran into technical problems with throttle on the penultimate stage and had to retire.[4][5] Sébastien Loeb crashed out and rolled his car while running third, then retired again, after restarting under SupeRally and winning two stages, because of the damaged engine.[6] Henning Solberg inherited the third place, but later suffered a puncture causing him to slip further down and then crashed while running fourth and was forced to retire for the second day;[7] after rejoining the fight under SupeRally format Norwegian was the fastest driver on day three, winning all the remaining stages.
Contents
Results
Special stages
Day | Stage | Time | Name | Length | Winner | Time | Avg. spd. | Rally leader |
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1 (7 FEB) | SS1 | 20:04 | SSS Karlstad 1 | 1.90 km | P. Solberg | 1:28.9 | 76.5 km/h | P. Solberg |
2 (8 FEB) |
SS2 | 09:34 | Stensjön 1 | 15.50 km | J. Latvala | 7:24.0 | 125.7 km/h | J. Latvala |
SS3 | 10:44 | Bjälverud 1 | 21.58 km | J. Latvala | 10:33.7 | 122.5 km/h | ||
SS4 | 11:23 | Mangen 1 | 22.09 km | J. Latvala | 12:20.7 | 107.4 km/h | ||
SS5 | 13:25 | Stensjön 2 | 15.50 km | J. Latvala | 7:22.3 | 126.2 km/h | ||
SS6 | 14:35 | Bjälverud 2 | 21.58 km | J. Latvala | 10:32.4 | 122.8 km/h | ||
SS7 | 15:14 | Mangen 2 | 22.09 km | J. Latvala | 12:21.2 | 107.3 km/h | ||
SS8 | 18:00 | SSS Karlstad 2 | 1.90 km | G. Galli | 1:28.2 | 77.6 km/h | ||
3 (9 FEB) |
SS9 | 08:25 | Horssjön 1 | 14.89 km | S. Loeb | 9:18.1 | 96.0 km/h | |
SS10 | 09:38 | Hagfors 1 | 20.92 km | D. Sordo | 11:45.8 | 106.7 km/h | ||
SS11 | 10:41 | Vargåsen 1 | 24.63 km | S. Loeb | 13:49.1 | 106.9 km/h | ||
SS12 | 13:04 | Horssjön 2 | 14.89 km | Cancelled [1] | ||||
SS13 | 14:17 | Hagfors 2 | 20.92 km | D. Sordo | 11:30.1 | 109.1 km/h | ||
SS14 | 15:20 | Vargåsen 2 | 24.63 km | M. Hirvonen | 13:32.5 | 109.1 km/h | ||
4 (10 FEB) |
SS15 | 08:08 | Ullen 1 | 16.25 km | H. Solberg | 8:21.7 | 116.6 km/h | |
SS16 | 09:13 | Lesjöfors 1 | 10.49 km | H. Solberg | 5:54.5 | 106.5 km/h | ||
SS17 | 09:45 | Rämmen 1 | 21.87 km | H. Solberg | 11:14.4 | 116.7 km/h | ||
SS18 | 11:21 | Ullen 2 | 16.25 km | Cancelled [2] | ||||
SS19 | 12:26 | Lesjöfors 2 | 10.49 km | H. Solberg | 5:43.8 | 109.7 km/h | ||
SS20 | 12:58 | Rämmen 2 | 21.87 km | H. Solberg | 11:07.1 | 118.0 km/h |
Championship standings after the event
Drivers' championship
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Manufacturers' championship
Rank | Driver | Event | Total points |
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MON |
SWE |
MEX |
ARG |
JOR |
ITA |
GRC |
TUR |
FIN |
GER |
NZL |
ESP |
FRA |
JPN |
GBR |
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1 | BP Ford World Rally Team | 8 | 18 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 26 |
2 | Stobart M-Sport Ford Rally Team | 8 | 8 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 16 |
Subaru World Rally Team | 10 | 6 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 16 | |
4 | Citroën Total World Rally Team | 11 | 4 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 15 |
5 | Suzuki World Rally Team | 2 | 3 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 5 |
6 | Munchi's Ford World Rally Team | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 0 |
Production championship
Points table:[9]
Pos | Driver | SWE |
ARG |
GRC |
TUR |
FIN |
NZL |
JPN |
GBR |
Pts |
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1 | Juho Hänninen | 1 | 10 | |||||||
2 | Jari Ketomaa | 2 | 8 | |||||||
3 | Patrik Sandell | 3 | 6 | |||||||
4 | Martin Prokop | 4 | 5 | |||||||
5 | Uwe Nittel | 5 | 4 | |||||||
6 | Toshihiro Arai | 6 | 3 | |||||||
7 | Armindo Araújo | 7 | 2 | |||||||
8 | Bernardo Sousa | 8 | 1 | |||||||
Pos | Driver | SWE |
ARG |
GRC |
TUR |
FIN |
NZL |
JPN |
GBR |
Pts |
References
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.