The 2013 Dakar heads south between 5 and 20 January
with an innovative course stretching from Lima to Santiago.
The release of the start list reveals a new
twist in the battle for the honours, as Honda steps into the fray
as an official motorcycle manufacturer to take the fight to KTM,
and Carlos Sainz combines forces with Nasser Al Attiyah in the
hopes of challenging the powerful Mini trio led by Stéphane
Peterhansel.
For its 35th edition, the Dakar will follow the north-south
direction which was so typical of its former stomping grounds but has not been used since it came to South America in 2009.
Peru's
geography means that the pilots and crews will come up against the
dunes from the first days of the race.
Chile will set the stage
for the first duel in the desert and, after passing the Andes,
Argentina will test the contenders' stamina with stages which are
as gruelling as they are jaw-dropping.
San Miguel de Tucumán will
give them an opportunity to catch their breath for the rest day,
eight days into the race and host the start of the longest stage
in the rally, just before a sandy trilogy with the dunes of Fiambalá and Copiapó on the menu.
This should be enough to sort
the men from the boys and shake up the classification before the
heroes are celebrated in Santiago on 20 January 2013.
Only a
minority of the pilots of the 459 vehicles on the start line
(representing a new record of 53 different countries) have a
realistic chance of getting their hands on the trophies awarded on
the finish podium opposite the Palacio de la Moneda.
But the list
of favourites has got much longer in all the categories since last
January. Among the motorcycles, the long-running hegemony of the
Cyril Despres – Marc Coma duo could be challenged by the new
official Honda team and its rider Hélder Rodrigues, who finished
on the bottom step of the podium in the last two editions. With
Paulo Gonçalves and Spaniards Joan Barreda and Jordi Viladoms,
Husqvarna is also aiming very high. And then there is Yamaha,
which seduced Frans Verhoeven in addition to Olivier Pain and
David Casteu, and welcomed back its old leader David Frétigné.
But the car category is where things really get too close to
call. In the wake of last year's win with Stéphane Peterhansel and
his Mini, X-Raid is fielding a star-studded team including Nani
Roma and Krzysztof Hołowczyc, but rulebook amendments may have
changed the state of play and now no-one knows if they still have
an edge over the promising Toyotas of Giniel De Villiers and Lucio
Álvarez (third and fifth in 2012, respectively), among other
drivers. The buggy designed in the United States by and for Nasser
Al Attiyah is an even less known quantity. The Qatari is banking
on the surprise factor after he invited his friend and rival at
Volkswagen, Carlos Sainz, to join him and mount a two-pronged surprise attack together. Among those making a comeback, Guerlain
Chicherit and his SMG buggy are also ready to step into the fray.
Big names who underperformed last year are also back in the fight
for the top places, including Guilherme Spinelli (Mitsubishi),
Christian Lavieille (Dessoude) and Matthias Kahle (Proto
Mercedes).
In the truck category, the Ivecos of Team de
Rooy handed the Kamazs their first defeat since 2007 and are
hoping to build on this success with defending champion Gerard de Rooy, his cousin Hans Stacey and Italy's Miki Biasion. Aleš
Loprais and his Tatra are capable of outperforming Eduard Nikolaev
and his Russian teammates once in a while, so he may be a kingmaker if he manages to end his drought. Among the quads, the Patronellis will be putting all their eggs in Marcos' basket and
hope he can see off the other 38 pilots on the start list, a
second record in the 2013 Dakar!
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