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WRC Portugal

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Al Qassimi has finished in 13m12.3s, and Hanninen is now in - but actually in quite a quick time.

He does have a left-rear puncture! That's a huge effort.
Hanninen stops the clock at 12m58.5s, which is very respectable. Still, he drops almost 30s to Latvala.

Mikkelsen continues to take time out of his team-mate's time, while Solberg, Neuville, and Sordo are all quicker through the first split.
Mikkelsen drops back from Latvala's benchmark in the final moments of the stage and ends up seven seconds slower.
Sordo and Ostberg look set to topple Latvala though, but there is only a few tenths between them at the second split!
And Ogier is quickest of anyone through the first checkpoint - but then Tanak shades him! Excellent.
Solberg comes through in 12m43.4s, which shows how impressive Latvala's end to the stage was. Solberg lost nine seconds!
Through comes Neuville, and he goes second ahead of Mikkelsen.
Sordo goes quickest, just eclipsing Latvala's time. But is Ostberg about to beat the Spaniard?

Neuville was less than a second faster than Mikkelsen.
Yep, Ostberg finishes the stage in 12m24.1s - that's a few seconds quicker than Sordo's 12m28.2s too.

Just 0.1s separated the pair before that stage. Great run from the Citroen man, who reckons he's "lacking in confidence" here as well.
Ogier, that's how you do it. The world champion pips Ostberg by 1.1s, and goes quick with his 12m23.0s.
What about Tanak and Hirvonen?

The Estonian was a tenth slower after the second split, with Hirvonen a bit further back.
Ogier is quickest so far, but he's not getting carried out: "I think it's quite fair for everyone. It looks like he [Tanak] is in a good ryhthm."
Tanak is 0.9s slower than Ogier - that's trimmed his advantage to 1.9s.
Hirvonen is second quickest - 12m23.2s from the rally leader. That's a 4.4s lead over Tanak now.

Mighty conclusion to that stage from the Finn!
"It was OK, Ogier was 0.2s faster which is good because we were a few seconds down," says Hirvonen.

So, was that cautious, with an eye on conserving his lead and making sure there are no silly errors? Not a chance!

"It's just flat out, you can't manage it. It's really flat out."

OK, so what about Ogier? He reckons he has a bit in hand...what about Hirvonen?

"If he does it, we have to do the same."

Fighting talk! We love it.
SS8 results:

1 Ogier 12m23.0s
2 Hirvonen +0.2s
3 Tanak +0.9s
4 Ostberg +1.1s
5 Sordo +5.2s
6 Latvala +5.7s

Overall leaderboard:

1 Hirvonen 1h37m28.8s
2 Tanak +4.4s
3 Ogier +6.3s
4 Ostberg +26.5s
5 Sordo +30.7s
6 Neuville +53.4s
So, that's nice and competitive isn't it?

It could all change in the next hour, though. We're not far from the start of the second stage of the day, Santana da Serra.

This will be 31.90km in length - the longest of the rally.


Pointless Rally Portugal fact - we are not at all far from a professional football stadium.

In fact, here's a picture of the other side of the service park…yes, our man DAVID EVANS scaled the fence to bring you a pitch-side view of Louletano Desportos's ground.

They play in the third division (the Portuguese name for that is quite long). The stadium is 10 years old this year, was built for Euro 2004 and hosted three matches.

When it's full, 30,002 people are sitting in there. AUTOSPORT Race Centre Live thinks the extra two makes all the difference.
For those busting a gut to know, Louletano play in the Campeonato Nacional de Seniores H Division. Told you it was long.

The Club was founded in 1923 and seven games into this campaign finds itself third in the table. You're welcome.
Anyway, WRC 2 update. The battle for the lead between Nassir Al-Attiyah and Jari Ketomaa continues.

The latter boosted his lead by 1.4s on that stage and now holds a 6.1s advantage.


Back to Louletano, but for rallying purposes (ish). Here's the Estadio Algarve being used "properly" (according to DAVID EVANS) in 2009.

Look at that crowd. If the stadium's capacity was only 30,000, it would look sparse. Instead, it's a hive of activity.
A momentary lull as we await some information to actually bring you! These longer runs are unkind to an as-it-happens service...
What we can tell you is Evans is running faster than Kubica after two splits, by about half a second, while Latvala is quicker - 2.5s up on Evans at the second checkpoint.
GP2 - Bahrain: Over in Bahrain, it's now time for the GP2 Series opener at Sakhir. Jolyon Palmer is on pole position for DAMS, but McLaren junior Stoffel Vandoorne pushed him hard in qualifying yesterday.

The big news overnight was Felipe Nasr's grid penalty, which has dropped the Williams F1 tester down to P11.
GP2 - Bahrain: Tyre degradation is going to the big issue in this race, and how long the soft-compound tyres will last in the heat of the desert. Air temperature is 27C with track temp at a whacking 54C.
GP2 - Bahrain: The frontrunners are all starting on the option tyre, which is the yellow sidewalled soft-compound. The hard tyre, which Pirelli thinks could actually run an entire race distance without issues, is being used by those towards the back of the grid, so expect some guys to run long, which always creates some traffic issues.
GP2 - Bahrain: The warm-up lap is underway, but without Simon Trummer who has stalled.
WRC - Portugal: We're approaching the end of Evans' run, so let's take a look at who is doing what on the stage.

Kubica is 2.7s down after four splits, while Latvala is almost 10s quicker at the same point.

Al Qassimi is well down, while Hanninen is a fraction quicker than Evans after two splits. Prokop's slower, but quicker than Al Qassimi, while Mikkelsen pops in through the first checkpoint a second quicker than Evans.
WRC - Portugal: Reports that Kubica, 20km into the stage, has stopped...
WRC - Portugal: Evans isn't massively happy after that run.

"Very very difficult and massive grip changes in there as well. We recced that stage in the worst possible conditions so with completely different notes I don't think that was very good for me."
GP2 - Bahrain: Palmer gets wheelspin on pole, so it's Vandoorne who leads from Richelmi, Haryanto and Evans.
WRC - Portugal: Kubica has definitely stopped, because Latvala is the next man through.

Solberg, Neuville and Sordo have all started the stage. Only the latter is significantly quicker than Evans at the first split.
GP2 - Bahrain: End of lap one, and it's Vandoorne from Richelmi and Coletti, as Evans passes Haryanto for fourth at Turn 1. Palmer and Nasr are duelling for sixth.
WRC - Portugal: Evans' time was 23m44.5s. Latvala, now in, says Kubica has no damage but was stuck at the side of the road.
GP2 - Bahrain: Richelmi attacks leader Vandoorne at Turn 1 at the start of lap two. Behind them, Palmer is attacking Haryanto. Evans is the fastest man on track.

Rookie Axcil Jefferies has just crashed out in quite spectacular style. The safety car is deployed.
GP2 - Bahrain: Race order under the safety car is Vandoorne, Richelmi, Coletti, Evans, Haryanto, Palmer and Nasr.

Replays of the Jefferies crash show that he was punted by Kimiya Sato, and crashed into the wall at high speed.
WRC - Portugal: Everyone is on the stage now. Ogier is quicker than Tanak and Hirvonen, but only a fraction faster than the rally leader. It's so close!

By: Dan Cross, David Evans, Scott Mitchell, Charles Bradley

Published: