WRC Croatia: Tanak overhauls Rovanpera for lead as sudden downpour strikes
Ott Tanak has overhauled Kalle Rovanpera to take a 1.4s lead into the final stage at Rally Croatia after a sudden downpour turned the rally on its head.


The Hyundai driver faced a 28.4s deficit to Rovanpera, who had led the rally from Friday’s first stage, heading into the penultimate stage when the heavens opened.
Tanak made the most of a superior tyre package - two wets, two softs - over Toyota’s Rovanpera - two wets, two hards - to reel in and claim the rally the lead in stunning fashion.
The 2019 WRC world champion managed to claw back 29.8s from Rovanpera in the treacherous conditions while his rival struggled to get heat into his hard rubber.
"I didn't know where this weather came from,” said Rovanpera.
“We had no idea there was going to be rain, and we cannot match him [Tanak] with these tyres. The hard is not working at all and there is not much more we can do.”
Rally Croatia is now set for a final stage showdown with Tanak holding a slender 1.4s advantage over Rovanpera. The power stage is currently dry but Tanak was faster than Rovanpera in the first pass of that test this morning.
With Tanak and Rovanpera the only Rally1 crews to have taken wet tyres, the rest of the field struggled in the desperately wet conditions and were reduced to crawl on slicks. Luckily all Rally1 crews reached the Stage 19 finish despite being on the wrong tyres.

Kalle Rovanperä, Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1
Photo by: Toyota Racing
In the end, WRC2 driver Emil Lindholm posted the second fastest time on the stage some 16.3s slower than Tanak, while Britain’s Chris Ingram was third fastest in his WRC2 Skoda.
Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville cemented his third spot overall as he completed the stage more than a minute faster than podium rival, M-Sport’s Craig Breen, who suffered a spin.
Neuville has a 1m42.4s margin over Breen heading into the last stage, while Toyota’s Elfyn Evans held firm in fifth ahead of team-mate Takamoto Katsuta.
The final stage is due to begin at 1218 BST.

WRC Croatia: Rovanpera extends lead as Tanak tyre gamble backfires
WRC Croatia: Rovanpera snatches win from Tanak in thrilling showdown

Latest news
Bourdais “surprised” Cadillac was beaten on pace in Daytona 24 Hours
Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac driver Sebastien Bourdais said he was surprised that the victorious Acura ARX-06 outperformed his new V-LMDh in the Daytona 24 Hours IMSA SportsCar Championship season opener.
Daytona 24: MSR Acura opens GTP era with win, Proton snatches LMP2 by 0.016s
Meyer Shank Racing scored its second consecutive victory in the Daytona 24 Hours in the first race for the IMSA SportsCar Championship's new GTP regulations, leading an Acura 1-2 finish.
Daytona 24, Hour 21: MSR Acura back in front with three hours left
The Meyer Shank Racing Acura was back in front with three hours remaining in the Daytona 24 Hours that opens the IMSA SportsCar season.
Ekstrom defeats Schumacher for fourth Race of Champions victory
Two-time DTM champion Mattias Ekstrom took his fourth Race of Champions title at Pite Havsbad in Sweden after defeating Mercedes Formula 1 reserve driver Mick Schumacher in the final.
How fired-up Ogier became the WRC's ultimate Monte master
He may only be contesting a part-time campaign in the World Rally Championship these days, but Sebastien Ogier underlined that he's lost none of his speed in the 2023 season opener. Storming to yet another victory on the Monte Carlo Rally, the eight-time world champion rewrote the history books again as Toyota served notice of its intentions with a crushing 1-2
How Lancia pulled off its famous Monte Carlo giantkilling
Audi should have been invincible in the snowy conditions that typically greeted the World Rally Championship paddock in Monte Carlo. But unexpectedly warm weather for the 1983 season opener, combined with some left-field thinking from the Lancia crew turned the tables. Forty years on, team boss Cesare Fiorio reflects on a smash and grab
Why M-Sport has pinned all its efforts on a WRC reunion
M-Sport had a disastrous 2022 with its Rally1 Ford Pumas following Sebastien Loeb’s first-time-out win on the Monte. But now things are looking up with 2019 world champion Ott Tanak leading its attack, and the Cumbrian operation has optimism that it can challenge for a first title since Sebastien Ogier's departure at the end of 2018
The contenders seeking to take Rovanpera's WRC crown
As Kalle Rovanpera begins his World Rally Championship title defence in Monte Carlo, the Finn knows he has a target on his back. But who is best placed to knock the Toyota ace off his perch?
Why Rovanpera is anticipating a fight to defend his WRC title
Question: what could be harder than becoming the youngest-ever World Rally champion? Answer: becoming the youngest-ever two-time World Rally champion. That's quite the challenge facing Toyota's Kalle Rovanpera in 2022, particularly against rejuvenated opposition in the second year of the WRC's hybrid regulations
From F1 to WRC: Why Hyundai's new boss could be an inspired signing
OPINION: New Hyundai WRC team boss Cyril Abiteboul admits he’s got a lot to learn as he leads the marque's efforts to dethrone Toyota. But could his Formula 1 experience and evident strengths mean he turns out to be an inspired choice?
The ultimate rally car project the WRC is glad COVID killed
Toyota was unstoppable in the 2021 World Rally Championship, with an excellent 75% strike rate from 12 rallies. But in a scary proposition for its rivals, the Japanese marque had built a car for the final year of the previous regulations set which it believes was much faster and could feasibly have crushed the opposition completely. Here the story of its mothballed world-beater
Autosport writers' most memorable moments of 2022
The season just gone was a memorable one for many of our staff writers, who are fortunate enough to cover motorsport around the world. Here are our picks of the best (and in some cases, most eventful) from 2022
Subscribe and access Autosport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
You have 2 options:
- Become a subscriber.
- Disable your adblocker.