Porsche takes first ever win in the Roger Albert Clark Rally

Yorkshire rally driver Ryan Champion and co-driver Craig Thorley overcame extreme weather conditions as well as strong opposition to win the gruelling five-day Roger Albert Clark Rally at the weekend.

Champion, from Castleton, along with York co-driver Craig Thorley, brought their Tuthill prepared Porsche 911 over the finish ramp in Carmarthen late on Monday afternoon to win by more than four minutes and in doing so, became the first Porsche ever to take victory in the event, which was inaugurated in 2004.

The bi-annual event, which replicates the Lombard RAC Rallies of the 1970s and 1980s, saw 139 crews, mainly in period cars and limited to two-wheel drive, converge on the Carlisle start last Thursday afternoon before four stages in Kielder Forest in darkness. The opening loop claimed a couple of leading names but saw Champion and Thorley return to the overnight halt in fourth overall and leading their class.

Friday’s action returned to the southernmost part of Kielder Forest with eight further stages during the day, but the arrival of Storm Arwen caused the event to be temporarily suspended as crews, officials, marshals, and spectators were stranded in the forests. Champion maintained his fourth place overall.

Saturday’s proposed leg into Scotland was cancelled whilst the various rally personnel were extracted from the forests, including many competitors who had to spend the night in their rally cars until snow-covered road and fallen trees could be cleared.

With the worst of the storm having passed, the organisers restarted the rally on Sunday where the remaining crews tackled six of the classic Welsh forests. There, Champion climbed to third overall when rally leader Jason Pritchard crashed out during the day meaning the Yorkshire crew were hoping to hang on to a podium place on the final leg on Monday.

Five final tests awaited the crews in Walters Arena and Crychan and with a typical sting in the tail, it saw the two leading cars of Osian Price and Paul Barrett retire, which handed the lead to Champion, from where he made no mistakes to claim one of the biggest victories of his and long-term friend and co-driver Thorley’s illustrious careers.

Despite the loss of a third of the stage miles due to the inclement weather, the crews covered nearly 227 miles of stages in the forests with Champion’s winning time being four hours, 13 minutes, and ten seconds of competitive rallying. The focus now shifts to the 2023 event where the organisers hope that sufficient allocation of forestry roads will be available in Yorkshire as the region has had to miss out in recent years due to the lack of availability. Hopefully this year’s winner, who lives on the North York Moors, might be able to defend his title partly on home territory.

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