海角直播

Evergreen Sainz holding back the sands of time to lead Dakar

Team Audi Sport鈥檚 Carlos Sainz and co-driver Lucas Cruz in action in 海角直播. (Reuters)
Team Audi Sport鈥檚 Carlos Sainz and co-driver Lucas Cruz in action in 海角直播. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 January 2024

Evergreen Sainz holding back the sands of time to lead Dakar

Evergreen Sainz holding back the sands of time to lead Dakar
  • Sainz has summoned all his guile and expertise to put himself in a prime position for a fourth overall title

RIYADH: Spanish sexagenarian Carlos Sainz is having the time of his life at this year鈥檚 Dakar Rally.
The 61-year-old three-time winner of motorsport鈥檚 toughest endurance test leads this year鈥檚 edition after a stamina-sapping first week in the 海角直播n sand by over 20 minutes.
Sainz has summoned all his guile and expertise to put himself in a prime position for a fourth overall title after the inaugural 48-hour two-part stage six in the kingdom鈥檚 Empty Quarter.
The father of Formula One driver Carlos Sainz finished the stage second to Sebastien Loeb to top the standings ahead of his Audi teammate Mattias Ekstrom to make him the man to beat going into the second week.
On Saturday鈥檚 rest day in Riyadh he told AFP he was 鈥減roud and happy鈥 after his performance behind the wheel of his Audi Hybrid since the start of the 2024 Dakar on January 5 in Al-Ula.
鈥淲e are better prepared than last year, the main priority is reliability,鈥 he noted, in reference to his team鈥檚 problem in that department over the past two Dakars.
鈥淲hen we have such a complex car it鈥檚 only normal to worry about something going wrong.鈥
While Sainz sailed through the Empty Quarter, the vast expanse of desert proved catastrophic for the title prospects of three of his arch-rivals: defending champion Nasser Al-Attiyah, the Qatari鈥檚 Prodrive teammate 海角直播n Yazeed Al-Rajhi, and record 14-time Dakar winner Stephane Peterhansel, a Frenchman who drives for Audi.
鈥淎nything can happen so quickly, you can easily lose half an hour,鈥 said Sainz.
鈥淚f you are behind a rival it鈥檚 easy to make up a lot of time on him by taking risks.
鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also a certainty that due to my experience, sooner or later you鈥檙e going to make a mistake or crash,鈥 he noted.
Sainz, a former Spanish squash champion, won two world rally titles before retiring from the WRC in 2005 to embark on a second career in off-road rallying.
He took 11th on his Dakar debut in 2006, winning in 2010, 2018 and 2020.
Despite all his success, he is on more than nodding terms with the flip side of the event, having to abandon it on no fewer than seven occasions, including last year.
While Peterhansel may hold the record for number of titles Sainz holds a proud record of his own. In 2020 aged 57 he became the oldest ever winner 鈥 a milestone he is hoping to break when this year鈥檚 edition wraps up in Yanbu on the Red Sea next Friday.
鈥淲e all want to win the Dakar,鈥 observed Sainz.
鈥淚 imagine that for Mattias (Ekstrom) or Sebastien (Loeb), who have never won it, finishing second or third is worth nothing in their eyes.
鈥淚 am sure they will take risks, that they will put a lot of pressure on me. I will defend as best as possible.鈥
He rates Loeb, runner up in the last two years, as 鈥渙ne of the best drivers in history鈥
鈥淚t is clear that one day or another he will win the Dakar, we have to postpone that moment,鈥 added the man nicknamed 鈥楨l Matador鈥.
After their well-earned time-out on Saturday, Sainz and company will fire up their engines again on Sunday for stage seven which includes a 483km special as they head to Al-Duwadimi.