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Championship Standings
 
2003 Championship
After 14 of 14 Rounds
 
Drivers Points
1 Petter Solberg 72
2 Sebastian Loeb 71
3 Carlos Sainz 63
4 Richard Burns 58
5 Markko Martin 49
Full Details...
 
Manufacturers Points
1 Citroen 160
2 Peugeot 145
3 Subaru 109
4 Ford 93
5 Hyundai 12
Full Details...
 
2003|NEWS
TELSTRA RALLY AUSTRALIA

FAULTLESS LOIX DRIVE GIVES HYUNDAI POINTS BOOST
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Manufacturer: Hyundai
Press Release Type: Event Wrap

The Hyundai World Rally Team crew Freddy Loix and Sven Smeets came home in eighth position taking points for the Korean manufacturer for the third consecutive event, after a faultless drive on Rally Australia. A confident and determined drive for team-mates Armin Schwarz and Manfred Hiemer rewarded the German crew with 13th place overall.

Hyundai’s Belgian crew had an excellent rally on which very few frontrunners either retired or incurred disabling problems and a trouble-free run for all three days permitted the pair to scoop up two more valuable points for Hyundai. Freddy and Sven set a string of top ten stage times that were competitive enough to stay well ahead of their main rivals – the Fords of Duval and Hirvonen and both Skodas.

Loix complained of a slight lack of top-end power on the first day but it did not prevent the Belgian from steadily working his way up the leaderboard and to achieve a much sought-after first driver point along with those towards the manufacturers championship.

“I’m absolutely delighted to get a driver point at last and of course it’s a great result for the team,” said a smiling Freddy. “For sure it has been a difficult event and having not finished for the last two years I was getting quite nervous today, especially in the last stage which wet and very, very slippery. But it’s good to get to the finish and to score good points.”

Adding to his comment about points, Freddy said: “Of course I always want the team to do well. They are a fantastic team to work with and I’m happy to have been able to score some more points to make all their hard work worthwhile. But I have also been waiting a long time to score some driver points. I thought we would get one earlier in the year and to be honest I really didn’t think we would do it in Australia so I’m very pleased that the wait is over!”

German team-mates Armin Schwarz and co-driver Manfred Hiemer had a more frustrating event as handling difficulties plagued them throughout but grit and determination saw the pair reach the finish on what was an incredibly difficult event.

“To be honest, I’m relieved to get to the finish,” said Armin. “This rally has been very hard for us and we spent most of it playing around with the settings to try and improve the way the car was handling for me. After last year though, at least we both got to the finish.”

Looking ahead to the next month with three asphalt events looming, Freddy commented: “I really don’t know what will happen on the tarmac rallies. It won’t be easy but then we had a surprise in Germany in the rain. If we have the same weather in Italy, Corsica and Catalunya then it could be okay but if it is dry then it will be difficult.”

News from our rivals
Misfortune struck for Markko Martin (Ford) as he was excluded for an infringement on FIA WRC regulations at the end of leg two. The sport’s regulations stipulate that ballast must be fixed and placed on the floor of the cockpit and at the end of leg two Martin was found to have a rock located in the spare wheel well at the rear of the car. The crew had placed it there when the mechanism holding the spare wheel in place had broken and the rock was to provide the same function to enable them to continue the rally.

The fight at the head of the leaderboard was close and exciting for the second two days between eventual winner Petter Solberg (Subaru) and Sebastien Loeb who was fighting within seconds of his Norwegian rival, with both trading fastest stage times. After stalling on the penultimate stage of the event, Loeb put his wise head on and decided to drive comfortably to second place rather than take unnecessary risks for a victory.

Loeb’s second place promotes Citroën into the first manufacturer spot, joint with French rivals Peugeot, and Solberg’s win launches Subaru unto a comfortable advantage over Ford, with whom they were tied on points.

Next Round
The eleventh round of the 2003 FIA World Rally Championship sees a return to Europe for the first of three back-to-back asphalt rallies, Rallye Sanremo, based out of the Italian Mediterranean coastal town of Sanremo running from 3-5 October.

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Calendar 2003

71st Rallye Automobile Monte-CarloEvent Dates: 23 Jan 2003 - 26 Jan 2003
Uddeholm Swedish RallyEvent Dates: 05 Feb 2003 - 09 Feb 2003
Rally of TurkeyEvent Dates: 26 Feb 2003 - 02 Mar 2003
Propecia Rally New ZealandEvent Dates: 09 Apr 2003 - 13 Apr 2003
Rally ArgentinaEvent Dates: 08 May 2003 - 11 May 2003
Acropolis RallyEvent Dates: 04 Jun 2003 - 08 Jun 2003
Cyprus RallyEvent Dates: 18 Jun 2003 - 22 Jun 2003
ADAC Rallye DeutschlandEvent Dates: 23 Jul 2003 - 27 Jul 2003
Neste Rally FinlandEvent Dates: 07 Aug 2003 - 10 Aug 2003
Telstra Rally AustraliaEvent Dates: 04 Sep 2003 - 07 Sep 2003
Rallye Sanremo - Rallye dItaliaEvent Dates: 01 Oct 2003 - 05 Oct 2003
Tour de Corse - Rallye de FranceEvent Dates: 15 Oct 2003 - 19 Oct 2003
Rallye Catalunya Costa BravaEvent Dates: 22 Oct 2003 - 26 Oct 2003
Wales Rally GBEvent Dates: 06 Nov 2003 - 09 Nov 2003

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