Toyota Gazoo Racing enjoyed a good stage 3 at Dakar 2025 when South African Henk Lategan extended his advantage in the overall car standings on Tuesday.
His young teammate and compatriot Saood Variawa made up for the Monday crash that threatened his further participation by bouncing back to score his maiden Dakar stage win.
Staving off a late challenge from the X-raid Mini entry of Guerlain Chicherit, Variawa reached the finish line with a 33-second margin to become the youngest Dakar stage winner at the age of 19.
Guillaume de Mevius was third in another Mini. Five-time Dakar winner Nasser Al-Attiyah was sixth in the Dacia Sandrider, with the top Ford Raptor driver, Mattias Ekstrom, in seventh.
Toyota Gazoo Hilux driver Giniel de Villiers was 10th, with teammate Lategan in 12th which was enough to retain the overall lead by 17min 17sec over Al-Attiyah and 9min 34 sec over Ekstrom.
SA's Variawa bounces back from crash to win his first Dakar Rally stage
Teammate Henk Lategan retains overall car lead in a Toyota Gazoo Hilux
Image: Supplied
Toyota Gazoo Racing enjoyed a good stage 3 at Dakar 2025 when South African Henk Lategan extended his advantage in the overall car standings on Tuesday.
His young teammate and compatriot Saood Variawa made up for the Monday crash that threatened his further participation by bouncing back to score his maiden Dakar stage win.
Staving off a late challenge from the X-raid Mini entry of Guerlain Chicherit, Variawa reached the finish line with a 33-second margin to become the youngest Dakar stage winner at the age of 19.
Guillaume de Mevius was third in another Mini. Five-time Dakar winner Nasser Al-Attiyah was sixth in the Dacia Sandrider, with the top Ford Raptor driver, Mattias Ekstrom, in seventh.
Toyota Gazoo Hilux driver Giniel de Villiers was 10th, with teammate Lategan in 12th which was enough to retain the overall lead by 17min 17sec over Al-Attiyah and 9min 34 sec over Ekstrom.
Toyota Gazoo Racing SA confident it can win Dakar Rally 2025
Nine-times world rally champion Sebastien Loeb rolled his Dacia in the Saudi desert on Tuesday as the Dakar Rally continued to take a toll of the big names after the exit of 2024 winner Carlos Sainz. Sainz turned his Ford upside down on Sunday, dealing too much damage to the car's roll cage to continue after just two stages.
Loeb, who had started the day sixth, and co-driver Fabian Lurquin were unhurt in the incident 12km into the third 327km stage from Bisha to Al-Henakiyah and resumed after making repairs.
They stopped again at the 63km mark, however, and finished the stage trailing Lategan by an hour and 14 minutes and dropping out of the top 15 in a big blow to their hopes of a first Dakar win.
The two-week rally, regarded as the world's toughest endurance event and now held entirely in Saudi Arabia, ends on January 17.
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