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2011 Rallye Deutschland


FieldValue
name2011 Rallye Deutschland
native_name29. ADAC Rallye Deutschland
round9
championship2011 World Rally Championship season
previous_round2011 Rally Finland
next_round2011 Rally Australia
country
imageDani Sordo - 2011 Rallye Deutschland.jpg
rallybaseTrier, Germany
startdate19 August
enddate21 August 2011
stages19
stagekm359.59stagekm_note=
overallkm1245.96overallkm_note=
surfaceTarmac
driver1FRA Sébastien Ogier
team1FRA Citroën World Rally Team
teamsstart85
teamsfinish48

The 2011 Rallye Deutschland was the ninth round of the 2011 World Rally Championship season. The rally took place over 19–21 August, and was based in Trier, in the Rhineland-Palatinate state of Germany. The rally was also the sixth round of the Super 2000 World Rally Championship, and the fourth round of the WRC Academy.

Sébastien Ogier won his first tarmac rally, and became the first driver other than his team-mate Sébastien Loeb to win the rally since it became a world championship event in 2002. Ogier benefitted from a puncture suffered by Loeb on the last stage of Saturday's running, and eventually won by just under 40 seconds from Loeb. This also resulted in some controversial remarks by Sébastien Ogier claiming there is "justice in the sport" referencing his prior displeasure with his team's decision to have Ogier hold off while teammate Sébastien Loeb held the lead. Meanwhile, Dani Sordo finished third, taking the first podium for the Mini WRC Team since its return to the sport.

In the SWRC, Ott Tänak took a comfortable victory by over five minutes, while in the WRC Academy, Egon Kaur's perfect start to the season was ended, after he finished in eighth place. Craig Breen, who finished second to Kaur in the previous round in Finland, took his first victory in the class.

Results

Event standings

Pos.DriverCo-driverCarTimeDifferencePointsOverall272115121186421SWRC25181512108642WRC Academy302515121180421
1.FRA Sébastien OgierFRA Julien IngrassiaCitroën DS3 WRC3:32:15.90.0
2.FRA Sébastien LoebMON Daniel ElenaCitroën DS3 WRC3:32:55.739.8
3.ESP Dani SordoESP Carlos Del BarrioMini John Cooper Works WRC3:34:11.51:55.6
4.FIN Mikko HirvonenFIN Jarmo LehtinenFord Fiesta RS WRC3:34:59.62:43.7
5.NOR Petter SolbergGBR Chris PattersonCitroën DS3 WRC3:36:03.93:48.0
6.FIN Kimi RäikkönenFIN Kaj LindströmCitroën DS3 WRC3:39:40.57:24.6
7.NOR Henning SolbergAUT Ilka MinorFord Fiesta RS WRC3:40:01.87:45.9
8.POR Armindo AraújoPOR Miguel RamalhoMini John Cooper Works WRC3:41:45.79:29.8
9.NED Peter van Merksteijn Jr.BEL Erwin MombaertsCitroën DS3 WRC3:42:17.510:01.6
10.NED Dennis KuipersBEL Frédéric MiclotteFord Fiesta RS WRC3:42:24.910:09.0
1. (12.)EST Ott TänakEST Kuldar SikkFord Fiesta S20003:46:04.80.0
2. (16.)QAT Nasser Al-AttiyahITA Giovanni BernacchiniFord Fiesta S20003:51:43.45:38.6
3. (19.)HUN Frigyes TuránHUN Gábor ZsirosFord Fiesta S20003:54:08.18:03.3
4. (20.)FIN Juho HänninenFIN Mikko MarkkulaŠkoda Fabia S20003:57:41.911:37.1
5. (22.)EST Karl KruudaEST Martin JärveojaŠkoda Fabia S20004:00:56.614:51.8
6. (30.)CZE Martin ProkopCZE Jan TománekFord Fiesta S20004:12:50.926:46.1
7. (32.)GER Hermann GassnerGER Kathi WüstenhagenŠkoda Fabia S20004:19:04.232:59.4
8. (35.)POR Bernardo SousaPOR António CostaFord Fiesta S20004:20:56.734:51.9
9. (39.)DEU Felix HerboldDEU Michael KölbachFord Fiesta S20004:27:00.540:55.7
1.IRL Craig BreenGBR Gareth RobertsFord Fiesta R23:07:54.00.0
2.ESP Yeray LemesESP Rogelio PeñateFord Fiesta R23:08:09.115.1
3.ITA Andrea CrugnolaITA Roberto MomettiFord Fiesta R23:09:37.21:42.3
4.ESP José Antonio SuárezESP Cándido CarreraFord Fiesta R23:09:52.21:58.2
5.CZE Jan ČernýCZE Pavel KohoutFord Fiesta R23:10:20.02:26.0
6.SWE Fredrik ÅhlinSWE Bjorn NilssonFord Fiesta R23:11:02.53:08.5
7.DEU Sepp WiegandDEU Claudia HarloffFord Fiesta R23:11:49.83:55.8
8.EST Egon KaurEST Erik LepiksonFord Fiesta R23:12:21.74:27.7
9.GBR Alastair FisherGBR Daniel BarrittFord Fiesta R23:14:04.36:10.3
10.NED Timo van der MarelNED Erwin BerkhofFord Fiesta R23:14:27.86:33.8

:† – The WRC Academy featured the first two days of the rally.

Special stages

DayStageTimeNameLengthWinnerTimeAvg. spd.Rally leaderLeg 1
(19 August)SS110:13SS211:26SS312:14SS415:07SS516:20SS617:08Leg 2
(20 August)SS78:18SS89:31SS910:29SS1011:02SS1115:18SS1216:31SS1317:29SS1418:02Leg 3
(21 August)SS158:13SS168:56SS1711:29SS1812:12SS1914:11
Ruwertal / Fell 124.18 kmFIN Jari-Matti Latvala13:57.4103.95 km/hFIN Jari-Matti Latvala
Grafschaft Veldenz 122.47 kmFRA Sébastien Ogier13:18.9101.25 km/hFRA Sébastien Ogier
Moselland 119.92 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb12:15.197.55 km/hFRA Sébastien Loeb
Ruwertal / Fell 224.18 kmFRA Sébastien Ogier13:50.3104.84 km/h
Grafschaft Veldenz 222.47 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb12:51.5104.85 km/h
Moselland 219.92 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb12:01.999.34 km/h
Hermeskeil / Gusenburg 111.37 kmFIN Jari-Matti Latvala6:12.9109.77 km/h
Bosenberg 114.29 kmFRA Sébastien Ogier8:25.5101.77 km/h
Birkenfelder Land 115.23 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb8:35.5106.36 km/h
Arena Panzerplatte 134.18 kmFRA Sébastien Ogier19:55.3102.94 km/h
Hermeskeil / Gusenburg 211.37 kmFRA Sébastien Ogier6:09.1110.90 km/h
Bosenberg 214.29 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb8:23.8102.11 km/h
Birkenfelder Land 215.23 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb8:36.5106.15 km/h
Arena Panzerplatte 234.18 kmFRA Sébastien Ogier19:49.2103.47 km/hFRA Sébastien Ogier
Dhrontal 120.85 kmFIN Mikko Hirvonen12:17.2101.82 km/h
Moselwein 115.12 kmFIN Jari-Matti Latvala9:16.597.81 km/h
Dhrontal 220.85 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb12:32.199.80 km/h
Moselwein 215.12 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb9:31.495.26 km/h
SSS Circus Maximus Trier (Power stage)4.37 kmFRA Sébastien Loeb3:17.479.70 km/h

Power Stage

The "Power stage" was a live, televised 4.37 km stage at the end of the rally, held in Trier.

PosDriverTimeDiff.Avg. speedPoints132231
FRA Sébastien Loeb3:17.40.079.70 km/h
FRA Sébastien Ogier3:19.4+2.078.90 km/h
NOR Petter Solberg3:20.4+3.078.50 km/h

References

References

  1. (2 August 2011). "Itinerary". [[World Rally Championship]]; [[International Sportsworld Communicators]].
  2. (21 August 2011). "Ogier wins in Germany". [[International Sportsworld Communicators]].
  3. (20 August 2011). "Puncture costs Loeb his rally lead". [[International Sportsworld Communicators]].
  4. (20 August 2011). "Breen takes maiden win". [[International Sportsworld Communicators]].
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