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Acropolis Rally
Rally competition in Greece
Rally competition in Greece
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Acropolis Rally |
| native_name | Ράλι Ακρόπολις |
| image | Rally Acropolis 2011-SS3.jpg |
| caption | Sébastien Ogier driving a Citroën DS3 WRC at the 2011 Acropolis Rally |
| status | active |
| genre | motorsporting event |
| date | May - June, September |
| frequency | annual |
| area | Attica, Fthiotis, Phokis, Corinthia |
| location | Athens, Lamia, Loutraki |
| country | GRE Greece |
| first | |
| founder_name | ELPA |
| website |
The Acropolis Rally of Greece () is a rally competition that is part of the World Rally Championship (WRC). The rally is held on very dusty, rough, rocky and fast mountain roads in mainland Greece, usually during the Greek hot summer period. The rally is known for its harsh roads and its temperatures.
History
The Acropolis Rally has been held since 1951 by the Greek Motorsports Organization Automobile and Touring Club of Greece (ELPA), making it one of the longest-standing competitions in world rallying. Many world renown drivers have won this event including Walter Röhrl, Björn Waldegård, Ari Vatanen, Stig Blomqvist, Juha Kankkunen, Carlos Sainz and Colin McRae, among others.
Due to the nature of the race, with a mix of rough, twisty, fast mountain stages and coupled with blistering heat and choking dust, the Acropolis Rally is one of the toughest on the European and World Rally circuits. The cars used in the race must be built with extra sturdiness in order to cope with the fast but rock-strewn stages. Drivers and co-drivers also have to contend with the pounding terrain and high summer temperatures which often reached 50 °C within the cockpit. Many drivers rate the event as a test of skill, patience, bravery and endurance in the past, going as far as comparing the Acropolis with the infamous Safari Rally.
In August 2020, rumours started to emerge about the possible return of the rally to the World Rally Championship. Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis assured that the government was ready to support the organizers financially. In late December of the same year, the Hellenic Ministry of Sport agreed with the Organizing Committee for Motorsport to revive the Acropolis Rally.
In March 2021, it was officially announced that the Acropolis Rally of Gods would return for the 2021 World Rally Championship, taking place in September of the same year, with Lamia as the host city.
Stages
The Acropolis Rally started out as a marathon/endurance type event back in the early 1950s. When the rally became part of the World Rally Championship after 1973, the crews had to face up to 800 competitive kilometers, in some of the most gruelling stages and conditions imaginable. This trip involved locations all over Greece up to the late 1980s, such as the more known Kalambaka and Meteora, stages near Mount Olympus, Attica, Central Greece, and even down south in the Peloponnese. The traditional start always took place under the legendary Acropolis in Athens, and the finish ceremony was carried out in the Panathenaic stadium.
With rallies ever so shrinking due to the new demands of the World Rally Championship and transitioning to "sprint" type events, the Acropolis Rally followed suit, basing the whole rally in certain areas and using stages nearby. The classic rally headquarters in the 1990s and early 2000s were the cities of Lamia and Itea.
In 2005, the rally headquarters and the service park moved to the Athens Olympic Sports Complex. In the 2007 edition, the rally headquarters and the service park moved to the Markopoulo Olympic Equestrian Centre. In 2008, the headquarters where situated at the Tatoi military airport, and that was the last time since that the rally was based in Attica, and that special stages were used in that area. In 2009 the rally headquarters and the service park were moved to Loutraki near the Corinth Canal, with stages in Argolis and Corinthia used for the rally. For the 2016 ERC Season, the event returned to Lamia. The 2026 edition will be held again in Loutraki.
Classic stages
The best stages in Greece are undoubtedly in the Phthiotis and Phokis regions, mainly around the Parnassus and Giona mountains. Recently used stages like Bauxites/Karoutes, Drosohori, Pavliani, Kaloskopi, Elatia, Rengini, Eleftherohori and Moschokarya are favorites amongst drivers and fans alike, due to their fast and flowing nature, allowing the cars to reach their full potential, in a rally where it is otherwise risky to push hard, due to the hard surface which can damage the cars heavily. The same goes for other famous rally stages in Greece, like the Kineta and Aghi Theodori stages around the Geraneia mountains in Corinthia, Prodromos, Livadeia and Thiva in Boeotia, Parnonas in mainland Peloponnese. Other honorable mentions include the fast and beautiful Parnitha stage, the car breaker Ymitos, plus the Assopia and Aghia Sotira stages in Attica, as well as the spectacular Meteora stage which was last used in the late 1980s in the longer version of the rally. Several stages feature significant archeological landmarks like the "Klenia-Mycenae" stage which includes the archeological site of Mycenae.
Many classic special stages (f.e. Grammeni Oxia, Gardiki, Hani Zagana, Evangelistria, Prodromos, Aliki, Loukissia) were asphalt paved at some point in the past, so they are no longer used in the Acropolis Rally, since it is a mainly gravel-based event.
The "Tarzan" test in Evrytania
This special stage, originally called the Fourna and Rentina test, is an unusually difficult 30.3 km test. The name "Tarzan" originates from Giorgos Burgos, who was from Fourna in Evritania, lived in Athens and was a police officer. He suffered from tuberculosis and was given a few months to live. He then moved to Fourna, and reached the age of 92. The Acropolis rally passed through the hut of Giorgos, whose nickname was "Tarzan", from the 22nd edition of the rally in 1975. At that time the special route was called "Fourna". The stage first appeared under the new name "Tarzan" in the 26th Acropolis Rally in 1979, in honor of Giorgos Bourgos, a local resident and rally fan. The presence of the full stage in the rally was continuous until the 42nd running of the event in 1995. For its last four years the route was renamed "Rentina-Tarzan", after using the second half of the classic 30,3 km (finishing in Tsoukka).
In the Acropolis Rally of 2003, when the event reached its 50th anniversary, a shortened 20.65 km version of the stage, called "New Tarzan", was held twice, paying tribute to the route's legacy in the event.
Didier Auriol in June 1991, dismantled a wheelrim and his suspension there, losing the lead and the overall victory in the race. Nevertheless, he later stated that "Tarzan" was his favorite Acropolis Rally special stage.
The Tarzan stage returns in the 2021 Acropolis Rally, as the Power Stage of the event, together with many other classic tests.
Super Special Stages
The Rally is also known for having used great Super Special Stages over the years.
This trend started with the Marlboro Super Stage held in the city of Anavissos, south of Athens, in the early 1990s. After the event base moved to Itea and Lamia in the early 2000s, a Super Special Stage was used in the outskirts of Lilea Parnassos. In 2005 a new stage was introduced; a superspecial stage held within the Athens Olympic Stadium. The Super Special Stage (SSS) was the highlight of the rally as well as the 2005 WRC schedule and in the same year, the Acropolis Rally was awarded the “Rally of the Year” title. It was loved by drivers and fans alike, as the packed stadium provided an "arena" feeling to the stage.
In 2006 there were 2 superspecials, again in the same stadium. The rally headquarters and the service park also moved from Lamia to the Athens Olympic Sports Complex. In the 2007 event, the superspecial (along with the rally headquarters and the service park) moved to the Markopoulo Olympic Equestrian Centre. In 2008 the super special stage was held twice at the Tatoi military airport. In 2018, a superspecial was based again in the Markopoulo Olympic Equestrian Centre.
In the 2022 event, the rally made a return to the Athens Olympic Stadium for the rally-opening super special stage.
Winners






| Year | Driver | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Co-driver | Car | Championship | |
| 1951 | GRE Petros Peratikos | ITA Fiat 1400 | |
| 1952 | GRE Johnny Pesmatzoglou | USA Chevrolet Deluxe | (as ELPA Rally) |
| 1953 | GRE Nikos Papamichail | GRB Jaguar XK120 | |
| 1954 | GRE Pétros Papadópoulos | GER Opel Rekord | |
| 1955 | GRE Johnny Pesmatzoglou | GER Opel Kapitän | |
| 1956 | FRG Walter Shock | GER Mercedes-Benz 300 SL | |
| 1957 | FRA Jean-Pierre Estager | ITA Ferrari 250 GT | |
| 1958 | ITA Luigi Villoresi | ITA Lancia Aurelia B20 GT | |
| 1959 | FRG Wolfgang Levy | GER Auto Union 1000 | |
| 1960 | FRG Walter Shock | ||
| FRG Rolf Moll | GER Mercedes-Benz 220 SE | ERC | |
| 1961 | SWE Erik Carlsson | ||
| SWE Walter Karlsson | SWE Saab 96 | ERC | |
| 1962 | FRG Eugen Böhringer | ||
| FRG Peter Lang | GER Mercedes-Benz 220 SE | ERC | |
| 1963 | FRG Eugen Böhringer | ||
| FRG Rolf Knoll | GER Mercedes-Benz 300 SE | ERC | |
| 1964 | SWE Tom Trana | ||
| SWE Gunnar Thermanius | SWE Volvo PV 544 | ERC | |
| 1965 | SWE Carl-Magnus Skogh | ||
| SWE Lennart Berggren | SWE Volvo Amazon 122S | ERC | |
| 1966 | SWE Bengt Söderström | ||
| SWE Gunnar Palm | GBR Ford Cortina Lotus | ERC | |
| 1967 | GBR Paddy Hopkirk | ||
| GBR Ron Crellin | GBR Mini Cooper S | ERC | |
| 1968 | GBR Roger Clark | ||
| GBR Jim Porter | USA Ford Escort Twin Cam | ERC | |
| 1969 | FIN Pauli Toivonen | ||
| FIN Martti Kolari | GER Porsche 911 S | ||
| 1970 | FRA Jean-Luc Thérier | ||
| FRA Marcel Callewaert | FRA Alpine-Renault A110 1600 | IMC | |
| 1971 | SWE Ove Andersson | ||
| SWE Arne Hertz | FRA Alpine-Renault A110 1600 | IMC | |
| 1972 | SWE Håkan Lindberg | ||
| ITA Helmut Eisendle | ITA Fiat 124 Sport Spider | IMC | |
| 1973 | FRA Jean-Luc Thérier | ||
| BEL Christian Delferrier | FRA Alpine-Renault A110 1800 | WRC | |
| 1974 | Event cancelled due to the oil crisis. | ||
| 1975 | FRG Walter Röhrl | ||
| FRG Jochen Berger | GER Opel Ascona 1.9 SR | WRC | |
| 1976 | SWE Harry Källström | ||
| SWE Claes-Göran Andersson | JPN Datsun Violet 160J | WRC | |
| 1977 | SWE Björn Waldegård | ||
| SWE Hans Thorszelius | USA Ford Escort RS 1800 | WRC | |
| 1978 | FRG Walter Röhrl | ||
| FRG Christian Geistdörfer | ITA Fiat 131 Abarth | WRC | |
| 1979 | SWE Björn Waldegård | ||
| SWE Hans Thorszelius | USA Ford Escort RS 1800 | WRC | |
| 1980 | FIN Ari Vatanen | ||
| GBR David Richards | USA Ford Escort RS 1800 | WRC | |
| 1981 | FIN Ari Vatanen | ||
| GBR David Richards | USA Ford Escort RS 1800 | WRC | |
| 1982 | FRA Michèle Mouton | ||
| ITA Fabrizia Pons | GER Audi Quattro | WRC | |
| 1983 | FRG Walter Röhrl | ||
| FRG Christian Geistdörfer | ITA Lancia 037 Rally | WRC | |
| 1984 | SWE Stig Blomqvist | ||
| SWE Björn Cederberg | GER Audi Quattro A2 | WRC | |
| 1985 | FIN Timo Salonen | ||
| FIN Seppo Harjanne | FRA Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 E2 | WRC | |
| 1986 | FIN Juha Kankkunen | ||
| FIN Juha Piironen | FRA Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 E2 | WRC | |
| 1987 | FIN Markku Alén | ||
| FIN Ilkka Kivimäki | ITA Lancia Delta HF 4WD | WRC | |
| 1988 | ITA Miki Biasion | ||
| ITA Tiziano Siviero | ITA Lancia Delta HF Integrale | WRC | |
| 1989 | ITA Miki Biasion | ||
| ITA Tiziano Siviero | ITA Lancia Delta HF Integrale | WRC | |
| 1990 | ESP Carlos Sainz | ||
| ESP Luis Moya | JPN Toyota Celica GT-Four | WRC | |
| 1991 | FIN Juha Kankkunen | ||
| FIN Juha Piironen | ITA Lancia Delta HF Integrale 16v | WRC | |
| 1992 | FRA Didier Auriol | ||
| FRA Bernard Occelli | ITA Lancia Delta HF Integrale | WRC | |
| 1993 | ITA Miki Biasion | ||
| ITA Tiziano Siviero | USA Ford Escort RS Cosworth | WRC | |
| 1994 | ESP Carlos Sainz | ||
| ESP Luis Moya | JPN Subaru Impreza 555 | WRC | |
| 1995 | GRE Aris Vovos | ||
| GRE Kostas Stefanis | ITA Lancia Delta HF Integrale | FIA 2-Litre Cup | |
| 1996 | SCO Colin McRae | ||
| SCO Derek Ringer | JPN Subaru Impreza 555 | WRC | |
| 1997 | ESP Carlos Sainz | ||
| ESP Luis Moya | USA Ford Escort WRC | WRC | |
| 1998 | SCO Colin McRae | ||
| WAL Nicky Grist | JPN Subaru Impreza S4 WRC '98 | WRC | |
| 1999 | ENG Richard Burns | ||
| SCO Robert Reid | JPN Subaru Impreza S5 WRC '99 | WRC | |
| 2000 | SCO Colin McRae | ||
| WAL Nicky Grist | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 00 | WRC | |
| 2001 | SCO Colin McRae | ||
| WAL Nicky Grist | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 01 | WRC | |
| 2002 | SCO Colin McRae | ||
| WAL Nicky Grist | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 01 | WRC | |
| 2003 | EST Markko Märtin | ||
| GBR Michael Park | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 03 | WRC | |
| 2004 | NOR Petter Solberg | ||
| WAL Phil Mills | JPN Subaru Impreza S10 WRC '04 | WRC | |
| 2005 | FRA Sébastien Loeb | ||
| MON Daniel Elena | FRA Citroën Xsara WRC | WRC | |
| 2006 | FIN Marcus Grönholm | ||
| FIN Timo Rautiainen | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 06 | WRC | |
| 2007 | FIN Marcus Grönholm | ||
| FIN Timo Rautiainen | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 06 | WRC | |
| 2008 | FRA Sébastien Loeb | ||
| MON Daniel Elena | FRA Citroën C4 WRC | WRC | |
| 2009 | FIN Mikko Hirvonen | ||
| FIN Jarmo Lehtinen | USA Ford Focus RS WRC 09 | WRC | |
| 2010 | Not held | ||
| 2011 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | FRA Citroën DS3 WRC | WRC | |
| 2012 | FRA Sébastien Loeb | ||
| MON Daniel Elena | FRA Citroën DS3 WRC | WRC | |
| 2013 | FIN Jari-Matti Latvala | ||
| FIN Miikka Anttila | GER Volkswagen Polo R WRC | WRC | |
| 2014 | IRL Craig Breen | ||
| GBR Scott Martin | FRA Peugeot 208 T16 R5 | ERC | |
| 2015 | POL Kajetan Kajetanowicz | ||
| POL Jarosław Baran | USA Ford Fiesta R5 | ERC | |
| 2016 | LVA Ralfs Sirmacis | ||
| LVA Arturs Šimins | CZE Škoda Fabia R5 | ERC | |
| 2017 | POL Kajetan Kajetanowicz | ||
| POL Jarosław Baran | USA Ford Fiesta R5 | ERC | |
| 2018 | PRT Bruno Magalhães | ||
| PRT Hugo Magalhães | CZE Škoda Fabia R5 | ERC | |
| 2019 and 2020 | Not held | ||
| 2021 | FIN Kalle Rovanperä | ||
| FIN Jonne Halttunen | JPN Toyota Yaris WRC | WRC | |
| 2022 | BEL Thierry Neuville | ||
| BEL Martijn Wydaeghe | KOR Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | WRC | |
| 2023 | FIN Kalle Rovanperä | ||
| FIN Jonne Halttunen | JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | WRC | |
| 2024 | BEL Thierry Neuville | ||
| BEL Martijn Wydaeghe | KOR Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | WRC | |
| 2025 | EST Ott Tänak | ||
| EST Martin Järveoja | KOR Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | WRC |
| Nation | Driver | Co-Driver | Manufacturers | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FIN | 12 | 10 | ||
| SWE | 10 | 9 | 2 | |
| FRA | 9 | 3 | 3 | |
| GER | 8 | 6 | 6 | |
| GRE | 6 | 6 | ||
| SCO | 6 | 1 | ||
| WAL | 4 | 5 | ||
| ITA | 4 | 1 | 3 | |
| ESP | 3 | 3 | ||
| GBR | 2 | 6 | 3 | |
| BEL | 2 | 2 | ||
| POL | 2 | 2 | ||
| PRT | 1 | 1 | ||
| ENG | 1 | |||
| IRL | 1 | |||
| LAT | 1 | |||
| MON | 3 | |||
| JPN | 3 | |||
| CZE | 2 | |||
| KOR | 1 | |||
| USA | 1 |
Number of victories per driver and manufacturer (WRC only)
Since 1973, the first WRC season.
| # Wins | Driver (24) | Years won | 5 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK Colin McRae | 1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002 | |||||
| DEU Walter Röhrl | 1975, 1978, 1983 | |||||
| ITA Miki Biasion | 1988, 1989, 1993 | |||||
| ESP Carlos Sainz | 1990, 1994, 1997 | |||||
| FRA Sébastien Loeb | 2005, 2008, 2012 | |||||
| SWE Björn Waldegård | 1977, 1979 | |||||
| FIN Ari Vatanen | 1980, 1981 | |||||
| FIN Juha Kankkunen | 1986, 1991 | |||||
| FIN Marcus Grönholm | 2006, 2007 | |||||
| FIN Kalle Rovanperä | 2021, 2023 | |||||
| BEL Thierry Neuville | 2022, 2024 | |||||
| FRA Jean-Luc Thérier | 1973 | |||||
| SWE Harry Källström | 1976 | |||||
| FRA Michèle Mouton | 1982 | |||||
| SWE Stig Blomqvist | 1984 | |||||
| FIN Timo Salonen | 1985 | |||||
| FIN Markku Alén | 1987 | |||||
| FRA Didier Auriol | 1992 | |||||
| UK Richard Burns | 1999 | |||||
| EST Markko Märtin | 2003 | |||||
| NOR Petter Solberg | 2004 | |||||
| FIN Mikko Hirvonen | 2009 | |||||
| FRA Sébastien Ogier | 2011 | |||||
| FIN Jari-Matti Latvala | 2013 | |||||
| EST Ott Tänak | 2025 |
| # Wins | Manufacturer (13) | Years won | 13 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA Ford | 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1993, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009 | ||||||||
| ITA Lancia | 1983, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992 | ||||||||
| JPN Subaru | 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2004 | ||||||||
| FRA Citroën | 2005, 2008, 2011, 2012 | ||||||||
| JPN Toyota | 1990, 2021, 2023 | ||||||||
| KOR Hyundai | 2022, 2024, 2025 | ||||||||
| GER Audi | 1982, 1984 | ||||||||
| FRA Peugeot | 1985, 1986 | ||||||||
| FRA Alpine-Renault | 1973 | ||||||||
| GER Opel | 1975 | ||||||||
| JPN Datsun | 1976 | ||||||||
| ITA Fiat | 1978 | ||||||||
| GER Volkswagen | 2013 |
References
References
- Pouliopoulos, George. (2021-09-01). "Acropolis Rally: Best spots in central Greece to catch the action".
- *[http://www.acropolisrally.gr Acropolis Rally 2011]
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