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Rally de Portugal
Portuguese rally competition
Portuguese rally competition
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Rally de Portugal |
| status | active |
| genre | motorsporting event |
| frequency | annual |
| country | Portugal |
| first | 1967 |
The Rally de Portugal (formerly: Rallye de Portugal) is a rally competition held in Portugal. First held in 1967, the seventh running of the race, the 7º TAP Rallye de Portugal was the third event in the inaugural FIA World Rally Championship in 1973. The rally remained on the WRC calendar for the next 29 years, and after being dropped for 2002–2006, the event returned to Portugal in 2007. During the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s, Rally de Portugal was a mixed event between asphalt and gravel. Currently it is an all-gravel event.
Rally de Portugal has been awarded "The Best Rally in the World" five times and in 2000 "The Most Improved Rally of the Year". The most successful driver in the history of the rally is Sébastien Ogier, who has won the event seven times (2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2024 and 2025).
History
The Rally of Portugal was extremely popular but also infamous due to poor crowd control. During the 1970s and especially the 1980s, Portugal was known for spectators standing on the roadway even as the cars drove by, often resulting in near-collisions, and finally in the 1986 season a collision between cars and spectators. It was the last year the Group B cars dominated the WRC scene. And it was because of a tragic accident which occurred during the rally that the future of Group B cars came under scrutiny. The final blow came at the Tour de Corse later that year with the death of Henri Toivonen.
In the first section of the rally (Sintra), in the "Lagoa Azul" stage, Portuguese works Ford rally driver Joaquim Santos came over a crest in his RS200 getting too loose through the corner. Santos managed to avoid the crowd on the outside of the corner, but he was not able to avoid the crowd on the inside of the corner. The car left the road, plunging right into the crowd, killing three and injuring dozens more. After this accident all works teams withdrew from the rally.
The combination of poor crowd behavior, and the extreme speeds of Group B cars, was not only dangerous for the crowd, but also for the drivers themselves. Former world champion Timo Salonen admitted at the '86 edition that he was scared to run first on the road. Walter Röhrl had his own theory on the crowd situation: "You just have to see the crowd as a wall and not as spectators."
It did not necessarily go any better in following years. At the 1987 edition a privately entered, FR car driven by Portuguese rally car driver Joaquim Guedes plunged into the crowd. Unfortunately, this led to the death of spectator Manuel Carvalho Da Silva Peixoto, and injured 12 others, but the crowd control was not much improved. It was not until the early 1990s that the Portuguese rally improved crowd control. Crowds were no smaller, but were better-behaved and more aware of the risks involved in spectating.
In the 1980s, the rally had a special stage at the Autódromo do Estoril.
The last WRC edition of the Portugal rally for five years was run under heavy rain in 2001. It was won by Tommi Mäkinen in a Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution. In 2002, it was replaced in favour of Germany's Rallye Deutschland. In 2005, the organisers of the Rally of Portugal announced their intentions to rejoin the WRC, this time switching locations to an area around the Algarve. This means the character of the rally has changed. It is now fully driven on gravel. This is frowned upon by the Portuguese fans, who consider the Algarve stages less exciting, which is also reflected in lower attendance numbers. In 2006, it ran as an official WRC candidate event for the 2007 WRC calendar and was formally incorporated into the 2007 calendar on 5 July 2006. The 2007 Rally Portugal was the fifth round of the season and was won by Citroën Total's Sébastien Loeb.
After a year in the Intercontinental Rally Challenge schedule, the Rally Portugal returned to the WRC calendar for the 2009 season. The competition in the 2009 Rally Portugal was set in the surroundings of Faro, capital of the Algarve region, on twisty hill sections, with fast blind corners and narrow sections. The first stage in the Estádio Algarve (Algarve Stadium) was won by Henning Solberg, but when the rally really began, Jari-Matti Latvala took the lead. However, he soon suffered a big crash, rolling his Ford Focus WRC 17 times down a steep mountain. The rally was eventually won by Loeb.
The 2020 edition of the rally was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Results 1967–2001
| Rally name | Stages | Podium finishers | Rank | Driver | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| co-driver | Team | ||||
| Car | Time | ||||
| 1º Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 1967 | 8 stages | ||||
| 47,60 km* | 1 | Portugal Carpinteiro Albino | |||
| Portugal Silva Pereira | France Renault 8 Gordini | 14758,9 pts | |||
| 2 | Portugal António Peixinho | ||||
| Portugal João Canas Mendes | UK Ford Cortina Lotus | 15888,9 pts | |||
| 3 | France Joseph Bourdon | ||||
| France Claude Bertrand | France Renault 8 Gordini | 22560,5 pts | |||
| 2º Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 1968 | 8 stages | ||||
| 94,60 km* | 1 | UK Tony Fall | |||
| UK R. Cellin | Italy Lancia Fulvia HF | 16503,3 pts | |||
| 2 | UK Paddy Hopkirk | ||||
| UK Tony Nash | UK BMC Cooper S 1300 | 17989,6 pts | |||
| 3 | Portugal António Peixinho | ||||
| Portugal João Canas Mendes | UK Morris Cooper S | 22661,8 pts | |||
| 3º Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 1969 | 10 stages | ||||
| 140,00 km* | 1 | Portugal Francisco Romãozinho | |||
| Portugal "Jocames" | France Citroën DS | 104759 pts | |||
| 2 | Portugal José Lampreia | ||||
| Portugal Christian Melville | Japan Datsun 1600 SSS | 113476 pts | |||
| 3 | Belgium Chris van Stalle | ||||
| Belgium Robert Loyens | Japan Datsun 1600 SSS | 113945 pts | |||
| 4º TAP Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 1970 | 12 stages | ||||
| 205,50 km | 1 | Finland Simo Lampinen | |||
| UK John Davenport | Italy Lancia Fulvia HF | 7099 pts | |||
| 2 | Italy Sandro Munari | ||||
| Italy Arnaldo Bernacchini | Italy Lancia Fulvia HF 1600 | 7486 pts | |||
| 3 | Sweden Björn Waldegård | ||||
| Sweden Hans Thorszelius | Germany Porsche 911 S | 7929 pts | |||
| 5º TAP Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 7 to 10 October 1971 | 20 stages | ||||
| 304,50 km | 1 | France Jean-Pierre Nicolas | |||
| France Jean Todt | France Alpine Renault A110 | 19249 pts | |||
| 2 | Finland Simo Lampinen | ||||
| UK John Davenport | Italy Lancia Fulvia HF 1600 | 20664 pts | |||
| 3 | France Robert Neyret | ||||
| France Jacques Terramorsi | France Alpine Renault A110 1600 | 23630 pts | |||
| 6º TAP Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 11 to 15 October 1972 | 31 stages | ||||
| 389,60 km | 1 | FRG Achim Warmbold | |||
| UK John Davenport | Germany BMW 2002 TI | 5 h 51 m 03 s | |||
| 2 | France Bernard Darniche | ||||
| France Alan Mahe | France Alpine Renault A110 1800 | 6 h 00 m 05 s | |||
| 3 | Sweden Björn Waldegård | ||||
| Sweden Hans Thorszelius | France Citroën SM Proto | 6 h 08 m 54 s | |||
| 7º TAP Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 13 to 18 March 1973 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1973 World Rally Championship | 32 stages | ||||
| 387 km | 1 | France Jean-Luc Thérier | |||
| France Jacques Jaubert | France Alpine Renault | ||||
| France Alpine Renault A110 1800 | 5 h 42 m 16 s | ||||
| 2 | France Jean-Pierre Nicolas | ||||
| France Michel Vial | France Alpine Renault | ||||
| France Alpine Renault A110 1800 | 5 h 48 m 16 s | ||||
| 3 | Portugal Francisco Romãozinho | ||||
| Portugal José Bernardo | France Citroën Competition | ||||
| France Citroën DS 21 | 6 h 7 m 48 s | ||||
| 8º TAP Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 20 to 23 March 1974 | |||||
| Round 1 of the 1974 World Rally Championship | 455 km | 1 | Italy Raffaele Pinto | ||
| Italy Arnaldo Bernacchini | Italy Fiat Abarth 124 Rallye | 6 h 26 m 15 s | |||
| 2 | Italy Alcide Paganelli | ||||
| Italy Nini Russo | Italy Fiat Abarth 124 Rallye | 6 h 30 m 12 s | |||
| 3 | Finland Markku Alén | ||||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Fiat Abarth 124 Rallye | 6 h 37 m 17 s | |||
| 9º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 18 to 21 July 1975 | |||||
| Round 6 of the 1975 World Rally Championship | 512 km | 1 | Finland Markku Alén | ||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Fiat Abarth 124 Rallye | 6 h 24 m 15 s | |||
| 2 | Finland Hannu Mikkola | ||||
| France Jean Todt | Italy Fiat Abarth 124 Rallye | 6 h 26 m 58 s | |||
| 3 | Sweden Ove Andersson | ||||
| Sweden Arne Hertz | DEU Toyota Team Europe | ||||
| Japan Toyota Corolla | 6 h 29 m 29 s | ||||
| 10º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 10 to 14 March 1976 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1976 World Rally Championship | 470 km | 1 | Italy Sandro Munari | ||
| Italy Silvio Maiga | Italy Lancia Stratos HF | 5 h 41 m 26 s | |||
| 2 | Sweden Ove Andersson | ||||
| Sweden Arne Hertz | DEU Toyota Team Europe | ||||
| Japan Toyota Celica 2000GT | 5 h 44 m 24 s | ||||
| 3 | Portugal "Mêquêpê" | ||||
| Portugal João Batista | Germany Opel Kadett GT/E | 6 h 26 m 37 s | |||
| 11º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 1 to 6 March 1977 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1977 World Rally Championship | |||||
| Round 4 of the 1977 FIA Cup for Rally Drivers | 580 km | 1 | Finland Markku Alén | ||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Fiat 131 Abarth | 6 h 51 m 47 s | |||
| 2 | Sweden Björn Waldegård | ||||
| Sweden Hans Thorszelius | UK Ford Escort RS1800 | 6 h 55 m 43 s | |||
| 3 | Sweden Ove Andersson | ||||
| UK Henry Liddon | DEU Toyota Team Europe | ||||
| Japan Toyota Celica 2000GT | 6 h 56 m 8 s | ||||
| 12º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 19 to 23 April 1978 | |||||
| Round 4 of the 1978 World Rally Championship | |||||
| Round 5 of the 1978 FIA Cup for Rally Drivers | 46 stages | ||||
| 627 km | 1 | Finland Markku Alén | |||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Fiat 131 Abarth | 7 h 45 m 33 s | |||
| 2 | Finland Hannu Mikkola | ||||
| Sweden Arne Hertz | UK Ford Escort RS1800 | 7 h 50 m 1 s | |||
| 3 | France Jean-Pierre Nicolas | ||||
| France Vincent Laverne | UK Ford Escort RS1800 | 8 h 1 m 1 s | |||
| 13º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 6 to 11 March 1979 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1979 World Rally Championship | 45 stages | ||||
| 735 km | 1 | Finland Hannu Mikkola | |||
| Sweden Arne Hertz | USA Ford Motor Company | ||||
| UK Ford Escort RS1800 | 9 h 13 m 52 s | ||||
| 2 | Sweden Björn Waldegård | ||||
| Sweden Hans Thorszelius | USA Ford Motor Company | ||||
| UK Ford Escort RS1800 | 9 h 16 m 36 s | ||||
| 3 | Sweden Ove Andersson | ||||
| UK Henry Liddon | DEU Toyota Team Europe | ||||
| Japan Toyota Celica 2000GT | 9 h 35 m 0 s | ||||
| 14º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 4 to 9 March 1980 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1980 World Rally Championship | 47 stages | ||||
| 673.5 km | 1 | FRG Walter Röhrl | |||
| FRG Christian Geistdörfer | Italy Fiat Italia | ||||
| Italy Fiat 131 Abarth | 9 h 13 m 52 s | ||||
| 2 | Finland Markku Alén | ||||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Fiat Italia | ||||
| Italy Fiat 131 Abarth | 9 h 16 m 36 s | ||||
| 3 | France Guy Fréquelin | ||||
| France Jean Todt | UK Talbot Cars GB | ||||
| UK Talbot Sunbeam Lotus | 9 h 35 m 0 s | ||||
| 15º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 4 to 7 March 1981 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1981 World Rally Championship | 46 stages | ||||
| 681 km | 1 | Finland Markku Alén | |||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Fiat Auto Torino | ||||
| Italy Fiat 131 Abarth | 8 h 27 m 26 s | ||||
| 2 | Finland Henri Toivonen | ||||
| UK Fred Gallagher | UK Talbot | ||||
| UK Talbot Sunbeam Lotus | 8 h 36 m 36 s | ||||
| 3 | Sweden Björn Waldegård | ||||
| Sweden Hans Thorszelius | DEU Toyota Team Europe | ||||
| Japan Toyota Celica 2000GT | 8 h 43 m 47 s | ||||
| 16º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 3 to 6 March 1982 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1982 World Rally Championship | 40 stages | ||||
| 639 km | 1 | France Michèle Mouton | |||
| Italy Fabrizia Pons | Germany Audi Sport | ||||
| Germany Audi Quattro | 7 h 39 m 36 s | ||||
| 2 | Sweden Per Eklund | ||||
| Sweden Ragnar Spjuth | DEU Toyota Team Europe | ||||
| Japan Toyota Celica 2000GT | 7 h 52 m 43 s | ||||
| 3 | Austria Franz Wittmann | ||||
| FRG Peter Diekmann | Germany Audi Sport | ||||
| Germany Audi Quattro | 8 h 7 m 25 s | ||||
| 17º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 2 to 5 March 1983 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1983 World Rally Championship | 40 stages | ||||
| 642 km | 1 | Finland Hannu Mikkola | |||
| Sweden Arne Hertz | Germany Audi Sport | ||||
| Germany Audi Quattro A1 | 7 h 17 m 24 s | ||||
| 2 | France Michèle Mouton | ||||
| Italy Fabrizia Pons | Germany Audi Sport | ||||
| Germany Audi Quattro A1 | 7 h 18 m 19 s | ||||
| 3 | FRG Walter Röhrl | ||||
| FRG Christian Geistdörfer | Italy Martini Racing | ||||
| Italy Lancia Rally 037 | 7 h 19 m 14 s | ||||
| 18º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 6 to 11 March 1984 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1984 World Rally Championship | 45 stages | ||||
| 684 km | 1 | Finland Hannu Mikkola | |||
| Sweden Arne Hertz | Germany Audi Sport | ||||
| Germany Audi Quattro A2 | 7 h 35 m 32 s | ||||
| 2 | Finland Markku Alén | ||||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Martini Racing | ||||
| Italy Lancia Rally 037 | 7 h 35 m 59 s | ||||
| 3 | Italy Attilio Bettega | ||||
| Italy Maurizio Perissinot | Italy Martini Racing | ||||
| Italy Lancia Rally 037 | 7 h 58 m 21 s | ||||
| 19º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 6 to 9 March 1985 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1985 World Rally Championship | 47 stages | ||||
| 733 km | 1 | Finland Timo Salonen | |||
| Finland Seppo Harjanne | France Peugeot Talbot Sport | ||||
| France Peugeot 205 Turbo 16 | 8 h 7 m 25 s | ||||
| 2 | Italy Miki Biasion | ||||
| Italy Tiziano Siviero | Italy Jolly Club | ||||
| Italy Lancia Rally 037 | 8 h 12 m 12 s | ||||
| 3 | FRG Walter Röhrl | ||||
| FRG Christian Geistdörfer | Germany Audi Sport | ||||
| Germany Audi Sport Quattro | 8 h 13 m 23 s | ||||
| 20º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 5 to 8 March 1986 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1986 World Rally Championship | 42 stages | ||||
| 660 km | 1 | Portugal Joaquim Moutinho | |||
| Portugal Edgar Fortes | Portugal Renault Galp | ||||
| France Renault 5 Turbo | 7 h 50 m 44 s | ||||
| 2 | Portugal Carlos Bica | ||||
| Portugal Cândido Júnior | Portugal Duriforte Construções | ||||
| Italy Lancia Rally 037 | 8 h 4 m 11 s | ||||
| 3 | Italy Giovanni Del Zoppo | ||||
| Italy Loris Roggia | Italy Jolly Club | ||||
| Italy Fiat Uno Turbo | 8 h 7 m 36 s | ||||
| 21º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 11 to 14 March 1987 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1987 World Rally Championship | 37 stages | ||||
| 597.67 km | 1 | Finland Markku Alén | |||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Martini Lancia | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta HF 4WD | 7 h 9 m 39 s | ||||
| 2 | France Jean Ragnotti | ||||
| France Perre Thimonier | France Renault Sport Elf | ||||
| France Renault 11 Turbo | 7 h 12 m 32 s | ||||
| 3 | Sweden Kenneth Eriksson | ||||
| FRG Peter Diekmann | Germany Volkswagen Motorsport | ||||
| Germany Volkswagen Golf GTI 16V | 7 h 14 m 37 s | ||||
| 22º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 1 to 6 March 1988 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1988 World Rally Championship | 37 stages | ||||
| 589.89 km | 1 | Italy Miki Biasion | |||
| Italy Carlo Cassina | Italy Martini Lancia | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta Integrale | 6 h 44 m 1 s | ||||
| 2 | Italy Alex Fiorio | ||||
| Italy Luigi Pirollo | Italy Jolly Club | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta HF 4WD | 6 h 52 m 47 s | ||||
| 3 | France Yves Loubet | ||||
| France Jean-Bernard Vieu | Italy Jolly Club | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta HF 4WD | 6 h 53 m 23 s | ||||
| 23º Rallye de Portugal Vinho do Porto | |||||
| 28 February to 4 March 1989 | |||||
| Round 3 of the 1989 World Rally Championship | 37 stages | ||||
| 576.88 km | 1 | Italy Miki Biasion | |||
| Italy Tiziano Siviero | Italy Martini Lancia | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta Integrale | 6 h 47 m 1 s | ||||
| 2 | Finland Markku Alén | ||||
| Finland Ilkka Kivimäki | Italy Martini Lancia | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta Integrale | 6 h 57 m 19 s | ||||
| 3 | Italy Alex Fiorio | ||||
| Italy Luigi Pirollo | Italy Jolly Club | ||||
| Italy Lancia Delta Integrale | 7 h 10 m 19 s |
2002–2006
Rally out of World Rally Championship
| Rally name | Stages | Podium finishers | Rank | Driver | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| co-driver | Team | ||||
| Car | Time | ||||
| 36º TMN Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 7 to 8 June 2002 | 8 stages | ||||
| 152,77 km | 1 | France Didier Auriol | |||
| France Thierry Barjou | Japan Toyota Corolla WRC | 1h41m25,5s | |||
| 2 | Italy Andrea Aghini | ||||
| Italy Loris Roggia | Italy Procar Srl | ||||
| Japan Subaru Impreza WRC P2000 | 1 h 43 m 59,9 s | ||||
| 3 | Portugal Miguel Campos | ||||
| Portugal Carlos Magalhães | Portugal Peugeot Total Silver Team SG | ||||
| France Peugeot 206 WRC | 1 h 44 m 35,9 s | ||||
| 37º TMN Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 28 to 29 March 2003 | 9 stages | ||||
| 164,97 km | 1 | Portugal Armindo Araújo | |||
| Portugal Miguel Ramalho | France Citroën Saxo Kit Car | 2 h 04 m 12,7 s | |||
| 2 | Portugal Pedro Leal | ||||
| Portugal Luis Ramalho | Japan Mitsubishi Lancer Evo VI | 2 h 05 m 57,9 s | |||
| 3 | Portugal Pedro Dias da Silva | ||||
| Portugal Mário Castro | Portugal Interpass Competição | ||||
| France Citroën Saxo S1600 | 2 h 09 m 07,1 s | ||||
| 38º TMN Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 2004 | 8 stages | ||||
| 151,82 km | 1 | Portugal Armindo Araújo | |||
| Portugal Miguel Ramalho | France Citroën Saxo Kit Car | 1 h 54 m 49,1 s | |||
| 2 | Portugal Pedro Leal | ||||
| Portugal Luis Ramalho | Japan Subaru Impreza WRX | 1 h 55 m 31,7s | |||
| 3 | Portugal Fernando Peres | ||||
| Portugal José Pedro Silva | Japan Mitsubishi Lancer Evo VII | 2 h 00 m 33,9 s | |||
| 39º TMN Rallye de Portugal | |||||
| 31 March to 2 April 2005 | 12 stages | ||||
| 237,66 km | 1 | Sweden Daniel Carlsson | |||
| Sweden Mattias Andersson | Japan Subaru Impreza WRX | 2 h 44 m 54,0 s | |||
| 2 | Finland Mikko Hirvonen | ||||
| Finland Jarmo Lehtinen | Japan Subaru Impreza WRX | 2 h 46 m 03,0 s | |||
| 3 | Portugal Armindo Araújo | ||||
| Portugal Miguel Ramalho | Portugal Mitsubishi Galp TMN | ||||
| Japan Mitsubishi Lancer Evo VIII | 2 h 47 m 19,2 s | ||||
| 40º PT-Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2006 | 12 stages | ||||
| 239,90 km | 1 | Portugal Armindo Araújo | |||
| Portugal Miguel Ramalho | Portugal Mitsubishi Motors Portugal | ||||
| Japan Mitsubishi Lancer Evo VIII MR | 3h 06 m 14,0 s | ||||
| 2 | Finland Janne Tuohino | ||||
| Finland Mikko Markkula | Japan Subaru Impreza N11 | 3h 07 m 31,0 s | |||
| 3 | Sweden Patrik Flodin | ||||
| Sweden Maria Andersson | Japan Subaru Impreza N12 | 3h 07 m 49,6 s |
2007–2014
Rally back to World Rally Championship, but held in Algarve
| Rally name | Stages | Podium finishers | Rank | Driver |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| co-driver | Team | |||
| Car | Time | |||
| 41º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 30 March to 1 April 2007 | ||||
| Round 5 of the 2007 World Rally Championship | 18 stages | |||
| 357.1 km | 1 | France Sébastien Loeb | ||
| Monaco Daniel Elena | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC | 3h 53 m 33.1 s | |||
| 2 | NOR Petter Solberg | |||
| UK Phil Mills | UK Subaru World Rally Team | |||
| Japan Subaru Impreza WRC S12b | 3h 56 m 47,0 s | |||
| 3 | Spain Dani Sordo | |||
| Spain Marc Marti | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC | 3h 58 m 38,4 s | |||
| 42º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2008 | ||||
| Round of the 2008 Intercontinental Rally Challenge | 13 stages | |||
| 249.74 km | 1 | Italy Luca Rossetti | ||
| Italy Matteo Chiarcossi | Italy Racing Lions SRL | |||
| France Peugeot 207 S2000 | 2 h 57 m 50.1 s | |||
| 2 | Czech Republic Jan Kopecky | |||
| Czech Republic Petr Stary | Czech Republic Champion Racing | |||
| France Peugeot 207 S2000 | 2 h 58 m 35,9 s | |||
| 3 | France Nicolas Vouilloz | |||
| France Nicolas Klinger | Belgium Peugeot Team Belux | |||
| France Peugeot 207 S2000 | 2 h 59 m 27,9 s | |||
| 43º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2009 | ||||
| Round 6 of the 2009 World Rally Championship | 18 stages | |||
| 361.36 km | 1 | France Sébastien Loeb | ||
| Monaco Daniel Elena | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC 09 | 3h 53 m 13.1 s | |||
| 2 | Finland Mikko Hirvonen | |||
| Finland Jarmo Lehtinen | UK BP Ford Abu Dhabi World Rally Team | |||
| UK Ford Focus WRC 09 | 3h 53 m 37,4 s | |||
| 3 | Spain Daniel Sordo | |||
| Spain Marc Marti | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC 09 | 3h 54 m 58,5 s | |||
| 44º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2010 | ||||
| Round 6 of the 2010 World Rally Championship | 18 stages | |||
| 355.32 km | 1 | France Sébastien Ogier | ||
| France Julien Ingrassia | France Citroën Junior Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC 09 | 3h 51 m 16.1 s | |||
| 2 | France Sébastien Loeb | |||
| Monaco Daniel Elena | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC 09 | 3h 51 m 24,0 s | |||
| 3 | Spain Daniel Sordo | |||
| Spain Marc Marti | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën C4 WRC 09 | 3h 52 m 33,7 s | |||
| 45º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2011 | ||||
| Round 3 of the 2011 World Rally Championship | 17 stages | |||
| 385.37 km | 1 | France Sébastien Ogier | ||
| France Julien Ingrassia | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën DS3 WRC | 4 h 10 m 53.4 s | |||
| 2 | France Sébastien Loeb | |||
| Monaco Daniel Elena | France Citroën Total World Rally Team | |||
| France Citroën DS3 WRC | 4 h 11 m 25,2 s | |||
| 3 | Finland Jari-Matti Latvala | |||
| Finland Miikka Anttila | UK BP Ford Abu Dhabi World Rally Team | |||
| UK Ford Fiesta RS WRC | 4 h 14 m 15,5 s | |||
| 46º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2012 | ||||
| Round 4 of the 2012 World Rally Championship | 22 | |||
| (19)† | ||||
| 434.77 km | ||||
| (368.43 km)† | 1 | Norway Mads Ostberg | ||
| Sweden Jonas Andersson | NOR Adapta World Rally Team | |||
| UK Ford Fiesta RS WRC | 4 h 21 m 16.1 s | |||
| 2 | Russia Evgeny Novikov | |||
| France Denis Giraudet | UK M-Sport Ford World Rally Team | |||
| UK Ford Fiesta RS WRC | 4 h 22 m 49,3 s | |||
| 3 | Norway Petter Solberg | |||
| UK Chris Patterson | UK Ford World Rally Team | |||
| UK Ford Fiesta RS WRC | 4 h 23 m 11,7 s | |||
| 47º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2013 | ||||
| Round 4 of the 2013 World Rally Championship | 23 stages | |||
| 396.82 km | 1 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | DEU Volkswagen Motorsport | |||
| DEU Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 4 h 07 m 38.7 s | |||
| 2 | FIN Mikko Hirvonen | |||
| FIN Jarmo Lehtinen | FRA Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT | |||
| FRA Citroën DS3 WRC | 4 h 08 m 36,9 s | |||
| 3 | FIN Jari-Matti Latvala | |||
| FIN Miikka Anttila | DEU Volkswagen Motorsport | |||
| DEU Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 4 h 11 m 43,2 s | |||
| 48º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | ||||
| 2014 | ||||
| Round 4 of the 2014 World Rally Championship | 16 stages | |||
| 339.46 km | 1 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | DEU Volkswagen Motorsport | |||
| DEU Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 3h 33 m 20.4 s | |||
| 2 | FIN Mikko Hirvonen | |||
| FIN Jarmo Lehtinen | GBR M-Sport WRT | |||
| GBR Ford Fiesta RS WRC | 3h 34 m 03.6 s | |||
| 3 | NOR Mads Østberg | |||
| SWE Jonas Andersson | FRA Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT | |||
| FRA Citroën DS3 WRC | 3h 34 m 32.8 s |
2015–
Rally back to its roots: North of Portugal
| Rally name | Stages | Podium finishers | Rank | Driver | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| co-driver | Team | ||||
| Car | Time | ||||
| 49º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2015 | |||||
| Round 5 of the 2015 World Rally Championship | (16)† 15 stages | ||||
| (351,71 km)† 324,18 km | 1 | FIN Jari-Matti Latvala | |||
| FIN Miikka Anttila | DEU Volkswagen Motorsport | ||||
| DEU Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 3h 30m 35.3 s | ||||
| 2 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | DEU Volkswagen Motorsport | ||||
| DEU Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 3h 30m 43.5 s | ||||
| 3 | NOR Andreas Mikkelsen | ||||
| NOR Ola Fløene | GER Volkswagen Motorsport II | ||||
| GER Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 3h 31m 03.9 s | ||||
| 50º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2016 | |||||
| Round 5 of the 2016 World Rally Championship | 19 stages | ||||
| 368,00 km | 1 | GBR Kris Meeke | |||
| IRL Paul Nagle | FRA Abu Dhabi Total World Rally Team | ||||
| FRA Citroën DS3 WRC | 3h 59m 01.0 s | ||||
| 2 | NOR Andreas Mikkelsen | ||||
| NOR Ola Fløene | GER Volkswagen Motorsport II | ||||
| GER Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 3h 59m 30.7 s | ||||
| 3 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | DEU Volkswagen Motorsport | ||||
| DEU Volkswagen Polo R WRC | 3h 59m 35.5 s | ||||
| 51º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2017 | |||||
| Round 6 of the 2017 World Rally Championship | 19 stages | ||||
| 349,17 km | 1 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | |||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | GBR M-Sport World Rally Team | ||||
| GBR Ford Fiesta WRC | 3h 42m 55.7 s | ||||
| 2 | BEL Thierry Neuville | ||||
| BEL Nicolas Gilsoul | KOR Hyundai Motorsport | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC | 3h 43m 11.3 s | ||||
| 3 | ESP Dani Sordo | ||||
| ESP Marc Martí | KOR Hyundai Motorsport | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC | 3h 43m 57.4 s | ||||
| 52º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2018 | |||||
| Round 6 of the 2018 World Rally Championship | 20 stages | ||||
| 358,19 km | 1 | BEL Thierry Neuville | |||
| BEL Nicolas Gilsoul | KOR Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC | 3h 49m 46.6 s | ||||
| 2 | GBR Elfyn Evans | ||||
| GBR Daniel Barritt | GBR M-Sport Ford WRT | ||||
| GBR Ford Fiesta WRC | 3h 50m 26.6 s | ||||
| 3 | FIN Teemu Suninen | ||||
| FIN Mikko Markkula | GBR M-Sport Ford WRT | ||||
| GBR Ford Fiesta WRC | 3h 50m 33.9 s | ||||
| 53º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2019 | |||||
| Round 7 of the 2019 World Rally Championship | 20 stages | ||||
| 306,97 km | 1 | EST Ott Tänak | |||
| EST Martin Järveoja | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota Yaris WRC | 3h 20m 22.8 s | ||||
| 2 | BEL Thierry Neuville | ||||
| BEL Nicolas Gilsoul | KOR Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC | 3h 20m 38.7 s | ||||
| 3 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | FRA Citroën Total WRT | ||||
| FRA Citroën C3 WRC | 3h 21m 19.9 s | ||||
| 2020 Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2020 World Rally Championship | 22 stages | ||||
| 331.10 km | Cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns | ||||
| 54º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2021 | |||||
| Round 4 of the 2021 World Rally Championship | 20 stages | ||||
| 337,51 km | 1 | GBR Elfyn Evans | |||
| GBR Scott Martin | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota Yaris WRC | 3h 38m 26.2 s | ||||
| 2 | ESP Dani Sordo | ||||
| ESP Borja Rozada | SKO Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| SKO Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC | 3h 38m 54.5 s | ||||
| 3 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | ||||
| FRA Julien Ingrassia | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota Yaris WRC | 3h 39m 49.8 s | ||||
| 55º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2022 | |||||
| Round 4 of the 2022 World Rally Championship | 21 stages | ||||
| 330,17 km | 1 | FIN Kalle Rovanperä | |||
| FIN Jonne Halttunen | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | 3h 44m 19.2 s | ||||
| 2 | GBR Elfyn Evans | ||||
| GBR Scott Martin | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | 3h 44m 34.4 s | ||||
| 3 | ESP Dani Sordo | ||||
| ESP Borja Rozada | SKO Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| SKO Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | 3h 46m 36.5 s | ||||
| 56º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2023 | |||||
| Round 5 of the 2023 World Rally Championship | 19 stages | ||||
| 329,06 km | 1 | FIN Kalle Rovanperä | |||
| FIN Jonne Halttunen | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | 3h 35m 11.7s | ||||
| 2 | ESP Dani Sordo | ||||
| ESP Cándido Carrera | SKO Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| SKO Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | 3h 36m 06.4s | ||||
| 3 | FIN Esapekka Lappi | ||||
| FIN Janne Ferm | SKO Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| SKO Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | 3h 36m 32.0s | ||||
| 57º Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2024 | |||||
| Round 5 of the 2024 World Rally Championship | 22 stages | ||||
| 337,04 km | 1 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | |||
| FRA Vincent Landais | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | 3h 41m 32.3s | ||||
| 2 | EST Ott Tänak | ||||
| EST Martin Järveoja | KOR Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | 3h 41m 40.2s | ||||
| 3 | BEL Thierry Neuville | ||||
| BEL Martijn Wydaeghe | KOR Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | 3h 42m 42.1s | ||||
| 58° Vodafone Rally de Portugal | |||||
| 2025 | |||||
| Round 5 of the 2025 World Rally Championship | 24 stages | ||||
| 344,50 km | 1 | FRA Sébastien Ogier | |||
| FRA Vincent Landais | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | 3h 48m 35.9s | ||||
| 2 | EST Ott Tänak | ||||
| EST Martin Järveoja | KOR Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT | ||||
| KOR Hyundai i20 N Rally1 | 3h 48m 44.6s | ||||
| 3 | FIN Kalle Rovanperä | ||||
| FIN Jonne Halttunen | JPN Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT | ||||
| JPN Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 | 3h 48m 48.1s |
;Notes
- † – Event was shortened after stages were cancelled.
Multiple winners
Embolded drivers are competing in the World Rally Championship in the current season.
A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the World Rally Championship.
| Wins | Driver | Years won | 7 | 5 | 3 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRA Sébastien Ogier | 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2024, 2025 | |||||
| FIN Markku Alén | 1975, 1977, 1978, 1981, 1987 | |||||
| FIN Hannu Mikkola | 1979, 1983, 1984 | |||||
| ITA Miki Biasion | 1988, 1989, 1990 | |||||
| POR Armindo Araújo | 2003, 2004, 2006 | |||||
| FIN Juha Kankkunen | 1992, 1994 | |||||
| FRA Sébastien Loeb | 2007, 2009 | |||||
| FIN Tommi Mäkinen | 1997, 2001 | |||||
| GBR Colin McRae | 1998, 1999 | |||||
| ESP Carlos Sainz | 1991, 1995 | |||||
| FIN Kalle Rovanperä | 2022, 2023 |
| Wins | Manufacturers | 10 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JPN Toyota | ||||||||
| FRA Citroën | ||||||||
| ITA Lancia | ||||||||
| ITA Fiat | ||||||||
| USA Ford | ||||||||
| FRA Renault | ||||||||
| JPN Subaru | ||||||||
| GER Audi | ||||||||
| JPN Mitsubishi | ||||||||
| GER Volkswagen | ||||||||
| FRA Peugeot | ||||||||
| GBR Talbot Sunbeam Lotus |
|- style="background-color:#EDEDED;" ! width=100px class="hintergrundfarbe5" | Nation ! width=200px class="hintergrundfarbe6" | Driver ! width=200px class="hintergrundfarbe6" | Co-Driver ! width=200px class="hintergrundfarbe6" | Manufacturers |- |FIN||16||12|| |- |FRA||13||10||4 |- |PRT||7||7|| |- |ITA||6||7||2 |- |GBR||6||6|| |- |ESP||2||2|| |- |GER||2||1||3 |- |SWE||1||5|| |- |BEL||1||1|| |- |EST||1||1|| |- |NOR||1|||| |- |MON||||2|| |- |IRL||||1|| |- |JPN||||||4 |- |KOR||||||1 |- |USA||||||1 |- |} --
References
References
- "History".
- (2012). "Rally – The Killer Years".
- "Estoril".
- Seara.com. "History – Circuito Estoril – Portugal".
- "Portugal WRC round called off".
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