The 2013 season also marked the first appearances of the Super 2000 and Group N replacement category,
Group R.[6] As part of this introduction, the support series –
Super 2000,
Group N Production Cars and the
World Rally Championship Academy – were restructured, with the Super 2000, four-wheel-drive Group R and Group N categories reorganised as the
FIA WRC2 Championship, two-wheel-drive Group R categories becoming
FIA WRC3 Championship, and the WRC Academy becoming the
FIA Junior WRC Championship. An FIA Production Car Cup will also be awarded to a registered entrant in WRC-2 who is driving a Group N car.[7]
The 2013 calendar was announced at a meeting of the
FIA World Motor Sport Council in Singapore on 28 September 2012.[2] The 2013 championship was contested over thirteen rounds in Europe, the Americas and Oceania.
The route of the
Acropolis Rally was heavily revised; where the
2012 event was run over 409 km (254 mi), the 2013 rally route was cut back to just 190 km (120 mi), held over two days of competition.[16]
Rally Australia is scheduled to return to the calendar, replacing the
Rally New Zealand as part of the event-sharing agreement established between the two events in 2008. The route for the event was adjusted from that used in
2011, with existing stages variously merged and trimmed down to make way for new stages and create a compact route that was as long as possible.[17]
The route of the
Rallye Deutschland was changed for 2013, with the start moving from
Trier to
Cologne. The first leg of the event included a series of brand-new stages between the two cities that formed the first leg of the event before the competitors arrive in Trier, which served as the base for the rally.[18]
Rally de Catalunya, which had been the final event of 2012, was moved back to the final weekend of October to become the penultimate event of the season. The rally will feature a revised route for 2013, with the introduction of night stages and a more even split between tarmac and gravel roads than in previous years.[19]
The
Wales Rally GB will return to its traditional end-of-season date, having been brought forward to September for the 2012 season in a failed bid to promote tourism in the region.[20] The event was relocated from
Cardiff to
Deeside in the
County of Flintshire.[15] This move enabled event organisers to introduce a brand-new route for the 2013 event, the rally run through the regions of
Snowdonia and
Denbighshire. More than half the stages will either be brand-new or returning after an absence of over twenty years, and will include a return to
Gwydyr, a stage which has not featured in the route since the 1960s.[21]
The
Rally Mexico featured a heavily revised route, which saw the introduction of several brand-new stages and the reconfiguration of older ones.[22]
The route of
Rally Sweden crossed over the Norwegian border to include stages previously used in
Rally Norway.[23]
Signed teams and drivers
World Rally Championship
The following teams and drivers are scheduled to compete in the World Rally Championship during the 2013 season:
World Rally Car entries eligible to score manufacturer points
Citroën will expand its
works team, the Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team, to become a three-car operation,[33] with the team's third car to be run part-time.[77] The Abu Dhabi Citroën Total World Rally Team will run two additional cars as a satellite team of the works outfit which is eligible to score manufacturers' points independently of the works team.[43]
Ford will no longer provide manufacturer support to its teams in 2013.[4] The
M-Sport Ford World Rally Team will still operate as a WRC team and be eligible to score World Championship points, with the team having acquired backing from
Qatar to run three cars.[40] Like Citroën, M-Sport's entries were structured into two teams that are able to score points independently of one another; in the absence of a Ford factory team, the Qatar M-Sport World Rally Team became the de facto lead team, and the Qatar World Rally Team was set up as a satellite operation.[43]
Hyundai will return to the series in 2014 as a manufacturer after an eleven-year absence. The company has announced plans to compete with the
i20 WRC at selected events in 2013, ahead of a full championship campaign in 2014.[78] Hyundai had previously competed in the WRC from
2000 to
2003 with the
Accent WRC.
In October 2012,
Mini formally terminated their factory-supported WRC programme, but stated that as the
John Cooper Works WRC had met the
FIA's homologation requirements for
World Rally Cars, they would make the car available to customer teams who wished to compete with it.[5]Prodrive announced their intentions to continue campaigning with cars,[73] but Team Mini Portugal,
Palmeirinha Rally and the
Armindo Araújo World Rally Team were closed down.[43]
Khalid Al Qassimi will return to the World Rally Championship in 2013, after spending
2012 on sabbatical.[33] Having spent most of his competitive career at the WRC level driving for
Ford, Al Qassimi will switch to
Citroën for the 2013 season, driving a
DS3 prepared by
Citroën Racing.
Jari-Matti Latvala will partner
Sébastien Ogier driving for Volkswagen.[48] Latvala described Ford's decision to end its works programme as the key factor that influenced his decision to change teams.[82]
At the
2012 Paris Motor Show, nine-time
World ChampionSébastien Loeb announced that he would only compete at selected events during the 2013 season, confirming his entry in the
Rallye Monte Carlo, but revealing that he had "no fixed plans" for the remainder of the season.[9] At
Citroën's formal team launch, Loeb confirmed that his programme for the 2013 season would consist of just four events,[31] and later announced that he would venture out into other motorsport categories, including the
FIA GT Series and the
Pikes Peak International Hill Climb.[83][84]
Thierry Neuville will move from
Citroën's junior team to
Qatar M-Sport.[42] Prior to his move to M-Sport, Citroën had planned to offer Neuville a place in their factory team, driving in Sébastien Loeb's place at the nine rounds Loeb will not appear at in 2013.[85]
The 2013 season will see the introduction of a new rally category,
Group R.[88] No new cars will be homologated under the
Group A and
Group N regulations for production cars, and will instead be reclassified under Group R before being phased out of competition.[89] With the introduction of Group R, the rules for the feeder categories re-written in a bid to boost entries:[7]
In the WRC Championship, entries registered as manufacturers must enter all thirteen rounds of the championship with a minimum of two cars. These teams may score drivers' and manufacturers' championship points at every round they enter.[90]
Major entries that are registered as WRC teams but not as manufacturers must take part in at least seven events – including at least one outside Europe – with a one or two-car team. These teams are eligible to score manufacturers' points if the cars entered meet the
homologation of those cars that are entered by teams registered as manufacturers.[90]
In the WRC-2 Championship – open to R5, R4, Super 2000 and N4 cars – teams must contest at least seven events, with their best six results from the first seven events they enter being counted towards their final points tally. There will be no penalty for missing rounds.[90]
In the WRC-3 Championship – open to two-wheel-drive cars conforming to the FIA's R1, R2 and R3 technical regulations – teams must contest at least six events, with their best five results from the first seven events they enter being counted towards their final points tally. There will be no penalty for missing rounds.[90]
The Junior WRC Championship will be open to drivers under the age of twenty-six. All teams will contest the same six events—the Rallies of
Portugal,
Greece,
Finland,
Germany,
France and
Catalunya—with their five best results counting towards their final score.[90][91]
Organisational structure
After the collapse of promoter North One Sport and parent company Convers Sports Initiatives in early 2012,[92][93] and being forced to arrange event coverage on an event-by-event basis for most of the 2012 season, the World Rally Championship sought out a new promoter for 2013 in
Red Bull House Media.[94]
At the end of the
2012 season, the FIA elected not to renew their contract with British firm Stage One Technology to provide timing services for stages. They were replaced by Spanish outfit Sistemas Integrales de Telecomunicacion.[95]
The opening event of the season was run in difficult conditions, with heavy snowfalls recorded the length of the route. In his final appearance at the Monte Carlo Rally,
Sébastien Loeb secured a record seventh victory on the event, winning by over a minute and a half. The World Champion took the lead during the first day and quickly established a one-minute margin to his former teammate,
Sébastien Ogier. Ogier went on to finish second in the
Volkswagen Polo R WRC's debut, having set the fastest time on the opening stage of the rally.[96] Teammate
Jari-Matti Latvala was less-fortunate, sliding off the road on the fourth leg of the rally and retiring. Despite beating Loeb's times on several stages, Ogier was quoted as saying he had no intention of challenging Loeb's lead as it was "never a part of the plan", whilst team principal Jost Capito stated that it was more important for the team to secure a strong result than it was to challenge for outright victory.[97] Nevertheless, some observers admitted that Loeb was untouchable, regardless Ogier's motivation.[98]Dani Sordo secured third place after spending most of the rally trading place with
Qatar M-Sport'sEvgeny Novikov until the Russian crashed out of the event on the
Col de Turini. The event was ultimately cut short when rally organisers cancelled the final two stages in the face of overwhelming spectator numbers that blocked access to the stages.[99] As a result, no points were offered for the
Power stage.
Sébastien Ogier secured the
Volkswagen Polo R WRC's maiden victory in Sweden, winning the rally by forty seconds ahead of
Sébastien Loeb. Ogier took the lead of the rally early on the first day,[100] and steadily built up a thirty-second lead over the rest of the field. After struggling with a poor set-up early in the rally,
Sébastien Loeb steadily began to recover, and eventually launched a final assault as the rally crossed over the border into Norway.[101] Loeb successfully took ten seconds away from Ogier as he won three consecutive stages until made a mistake on the penultimate stage and hit a snowbank, at which point he decided to back off.[102] Ogier and teammate
Jari-Matti Latvala went on to set the two fastest times on the
Power Stage, with the three bonus World Championship points giving Ogier the lead in World Drivers' Championship.[103]Mads Østberg completed the podium, narrowly beating Latvala.
Mikko Hirvonen lost twenty minutes in an accident on the first day and ultimately went on to finish seventeenth,[100] whilst
Evgeny Novikov rolled on the final day and fell from fifth to ninth overall.[102]
With
Sébastien Loeb contesting just four events in 2013, the
Rally of Mexico became the first rally since the
1992Rallye Côte d'Ivoire to start without a
World Champion driver taking part. The first leg of the rally was marked by a three-way battle, with
Thierry Neuville,
Sébastien Ogier and
Mads Østberg all holding the lead of the rally. As Ogier gradually established a lead over Østberg as Neuville fell behind until a mechanical issue forced Østberg into a premature retirement. Østberg was able to re-enter the rally the next day under "Rally 2" regulations, but the accompanying five-minute penalty put him out of contention and
Mikko Hirvonen emerged as Ogier's closest challenger; Østberg ultimately finished eleventh, but scored two bonus world championship points on the
Power Stage. Ogier went on to win his second rally in succession by three and a half minutes, with Hirvonen second and Neuville completing the podium.
Dani Sordo—driving for the
Citroën works team in Loeb's absence—was fourth, while
Nasser al-Attiyah,
Chris Atkinson and
Ken Block all marked their return to the WRC with fifth, sixth and seventh place respectively.
Sébastien Ogier took his third consecutive win in Portugal.
Mads Østberg took an early lead, but rolled his
Ford Fiesta RS WRC when he mis-heard a pace note on the first day, and he was forced to retire.
Dani Sordo emerged as Ogier's next challenger, but his bid to win the rally came to an abrupt end when he was similarly forced to retire after crashing. Ogier and teammate
Jari-Matti Latvala built up a lead over third-placed
Mikko Hirvonen until disaster struck the two
Volkswagen Polo R WRCs on the final day. Ogier lost thirty seconds on a single stage with a mechanical problem, whilst the same fate befell Latvala, who subsequently lost second place to Hirvonen. The Volkswagens recovered quickly, and Ogier went on to win the power stage and the rally, but the damage had been done and Latvala finished three minutes behind Hirvonen.
Evgeny Novikov recovered from a slow start to his season to finish fourth, the highest-placed Ford driver, with
Nasser Al-Attiyah in fifth and
Andreas Mikkelsen sixth in the third Volkswagen. Østberg re-entered the rally after his roll and went on to finish eighth, picking up two extra World Championship points on the power stage.
After missing the rallies of Mexico and Portugal to compete in the
FIA Grand Touring Series,
Sébastien Loeb marked his return to rallying with first place in the Rally Argentina.
Sébastien Ogier took the lead early on, but made a mistake whilst driving in heavy fog. He lost forty seconds, allowing Loeb to seize the advantage.
Jari-Matti Latvala and
Mikko Hirvonen fought over the final podium position until Hirvonen's
Citroën DS3 WRC developed an electrical problem. Latvala could not afford to rest, as he found himself fighting with
Evgeny Novikov. A late charge on the final day—including the fastest time on the power stage—was enough for Latvala to secure third place and his first podium in Argentina. Hirvonen recovered to finish sixth overall, finishing third on the power stage to score an additional World Championship point.
Jari-Matti Latvala took his first win of the 2013 season, and his first win for
Volkswagen on the Acropolis Rally. The opening forty-seven kilometre stage proved to be difficult, claiming three high-profile victims in
Sébastien Ogier,
Mads Østberg and
Mikko Hirvonen in short order, and
Evgeny Novikov emerged as the surprise early leader, building up a thirty-second advantage at the end of the first leg. The Russian's lead was short-lived, as he developed a puncture early in the second leg and was forced to limp back to the service park. Latvala took control of the rally while
Andreas Mikkelsen in the third factory-supported Polo R began to work his way up through the points-paying positions. He ultimately missed out on a podium finish of his own, as
Dani Sordo and
Thierry Neuville each took their second podium finish of the season with second and third place respectively. Latvala's result was briefly challenged by
Citroën, who believed his car was in violation of the technical regulations, but the protest was dismissed and Latvala's result was confirmed, allowing him to secure second place in the drivers' championship standings behind teammate Ogier.
Sébastien Ogier held the lead of the rally from start to finish; with three stage wins on the first day, Ogier held a lead of 46.6 seconds over
Mikko Hirvonen, who battled for second with
Thierry Neuville, with a difference of only 3.1 seconds at the end of the day. Both
Qatar M-Sport World Rally Team drivers,
Mads Østberg and
Evgeny Novikov retired.[104] On the second day, Hirvonen started with a stage win, but on the next stage went wide and got stuck into a ditch, leaving second place to Neuville. Ogier's teammate,
Jari-Matti Latvala recovered from 12th position after a puncture on stage one, to finish third.
Dani Sordo was the best
Citroën finisher in fourth, ahead of
Martin Prokop in fifth, while
Elfyn Evans finished sixth on his début in a World Rally Car.
Michał Kościuszko got his best result of the year in seventh, ahead of Østberg – recovering from his accident – to finish eighth via Rally-2.
Robert Kubica got his first championship points by finishing ninth and
Khalid Al Qassimi completed the top ten finishers.[105]
Sébastien Ogier won the rally to become the fifth non-Scandinavian driver to win the rally. Rally Finland started with a four-way fight between
Volkswagen Motorsport's Ogier,
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT's
Mikko Hirvonen,
Qatar M-Sport WRT's
Mads Østberg and
Qatar World Rally Team's
Thierry Neuville. Ogier won the first stage, but Neuville won the second one to become the leader jointly with Hirvonen. Ogier set the fastest time for the third stage, and joined Neuville at the front. Hirvonen fought back on the very next stage, and returned to the joint lead with Neuville. The next stage saw heavy rain and a complicated Hirvonen lost sixteen seconds to be back in the fight. Østberg won the stage, but Neuville became the outright leader.
Jari-Matti Latvala hit a rock on the second stage and had to retire for the day.[106] The second day started with a swap of the leading position between M-Sport's Neuville and Østberg. But on the second loop, both hit trouble and Ogier become the leader by over 30 seconds.
Kris Meeke lost nearly 25 seconds behind
Evgeny Novikov, but Meeke was attributed his afternoon time for both passes through the stage, and finished the day in fifth.[107] The final day saw the podium finishers remain as the previous evening, after second placed Neuville won the battle with Østberg, when the latter went off to avoid a rock. Hirvonen finished fourth, with teammate
Dani Sordo finishing fifth after Meeke rolled his
Citroën DS3 WRC. Novikov recovered to finish sixth, with local
Jari Ketomaa in seventh in his
Ford Fiesta R5. The top ten finishers were completed by
Per-Gunnar Andersson,
Robert Kubica – scoring again with the
Citroën DS3 RRC – and
Andreas Mikkelsen.[108]
Dani Sordo won his first ever WRC event at the all-tarmac
Rallye Deutschland after fighting back from fourth place. The first day finished with
Volkswagen Motorsport's
Sébastien Ogier and
Jari-Matti Latvala in first and second, with
Thierry Neuville in third.[109] The second day of competition started with leader Ogier off the road after missing a braking point. This handed the lead to teammate Latvala, who fought to maintain this position from Neuville. Neuville won the first three stages of the day, but Latvala went on to win three stages from the second loop.[110] Latvala lost the lead after an accident on stage 12, on a stage where Neuville and
Mads Østberg also went off the road. Neuville took the lead, but lost it on the next stage to
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT's Sordo. Day 3 finished with Sordo leading by only 0.8 seconds.[111] In the final day of competition, Sordo retained the lead after Neuville went off in the very last stage and settled with second position and Mikko Hirvonen completed the podium.
Martin Prokop and
WRC-2 frontrunners
Robert Kubica and
Elfyn Evans got their best results with fourth, fifth and sixth respectively. Latvala went on to finish seventh, with
Hayden Paddon in eighth with a
Škoda Fabia S2000. Teammates Østberg and
Evgeny Novikov completed the top ten finishers.[112]
Sébastien Ogier won the last non-European rally of the year.
Volkswagen Motorsport II's
Andreas Mikkelsen started leading the event with temporary co-driver
Paul Nagle before losing the lead to championship leader Ogier, who won eight stages on the day. Early leader Mikkelsen finished the day in seventh position.[113] On the second day, Ogier kept his stage-winning streak, to extend the lead to 45.9 seconds from
Mikko Hirvonen.
Kris Meeke went off the road in the third stage of the day.[114] In the final day of competition, Ogier almost claimed the championship, but lost the opportunity when Hirvonen got a puncture on the final stage of the rally, to lose second place to
Thierry Neuville; his fourth consecutive second place. After his puncture, Hirvonen finished third, ahead of
Jari-Matti Latvala,
Mads Østberg, Mikkelsen,
Evgeny Novikov, local
Nathan Quinn,
Khalid Al Qassimi and
Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari.[115]
Sébastien Ogier clinched the title after
Thierry Neuville failed to win the opening stage of the event, which was denoted as the Power Stage. After struggling through the first day, Ogier took the lead on the final day of the rally. Neuville finished the first day in the lead, but lost it after a puncture on stage 11, and eventually finished fourth.
Dani Sordo finished second, after battling for the lead from most of the rally, with
Jari-Matti Latvala completing the podium in third overall.
Evgeny Novikov finished fifth ahead of
Mikko Hirvonen,
Andreas Mikkelsen and
Mads Østberg. WRC-2 frontrunner
Robert Kubica scored more championship points with ninth, with sportscar racer
Romain Dumas completing the points in tenth, in a one-off drive. Nine-time World Champion
Sébastien Loeb failed to finish his last appearance in the championship after his car slid wide on stage 15 and rolled into a ditch.[116]
The Mixed event saw the first rally of
Sébastien Ogier as a
World Champion. Ogier started the event in the best way, winning all the night stages of the first day. Teammate
Jari-Matti Latvala got the second place from local
Dani Sordo on the last stage.[117] On the second day of tarmac stages, Ogier lost the lead to Latvala after a puncture, promoting Sordo and
Thierry Neuville to second and third respectively.[118] The last day of competition, on gravel, saw Ogier fight back from sixth to become the rally leader. Latvala finished second. This one-two finish for
Volkswagen Motorsport enabled the team to win the Manufacturers' Championship.
Mikko Hirvonen finished third after teammate Sordo retired with a broken suspension.
M-Sport's trio of Neuville,
Evgeny Novikov and
Mads Østberg finished fourth, fifth and sixth respectively, followed by
Martin Prokop and
Hayden Paddon in seventh and eighth. In ninth was
Robert Kubica, to clinch the
WRC2 title, ahead of rival
Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari.[119]
Sébastien Ogier won the last event of the season to round up a year with nine wins. Ogier led the event from start to finish, with teammate
Jari-Matti Latvala and
Thierry Neuville completing the podium after taking their final positions on stage 6.
Robert Kubica, who was making his début in a
Citroën DS3 WRC, rolled his car on the first stage of the second day of competition.[120] Kubica later rejoined on the third day, only to roll out again on stage 11.[121] Day four saw the end of a three-way battle for third in favour of Neuville between him,
Mads Østberg and
Andreas Mikkelsen, who finished fourth and fifth respectively.
Martin Prokop finished sixth, with
Dani Sordo in seventh after taking a five-minute penalty for a breach of the chassis regulations. The top ten finishers were completed by
WRC2 drivers
Elfyn Evans,
Jari Ketomaa and
Mark Higgins, all driving
Ford Fiesta R5 cars.[122]
Notes:
^† — Rally was shortened after stages were cancelled.
Results and standings
FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers
Points are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers. There are also 3 bonus points awarded for Power Stage wins, 2 for second place and 1 for third.
^Following
Ford's withdrawal from the category as a manufacturer team, the FIA recognised
Qatar M-Sport as the de facto manufacturer team, subjecting them to the same rules as other manufacturer teams.[123]
^Although
Lotos Team WRC is recognised by the FIA as a manufacturer team, only their best eight results from thirteen rallies will be counted towards the team's final points tally.[123]
^Heimrich, Michael (6 December 2012).
"Deutschland: Köln und Nacht-WP" [Germany: Cologne and Night]. Rally-Mazagin.de (in German).
Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
^"Latvala rules out Sweden hat-trick". WRC.com. 20 December 2012.
Archived from the original on 23 December 2012. Retrieved 20 December 2012. Next year's Rally Sweden forms round two of the 13-event WRC season. It consists of 22 stages over a competitive distance of 339 kilometres with the start and finish in Karlstad and the permanent service park in Hagfors. Friday's route is based in the Hagfors region, Saturday's stages take place east of the town with the bulk of Sunday's action taking place over the border in Norway.
^
abc"Citroën pursues its involvement in the WRC". citroen-wrc.com. Citroën Racing. 27 September 2012. Archived from
the original on 19 January 2013. A Citroën DS3 WRC will also be entrusted to the United Arab Emirates driver Khaleed Al-Qassimi
^
abc"Martin Prokop před sezonou 2013" [Martin Prokop pre-season 2013]. Autosport.cz (in Czech). 16 December 2012.
Archived from the original on 20 December 2012. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
^Elizalde, Pablo (13 August 2012).
"Toyota unveils entry-level WRC Yaris". Autosport.com.
Haymarket Publications.
Archived from the original on 16 August 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2012. Toyota said the car will be able to compete in the World Rally Championship under the R1A regulations once it is homologated by the FIA before the end of the year.