The rivalry between Can-Am and Polaris has heated up in recent years with the rises of Polaris Factory Racing and the Maverick R, especially in the deserts of their native North America. The Saudi theater of their conflict has swung in Polaris’ favor since snapping Can-Am’s SSV win streak in 2024, so BRP was eager to return the favor once the Maverick R was finally approved for competition at the 2025 Dakar Rally.
While Polaris walked away with a second straight win courtesy of Brock Heger, the Maverick R proved the war was far from over by winning ten of 12 stages. If not for early mechanical gremlins, the result certainly could have been much closer.
The Maverick R is widely touted as the most powerful UTV on the market, a moniker it seemed to live up to on the American desert racing side. It also saw success in sporadic rally competition in 2024 prior to FIA homologation, even being faster than FIA-approved cars at the Rallye du Maroc last October. Being such a radically different UTV design- (note the funky tall-knuckle front suspension) and power-wise, it was classified as its own SSV1 subcategory rather than the standard T4 but otherwise competed directly with the RZRs.
Meanwhile, Polaris arrived in Saudi Arabia looking for a second straight victory in the SSV category after Xavier de Soultrait won the 2024 edition to end Can-Am’s six-year reign. Besides retaining Soultrait and Florent Vayssade under the Sébastien Loeb Racing banner, PFR—who designed the Polaris RZR Pro R Factory—brought its SCORE Pro UTV Open and Baja 1000 UTV champion Brock Heger and his teammate-slash-navigator Max Eddy Jr. into the fold.
Heger, an off-road racing prodigy who enjoyed success in short course before transitioning to longer-distance disciplines, got off to a fast start despite his rally raid inexperience as he won the Prologue and the Chrono Stage. Soultrait notched a stage win between Heger’s two in Stage #1, including finishing behind his teammate in the Chrono Stage to secure a Polaris 1–2.
Conversely, the two-day Chrono Stage was a disaster for Can-Am that gave the Polarises more breathing room atop the leaderboard. Three-time Dakar winner and de facto team leader Francisco López Contardo, who placed second behind Soultrait in Stage #1, lost nearly two hours in the dunes and finished 13th. Sara Price had to be towed back to the bivouac with a fuel problem. Alexandre Pinto, who was in the older Maverick X3 XRS, was the highest finishing Can-Am of the stage in third.
Manuel Andújar, the final person to win the Dakar in the Quad class before it was axed for 2025, had problems strike his Maverick R from the very beginning when he lost his brakes in the Prologue. A crash cost him three hours in Stage #1 before another mechanical killed his race altogether three legs later.
Soultrait and Heger being over an hour ahead seemed to ignite a spark in the Mavericks afterward. López went on to win five stages and did not finish outside the top ten until the very last day, while Price and Jeremías González Ferioli respectively added three and two of their own. González, who won the 2024 Desafío Ruta 40’s Open Cars class in the Maverick R’s W2RC debut, was eliminated from contention by a mechanical in Stage #4.
While Can-Am’s hopes of taking back the overall hinged on a Polaris DNF that never came, the roster still kept its head up after an otherwise strong outing for the Maverick R. Price is the only Maverick R factory driver registered for the W2RC, hoping to complete the full season after being sidelined by a lack of funding in 2024. López settled for a still-solid second in the final results, even if he finished over two hours back.
“Our team put in an incredible effort at Dakar this year,” commented BRP race manager Jean-François Leclerc. “This race always presents unique and unpredictable challenges and this year was no exception. I’m proud of how our drivers, team and partners at South Racing adapted and persevered throughout the rally. With ten stage wins and multiple stage podium sweeps, we’ve proven the capabilities of the Maverick R. There are a lot of positives to take away from this year and we look forward to coming back even stronger next year.”
In the Polaris camp, Soultrait lost the lead to Heger after a poor Stage #4 that cost him nearly an hour and a half. He rode behind his teammate in the overall before falling further back when he got lost in Stage #9. A mechanical issue on the penultimate day knocked him out of the picture for good.
While Soultrait’s hopes of a repeat were dashed, Heger stayed out of trouble to walk away with the victory in his Dakar debut.
“Dakar is the pinnacle of our sport and winning this championship is truly a dream come true,” said Heger. “Max’s experience and pinpoint navigation allowed me to focus solely on our pace and optimizing the condition of our vehicle, and the RZR Pro R Factory was virtually flawless for the entire 12 stages.
“Earning this historic victory with my close friend is something truly special, but to win Dakar after winning the Baja 1000, that’s something I could have never imagined.”
Due to the Maverick R’s early issues, the X3 ended up comprising most of the top finishers with five of the remaining eight slots being filled by the latter. Hunter Miller rounded out the top ten in his Maverick R. Fifth-placed Enrico Gaspari was the only other Polaris besides Heger in the top ten.
Overall results
| Finish | Overall | Number | Driver | Navigator | Team | Class | Time | Margin |
| 1 | 18 | 425 | Brock Heger* | Max Eddy Jr. | Sébastien Loeb Racing | T4 | 59:13:11 | Leader |
| 2 | 26 | 404 | Francisco López Contardo* | Juan Pablo Latrach | Can-Am Factory Team | SSV1 | 61:19:15 | + 2:06:04 |
| 3 | 31 | 412 | Alexandre Pinto | Bernardo Oliveira | Old Friends Rally Team | T4 | 62:50:22 | + 3:37:11 |
| 4 | 34 | 403 | Jérôme de Sadeleer* | Diego Ortega | MMP Compétition | T4 | 64:30:05 | + 5:16:54 |
| 5 | 49 | 406 | Enrico Gaspari | Fausto Mota | TH-Trucks Team | T4 | 69:09:02 | + 9:55:51 |
| 6 | 53 | 402 | Gerard Farrés* | Toni Vingut | Pedregà Team | T4 | 70:36:04 | + 11:22:53 |
| 7 | 56 | 418 | Arnaldo Monteiro* | Nuno Morais | South Racing Can-Am | SSV1 | 71:41:41 | + 12:28:30 |
| 8 | 60 | 430 | Roger Grouwels | Rudolf Meijer | RaceArt | T4 | 72:43:31 | + 13:30:20 |
| 9 | 65 | 415 | Fidel Castillo Ruiz* | Anuar Osman | Bujarkay-Makarthy Racing | T4 | 74:17:43 | + 15:04:32 |
| 10 | 66 | 420 | Hunter Miller* | Andrew Short | Can-Am Factory Team | SSV1 | 74:27:50 | + 15:14:39 |
| 11 | 69 | 427 | Benoit Lepietre* | Rodrigue Relmy-Madinska | BTR Racing Team | SSV1 | 76:06:09 | + 16:52:58 |
| 12 | 72 | 401 | Sebastián Guayasamín* | Fernando Acosta | BE Racing | T4 | 77:18:19 | + 18:05:08 |
| 13 | 74 | 433 | Olivier Pernaut* | Benjamin Riviere | Ohres Racing | SSV1 | 78:59:03 | + 19:45:52 |
| 14 | 75 | 410 | Claude Fournier | Grégory Revest-Arnoux | MMP Compétition | T4 | 80:35:48 | + 21:22:37 |
| 15 | 78 | 442 | Gregory Lefort* | George Da Cruz | Pole Position 77 | SSV1 | 81:39:37 | + 22:26:26 |
| 16 | 80 | 422 | Eric Croquelois* | Bruno Raymond | Drag’on Rally Team | T4 | 82:02:03 | + 2:48:52 |
| 17 | 82 | 431 | Pietro Cinotto* | Martino Albertini | Xtremeplus | T4 | 82:42:35 | + 23:29:24 |
| 18 | 85 | 428 | Sander Derikx* | Marnix Leeuw | Timola Rallysport | T4 | 86:55:42 | + 27:42:31 |
| 19 | 92 | 434 | Domingo Román* | Óscar Bravo | CAP 4 Racing | T4 | 92:20:13 | + 33:07:02 |
| 20 | 95 | 437 | Souad Mouktadiri* | Vincent Ferri | Mouktadiri Racing Team | T4 | 97:28:44 | + 38:15:33 |
| 21 | 96 | 400 | Xavier de Soultrait* | Martin Bonnet | Sébastien Loeb Racing | T4 | 98:47:07 | + 39:33:56 |
| 22 | 98 | 429 | Ibrahim Almuhna* | Faisal Alsuwayh | Almuhna Racers | T4 | 106:03:29 | + 46:50:18 |
| 23 | 105 | 414 | Michele Cinotto | Alberto Bertoldi | Xtremeplus | T4 | 122:53:20 | + 63:40:09 |
| 24 | 107 | 444 | Hasan Alsadadi* | Marcin Pasek | R-X Sport | T4 | 123:06:03 | + 63:52:52 |
| 25 | 113 | 423 | Philippe Boutron* | Mayeul Barbet | BTR Racing Team | SSV1 | 134:11:34 | + 74:58:23 |
| 26 | 115 | 411 | Florent Vayssade* | Nicolas Rey | Sébastien Loeb Racing | T4 | 135:03:39 | + 75:50:28 |
| 27 | 118 | 405 | Sara Price | Sean Berriman | Can-Am Factory Team | SSV1 | 138:56:45 | + 79:43:34 |
| 28 | 120 | 413 | Manuel Andújar | Bernardo Graue | South Racing Can-Am | SSV1 | 140:28:26 | + 81:15:15 |
| 29 | 123 | 438 | Stefano Marrini* | Matteo Landori | R Team | T4 | 145:37:02 | + 8623:51 |
| 30 | 125 | 407 | Jeremías González Ferioli* | Pedro Gonzalo Rinaldi | Can-Am Factory Team | SSV1 | 148:58:56 | + 89:45:45 |
| 31 | 128 | 419 | Shinsuke Umeda* | Paul Durame | Xtremeplus | T4 | 161:27:13 | + 102:14:09 |
| DNF | DNF | 408 | Diego Martinez | Sergio Lafuente | South Racing Can-Am | SSV1 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 409 | Fernando Álvarez | Xavier Panseri | South Racing Can-Am | SSV1 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 416 | Grzegorz Brochocki* | Grzegorz Komar | Overlimit | T4 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 424 | João Dias* | Gonçalo Reis | Santag Racing | T4 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 426 | Carlos Vento | Jorge Brandão | Old Friends Rally Team | T4 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 432 | José Vidaña* | Mario Garrido | Pedregà Team | T4 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 435 | José Ignacio Gayoso* | Santiago Ramiro | TH-Trucks Team | T4 | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 439 | Rafael Muñoz* | Daniel Cámara | Pedregà Team | T4 | DNF | N/A |
Stage winners
| Stage | Winner | Time |
| Prologue | Brock Heger* | 17:40.8 |
| Stage #1 | Xavier de Soultrait* | 4:52:43 |
| Stage #2 | Brock Heger* | 11:57:43 |
| Stage #3 | Francisco López Contardo* | 3:46:37 |
| Stage #4 | Sara Price | 5:13:38 |
| Stage #5 | Francisco López Contardo* | 5:02:26 |
| Stage #6 | Francisco López Contardo* | 5:17:35 |
| Stage #7 | Jeremías González Ferioli* | 4:34:50 |
| Stage #8 | Jeremías González Ferioli* | 5:34:39 |
| Stage #9 | Francisco López Contardo* | 3:38:10 |
| Stage #10 | Francisco López Contardo* | 2:10:45 |
| Stage #11 | Sara Price | 4:35:06 |
| Stage #12 | Sara Price | 58:53 |
W2RC
Drivers
| Rank | Driver | Points | Margin |
| 1 | Alexandre Pinto | 95 | Leader |
| 2 | Enrico Gaspari | 70 | – 25 |
| 3 | Sara Price | 55 | – 40 |
| 4 | Roger Grouwels | 45 | – 50 |
| 5 | Manuel Andújar | 42 | – 53 |
| 6 | Claude Fournier | 28 | – 67 |
| 7 | Michele Cinotto | 27 | – 68 |
| 8 | Fernando Álvarez | 12 | – 83 |
| T-9 | Carlos Vento | 2 | – 93 |
| T-9 | Diego Martinez | 2 | – 93 |
Navigators
| Rank | Navigator | Points | Margin |
| 1 | Bernardo Oliveira | 95 | Leader |
| 2 | Fausto Mota | 70 | – 25 |
| 3 | Sean Berriman | 55 | – 40 |
| 4 | Rudolf Meijer | 45 | – 50 |
| 5 | Bernardo Graue | 42 | – 53 |
| 6 | Grégory Revest-Arnoux | 28 | – 67 |
| 7 | Alberto Bertoldi | 27 | – 68 |
| 8 | Xavier Panseri | 12 | – 83 |
| T-9 | Jorge Brandão | 2 | – 93 |
| T-9 | Sergio Lafuente | 2 | – 93 |
Featured image credit: Jennifer Lindini / ASO


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