For the first time ever, Nasser Al-Attiyah did not win the World Rally-Raid Championship. While that was a change, what wasn’t new was a Toyota Hilux at the top.

Lucas Moraes entered the season-ending Rallye du Maroc with a ten-point deficit on Al-Attiyah, but also momentum on his side after scoring his maiden W2RC win at the Rally Raid Portugal two weeks prior. His TGR teammate Henk Lategan sat between them, nine points back of Al-Attiyah.

Al-Attiyah, who had won every drivers’ title since the series’ inception in 2022 as well as the 2024 Rallye du Maroc in Dacia’s debut, struck first by winning the Prologue. While Prologue times don’t count towards the FIA overall, it was still a good way to set the tone. Unfortunately for Al-Attiyah, his Sandrider failed to hold that high note as he hit a ditch in Stage 1 steering arm. Moraes finished third to take the early advantage and leave Al-Attiyah having to claw back through the order.

While Al-Attiyah won Stage 2, he was never able to catch Moraes in the overall. Even then, all the Qatari really needed was to get close enough to Moraes to mitigate the points blow and hold onto his title. Entering the final day, Al-Attiyah led Moraes by just two points.

Moraes had an unimpressive Stage 5, but Al-Attiyah’s defense was ultimately killed when he received a one-hour penalty for not stopping at the end of the Power Stage’s timed section. The error came when Al-Attiyah and his navigator Fabian Lurquin were bickering over the end of the section, during which neither noticed the point in front of the media area where they needed to come to a stop. Al-Attiyah blasted by at over 165 km/h before finally coming to a halt 649 meters after the finish.

The team blamed dust for causing them to miss the stop sign, but video review by the FIA found the dust had actually been from behind their car. Additionally, the stewards poitned out Al-Attiyah had continued driving well after passing the sign and should have noticed that the course had already ended.

“[E]ven if the crew’s claims were valid (as already mentioned, this was not confirmed in this case), and there was a significant amount of dust, the crew members, being professional athletes, should have understood how to behave in such situations,” reads the stewards’ report. “Dust is a common factor in this motorsport discipline, but that does not mean that it gives the crew any right to behave unsafely and unreasonably.”

Al-Attiyah was eventually fined €10,000, half of which is suspended until the end of the 2026 W2RC season assuming no repeat infractions. The penalty dropped him to 15th overall for the race.

While a disappointing end for Al-Attiyah, Sébastien Loeb still won the race for Dacia by 5:43 over Moraes. It was a massive breath of fresh air for Loeb, who had not won a rally raid since the 2022 season-ending Andalucía Rally. His new co-driver Édouard Boulanger, ironically Al-Attiyah’s for much of the season, also clinched the navigators’ title for the second year in a row.

“We had a good rhythm since the beginning of the rally, no mistakes, no problems,” said Loeb. “We worked together with Édouard, finding our collaboration and improving it because we did just one rally together before this. Honestly, the feeling was really good with the Dacia Sandrider with the stages and we could push from the start to the end.

“It was the perfect rally for us. Édouard is the world champion navigator. He started the season with Nasser and finished it with me and finishes the season with me most points so it’s good. I’m happy for him, he deserved it and did a great job here. This rally is good preparation for the Dakar also, we were here also for that, to prepare for Dakar. At the moment, everything is going very well. It’s only my second cross-country rally win and I’m really happy.”

Al-Attiyah’s debacle and Moraes’ runner-up propelled the latter past for the championship by 11 points. Lategan settled for third, knocked out of title contention by a rear differential failure in Stage 2.

Moraes and Lategan’s contributions also helped Toyota secure the manufacturers’ title, which the Japanese company has won every year of the W2RC’s existence.

“Crazy, crazy finish to this rally but I just want to thank the whole team,” Moraes stated. “It has been a dream to be a part of this team and to win the manufacturers and also the drivers’ championship is something amazing. All the mechanics and engineers, they work so hard and really happy to finish the season like this even though it went down to the wire. This goes to Brazil and to Toyota.”

The last stage claimed a handful of victims. Isidre Esteve, who was using the race to prep for Dakar, changed the differential throughout the race and the final setup proved to be a mess, costing him time that was further piled on by a penalty for missing a waypoint. Still, he managed a 19th.

Perennial frontrunners Yazeed Al-Rajhi and Carlos Sainz were respectively taken out by mechanical failures. Daniel Schröder retired after a massive crash that destroyed much of his Volkswagen’s bodywork, while former IndyCar driver Francesco Dracone’s rally raid debut was cut short when his navigator Alessandro Verna had a medical emergency.

Nathan Hayashi, an unusual face as an ULTS entry, started the race in Ultimate but back-to-back stage DNFs prevented him from continuing in the class. He switched to Open for the last two stages.

The rally was especially challenging for Century Racing, who was hoping to test new parts like shocks and suspension. While a few retirements were perhaps unsurprising with 11 cars entered, virtually all of them struggled with a myriad of problems ranging from mechanical to accidents.

The team’s factory drivers Mathieu Serradori and Brian Baragwanath entered Morocco with high hopes, the former in an upgraded chassis while the latter drove his teammate’s old car. However, while the reliability of the cars improved, the desert and high speeds took heavy tolls on the R53 shocks and suspension early on. Baragwanath also had to deal with his GPS signal, which controls the car’s speed, glitching out on the first stage.

“Our dampers contain around 240 individual parts with three stages in compression, so it’s a very complex three dimensional problem,” explained team manager Julien Hardy. “A lot of variable like terrain, fuel load, temperature add to the complexity, not to mention that the front and the rear have to be considered sometimes separately and sometimes together. Many clues from the instrumentation we have on the car and from the bench testing, but it’s not always easy to find our way around.

“Introducing upgrades during the race is a balancing act. It can backfire if we get it wrong as we cannot really test them until the next day. Morocco as always is the final big test before Dakar so we’re trying to keep that goal in mind, treat it more as a development race.”

Although R53 and Century managed to figure out the right suspension, attrition from crashes and other misfortunes still lurked. Serradori suffered a broken rear CV joint that knocked him out of Stage 5, with Baragwanath stopping to help.

Other Century clients had a rough going too. Janus van Kasteren was taken out of ontention by a rut that destroyed the left front of his CR7-T while teammate Michiel Becx and ally Jérémie Renou suffered rollovers. Rik van den Brink hit a ditch that resulted in a compression fracture.

Despite the tribulations, Baragwanath ended up being the highest-finishing Century in 14th while Benoît Fretin won the race in T1.2. Dutch collective Shiver Offroad also managed to get all three cars, including van Kasteren and Becx, to the finish.

Laia Sanz finished 18th in class and rounded out the top 20 overall in the debut race for the EBRO s800 XRR, which is based on Century’s CR7 so they lent technical assistance to EBRO Audax Motorsport. She ran in the top 15 until she lost power steering in Stage 5 and the Power Stage.

“We’ve turned around the suspension setup and all drivers were very happy with it today,” Hardy commented at the end of the last day. “Of course we have a list of items to improve as always, nothing new after any big race like this week. The cars were relatively trouble free up until today, so in a way better to see those issues now than in Saudi.”

Results

FinishOverallNumberDriverNavigatorTeamClassTotal TimeMargin
11219Sébastien LoebÉdouard BoulangerDacia SandridersT1+15:11:40Leader
22202Lucas MoraesArmand MonleónToyota Gazoo RacingT1+15:17:23+ 5:43
33227Nani RomaAlex HaroFord M-SportT1+15:17:55+ 6;15
44240João FerreiraFilipe PalmeiroToyota Gazoo Racing South AfricaT1+15:17:59+ 6:19
55226Mattias EkströmEmil BergkvistFord M-SportT1+15:19:09+ 7:29
66206Saood VariawaFrançois CazaletToyota Gazoo Racing South AfricaT1+15:38:23+ 26:43
77228Mitch GuthrieKellon WalchFord M-SportT1+15:39:00+ 27:20
88210Eryk GoczałSzymon GospodarczykEnergylandia Rally TeamT1+15:39:13+ 27:33
99212Cristina GutiérrezPablo MorenoDacia SandridersT1+15:56:26+ 44:46
1010211Marek GoczałMaciej MartonEnergylandia Rally TeamT1+16:03:09+ 51:29
1111221Martin ProkopViktor ChytkaORLEN Jipocar TeamT1+16:10:46+ 59:06
1212203Juan Cruz YacopiniDaniel OliverasSVRT1+16:13:12+ 1:01:32
1313204Henk LateganBrett CummingsToyota Gazoo RacingT1+16:19:01+ 1:07:21
1414223Brian Baragwanath*Leonard CremerCentury RacingT1+16;23:55+ 1:12:15
1515200Nasser Al-AttiyahFabian LurquinDacia SandridersT1+16:24:36+ 1:12:56
1616218Michał GoczałDiego OrtegaEnergylandia Rally TeamT1+16:33:21+ 1:21:41
1717224Lionel BaudLucie BaudX-raid Mini JCW TeamT1+16:51:30+ 1:39:50
1820239Laia Sanz*Maurizio GeriniEBRO Audax MotorsportT1+17:33:47+ 2:22:07
1926230Isidre Esteve*José María VillalobosRepsol Toyota Rally TeamT1+18:00:56+ 2:49:16
2027220Marcos Baumgart*Kleber CinceaSVRT1+18:13:523:02:12
2133249Benoît Fretin*Cédric DupléYDEO CompétitionT1.219:23:00+ 4:11:20
2234245Roger Grouwels*Rudolf MeijerShiver OffroadT1+19:24:24+ 4:12:44
2335250Lucas del Rio*Bruno JacomyMD Rallye SportT1.219:26:03+ 4:14:23
2437248Nandu Jubany*Marc SolàMD Rallye SportT1.219:50:04+ 4:38:24
2538233Hernán Garces*Juan Pablo LatrachOverdrive RacingT1+20:10:25+ 4:58:45
2639244Tomasz Baranowski*Konrad DudzinskiPromenada Rally TeamT1+20:17:48+ 5:06:08
2741237Maik Willems*Arjan Van TielBastion Hotels Dakar TeamT1+20:31;17+ 5:19:37
2845236Mark Mustermann*Michael ZajcMM RallyeT1+22:32:04+ 7:20:24
2946235Jourdan Serderidis*Frédéric MiclotteFord M-SportT1+23:13:52+ 8:02:12
3047207Jean-Luc CeccaldiGuilhem AlvesJLC RacingT1.223:22:11+ 8:10;31
3153208Mathieu SerradoriLoïc MinaudierCentury RacingT1+29:10:36+ 13:58:56
3256205Seth QuinteroAndrew ShortToyota Gazoo RacingT1+33:00:38+ 17:48:58
3359234Janus van Kasteren*Marcel SnijdersShiver OffroadT1+34:33:31+ 19:21:51
3461253Mike Van Eikeren*Jasper RiezebosBastion Hotels Dakar TeamT1.236:02:25+ 20:50:45
3564216Tomáš Ouředníček*Rafał MartonSVRT1+36:15:08+ 21:03:28
3668243Michiel Becx*Wouter de GraaffShiver OffroadT1+38:10:10+ 22:58:30
DNFDNF201Yazeed Al-RajhiTimo GottschalkOverdrive RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF209Daniel SchröderHenry Carl KöhnePS Laser RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF225Carlos SainzLucas CruzFord M-SportT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF241Rik van den Brink*Gydo HeimansBrinky RallysportT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF242Francesco Dracone*Alessandro VernaOverdrive RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF246Nathan Hayashi* ^Shane HairsineThe Gear Shop Technical Motorsport TeamULTSDNFN/A
DNFDNF251Jérémie Renou*Antoine SanchezYDEO CompétitionT1.2DNFN/A
DNFDNF252Frédéric Chesneau*Lionel RomaninSkyboxT1.2DNFN/A
* – Not competing for World Rally-Raid Championship
^ – Switched to Open in Stage 4

Stage winners

StageOverallDriverTime
Prologue1Nasser Al-Attiyah11:56.8
Stage 11Sébastien Loeb2:49:43
Stage 21Nasser Al-Attiyah3:19:17
Stage 31Henk Lategan3:29:48
Stage 41Nani Roma2:40:15
Stage 51Seth Quintero2:37:17
Power Stage1Nani Roma16:24

W2RC

Drivers

RankDriverPointsMargin
1Lucas Moraes164Leader
2Nasser Al-Attiyah153– 11
3Henk Lategan141– 23
4Sébastien Loeb113– 51
5Seth Quintero97– 67
6Yazeed Al-Rajhi78– 86
7João Ferreira78– 86
8Mattias Ekström70– 94
9Nani Roma62– 102
T-10Mitch Guthrie55– 109
T-10Juan Cruz Yacopini55– 109
12Saood Variawa52– 112
13Carlos Sainz39– 125
14Mathieu Serradori35– 129
T-15Guillaume de Mévius31– 133
T-15Martin Prokop31– 133
17Dania Akeel30– 134
18Cristina Gutiérrez28– 136
19Daniel Schröder23– 141
20Pau Navarro22– 142
21Gonçalo Guerreiro20– 144
T-22Nicolás Cavigliasso19– 145
T-22Marek Goczał19– 145
T-22Eryk Goczał19– 145
25Rokas Baciuška16– 148
T-26Guy Botterill14– 150
T-26Adam Kuś14– 150
T-26Alexandre Pinto14– 150
T-26Yasir Seaidan14– 150
30Lionel Baud13– 151
31Enrico Gaspari12– 152
32Denis Krotov11– 153
33Pim Klaassen10– 154
T-34Pedro Gonçalves9– 155
T-34Puck Klaassen9– 155
T-36Khalifa Al-Attiyah8– 156
T-36Michele Cinotto8– 156
T-36Claude Fournier8– 156
T-36Eduard Pons8– 156
T-40Khalid Al-Jafla7– 157
T-40Mário Franco7– 157
T-42Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari6– 158
T-42Manuel Andújar6– 158
T-42Jean-Luc Ceccaldi6– 158
T-42Dave Klaassen6– 158
46David Zille5– 159
T-47Michał Goczał4– 160
T-47Roger Grouwels4– 160
T-47Corbin Leaverton4– 160
T-47Sara Price4– 160
T-47Guoyu Zhang4– 160
52Rui Carneiro3– 161
T-53Mansour Al-Helei2– 162
T-53Fernando Álvarez2– 162
T-53Diego Martinez2– 162
T-53Carlos Vento2– 162

Navigators

RankNavigatorPointsMargin
1Édouard Boulanger187Leader
2Armand Monleón164– 23
3Brett Cummings141– 46
T-4Fabian Lurquin79– 108
T-4Dennis Zenz79– 108
T-6Timo Gottschalk78– 109
T-6Filipe Palmeiro78– 109
8Emil Bergkvist70– 117
9Álex Haro62– 125
T-10Daniel Oliveras55– 132
T-10Kellon Walch55– 132
12François Cazalet52– 135
13Lucas Cruz39– 148
14Loïc Minaudier35– 152
15Viktor Chytka31– 156
16Pablo Moreno28– 159
17Oriol Mena24– 163
18Henry Carl Köhne23– 164
T-19Stéphane Duplé22– 165
T-19Bruno Jacomy22– 165
T-21Maciej Marton19– 168
T-21Valentina Pertegarini19– 168
23Andrew Short18– 169
24Xavier Panseri17– 170
T-25Mathieu Baumel16– 171
T-25Jan Rosa I Viñas16– 171
27Carlos Sachs15– 172
T-28Michaël Metge14– 173
T-28Dennis Murphy14– 173
T-28Bernardo Oliveira14– 173
T-28Dmytro Tsyro14– 173
32Lucie Baud13– 174
T-33Szymon Gospodarczyk11– 176
T-33Konstantin Zhiltsov11– 176
35Mark Laan9– 178
T-36Jaume Betriu8– 179
T-36Rui Franco8– 179
T-36Charan Moore8– 179
T-36Fausto Mota8– 179
40Andrei Rudnitski7– 180
T-41Tessa Klaassen6– 181
T-41Lisandro Sisterna6– 181
T-43Sebastián Cesana5– 182
T-43Hugo Magalhães5– 182
T-43Cadu Sachs5– 182
T-46Nasser Al-Kuwari4– 183
T-46Sean Berriman4– 183
T-46Alberto Bertoldi4– 183
T-46Delphine Delfino4– 183
T-46Maurizio Dominella4– 183
T-46Bernardo Graue4– 183
T-46Patrick Jimbert4– 183
T-46Antoine Lecourbe4– 183
T-46Rudolf Meijer4– 183
T-46Diego Ortega4– 183
T-46Taye Perry4– 183
T-46Grégory Revest-Arnoux4– 183
T-46Yicheng Wang4– 183
59João Miranda3– 184
T-60Khalid Al-Kendi2– 185
T-60Guilhem Alves2– 185
T-60Jorge Brandão2– 185
T-60Ola Fløene2– 185
T-60Andres Frini2– 185
T-60Sergio Lafuente2– 185
T-60Augusto Sanz2– 185
T-67Max Delfino1– 186
T-67David Megre1– 186

Manufacturers

RankManufacturerPointsMargin
1Toyota467Leader
2Dacia359– 108
3Ford276– 191

Featured image credit: Julien Delfosse / DPPI / ASO

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