Francisco López Contardo is one of the top UTV rally raiders today, having won the Dakar Rally thrice in such vehicles and the inaugural World Rally-Raid Championship in T3. While it took some luck courtesy of a penalties, López recorded his first W2RC SSV win under modern FIA regulations at the Rallye du Maroc.

Fellow Can-Am Maverick R driver Jeremías González Ferioli would have beaten López for his second win of the season, on the heels of claiming the UTV’s maiden homologated-era W2RC win at the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge in February. However, Ferioli received over five minutes’ worth of penalties that instead dropped him to second behind López: he got three minutes tacked on for failing to let a faster car pass him in Stage 1, another two minutes in Stage 5 for missing a waypoint, and ten more seconds for speeding in the Power Stage.

Consequently, López was promtoed to the SSV win by just 11 seconds over Ferioli. It is his first win under the T4 banner (still used today unofficially to describe any production side-by-side) since the 2021 Dakar Rally.

López won the first stage but had some mistakes that included a missed waypoint himself in Stage 4. He was 14 minutes behind Ferioli entering the final day, and even without the penalty still made up a good chunk of that margin.

Hunter Miller completed the Maverick R podium sweep in third. He had a speeding penalty in the Prologue, crashed into a concrete pillar in a dune during the third stage, and nearly hit a camel in Stage 4 while going through dust. Despite the occasional misadventure, he came within just three minutes of his Can-Am allies.

Kyle Chaney, an American Maverick R driver like Miller, scored a top five in class in his maiden rally raid. The defending King of the Hammers champion suffered a broken A-arm on the first stage but otherwise ran a fairly clean race.

Can-Ams occupied nearly the entire top ten save for Hélder Rodrigues’ Polaris RZR in fourth. Oscar Masó was also the only top-ten Can-Am finisher who didn’t drive the swanky new Maverick R as he was instead in the older X3.

While he finished sixth, Manuel Andújar was officially the SSV winner according to the W2RC since he was the highest finishing driver registered for points. This meant the 2024 Quad champ received the maximum 30 points for winning and technically scored his first victory as an SSV driver.

Mindaugas Sidabras was seventh to win the Road to Dakar.

Alexandre Pinto, who clinched the 2025 SSV title before Morocco, retired after three stages with a mechanical failure.

Results

FinishOverallNumberDriverNavigatorTeamClassTotal TimeMargin
134401Francisco López Contardo*Alvaro LeónCan-Am Factory TeamSSV117:41:41Leader
224411Jeremías González Ferioli*Gonzalo RinaldiCan-Am Factory TeamSSV117:41:52+ 00:11
325408Hunter Miller*Jeremy GrayCan-Am Factory TeamSSV117:44:40+ 2:59
430405Hélder Rodrigues*Gonçalo ReisSantag RacingT418:54:56+ 1:13:15
532419Kyle Chaney*Jacob ArgubrightCan-Am Factory TeamSSV119:18:47+ 1:37:06
640406Manuel AndújarAndres FriniSouth RacingSSV120:25:36+ 2:43:55
743429Mindaugas Sidabras*Ernestas ČesokasIzoton SportSSV121:37:38+ 3:55:57
848418Maciej Oleksowicz*Marcin SienkiewiczSouth RacingSSV123:38:57+ 5:57:16
949432Oscar Masó*Pedro LopezPedregà TeamT424:09:54+ 6:28:02
1050423Richard Aczel*Wouter RosegaarSouth RacingSSV124:18:47+ 6:37:06
1160422José Oscar Nogueira*Arcélio CoutoOld Friends Rally TeamT425:12:30+ 17:30:49
1262410Rui Serpa*Rui PitaSantag RacingT436:02:48+ 18:21:07
1366414Juan Miguel Fidel*Javier VentajaBE RacingT436:58:35+ 19:16:54
1469430Philippe Boutron*Mayeul BarbetBTRSSV139:23:13+ 21:41:32
1570420Gustavo Gallego*Eugenio ArrietaSouth RacingSSV139:56:39+ 22:14:58
1673428Vic Flip*Gerhard SchmiedbergerMM RallyeSSV145:20:29+ 27:38:48
1774424Geoff Minnitt*Stuart GregorySouth RacingSSV150:35:26+ 32:53:45
1875426Joan Piferrer*Xavier BlancoBuggy Masters TeamSSV151:32:05+ 33:50:24
1977433Benoît Lepietre*Peter SerraBTRSSV154:15:39+ 36:33:58
2078431José María Camí*Cristian CamíBuggy Masters TeamSSV155:30:01+ 37:48:20
2180417Hassan Jameel*Maciej GiemzaSouth RacingSSV158:22:24+ 40:40:43
2281425Michael Devos*Karim Ez-ZouaqBTRT474:27:22+ 56:45:41
DNFDNF402Alexandre PintoBernardo OliveiraOld Friends Rally TeamT4DNFN/A
DNFDNF403João Dias*Nuno MoraisSantag RacingT4DNFN/A
DNFDNF412Luís Cidade*Sebastián CesanaSouth RacingSSV1DNFN/A
DNFDNF434Pedro Caparrós*Abel MontoyaPedregà TeamT4DNFN/A
DNFDNF435Benoît Delmas*Firdaouss Al-FannaneObjectif Maroc MMPT4DNFN/A
DNFDNF437Juan Manuel Mañá*Giovanna di BlasiAutomodeT4DNFN/A
* – Not competing for World Rally-Raid Championship

Stage winners

StageOverallDriverTime
Prologue27João Dias*13:04.8
Stage 130João Dias*3:15:40
Stage 221Francisco López Contardo*3:46:05
Stage 323Francisco López Contardo*3:57:38
Stage 433Jeremías González Ferioli*3:09:18
Stage 526Francisco López Contardo*3:07:13
Power Stage19Hélder Rodrigues*21:50

W2RC

Drivers

RankDriverPointsMargin
1Alexandre Pinto234Leader
2Enrico Gaspari190– 44
3Michele Cinotto105– 129
4Manuel Andújar98– 136
5Claude Fournier81– 153
6Sara Price55– 179
7Mário Franco50– 184
8Roger Grouwels45– 189
9Mansour Al-Helei29– 205
10Fernando Álvarez12– 222
T-11Diego Martinez2– 232
T-11Carlos Vento2– 232

Navigators

RankNavigatorPointsMargin
1Bernardo Oliveira234Leader
2Fausto Mota140– 94
3Maurizio Dominella78– 156
4Andres Frini56– 178
5Sean Berriman55– 179
6Patrick Jimbert53– 181
T-7Antoine Lecourbe50– 184
T-7João Miranda50– 184
9Rudolf Meijer45– 189
10Bernardo Graue42– 192
11Khalid Al-Kendi29– 205
12Grégory Revest-Arnoux28– 206
13Alberto Bertoldi27– 207
14Xavier Panseri12– 222
T-15Jorge Brandão2– 232
T-15Sergio Lafuente2– 232

Featured image credit: Kin Marcin / Red Bull Content Pool

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