60 years after Ford vs. Ferrari at Le Mans, there was Ford vs. Dacia at Dakar. Unlike Bruce McLaren and Chris Amon, Nani Roma and Mattias Ekström couldn’t get it done for the Blue Oval against Nasser Al-Attiyah.

After Toyota’s hopes of a repeat went out the window, the Dakar Rally became a duel between the Dacia Sandrider and Ford Raptor. Al-Attiyah faced challenges from Ekström and Roma before a frustrating penultimate stage for Ford all but assured him of his sixth title barring disaster on the last day.

The top five solely consisted of Sandriders or Raptors as Al-Attiyah led Roma, Ekström, his teammate Sébastien Loeb, and Carlos Sainz of Ford. Roma was the only other driver with a real chance at the overall as he tailed Al-Attiyah by 8:40 following Stage 11, but the second-to-last leg was a catastrophe as Al-Attiyah dominated to put more distance between them. 50 meters before the finish, Roma’s front axle broke off and would have forced him out of the race had Laia Sanz now towed him to the finish.

With 16 minutes between the top two and Stage 13 being just 105 kilometers, Al-Attiyah could afford to run the last stage at a more conservative pace. As such, Roma finished 12th to Al-Attiyah’s 36th in Ultimate, but they were only separated by less than seven minutes.

Al-Attiyah’s six overall wins are the second most by a driver in race history behind Stéphane Peterhansel’s eight, coming with four different manufacturers: he previously won in 2011 with Volkswagen, 2015 with Mini, and was in a Hilux when he won the 2019 and 2022–2023 editions. He also joined Peterhansel and Ari Vatanen in the 50 Stage Win Club when he claimed Stage 12.

“From the start, we believed we could win this race,” said Al-Attiyah. “We started from zero with this Dacia project and we’ve developed the car so much. Now, we’ve won the Dakar.”

Likewise, Dacia is the 13th different manufacturer to overall the Dakar. This company includes 12-time champion Mitsubishi, Peugeot who has seven, six-pack holder Mini, the four each for Citroën, Toyota, and Volkswagen, two apiece for Porsche, Range Rover, and uniquely Jean-Louis Schlesser’s prototypes, and the single victory that Audi, Dacia, Mercedes-Benz, and Dacia’s parent group Renault enjoyed.

“Today is a historic moment and the proudest moment for the whole Dacia brand, our partners and customers,” Automobile Dacia CEO Katrin Adt stated. “It’s the result of so much hard work by so many talented people and shows that the Dacia Sandrider is reliable and robust. All the team members deserve this result, and they should be so incredibly proud for what they have done, achieving victory so early in Dacia’s Dakar journey.”

Ekström held off Loeb for the last step on the podium. The top five was still a Ford and Dacia lockout, and very well could’ve been a 1–2–3–4–5–6 for the two if not for Mathieu Serradori’s stunning run in the Century CR7.

Century Racing’s Dakar began in inauspicious fashion when their hospitality and parts containers got trapped in customs; the former made it in time for the race, but the latter didn’t until Stage 4. Besides overseeing the factory team of Serradori and Brian Baragwanath as well as various clients, their hands were triply tied also working on debuting marques EBRO and Santana.

Despite the usual challenges that a smaller program without the support of full-fledged manufacturers might face, Serradori pulled off a stunning upset when he beat Al-Attiyah to win Stage 10. Perhaps making it all the more impressive, he did so at limited power with no air conditioning and non-vital functions disabled due to electrical problems. With Serradori previously claiming the opening leg in 2020, Century joined Mini as the only makes to win Dakar stages with both a 2WD and a 4WD model.

By the end, Serradori was able to beat Lucas Moraes for sixth. The defending World Rally-Raid Champion had moved from Toyota to Dacia for the 2026 season.

“It has been another tough edition as always, but our preparation and car development have kept us in touch with the big teams,” Century team manager Julien Hardy stated. “One stage victory (long overdue from our side…), third manufacturer and ahead of Toyota, and Mathieu also finished ahead of the reigning world champion Lucas Moraes.

“I hope we kept you on the edge of your seat during Stage 10 and hopefully we’ll be fighting for more stage wins next year!”

On the flip side, it was a frustrating Dakar for Toyota. The defending manufacturers’ champ had a new Hilux developed by Overdrive Racing that showed solid pace, but Toyota Gazoo Racing newcomer Toby Price would be the higher finisher in it as he placed eighth. Henk Lategan had contended with Dacia and Ford before he suffered wheel bearing failure in Stage 11.

Things weren’t any better for non-TGR Hiluxes either, lowlighted by a three-day stretch where a prominent Hilux retired. 2025 Dakar winner Yazeed Al-Rajhi retired after just four stages because he felt he wasn’t at 100% after his vertebra fracture at the Jordan Baja, Benediktas Vanagas from regional subsidiary TGR Baltics bowed out after a huge accident in Stage 5, and Isidre Esteve was a Stage 6 DNF when he hit a dune and his navigator José María Villalobos hurt his back.

While certainly disappointing, Toyota need not worry. TGR has been open about 2026 being a developmental year for the Hilux before stepping up in 2027 or 2028. Even then, they still won three stages.

Likewise, Red-Lined Motorsport had to be dismayed by their T1 showing. Aliyyah and Martin Koloc both failed to finish in their REVOs, the former after hurting her arm when she hit a ditch and broke the steering column in Stage 9 and the latter due to a gearbox failure in Stage 4. Meanwhile, Red-Lined partner DaklaPack Rallysport debuted their own T1+ called the DKR EVO Ultimate with Dave Klaassen; he experienced multiple problems with the crankshaft sensor, had to replace his gearbox early on, and lost a fender to a giant rock on the second marathon but completed the race in 51st.

Simon Vitse finished 15th to win the T1.2 subcategory for two-wheel-drive cars. 2WD vehicles have become increasingly rare in recent years as manufacturers prefer to build more powerful 4WD models, with the Century CR6 and MD Optimus being the only such cars taking part in 2026.

Sanz rounded out the top 20 in EBRO’s first Dakar, while Santana Motor’s debut was cut short by a massive crash for Jesús Calleja. A postmortem of the latter’s car found the engine, drivetrain, and electronics could be salvaged but everything else had to be discarded because the damage was that severe. In particular, Hardy noted “the steering is bent, the seats are damaged, the fuel tank isn’t leaking but got badly squashed. The next Santana car will be a new chassis, no doubt.”

The most unique Ultimate vehicle probably could’ve competed in Stock too as Nathan Hayashi brought his Ford Bronco Raptor from Canada, which was subclassed in the revived T1.3 for SCORE-eligible cars. Despite being probably the weakest T1 car on paper, he successfully reached the finish without major issue.

“It is incredible that a car off the showroom floor can handle that type of terrain,” Hayashi remarked after the second day. “There are no upgrades on this car and it just took everything the stage threw at us.”

Besides Spain, China was well represented too with six JJ3 T1+ cars and Han Wei Motorsport’s duo; the latter’s eponymous owner led the way in 26th with his new HWM T1+. Han knew the Chinese machines weren’t up to par with others, so his focus was mainly on testing rather than gunning for a good finish. He even called the final set of stages “garbage time” to try out new adjustments.

While he certainly would like to go all-out in a future Dakar, the current goal remains to develop the program he currently has.

“If you want to go fast now, the resources and coordination necessary are still lacking,” Han explained. “This is a problem. The data from China is still sorely lacking.

“The first condition is that we need to improve our systems, which seem to be different from the goals of foreign teams. They place more emphasis on competition; it’s deeply ingrained in their culture. I think this is because preparing for the Dakar Rally is incredibly difficult and it takes a whole year, perhaps even more, to prep for the following year’s race. This race is precious for everyone.

“If we don’t finish the race, it’d be like eating a tangyuan without knowing if the filling is sweet or savory. I think that would be even more disappointing.”

Results

FinishOverallNumberDriverNavigatorTeamClassTotal TimeMargin
11299Nasser Al-AttiyahFabian LurquinDacia SandridersT1+48:56:53Leader
22227Nani RomaÁlex HaroFord RacingT1+49:06:35+ 9:42
33226Mattias EkströmEmil BergkvistFord RacingT1+49:11:26+ 14:33
44219Sébastien LoebÉdouard BoulangerDacia SandridersT1+49:12:03+ 15:10
55225Carlos SainzLucas CruzFord RacingT1+49:25:23+ 28:30
66214Mathieu SerradoriLoïc MinaudierCentury Racing Factory Team / Serradori Racing TeamT1+49:41:55+ 45:02
77223Lucas MoraesDennis ZenzDacia SandridersT1+49:44:43+ 47:50
88204Toby PriceArmand MonleónToyota Gazoo RacingT1+49:49:00+ 52:07
99203Seth QuinteroAndrew ShortToyota Gazoo RacingT1+50:11:55+ 1:15:02
1010213Saood VariawaFrançois CazaletToyota Gazoo Racing South AfricaT1+50:20:29+ 1:23:36
1111212Cristina GutiérrezPablo MorenoDacia SandridersT1+50:26:42+ 1:29:49
1212228Mitch GuthrieKellon WalchFord RacingT1+50:34:18+ 1:37:25
1313206Marek GoczałMaciej MartonEnergylandia Rally TeamT1+50:34:20+ 1:37:27
1414218Guy BotterillOriol MenaToyota Gazoo Racing South AfricaT1+50:40:30+ 1:43:37
1515234Simon Vitse*Max DelfinoMD Rallye SportT1.250:44:16+ 1:47:23
1616224Brian Baragwanath*Leonard CremerCentury Racing Factory TeamT1+50:54:43+ 1:57:50
1717205Eryk GoczałSzymon GospodarczykEnergylandia Rally TeamT1+51:25:03+ 2:28:10
1818240João FerreiraFilipe PalmeiroToyota Gazoo Racing South AfricaT1+52:14:41+ 3:17:48
1919209Michał GoczałDiego OrtegaEnergylandia Rally TeamT1+52:18:22+ 3:21:29
2020232Laia SanzMaurizio GeriniEBRO Audax MotorsportT1+52:28:02+ 3:31:09
2121202Henk LateganBrett CummingsToyota Gazoo RacingT1+52:54:38+ 3:57:45
2222230Christian Lavieille*Valentin SarreaudMD Rallye SportT1.253:07:49+ 4:10:56
2323221Martin ProkopViktor ChytkaORLEN Jipocar TeamT1+53:20:27+ 4:23:34
2424239Shaikh Al-Qisimi*Khalid Al-KendiSVRT1+53:25:07+ 4:28:14
2525235Ronan Chabot*Gilles PillotOverdrive RacingT1+53:55:57+ 4:59:04
2626220Wei Han*Li MaHanwei MotorsportT1+53:58:24+ 5:01:31
2727243Lu Binglong*Sha HeJJ SportT1+54:40:46+ 5:43:53
2829210Hernán GarcésJuan LatrachOverdrive RacingT1+54:47:23+ 5:50:30
2934259Tao Yongming*Fu LiguoJJ SportT1+55:30:44+ 6:33:51
3035208Lionel BaudLucie BaudX-raid Mini JCW TeamT1+55:33:36+ 6:36:43
3141217Denis KrotovKonstantin ZhiltsovM-Sport Rally Raid TeamT1+57:07:38+ 8:10:45
3242222Guillaume de MéviusMathieu BaumelX-raid Mini JCW TeamT1+57:08:14+ 8:11:21
3347238Jean-Rémy Bergounhe*Anthony PesMD Rallye SportT1.257:34:55+ 8:38:02
3456267Mark Mustermann*Michael ZajcMM RallyeT1+59:10:14+ 10:13:21
3559252Benoît Fretin*Cédric DupléYDEO CompétitionT1.259:48:38+ 10:51:45
3660270Khaled Al-Jafla*Andrei RudnitskiSVRT1+60:12:40+ 11:15:47
3761258François Cousin*Stéphane CousinCompagnie des DunesT1.260:16:43+ 11:19:50
3862246Karel Trněný*Václav PritzlX-Force RacingT1+60:51:40+ 11:54:47
3963242Miroslav ZapletalMarek SýkoraOffroadsportT1+60:56:59+ 12:00:06
4067261Xu Benyang*Tian LeiJJ SportT1+62:15:32+ 13:18:39
4168248Maria Luís Gameiro*Rosa Romero FontX-raid Mini JCW TeamT1+62:16:30+ 13:19:37
4276257Roger Grouwels*Rudolf MeijerShiver OffroadT1+64:14:30+ 15:17:37
4377272Jordi Torras*Santiogo CostaMD Rallye SportT1.264:18:24+ 15:21:31
4479268Silvio Totani*Tito TotaniMD Rallye SportT1.264:36:50+ 15:39:57
4582253Janus van Kasteren*Marcel SnijdersShiver OffroadT1+65:11:05+ 16:14:12
4683247Tim Coronel*Tom CoronelTeam CoronelT1+65:11:51+ 16:14:58
4787241Gintas Petrus*Nursaltan AbykayevPetrus Racing Team / MV SportT1.266:38:24+ 17:41:31
4889249Maik Willems*Jasper RiezebosBastion Hotels TeamT1+67:04:59+ 18:08:06
4993262Wang Guorui*Tian YuLongmai MotorsportT1+69:25:14+ 20:28:21
5094231Nandu Jubany*Marc SolàMD Rallye SportT1.269:26:41+ 20:29:48
51103254Dave Klaassen*Tessa KlaassenDaklaPack RallysportT1+72:12:18+ 23:15:25
52122260Bruno Miot*Cristophe CrespoMD Rallye SportT1.2103:53:31+ 54:56:38
53123237Marcos Moraes*Fabio PedrosoSVRT1+105:08:52+ 56:11:59
54125278Jean-Pierre Strugo*Kevin MorelMD Rallye SportT1.2110:16:57+ 61:20:04
55131215Zhang Biaobiao*Ma WenkeJJ SportT1+134:07:07+ 85:10:14
56135245Po Tian*Ha SimurenHanwei MotorsportT1.1152:54:12+ 103:57:19
57136256Jürgen Schröder*Stuart GregoryPS Laser RacingT1+153:02:08+ 104:05:15
58141271Fan Gaoxiang*Zhao KaiJJ SportT1+183:55:24+ 134:58:31
59145265Nathan HayashiShane HairsineThe Gear Shop Technical Motorsport TeamT1.3196:58:24+ 148:01:31
60150266Pedro Peñate*Daniel MesaTH-Trucks TeamT1.2233:29:09+ 184:32:16
DNFDNF201Yazeed Al-RajhiTimo GottschalkOverdrive RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF207Jean-Luc CeccaldiPascal DelacourJLC RacingT1.2DNFN/A
DNFDNF216Benediktas Vanagas*Aisvydas PaliukėnasGurtam Toyota Gazoo Racing BalticsT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF229Daniel SchröderHenry Carl KöhnePS Laser RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF233Isidre EsteveJosé María VillalobosRepsol Toyota Rally TeamT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF236Romain DumasAlex WinocqFord Racing / RD LimitedT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF244Jesús Calleja*Edu BlancoSantana MotorsT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF250Aliyyah KolocMarcin PasekBuggyra ZM RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF251Martin KolocMirko BrunBuggyra ZM RacingT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF255Zhao Yuqiao*Gui HaiboJJ SportT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF263Michiel Becx*Wouter de GraaffShiver OffroadT1+DNFN/A
DNFDNF269Jourdan SerderidisGrégoire MunsterM-Sport Rally Raid TeamT1+DNFN/A
* – Not competing for World Rally-Raid Championship

Stage winners

StageOverallDriverTotal Time
Prologue1Mattias Ekström10:48.7
Stage 11Guillaume de Mévius3:07:49
Stage 21Seth Quintero3:57:16
Stage 31Mitch Guthrie4:04:32
Stage 41Henk Lategan4:47:08
Stage 51Nani Roma3:54:42
Stage 61Nasser Al-Attiyah3:38:28
Stage 71Mattias Ekström3:44:22
Stage 81Saood Variawa4:20:35
Stage 91Eryk Goczał3:46:42
Stage 101Mathieu Serradori4:48:27
Stage 111Mattias Ekström2:47:22
Stage 121Nasser Al-Attiyah3:21:52
Stage 131Mattias Ekström46:14

Featured image credit: Charly López / ASO

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