It goes without saying that a motorcycle with a multi-cylinder engine and displacement of over 650 cubic centimeters will usually outperform a single-cylinder, 450cc model. Usually.

Stage 3 of the Africa Eco Race, the first full-length leg after the first three days were plagued by bad weather, already delivered an upset when Thomas Marini beat the more powerful bikes for the win. His Husqvarna FR 450 was the only vehicle, bike or otherwise, to navigate the 440-kilometer special in less than five hours.

“The navigation wasn’t easy, but I managed to avoid making any big mistakes,” said Marini. “Once I caught up with the French guy, we went on together. We helped each other a bit with the navigation, so it went well. I’m very happy with it.

“We need to stay focused because the race is long, but in the meantime, we’ve brought this one home and it’s a great result.”

In fact, two of top three bikes on the stage podium were 450cc. Kevin Gallas’ Yamaha Ténéré 700 was sandwiched between Marini’s Husqvarna and Jean-Loup Lepan’s KTM 450 Rally, and the latter in turn was surrounded by Ténérés and Aprilia Tuareg 660s. The next highest bike under 650cc was the KTM 450 of Valentin Sertilhanges in 11th.

Being the first full stage, there were bound to be some incidents. Jacopo Cerutti, for example, made a mistake at the start and fell off the pace then got stuck in the sand, further slowing him down. Despite his difficulties, he managed to finish fifth ahead of Stage 2 winner Alessandro Botturi.

Noa Sainct crashed but will be able to continue. The same can’t be said for Gerben Lieverdink, who had to retire after falling on the rocks on Tuesday; he broke six ribs, his pinky, and had a collapsed lung.

One SSV rolled in the dunes, prompting Tomáš Ouředníček to come help. Another side-by-side bumped into the Porsche 964 of Axel Berrier, who is competing in the Africa Eco Race Historic; Berrier explained he had stopped to let another SSV pass, but the offending car didn’t see his Porsche in the dust nor activated the Sentinel to warn him.

Stage 3 winners

Bike

ClassOverallNumberRiderTeamTotal Time
450cc130Thomas MariniSolarys Factory Team4:53:26
Over 450cc25123Fabio LotteroClub Aventura Touareg3:04:08
Over 650cc2171Kevin GallasTénéré Yamaha Rally Team5:01:19
Electric96100Cyril ForgetCFR Endurance5:30:00
Quad9597Alexis VaragneTeam Sénégal5:30:00

Car

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T1+4215Christian FemontDesert Foxx Racing5:14:31
T1.16200Vincent VroninksDesert Lions Rally Team5:29:10
T1.21205Pol van PollaertDesert Foxx Racing5:05:27
Open14208Éric CoquideRT2R11:00:00

SSV

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
SSV1251Pierre LafayTeam Gazzafond5:06:36
T32299Martin BenkoNorwit Racing5:17:09
T43273William GrarreTRC5:29:01

Truck

ClassNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T5400Gerrit ZuurmondRainbow Truck Team6:41:01

Leaders after Stage 3

Bike

ClassOverallNumberRiderTeamTotal Time
450cc130Thomas MariniSolarys Racing7:22:36
Over 450cc2213Alexandre AzinhaisClub Aventura Touareg9:15:43
Over 650cc2171Kevin GallasTénéré Yamaha Rally Team7:27:40
Electric94100Cyril ForgetCFR Endurance22:40:00
Quad9997Alexis VaragneTeam Sénégal33:25:00

Car

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T1+3215Christian FemontDesert Foxx Racing7:52:16
T1.16200Vincent VroninksDesert Lions Rally Team8:08:14
T1.21205Pol van PollaertDesert Foxx Racing7:32:08
Open14208Éric CoquideRT2R15:27:05

SSV

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
SSV1251Pierre LafayTeam Gazzafond7:31:10
T32299Martin BenkoNorwit Racing7:55:19
T43273William GrarreTRC8:09:48

Truck

ClassNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T5400Gerrit ZuurmondRainbow Truck Team9:49:03

Featured image credit: Solarys Racing

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