In a sense, Thierry Sabine finally made it back to Lac Rose on Saturday.

40 years after his untimely passing in a helicopter crash while overseeing the rally he created, Team DAK’CAR brought their bus bearing the likenesses of Sabine and his Paris–Dakar contemporaries to the Africa Eco Race finish along Lake Retba in Dakar, Senegal. Sabine and his wife Diane are featured in an emblem on both sides of the bus accompanied by former winners and race icons on two and four wheels.

“As I drove toward Lac Rose, I thought back to all those early Paris–Dakar Rallies, to all our fellow travelers, to my brother Philippe, to those who are no longer with us, with a touch of nostalgia,” DAK’CAR boss Marc Joineau commented. Joineau himself was a Dakar regular during its infancy in the 1980s before getting back on a bike and signing up for the AER.

“I will have done it on a motorcycle, in a buggy, in a 4×4, and finally in a school bus painted in the colors of the Thierry Sabine era. A wonderful challenge very close to my heart.”

Stage 12 was not included in the final overall results, though there was still a 22-kilometer Selective Section to go with the 246-km trip from Mpal to Dakar. Of course, the SS was irrelevant in the bigger picture of another AER that successfully reached the legendary finish by the pink water of Lac Rose. Organizers even called for a mass start along the beach as done in Dakars of yore and for a one-off in 2025 (the 2026 Dakar Classic also conducted one in Stage 8).

René Metge’s Range Rover is among the cars on the DAK’CAR bus, which makes it all the more fitting that his kids Jonathan and Élodie finished the AER in their own. 45 years after their dad won the Dakar for the first time, the siblings finally achieved their goal of reaching the lake in a replica of René’s 1981 winner.

Besides celebrating the finish, they took a photo alongside a memorial marker by the lake to Sabine and caught up with Jean-Louis Schlesser, the two-time Dakar winner who co-founded the AER alongside René. The younger Metges also brought with them the trophy their dad received for winning the 1981 Dakar, which has a traditional cup design rather than the Bedouin used today.

“After an absolutely incredible day full of emotions, our dream—which we’ve been imagining for over a year—has finally come true,” the Metge siblings jointly stated. “We set off at night from Mpal on a long liaison. There was a lot of traffic this morning, then we went to the beach where we put the pedal to the metal.

“It was an intense and, to be honest, a bit nerve-wracking moment: high tide, the waves catching up to us, adrenaline at its peak. The emotion was so strong that Élodie couldn’t even manage the navigation on the beach.

“At the finish line, there was immense relief, an indescribable pride in having completed this adventure with this Range Rover, and above all, the immense joy of being reunited with our loved ones. Standing on the podium, surrounded by the entire Africa Eco Race team, was a timeless moment.

“Today, there were so many tears… but tears of joy. Thank you all!”

Since the Africa Eco Race retraces the route that the Dakar followed until 2009, it made sense that getting to Lac Rose was an emotional moment for those with connections to the older race. Noa Sainct got to be at the location where his father Richard stood triumphant in 1999 (the 2000 and 2003 Dakars finished in Egypt), while Tomáš Tomeček and his crew of service truck drivers got three Tatra 815s to Retba as the late Karel Loprais certainly would’ve been proud of. Yoshimasa Sugawara, who still holds the record for the longest Dakar consecutive start streak, was also back by the water for the second year in a row.

Even Stéphane Peterhansel made a point of showing up. Like in 2025, he briefly participated in the final stage on a Yamaha Ténéré so that he could join everyone at the lake. He wasn’t as involved as last year since he was still unwinding after January’s Dakar in Saudi Arabia, but his presence was still more than welcomed by those like the Metges and Sainct.

Stage 12 winners

Bike

ClassOverallNumberRiderTeamTotal Time
450cc112David FrétignéDavid Frétigné Honda Off Road Center12:20
Over 450cc4120Mirco BettiniRally Team Azzurrorosa19:21
Over 650cc3191Mike WiedemannWiedemann Mtorsports13:06
Quad6197Alexis VaragneTeam Sénégal24:24

Car

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T1+7215Christian FemontDesert Foxx Racing16:34
T1.12202Imre VargaVarga Racing Team13:54
T1.21236Andrea SchiumariniR Team12:58
Open10210Cédric FerynFeryn Rally Raid Team20:40

SSV

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
SSV3285Eric BernardVendée Team15:37
T39253Jérôme CambierJérôme Cambier16:24
T41275Martijn van den BroekVan Ham Racing / QFF Racing14:43

Truck

ClassNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T5400Gerrit ZuurmondRainbow Truck Team16:57

Overall winners

Bike

ClassOverallNumberRiderTeamTotal Time
450cc3176Jean-Loup LepanRC Assistance398:40:13
Over 450cc2213Alexandre AzinhaisClub Aventura Touareg48:18:03
Over 650cc1171Kevin GallasTénéré Yamaha Rally Team39:24:05
ElectricN/A100Cyril ForgetCFR Endurance197:53:40
Quad6897Alexis VaragneTeam Sénégal118:51:59

Car

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T1+2215Christian FemontDesert Foxx Racing40:42:43
T1.13200Vincent VroninksDesert Lions Rally Team41:02:29
T1.21201David GérardNominoe Aventures / Les Fous du Volant / MD Rallye39:13:24
Open11210Cédric FerynFeryn Rally Raid Team107:31:53

SSV

ClassOverallNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
SSV4285Eric BernardVendée Team44:20:56
T32299Martin BenkoNorwit Racing42:44:22
T41275Martijn van den BroekVan Ham Racing / QFF Racing41:56:38

Truck

ClassNumberDriverTeamTotal Time
T5400Gerrit ZuurmondRainbow Truck Team61:18:21

Featured image credit: Metge Adventure

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