Seth Quintero is one of rally raid’s brightest prospects, but victory in the Ultimate class eluded him as older drivers like Nasser Al-Attiyah and Sébastien Loeb kept him at bay.
After two and a half years of coming up short, the kid’s finally got it done. Even if he had to fight tooth and nail for it.
Quintero didn’t win any stages, but found himself leading the Desafío Ruta 40 at the end of the penultimate day by just seven seconds over Al-Attiyah. He had been running well leading up to Stage 4, finishing fourth on the first leg despite being the first car on track followed by sixth, third, and fifth. The only real snags he faced early on were a puncture apiece in Stages 2 and 3, a broken damper in the latter that was replaced while in the transfer zone,
Ironically, the fourth stage was also his worst day performance-wise despite taking the lead. After catching up to Sébastien Loeb, he got trapped in his dust before suffering two punctures at KMs 170 and 200.
Even then, he ended up in first after teammate Henk Lategan struggled with power steering problems and flat tires that day. He also received a three-minute penalty for arriving at the time control late, which Lategan felt was “a bit harsh.” These dropped Lategan to third, while Al-Attiyah moved up into second.
Al-Attiyah’s chances were officially killed on the last day by a wheel change. Quintero finished third, but two minutes ahead of Al-Attiyah to seal the victory. Lategan won the stage, passing Al-Attiyah and completing a 1–2 finish for Toyota Gazoo Racing.
“We were fighting hard to the end, but we had a puncture and then we were stuck behind Seb with all the dust,” said Al-Attiyah. “We couldn’t do anything, but this is motorsport and we finished third, which is good for the championship. We’ll see for Morocco.”
Quintero was more than relieved to finally stand atop the box. He is the first American driver to win a rally raid overall (which excludes riders and class winners) in the World Rally-Raid Championship era. His last W2RC race victory of any kind was in the T3 class at the 2023 Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge en route to the title.
“We tried our absolute best every single day. TGR W2RC gave me the tools to do what I needed to do, and we came away with the victory,” Quintero stated. “It feels amazing. I am really happy to win here in front of all these fantastic fans and to give TGR W2RC this victory. We have been working so hard this year. Everyone’s hard work paid off and I’m glad I could finally achieve this for them because I am so thankful to be part of this family.”
Loeb was fourth to cap off a frustrating rally. Tire failures plagued the points leader all race long, but he was able to finish second overall in Stage 3 and 5 to keep it close with the leaders. He remains atop the standings with 114 points to Al-Attiyah’s 111 and Quintero’s 101.
While TGR was pleased with the result, it wasn’t all celebratory. Akira Miura was running tenth after three stages before an upright issue took him out. A suspension failure on the final stage ended his race for good.
Ford had a tough going that was only salvaged by Nani Roma’s top-ten finish. Carlos Sainz won a stage but it came a day after a broken belt forced him to retire. Mitch Guthrie and ally Denis Krotov were DNFs, while Martin Prokop placed 12th and Kees Koolen 14th as privateers.
Roma and Sebastián Halpern were the only drivers in the top ten who didn’t race a Hilux or Sandrider. Halpern, making his return to the W2RC after a two-year absence, ran top 20 in the first half before stringing together three straight top-ten runs that included a seventh in Stage 4.
After his 2023 and 2024 Ruta 40s were plagued by mechanical issues on his diesel-powered Mini, Halpern was more than happy that his petrol-based 3.0i held up.
“Given the extremely strong competition here, I think a top-ten finish is a damn good result for us and the entire team,” he stated. “It was a really, really tough race that challenged us every single day, and the pace the drivers are setting here is deeply impressive. Since we hadn’t raced in two years, we lacked a bit of rhythm at the beginning.
“To be honest, the Mini ran phenomenally and without the slightest issue. The team was also incredible and did a fantastic job. Edu (Pulenta) did a first-class job as co-driver, too: he called every course, every river, and all the waypoints perfectly. Overall, I am super happy with the new car, which pulls extremely hard. The petrol engine has truly changed the car completely. The suspension works brilliantly as well. We are completely happy all around: with the car, the team, the navigator, and all the work that was put in.”
Eryk Goczał was tenth, a solid finish on paper but definitely a disappointment after starting the race by winning the first stage. He had a pair of punctures and lost fourth gear the next day, then lost even more time to navigation errors and getting stuck behind slower cars. After scoring a second in Stage 4, the driveshaft failed just 30 kilometers from the race finish on the last leg. He and Szymon Gospodarczyk improvised by moving the front driveshaft to the rear, which “effectively turned out car into something like a buggy. Somehow, we managed to reach the finish like that.”
Fellow Hilux driver Kevin Benavides was 13th in his maiden Ultimate race. The former Dakar bike winner was impressive early on as he finished P2 to Al-Attiyah by just 18 seconds in Stage 2, but the progress was nullified just a day later when a shock absorber and caused him to get stuck on his side in the dunes.
João Ferreira was leading the overall until he and Lucas Moraes crashed together in Stage 3. Both were able to continue and finish the race, albeit at the bottom of the order.
Results
| Finish | Overall | Number | Driver | Navigator | Team | Total Time | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 203 | Seth Quintero | Andrew Short | Toyota Gazoo Racing | 15:55:38 | Leader |
| 2 | 2 | 202 | Henk Lategan | Brett Cummings | Toyota Gazoo Racing | 15:57:33 | + 1:55 |
| 3 | 3 | 299 | Nasser Al-Attiyah | Fabian Lurquin | Dacia Sandriders | 15:58:04 | + 2:26 |
| 4 | 4 | 219 | Sébastien Loeb | Édouard Boulanger | Dacia Sandriders | 15:59:32 | + 3:54 |
| 5 | 5 | 218 | Saood Variawa | François Cazalet | Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa | 16:27:42 | + 32:04 |
| 6 | 6 | 201 | Yazeed Al-Rajhi | Timo Gottschalk | Overdrive Racing | 16:47:29 | + 51:51 |
| 7 | 7 | 238 | Marcelo Gastaldi* | Carlos Eduardo Sachs | SVR | 16:50:23 | + 54:45 |
| 8 | 8 | 227 | Nani Roma | Álex Haro | Ford Racing | 16:56:25 | + 1:00:47 |
| 9 | 9 | 250 | Sebastián Halpern* | Eduardo Pulenta | X-raid Mini JCW Team | 17:01:26 | + 1:05:48 |
| 10 | 13 | 205 | Eryk Goczał | Szymon Gospodarczyk | Energylandia Rally Team | 17:31:35 | + 1:35:57 |
| 11 | 14 | 210 | Hernán Garcés | Juan Latrach | Overdrive Racing | 17:49:45 | + 1:54:07 |
| 12 | 15 | 221 | Martin Prokop | Viktor Chytka | ORLEN Jipocar Team | 17:58:43 | + 2:03:05 |
| 13 | 16 | 247 | Kevin Benavides* | Lisandro Sisterna | Overdrive Racing | 18:10:41 | + 2:15:03 |
| 14 | 20 | 231 | Kees Koolen | Wouter Rosegaar | RD Limited | 20:12:57 | + 4:17:19 |
| 15 | 25 | 222 | Marcos Baumgart | Kleber Cincea | SVR | 30:44:54 | + 14:49:16 |
| 16 | 26 | 236 | Cristian Baumgart | Luis Felipe Eckel | SVR | 32:32:37 | + 16:36:59 |
| 17 | 27 | 240 | João Ferreira | Filipe Palmeiro | Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa | 35:56:46 | + 20:01:08 |
| 18 | 28 | 230 | Lucio Álvarez | Bernardo Graue | SVR | 36:00:36 | + 20:04:58 |
| 19 | 29 | 225 | Carlos Sainz | Daniel Oliveras | Ford Racing | 36:07:37 | + 20:11:59 |
| 20 | 30 | 206 | Marek Goczał | Maciej Marton | Energylandia Rally Team | 36:15:02 | + 20:19:24 |
| 21 | 31 | 223 | Lucas Moraes | Dennis Zenz | Dacia Sandriders | 36:28:34 | + 20:32:56 |
| DNF | DNF | 204 | Akira Miura | Armand Monleón | Toyota Gazoo Racing | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 217 | Denis Krotov | Konstantin Zhiltsov | M-Sport Rally-Raid Team | DNF | N/A |
| DNF | DNF | 228 | Mitch Guthrie | Kellon Walch | Ford Racing | DNF | N/A |
Stage winners
| Stage | Overall | Driver | Total Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | 1 | Eryk Goczał | 3:33:59 |
| Stage 2 | 1 | Nasser Al-Attiyah | 1:45:42 |
| Stage 3 | 1 | Henk Lategan | 4:14:34 |
| Stage 4 | 1 | Carlos Sainz | 3:32:47 |
| Stage 5 | 1 | Henk Lategan | 2:31:12 |
Featured image credit: Kin Marcin / Red Bull Content Pool


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