Mikko Hirvonen continues to lead Rally Sweden following what his Ford team boss Malcolm Wilson described as a career-best performance as the Finn stretched his lead over arch-rival Sebastien Loeb by more than 10 seconds.
The WRC, we are told, is all about new frontiers. Boldly going where no man has gone before and all that – which is certainly not a description you could apply to the local working girl who was looking for customers in the hotel bar last night.
World champion Sébastien Loeb crashed out of the WRC in Poland, handing Ford’s Mikko Hirvonen a gilt-edged chance to take the lead in the championship.
Jeremy Clarkson once said that one of the most embarrassing experiences of his life originated in Poland, where the World Rally Championship has just rolled into town for round eight.
In the same setting where Aesop sat and told his fables, the steady slog of Hirvonen's victory took a great chunk out of Sébastien Loeb's hare-like performance in the opening half of the season.
Dust. It’s something that keeps cleaners in business (apart from mine, who seems has a curiously selective blindness to the stuff) and it’s what we will all be reduced to once we meet our Maker.
A funny thing happened on the way to Sardinia. The FIA announced that it might make the 2011 WRC a competition for cars that don't exist – quite possibly never will.
Just how do you go about winning a championship? Let’s ask Sébastien Loeb, who is well on the way to his sixth. “If you ask me, I can’t really tell you,” he says. Well, thanks, Seb.
Sébastien Loeb brought his C4 through the gravel stage of the Cyprus Rally to win the 50th race of his career and make it a clean sweep of the first three races of the 2009 season.
Winston Churchill paid tribute to those working behind the scenes during the Battle of Britain, saying: "They also serve, who only stand and wait." Clearly he would have felt quite at home in a rally Service Area.
Leaving the luxury of the WRC service park, our intrepid correspondent Justin Hynes discovers the 2006 junior world rally champion Patrik Sandell ensconced in a frozen corner of Hamar...
Petter Solberg left everyone in his snowspray as he won the opening stage of Rally Norway 2009 on February 12. Mikko Hirvonen and Sébastien Loeb were just fractions of a second behind.