CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: DR. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Sports / Rally

Qatar’s Al Attiyah leading starter in Jordan

Published: 09 May 2013 - 01:19 am | Last Updated: 01 Feb 2022 - 10:48 pm

DEAD SEA, Jordan:  The 2013 Jordan Rally, round three of the FIA Middle East Rally Championship, gets under way at 5pm from Martyr’s Memorial in Al Hussein Sports City in Amman today.

A provisional 28 entrants from eight countries will tackle 16 timed special stages and 256.64 competitive kilometres in a total route of 764.62km in the Dead Sea area of the Hashemite Kingdom tomorrow and Saturday.

While the likes of Qatar’s Nasser Saleh Al Attiyah (pictured), the UAE’s Sheikh Khalid Al Qassimi, Doha-based Abdulaziz Al Kuwari and Sharjah’s Sheikh Abdullah Al Qassimi will be vying for vital seconds at the front of the field, several drivers will be battling for supremacy in the Group N category for showroom-type cars.

Kuwait’s Mishari Al Thefiri (Mitsubishi) currently holds a 15-point lead in the well-supported second tier category after securing points for first and third in the Group N section at the opening two rounds. The Emirati duo of Bader Al Jabri (Subaru) and Majed Al Shamsi (Subaru), Turkish lady driver Burcu Cetinkaya (Mitsubishi) and Qatari Abdullah Al Kuwari (Mitsubishi) will be determined to close in on the Kuwaiti in the points’ standings.

Young Abu Dhabi Racing Team drivers Mohamed Al Sahlawi and Mohamed Al Mutawaa are the sole challengers in the two-wheel drive and Junior categories in their Citroën DS3s and seconds are likely to separate the two UAE drivers on these notoriously difficult gravel stages in Jordan.

“It’s our first time here and a new challenge for us,” admitted an enthusiastic Mutawaa. 

“Our co-drivers have been here before and so have many members of our team so we have experience and advise on hand.”

Drivers completed their policed reconnaissance of the route on Wednesday afternoon and the tricky nature of the roads was soon evident to the leading teams. “I think the stage surfaces have been regraded and there is a fine layer of very slippery gravel on the top,” admitted Sheikh Abdullah Al-Qassimi’s British co-driver Steve Lancaster.

“This has made them so slippery and very tricky. Abdullah and I were talking to Nasser (Al Attiyah) after the first day of the recce on Tuesday evening and we all agreed it is going to be very difficult. Nasser starts as the first car on the road and we are seventh and he jokingly admitted that he would be happy to swap our starting order for the first stage.”

The nature of rallying means that the leading two or three drivers, including Al-Attiyah and Khalid Al Qassimi, will act as ‘road sweepers’ to ‘clean’ the stage surfaces of loose gravel and this may well put them at a slight disadvantage on the first two stages.

Today teams pass through the pre-event scrutineering checks before the official ceremonial at Martyr’s Memorial in Al-Hussein Sports City. Rally action gets underway with the opening Suwayma stage tomorrow.

The peninsula