Sola wins PCWRC category in Germany.

Daniel Sola took outright honours in Germany in the Production Car World Rally Championship today. The Spaniard led the category from start to finish, winning 10 of the 22 special stages to claim maximum points. Mitsubishi drivers also claimed six of the leading nine positions.

Sola wins PCWRC category in Germany.

Daniel Sola took outright honours in Germany in the Production Car World Rally Championship today. The Spaniard led the category from start to finish, winning 10 of the 22 special stages to claim maximum points. Mitsubishi drivers also claimed six of the leading nine positions.

The final leg of Rallye Deutschland returned to the Mosel Valley and the countryside around Saarland for the concluding six stages and 101.54 competitive kilometers, the shortest leg of the rally. The route took in two loops of three stages but proved to be no easy cruise to the finish. While the weather remained dry during the first two stages, torrential rain then fell for the rest of the afternoon, making conditions doubly tricky for the remaining 56 crews who left Trier early this morning.

Sola admitted that he had little chance to relax thanks to the rain, but the reigning Junior World Rally Champion drove superbly to clinch his first Production Car World Rally Championship event success by a clear margin of 4 minutes 32 seconds in his Lancer Evolution.

"We have had a few scares today with the weather, but the car has performed very well indeed and the rally has gone to plan," commented Sola, who won just one of today's six stages. "I am really happy with this result."

Pole Janusz Kulig had never driven a production car on asphalt before, but survived both the weather and a puncture to take a fine third in the class, one of his best results of the season. Kulig claimed two stage victories today, finishing behind Subaru's Martin Rowe but ahead of reigning Production Car Champion and Proton driver Karamjit Singh.

"In some ways the last day has been a cruise, but because of the weather you had to pay attention all the time," said Janusz. "It's been a very satisfying result after some bad luck earlier this year,"

Sixth position in the production class was claimed by Mexican Ricardo Trivino, while seventh, eighth and ninth were filled by Titi Aur, Stefano Marrini and Riccardo Errani respectively, all driving Lancer Evolutions.

The FIA Production Car World Rally Championship contenders now take a break before their penultimate round in the series on the other side of the world. Rally Australia [September 3-7] is yet another tricky event with unique ball-bearing shaped gravel and narrow tree-lined roads that require inch-perfect precision.

Picture courtesy of Mitsubishi.

Read More