2019 Rally Argentina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2019 Rally Argentina
39. XION Rally Argentina
Round 5 of 14 in the 2019 World Rally Championship
← Previous eventNext event →
Sébastien Ogier Rally Argentina 2015 001.jpg
Rally Argentina features with vast pampas plains, rugged mountains and softer lakeland landscapes.
Host country Argentina
Rally baseVilla Carlos Paz, Córdoba
Dates run25 – 28 April 2019
Start locationVilla Carlos Paz, Córdoba
Finish locationEl Cóndor, Córdoba
Stages18 (347.50 km; 215.93 miles)[1]
Stage surfaceGravel
Transport distance952.88 km (592.09 miles)
Overall distance1,300.38 km (808.02 miles)
Results
Overall winnerBelgium Thierry Neuville
Belgium Nicolas Gilsoul
South Korea Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT
3:20:54.6
WRC-2 Pro winnerNorway Mads Østberg
Norway Torstein Eriksen
France Citroën Total
3:35:23.1
WRC-2 winnerChile
Spain Marc Martí
Chile
3:41:09.1
Power Stage winnerFrance Sébastien Ogier
France Julien Ingrassia
France Citroën Total WRT
Crews registered27
Crews25 at start, 21 at finish

The 2019 Rally Argentina (also known as the XION Rally Argentina 2019) was a motor racing event for rally cars that held over four days between 25 and 28 April 2019.[2] It marked the thirty-ninth running of Rally Argentina, and was the fifth round of the 2019 World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2 and the newly-created WRC-2 Pro class. The 2019 event was based in Villa Carlos Paz in Córdoba Province and consisted of eighteen special stages totalling 347.50 km (215.93 mi) competitive kilometres.

Ott Tänak and Martin Järveoja were the defending rally winners. Their team, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT, were the manufacturers' winners.[3] Pontus Tidemand and Jonas Andersson were the defending winners in the World Rally Championship-2 category, but they did not participate in the event.[4]

Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul won the rally for the second time in their career. Their team, Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT, were the manufacturers' winners.[5] The Citroën Total crew of Mads Østberg and Torstein Eriksen won the WRC-2 Pro category, finishing first in the combined WRC-2 category, while the crew of and Marc Martí won the wider WRC-2 class.[6] Østberg's win marked the first World Championship victory for the R5-spec Citroën C3.

Background[]

Championship standings prior to the event[]

Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul led both the drivers' and co-drivers' championships by two-points ahead of six-time world champions Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia. Ott Tänak and Martin Järveoja were third, a further three points behind. In the World Rally Championship for Manufacturers, Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT held a twelve-point lead over Citroën Total WRT.[7]

In the World Rally Championship-2 Pro standings, Łukasz Pieniążek and held a twenty-two-point lead ahead of Gus Greensmith and Elliott Edmondson in the drivers' and co-drivers' standings respectively. Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen were third, four points further back. In the manufacturers' championship, M-Sport Ford WRT lead Škoda Motorsport by sixty-six points, with Citroën Total eleven points further behind in third.[8]

In the World Rally Championship-2 standings, Ole Christian Veiby and Jonas Andersson led the drivers' and co-drivers' standings by twelve points respectively. Nikolay Gryazin and were second, following by Yoann Bonato and in third.[8]

Entry list[]

The following crews entered into the rally. The event was open to crews competing in the World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2, WRC-2 Pro and privateer entries not registered to score points in any championship. A total of twenty-seven entries were received, with ten crews entered with World Rally Cars and nine entered the World Rally Championship-2. Three crews were nominated to score points in the Pro class.

No. Driver Co-Driver Entrant Car Tyre
World Rally Car entries
1 France Sébastien Ogier France Julien Ingrassia France Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC M
3 Finland Teemu Suninen Finland Marko Salminen United Kingdom M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC M
4 Finland Esapekka Lappi Finland Janne Ferm France Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC M
5 United Kingdom Kris Meeke United Kingdom Sebastian Marshall Japan Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC M
6 Spain Dani Sordo Spain Carlos del Barrio South Korea Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC M
8 Estonia Ott Tänak Estonia Martin Järveoja Japan Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC M
10 Finland Jari-Matti Latvala Finland Miikka Anttila Japan Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC M
11 Belgium Thierry Neuville Belgium Nicolas Gilsoul South Korea Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC M
33 United Kingdom Elfyn Evans United Kingdom Scott Martin United Kingdom M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC M
89 Norway Andreas Mikkelsen Norway Anders Jæger-Amland South Korea Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC M
World Rally Championship-2 Pro entries
21 United Kingdom Gus Greensmith United Kingdom Elliott Edmondson United Kingdom M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta R5 M
22 Norway Mads Østberg Norway Torstein Eriksen France Citroën Total Citroën C3 R5 M
23 Bolivia Marco Bulacia Wilkinson Argentina Czech Republic Škoda Motorsport[a] Škoda Fabia R5 M
World Rally Championship-2 entries
41 Mexico Benito Guerra Mexico Mexico Benito Guerra[b] Škoda Fabia R5 M
42 Chile Argentina Chile Ford Fiesta R5 M
43 Poland Kajetan Kajetanowicz Poland Maciej Szczepaniak Poland Kajetan Kajetanowicz[c] Volkswagen Polo GTI R5 P
44 Japan Takamoto Katsuta United Kingdom Daniel Barritt Japan Takamoto Katsuta[d] Ford Fiesta R5 P
45 Chile Spain Marc Martí Chile Ford Fiesta R5 M
46 Brazil Paulo Nobre Brazil Brazil Paulo Nobre[e] Škoda Fabia R5 P
Source:[9]

Route[]

No major changes are made to the route this year apart from some slight length-reductions to selected stages.[10]

Itinerary[]

All dates and times are ART (UTC-3).

Date Time No. Stage name Distance
25 April 10:00 Villa Carlos Paz [Shakedown] 4.25 km
Leg 1 — 147.82 km
25 April 19:08 SS1 SSS Villa Carlos Paz 1.90 km
26 April 8:08 SS2 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 1 16.65 km
8:55 SS3 Amboy / Yacanto 1 29.85 km
10:08 SS4 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 1 23.44 km
12:03 SS5 SSS Parque Tematico 1 6.04 km
14:51 SS6 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 2 16.65 km
15:38 SS7 Amboy / Yacanto 2 29.85 km
16:51 SS8 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 2 23.44 km
Leg 2 — 146.52 km
27 April 7:47 SS9 Tanti — Mataderos 1 13.92 km
8:38 SS10 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 1 22.67 km
9:25 SS11 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 1 33.65 km
11:26 SS12 SSS Parque Tematico 2 6.04 km
13:17 SS13 Tanti — Mataderos 2 13.92 km
14:08 SS14 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 2 22.67 km
14:55 SS15 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 2 33.65 km
Leg 3 — 53.16 km
28 April 9:08 SS16 Copina — El Cóndor[f] 16.43 km
10:31 SS17 Mina Clavero — Giulio Cesare 20.30 km
12:18 SS18 El Cóndor[f] [Power Stage] 16.43 km
Source:[1]

Report[]

World Rally Cars[]

Normally, the road cleaner has to endure the insufficient grip, but this year in Argentina was different — persistent rain over the previous forty-eight hours meant the road was muddy and difficult to drive through for the crews who started down the road order. As a result, championship leader Thierry Neuville grabbed the lead as defending rally winner Ott Tänak lost valuable time with a broken drive shaft. The only casualty of the day was Esapekka Lappi, who was crashed out in the final stage of Friday and forced to retire from the rally.[11]

Coming to the second leg, the battle for the victory was extremely intense until Tänak stopped his Yaris due to an alternator failure in the afternoon loop. Another casualty of the leg was Elfyn Evans, who rolled his Fiesta heavily after smashed a huge rock. As a result, the Welshman was forced to retire from the weekend.[12] Defending world champion Sébastien Ogier lost power steering in the morning loop, while Kris Meeke lost his brakes.[13] Following the drivers ahead suffered issues, Andreas Mikkelsen charged himself to second overall after the oil-leak issue fixed.[14] Eventually, the Hyundai duos managed to bring their team a 1-2 finish.[5] Ogier completed the podium as Meeke receive a ten-second penalty for deviating from the correct route in Saturday morning's speed test.[15]

Classification[]

Position No. Driver Co-driver Entrant Car Time Difference Points
Event Class Event Stage
1 1 11 Thierry Neuville Nicolas Gilsoul Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3:20:54.6 0.0 25 3
2 2 89 Andreas Mikkelsen Anders Jæger-Amland Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3:21:43.0 +48.4 18 0
3 3 1 Sébastien Ogier Julien Ingrassia Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC 3:21:59.4 +1:04.8 15 5
4 4 5 Kris Meeke Sebastian Marshall Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC 3:22:00.8 +1:06.2 12 0
5 5 10 Jari-Matti Latvala Miikka Anttila Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC 3:22:15.7 +1:21.1 10 4
6 6 6 Dani Sordo Carlos del Barrio Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3:22:21.3 +1:26.7 8 2
7 7 3 Teemu Suninen Marko Salminen M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC 3:25:51.9 +4:57.3 6 0
8 8 8 Ott Tänak Martin Järveoja Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC 3:35:19.4 +14:24.8 4 1
Retired SS10 33 Elfyn Evans Scott Martin M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC Accident 0 0
Retired SS8 4 Esapekka Lappi Janne Ferm Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC Accident 0 0

Special stages[]

Date No. Stage name Distance Winners Car Time Class leaders
25 April Villa Carlos Paz [Shakedown] 4.25 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 2:34.9 N/A
SS1 SSS Villa Carlos Paz 1.90 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 1:58.6 Tänak / Järveoja
26 April SS2 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 1 16.65 km Meeke / Marshall Toyota Yaris WRC 9:19.1
SS3 Amboy / Yacanto 1 29.85 km Stage cancelled[g]
SS4 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 1 23.44 km Neuville / Gilsoul Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 14:05.5 Meeke / Marshall
SS5 SSS Parque Tematico 1 6.04 km Mikkelsen / Jæger-Amland Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 4:45.4
SS6 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 2 16.65 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 9:09.7
SS7 Amboy / Yacanto 2 29.85 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 17:38.5 Tänak / Järveoja
SS8 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 2 23.44 km Neuville / Gilsoul Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 13:47.6 Neuville / Gilsoul
27 April SS9 Tanti — Mataderos 1 13.92 km Neuville / Gilsoul Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 9:08.1
SS10 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 1 22.67 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 11:56.1
SS11 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 1 33.65 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 19:45.8
SS12 SSS Parque Tematico 2 6.04 km Mikkelsen / Jæger-Amland Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 4:41.3
SS13 Tanti — Mataderos 2 13.92 km Ogier / Ingrassia Citroën C3 WRC 8:59.9
SS14 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 2 22.67 km Ogier / Ingrassia Citroën C3 WRC 11:44.4
SS15 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 2 33.65 km Mikkelsen / Jæger-Amland Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 19:34.5
28 April SS16 Copina — El Cóndor 16.43 km Meeke / Marshall Toyota Yaris WRC 13:08.2
SS17 Mina Clavero — Giulio Cesare 20.30 km Neuville / Gilsoul Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 17:02.6
SS18 El Cóndor [Power Stage] 16.43 km Ogier / Ingrassia Citroën C3 WRC 13:02.1

Championship standings[]

Pos. Drivers' championships Co-drivers' championships Manufacturers' championships
Move Driver Points Move Co-driver Points Move Manufacturer Points
1 1rightarrow blue.svg Thierry Neuville 110 1rightarrow blue.svg Nicolas Gilsoul 110 1rightarrow blue.svg Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT 157
2 1rightarrow blue.svg Sébastien Ogier 100 1rightarrow blue.svg Julien Ingrassia 100 1uparrow green.svg 1 Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT 120
3 1rightarrow blue.svg Ott Tänak 82 1rightarrow blue.svg Martin Järveoja 82 1downarrow red.svg 1 Citroën Total WRT 117
4 1uparrow green.svg 1 Kris Meeke 54 1uparrow green.svg 1 Sebastian Marshall 54 1rightarrow blue.svg M-Sport Ford WRT 78
5 1downarrow red.svg 1 Elfyn Evans 43 1downarrow red.svg 1 Scott Martin 43

World Rally Championship-2 Pro[]

Mads Østberg comfortably led the rally despite a puncture, over four minutes ahead of eighteen-year-old driver Marco Bulacia Wilkinson, who won all three afternoon stages. Gus Greensmith failed to complete the first leg with a broken front suspension.[17] In the end, Østberg comfortably won his second victory of the season, following by Greensmith, who re-join the rally on Saturday.[6] Bulacia Wilkinson rolled his Fabia at the opening stage, which forced to retire from the rally in leg two.[18]

Classification[]

Position No. Driver Co-driver Entrant Car Time Difference Points
Event Class Class Event
9 1 22 Mads Østberg Torstein Eriksen Citroën Total Citroën C3 R5 3:35:23.1 0.0 25 2
15 2 21 Gus Greensmith Elliott Edmondson M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta R5 3:56:25.4 +21:02.3 18 0
Retired SS9 23 Marco Bulacia Wilkinson Škoda Motorsport Škoda Fabia R5 Rolled 0 0

Special stages[]

Results in bold denote first in the RC2 class, the class which both the WRC-2 Pro and WRC-2 championships run to.

Date No. Stage name Distance Winners Car Time Class leaders
25 April Villa Carlos Paz [Shakedown] 4.25 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 2:47.0 N/A
SS1 SSS Villa Carlos Paz 1.90 km Greensmith / Edmondson Ford Fiesta R5 2:03.2 Greensmith / Edmondson
26 April SS2 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 1 16.65 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 9:57.9 Østberg / Eriksen
SS3 Amboy / Yacanto 1 29.85 km Stage cancelled[g]
SS4 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 1 23.44 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 15:09.2 Østberg / Eriksen
SS5 SSS Parque Tematico 1 6.04 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 4:58.8
SS6 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 2 16.65 km Bulacia Wilkinson / Škoda Fabia R5 9:56.6
SS7 Amboy / Yacanto 2 29.85 km Bulacia Wilkinson / Škoda Fabia R5 19:28.1
SS8 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 2 23.44 km Bulacia Wilkinson / Škoda Fabia R5 15:16.7
27 April SS9 Tanti — Mataderos 1 13.92 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 9:38.4
SS10 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 1 22.67 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 12:50.2
SS11 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 1 33.65 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 21:24.3
SS12 SSS Parque Tematico 2 6.04 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 4:52.9
SS13 Tanti — Mataderos 2 13.92 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 9:33.8
SS14 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 2 22.67 km Greensmith / Edmondson Ford Fiesta R5 12:38.4
SS15 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 2 33.65 km Greensmith / Edmondson Ford Fiesta R5 20:52.8
28 April SS16 Copina — El Cóndor 16.43 km Greensmith / Edmondson Ford Fiesta R5 13:54.0
SS17 Mina Clavero — Giulio Cesare 20.30 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 17:59.8
SS18 El Cóndor 16.43 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 13:47.6

Championship standings[]

Pos. Drivers' championships Co-drivers' championships Manufacturers' championships
Move Driver Points Move Co-driver Points Move Manufacturer Points
1 1rightarrow blue.svg Łukasz Pieniążek 62 1rightarrow blue.svg 62 1rightarrow blue.svg M-Sport Ford WRT 120
2 1rightarrow blue.svg Gus Greensmith 58 1rightarrow blue.svg Elliott Edmondson 58 1uparrow green.svg 1 Citroën Total 50
3 1uparrow green.svg 1 Mads Østberg 50 1uparrow green.svg 1 Torstein Eriksen 50 1downarrow red.svg 1 Škoda Motorsport 36
4 1downarrow red.svg 1 Kalle Rovanperä 36 1downarrow red.svg 1 Jonne Halttunen 36
5 1rightarrow blue.svg 0 1rightarrow blue.svg 0

World Rally Championship-2[]

The first leg produced four different leaders in progress. Takamoto Katsuta was the first leader, but a puncture and broken wheel rim deposited his Fiesta into a ditch; Kajetan Kajetanowicz was the second leader, but he broke his rear suspension after landing heavily over a jump; was the third leader, but he stopped in the penultimate test when his Fiesta's engine auxiliary belt broke. Eventually, the fourth leader topped the category by almost six minutes after a day of attrition.[17] Having a trouble-free Saturday, Pedro took the victory after overcame a big scare that the car stopped less than one kilometer from the finish of the iconic special stage.[18][6]

Classification[]

Position No. Driver Co-driver Entrant Car Time Difference Points
Event Class Class Event
10 1 45 Marc Martí Ford Fiesta R5 3:41:09.1 0.0 25 1
12 2 41 Benito Guerra Benito Guerra Škoda Fabia R5 3:50:43.9 +9:34.8 18 0
13 3 46 Paulo Nobre Paulo Nobre Škoda Fabia R5 3:52:20.1 +11:11.0 15 0
14 4 42 Ford Fiesta R5 3:55:15.1 +14:06.0 12 0
16 5 44 Takamoto Katsuta Daniel Barritt Takamoto Katsuta Ford Fiesta R5 3:59:20.7 +18:11.6 10 0
Retired SS5 43 Kajetan Kajetanowicz Maciej Szczepaniak Kajetan Kajetanowicz Ford Fiesta R5 Suspension 0 0

Special stages[]

Results in bold denote first in the RC2 class, the class which both the WRC-2 Pro and WRC-2 championships run to.

Date No. Stage name Distance Winners Car Time Class leaders
25 April Villa Carlos Paz [Shakedown] 4.25 km / Ford Fiesta R5 2:48.9 N/A
SS1 SSS Villa Carlos Paz 1.90 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 2:02.4 Katsuta / Barritt
26 April SS2 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 1 16.65 km Kajetanowicz / Szczepaniak Volkswagen Polo GTI R5 10:19.8 Kajetanowicz / Szczepaniak
SS3 Amboy / Yacanto 1 29.85 km Stage cancelled[g]
SS4 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 1 23.44 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 15:41.5 Katsuta / Barritt
SS5 SSS Parque Tematico 1 6.04 km / Ford Fiesta R5 5:06.5
SS6 Las Bajadas / Villa del Dique 2 16.65 km / Martí Ford Fiesta R5 10:10.8 /
SS7 Amboy / Yacanto 2 29.85 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 19:52.7 Katsuta / Barritt
SS8 Santa Rosa / San Agustin 2 23.44 km / Martí Ford Fiesta R5 15:38.4 / Martí
27 April SS9 Tanti — Mataderos 1 13.92 km Stage interrupted[h]
SS10 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 1 22.67 km Guerra / Škoda Fabia R5 13:03.3 / Martí
SS11 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 1 33.65 km / Martí Ford Fiesta R5 21:50.0
SS12 SSS Parque Tematico 2 6.04 km Guerra / Škoda Fabia R5 4:57.0
SS13 Tanti — Mataderos 2 13.92 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 9:43.0
SS14 Mataderos — Cuchilla Nevada 2 22.67 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 12:44.6
SS15 Cuchilla Nevada — Characato 2 33.65 km / Ford Fiesta R5 21:08.6
28 April SS16 Copina — El Cóndor 16.43 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 14:08.4
SS17 Mina Clavero — Giulio Cesare 20.30 km / Martí Ford Fiesta R5 18:10.1
SS18 El Cóndor 16.43 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 14:06.2

Championship standings[]

Pos. Drivers' championships Co-drivers' championships
Move Driver Points Move Co-driver Points
1 1uparrow green.svg 3 Benito Guerra 43 1uparrow green.svg 3 43
2 1downarrow red.svg 1 Ole Christian Veiby 40 1downarrow red.svg 1 Jonas Andersson 40
3 1downarrow red.svg 1 Nikolay Gryazin 28 1downarrow red.svg 1 28
4 1uparrow green.svg 7 27 1uparrow green.svg 7 27
5 1downarrow red.svg 2 Yoann Bonato 25 1downarrow red.svg 2 25

Notes[]

  1. ^ Entry run by VIALCO Racing.
  2. ^ Entry operated by Race Seven.
  3. ^ Entry operated by Lotos Dynamic Rally Team.
  4. ^ Entry operated by Tommi Mäkinen Racing.
  5. ^ Entry operated by Palmerinha Rally.
  6. ^ a b SS16 and S18 are the same stage, but are known by different stage names.
  7. ^ a b c SS3 cancelled due to the weather.[16]
  8. ^ Marco Bulacia Wilkinson and rolled their Škoda Fabia R5, which caused that the test was halted for the following competitors. As a consequence, WRC-2 category crews were received 9:54.0 to their times, while private crews were given 13:20.0.[18]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "Maquetación" [Layout] (PDF). rallyargentina.com (in Spanish). Rally Argentina. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  2. ^ "FIA announces World Motor Sport Council decisions". fia.com. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 12 October 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  3. ^ "Breaking News: Victory for Tänak". wrc.com. WRC. 29 April 2018. Retrieved 29 April 2018.
  4. ^ "WRC 2 in Argentina: Tidemand wins as Rovanperä crashes". wrc.com. WRC. 29 April 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  5. ^ a b "Sunday in Argentina: Neuville's double". wrc.com. WRC. 28 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  6. ^ a b c "Sunday in WRC 2: Østberg wins Pro". wrc.com. WRC. 28 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  7. ^ "Sunday in Corsica: Neuville profits from Evans Despair". wrc.com. WRC. 31 March 2019. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  8. ^ a b "WRC 2 in Corsica: Andolfi wins after Sunday Thriller". wrc.com. WRC. 31 March 2019. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  9. ^ "YPF Rally Argentina 2019 Entry List" (PDF). rallyargentina.com. Rally Argentina. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  10. ^ "Itinerary". e-wrc.com. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
  11. ^ "Friday in Argentina: Neuville grabs lates lead". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
  12. ^ "SS9/10: Tänak sends warning". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  13. ^ "SS11/12: Neuville resists Tänak". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  14. ^ "Friday in Argentina: Neuville in the clear". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  15. ^ "SS16: Vamos Meeke!". wrc.com. WRC. 28 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  16. ^ "SS2: Meeke claims Friday's opener". wrc.com. WRC. 26 April 2019. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
  17. ^ a b "Friday in WRC 2: Østberg leads Pro category". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
  18. ^ a b c "Saturday in WRC 2: Østberg dominates Pro". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2019.

External links[]

Previous rally:
2019 Tour de Corse
2019 FIA World Rally Championship Next rally:
2019 Rally Chile
Previous rally:
2018 Rally Argentina
2019 Rally Argentina Next rally:

2020 edition cancelled
Retrieved from ""