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Edition

Australia
Stage report

Dakar 2022, Stage 10: Van Beveren retakes lead as Price wins

Yamaha rider Adrien van Beveren has moved back into the lead of the 2022 Dakar Rally with two stages to run, as KTM's Toby Price came out on top in Wednesday's test.

Watch: Dakar: Van Beveren retakes lead as Price wins

Van Beveren started the day third overall, trailing leader Matthias Walkner by just under four minutes ahead of the day's 375km run between Wadi Ad Dawasir and Bisha.

But with the fourth-fastest stage time, the Frenchman leapt into the spot for the second time in Saudi Arabia, and will take an advantage of four minutes and 15 seconds into the final two days.

Taking honours on Stage 10 was Price, who seized the advantage at the 258km mark to take his first win of the rally - and his second on the road after he lost his Stage 5 victory to a speeding penalty.

The Australian's nearest rival was Luciano Benavides, who was 2m09s adrift on the sole remaining factory Husqvarna.

Honda's Joan Barreda had commanded much of the stage but lost a chunk of time around the halfway mark, albeit recovering to finish third and a little over three minutes adrift of Price.

The Spaniard's teammate Pablo Quintanilla by comparison could only manage 10th on the day, but has jumped up to second in the general classification behind van Beveren.

Behind the pair sits GasGas rider Sam Sunderland, who was only 19th-fastest on the stage but remains 5m59s off the lead.

Barreda is now fourth overall, 6m47s back, while overnight leader Walkner has slipped to fifth place after giving away just under 16 minutes on the stage, albeit only 8m24s behind van Beveren.

Price has gone from ninth overnight to sixth, also gaining from the retirement of KTM teammate Kevin Benavides, but faces a daunting 27-minute deficit with just two stages to go.

Honda's Ricky Brabec has now entered the top 10 in ninth place, behind fellow Americans Andrew Short (Yamaha) and Mason Klein (KTM) but ahead of teammate Jose Ignacio Cornejo, who dropped 14 minutes opening the road.

Sherco rider Lorenzo Santolino was fifth on the stage, but a 15-minute penalty for an engine change awarded following Tuesday's stage has left him down in 11th overall ahead of Stefan Svitko, who was given a similar punishment.

UPDATE: Honda pair Quintanilla and Barreda were both hit by penalties for speeding following the end of the stage, with the former losing two minutes and the latter losing four.

The effect on the general classification is that Quintanilla slips to third behind Sunderland, while Barreda drops to fifth and surrenders a position to Walkner.

Revised standings after Stage 10:

Pos. # Name Bike Time Gap Penalty
1 42 Adrien van Beveren YAMAHA 33:27:06   00:00:00
2 3 Sam Sunderland KTM 33:33:05 +00:05:59 00:00:00
3 7 Pablo Quintanilla HONDA 33:33:21 +00:06:15 00:02:00
4 52 Matthias Walkner KTM 33:35:30 +00:08:24 00:00:00
5 88 Joan Barreda HONDA 33:37:53 +00:10:47 00:05:00
6 18 Toby Price KTM 33:54:49 +00:27:43 00:06:00
7 29 Andrew Short YAMAHA 34:01:03 +00:33:57 00:00:00
8 43 Mason Klein KTM 34:04:55 +00:37:49 00:00:00
9 2 Ricky Brabec HONDA 34:05:11 +00:38:05 00:02:00
10 11 Jose Ignacio Cornejo HONDA 34:06:06 +00:39:00 00:00:00

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Edition

Australia