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Corsica WRC: Meeke takes early lead, Hanninen crashes

Kris Meeke grabbed the early advantage on the first dry asphalt rally of the 2017 WRC season by establishing his Citroen in the lead on Tour de Corse's opening stages.

Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle, Citroën C3 WRC, Citroën World Rally Team

Photo by: Citroën Communication

Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle, Citroën C3 WRC, Citroën World Rally Team
Kris Meeke, Paul Nagle, Citroën C3 WRC, Citroën World Rally Team
Sébastien Ogier, Julien Ingrassia, Ford Fiesta WRC, M-Sport
Sébastien Ogier, Julien Ingrassia, Ford Fiesta WRC, M-Sport
Thierry Neuville, Nicolas Gilsoul, Hyundai i20 WRC, Hyundai Motorsport
Ott Tänak, Martin Järveoja, Ford Fiesta WRC, M-Sport

Meeke was quickest on both the Pietrosella-Albitreccia and Plage du Liamone-Sarrola-Carocpino stages, and is 8.9 seconds clear of points leader Sebastien Ogier's M-Sport Ford.

Hyundai's Thierry Neuville drifted away from Meeke and Ogier in third through the morning loop, with the second Fiesta of Ott Tanak on his tail.

Tanak and Dani Sordo were tied for fourth following SS1, but a strong time from Tanak on SS2 drew him clear and left Sordo to fend off the second Citroen of Craig Breen.

Citroen is running three 2017 cars for the first time this week, with Stephane Lefebvre running ninth behind Hayden Paddon.

Toyota has had a tough start to its first factory Corsica appearance of the 21st century.

Jari-Matti Latvala felt his driving was too "hesitant" all morning, and is already 34s off the lead in seventh.

His teammate Juho Hanninen looked like he would be in the podium fight based on his split times before hitting a bridge near the end of SS1.

That caused a fluid spillage that then led to a fire.

Hanninen extinguished the blaze and got to the stage end after a 14-minute delay, but he decided to retire on the way to SS2.

Elfyn Evans was ninth after SS1, as his DMACK tyres proved less competitive than the Michelins on asphalt, then tumbled right down the order when hydraulics problems set in on the next stage and cost him over two minutes.

Andreas Mikkelsen resumed his WRC2-leading form from his last Skoda appearance in Monte Carlo, though M-Sport's Eric Camilli is just 5.8s behind in the class as they hold 10th and 11th overall.

Formula E racer and Toyota LMP1 driver Stephane Sarrazin is giving his new Sarrazin Motorsport rally team its debut this weekend, and runs 12th overall in his Skoda.

While not registered for WRC2, Sarrazin is within 10s of R5 category pacesetter Mikkelsen.

Standings after SS2

Pos.Driver/CodriverCarTime/Gap
1 united_kingdomKris Meeke 
irelandPaul Nagle 
Citroen C3 WRC 38m18.8s
2 franceSébastien Ogier 
franceJulien Ingrassia 
Ford Fiesta WRC '17 8.9s
3 belgiumThierry Neuville 
belgiumNicolas Gilsoul 
Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 17.2s
4 estoniaOtt Tanak 
estoniaMartin Jarveoja 
Ford Fiesta WRC '17 21.5s
5

 Dani Sordo

 Marc Marti

Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 26.7s
6

 Craig Breen

united_kingdomScott Martin

Citroen C3 WRC 29.7s
7 finlandJari-Matti Latvala 
finlandMiikka Anttila 
Toyota Yaris WRC 34.8s
8

new_zealandHayden Paddon 
new_zealandJohn Kennard 

Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 45.0s
9

franceStephane Lefebvre
franceGabin Moreau

Citroen C3 WRC 1m06.1s
10

 Andreas Mikkelsen

 Anders Jaeger

 

Skoda Fabia R5 1m28.2s

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