After the 2012 Rallye Deutschland both Dani Sordo and Chris Atkinson are focussing fully on their next WRC events. The goals for both MINI WRC drivers have been clearly defined.
For a day and a night Chris Atkinson was unable to wipe an enormous grin off his face. Before making his MINI John Cooper Works WRC debut on the Rallye Deutschland, the Australian had certainly not reckoned on finishing fifth. “It was an awesome weekend,” said Chris, known in WRC circles as ‘Atko’. “We went to the rally with modest expectations. I was hoping for a finish between 6th and 10th , so 5th was really cool.”
Despite not having tested meaningfully, in Germany Atko instantly felt comfortable with the MINI WRC. “Straight away I had a great feeling for the chassis balance of the MINI so that made it easy. There were really no surprises,” said Atko, who quickly bonded with the crew of the WRC Team MINI Portugal led by Bruno di Pianto. “The team atmosphere made it really easy as well as fun, so I was pretty relaxed from the start,” added Atko, whose laid-back manner in Germany enabled him to concentrate fully on the rally’s 15 difficult stages.
Atko’s next event is the Rally Great Britain (13-16 September), which – unlike Germany – will be contested on gravel. “It’s my best surface. The rally will get a bit dirty. It is great fun,” grins Atko. Ahead of his start in Great Britain, Atko faces numerous tests in the MINI WRC, during which he aims to, as he puts it, ” get that last few percent out of the MINI WRC”. Is another top five finish possible on Rally GB? “It would be great to keep scoring good points,” says Atko. “But let’s not get too greedy just yet, its already been an awesome start.”
France: Quest for podiums continues.
Following a solid start on the Rallye Deutschland, the event looked promising for Dani Sordo and the MINI WRC entered by the Prodrive WRC Team. While lying fifth on the second day he had his sights firmly set on third place before tyre damage and a collision with a boundary stone dropped him down the overall order. Dani eventually finished ninth. “I am extremely disappointed,” said Dani at the finish, having initially targeted a podium place. He had set top five times on over half the rally’s special stages, even recording a second-best and overall stage win. “The MINI was good,” says Dani, “but we can still extract a bit more.”
Dani’s team principal, Dave Wilcock, will no doubt accede to his driver’s wishes ahead of his next WRC start, the Rally France (4-7 October), even if, as Wilcock says, “nothing major” will be changed. “During the second day the pace was where we expected it. Until France we mainly have to keep Dani active. We are hoping to organize a pre event test in France the weekend before the rally as this is the tactic we used last year to good effect.” A solid performance is the key, for the goals for France both Dani and the Prodrive WRC Team are clearly defined: “To be competitive,” says Wilcock, “and finish on the podium.”
Related posts:
- Chris Atkinson finished 5th in his MINI WRC debut
- Yvan Muller to drive MINI WRC in France
- MINI WRC – Rallye de France 2011 – Alsace preview
- MINI WRC Team on pace to take second in Rallye de France
- Strong season start for the MINI WRC team
- MINI WRC – Monte Carlo Rally 2012 Preview
- MINI claims podium finish on its return to Monte Carlo
- MINI to follow new path in the WRC
- Prodrive eyes success in Germany with MINI WRC
- The Mini John Cooper Works WRC to make British debut



























