2020 ACI Rally Monza 41. ACI Rally Monza 2020 | ||
---|---|---|
Round 7 of 7 in the 2020 World Rally Championship
| ||
Host country | Italy | |
Rally base | Monza, Brianza | |
Dates run | 3 – 6 December 2020 | |
Start location | Monza, Brianza | |
Finish location | Monza, Brianza | |
Stages | 16 (239.20 km; 148.63 miles)[1] | |
Stage surface | Tarmac | |
Transport distance | 272.84 km (169.53 miles) | |
Overall distance | 512.04 km (318.17 miles) | |
Statistics | ||
Crews registered | 95 | |
Crews | 91 at start, 71 at finish | |
Cancellation | SS10 cancelled due to a road-blocked crash. SS12 cancelled due to heavy snow. | |
Overall results | ||
Overall winner | Sébastien Ogier Julien Ingrassia Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT 2:15:51.0 | |
Power Stage winner | Takamoto Katsuta Daniel Barritt Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT 11:05.5 | |
Support category results | ||
WRC-2 winner | Mads Østberg Torstein Eriksen PH-Sport 2:21:18.4 | |
WRC-3 winner | Andreas Mikkelsen Anders Jæger-Amland 2:19:47.2 | |
J-WRC winner | Tom Kristensson Joakim Sjöberg Tom Kristensson Motorsport 2:35:21.4 |
The 2020 Rally Monza (also known as ACI Rally Monza 2020) was a motor racing event for rally cars that was scheduled to hold between 3 and 6 December 2020.[2] It marked the forty-first running of Monza Rally Show and was the final round of the 2020 World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2, World Rally Championship-3. It was also the final round of the Junior World Rally Championship.[3] The event was based in the famous Autodromo Nazionale di Monza circuit near Milan, where the Italian Grand Prix is held. The rally covered a total competitive distance of 239.20 km (148.63 mi).[1]
Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia won the rally. Their team, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT, were the manufacturers' rally winners.[4] Mads Østberg and Torstein Eriksen were the winners in the WRC-2 category.[5] Andreas Mikkelsen and Anders Jæger-Amland winners in the WRC-3 category.[6] Tom Kristensson and Henrik Appelskog won the junior class.[7]
Ogier and Ingrassia won their seventh world titles, while Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT secured their second consecutive manufacturers' titles.[4] Østberg and Eriksen won the WRC-2 championship, while Toksport WRT claimed the teams' titles.[5] Jari Huttunen and Mikko Lukka became WRC-3 crowned champions.[6] Kristensson and Appelskog sealed junior world titles.[7]