2021 Rally Catalunya RallyRACC Catalunya - Costa Daurada 2021 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Round 11 of 12 in the 2021 World Rally Championship
| |||
Host country | Spain | ||
Rally base | Salou, Tarragona | ||
Dates run | 14 – 17 October 2021 | ||
Start location | Vilaplana, Tarragona | ||
Finish location | Riudecanyes, Tarragona | ||
Stages | 17 (280.46 km; 174.27 miles)[1] | ||
Stage surface | Tarmac | ||
Transport distance | 1,129.83 km (702.04 miles) | ||
Overall distance | 1,410.29 km (876.31 miles) | ||
Statistics | |||
Crews registered | 83 | ||
Crews | 83 at start, 50 at finish | ||
Overall results | |||
Overall winner | Thierry Neuville Martijn Wydaeghe Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT 2:34:11.8 | ||
Power Stage winner | Dani Sordo Cándido Carrera Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT 10:09.3 | ||
Support category results | |||
WRC-2 winner | Eric Camilli Maxime Vilmot Sports & You 2:44:01.2 | ||
WRC-3 winner | Reeta Hämäläinen Emil Lindholm 2:44:31.9 | ||
J-WRC winner | Sami Pajari Marko Salminen Porvoon Autopalvelu 2:58:02.5 |
The 2021 Rally Catalunya (also known as the RallyRACC Catalunya - Costa Daurada 2021) was a motor racing event for rally cars that held over four days between 14 and 17 October 2021.[2] It marked the fifty-sixth running of the Rally de Catalunya. The event was the tenth round of the 2021 World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2 and World Rally Championship-3. It also hosted as the final round of the 2021 Junior World Rally Championship.[3] The 2021 event was based in Salou in the province of Tarragona in Catalonia and was contested over seventeen special stages totalling 280.46 km (174.27 mi) in competitive distance.[1]
Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul were the defending rally winners. Their team, Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT, were the defending manufacturers' winners.[4] However, Gilsoul did not defend his title as Neuville changed his co-driver to Martijn Wydaeghe at the start of the season.[5] Mads Østberg and Torstein Eriksen were the defending winners in the WRC-2 category,[a] while Eric Camilli and Benjamin Veillas were the defending winners in the WRC-3 category.[b][6]
Neuville successfully defended his title with his new co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe. Their team, Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT, successfully defended their titles.[7] In the World Rally Championship-2 category, Eric Camilli and Maxime Vilmot won the event, while Andreas Mikkelsen confirmed to win the WRC-2 title.[8] In the World Rally Championship-3 category, Emil Lindholm and Reeta Hämäläinen took back-to-back victory.[9] In the junior championship, the Finnish crew of Sami Pajari and Marko Salminen won the rally and became the junior rally champions.[10]
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha>
tags or {{efn}}
templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}
template or {{notelist}}
template (see the help page).