1997 Paris–Dakar Rally

(Redirected from 1997 Dakar Rally)

1997 Dakar Rally also known as the 1997 Paris–Dakar Rally was the 19th running of the Dakar Rally event. The rally started and finished in Dakar, taking in a loop including Niger and the Ténéré desert.[1] Jutta Kleinschmidt became the first woman to win a stage of the Dakar Rally.[1] Japanese driver, Kenjiro Shinozuka, won the car class and Stephane Peterhansel won his fifth motorcycle title.[1]

Stages edit

Stage Date From To Total
(km)
Stage winners
Bikes Cars Trucks
1 4 January   Dakar   Tambacounda 587   S. Peterhansel   J-P. Fontenay   E. Pelichet
2 5 January   Tambacounda   Kayes 594   S. Peterhansel   J-L. Schlesser   P. Reif
3 6 January   Kayes   Nara 592   S. Peterhansel   K. Shinozuka   P. Reif
4 7 January   Nara   Timbuktu 658   S. Peterhansel   B. Saby   M. Koreny
5 8 January   Timbuktu   Gao 482   T. Magnaldi   J-P. Fontenay   P. Reif
6 9 January   Gao   Ménaka 332   S. Peterhansel   K. Shinozuka   B. Slenovsky
7 10 January   Ménaka   Tahoua 396   C. Sotelo   J-P. Fontenay   K. Loprais
8 11 January   Tahoua   Agadez 820   S. Peterhansel   K. Shinozuka   K. Loprais
12 January   Agadez Rest day
9 13 January   Agadez   Oclan 460   T. Magnaldi   J. Kleinschmidt   P. Reif
10 14 January   Oclan   Kidal 537   J. Arcarons   D. Guedes   P. Reif
11 15 January   Kidal   Timbuktu 577   J. Lewis   J-P. Strugo   P. Reif
12 16 January   Timbuktu   Néma 588   S. Peterhansel   J-P. Fontenay   P. Reif
13 17 January   Néma   Kiffa 604   É. Bernard   H. Masuoka   P. Reif
14 18 January   Kiffa   Saint-Louis 751   P. Marques   J-P. Fontenay   P. Reif
15 19 January   Saint-Louis   Dakar 255   J. Brucy   J. Kleinschmidt   J. Petit

Final standings edit

Motorcycles edit

Pos No. Rider Bike Entrant Time
1 1   Stéphane Peterhansel Yamaha Yamaha Motor France 65:14:37
2 17   Oscar Gallardo Cagiva Pelayo Mutua de Seguros +2:35:16
3 8   David Castera Yamaha Yamaha Motor France +2:56:25
4 7   Jimmy Lewis KTM KTM USA +3:28:15
5 11   Dirk von Zitzewitz KTM KTM Sport +4:28:38
6 73   Jurgen Mayer KTM MSA +6:01:53
7 45   Jean Brucy KTM Raid Aventure +7:17:10
8 41   Paulo Manuel Marques KTM Portugal RPM +7:18:10
9 27   Norbert Schilcher KTM MSA +7:20:30
10 10   Eric Bernard KTM E.Leclerc +7:27:54

Cars edit

Pos No. Driver Co-Driver Car Entrant Time
1 205   Kenjiro Shinozuka   Henri Magne Mitsubishi Sonauto Mitsubishi 61:56:31
2 200   Jean-Pierre Fontenay   Bruno Musmarra Mitsubishi Sonauto Mitsubishi +4:16
3 202   Bruno Saby   Dominique Serieys Mitsubishi Sonauto Mitsubishi +9:12
4 220   Hiroshi Masuoka   Andreas Schulz Mitsubishi Sonauto Mitsubishi +2:25:27
5 206   Jutta Kleinschmidt   Jean Boutaire Schlesser Schlesser-SEAT +4:35:51
6 204   Salvador Servia   Gilles Picard Nissan Nissan Europe +5:15:14
7 216   Jean-Pierre Strugo   Bruno Catarelli Mitsubishi Mitsubishi International +6:20:08
8 208   Duarte Guedes   Jacky Dubois Nissan Team Dessoude +9:23:13
9 268   Edoardo Argazzi   Riccardo Argazzi Nissan Team Dessoude +9:40:41
10 224   Carlos Sousa   Philippe Rey Mitsubishi Mitsubishi International +23:28:05

Trucks edit

Pos No. Driver Co-Drivers Truck Time
1 427   Peter Reif   Johann Deinhofer Hino 78:21:02
2 402   Yoshimasa Sugawara   Naoko Matsumoto
  Katsumi Hamura
Hino +3:33:27
3 411   Joseph Petit   Jean-Christophe Wagner
  Takeshi Hashimoto
Hino +4:08:52
4 425   Edmond Pelichet   Hubert Molina Mercedes-Benz +6:43:50
5 406   Gilbert Versino   Christian Lacourt
  Christian Versino
Mitsubishi +7:51:50
6 415   Christophe Granjon   Masaaki Imai
  Anthony Martineau
Mitsubishi +10:33:16
7 404   Christian Barbier   Eric André
  Jean-Louis Berger
Mercedes-Benz +15:41:33
8 417   Yves Ferri   Michel Plateau
  Hubert Auvray
Mercedes-Benz +22:11:30
9 433   Bernard Malferiol   Patrick Croset
  Jean Rodrigues
Mercedes-Benz +23:43:18
10 434   Michel Gambillon   Raymond Louin
  Reynald Prive
Mercedes-Benz +25:52:51

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "History of Dakar - RETROSPECTIVE 1979-2007" (PDF). Dakar. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2009-01-07.