2015 Monte Carlo Rally 83ème Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo |
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| Host country | Monaco |
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| Rally base | Gap, Hautes-Alpes |
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| Dates run | 22 – 25 January 2015 |
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| Stages | 15 (335.48 km; 208.46 miles) |
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| Stage surface | Tarmac and snow |
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| Crews | 94 at start, 78 at finish |
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| Overall winner | Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport |
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The 2015 Monte Carlo Rally (formally known as the 83ème Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo) was a motor racing event for rally cars that was held over four days between 22 and 25 January 2015. It marked the eighty-third running of the Monte Carlo Rally, and was the first round of the 2015 World Rally Championship, WRC-2, WRC-3, Junior World Rally Championship and FIA R-GT Cup seasons.[1]
Defending World Champion Sébastien Ogier started the season with a win in Monte Carlo, his second consecutive in the principality and the 25th of his WRC career. Returning nine-time World Champion Sébastien Loeb was the early leader of the rally, losing first position to Ogier on the seventh stage after a spin while negotiating a hairpin bend. On the next stage, Loeb hit a rock and lost a total of six minutes, before retiring in the following liaison section.[2] This gave Ogier a lead of almost two minutes over Volkswagen team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala. Despite being unable to monitor his rivals' split times during the stages under new rules, Ogier blended a controlled pace with safe tyre choices through the final two days to seal the victory.[3] Latvala finished second, also taking one power stage point, with Andreas Mikkelsen completing a one-two-three for Volkswagen Motorsport. Citroën's Mads Østberg finished the event in fourth position. Hyundai Motorsport duo Thierry Neuville and Dani Sordo finished in fifth and sixth, split by 0.8 seconds. M-Sport's Elfyn Evans finished seventh, having dropped time after he damaged his car's rear suspension against a wall. Evans finished ahead of Loeb, who rejoined under rally-2 rules and won two power stage points. The top ten was completed by Martin Prokop and Kris Meeke, who won the power stage to take three additional points.[3]
In the support classes, Stéphane Lefebvre won WRC-2 in 12th position overall,[4] Quentin Gilbert finished as the best WRC-3/JWRC runner in 22nd place,[5] just ahead of the FIA R-GT Cup winner François Delecour.
Entry list
Results
Special Stages
Special stages
Championship standings after the event
WRC
- Drivers' Championship standings
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- Manufacturers' Championship standings
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Other
References
External links
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Categories within the World Rally Championship |
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- FIA WRC2 Championship
- FIA WRC3 Championship
- FIA Junior WRC Championship
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Teams and drivers that are eligible to score manufacturer points |
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Schedule of events |
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- Sweden
- México
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- Poland
- Finland
- Germany
- Australia
- France
- Spain
- Great Britain
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