Despres, who completed the final stage, a total ride of 707 km with a timed
special of 206 km of fast track riding to finish the stage in a comfortable sixth
place. He was five minutes 05 seconds behind the winner of the day, rather
fittingly, his KTM support rider Rubin Faria of Portugal. Despres, who also
won in 2005 and 2007 when the rally was staged across Africa, was one hour
02’ 52” minutes in front after completing the immense distance and endless
challenging terrain, including four stages in Chile’s Atacama Desert.
An emotional Despres
“All victories are nice but this one is particularly beautiful,” he said. “It is the
victory of hard work, of expertise and of an incredible team. There are nine of
us in the team and not one of us ever let go. We all wanted to win; we all
wanted to fight hard and we won. It’s just fantastic. Of course there is a lot of
emotion.” Despres whose racing career has had its setbacks, injuries and a
constant battle with his arch rival, fellow KTM rider Marc Coma of Spain said
he was genuinely moved by the victory. “I am human,” he said “I know I have
been riding this bike for 15 days and I am exhausted but the little strength I
had left just went in tears.
KTM played a big part in this victory. They trusted
us. We chose everyone. We have been working 24/7 for months. One thing is
clear; I was not afraid of losing. I just wanted to win. And this will to win was
stronger than the fear of losing. It was a tough Dakar, a beautiful Dakar and I
am so glad I won.”
Ullevalseter second overall on KTM
Second place overall went to KTM rider Pal Ullevalseter of Norway, who
completed his eighth Dakar rally and finally succeeded in winning his first
stage on Friday. “To finish second in the standings is more than I expected.
I
had dreamed of it and there it is. On this Dakar, I only had good times. No
problems, no crash. The bike worked well. I may not be the fastest rider but I
am experienced. I know how to navigate, I know the technique and I am much
more relaxed. With my first stage victory yesterday, I have lived so many
things in two days. It’s great times. The party is on for weeks to come now.
I’ve been training for this moment for 25 years”
Third place went to Aprilia rider Francisco Lopez. Six of the top ten finishers
were KTM riders.
Four stage victories for Coma
Marc Coma, Despres’ eternal rival in the KTM camp, finally finished in 15th
place after penalties put him out of contention. But he still had four stage wins
to his credit and, penalties aside, his actual riding time was remarkable close
to that of Despres, proof enough that the two KTM riders are in a class of their
own in international rally competition.
The result was all the more remarkable
because both Despres and Coma had to ride with air restrictors on their KTM
690 rally machines, to reduce the performance down to the level of a 450 cc
bike.
KTM continues its domination of the world’s greatest rally
The 2010 rally was yet another triumph for KTM, the Austria manufacturer
whose sports machines play such a dominant role in international offroad
competition, with winning world champion Cyril Despres, the great second
place of top-privateer Pal Ullevalseter, an additional 44 KTM riders who
reached the finish line and last but not least the successful service of the
official KTM support truck.
KTM first won the Dakar Rally in 2001 and has been undefeated ever since.
Six of those victories have come with either Despres or Coma at the
handlebars and each has now won three Dakar titles.
Final Standings Dakar Rally after Stage 14
1. Cyril Despres, Andorra, KTM (2010 winner)
2. Pal Ullevalseter, Norway, KTM (at 1:02’52”)
3. Francisco Lopez, Chile, Aprilia, (at 1:08.34)
4. Helder Rodrigues, Portugal, Yamaha
5. David Fretigne, France, Yamaha
6. Alain Duclos, France, KTM
7. Jonah Street, USA, KTM
8. Jakub Przygonski, Poland, KTM
9. Olivier Pain, France, Yamaha
10. Juan Pedrero Garcia, Spain, KTM
15. Marc Coma, Spain, KTM
KTM-supported rider Cyril Despres sealed victory in the 2010 Dakar
Rally after more than 9000 km across Argentina and Chile. He rode
triumphantly into Buenos Aires to complete his third Dakar victory and
the ninth consecutive victory for KTM, the Austrian-made sports
motorcycles. With this ninth consecutive success KTM remains
unbeaten in the most important Rally race since 2001.
Tagged under
Leigh Godson
Technical Editor and Lead Product Reviewer for Bikechatter, is responsible for the team of rabid Bikechatter.net reviewers and partial to the odd product test himself.
Leigh rides a 2005 ZX-10R while his (poor old) aching body will still allow and puts in a decent amount of road miles each year - if only he could get more track miles though!
Website: bikechatter.net










