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2007 Monte Carlo Rally

2007 Monte Carlo Rally
75e Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo
Round 1 of the 2007 World Rally Championship
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2007 Monte Carlo Rally route.svg
Route map of the 2007 Monte Carlo Rally
Host country  Monaco
Rally base Valence, Drôme, France
Dates run 18 (18) – 21 January 2007 (2007-01-21)
Stages 15 (328.54 km; 204.15 mi)
Stage surface Tarmac
Overall distance 1,185.22 km (736.46 mi)
Results
Overall winner France Sébastien Loeb (driver)
Monaco Daniel Elena (co-driver)
France Citroën Total World Rally Team (manufacturer)
Crews 47 at start, 39 at finish

The 2007 Monte Carlo Rally (formally known as the 75e Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo) was a rallying autosports race held over four days between 18 January and 21 January 2007, and operated out of Valence, Drôme, France. It was the first race of the 2007 World Rally Championship (WRC) season. Contested over fifteen stages at a length of 328.54 kilometres (204.15 miles), Sébastien Loeb won the race for the Citroën Total World Rally Team. Dani Sordo finished second in the other Citröen works car, with Marcus Grönholm finishing third in a Ford.

Loeb, driving an all new Citroën C4 WRC car which had been in development throughout 2006, took control of the race from the outset, winning the two stages on the first day and four more stages over the following three days. His teammate Sordo kept the pressure on, winning three stages, but on Stage 6, Loeb extended his lead from 6.6 seconds to nearly 24 seconds, and from thereon became unattainable. Each stage on the first two Legs were won by either Loeb or Sordo, and it wasn't until Saturday afternoon on the second run of the day's stages, that other drivers could effectively challenge them. The last two days of the race consisted of a duel between Mikko Hirvonen, who drove a factory 2006 model Ford Focus RS WRC, and Chris Atkinson in a factory Subaru Impreza WRC 2006. After Hirvonen completed Stage 2 in fourth place, Atkinson took the position on Stage 3 and held onto it throughout Friday and into Saturday morning's stages. On Stage 12 on Saturday afternoon, Hirvonen retook fourth, Atkinson regained it on Stage 13 but then lost it to Hirvonen again following Stage 14. Atkinson won the final stage on Sunday morning, and finished the race back in fourth position.


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