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Venteventer breaks leg - Maragozidis takes Safari lead24/Aug/2008South African, Vicus Vandeventer, had dominated Safari since the start on Saturday but crashed heavily on stage 19 on leg five and broke his leg.Vandeventer held a 90 minute lead before then, but South Australian, John Maragozidis, on a Polaris Outlaw IRS, now has his sights set on the inaugural Quad bike victory. He leads Darrell Knight (CAN AM) by nearly three hours.Leaving the outback mining town of Meekatharra this morning, the 600 kilometre course took competitors south west towards Mt Magnet, with four sections totalling over 470 competitive kilometres. Road conditions were again dry and dusty, with fast, open sections interspersed with rough and rocky tracks that provided a real challenge to both competitors and their vehicles. Crews spend tonight in Mt Magnet, before heading south west to the coastal town of Geraldton tomorrow, before the finish in Perth on Saturday afternoon. Between now and then though there is still over 500 kilometres of competitive stages still to be negotiated with a lot of those stages involving some tricky navigation challenges that will really test an ATV field that is far from familiar with which opens up a lot of opportunity for positions to be shuffled before competitors cross the line in Perth on Saturday afternoon. RESULTS – LEG FIVE 1. John Maragozidis, Polaris Outlaw IRS, 29h30m18s More results to follow With the support of the Western Australian Government, this year’s Australasian Safari started in the gold mining city of Kalgoorlie. Competitors face over 2675k kilometres of competitive stages through remote areas of Western Australia, such as Sandstone, Meekatharra, Mt Magnet and Geraldton, before finishing in the state’s capital, Perth, on Saturday, August 30. The event's overall distance is more than 4400km. For the first time in the event’s 21 year history, four-wheeled quad bikes will have their own division, as they join motorcycles and cars in the event. This has not only opened the event up to more competitors, but has also stimulated more media interest in the Safari. One of the unique aspects about an event like the Australasian Safari is that it allows both two- and four-wheeled vehicles to compete together. However, while all vehicles in the rally will compete over the same course, they will, essentially, only be racing against vehicles in their category or class. Quad bikes, for example, aren’t pitted against the two-wheeled motorbikes in the overall standings. HOW IT WORKS The Australasian Safari is timed just like any other rally. Entrants start each competitive section at pre determined intervals and are racing against the clock, rather than racing directly against other competitors. They are timed from when they leave the start control until when they cross the finish line of that competitive section. Times from all sections are added up, and at the end of the event, the competitor who has covered the entire course in the least amount of time is declared the winner. Competitive sections are interspersed with liaison or ‘road’ sections, which are travelled at normal road speeds. These sections are used to join the competitive sections, often through towns and villages along the way. FINDING THEIR WAY The Western Australian outback can be a dry and barren place, with a seemingly never-ending horizon, which makes it a real challenge for competitors just to find their way. To help them navigate the course, competitors are issued with route instructions that give them exact directions of how far they need to travel and where they need to turn. The instructions also warn crews of any hazards along the way, such as creek crossings, gates, rough sections and the like. As the four-wheeled vehicles carry a navigator, or co-driver, their instructions are in book form, however for the single occupant motorbikes and quads, the instructions are a little more challenging. To make things easier, Worldwide Online Printing have worked with the organisers to produce a continuous print scroll of the instructions is supplied to all bike crews. The instructions are housed in a special scroll on the handlebars, allowing riders to read the directions, and advance the scroll forward, as they traverse the course. WHERE DO THEY SLEEP? As you’d expect, the Australasian Safari covers some pretty remote country, but with an event that covers seven days, competitors – and officials – need to sleep somewhere. To make things easier, the overnight stops are in towns such as Sandstone, Meekatharra, Mt Magnet and Geraldton, and while most of the competitors camp out, others treat themselves to the extra luxury of motel accommodation. But while the drivers and riders rest up, their hard working service crews don’t usually have it so easy. Having travelled a similar distance during the day to the competitors, the service crews then have to get to work refuelling, and often rebuilding the cars, bikes and quads. It’s the hard-working service crews who are the unsung heroes of the Australasian Safari, and who can, more often than not, be the difference between who wins and who loses. ROUGH AND RUGGED As the toughest rally on the Australian calendar, the wear and tear on vehicles is unrelenting. The vehicles can have all sorts of mechanical issues along the way – any of which could put them out of the rally. Fortunately, there are rules in place to keep as many competitors as possible in the event. A vehicle that retires from any day of the Safari can rejoin the event at a later stage, and while this ultimately rules them out of outright contention, it keeps them in the rally. For the select few, winning the Australasian Safari is their ultimate goal. But for most, just finishing is as good as a victory. And that’s what keeps competitors coming back year after year. THE SAFARI COURSE The Australasian Safari covers plenty of country, and not unexpectedly, it uses both privately owned and public land in the outback of WA. According to Event Director, Justin Hunt, the Safari has continued to receive excellent support from landowners, and this year’s course promises to be just as demanding as in previous years. “We use the roughest and toughest tracks available to us, not commercial grade or "working / farm" roads,” Hunt stresses. “As in other years, the winner of the Australasian Safari – and everyone who competes, for that matter – will know that they’ve been in Australia’s toughest motorsport challenge.” |
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