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sunnuntai 8. syyskuuta 2013

Vetomies -rally 3rd of August, Jyväskylä

Neste Rally Finland, The Finnish Grand Prix. So what does Vetomieshave to do with it? During some of the years there has been an extra class after the Neste Rally cars. In that class the competitors drive with Finnish 2wd group F cars which have outdated homologation.For example BMW M3, Toyota Corolla GT, Opel Astra, Ford Escortetc etc. This year we participated to the class with my brother Mikkoin his BMW M3. Jari also took part with his brother in their M3. In the middle of Finnish rally championship this was an opportunity to just enjoy the rallying how it’ meant to be done. Sideways :) TheVetomies –rally was done on Saturday and we drove stages Surkee,LeustuOuninpohja and Painaa after the big boys had done the stages for the first time. It was really great to be part of the WRC round  atmosphere. Since we haven’t done that many rallies with my brother anymore I was really looking forward to doing one rally with him. Just like back in the day. A BMW, Mikko driving and me co-driving.


The recce was one weekend on a Saturday. Actually a couple of days earlier than even the WRC guys get to do the recce. Maybe the organizers didn’t want them to be in our way during the recce :D We managed to make good pace notes even though Mikko hasn’t done notes in a long time and usually doesn’t do pace note rallies.

Next Friday it was time to get back to Jyväskylä. To kill the time me, Mikko and a couple of our friends went to see Lankamaa stage. After the stage me and Mikko headed towards Kangasniemi to spend thenight. Next morning it was all rally glamour. Wake up at 5am and on the road around 5h45. 

Around 7am we were ready at Paviljonki for paper check and scrutineering. The whole atmosphere was really relaxed since probably 90% of the crews were there just to enjoy themselves.

The Vetomies rally usually has a really high retiring rate and that was wise to keep in mind. Around 11am it was our time to head towards the stages. The Surkee stage was familiar to me from last year. The stage was luckily in quite good shape after the WRC guys. We took it steadily trying not to damage the car. Mikko was also learning how to concentrate on listening to the pace notes. Our tactic was to avoid any damage to the car so that we could enjoy the famousOuninpohja stage. After Surkee we continued through Leustu with the same strategy. One of the Leustu junctions was so soft that we almost got stuck with the heavy rwd BMW.

After Leustu there was a short service break on a road section. We checked the car and didn’t even change the tyres. No fluids or anything needed either. Everything was OK and we just ate and drank a little bit to keep energy levels up. We hadn't even expected any problems. Mikko's trusted mechanic Teuvo was enjoying the rally as a spectator and our dad was the only mechanic we had with us. Even a couple of spectators came to the car laughing and commenting that there doesn't seem to be anything wrong with the car since everybody is just talking bs and eating. The Ouninpohja stage started very well. Mikko had better gotten used listening the pace notes and since the stage was in great condition he could push the car without having to worry about it getting broken.

When reaching the famous Kakaristo junction after over 20km we were inside the top ten according to the gps tracker that was installed inside all the cars. About 700m everything went wrong. The organizers had built a jump for Tommi Mäkinen’s VIP people and we landed heavily nose first. Several cars broke in that artificial jump and we were no exception. The landing had damaged our oil cooler which had ripped of the radiator from its mountings. About 3km after the jump on the so called Ouninpohja small road our engine seized. End of our rally. 
Unfortunately we also had to wait for several hours for the WRC guys to drive the stage for the second time. The organizers driving through the stage were really cool and stopped at our spot to ask if we were alright and if we needed anything. Even though we had drinking water the supplied us a couple of liters more. A big thank you for that for those guys. Very friendly. Our car wasn’t blocking the road, but it was on the outside corner where the WRC cars would throw a lot of stones. We tried to clean all the bigger stones after a car had passed, but unfortunately Kris Meeke dropped the driver’s side window with one stone. Kris himself wasn’t too lucky either crashing his car about 3km later. A shame since we was driving a great rally with a factory Citroën. Even though we didn’t finish the rally and broke the BMW’s engine we were quite happy. The setup of the car is pretty much spot on and since the Ouninpohja had gone so well the broken engine isn’t the end of the world.

sunnuntai 7. elokuuta 2011

Neste Oil Rally Finland 2011

No I wasn't participating. Only watching. Of course I would have liked to participate, but maybe that day will come. However I had a interesting few days watching cars etc.

My rally trip started already one day before the stages on Wednesday. University of Jyväskylä held a seminar Promoting Driver Performance. Topics included Risto Mannisenmäki (Tommi Mäkinen's ex co-driver) talking about AKK Driving Academy - Rally coaching in Finland, Robert Reid (Richard Burns' ex co-driver) talking about Comprehensive Motorsport Coaching - Limitations of a top driver. Other topics ranged from dividing attention between driving and secondary actions to topics like emotional attributes of Finnish motorsport athletes and how to train psychological skills. All in all I enjoyed the seminar a lot since it gave a some different angles to rallying that you don't normally come across when talking about rallying with other enthusiasts. At least in Finland you don't normally start a conversation with another rally driver/co-driver by asking that has he/she been doing any mental exercises during the rally weekend.

Spectating the stages started on Thursday. There were only three stages scheduled for Thursday evening and we chose to go to the second one Laukaa. The Finnish police were out on the roads on force like normal to show everybody that they are there and despite traffic jams everybody should keep driving by the book. In Laukaa we didn't have too good spectating position since we chose to go to a field where there were a couple of hundred other people also. You could see the cars for a long time, but not a place where anything interesting would happen. Really positive surprise was the excellent pace of Jari Ketomaa with the WRC Ford. Everybody expected him to be quick, but we was driving fastest times during Thursday before having to slow down so that he wouldn't have to be first on the road on Friday. Sad news for Finns was that Mikko Hirvonen hit a tree on Thursday and even though he didn't retire the fight for victory ended then and there. On Thursday we watched almost all the cars, before driving to Mikkeli to my friend's place for the night.

On Friday we drove from Mikkeli to Lahti area. We decided to go to special stage 6/9 Hyväneula since we got a tip from one Finnish rally driver that there is one right hand corner after a crest which has had "off roading" whenever the road has been used as a special stage. The corner turned out to be a good spectating position. There was a hill on the outside corner we people could position easily so that everyone can see. The first cars drove nicely through the bend like expected. After that there began to be a lot of loose gravel outside the optimal driving line. PG Anderson had a close call with Tommi Mäkinen Racing's Subaru when he missed the line a bit and had to floor the throttle  and throw the car sideways on the loose gravel to get through the bend. Same thing happened also to Prokop with his S2000 Ford. The struts were really deep for cars coming later and the bend started to loose it's interest. We chose to move to special stage Koukunmaa. Later I saw from youtube that Latvala had a big moment in the bend because the struts had thrown him of the line and on privateer WC Mini also went off. Aftermath you can say that maybe we shouldn't have moved to another stage after all.



In Koukunmaa we had a really quiet spectating place after some field on a right hand corner. No action to be expected since there wasn't anything surprising in the corner. Just your average right hand corner that narrowed a little bit. The most interesting part on Friday was to listen to the rally radio and follow special stage results from wrc.com. Ketomaa unfortunately went off so that ended his big surprise. Matti Rantanen also went off with his Mini WRC. I was a bit surprised about that since he has had good results in Finland and I haven't qualified him as the type of driver who crashes a lot. Luckily the driver and co-driver were OK since he went off in a high speed corner. On the positive side Mikko Pajunen showed spectacular pace with a Renaul Clio R3 against the Mitsubishi Evos and Subaru Imprezas in the PWRC class. He was running second in class after Friday with a n/a engined 2wd car. One class below Esapekka Lappi (C2 R2) and Jukka Korhonen (Fiesta R2) had a great battle against each other which Lappi finally won on Saturday. Both also showed their pace against the WRC Academy's Fiesta R2 drivers by leaving them trailing way behind.

Not showing 100% commitment we ended our rally trip already on Friday since we didn't want to drive back north to Jyväskylä for Saturdays stages and then back south to Helsinki after the rally. I followed the Saturday's stages from the internet. Loeb deserved his victory this year, but let's hope there will be a Finn setting the pace next year.