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The first rallies in Cyprus were nothing like we see
today. A cross between a race and a reliability trial, where the
overriding problem was whether the cars would be capable of getting to the
finish, is the best description. However, as the expertise of the drivers -
and the reliability of the cars - improved, motor club members glamoured
for another type of event and it became evident that something more
professional was needed.
Therefore, in 1970 the Cyprus Automobile Association
joined Rothmans of Pall Mall to run an annual international
rally.
Initially they were rough, tough, long and ultimately
destructive events, as the cars were routed over primitive (and sometimes
non-existent) tracks; with unattainable average speeds and controls placed
so as to extract the highest possible lateness penalties.
Despite its toughness, the Cyprus Rally earned itself a
reputation for a blend of superb organisation, warm hospitality and
genuine friendliness – features that still entice drivers, journalists and
fans back year after year.
Hannu Mikkola was the star the first year but he failed to
finish - engine failure forced him to retire his Ford Escort halfway
through - and the winners were the three-man Anglo-Cypriot crew of Victor
Zachariades, Loris Ellinas and Roger Fisher.
In 1971 local champion Christos Kirmitsis won in a Ford
Escort TC, pushing Brian Culcheth and Johnstone Syer into second place.
The British pair returned the following year, only to be pipped at the
post again by a Cypriot: Lefteris Makrides in a Mercedes
250CE.
Stig Blomqvist and Arne Hertz brought their Saab 96 to the
3rd Cyprus International Rally and won, annihilating all
opposition.
The Turkish invasion and subsequent upheaval precluded any
motorsport in 1974 and 1975 but the Cypriots were soon back in business
and the 1976 rally drew entries from Spaniard Antonio Zanini, Ireland's
Billy Coleman and Shekhar and Yvonne Mehta, the winners.
The Mehtas returned in 1977 but success eluded them, the
victors' laurels going to local champion Kypros Kyprianou in a Hillman
Avenger.
In 1978 the event was awarded coefficient 3 in the
European Championship - and Britain's Roger Clark won.
Ari Vatanen and Dave Richards were the winners of the 1979
event while second place was enough to secure the European Championship
for Jochi Kleint of Germany.
1980 saw Roger Clark triumph again in a works prepared
Ford Escort RS and become the first driver to win the event twice - a
record that stood for fourteen years.
Vahan Terzian, who dominated motorsport in Cyprus for a
decade, took the lead in the 1981 rally after Britain's Malcolm Wilson
retired his Ford Escort early in the event. Cypriots took the top three
places; but the island was not to see another local winner for ten
years.
Meanwhile the rally had been steadily climbing the
European ladder and it achieved coefficient 4 in 1982, the year that Tony
Fassina left with the winner's trophy and the European Championship in the
bag. Jimmy McRae and Ian Grindrod romped home in an Opel Manta 400 the
following year.
John Buffum of the USA brought the Audi Quattro to Cyprus
in 1984 and led from start to finish.
An unknown entity to the Cypriots before the start, Mauro
Pregliasco was the dark horses of the Lancia team in 1985. However, with
their uncanny knack of spotting the winner, the crowds were soon urging
the Italian on to a flamboyant win.
After an epic battle with Cypriot Dimi Mavropoulos,
Belgian Patrick Snijers, driving a Lancia 037, won the 14th
Cyprus Rally and secured second place in the European
Championship.
Britons David Llewellin and Phil Short gave Audi its
second victory in 1987, conquering the tough Cyprus stages in the Coupe
Quattro.
1988 saw Toyota Team Europe bring a very powerful team to
the event - now at coefficient 20 - to test the new Celica GT-Four prior
to its World Championship debut. Kenneth Eriksson shot into an early lead,
only to lose it to teammate Bjorn Waldegaard, who went on to win in a
spectacular drive that gave the Toyota its first major victory.
Meanwhile Fabrizio Tabaton, in a Lancia Delta Integrale,
and 1986 winner Snijers, in a BMW M3, fought for European Championship
sovereignty. The Italian was the final victor after the Belgian crashed
out in the third leg.
The following year Corsican driver Yves Loubet, who was
already leading the European Championship, clinched it with his win in
Cyprus.
After 15 previous attempts and being runner-up three
times, Dimi Mavropoulos finally realised his dream in 1990. It was not an
easy win, for Vahan Terzian, driving a 1600cc Honda Civic, fought a David
and Goliath battle all the way against the Audi Quattro of Mavropoulos.
Cypriots prevailed again in 1991 as Antonis Jeropoulos, in
the Mitsubishi Gallant VR4, had a runaway victory over
Mavropoulos.
The young Italian Alessandro Fiorio, driving the Astra
Team's Lancia Delta Integrale 16V, surged ahead in the first stage of the
20th Cyprus Rally and stayed there - scoring his first
coefficient 20 win. Mavropoulos came in second while Pole Marian
Bublewicz’s third overall assured him second slot in the European
Championship.
Fiorio returned in 1993 to equal Roger Clark's record and
to set a new one of two consecutive wins. He accomplished both objectives
after a thrilling dogfight with Jeropoulos in the Mitsubishi VR4.Young
Cypriot Zacharias Prastitis won F2 in his Honda Civic Si.
In 1994 the amiable young Italian came back for the third
year running, intent on driving his Astra Team Lancia Delta into the
record books with a hat trick of wins. He achieved his goal with a
stupendous drive during which he set a further record by winning every
special stage.
Vahan Terzian, in the Toyota Celica, was more than happy
with second place and Group N. Dimi Mavropoulos rounded off the top three
in the Ford Escort Cosworth while Prastitis picked up the F2 Cup
again.
Lebanese driver "Bagheera", driving an Astra Team Lancia
Delta, made history at the 1995 event when he became the first Arab to win
a major European Rally. Second was Cypriots Lenas Cleanthous, who also
took Group N honors in his Mitsubishi Lancer EVO while first in F2 - and
third overall - in the Opel Astra GSi, was enough to secure the European
2WD crown for Russian Evgeny Vassine.
In 1996 both the European Championship leader, Kurt
Gottlicher of Austria, and Toyota Team Germany driver Armin Schwarz came
to Cyprus intent on winning. Schwarz set the pace, pulling further and
further ahead of Gottlicher and smashing each stage record as they went.
He eventually cruised to victory and to the top of the European league
table.
In Formula 2, Germans Nikolai Burkart consolidated his
place at the top of the European leader board.
In 1997 the European title leader was here again.
Krzysztof Holowczyc Poland knew from the start that a top three place
would secure him the crown. So he stamped his mark on the rally from the
very first stage, never faltering in the Subaru Impreza 555 and finishing
over 14 minutes ahead of second placed Andreas Tsouloftas. Andreas
Peratikos of Cyprus was third and Group N winner in his Mitsubishi Lancer
Evo III.
Formula 2 honours went to local driver Savvas Andreou in
his Seat Ibiza GTi.
In 1998 Andrea Navarra of Italy, driving a Subaru WRX1,
raced to the top of the European Championship with a convincing win at the
26th Cyprus Rally. Emil Triner of the Czech Republic took
second place and F2 in the Skoda Octavia KC and Andreas Peratikos was
again third overall and first in Group N in the Lancer.
In 1999 Monegasque Jean-Pierre Richelmi, driving a
Subaru Impreza, scored his first coefficient 20 win. European Championship
leader Enrico Bertone, who brought his Renault Megane KC to Cyprus to add
to his points tally, was beaten into seventh place after being dogged by
niggling mechanical problems throughout the 1050 kilometre
route.
Pavel Sibera, driving the Czech National Team’s Skoda
Octavia KC, achieved what he set out to do. He won F2 and beat
Bertone.
Cyprus’ Andreas Peratikos made the hat trick, finishing
third and first in Group N for the third consecutive year.
The Cyprus organisers were thrown in at the deep end in 2000, with just
four months in which to put everything together, when the rally was taken
into the WRC as a last-minute replacement for the China Rally.
Cyprus Rally 2000 was a level playing field for the WRC Teams as Armin
Schwarz was the only driver to have competed on the island. A crushing
all-the-way win gave Carlos Sainz his first victory in the Ford Focus and
his 23rd in the WRC. Team-mate Colin McRae came in second and François
Delecour rounded off the top three for Peugeot.
The 2001 event moved from sweltering September to flaming June and Ford
won again. This time Colin McRae took the honours. Richard Burns was
runner-up for Subaru and Carlos Sainz was third in another Ford.
Marcus Gronholm won the 2002 Cyprus Rally, run in lashing April
rainstorms, without winning a single stage! His Peugeot team-mate Burns
was second and Tommi Makinen brought the Subaru home in third place.
In 2003 the rally was back to June and Subaru’s Petter Solberg scored his
first win of the season that culminated in his taking the World
Championship crown. Harri Rovanpera managed to hang on to second place in
his Peugeot despite a last minute scare when a driveshaft broke in one of
the final stages. Sébastien Loeb took third in the Citroen, leading all
three double-chevrons to the finish.
World Champion Sébastien Loeb was declared winner of the 2004 Cyprus Rally
in the Citroën Xsara, after Marcus Grönholm was disqualified because of a
technical infringement on the Peugeot 307 WRC. Estonian Markko Märtin was
second, retaining the Manufacturers’ Championship lead for Ford, and
Carlos Sainz was third in the second Xsara.
In a year when Sébastien Loeb was steamrolling through the WRC, Cyprus would
be no exception. The 2005 Cyprus Rally was dominated by the French driver in
his Citroën Xsara, who became only the third driver in the event's history to
win it in two consecutive years. Austrian privateer Manfred Stohl took a
career-best second overall in his OMV-backed Citroën Xsara. Only a few seconds
behind, Markko Märtin and Henning Solberg fought it out until the end, with the
Estonian and his Peugeot 307 finally getting to the podium for the second
year in a row.
Every year the action and excitement of the race continue and are raised to
a whole new level. The past rallies links can
guide you through the drama, as it played out on "the most challenging
gravel routes in the WRC".
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