Showing posts with label Nyriad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nyriad. Show all posts

Monday, 1 June 2026

Guess who’s back? Bakkerud is back on top with first victory in four years after Hungarian masterclass.

Podium celebrations in Hungary.
PHOTO CREDIT: FIA Rallycross Championship
“Guess who’s back, Bakker again…” Under the searing heat of Hungary’s legendary ‘Red Cauldron’, through wheel-banging battles, strategic chaos, and sudden rain showers, Andreas Bakkerud delivered a dominant performance at the Kárai Trans Euro RX of Hungary. 

Arriving at the second round of the FIA European Rallycross Championship, determined to rebound from a frustrating season-opener in Latvia, where a podium challenge slipped away, the Norwegian fought off Johan Kristoffersson and a stacked Euro RX1 field to claim his first victory since Hell in 2022. 

From the moment practice began on Saturday morning, the stage was set for another chapter in rallycross’ modern great rivalry. Bakkerud topped FP1, Kristoffersson responded in FP2, and the pair traded fastest times by milliseconds around one of the championship’s most punishing circuits, Nyirád.

The Norwegian struck first, dominating, whilst his rival, Kristoffersson, who was already battling sluggish starts in Latvia, continued to haunt him throughout the weekend.

But despite the nightmare start, the eight-time World Rallycross champion hit back in Q2. Their first direct duel of the weekend quickly escalated into one of the standout races of the season so far, Kristoffersson edging Bakkerud by just 0.334s in a fierce battle that neither driver was willing to yield.

As rain rolled over Nyirád ahead of Q3, the circuit transformed from hot and dusty into a greasy survival test. Kristoffersson again bogged down at the start, leaving Bakkerud to aggressively defend into Turn One. At the same time, KMS opted to roll the dice early with joker laps for both Ole Christian Veiby and Kristoffersson.

Bakkerud and his SET Promotion supported stablemates, Joni Turpeinen and Juha Rytkönen, who had perfect launches. Turpeinen jokered first from the lead, Rytkönen followed shortly afterwards, whilst Bakkerud delayed his joker until the final lap. The strategy paid off perfectly, allowing the Norwegian to emerge crucially ahead of Kristoffersson and secure the overnight top qualifier spot.

“It feels good. It’s always brilliant to race against Johan. He’s such a strong driver and hardly ever puts a foot wrong, so you can never hold anything back against him,” Bakkerud said. 

By Sunday morning, teams had a better understanding of how to extract more performance; however, Bakkerud’s momentum only intensified.

He narrowly beat Kristoffersson to the Top Qualifier spot in Q4 before controlling both his Quarter-Final and Semi-Final from lights-to-flag, earning pole position for the all-important Final.

The EuroRX of Hungary final.
Source: TheRedsRX
And inevitably, alongside him on the front row was Kristoffersson. When the lights went out, the pair launched evenly, but Bakkerud held the inside line into Turn One and refused to surrender it. As he edged Kristoffersson wide, the closely following SET Promotion pair of Turpeinen and Rytkönen sensed opportunity. What followed was the defining moment of the weekend.

As the field compressed into the tight left-hander, slight contact pitched Kristoffersson into the outside tyre wall, dropping the reigning world champion to the back of the field and effectively ending his challenge for a podium spot.

Up front, the Bergen Motorsport Evolution by SET Promotion driver escaped the chaos unscathed. Rytkönen applied pressure throughout the race, but the outcome rarely looked in doubt. Bakkerud controlled the pace, set the fastest lap, and crossed the finish line just over one-and-a-half seconds clear.

After climbing from his ex-Ken Block Ford Fiesta, Bakkerud fought back tears as he reflected on his return to the top step of the podium.

“This means the world,” he said. “We fight hard, and I'm not meaning to stand here crying, but it means a lot. It was good. It's not often you get the chance to go door-to-door next to an eight-time world champion, and Johan is such a beast. He's such a character, such a driver. So, I mean, we come here with a car painter, a ventilation guy, a sticker guy. We do a good job.”

“We were the top qualifier as well. First, the semi-finals, pole in the final. The last time I was pole, was Barcelona 2021 with GCK. So, it's been forever. It's been many years. Tough time in America, coming back here, racing, starting a new chapter, and all the field of sport is back supporting us,” an emotional Bakkerud said. 

Side-by-side heading into turn one. 
PHOTO CREDIT: FIA Rallycross Championship
Behind him, Rytkönen completed a memorable one-two for the SET Promotion-supported Fiesta package, while 17-year-old Turpeinen continued his remarkable start to the season with a second consecutive podium finish.

The Finnish teenager had been one of the revelations of Saturday, overcoming gearbox issues in Q1 before consistently challenging the established stars throughout qualifying. His third-place finish leaves him firmly in the championship conversation after two rounds.

“Three SET Promotion drivers on the podium – it’s crazy! I absolutely didn’t expect to have such a successful start to the season,” Turpeinen said. “It was quite chaotic in Turn One in the Final – everyone was flying everywhere like rockets, but I was able to stay clean on the inside line, and it was good to finish third again. My tyres were completely gone by the end of the weekend, but we’ll have good ones for Höljes!”

Ole Christian Veiby climbed to fourth despite spending much of the weekend recovering from a broken gear lever that cost him valuable time in Q1, with team-mate Kristoffersson recovered to fifth after his opening-corner drama.

“We're done here in Hungary. Started off with qualifying four, which put us second overall, and managed to win our quarter-final and semi-final. Started from the outside of the final. I had a good start, which was really promising, but then I was just too wide and going into turn one. And yeah, with all the loose gravel on the outside there, I lost it going into the wall and had a spin. So, lost a lot of time there, but managed to get one position back and ended up P4 overall. So, we scored enough points for second overall in the championship, one point behind Bakkerud. It was a fun weekend in Hungary. It's a proper rallycross track, so I really enjoyed the fight,” the eight-time champion said. 

A sixth-place finish may not seem impressive to some, but Casper Jansson truly demonstrated a very mature and strong performance throughout the weekend. The young Swede is a definite driver to watch in the coming events, having unlocked more pace from his Peugeot 208 with assistance from 14-time European Rallycross ace Kenneth Hansen. 

Elsewhere, Patrick O'Donovan demonstrated both his speed and aggression despite suffering accidents on consecutive days, Fabien Pailler rebounded strongly from a nightmare season-opener in Latvia, where he was plagued by engine issues, whilst home hero Andor Trepák showed flashes of genuine front-running pace before narrowly missing out on a place in the final.

O’Donovan, a former EuroRX Champion, did not mince his words when reflecting on the weekend and an incident with Ole Christian Veiby in the semi-finals, as he explains: “heartbreak for myself. I did the hard work. And I mean, we beat OC in the quarterfinal. And then into the semi, I beat him out of the joker. I couldn't have gone any wider because I was on the absolute limit of where the grip is before you hit the marbles. And, I mean, he was completely off his line. If you go back to any other lap, he just drove out there with the intent to hit me. And you can see his car go sideways. You're telling me the best car in rallycross, if he doesn't want it to, isn't going to be going forward at that point. He's driven there to take me out. And I mean, yeah, it's a really bitter pill to swallow. And, I just hope we can get out for Holjes at this point, because at the moment, looking at the car in there, it's really unlikely.” 

It’s unfortunate for Team RX Racing and O’Donovan, with the clock well and truly ticking to repair his Peugeot 208. However, ultimately, Nyirád belonged to one man, Andreas Bakkerud, who reminded everyone that he still knows exactly how to beat the best in the business.

Whilst victory catapulted Bakkerud into the championship lead by a single point over Kristoffersson heading into the iconic Höljes ‘Magic Weekend’ in July, it’s evident that both teams and drivers will take a deep dive into their data in an attempt to unlock more pace, which truly sets the stage for an epic battle in the Värmland forest!

Wednesday, 31 July 2024

Kristoffersson extends championship lead despite Battle of Technologies tie in hot Nyirád.

PHOTO CREDIT: Red Bull Content Pool
Hungary turns up the heat, as the FIA World Rallycross Championship serves up a thrilling double-header at the 'Red Cauldron', with Niclas Grönholm and Johan Kristoffersson winning Rounds 3 and 4 respectively in the ‘Battle of Technologies’ at the World RX of Hungary. 

Six-time World Champion Johan Kristoffersson kickstarted his 2024 campaign in commanding fashion winning both rounds in Holjes, Sweden earlier this month in the teams' newly-developed Volkswagen 601 KMS RX sustainably-fuelled combustion-engined Supercar, while his rivals expect the 'Battle of Technologies' to sway between ICE and EV cars, as the season progresses. 

PHOTO CREDIT: Red Bull Content Pool
Nyirád's famous 'Red Cauldron' played host to rounds 3 and 4 of the World RX Championship, and boy did it deliver, as Johan Kristoffersson and Kevin Hansen were quite literally locked in a sprint to the tight turn one, with neither of them willing to concedes as the field barrelled into the first corner, and both had heavy impacts into the outside barrier, with Hansen's damaged Peugeot 208 RX1e going no further, whilst Niclas Grönholm, cool as a cucumber navigated his way through to the lead, and eventually, his first victory of the season ahead of new father, and second-placed finisher Ole Christian Veiby by 5.364s with Hungarian Jankó Wieszt reaching the rostrum on his World RX debut. Behind them were champions, Timmy Hansen in fourth and Kristoffersson in fifth, who lost heaps of time due to suspension damage from the turn-one incident.

“I am proud of everyone in the team, they have been working hard and now when we get the results it is amazing. We are here to win and do good, so it is a good reward to everyone and a testament to our core philosophy of equal and sustainable motorsport,” Grönholm said.

Following the final, the FIA Stewards investigated the first corner incident between Johan Kristoffersson and Kevin Hansen, and deemed the reigning World Champion "predominately to blame for the first incident", whilst Hansen was disqualified for "failure to provide footage from the Judicial Camera".

Round 4 Podium - Johan Kristoffersson winner [center], OC Veiby second [left], and Klara Andersson third [right]
PHOTO CREDIT: Red Bull Content Pool
With temperatures on the rise in Hungary and between rivals, Sunday was another day to find some improvements for all in the field, and that seemed to be the target for Johan Kristoffersson who was fairly mighty, despite damage in the second heat, he posted the fastest lap, and led from lights-to-flag in the semi-final and final, winning Round 4 by 10.809s to further extend his lead in the World RX championship. 

“Yesterday wasn’t a great day, but today was much better!” Kristoffersson said. “It’s been a great first experience here in Hungary and it’s been nice to see so many fans. I got a good start in the final and could then control the race from there – I wasn’t pushing hard. I just tried to drive smoothly and avoid making any mistakes. If I’d needed a real ‘killer’ lap, I’m pretty sure I could have gone quicker...”

Like a 24-hours earlier, OC Veiby finished second once again to jump from fourth to second in the drivers’ standings, while Klara Andersson came home third.

"Twice P2 is absolutely acceptable. Up to second place in the championship as well and many team points. It can't get any better," Veiby said.

Klara Andersson has been on fantastic form – but when margins are so tight a brush with a barrier on the joker lap in Saturday’s semi-final denied her a place in the Round 3 final, while bent steering after contact with the barriers at the first comer hampered her efforts of winning Sunday’s Round 4.

“It was a tough weekend, but I’m really happy to finish on the podium today. The car felt great, and winning two heats was a big highlight. A big decision today was switching to rain tires for the final, and it paid off as we secured third place. Standing on the podium and earning good points felt amazing. Sharing third place in the championship with Niclas is a great comeback from yesterday, but I know there’s more potential to unlock,” said Klara Andersson.

PHOTO CREDIT: RED BULL CONTENT POOL
Coming into the Hungarian weekend, the Hansen World RX team drivers expected EV cars to get one over their sustainably-fuelled internal-combustion-engined rivals, but it was yet another difficult weekend. 

Timmy Hansen finished fourth in both Saturday and Sunday’s finals, which was a scant reward for the driver’s efforts.

"A big thank you to our team. They worked until the early hours of the morning preparing for today and fixing the damage from yesterday. They did an amazing job and the cars were like new. The 'Battle of Technologies' is still in favour of the ICE cars, we are 160kg heavier than them and even with our extra power we can't seem to get the advantage," Timmy said. "We are fighting with the CE Dealer Team for best of the electric, and that fight is looking very close. We've got testing tomorrow so we'll be looking into everything and improving where we can ahead of Belgium."

The Hansen World RX team may still be searching for its first podium result of 2024, but nevertheless, Kevin and Timmy remain a close fourth and fifth in the points table respectively.

"This weekend has been a tough one for all of us. It was a very hot couple of days so it has been a real challenge to keep pushing forward, but the team were amazing and we kept improving the car step by step. We were much more in the fight today and that was a good feeling. Unfortunately, we couldn't get all the way to the podium on either day this weekend, but we'll keep pushing until we get that win," the younger Hansen brother said.

Jankó Wieszt reaches the podium on debut.
PHOTO CREDIT: Red Bull Content Pool
Having celebrated a third-place finish on Saturday, the former Hungarian rallycross champion Jankó Wieszt was involved in an incident on the run up to turn one in Sunday's semi-final, and after wheel-to-wheel contact, his Renault Megane rotated sharp left and hit the tyre wall bringing out a Red Flag.

It wasn't smooth sailing for Rene Munnich either, as he was denied a place in the final after a turn-one incident as well, but just a day later, he made it through the semi-final, on course to a sixth-place finish on Sunday. 

World RX returns on 17 to 18 August at Mettet, Belgium for rounds 5 and 6. Can anyone stop Kristoffersson?