Yamaha Counts Down To Adventure For The 2013 Dakar Rally
[caption id="attachment_22488" align="alignright"
width="300"] Frans Verhoeven is no stranger to the
Dakar Rally, raising Yamaha's hopes for at least a top five
finish.[/caption]
As the New Year begins, so does Yamaha's first racing challenge of
2013. Having spent 21 days at sea crossing the Atlantic and passing
through the Panama Canal, the Yamaha Netherlands Verhoeven Team's
Yamaha YZ450F four-stroke based machine and support equipment for
Dutch rider Frans Verhoeven has arrived in South America and is
undergoing technical inspection with 195 fellow two-wheeled
competitors on the beaches of Lima, capital city of Peru. The team
is set and prepared for the first event of the 2013 Dakar Rally,
the special stage at Chorillos on January 5th.
Frans Verhoeven, who has recently signed a two-year contract with
Yamaha Motor Europe and Yamaha Motor Netherlands for the 2013 and
2014 Dakar Rally, is no stranger to the competition. His first
Dakar experience was 2005, the Dutchman gradually increasing his
experience to finish a career best of eighth in 2009. Verhoeven can
also claim three stage victories along with two top three finishes
in the 2012 Rally. Yamaha can claim a special place in the Dakar
story, having won the first two ever Rallies in 1979 and 1980 with
the Yamaha XT500 and rider Cyril Neveu.
The manufacturer has gone on to claim a total of eight titles from
1979 to the present and is optimistic of at least a top five finish
with Verhoeven on-board.
In preparation for the 2013 Dakar and to familiarize himself with
the Yamaha YZ450F bike and support team, Verhoeven entered the
Libya Rally du Maroc in October 2012. The 'training exercise'
proved extremely successful with rider, machine and staff all
performing above expectation, taking fourth in the final
standings.
"The main goal with the Libya Rally in October was to get to know
the Yamaha 450 and work on its set up," said Frans Verhoeven. "I
was really impressed with its speed and the smoothness of the
engine. It was my first time riding with this kind of engine
management control and traction control so it took some
understanding but my confidence has really grown. It was a pleasure
working with the mechanics, we understand each other very well and
most importantly we had no crashes and no technical problems! I
think we have the potential to do really well in the rally, the
potential of the bike is great and the support from Yamaha is
essential for success."
[caption id="attachment_22489" align="alignleft"
width="300"] Yamaha Racing France Yamalube's Olivier
Pain will be putting his YZ450Fs to the test in South America as
well.[/caption]
Frans Verhoeven will not be the only rider representing Yamaha in
the rally. Yamaha Racing France Yamalube riders Olivier Pain and
Michael Metge will be putting their YZ450Fs to the test in South
America alongside David Casteu riding for the Casteu Adventure Team
and former stage winner David Frétigné riding the WR450F for the
Yamaha Racing France Power Bike Team. A total of 49 Yamaha machines
will line up to contest the 2013 Dakar Rally, but not all will be
two-wheeled. 2010 Dakar Quad Champion Marcos Patronelli will be
fighting for victory on his modified Yamaha YF700M machine for a
combined Yamaha Motor France and Yamaha Argentina entry alongside
defending World Cup Rally Quad Women's Champion Camellia Liparoti,
also on the YF700M quad.
"Yamaha has a real pedigree in the Dakar Rally," commented Yamaha
Motor Europe Racing Manager, Laurens Klein Koerkamp. "Our
production machinery has been there fighting at the front, from the
very first rally with Cyril Neveu in 1979 to our last victory in
1998 with Stéphane Peterhansel. We are confident that with our
official support and technical experience through Yamaha Motor
France, the combination of riders Verhoeven, Pain, Metge, Casteu
and Frétigné and the modified YZ450F and WR450F can challenge for
at least top five results."
The Dakar Rally was moved to Beunos Aires in South America in 2009
following terrorist threats to the competition in 2008 in North
Africa forcing the last minute cancellation of the event. The 2012
Rally ran from Mar del Plata in Argentina, ending in Lima, Peru.
The 2013 Dakar Rally will officially start on the 5th January in
Lima and will head south for the first time. The competitors will
embark on an arduous and grueling journey of 14 stages over 8,000km
through Peru, Argentina and Chile to the finish in Santiago de
Chile on the 20th January.
Source: Yamaha Racing