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Official
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Latest News
The lull before the storm ?
In just under ten days time, the
Kenya Airways East African Safari Classic will start from Mombasa on Kenya's
Indian Ocean coastline. Many classic rallies claim to re-capture the spirit
and essence of the old event whose name they bear, but none does it so
well as the Safari Classic. As the fifty-nine crews leave Mombasa early
on Sunday morning, November 25th, they will be facing a true test of men
and machines that differs in very few respects from that which the East
African Safari competitors faced thirty-five years ago when the Safari
Rally was in its hey-day and the cars that they are using today were new..
Some things have changed. There
is a reduced endurance aspect in that each night sees the crews taking
a halt in one of Kenya's or Tanzania's excellent hotels or game lodges.
But the total competitive distance is thus spread over nine days rather
then the traditional five days and nights so the cars still have a lot
to do. And the roads used are not modern highways but the older, sometimes
even neglected, by-ways that made the old Safari Rallies such a severe
event. The pre-1975 cars that are eligible to compete have been able to
avail themselves of technology that has developed in the intervening years
especially in the matter of suspension components such as dampers. It
is no coincidence that the first two times that the Safari Classic was
run - in 2003 and 2005 - it was won by Rob Collinge in his Datsun 240Z.
Collinge is a renowned expert on suspensions for off-road vehicles and
that undoubtedly contributed to his double success.
The fact that there is such an event
at all is due entirely to the enthusiasm of people like Mike Kirkland
and Surinder Thatthi. When the original Safari Rally expired after celebrating
its fiftieth birthday in 2002 under the strain of trying to get its unique
format to conform with World Rally Championship regulations, they promptly
decided to create a classic version. Mike Kirkland ran the 2003 and 2005
events and shifted the event from Nairobi to run out of his home base
of Mombasa. For 2007, the event is being run by Surinder Thatthi and has
attracted its biggest entry to date with a full house of fifty-nine cars
taking the start.
The cars and their crews are as
varied as the terrain that they will have to tackle during the event.
There are drivers from as far afield as Australia, South Africa and the
U.S.A while almost every country in Europe seems to have at least one
representative. There are also, as with the old Safari, plenty of crews
from Kenya and Tanzania who want to take on the challenge presented by
a Safari Rally. There are two ex-World Champion drivers in the field with
Björn Waldegård and Stig Blomqvist both in Historic Motorsport
Ford Escort Mk 1s and a nine times Kenyan rally champion, Ian Duncan,
behind the wheel of another Ford, this time a Mustang.
With Ford Escorts, Datsuns, Volvos
and Porsches all having enviable reputations from the original Safari
Rally, it is not surprising that the entry list contains many examples
of these with well-know rallyists like Gerard Marcy, Frederic Dor, Geoff
Fielding and Paul Eric-Jarry opting for Porsche 911s, Keith Callinan,
Ian Freestone, Bo Axelsson, Alex Hack and Dave Kedward choosing Escorts,
Bert Dolk, Kurt Vanderspinnen and Ian Swan with Volvos, and John Lloyd,
Steve Perez, Graham Alexander, Jayant Shah, Roddy Sachs and Jonathan Savage
in Datsuns. Among the less-familiar cars are Ford Capri Peranas (a 5.0
litre V8 version built in South Africa in the early 1970s) for Richard
Martin-Hurst and Paul Darrouzet while David and Sarah Rayner have a Capri
2.6 fitted with the original V6. Mercedes are represented by Marzio Kravos
and Günther Kronseder with 450SLCs while there are several Colt Lancers
of the kind with which Joginder Singh won two Safari Rallies in the 1970s.
Various Peugeots, Alfa Romeos, BMWs and Toyotas complete the line up while
there is a lone British sports car, a Triumph GT6 entered by Quentin Mitchell
and Russell Savage. They have the distinction of being the youngest crew
in the event with a combined age on the start line of forty-three years.
The last two Safari Classics have
been mainly dry but, in the run-up to the event this year, there has been
a fair amount of rain in the Rift Valley and north-west Kenya. And the
long-range weather forecast seems to suggest that climate change may not
yet have finished delivering its message to the Kenyan hills. In which
case, the third running of the Safari Classic may indeed be a classic
though one hopes that it will not quite match those epic ancestors of
1963 and 1968 when on both occasions only seven cars got through the wet
conditions to qualify as finishers.
For press enquiries, contact
E-mail: safari.press@btinternet.com
News will be issued daily during the event on www.eastafricansafarirally.com
Photography is copyright free and can be found at www.mcklein.de all downloads
of high resolution photos of the daily action are free of charge.
John Davenport Tel: +44 7973.334297
Francesca Davenport Tel: +44 7976.918968
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