|
|
|
|
Official
ISP for EASR
|
|
Latest News
The World's Greatest Rally
Of all the major rallies in the
world, few have such a widespread reputation as the East African Safari.
The event was first run in 1953 by some car enthusiasts who used the holiday
granted to celebrate the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth 1st to run a motoring
event that they called "The Coronation Safari". With time controls
only at the start and finish, a 3,000 kilometre (1,875 mile) route, and
set times rendered impossible by the rainy conditions, it proved to be
a great success. Over the next seven years, it gradually grew and became
more sophisticated. One major difference to European events, apart from
the road conditions, was that the Safari catered only for standard cars,
and these were often put into classes on their Nairobi price rather than
cylinder capacity.
Gradually the European drivers and teams were attracted to this event
since winning it had already proved to help international sales for VW,
Mercedes, Ford and Peugeot. But the overseas drivers found it hard to
get on terms with the local experts and right through the 1960s the likes
of Erik Carlsson, Paddy Hopkirk, Eugen Böhringer, Tom Trana, Pat
Moss, Rauno Aaltonen all failed to take that tantalising win. They often
led the event but at the finish it was local men like Nick Nowicki, Bert
Shankland, Peter Hughes, Edgar Herrmann and Robin Hillyar who went home
with the trophies.
Weight of numbers plus hard learned experience was bound to tell in the
long run and in 1972, Hannu Mikkola finally became the first overseas
driver to win the Safari in his Ford Escort RS1600. Second that year was
another European, Sobieslaw Zasada, driving a Porsche 911. By this time,
the Safari had become a very big event in every meaning of the phrase.
Firstly, it was covering some 6,400 kilometres (4,000 miles) and stretched
over all three countries in East Africa - Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.
Secondly, it was attracting up to a hundred entries each year, of which
many were from factory teams. Lastly and not least, it was also inducted
as a round of the new World Rally Championship that started in 1973. The
media coverage and the reputation of the Safari was enormous.
As the years went on, Uganda and Tanzania dropped away and the Safari
ran entirely within Kenya with Nairobi as the traditional start and finish
location. The route gradually shortened until in the mid-1980s it was
some 5,200 kilometres (3,250 miles) but the ingenuity of the organisers
and the introduction of larger number of time controls meant that the
rally lost none of it tough reputation. There had been plenty of local
wins in the 1970s with Joginder Singh and Shekhar Mehta clocking up seven
wins between them - Mehta winning the rally four times in succession for
Datsun between 1979 and 1982 - but the general trend was for overseas
drivers from the factory teams to win. When the four wheel drive Group
B cars arrived in the 1980s, they were not immediately dominant and conventional
cars like the Opel Ascona 400 and the Toyota Celica Turbo continued to
win. Indeed it was not until Group B had been banned at the end of 1986
and the new Group A cars were introduced that a four wheel drive car finally
won the Safari. This distinction went again to Hannu Mikkola who drove
an Audi 200 Quattro to success in 1987.
The effect of the Group B ban had been to force rally organisers in other
parts of the world to vastly improve their crowd control and rules came
in to reduce, among other things, the length of World Championship Rallies.
These rules hit the Safari quite hard as it was an event that had traditionally
been decided over long distances and with timing to the nearest minute.
Now it was required to have short stages on guaranteed closed roads and
timing to the second. As it moved into the 21st Century, its route shrunk
to 2,500 kilometres (1,550 miles) and the need to have the whole rally
rigorously controlled had forced up the cost of running so that it was
concentrated in a very confined area of Kenya. As well as taking away
much of the adventure and the style of the old events, the budget could
not be found to keep it alive and, after the fiftieth edition in 2002,
the East African Safari ceased to exist as a World Championship event.
The King is dead. Long live the King !
Fortunately for rallying, Mike Kirkland, Surinder Thatthi and several
of the old competitors and organisers thought that it would be a good
idea to run an old-style Safari - with some suitable changes - featuring
cars that were around in the hey-day of the Safari. Out of this idea sprung
the 2003 event, which proved a very popular success both with local teams
and crews from abroad. With help from Kenya Airways and WEC Lines, both
the competitors and their cars were conveyed to and from Kenya. The event
ran again successfully in 2005 and with the announcement of the 2007 edition,
looks set to become a regular feature on the calendar of classic events.
For press enquiries, contact E-mail:
safari.press@btinternet.com
John Davenport Tel: +44.7973.334297
Francesca Davenport Tel: +44.7976.918968.
|
|