The 2019 Rally Chile (also known as the Copec Rally Chile 2019) was a motor racing event for rally cars that was held over four days between 9 and 12 May 2019.[2] It marked the first running of Rally Chile, and was the sixth round of the 2019 World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2 and the newly-created WRC-2 Pro class. The 2019 event was based in Talcahuano of Concepción Province in Bío Bío Region and consists of sixteen special stages totalling 304.81 km (189.40 mi) competitive kilometres.

2019 Rally Chile
1. Copec Rally Chile
Round 6 of 14 in the 2019 World Rally Championship
← Previous eventNext event →
Host country Chile
Rally baseConcepción, Biobío
Dates run9 – 12 May 2019
Start locationEl Pinar, Concepción Province
Finish locationVilla Verde, Concepción Province
Stages16 (304.81 km; 189.40 miles)[1]
Stage surfaceGravel
Transport distance940.87 km (584.63 miles)
Overall distance1,245.68 km (774.03 miles)
Statistics
Crews registered63
Crews55 at start, 35 at finish
Overall results
Overall winnerEstonia Ott Tänak
Estonia Martin Järveoja
Japan Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT
3:15:53.8
Power Stage winnerEstonia Ott Tänak
Estonia Martin Järveoja
Japan Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT
Support category results
WRC-2 winnerJapan Takamoto Katsuta
United Kingdom Daniel Barritt
Japan Takamoto Katsuta
3:29:26.7

Ott Tänak and Martin Järveoja won the first edition of Rally Chile. Their team, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT, were the manufacturers' winners.[3] The Škoda Motorsport crew of Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen took the victory in the WRC-2 Pro category, finishing first in the combined WRC-2 category, while Takamoto Katsuta and Daniel Barritt won the wider WRC-2 class.[4]

Background edit

Championship standings prior to the event edit

Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul led both the drivers' and co-drivers' championships with a ten-point lead over six-time world champions Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia. Ott Tänak and Martin Järveoja were third, a further eighteen points behind. In the World Rally Championship for Manufacturers, Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT held a thirty-seven-point lead over Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT.[5]

In the World Rally Championship-2 Pro standings, Łukasz Pieniążek and Kamil Heller held a four-point lead ahead of Gus Greensmith and Elliott Edmondson in the drivers' and co-drivers' standings respectively. Mads Østberg and Torstein Eriksen were third, eight points further back. In the manufacturers' championship, M-Sport Ford WRT led Citroën Total by seventy points, with Škoda Motorsport fourteen points further behind in third.[6]

In the World Rally Championship-2 standings, Benito Guerra and Jaime Zapata led the drivers' and co-drivers' standings by three points respectively. Ole Christian Veiby and Jonas Andersson were second, following by Nikolay Gryazin and Yaroslav Fedorov in third.[6]

Entry list edit

The following crews entered into the rally. The event was open to crews competing in the World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2, WRC-2 Pro and privateer entries not registered to score points in any championship. A total of sixty-three entries were received, with eleven crews entered with World Rally Cars and twenty-three entered the World Rally Championship-2. Four crews were nominated to score points in the Pro class.

No. Driver Co-Driver Entrant Car Tyre
World Rally Car entries
1   Sébastien Ogier   Julien Ingrassia   Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC M
3   Teemu Suninen   Marko Salminen   M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC M
4   Esapekka Lappi   Janne Ferm   Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC M
5   Kris Meeke   Sebastian Marshall   Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC M
8   Ott Tänak   Martin Järveoja   Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC M
10   Jari-Matti Latvala   Miikka Anttila   Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC M
11   Thierry Neuville   Nicolas Gilsoul   Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC M
19   Sébastien Loeb   Daniel Elena   Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC M
33   Elfyn Evans   Scott Martin   M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC M
37   Lorenzo Bertelli   Simone Scattolin   M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC M
89   Andreas Mikkelsen   Anders Jæger-Amland   Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC M
World Rally Championship-2 Pro entries
21   Gus Greensmith   Elliott Edmondson   M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta R5 M
22   Kalle Rovanperä   Jonne Halttunen   Škoda Motorsport[a] Škoda Fabia R5 M
23   Mads Østberg   Torstein Eriksen   Citroën Total[b] Citroën C3 R5 M
24   Marco Bulacia Wilkinson   Fabian Cretu   Škoda Motorsport[c] Škoda Fabia R5 M
World Rally Championship-2 entries
41   Benito Guerra   Jaime Zapata   Benito Guerra[d] Škoda Fabia R5 M
42   Alberto Heller   José Díaz   Alberto Heller[e] Ford Fiesta R5 M
43   Kajetan Kajetanowicz   Maciej Szczepaniak   Kajetan Kajetanowicz[f] Volkswagen Polo GTI R5 P
44   Takamoto Katsuta   Daniel Barritt   Takamoto Katsuta[g] Ford Fiesta R5 P
45   Pedro Heller   Marc Martí   Pedro Heller[e] Ford Fiesta R5 M
46   Paulo Nobre   Gabriel Morales   Paulo Nobre[h] Škoda Fabia R5 P
47   Emilio Fernández   Emilio Fernández   Joaquin Riquelme Škoda Fabia R5 M
48   Benjamin Israel   Marcelo Der Ohannesian   Benjamin Israel[i] Citroën C3 R5 M
49   Vicente Israel   Matias Ramos   Vicente Israel[i] Citroën C3 R5 M
50   Samuel Israel   Nicolas Garcia   Samuel Israel[i] Citroën C3 R5 M
51   Jorge Martínez Fontena   Alberto Alvarez   Jorge Martínez Fontena Škoda Fabia R5 M
52   Alejandro Cancio   Santiago Garcia   Alejandro Cancio Škoda Fabia R5 M
53   Cristóbal Vidaurre   Ruben Garcia   Cristóbal Vidaurre Škoda Fabia R5 M
54   Felipe Rossi   Luis Ernesto Allende   Felipe Rossi Ford Fiesta R5 M
55   Francisco Lopez   Nicolas Levalle   Francisco Lopez Peugeot 208 T16 M
56   Germán Lyon   Ignacio Uez Ahumada   Germán Lyon Peugeot 208 T16 M
57   Eduardo Castro   Julio Echazu   Eduardo Castro Citroën C3 R5 M
58   Martin Scuncio   Javiera Roman   Martin Scuncio Hyundai i20 R5 M
59   Tomas Etcheverry   Sebastian Vera   Tomas Etcheverry Hyundai i20 R5 M
Source:[7]

Route edit

Chile has never previously hosted its own WRC round, so every stage is brand new.[8]

Itinerary edit

All dates and times are CLT (UTC-3).

Date Time No. Stage name Distance
9 May 11:00 Talcahuano [Shakedown] 6.45 km
Leg 1 — 142.38 km
10 May 8:00 SS1 El Pinar 17.11 km
9:33 SS2 El Puma 1 30.72 km
10:46 SS3 Espigado 1 22.26 km
15:14 SS4 El Puma 2 30.72 km
16:27 SS5 Espigado 2 22.26 km
18:30 SS6 Concepcion — Bicentenario 2.20 km
Leg 2 — 121.16 km
11 May 8:08 SS7 Rio Lia 1 24.90 km
9:08 SS8 Maria Las Cruces 1 23.09 km
10:20 SS9 Pelun 1 16.59 km
14:08 SS10 Rio Lia 2 24.90 km
15:08 SS11 Maria Las Cruces 2 23.09 km
16:20 SS12 Pelun 2 16.59 km
Leg 3 — 62.16 km
12 May 8:08 SS13 Bio Bio 1 14.41 km
10:31 SS14 Lircay 18.06 km
10:20 SS15 San Nicolàs 15.28 km
12:18 SS16 Bio Bio 2 [Power Stage] 14.41 km
Source:[1]

Report edit

World Rally Cars edit

The second stage of the brand new event was interrupted due to the safety reason, which affected Thierry Neuville, who was first on the road. As a result, the Belgian was awarded a notional time.[9] In the afternoon loop, Ott Tänak stormed away and held a 22.4-second lead into Saturday.[10]

The second leg was quite dramatic. Kris Meeke rolled his Yaris in the opening stage of the day. He managed to carry on, but valuable time has been lost, which dropped him down to tenth overall at the end of the day.[11] One stage later, championship leader Neuville crashed violently after a right-hand blind crest, badly damaging his i20. Luckily, the Belgian and his co-driver Nicolas Gilsoul were fine, but they were unable to continue the rally.[12] The battle for the final podium was on fire until Jari-Matti Latvala hit a rock in the final test and broke his Toyota's driveshaft, which elevated nine-time world champion Sébastien Loeb to third, just 5.1 seconds off defending world champion Sébastien Ogier, who was half a minute behind rally leader Tänak.[13] Eventually, Tänak took the rally victory, following by Ogier, who managed to keep Loeb behind, in second.[3]

Classification edit

Position No. Driver Co-driver Entrant Car Time Difference Points
Event Class Event Stage
1 1 8 Ott Tänak Martin Järveoja Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC 3:15:53.8 0.0 25 5
2 2 1 Sébastien Ogier Julien Ingrassia Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC 3:16:16.9 +23.1 18 4
3 3 19 Sébastien Loeb Daniel Elena Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3:16:24.0 +30.2 15 2
4 4 33 Elfyn Evans Scott Martin M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC 3:17:30.5 +1:36.7 12 0
5 5 3 Teemu Suninen Marko Salminen M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta WRC 3:19:09.4 +3:15.6 10 0
6 6 4 Esapekka Lappi Janne Ferm Citroën Total WRT Citroën C3 WRC 3:19:39.2 +3:45.4 8 0
7 7 89 Andreas Mikkelsen Anders Jæger-Amland Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 3:20:32.8 +4:39.0 6 0
10 8 5 Kris Meeke Sebastian Marshall Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC 3:24:27.2 +8:33.4 1 1
11 9 10 Jari-Matti Latvala Miikka Anttila Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota Yaris WRC 3:26:53.0 +10:59.2 0 3
Retired SS8 11 Thierry Neuville Nicolas Gilsoul Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC Rolled 0 0

Special stages edit

Date No. Stage name Distance Winners Car Time Class leaders
9 May Pinares [Shakedown] 6.45 km Mikkelsen / Jæger-Amland Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 4:46.4
10 May SS1 El Pinar 17.11 km Meeke / Marshall
Latvala / Anttila
Toyota Yaris WRC
Toyota Yaris WRC
11:35.9 Meeke / Marshall
Latvala / Anttila
SS2 El Puma 1 30.72 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 21:10.4 Tänak / Järveoja
SS3 Espigado 1 22.26 km Neuville / Gilsoul Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 14:23.7
SS4 El Puma 2 30.72 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 20:46.0
SS5 Espigado 2 22.26 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 14:03.4
SS6 Concepcion — Bicentenario 2.20 km Loeb / Elena Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 2:06.9
11 May SS7 Rio Lia 1 24.90 km Neuville / Gilsoul Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 13:55.1
SS8 Maria Las Cruces 1 23.09 km Loeb / Elena Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 14:28.3
SS9 Pelun 1 16.59 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 10:09.8
SS10 Rio Lia 2 24.90 km Ogier / Ingrassia Citroën C3 WRC 13:45.1
SS11 Maria Las Cruces 2 23.09 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 14:14.7
SS12 Pelun 2 16.59 km Loeb / Elena Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 10:00.6
12 May SS13 Bio Bio 1 14.41 km Meeke / Marshall Toyota Yaris WRC 8:14.5
SS14 Lircay 18.06 km Ogier / Ingrassia Citroën C3 WRC 10:13.5
SS15 San Nicolàs 15.28 km Loeb / Elena Hyundai i20 Coupe WRC 8:08.6
SS16 Bio Bio 2 [Power Stage] 14.41 km Tänak / Järveoja Toyota Yaris WRC 7:57.3

Championship standings edit

Pos. Drivers' championships Co-drivers' championships Manufacturers' championships
Move Driver Points Move Co-driver Points Move Manufacturer Points
1   1 Sébastien Ogier 122   1 Julien Ingrassia 122   Hyundai Shell Mobis WRT 178
2   1 Ott Tänak 112   1 Martin Järveoja 112   Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT 149
3   2 Thierry Neuville 110   2 Nicolas Gilsoul 110   Citroën Total WRT 143
4   Kris Meeke 56   Sebastian Marshall 56   M-Sport Ford WRT 100
5   Elfyn Evans 55   Scott Martin 55

World Rally Championship-2 Pro edit

Kalle Rovanperä led in the Pro category with a slender 2.4-second advantage after an intense battle with Mads Østberg.[14] The eighteen-year-old Finn extended his lead over Østberg as the Norwegian lost 30 seconds when fluid leaked out of the rear brakes of his C3 R5.[15] Eventually, Rovanperä successfully took his first Pro victory of the season.[4]

Special stages edit

Results in bold denote first in the RC2 class, the class which both the WRC-2 Pro and WRC-2 championships run to.

Date No. Stage name Distance Winners Car Time Class leaders
9 May Talcahuano [Shakedown] 6.45 km Rovanperä / Halttunen Škoda Fabia R5 4:59.6
10 May SS1 El Pinar 17.11 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 12:03.0 Østberg / Eriksen
SS2 El Puma 1 30.72 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 22:11.7
SS3 Espigado 1 22.26 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 15:08.3
SS4 El Puma 2 30.72 km Rovanperä / Halttunen Škoda Fabia R5 21:32.5 Rovanperä / Halttunen
SS5 Espigado 2 22.26 km Rovanperä / Halttunen Škoda Fabia R5 14:47.5
SS6 Concepcion — Bicentenario 2.20 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 2:12.8
11 May SS7 Rio Lia 1 24.90 km Rovanperä / Halttunen Škoda Fabia R5 14:24.7
SS8 Maria Las Cruces 1 23.09 km Stage interrupted[j]
SS9 Pelun 1 16.59 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 10:36.6 Rovanperä / Halttunen
SS10 Rio Lia 2 24.90 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 14:05.1
SS11 Maria Las Cruces 2 23.09 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 14:46.1
SS12 Pelun 2 16.59 km Rovanperä / Halttunen Škoda Fabia R5 10:32.5
12 May SS13 Bio Bio 1 14.41 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 8:37.2
SS14 Lircay 18.06 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 10:39.5
SS15 San Nicolàs 15.28 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 8:30.9
SS16 Bio Bio 2 14.41 km Østberg / Eriksen Citroën C3 R5 8:21.4

Classification edit

Position No. Driver Co-driver Entrant Car Time Difference Points
Event Class Class Event
8 1 22 Kalle Rovanperä Jonne Halttunen Škoda Motorsport Škoda Fabia R5 3:23:46.3 0.0 25 4
9 2 23 Mads Østberg Torstein Eriksen Citroën Total Citroën C3 R5 3:24:09.9 +23.6 18 2
12 3 21 Gus Greensmith Elliott Edmondson M-Sport Ford WRT Ford Fiesta R5 3:27:35.3 +3:49.0 15 0
15 4 24 Marco Bulacia Wilkinson Fabian Cretu Škoda Motorsport Škoda Fabia R5 3:29:28.6 +5:42.3 12 0

Championship standings edit

Pos. Drivers' championships Co-drivers' championships Manufacturers' championships
Move Driver Points Move Co-driver Points Move Manufacturer Points
1   1 Gus Greensmith 73   1 Elliott Edmondson 73   M-Sport Ford WRT 135
2   1 Mads Østberg 68   1 Torstein Eriksen 68   1 Škoda Motorsport 73
3   2 Łukasz Pieniążek 62   2 Kamil Heller 62   1 Citroën Total 68
4   1 Kalle Rovanperä 61   1 Jonne Halttunen 61
5 Marco Bulacia Wilkinson 12 Fabian Cretu 12

World Rally Championship-2 edit

Three-time European Rally Champion Kajetan Kajetanowicz was initially entered for the event, but due to the mechanical issues in Rally Argentina, he and his team withdrew from Chile.[16]

Local hero Alberto Heller was comfortable in the lead, but his brother Pedro Heller had to retire from the day as he rolled his Fiesta in the opening stage.[14] However, Alberto was surpassed by Takamoto Katsuta in final stage of the second leg.[15] Worse still, the Chilean rolled his Ford Fiesta into retirement in the second to last stage. Eventually, Katsuta brought car home to take his first victory of the season.[4]

Classification edit

Position No. Driver Co-driver Entrant Car Time Difference Points
Event Class Class Event
14 1 44 Takamoto Katsuta Daniel Barritt Takamoto Katsuta Ford Fiesta R5 3:29:26.7 0.0 25 0
16 2 41 Benito Guerra Jaime Zapata Benito Guerra Škoda Fabia R5 3:32:32.8 +3:06.1 18 0
17 3 52 Alejandro Cancio Santiago Garcia Alejandro Cancio Škoda Fabia R5 3:34:33.9 +5:07.2 15 0
18 4 53 Cristóbal Vidaurre Ruben Garcia Cristóbal Vidaurre Škoda Fabia R5 3:34:54.0 +5:27.3 12 0
19 5 50 Samuel Israel Nicolas Garcia Samuel Israel Citroën C3 R5 3:36:04.4 +6:37.7 10 0
20 6 49 Vicente Israel Matias Ramos Vicente Israel Citroën C3 R5 3:37:17.9 +7:51.2 8 0
21 7 46 Paulo Nobre Gabriel Morales Paulo Nobre Škoda Fabia R5 3:44:57.2 +15:30.3 6 0
22 8 57 Eduardo Castro Julio Echazu Eduardo Castro Citroën C3 R5 3:48:01.7 +18:35.0 4 0
23 9 55 Francisco Lopez Nicolas Levalle Francisco Lopez Peugeot 208 T16 3:56:42.0 +27:15.3 2 0
28 10 45 Pedro Heller Marc Martí Pedro Heller Ford Fiesta R5 4:15:21.7 +45:55.0 1 0
30 11 51 Jorge Martínez Fontena Alberto Alvarez Jorge Martínez Fontena Škoda Fabia R5 4:19:58.3 +50:31.6 0 0
34 12 54 Felipe Rossi Luis Ernesto Allende Felipe Rossi Ford Fiesta R5 4:31:24.8 +1:01:58.1 0 0
Retired SS15 58 Martin Scuncio Javiera Roman Martin Scuncio Hyundai i20 R5 Mechanical 0 0
Retired SS14 59 Tomas Etcheverry Sebastian Vera Tomas Etcheverry Hyundai i20 R5 Mechanical 0 0
Retired SS13 56 Germán Lyon Ignacio Uez Ahumada Germán Lyon Peugeot 208 T16 Mechanical 0 0
Retired SS2 47 Emilio Fernández Joaquin Riquelme Emilio Fernández Škoda Fabia R5 Accident 0 0
Retired SS2 48 Benjamin Israel Marcelo Der Ohannesian Benjamin Israel Citroën C3 R5 Mechanical 0 0
Did not start 43 Kajetan Kajetanowicz Maciej Szczepaniak Kajetan Kajetanowicz Volkswagen Polo GTI R5 Withdrawn 0 0

Special stages edit

Results in bold denote first in the RC2 class, the class which both the WRC-2 Pro and WRC-2 championships run to.

Date No. Stage name Distance Winners Car Time Class leaders
9 May Talcahuano [Shakedown] 6.45 km Fontena / Alvarez Škoda Fabia R5 4:59.3
10 May SS1 El Pinar 17.11 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 12:30.4 Katsuta / Barritt
SS2 El Puma 1 30.72 km A. Heller / Díaz Ford Fiesta R5 22:40.3 A. Heller / Díaz
SS3 Espigado 1 22.26 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 15:46.0
SS4 El Puma 2 30.72 km A. Heller / Díaz Ford Fiesta R5 22:23.9
SS5 Espigado 2 22.26 km A. Heller / Díaz Ford Fiesta R5 15:24.4
SS6 Concepcion — Bicentenario 2.20 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 2:15.5
11 May SS7 Rio Lia 1 24.90 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 14:34.3
SS8 Maria Las Cruces 1 23.09 km Stage interrupted[j]
SS9 Pelun 1 16.59 km Martínez Fontena / Alvarez Škoda Fabia R5 10:33.4 A. Heller / Díaz
SS10 Rio Lia 2 24.90 km A. Heller / Díaz Ford Fiesta R5 14:20.2
SS11 Maria Las Cruces 2 23.09 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 15:01.7
SS12 Pelun 2 16.59 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 10:47.2 Katsuta / Barritt
12 May SS13 Bio Bio 1 14.41 km Katsuta / Barritt Ford Fiesta R5 8:46.8
SS14 Lircay 18.06 km Martínez Fontena / Alvarez Škoda Fabia R5 11:03.7
SS15 San Nicolàs 15.28 km Martínez Fontena / Alvarez Škoda Fabia R5 8:44.3
SS16 Bio Bio 2 14.41 km Martínez Fontena / Alvarez Škoda Fabia R5 8:31.3

Championship standings edit

Pos. Drivers' championships Co-drivers' championships
Move Driver Points Move Co-driver Points
1   Benito Guerra 61   Jaime Zapata 61
2   7 Takamoto Katsuta 47   7 Daniel Barritt 47
3   1 Ole Christian Veiby 40   1 Jonas Andersson 40
4   1 Nikolay Gryazin 28   1 Yaroslav Fedorov 28
5   1 Alberto Heller 27   1 José Díaz 27

Notes edit

  1. ^ Entry run in conjunction with Toksport World Rally Team.
  2. ^ Entry run in conjunction with DG Sport.
  3. ^ Entry operated by VIALCO Racing.
  4. ^ Entry operated by Race Seven.
  5. ^ a b Entry operated by Joker Team.
  6. ^ Entry operated by Lotos Dynamic Rally Team.
  7. ^ Entry operated by Tommi Mäkinen Racing.
  8. ^ Entry operated by Palmeirinha Rally.
  9. ^ a b c Entry operated by Monster Procircuit.
  10. ^ a b The stage was interrupted following Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul's accident. As a result, WRC-2 Pro crews were given 15:00.0 to their times; WRC-2 crews were given 15:15.0; private crews received 16:15.0.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Itinerary" (PDF). rallymobil.cl. Rally Chile. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-09-13. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  2. ^ "FIA announces World Motor Sport Council decisions". fia.com. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. 12 October 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Sunday in Chile: victory for masterful Tänak". wrc.com. WRC. May 12, 2019. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "Sunday in Chile: Rovanperä seals Pro win". wrc.com. WRC. May 12, 2019. Retrieved May 13, 2019.
  5. ^ "Sunday in Argentina: Neuville's double". wrc.com. WRC. 28 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Sunday in WRC 2: Østberg wins Pro". wrc.com. WRC. 28 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  7. ^ "Copec Rally Chile 2019 Entry List" (PDF). rallymobil.cl. Rally Chile. 18 April 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 April 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  8. ^ "Chile steps up to 2019 WRC". wrc.com. WRC Promoter. 12 October 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  9. ^ "SS3: Tänak takes Chile lead". wrc.com. WRC. 10 May 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  10. ^ "Friday in Chile: Dominant Tänak leads". wrc.com. WRC. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  11. ^ "SS7: Neuville climbs to third". wrc.com. WRC. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  12. ^ a b "SS8/9: Tänak leads, Neuville out". wrc.com. WRC. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  13. ^ "Saturday in Chile: Tänak in control". wrc.com. WRC. 12 May 2019. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  14. ^ a b "WRC 2 in Chile: Kalle holds sway in Pro". wrc.com. WRC. 11 May 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  15. ^ a b "WRC 2 in Chile: Kalle clear in Pro". wrc.com. WRC. 12 May 2019. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  16. ^ "Friday in WRC 2: Østberg leads Pro category". wrc.com. WRC. 27 April 2019. Retrieved 27 April 2019.

External links edit

Previous rally:
2019 Rally Argentina
2019 FIA World Rally Championship Next rally:
2019 Rally de Portugal
Previous rally:
none
2019 Rally Chile Next rally:
2023 Rally Chile
2020 and 2021 editions cancelled