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The WRC was formed from well-known and popular international rallies, most of which had previously been part of the European Rally Championship and/or the International Championship for Manufacturers; the series was first contested in 1973. [2] The first official rallying Manufacturers' Champion was Alpine-Renault.
9 World Rally Car (1997–2021) 10 Rally1 (2022–present) ... Audi Quattro S1, one of the most successful Group B cars. Alfa Romeo Alfasud Sprint 6C; Audi Quattro A1;
Each rally is split into 15–25 special stages, which are run against the clock on closed roads. The WRC was formed from well-known and popular international rallies, most of which had previously been part of the European Rally Championship and/or the International Championship for Manufacturers; the series was first contested in 1973. [2]
Loeb holds the record for the most consecutive wins, having two six-win streaks (2005 Rally New Zealand–2005 Rally Argentina and 2008 Wales Rally GB–2009 Rally Argentina). [3] Kalle Rovanperä is the youngest winner of a World Rally Championship event; he was 20 years, 11 months and 17 days old when he won the 2021 Rally Estonia. [4]
Pages in category "World Rally championship–winning cars" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
2008 Swedish Rally: 3 Henri Toivonen: 24 y, 86 d: 1980 RAC Rally: 4 Markku Alén: 24 y, 156 d: 1975 Rally Portugal: 5 Mads Østberg: 24 y, 173 d: 2012 Rally Portugal: 6 François Duval: 24 y, 359 d: 2005 Rally Australia: 7 Colin McRae: 25 y, 2 d: 1993 Rally New Zealand: 8 Timo Salonen: 25 y, 345 d: 1977 Critérium du Quebec: 9 Juha Kankkunen ...
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Daniel Elena is the most successful WRC co-driver champion, winning 9 times with driver Sébastien Loeb. The World Rally Championship (WRC) is a rallying series administered by Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motorsport's world governing body. [1]