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Dakar 2016: Plan B, fast, very fast

In three and a half months’ time the Dakar’s competitors and teams will finally come together in Buenos Aires! After three weeks’ intense work on the ground together with the authorities of the host countries, who have shown exceptional capability, the rally teams have been able to design a route whose features remain faithful to the values of the event in every respect.

“Thanks to the immediate involvement and unfailing commitment of the Bolivian and Argentinian authorities, we have found the right technical solutions to take on the new challenge posed to us at the end of August. The loyalty of the institutions in the two countries to the Dakar means we are now in a position to offer competitors a quality event for 2016”, says Dakar General Manager Etienne Lavigne.

While the dates, the number of stages and the distance of the stages will remain the same, the nature of the terrain proposed will force the competitors to employ a different driving approach and shift up one gear. There will be fewer dunes and more technical tracks on the opening three days, which will take the rally to San Salvador de Jujuy. Then, a new idea has been devised to reach Bolivia, particularly the bivouac at Uyuni, where vehicles from all the categories will come together this time. “Before arriving there, the competitors will be placed in a new marathon configuration,” explains Marc Coma, Sporting Director of the event. “We are going to set up a strict Parc Fermé at Jujuy while the support vehicles drive the long route to Uyuni. The Bolivian section maintains the feature of three days’ racing at high altitude”.

After having reached Salta for the 10 January rest day, the Dakar will head to Rosario by taking the route initially designed for the 2016 edition. The six stages to be contested in the foothills of the Andes were concocted precisely to offer a demanding and complicated end of the rally, with sandy stages, most notably in the Fiambala sector. The Sporting Director of the event, Marc Coma, who has recently supervised the reconnaissance for this part of the race, cautions precisely that “the idea of endurance will live up to all its meaning on these stages, because the bikes and quads will have to cope with a second marathon stage in week two. I have a feeling that changes at the sharp end of the general classification will be more than likely on these stages.”

Program of the 2016 Dakar:

31/12 and 01/01: Administrative and technical checks

02/01: Start podium in Buenos Aires

03/01: Buenos Aires – Villa Carlos Paz

04/01: Villa Carlos Paz – Termas de Río Hondo

05/01: Termas de Río Hondo – Jujuy

06/01: Jujuy – Jujuy

07/01: Jujuy – Uyuni

08/01: Uyuni – Uyuni

09/01: Uyuni – Salta

10/01: Rest day in Salta

11/01: Salta – Belén

12/01: Belén – Belén

13/01: Belén – La Rioja

14/01: La Rioja – San Juan

15/01: San Juan – Villa Carlos Paz

16/01: Villa Carlos Paz – Rosario