
Kanaan beat Loeb in A WRC rally car but given a time penalty
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Young Heikki Kovalainen, from Finland, created a sensation today by
winning the 2004 Race of Champions at the Stade de France in Paris.
Aged just 23, the 2004 'World Series by Nissan' victor not only
becomes the youngest driver to win the coveted trophy but he also
follows a long and prestigious line of rally superstars… including
last year's winner Sébastien Loeb, the man he defeated in this
evening's finale.
Playing to a near-packed house, the world's leading motor sport
champions kept the 60,000 spectators thrilled – and warm – with an
action-packed show that created more than one stunning surprise,
from the first heats all the way through to the final itself. And
the man responsible for many of those surprises was Kovalainen.
After eliminating F1's David Coulthard in is his first match, he
went on to dispose of Jean Alesi. That result saw him qualify
process for a place in the "racers' final" against seven-times F1
World Champion Michael Schumacher who he promptly defeated by a
little less than one second around the 1km all-asphalt figure-of-
eight track.
Meanwhile, reigning World Rally Championship Sébastien Loeb had
successively disposed of Tony Kanaan, Armin Schwarz and 2003
Champion of Champions Marcus Grönholm.
The first of the final's three heats was raced at the wheel of
Peugeot 307 WRCs which theoretically gave the advantage to Loeb.
Kovalainen only sat inside a WRC car for the first time just minutes
before the start as Peugeot engineers took time to talk him through
the different controls, including the car's steering-wheel mounted
gearshift system.
And clearly the lesson worked for the Finn who immediately went out
to spring a stunning victory over Loeb by 8/10ths of a second,
profiting certainly from an early mistake by the Frenchman.
Switching to Ferrari 360 Modena Challenges for the second heat
seemed to tip the advantage back in favour of Loeb who crossed the
line first. However, he was deemed to have touched a barrier which
earned him a ten-second penalty to hand the title to his young
opponent.
"I just can't believe it," exclaimed the
Finn after the finish,
"especially the fact that I
beat rallying's World Champion in a WRC car. Amazing! And it's not
every day you get a chance to beat Michael Schumacher. That was a
big moment. I just tried to attack a little harder, brake a little
later. And the atmosphere was great too!"
E.A.
Source RoC