- Carlos Sainz
WRC driver
Name = Carlos Sainz
Caption =
Nationality = flagicon|Spain Spanish
Years = 1987 - 2005
Teams =Toyota ,Lancia , Subaru, Ford,Citroën
Races = 196
Championships = 2 (1990, 1992)
Wins = 26
Podiums = 97
Stagewins = 756
Points = 1242
First race = 1987Rally Portugal
First win = 1990Acropolis Rally
Last win = 2004Rally Argentina
Last race = 2005Acropolis Rally Carlos Sainz (born
April 12 ,1962 inMadrid ,Spain ) is a former Spanishrally driver . He was World Rally Champion forToyota in both 1990 and 1992. His co-drivers were Antonío Boto,Luís Moya and Marc Marti. Constructors' World Champions to have benefitted from Sainz include Subaru (1995), Toyota (1999) and Citroën (2003, 2004 and 2005).Career
Sainz began rallying in
1980 . He first appeared in the World Rally Championship with Ford during the 1987 season. He left to joinToyota Team Europe , the Japanese marque's rallying arm operating inCologne ,Germany . Despite all previous rallyingToyota Celica s having only ever looked a competitive prospect on highly specialized endurance rallies such as theSafari Rally , the new combination of Toyota and Sainz rapidly rose in competitiveness, to the point of winning its first world rally event, theAcropolis Rally , in June 1990, with Sainz going on to claim his first world drivers' title later that year and for the first time, breaking the stranglehold on the titles which only the dominantLancia Deltas team had hitherto held in the series since the advent of theGroup A era of the sport in 1987.After narrowly failing to defend his title against a resurgent Lancia-mounted
Juha Kankkunen in identical Toyota machinery in 1991, his efforts capped by a dramatic roll of his Celica GT4 which left him in a neckbrace, Sainz managed to claim his second overall points victory, aboard the new ST185 Toyota Celica in the 1992 season. In a year that would prove the last for the foreseeable future for Lancia, Sainz managed to score memorable victories on the Safari Rally and on his home asphalt round, theRally Catalunya , repelling the might of the representatives for the Italian marque, Kankkunen and six-time rally victor,Didier Auriol . Indeed, Auriol's retirement on the final round inGreat Britain , combined with Sainz's victory, confirmed the title in favour of the Spaniard.Such success, however, failed to coerce Sainz into staying with Toyota. Instead, he moved to the private
Lancia 'Jolly Club' team with which he would go on to endure a sole, torrid winless season in1993 . Meanwhile, the Italian marque's works refugees Kankkunen and Auriol, switched in the other direction to take his place. The result was a title double for Toyota and Kankkunen in the1993 World Rally Championship season . Sainz then chose to drove for the then fledglingSubaru World Rally Team in 1994, reaching the unprecedented heights of second in the championship standings for them, behind Auriol. In 1995, he won the Monte Carlo and Portuguese rallies and helped Subaru to win the manufacturers' series, although once again, he would be forced to give best in the drivers' title race, this time to young team-mateColin McRae , whom he was to join on later occasions at both Ford and Citroën.Sainz responded by rejoining Ford for the 1996 season. He spent two seasons with the squad, aboard the
Ford Escort RS Cosworth and latterly, the Escort World Rally Car. He also won theRace of Champions at the end of 1997. He then departed, once again, for Toyota, helping to further the Corolla World Rally Car project that had been instituted in 1997 as part of the Cologne recovery from the embarrassment of exclusion from the world championship on the penultimate round of the 1995 season. He won on his first outing for them, on the 1998Monte Carlo Rally , and later in the season, added a victory in New Zealand. The seemingly terminal blow to title rivalTommi Mäkinen 's chances was his retirement on the first day of the final event of the year, the RallyGreat Britain , gave the initiative to Sainz, who now only had to score the points associated with finishing fourth, in order to ensure the title. However, he too, just 500 metres from the finish of the very last stage, was then forced to retire, with a mechanical problem. As a result, both Sainz and Toyota gifted their respective titles to rivals Mäkinen and Mitsubishi Ralliart.A subdued season followed for Sainz in 1999, although it did at least culminate in a departing manufacturers' title for Toyota, by now fostering alternative interests in
Formula One . This was the precursor of another, three year stint with Ford, again alongside McRae, beginning with the 2000 season. There, he won the inaugural edition of the Cyprus round of the World Championship, and finished third in the drivers' points standings. He failed to score victory on any rally during the 2001 season, finishing sixth in the championship. In 2002, he inherited the victory of theRally Argentina , having provisionally finished third, by virtue of the disqualifications of the two leadingPeugeot s ofMarcus Grönholm andRichard Burns . Effectively frozen out along with McRae at Ford, he moved toCitroën for the 2003 and 2004 seasons, with whom he was to score his final world rally victory, at the 2004 Rally Argentina.Despite formally retiring at the end of the 2004 season, with a possible view to moving into the
World Touring Car Championship , he was to actually find himself invited back to the WRC fold on the request of Citroën, to replace the faltering Belgian driverFrançois Duval . Although Duval was soon to reclaim his seat, Sainz's two rallies back in the Citroën impressed many, with the now-43 year old Spaniard posting 4th and 3rd finishing positions respectively.2006 saw a first participation for Sainz at the wheel of aVolkswagen in that year'sDakar Rally . In2007 , he repeated his attempt with Volkswagen. Following the resignation ofFernando Martin , he even ran, eventually in vain, for the vice-president position at his beloved football clubReal Madrid C.F. , for which he once trained.In
2007 Sainz won the Cross-Country Rally World Cup with Volkswagen team. In 2008, Sainz won theCentral European Rally . [ [http://www.centraleuroperally.com/2008/CER/LIVE/us/700/r7_1-film.html Central Europe Rally 2008 : The film of the stage ] ]A limited number of 440 Celica GT-Four ST185s, carrying his name on a plaque in the vehicle, and with decals on the outside, were sold in the
United Kingdom in1992 in an attempt to capitalise on Sainz's two championship successes with the works team. These were the part of 5,000 units ST185 for WRC Homologation. It is said that Sainz still keeps a Celica GT-Four given to him by Toyota, which he drives toReal Madrid games at theSantiago Bernabéu Stadium .sainz also hoped to run as opening car on the colin mcrae forest stages but down to lack of british opening car expernce he was unable to run on this eventTitles
References
External links
* [http://www.carlos-sainz.com Official website of Carlos Sainz]
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