Suzuki aims
to shine on home territory
The penultimate
round of this year's World Rally Championship
marks an important occasion for Suzuki,
as it is the first time that the SX4
WRC will be seen on its home territory.
The rally takes place on Japan's northernmost
island of Hokkaido, more than a thousand
kilometres away from Suzuki's headquarters
in Hamamatsu. But the event is still
a source of great national pride for
the Japanese team, and drivers Toni
Gardemeister and P-G Andersson will
be cheered on by hundreds of thousands
of enthusiastic Japanese fans.
The event first
joined the World Rally Championship
in 2005, but this is the first year
that it is based in the Olympic city
of Sapporo, which hosted the winter
games in 1972. The city is famous all
over the world for its Dome - used in
the 2002 World Cup - while Japan's challenging
gravel stages are best-known for their
speed and complexity. The roads, which
are all-new for this year, tend to be
narrow and are often characterised by
fast straights leading into tight corners.
With trees and ditches close to the
side of the road, there is little room
for error. The braking areas are particularly
complex, as the drivers tend to arrive
at high speed with little idea about
the levels of grip and traction that
they might encounter. The surfaces consist
of soft gravel that can become muddy,
a little bit like Argentina or Great
Britain.
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The
weather has a huge impact, with
rain and cold conditions not an
uncommon occurrence in Hokkaido,
which is at the same latitude
as Siberia in Russia.
The Rally
Japan is due to get underway with
a ceremonial start in Sapporo
on Thursday evening before the
teams go on to tackle 29 gravel
stages totalling 343.69 competitive
kilometres. The finish takes place
back in Sapporo on Sunday afternoon.
For more information: www.rallyjapan.jp/e/. |
Car news - Suzuki
SX4 WRC n.11 (Gardemeister) and n.12
(Andersson):
After two back-to-back asphalt events
in Spain and Corsica, the World Rally
Championship returns to gravel, the
favoured surface for Suzuki's all-Scandinavian
driver line-up of Toni Gardemeister
and P-G Andersson. Nonetheless, many
useful lessons have been learned from
the pair of sealed-surface rallies that
will have a direct relevance for this
tricky gravel event, particularly as
Rally Japan features many rapid direction
changes. There has been a lot of work
on the differential, to make the SX4
WRC more reactive, and the team has
also had the chance to test a wide range
of spring and damper settings.
In Japan, the SX4
WRC will run with a taller ride height
and smaller brakes than are used on
asphalt. However, the ride height is
likely to be altered again for the second
passages through the repeated stages,
as the soft Japanese roads have a tendency
to degrade. The recent emphasis at Suzuki
has been on reliability, with both cars
managing to finish every event since
the mid-season break in July. This important
work will be continued in Japan, but
the team will also be looking to show
some speed in front of its many home
fans.
Driver news:
Both Toni Gardemeister and P-G Andersson
come into Japan with not much experience
of the event, each of them having only
contested the rally once before. In
Toni's case, this experience dates back
to 2005, while P-G Andersson also contested
Rally Japan in 2005, using a Suzuki
Swift Super 1600. However, the drivers'
previous knowledge of the event is largely
irrelevant, as all the stages are completely
new this year.
"Japan is
a really difficult rally as it is so
easy to make a mistake: a fact that
many drivers have found out the hard
way!" said Toni. "I don't
really know what it will be like this
year though. The key to doing well in
Japan is to be very neat and precise,
and try to never get off the line. I
quite like it, because in some ways
this makes it a bit similar to Rally
Finland. One big difference though is
that the roads are a lot narrower and
the grip is much more inconsistent -
or at least this was the case when I
did Rally Japan in the past."
P-G Andersson's
only previous attempt at the Rally Japan
resulted in second place in class A6
with the Swift. He enjoyed the experience
and the stages, and is keen to discover
the all-new route this year. "I'm
really pleased to get back to gravel,"
commented P-G. "It's my favourite
surface and I think we can do well in
Japan. We've done a lot of work on the
SX4 WRC since the start of the year
and now I think it is really starting
to pay off. The stages in Japan require
proper commitment from the driver, particularly
under braking, so I think that they
should suit us well. After Corsica my
confidence is back now, so my target
will be to do my very best and try to
finish in the points for Suzuki at home."
Team news:
The team's engineers and drivers now
have to switch their way of thinking
to gravel, less than three weeks after
two extremely specialised asphalt events
in Spain and Corsica. However, Japan
is no ordinary gravel rally: it is also
Suzuki's home event and so it is of
vital importance. The whole team is
determined to do the best job possible,
so the two competing Suzuki SX4 WRCs
will be checked and re-checked several
times in the build-up to the rally.
Shusuke Inagaki, Suzuki World Rally
Team Director, commented: "Japan
will be a very big challenge for us
as all the stages are new this year.
However, we hope that this fact will
benefit us, because it means that nobody
will start the rally with a particular
advantage in terms of experience. Our
recent performances have underlined
the encouraging reliability of the SX4
WRC, so we hope to use this to good
effect on our home territory. The entire
team has been working very hard to make
solid progress, step by step, and we
aim to see more improvement on Rally
Japan."
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