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ADDC 2025 I ET.1 : MORAES TURNS HIS LUCK AROUND AS SCHAREINA EXTENDS HIS STREAK

  • Stage 1 took the field on a 400 km trip (including 243 km against the clock) from Al Ain to Mezaira'a, where it will spend most of the rally.
  • Lucas Moraes (Toyota Gazoo Racing) picked up his maiden win at the event and became the inaugural FIA leader by a minute over Sébastien Loeb (The Dacia Sandriders).
  • Middle Eastern racers emerged victorious in both lightweight vehicle classes, with Dania Akeel (BBR Motorsport) triumphant in Challenger and Mansour Al Helei (Liwa Team UAE) in SSV.
  • The motorbike race was a carbon copy of the prologue, with Tosha Schareina (Monster Energy Honda HRC) ruling the roost in RallyGP and Michael Docherty (SRG Motorsports) in Rally2. Both are perched at the top of their respective standings.
  • Abdulaziz Ahli went back to regular programming, seizing both the quad stage and the overall lead.
  • Stage 2 will take place on a 320 km loop course around Mezaira'a, including 228 km against the clock. The first FIM rider will get going at 8 am (GMT+4) and the first FIA car at 10:20. Access the Race Center and follow the race live.
Stage 1 Highlights - Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge

FIA: Moraes opens his account  
Last season, Lucas Moraes had won specials at each round except for the ADDC, where his hopes had —quite literally— gone up in smoke. In 2025, he is turning his luck around in no time, claiming stage 1. The Dacia duo of Sébastien Loeb (second at 1′01″) and Nasser Al Attiyah (fourth at 2′16″) piled the pressure on him all the way to the finish, as did his Toyota Gazoo Racing teammate Seth Quintero (third at 2′07″) in a Hilux, but the Brazilian held firm to finally take a win in the United Arab Emirates, securing his eighth W2RC stage victory. Saood Variawa (Toyota Gazoo Racing) rounded out the top 5 at 3′07″, ahead of the X-raid Mini JCWs of Guillaume de Mévius (+4′16″) and João Ferreira (+4′24″). The overall standings mirror the stage classification.  

CHALLENGER: Akeel takes her turn  
Just a month after becoming a W2RC winner at the Dakar, Dania Akeel is back on top in Mezaira'a. Locked in a ferocious battle with Yasir Seaidan, she finished just one second behind her fellow Saudi driver. However, Seaidan was hit with a one-minute penalty for a false start, handing the former rider the win by 59 seconds. Pau Navarro completed a BBR Motorsport podium sweep at 4′20″. The only dark cloud for the French team was the rollover of Nicolás Cavigliasso, who will be slapped with a heavy penalty after withdrawing from the stage. The recent Dakar winner will not be making it two victories in a row.

SSVs: Al Helei settles the score  
Mansour Al Helei saw his first W2RC victory slip away yesterday after missing a waypoint. However, the local hero succeeded in his second attempt and finished as the top-ranked championship entrant. Two Italians trailed the Emirati: Enrico Gaspari (MMP) at 7′41″ and Michele Cinotto (CST Xtreme Plus Polaris) at 11′37″.

202 MORAES Lucas (bra), MONLEON Armand (spa), Toyota Gazoo Racing, Toyota GR DKR Hilux, FIA W2RC, Ultimate, action during the Stage 2 of the 2024 Rallye du Maroc, 5th round of the 2024 FIA W2RC, on October 8, 2024 in Zagora, Morocco
202 MORAES Lucas (bra), MONLEON Armand (spa), Toyota Gazoo Racing, Toyota GR DKR Hilux, FIA W2RC, Ultimate, action during the Stage 2 of the 2024 Rallye du Maroc, 5th round of the 2024 FIA W2RC, on October 8, 2024 in Zagora, Morocco © A.S.O./J.Delfosse/DPPI

FIM: Schareina on point  
Winning both the prologue and stage 1 set Tosha Schareina on course for overall victory in Portugal in April 2024. Now, he is looking to execute the same game plan here. Setting out tenth this morning thanks to his win yesterday, the Honda rider capitalised on the tracks left by the men ahead of him, allowing him to focus on his riding. He claimed the stage with 1′54″ to spare over his teammate Ricky Brabec and 3′18″ over Luciano Benavides and his KTM. The overall looks pretty much the same, although with different gaps: Schareina is 2′07″ ahead of the American and 3′22″ clear of the Argentinian.   The 2025 Dakar champion, Daniel Sanders (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), conceded 6′17″ to avoid pushing his machine too far after it showed signs of weakness. Adrien Van Beveren (Monster Energy Honda HRC) opened the road for part of the special and dropped 7′13″. Tomorrow, this arduous task will fall upon Schareina, while the Australian and the Frenchman will be chasing from behind —an opportunity for them to claw back some time.  

RALLY2: Docherty by a nose, Canet out due to an elbow  
A single second separated Michael Docherty and Edgar Canet (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) at the end of the special on Sunday! The South African secured his nineteenth Rally2 victory, thanks in no small part to 16 seconds in bonuses for opening the race. Tobias Ebster (SRG Motorsports) rounded out the podium at 10′12″. Docherty held on to the Rally2 reins by half a minute over Canet and 10′36″ over Konrad Dąbrowski (Duust Rally Team). However, the Spaniard will no longer be a factor tomorrow, as he fractured his elbow in a crash near the end and had to withdraw.  

QUADS: Ahli gets his own back  
Abdulaziz Ahli has set the record straight after a navigation blunder in the prologue that had relegated to 3′55″ from the leader. The Emirati secured a comfortable win and soared to the lead by 13′20″ over Antanas Kanopkinas (CFMoto Thunder Racing) and 16′35″ over Marek Łój (Poland National Team). The favourite is back on track for a fifth victory!

#174 AHLI Abdulaziz (UAE), Yamaha 700 Raptor, Quad, W2RC during the Stage 1 of the 2025 Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge, on February 23, 2025 in Al Ain to Mzeer’ah, United Arab Emirates
#174 AHLI Abdulaziz (UAE), Yamaha 700 Raptor, Quad, W2RC during the Stage 1 of the 2025 Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge, on February 23, 2025 in Al Ain to Mzeer’ah, United Arab Emirates © A.S.O. / Edophoto / DPPI / Helena Clancy