Rali Ceredigion showcases rallying, putting sustainability and community engagement at its heart.
The 2024 JDS Machinery Rali Ceredigion will be remembered not only for bringing the European Rally Championship back to Wales, but also for showcasing the best of UK rally action, in an event that placed sustainability and community engagement at the forefront.
The event has gone from strength to strength each year since it launched in 2019. Following an ambitious roadmap of event development, the organisers attracted the European Rally Championship back to Wales after a 28-year absence.
The event has prioritised sustainability, winning the FIA's two-star environmental accreditation in 2023, and achieving the highest known level of carbon offsetting of any rally in the world in 2024.
This year the event built on its popularity in the local community, with an active programme of community engagement that brought the event to the fans. In addition to the start and finish ceremonies in Aberystwyth town centre, the rally featured a longer town centre stage, running four times during the event, together with a new Rali Engage fan zone that brought a wide variety of attractions and activities to the local community.
Making history by bringing the ERC to Wales for the first time since 1996, over 130 competitors from 14 different countries contested Rali Ceredigion, playing their part in delivering a battle to remember as Europe’s top drivers went head-to-head with Britain's finest from the Probite British Rally Championship and Protyre British Asphalt Championship, showcasing thrilling rally action to a global audience.
Leading competitors from both championships battled it out against the stunning Ceredigion scenery for three days of rallying, under the glare of following helicopters and multiple tv cameras who captured and transmitted the action live.
Reigning FIA European Rally Champions Hayden Paddon and John Kennard won the rally for a second time, dominating a dramatic 2024 event. Topping the pre-event qualifying stage was a sign of things to come, as an untouchable Paddon won all but one of the event's first 10 stages to hold a one-minute advantage ahead of the chasing pack.
There was no need for the New Zealand driver to push to the limit on Sunday and instead he prioritised protecting his rally lead rather than extending it.
Although Sunday's leg was significantly shorter than Saturday at just 57 competitive kilometres, the DC Autos Bethania and Spencer Quantum Hafod stages packed a punch - and wet weather for the second pass made it even more difficult.
Chris Ingram was the first to be caught out, as he lost the rear on a sweeping right-hander and smacked his Toyota GR Yaris against a bridge, ripping a wheel off and retiring from second place.
His British Rally Championship rival Keith Cronin should've been the one to profit, but he rolled later in the very same stage to cause a stage cancellation and throw the leaderboard on its head.
Mathieu Franceschi and Andy Malfoy were the key beneficiaries as they slotted into second overall behind ERC title rival Paddon, but Andrea Mabellini and co-driver Virginia Lenzi got the better of them to steal second spot ahead by just 3.5s. Mikołaj Marczyk and Szymon Gospodarczyk were another 3.7s adrift in fourth.
Out front, Paddon's eventual winning margin stood at a commanding 1m47.3s, as drivers of five different nationalities (New Zealand, Poland, France, Italy and Ireland) filled out the top-five places.
Without a puncture on Saturday morning, Jon Armstrong could well have finished on the podium but he recovered well to take fifth - claiming what would have been maximum BRC points for Sunday's round, but he checked in late to the final podium control to allow championship-chasing team-mate William Creighton full points.
Reigning Irish Tarmac champion Callum Devine came home sixth, ahead of top Welsh driver and two-time Rali Ceredigion winner Osian Pryce. Matt Edwards took a stage victory today but then suffered on the power stage with a car that cut out three times. Fellow Welshman Meirion Evans was ninth, with top ERC3 competitor Jakub Matulka completing the top-10.
Junior ERC went the way of Max McRae and Cameron Fair after a mega fightback allowed him to overhaul Mille Johansson, but second place was enough for the Swede to lift this year's championship title - and earn the FIA Junior WRC prize drive that comes with it.
Callum Black and Jack Morton's epic drive all weekend earned them victory in the Rali Ceredigion National Rally, taking maximum Protyre Asphalt Rally Championship points in the process. Championship rival Neil Roskell was second with Sam Touzel rounding out the podium.
Hayden Paddon, Rali Ceredigion 2024 winner, said: “It's a relief to win here. It's been a very, very tough season - not for a lack of trying, the whole team has been pushing really hard but obviously we've been lacking some performance this year. But to put it right this weekend, and do it reasonably comfortably as well, is just a huge credit to the team and everyone involved. It's a massive result - huge thanks to everyone supporting us back home.”
Callum Black, National rally winner, said: “I’ve really enjoyed the rally. We came here with an ambition to set some strong ERC times and win the National rally, and we somehow managed to get a fastest overall time thanks to a drying stage so that’s pretty cool. The stages were brilliant and we won by almost four minutes in the end so it couldn’t really have gone any better.”
Look out for our blog on how Rali Ceredigion is setting the standard for sustainability in UK Rallying.
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