2022 Rally New Zealand
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| 2022 Rally New Zealand Repco Rally New Zealand 2022 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Round 11 of 13 in the 2022 World Rally Championship
| |||
The Rally New Zealand returned to the championship. | |||
| Host country | |||
| Rally base | Auckland, North Island | ||
| Dates run | 29 September – 2 October 2022 | ||
| Start location | Auckland, North Island | ||
| Finish location | Auckland, North Island | ||
| Stages | 17 (279.80 km; 173.86 miles)[1] | ||
| Stage surface | Gravel | ||
| Transport distance | 1,100.17 km (683.61 miles) | ||
| Overall distance | 1,379.97 km (857.47 miles) | ||
| Statistics | |||
| Crews registered | 29 | ||
| Crews | 28 at start, 21 at finish | ||
| Overall results | |||
| Overall winner | 2:48:01.4 | ||
| Power Stage winner | 4:51.9 | ||
| Support category results | |||
| WRC-2 winner | 2:58:05.1 | ||
| WRC-3 winner | No classified finishers. | ||
The 2022 Rally New Zealand (also known as the Repco Rally New Zealand 2022) was a motor racing event for rally cars that was held over four days between 29 September and 2 October 2022.[2] It would mark the forty-fifth running of the Rally New Zealand. The event was the eleventh round of the 2022 World Rally Championship, World Rally Championship-2 and World Rally Championship-3. The 2022 event was based in Auckland of North Island and was set to be contested over seventeen special stages covering a total competitive distance of 279.80 km (173.86 mi).[1]
Sébastien Loeb and Daniel Elena were the overall reigning rally winners, but they would not defend their titles. Citroën Total World Rally Team, the team they drove for in 2012, when the Rally New Zealand held a World Rally Championship event last time, were the defending manufacturers' winners.[3] However, they would not defend the rally either as they withdrew from the championship at the end of 2019.[4]
Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen won their sixth rally of the season and became the 2022 World Champions. Their team, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT, were the manufacturers' winners.[5] Hayden Paddon and John Kennard won the World Rally Championship-2 category.[6]
Entry list
The following crews entered into the rally. The event was opened to crews competing in the World Rally Championship, its support categories, the World Rally Championship-2 and World Rally Championship-3, and privateer entries that were not registered to score points in any championship. Eleven were set to enter under Rally1 regulations, as were twelve Rally2 crews in the World Rally Championship-2.[7][8]
Itinerary
All dates and times are NZST (UTC+12).
| Date | Time | No. | Stage name | Distance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29 September | 9:01 | — | Inland Road [Shakedown] | 3.54 km |
| 18:08 | SS1 | Pukekawa Auckland Domain | 1.78 km | |
| 30 September | 8:33 | SS2 | Whaanga Coast 1 | 29.27 km |
| 10:11 | SS3 | Te Akau South 1 | 31.48 km | |
| 11:14 | SS4 | Te Akau North 1 | 18.53 km | |
| 14:22 | SS5 | Whaanga Coast 2 | 29.27 km | |
| 16:00 | SS6 | Te Akau South 2 | 31.48 km | |
| 17:03 | SS7 | Te Akau North 2 | 18.53 km | |
| 1 October | 8:08 | SS8 | Kaipara Hills 1 | 15.83 km |
| 9:06 | SS9 | Puhoi 1 | 22.50 km | |
| 10:14 | SS10 | Komokoriki 1 | 5.81 km | |
| 14:08 | SS11 | Kaipara Hills 2 | 15.83 km | |
| 15:06 | SS12 | Puhoi 2 | 22.50 km | |
| 16:24 | SS13 | Komokoriki 2 | 5.81 km | |
| 2 October | 11:03 | SS14 | Whitford Forest – Te Maraunga Waiho 1 | 8.82 km |
| 12:08 | SS15 | Jacks Ridge Haunui 1 | 6.77 km | |
| 13:38 | SS16 | Whitford Forest – Te Maraunga Waiho 2 | 8.82 km | |
| 15:18 | SS17 | Jacks Ridge Haunui 2 [Power Stage] | 6.77 km | |
| Source:[1] | ||||