Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

Table of contents

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
HRC

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

30th pictures

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Speedbrain

1/30
After the first three stages, Joan Barreda Bort already has two victories on the account and lets the Honda works team continue to dream of great success.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Majoli, tooth

2/30
German drivers at the 2014 Dakar Rally: Majoli and Zahn.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Peter Mayer

3/30
MOTORRAD editor Peter Mayer in the Parc Ferme of the Dakar 2014 in Rosario / Argentina.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Peter Mayer

4/30
Bivouac with a feel-good atmosphere: local recreation area with swimming lake and hotel on the Autodromo de San Rafael.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Pep Segales

5/30
Disc and road book remind of the collision: Joan Barreda tells MOTORRAD man Mayer (1st from right) about the collision with the cop.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Polo motorcycle

6/30
For the German Ingo Zahn, the Dakar came to a painful end during the second stage.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Peter Mayer

7/30
Unusual sense of community: military dormitory for the rally drivers on the marathon stage.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

8/30
Short luck: Ingo Zahn crashed on the second stage – shoulder and three ribs are broken, the German was eliminated in the second stage.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Speedbrain

9/30
After the first three stages, Joan Barreda Bort already has two victories on the account and lets the Honda works team continue to dream of great success.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Yamaha

10/30
For a few minutes, the defending champion Cyril Despres reached the top of the overall standings during the fourth stage – then the Yamaha works rider was stopped by an electrical fault a few kilometers before the stage finish, lost almost half an hour to Joan Barreda Bort, who was still in the lead, and fell from second to sixth place.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Haudiquert

11/30
Have a good laugh: Sherco driver Alain Duclos (left), motorcycle man Mayer and team boss Nicolas Chaix (right).

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

12/30
The 2014 Dakar Rally – MOTORRAD editor Peter Mayer reports live.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Maragni / KTM

13/30
KTM factory rider Marc Coma celebrated his first stage win on the fifth day of the 2014 Dakar and took the overall lead.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

14/30
A village moves every day: the organizer’s logistics are an organizational masterpiece.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

15/30
A dewy complexion even after 486 kilometers: Laia Sanz – the Miss Miracle of off-road sport.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Sherco

16/30
With his victory after the sixth stage, Sherco driver Alain Duclos moved up from fifth to third place in the provisional overall standings.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Speedbrain / HRC

17/30
It can also look like this in South America: Joan Barreda-Bort, winner of the 7th stage, on the Speedbrain Honda in the countryside.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Pascal Haudiquert

18/30
This is what the Bolivian Mrs. Merkel looks like: a photo together with the Bolivian President Evo Morales and MOTORRAD editor Peter Mayer.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

19/30
The rally driver looks at it: 1st row (from above): Tripmaster 1 and compass, 2nd row: Roadbook, 3rd row: Tripmaster 2 with antennas, 4th row: GPS.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

20/30
Despite all the electronics: the road book is meticulously prepared every evening.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Speedbrain / HRC

21/30
In his race to catch up to the top, Honda driver Joan Barreda-Bort, who was in second place, received a 15-minute time penalty – he disregarded a speed limit.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

22/30
A new highlight every day: helicopter flight over the Atacama desert for MOTORRAD man Peter Mayer.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

23/30
Drive yourself, screw it yourself: the South African Brett Cummings lives the basic idea of ​​rallying – and is currently in a respectable 30th place.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

24/30
Pit stop: Only what fits in a single steel box is allowed on the Dakar.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Yamaha

25/30
Olivier Pain (# 6) and Yamaha brand colleague Cyril Despres crossed the finish line in third and second after the 11th stage.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

26/30
All hands on board: the transport of journalists to El Salvador was carried out by the Chilean military.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

27/30
From the dream: Honda works driver Barreda is dragged into the paddock.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

28/30
New KTM from Marc Coma: engine from the motocross model, injection, carbon front, new frame, new deflection, new shock absorber.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
Mayer

29/30
Viva el Dakar: The rally is enthusiastically adopted by tens of thousands at the finale in Valparaiso. MOTORRAD editor Mayer (in red) finally closes his Dakar diary.

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally
KTM

30/30
In the end it was easily enough for Marc Coma and KTM to win.

Sports & scene

Interview HRC Team Principal Dakar Rally

Interview with the new HRC team manager
“Dream of winning the Dakar should become reality in 2015”

MOTORRAD editor Peter Mayer interviewed the new HRC team boss Wolfgang Fischer. His goal: winning the Dakar Rally next year.

Peter Mayer

04/23/2014

Wolfgang Fischer, 44, was appointed team manager of the Honda works team before the start of the World Rally Championship. At the first of six events for the 2014 Cross Country Rally World Championship, the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge, the red troop with the Portuguese Paulo Goncalves won.

Congratulations for the win. After all, your team beat Dakar winner Marc Coma. How is the significance of this rally to be assessed compared to the Dakar?

Fischer: Thanks for the congratulations. Abu Dhabi is one of the desert classics and is extremely tough. Since 90 percent of the route leads through dunes and there is great heat, the engines are extremely stressed. KTM has won this race for the last twelve years in a row. Now we have interrupted this winning streak. That makes us proud.

Now about yourself. You were appointed team manager for the Honda factory rally team prior to this rally. What tasks does such a job include?

Fischer: First of all, a multinational team of around 20 has to be managed and coordinated. In addition, I have to control the preparation and technical development of the racing cars, plan and carry out the logistics. Engaging the racing drivers and supporting them in their training is part of this job. Tests have to be organized and every race has to be meticulously planned. As little as possible should be left to chance.

This task is not entirely new to you. After all, you’ve been running the Speedbrain team for years and even build your own rally machines in Stephanskirchen, Bavaria. Now give up this commitment?

Fischer: I’ve been doing works team management since BMW started off-roading in 2007. Since 2010 with my own rally team. Initially with BMW and Husqvarna support, later with our own Speedbrain vehicle development. We are of course very happy that we have made ourselves interesting for Honda’s rally project with this commitment. Personally, I am now 100 percent responsible for the Honda project. My two Speedbrain co-partners have been responsible for Speedbrain customer sports since January 1st, 2014. In this constellation, we were already at the 2014 Dakar with five drivers. That worked out very well and that is why the program will be continued.

Honda has announced that it will produce a replica of the Dakar machine as a Production Racer by May. How far has the project come??

Fischer: As a works team, we currently have nothing to do with the Production Racer. I think Honda will publish more information about this soon.

Honda did not succeed in winning the Dakar at the second attempt this year either. KTM acted very confidently, Helder Rodrigues, as the best Honda rider, only finished fifth. Which levers do you want to turn in order to bring the team to success??

Fischer: The second Dakar attempt for Honda with a completely newly developed bike was very close to being a great success. But rallying is extremely complex. You experience a complete racing season during the 14 days of Dakar, but without the time between the racing weekends to make any improvements. We were able to win five stages with Joan Barreda. To get the win, every facet has to be right. In order to minimize the luck factor and to have all eventualities under control as well as possible, you simply need preparation time. It is impossible to quickly catch up with the experience of the last decade of KTM hegemony in rallying. But we have a very steep learning curve, and that also affects our racing drivers. The last five Dakar winners took an average of six attempts to get to the top. In the end, constant and focused work pays off, for which we have now been rewarded with victory in Abu Dhabi. We will continue to work on making our dream of winning the 2015 Dakar a reality.

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