Welcome to our daily Dakar Rally 2025 coverage, where the world’s most daring drivers and riders take on Saudi Arabia’s breathtaking and unforgiving landscapes. From shifting sands to rocky trails, witness unparalleled endurance, strategy, and determination as competitors tackle each stage. Here is all you need to know:
- Click HERE for more Dakar news from Dakar.com.
- Free Editorial Content from the race HERE
- Discover all the key players of the 2025 Dakar Rally, that you need to know HERE
- Follow Carlos Sainz Snr, Mitch Guthrie, Nani Roma and Mathias Ekström on their journey to the world’s toughest off-road race, the Dakar Rally with the film Journey to Dakar HERE
- Watch Australian dirt legend Toby Price’s challenging journey to four wheels with his sights set on the world’s hardest rally, Dakar 2025, in Price to Dakar HERE
DAY 6: Stage 4 – January 8, 2025
Route: Al Henakiyah > AlUla – Liaison 173km and Special 415km
– After trouble with his electronic tablet during Tuesday’s Stage 3, bike racer Daniel Sanders was given back 4m54s by race organisers before setting off on Stage 4. He continued his brilliant 2025 Dakar Rally in the first part of this year’s Marathon Stage as the Australian navigated the 415-kilometre volcanic rock garden spreading from Al Henakiyah to AlUla safely on Wednesday as others in the convoy found it tough going on their tyres. The 30-year-old, who holds a 13-minute 26-second lead over his nearest rival Spaniard Tosha Schareina, said: “I know this area and it can be tricky, so you’ve just got to focus. It looks like I’m opening the stage tomorrow, so the pressure is on to not lose too much time.”
– With younger brother Luciano in eighth overall, two-time bike winner Kevin Benavides has struggled to reach those heights again at the 47th edition as – under Marathon Stage rules – the riders were given just 90 minutes to work on their bikes after completing today’s route. The Argentine revealed: “The first part of this Marathon Stage was incredibly long, more than five hours of racing. There were lines everywhere, so I was really focused on the navigation and doing my own work.”
– The Red Bull Off-Road Junior Team rookies swapped positions in the Challenger class as American Corbin Leaverton leapfrogged Portuguese team-mate Gonçalo Guerreiro into second spot overall. Guerreiro, 24, admitted: “There were so many stones. I’ve never seen something like this. We managed as best we could and still got one flat tyre. We have more than 400 kilometres and our car is in perfect condition.”
– It was a frustrating day in the Ultimate class as Frenchman Sébastien Loeb did not even start due to a damaged roll cage – which means he goes another year without an elusive Dakar title – while car debutant Australian Toby Price was undone after a string of strong results when he had to wait more than two hours for his service truck to arrive.
– Swede Mattias Ekström got through unscathed to lie 21m40s off Ultimate leader Henk Lategan with Brazilian Lucas Moraes up to fifth overall, and American Mitch Guthrie Jr. up to sixth as five-time winner Nasser Al-Attiyah dropped down to seventh – 35m 53s back from Lategan overall. The Qatari, 54, commented: “We stopped twice today. Once for a puncture and the second time for a broken rear arm. We waited for Cristina (Dacia teammate Gutiérrez) and then we fixed it. The car is OK for tomorrow.”
– In the SSV class, Chilean Francisco “Chaleco” López finished second on the day for fourth overall. The three-time Dakar winner, 49, said: “All the rocks and also the navigation made this a complicated stage. Aside from the tough terrain, the landscape in AlUla is always very beautiful.”
– Thursday’s Stage 5 to Hail is a classic mix of sandy and rocky tracks on a timed special stage of 428km as the rally heads towards its rest day.
2025 Dakar Rally selected overall standings after Stage 4
Ultimate
1. Henk Lategan (ZAF) 23:36.24
3. Mattias Ekström (SWE) +21.40
5. Lucas Moraes (BRA) +33.25
6. Mitch Guthrie Jr. (USA) +34.09
7. Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT) +35.53
13. Seth Quintero (USA) +1:31.04
16. Giniel de Villiers (ZAF) +2:33.27
18. Rokas Baciuška (LTU) +2:46.08
25. Guillaume De Mévius (BEL) +3:32.42
48. Cristina Gutiérrez (ESP) +37:14.59
51. Nani Roma (ESP) +61:48.38
Challenger
1. Nicolas Cavigliasso (ARG) 25:32.26
2. Corbin Leaverton (USA) +25.14
3. Gonçalo Guerreiro (POR) +29.35
5. Pau Navarro (ESP) +1:17.11
6. Dania Akeel (SAU) +1:20.59
SSV
1. Brock Heger (USA) 26:25.40
4. Francisco López (CHL) +2:22.47
Bike
1. Daniel Sanders (AUS) 25:15.33
8. Luciano Benavides (ARG) +35.57
12. Edgar Canet (ESP) +1:06.09
26. Kevin Benavides (ARG) +2:43.50
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