Fresh from a seventh place finish at round nine of the World Rally Championship in Finland,
Craig Breen and Paul Nagle turn their attention to matters closer to home this weekend.
The two men are the top seeds for Saturday’s Today’s Ulster Rally, the penultimate round of
the Irish Tarmac Championship. They currently head the standings courtesy of four victories from five rounds, with a win on the Ulster guaranteed to hand them the Irish Tarmac crown.
Breen – who last made an appearance at the Northern Ireland Motor Club event in 2012
with Nagle when they performed safety car duties in Peugeot Sport’s new 208 R2 rally car
–is making the surprise switch from a Ford Fiesta R5 to a Hyundai i20 R5 for the Ulster Rally.
Running behind Breen is last year’s Ulster Rally winner, Matt Edwards (Ford Fiesta R5). The
Welshman is also the defending British Rally champion and jointly leads that series with fift seed Tom Cave (Hyundai i20 R5). The pair make the trip across the Irish Sea tied on points
and know how decisive a perfect score on the Ulster could prove in their bid for silverware.
Separating the two visitors on the road is Alastair Fisher – the nephew of Bertie Fisher – and Callum Devine, two drivers who also have experience of competing at the sport’s top level.
Josh Moffett – the reigning Irish Tarmac champion – starts at six ahead of his older brother
Sam. Desi Henry, Jonny Greer and Marty McCormack start at eight, nine and 10 respectively.
A strong line-up of front-wheel-drive crews from the British and Irish series will also take
part, including William Creighton and Josh McErlean (Peugeot 208 R2), Marty Gallagher and
Johnnie Mulholland (Ford Fiesta R2T), and Jordan Hone (Opel Adam R2).
This weekend’s Today’s Ulster Rally is also a counting round of the FUCHS Lubricants British
Historic Rally Championship, which Simon Webster leads by two points from Rudi Lancaster,
and the FUCHS Lubricants Historic Asphalt Rally Championship where Dick Mauger and Paul
Smith share the lead on 90 points apiece.
Saturday’s rally comprises three special stages, repeated three times, with the first going
live at 8.30am. In-between each loop of stages, Banbridge will host three regroups at
Solitude Park car park. During these, fans and families will get the chance to meet various
drivers and see their favourite cars at close quarters.
The ceremonial start takes place in Newry on Friday at the Albert Basin from 8.45pm with
the grounds of Newry High School the backdrop for the finish ramp celebrations on Saturday afternoon (5.30pm). A free spectator programme containing stage maps and a full entry list will be available to download from the Today’s Ulster Rally website (www.ulsterrally.com) and the event’s official Facebook page from early this week.
Ulster Rally Event Director, Richard Swanston, said: “We are absolutely delighted to have
attracted such a strong line-up of leading drivers for the Today’s Ulster Rally. There is real
strength and depth in the top ten which makes picking a winner incredibly difficult. Each
and every single one of them has a chance as the crews and cars are all so evenly matched.”
- Fri, 8 Nov 2024
- (+353) 07491 25000
- (+353) 086 60 25000