Kurdistan team win third stage of Rally Jameel, as Chlebowska and Riehle lead overall standings

Iraq’s Saz Gullani, left, and her co-driver, Annie Seel of Sweden, won the third stage of the Rally Jameel on Thursday from Umluj to Yanbu city. (Supplied)
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Updated 08 March 2024
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Kurdistan team win third stage of Rally Jameel, as Chlebowska and Riehle lead overall standings

  • Saudi’s Dania Akeel and her navigator, Senegal’s Syndiely Wade, finished third on Thursday and sit second in the table

YANBU: Iraq’s Saz Gullani and her co-driver, Annie Seel of Sweden, won the third stage of the Rally Jameel on Thursday from Umluj to Yanbu city to rack up 1,181.282 points for the Kurdistan team.

Gullani and Seel are now in seventh place in the overall standings, with 3361.043 points, ahead of Friday’s fourth and final stage.

Now competing in her second Rally Jameel event, Gullani said at a press conference in Yanbu after the race: “It was a difficult and challenging stage but this is the nature of any rally. We knew it was going to be a tough rally but we prepared well for it.”

She added: “Hope we keep our pace as high as it was in the third stage in order to gain more points and win the final stage.”

Seel said: “Oh yeah. Super happy. That was really cool.”

Poland’s Ewelina Chlebowska and her German co-driver Hanna Riehle came in second, with 1,190.870 points, and currently lead the overall standings with a total of 3,428.603.

Saudi Arabia’s racer Dania Akeel and her navigator, Senegal’s Syndiely Wade, came third with 1,183.509 points, and maintain their second place in the overall standings with 3,412.907.

The fourth and final stage of the rally begins on Friday morning, heading to King Abdullah Economic City in Rabigh.

The 2024 edition, titled “Her Passion Changes the World,” is aimed at empowering women in motorsport.

The event has attracted 110 contestants from 37 countries.


Sanders crashes out of Dakar Rally contention and Al-Attiyah reclaims car lead

Updated 14 January 2026
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Sanders crashes out of Dakar Rally contention and Al-Attiyah reclaims car lead

  • The Australian’s KTM finished 28 minutes behind stage 10 winner Adrien van Beveren’s Honda
  • Al-Attiyah has a sixth Dakar triumph in sight

BISHA, Saudi Arabia: Dakar Rally front-runner Daniel Sanders crashed and fell out of motorbike title contention and Nasser Al-Attiyah snatched back the car lead in the Saudi desert on Wednesday.
Sanders broke his left collarbone and sternum jumping a dune 138 kilometers into the 368-kilometer second half of a marathon stage to Bisha. The defending champion continued but slower and within 30 kilometers his six-minute overnight lead was gone.
The Australian’s KTM finished 28 minutes behind stage 10 winner Adrien van Beveren’s Honda and he dropped from first overall to fourth, more than 17 minutes back, two minutes off the podium.
That left the title to be decided between new leader Ricky Brabec and Luciano Benavides, second and third on the stage. The American’s Honda and Argentine’s KTM were separated overall by 56 seconds ahead of, effectively, a two stage shootout. The final stage on Saturday is usually a ceremonial ride.
Brabec won the Dakar in 2020 and 2024 while Benavides has never won; best placing was fourth last year.
Al-Attiyah has a sixth Dakar triumph in sight.
The dunes specialist from Qatar stamped his authority on the sandy special to finish second to Mathieu Serradori, who gave South African manufacturer Century its first Dakar stage win.
Serradori won his second career stage by six minutes.
The Fords of Nani Roma (first overnight), Carlos Sainz (second) and Mattias Ekström (fifth) were the biggest losers.
Ekström was first to the checkpoint at 91 kilometers but moments later suffered a mechanical problem. Roma lost his way and dropped 10 minutes just before passing 200 kilometers. Sainz also made a navigation error in the soft sand.
“I’m knackered, my back hurts, I suffered a lot today,” Roma said. “But that’s part of the game.”
Also, Toyota’s Henk Lategan, fourth overnight, ran out of fuel and made a navigation error.
Al-Attiyah grabbed the provisional overall lead about 200 kilometers into the 420-kilometer special and topped a Dacia 2-3-4 stage finish with Sébastien Loeb and Lucas Moraes.
“My head and body have taken a real beating,” Al-Attiyah said. “But we really attacked from start to finish. Fabian (Lurquin, navigator) did a great job and we can feel both happy and lucky because it was really hard.”
Overall, Al-Attiyah earned his biggest lead yet, over Lategan by 12 minutes, Roma by nearly 13 and Loeb by 23. Ekström and Sainz fell more than 34 minutes back.