2015 World Rally Championship

The 2015 FIA World Rally Championship was the 43rd season of the World Rally Championship, a rallying championship recognised by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile as the highest class of international rallying. Teams and drivers contest thirteen rallies across four continents, competing for the FIA World Rally Championships for Drivers and Manufacturers. The WRC-2, WRC-3 and Junior WRC championships are run in support of the premier championship.

Sébastien Ogier successfully defended the drivers' title.
The Volkswagen Polo R WRC, car entered by Volkswagen Motorsport, who successfully defended manufacturers' title.

Sébastien Ogier started the season as the defending drivers' champion.[1] His team, Volkswagen Motorsport, were the defending manufacturers' champions.[2]Both Ogier and Volkswagen Motorsport claimed their third consecutive drivers' and manufacturers' championships with 3 rounds to spare by winning in Rally Australia.

Calendar

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The 2015 calendar was announced at a meeting of the FIA World Motor Sport Council in Beijing in September 2014.[3] The season maintained the same rallies as the 2014 season and was contested over thirteen rounds in Europe, the Americas and Oceania.

A map showing the locations of the rallies in the 2015 season
RoundDatesRally nameRally headquartersSurface
122–25 January Monte Carlo RallyGap, Hautes-Alpes, FranceMixed
213–15 February Rally SwedenHagfors, VärmlandSnow
36–8 March Rally MexicoLeón, GuanajuatoGravel
424–26 April Rally ArgentinaVilla Carlos Paz, CórdobaGravel
522–24 May Rally de PortugalMatosinhos, PortoGravel
612–14 June Rally Italia SardegnaAlghero, SardiniaGravel
73–5 July Rally PolandMikołajki, Warmia-MasuriaGravel
831 July–2 August Rally FinlandJyväskylä, Keski-SuomiGravel
921–23 August Rallye DeutschlandTrier, Rhineland-PalatinateTarmac
1011–13 September Rally AustraliaCoffs Harbour, New South WalesGravel
112–4 October Tour de CorseAjaccio, Corse-du-SudTarmac
1223–25 October Rally de CatalunyaSalou, TarragonaMixed
1313–15 November Wales Rally GBDeeside, FlintshireGravel
Source:[3][4]

Notes:

  • ^1  — The Rallies of Germany and France were provisional inclusions subject to negotiation of a new agreement between their organisers and series promoters.[3]

Calendar changes

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Teams and drivers

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The following teams and drivers are scheduled to compete in the World Rally Championship during the 2015 season:

World Rally Car entries eligible to score manufacturer points
ConstructorNat.TeamTyreNo.Nat.DriversNat.Co-driversRounds
Volkswagen
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
Volkswagen Motorsport[7]M1 Sébastien Ogier[8] Julien Ingrassia[9]All
2 Jari-Matti Latvala[8] Miikka Anttila[9]All
Volkswagen Motorsport II[8]M9 Andreas Mikkelsen[8] Ola Fløene[9]2, 4–13
Citroën
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team[9]M3 Kris Meeke[10] Paul Nagle[10]All
4 Sébastien Loeb[11][12] Daniel Elena[12]1
Mads Østberg[13] Jonas Andersson[13]2–9, 11–13
Stéphane Lefebvre[14] Stéphane Prevot[14]10
Ford
(Ford Fiesta RS WRC)
M-Sport World Rally Team[9]M5 Elfyn Evans[15] Daniel Barritt[15]All
6 Ott Tänak[15] Raigo Mõlder[15]All
Jipocar Czech National Team[9]P21 Martin Prokop[16] Jan Tománek[16]1–9, 11–13
FWRT s.r.l.[9]P37 Lorenzo Bertelli[16] Giovanni Bernacchini[16]1–5
Lorenzo Granai[17]6–13
Hyundai
(Hyundai i20 WRC)
Hyundai Motorsport[9]M7 Thierry Neuville[18] Nicolas Gilsoul[9]1–12
Dani Sordo[19] Marc Martí[19]13
8 Dani Sordo[20] Marc Martí[9]1, 3–9, 11–12
Hayden Paddon[21] John Kennard[21]2, 10, 13
Hyundai Motorsport N[9]M20 Kevin Abbring[22][23] Sebastian Marshall[22]2
Hayden Paddon[24] John Kennard[25]3–9, 11–12
Dani Sordo[26] Marc Martí[26]10
Thierry Neuville[19] Nicolas Gilsoul[19]13
World Rally Car entries ineligible to score manufacturer points
ConstructorNat.TeamTyreNo.Nat.DriversNat.Co-driversRounds
Volkswagen
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
Volkswagen Motorsport II[9]M9 Andreas Mikkelsen[9] Ola Fløene[9]1, 3
Hyundai
(Hyundai i20 WRC)
Hyundai Motorsport N[17]M10 Kevin Abbring[17] Sebastian Marshall[17]7, 9, 11, 13
Citroën
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team[9]M12 Mads Østberg[9] Jonas Andersson[9]1
Khalid Al Qassimi[27] Chris Patterson[27]4–6, 8, 12
Stéphane Lefebvre[28] Stéphane Prevot[28]9, 11, 13
PH Sport[9]M15 Stéphane Lefebvre[29] Stéphane Prevot[29]12
18 Sébastien Chardonnet[9] Thibault De La Haye[9]1
D-Max Racing[9]P17 Yuriy Protasov[9] Pavlo Cherepin[9]1
Ford
(Ford Fiesta RS WRC)
RK World Rally Team[9]P14 Robert Kubica[30] Maciek Szczepaniak[30]1–9, 11–13
Adapta Motorsport[31]M15 Henning Solberg[9] Ilka Minor[9]1–2, 8, 13
M-Sport World Rally Team[9]M15 Bryan Bouffier[32] Xavier Panseri[9]1
Thibault De La Haye[33]11
Juho Hänninen[34] Tomi Tuominen[34]8
P17 Yuriy Protasov[35] Pavlo Cherepin[35]2
Alexey Lukyanuk[34] Alexey Arnautov[34]8
Synthos Cersanit Rally Team[35]P18 Michał Sołowow[35] Maciek Baran[35]2
GP Racing Team[9]M19 Jean-Michel Raoux[9] Thomas Escartefigue[9]1
Jipocar Czech National Team[28]P22 Jaroslav Melichárek[28] Erik Melichárek[28]9
First Motorsport[33]M22 Stéphane Sarrazin[33] Jacques-Julien Renucci[33]11
Combilift Rallying[36]P22 Josh Moffett[36] John Rowan[36]13
23 Sam Moffett[36] Karl Atkinson[36]13
Motorsport Italia[31]P23 Benito Guerra[31] Borja Rozada[31]3
Graham Coffey Rally Team[28]P79 Graham Coffey[28] Jenny Gäbler[28]9

Driver changes

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Changes

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Regulation changes

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  • Competitors who fail to contest a special stage without being able to show cause receive a seven-minute time penalty.[3]
  • Selected rounds of the 2015 season are included in the newly created FIA R-GT Cup—with the remaining rounds taken from the European Rally Championship calendar—for Grand Touring cars entered under Group R-GT regulations.[38]
  • The running order is in championship order for the first two legs of the rally. On the last leg, P1 and P2 crews run in reverse classification order.[39]
  • The transmission of performance data or information to or from a competing car, not in relation with safety, is forbidden during special stages to help promote greater competition.[40]
  • A car which has not started from the start line within 20 seconds will be considered as retired and will be able to restart under Rally 2 on the subsequent day.[40]

Rally summaries

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Round 1 — Monte Carlo Rally

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
1 Monte Carlo Rally
(22–25 January) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:36:40.2(15)1a
14
(355.48 km)1b
335.55 km
9478
22 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:37:38.2
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:38:52.5

Defending World Champion Sébastien Ogier started the season with a win in Monte Carlo, his second consecutive in the principality and the 25th of his WRC career. Returning nine-time World Champion Sébastien Loeb was the early leader of the rally,[41] losing first position to Ogier on the seventh stage after a spin while negotiating a hairpin bend. On the next stage, Loeb hit a rock and lost a total of six minutes, before retiring in the following liaison section.[42] This gave Ogier a lead of almost two minutes over Volkswagen teammate Jari-Matti Latvala. Despite being unable to monitor his rivals' split times during the stages under new rules, Ogier blended a controlled pace with safe tyre choices through the final two days to seal the victory.[43] Latvala finished second, also taking one power stage point, with Andreas Mikkelsen completing a one-two-three for Volkswagen Motorsport. Citroën's Mads Østberg finished the event in fourth position. Hyundai Motorsport duo Thierry Neuville and Dani Sordo finished in fifth and sixth, split by 0.8 seconds. M-Sport's Elfyn Evans finished seventh, having dropped time after he damaged his car's rear suspension against a wall. Evans finished ahead of Loeb, who rejoined under rally-2 rules and won two power stage points. The top ten was completed by Martin Prokop and Kris Meeke, who won the power stage to take three additional points.[43]

Round 2 — Rally Sweden

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
2 Rally Sweden
(12–15 February) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:55:30.521308.00 km4440
27 Thierry Neuville
Nicolas Gilsoul
Hyundai Motorsport
(Hyundai i20 WRC)
2:55:36.9
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:56:10.3

Sébastien Ogier won the rally on the last stage to extend his lead in the drivers' championship. The rally started with Pontus Tidemand, competing in a WRC2 Ford Fiesta RRC, winning the Thursday night super special stage in Karlstad.[44] Ogier took the lead on Friday's opening stage, with teammate Jari-Matti Latvala chasing him for the lead. Volkswagen's third driver, Andreas Mikkelsen gained the lead on the ninth stage, after Ogier and Latvala both hit snow banks, dropping to 4th and 23rd respectively.[45] Mikkelsen kept the lead until Saturday's final stage, where Hyundai's Thierry Neuville took the lead after fitting new tyres for the stage; Mikkelsen and Ogier were both in contention however, at deficits of 1.5 and 9.6 seconds respectively.[46] Mikkelsen regained the lead on Sunday's opening stage, and held a three-second lead over Ogier ahead of the final stage, Värmullsåsen, which was also the event's power stage, offering additional drivers' championship points.[47]

Running in reverse order to their rally positions, Ogier bested Neuville's time for the stage – ultimately, the stage's fastest time – and just after he completed the stage, Mikkelsen hit a snow bank and lost 40 seconds to fall behind Neuville in the standings as well. Ott Tänak finished fourth to record his best WRC result since 2012, while Hayden Paddon recorded his best WRC finish – replacing the injured Dani Sordo – in fifth position. Next in the order was British duo Elfyn Evans and Kris Meeke, Martin Prokop finished eighth ahead of Yuriy Protasov, who took his first WRC stage win, on the Kirkenær stage. Completing the championship points was Mads Østberg, who was in position for a podium spot, until he hit a snow bank on the eleventh stage.[48] He also scored an extra point by finishing third on the power stage. After the last stage, Volkswagen Motorsport decided to retire Latvala's car – he had managed to recover up the order to 12th place – due to a rules loophole in relation to the following event, Rally México.[49]

Round 3 — Rally Mexico

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
3 Rally Mexico
(6–9 March) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
4:19:13.421394.21 km3023
24 Mads Østberg
Jonas Andersson
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
4:20:32.2
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
4:20:38.5

Sébastien Ogier began the event by winning the shakedown, before the rally proper opened with a night-time special stage in the tunnels of Guanajuato city, a World Heritage Site as denoted by UNESCO. Thierry Neuville became the first leader of the event by winning the stage, in front of Lorenzo Bertelli.[50]

The second day of the event began with the first gravel section of the 2015 season, where Ogier took the opportunity to jump into the lead despite having the difficult task of sweeping the roads; he had been doing so as the championship leader. On the third stage, Ott Tänak lost control of his Ford Fiesta RS WRC and left the road, with his car falling into a reservoir. Tänak and co-driver Raigo Mõlder managed to evacuate the car before it submerged. Kris Meeke, who won the stage that Tänak crashed out on, crashed out of the rally on the following stage, irreversibly damaging his Citroën DS3 WRC. The morning also saw the retirements of Robert Kubica and Hayden Paddon.

Thierry Neuville was driving quickly in second overall when he crashed on the eighth stage, leaving Jari-Matti Latvala in second position at the end of the second day. Tänak's car was recovered from the reservoir, and the M-Sport World Rally Team were able to repair the car for use the next day. However, the car failed just after leaving service, and the car was retired for the day. Tänak did compete on the final trio of stages and was able to finish the rally in 22nd overall. On the final day, Latvala started in pursuit of Ogier, but he would ultimately finish 15th overall after broken suspension caused damage to a rear wheel. Ogier ultimately won his fifth successive rally, collecting maximum points with a power stage win. The fight for second place was between Mads Østberg and Andreas Mikkelsen, with Østberg prevailing by 6.3 seconds. Elfyn Evans matched his best WRC result in fourth, in front of Hyundai's Dani Sordo, returning from injury.

Round 4 — Rally Argentina

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
4 Rally Argentina
(23–26 April) — Results and report
13 Kris Meeke
Paul Nagle
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
3:41:44.9(12)2a
11
(315,86 km)2b
292,81 km
6026
24 Mads Østberg
Jonas Andersson
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
3:42:03.0
36 Elfyn Evans
Daniel Barritt
M-Sport World Rally Team
(Ford Fiesta WRC)
3:45:12.3

Kris Meeke won a WRC rally for the first time in his career, the first time a British driver had won a WRC event since the 2002 World Rally Championship season Safari Rally, which was won by Colin McRae. Meeke dedicated the victory to McRae, who had been his mentor.

This event was the first time Citroën had won a rally since (2013 Rallye Deutschland), and the first one-two since 2012 Rally Finland, as Mads Østberg finished second. Elfyn Evans, in a Ford Fiesta WRC, took the first podium of his career. This event was the first time Volkswagen hadn't finished on the podium since their return to the WRC.

The rally was notable for its high level of attrition; only five World Rally Cars finished the event without experiencing mechanical problems. The second stage saw double world champion Sébastien Ogier stop with an injector problem,[51] whilst Lorenzo Bertelli also retired on this stage.[52] On the following stages, Andreas Mikkelsen and Hayden Paddon both experienced technical problems, with both drivers restarting on the following day.[52] Ott Tänak lost a wheel on the fourth stage, but also restarted on the following day.[52] On the second day, Paddon crashed out on the ninth stage, whilst Dani Sordo stopped with power steering problems on the following stage; both drivers restarted on the final day.[52] On the final day, Jari-Matti Latvala suffered an engine failure on the eleventh stage, whilst Mikkelsen and Thierry Neuville both crashed in the same place on the final stage.[52] Østberg had also experienced engine problems on the opening stage, but was able to recover to second.[53]

Ogier won the power stage on the way to finishing 17th overall; Sordo was second on the power stage, as he recovered to fifth, and Østberg finished third.[52]

Round 5 — Rally de Portugal

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
5 Rally de Portugal
(21–24 May) — Results and report
12 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:30:35.3(16)3a
15
(351,71 km)3b
324,18 km
9464
21 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:30:43.5
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:31:03.9

14 years later, the Rally de Portugal returned to be held in the North of the country, returning to the sections that earned it the World Best Rally award for 6 times,[54] and the people joined massively.[55]

The race began with the return of the mythical Special Stage at Lousada racing track, with 15,000 spectators. As in the shakedown, Andreas Mikkelsen was the fastest, followed by Sébastien Ogier and Jari-Matti Latvala. Robert Kubica took the all-new Ford Fiesta RS WRC (premiered by M-Sport at Rally of Portugal) to 4th place.

On the second day of the race, the competition played in the Minho Province, with the section of Caminha proving to be quite hard, causing several dropouts and mechanical breakdowns. Ogier on WRC leader condition had the difficult task of opening the road, had a flat tyre right at the SS 2 and finished the day in 2nd overall. At the end of the SS 5 (2nd passage through Ponte de Lima was canceled due to a forest fire) Latvala was the leader with 11.1 seconds ahead of Kris Meeke, and 16 s on Mikelsen. Sordo, winner of the first special of the day (SS 2) was only 5th.

On Saturday, Ogier regained some handicap, winning the second day passes and finished the third day on 2nd place 9.5 seconds behind the leader, Latvala. Meeke won two of the SS and was 3rd, 20 s behind the leader but had Mikelsen (who won the other SS) at just 1.1 s. Elfyn Evans left after the first SS (as in the previous day) with electrical problems in the Ford Fiesta RS WRC, while Tänak and Sordo, already at more than a minute behind the lead were out of the fight for a podium finish. Neuville overturned and Ostberg suffered engine problems in his Citroën.

The title decision was reserved for Sunday, with the dispute of the mythical passages of Fafe (2 passes, with the second being the power-stage) and Cabreira (the longest of the rally with 32 km, now called the "Vieira do Minho" ). On the first pass by Fafe, and benefiting from a better position on the road, Ogier took 1.7 s the downside to Latvala, but at Serra da Cabreira Latvala responded and increased the advantage to 10.4 s. Mikelsen Volkswagen closed the podium. In the decisive power-stage, Ogier recovered 2.2 s at Latvala, insufficient to prevent the Finn to celebrate the triumph.

Round 6 — Rally Italia Sardegna

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
6 Rally Italia Sardegna
(11–14 June) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
4:25:54.323394,63 km5341
220 Hayden Paddon
John Kennard
Hyundai Motorsport N
(Hyundai i20 WRC)
4:28:59.7
37 Thierry Neuville
Nicolas Gilsoul
Hyundai Motorsport
(Hyundai i20 WRC)
4:30:16.8

The rally began with a surprising Martin Prokop winning the Super Special Stage of Cagliari, followed by Dani Sordo (penalized for false start) and Mikkelsen. On the second day, new surprise with Hayden Paddon winning the first Friday 3 sections, and at the end of SS 4 led the rally with 25.3 s lead over Latvala and Ogier on 27.5. In the remaining stages, Paddon controlled the pace, but a slight touch on the last stage reduced the advantage to only 8.8 s, now on Ogier who had exceeded his teammate. Dani Sordo was forced to leave after booting a wheel while Neuville suffered from problems such as turbo and handbrake and finished 6th. Meeke gave-up at SS 2 and Kubica did the same on the next.

It was necessary to reach the SS 17 and a spinning from Paddon for a VW take the rally lead. Ostberg was third, despite having traveled 20 km with a slow tyre leakage, having won 2 PEC before having new slow tyre leakage in the last SS. In this day Mikkelsen (lost a wheel) Sordo (lack of gas pressure), Kubica (3 holes and a stuck gearbox) and Tänak (gearbox jammed when he was 3rd place) dropped out while there were many hardships to Neuville (whipping-top, turbo and steering problems and 40s penalty) and Latvala (hole and crashed shock absorber for 2 sections). At the end of the day Ogier had a huge advantage over Paddon (2m13s) while Ostberg was 3 to 3m25s and Neuville 4th at 3m57s.

For the last day the attention was concentrated in the fight for the last podium spot between Ostberg and Neuville. An outwit from Ostberg (dropped to 5) delivered the 3rd to the Belgian. The power-stage was completely dominated by VW: Ogier, Latvala and Mikkelsen.

Round 7 — Rally Poland

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
7 Rally Poland
(2–5 July) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:26:11.5(19)4a
18
(313,53 km)4b
295,83 km
7057
29 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:26:23.4
36 Ott Tänak
Raigo Mõlder
M-Sport World Rally Team
(Ford Fiesta WRC)
2:26:34.5

Yet in the shakedown, Kris Meeke had an accident that forced him to move on foot at the departure ceremony. Sebastien Ogier won the opening Super Special, followed by privates Robert Kubica and Martin Prokop.On the 2nd day Ott Tänak took the starting position (11th on the road) and won 3 sections. However, Ogier increased the pace, and benefiting from Tänak problems, was the leader at the end of SS 7.On the 3rd day, Ogier held the lead while Tänak pressed and passed Latvala to get the final podium spot behind Mikkelsen. Elfyn Evans abandoned with trouble in the water pump, Hayden Paddon was the best Hyundai while the Citroën were misplaced.On the last day, Mikkelsen still tried the win, but the podium positions did not change. Latvala lost fourth place already on the link for assistance park to Hayden Paddon, who was the best Hyundai, a race in which four cars of the South Korean brand ended.

Round 8 — Rally Finland

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
8 Rally Finland
(30 July–2 August) — Results and report
12 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:33:03.820320,00 km8456
21 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:33:17.5
34 Mads Østberg
Jonas Andersson
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
2:34:40.6

Jari-Matti Latvala drove away from his teammate Sébastien Ogier. After the years 2010 and 2014 Latvala won his home rally for the third time. Meeke was holding the third place until he punctured on SS15. Mikkelsen and Paddon retired after crashes.

Round 9 — Rallye Deutschland

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
9 Rallye Deutschland
(20–23 August) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:35:49.521374.43 km7556
22 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:36:12.5
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:37:46.1

Sébastien Ogier won in front of his teammate Jari-Matti Latvala and Andreas Mikkelsen. He made thus a further major step towards world title number three. For Volkswagen it was the third triple victory of the season.

Round 10 — Rally Australia

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
10 Rally Australia
(10–13 September) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:59:16.417311.36 km2622
22 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:59:28.7
33 Kris Meeke
Paul Nagle
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
2:59:49.0

The seventh rally win this year, Ogier after 2013 and 2014 also prematurely clinched the world champion title for 2015. Volkswagen won also its third Manufacturer Title in a row.

Round 11 — Tour de Corse

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
11 Tour de Corse
(1–4 October) — Results and report
12 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:39:46.7(9)5a
7
(332,73 km)5b
245,35 km
12397
25 Elfyn Evans
Daniel Barritt
M-Sport World Rally Team
(Ford Fiesta WRC)
2:40:29.8
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
2:40:33.0

Round 12 — Rally Catalunya

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
12 Rally Catalunya
(22–25 October) — Results and report
19 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:21:04.823331,25 km8264
22 Jari-Matti Latvala
Miikka Anttila
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:21:07.9
38 Dani Sordo
Marc Martí
Hyundai Motorsport
(Hyundai i20 WRC)
3:21:26.0

Round 13 — Wales Rally GB

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RoundRally namePodium finishersStatistics
Pos.No.DriverTeamTimeStagesLengthStartersFinishers
13 Wales Rally GB
(12–15 November) — Results and report
11 Sébastien Ogier
Julien Ingrassia
Volkswagen Motorsport
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:03:02.019310.15 km7058
23 Kris Meeke
Paul Nagle
Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team
(Citroën DS3 WRC)
3:03:28.0
39 Andreas Mikkelsen
Ola Fløene
Volkswagen Motorsport II
(Volkswagen Polo R WRC)
3:03:38.2
Notes
  • ^1  – The Monte Carlo Rally was shortened, as overcrowding caused the ninth stage to be cancelled for safety reasons.[56]
  • ^2  – The Rally Argentina was shortened after Hayden Paddon's accident in the ninth stage in which six spectators were injured.[57]
  • ^3  – The Rally de Portugal was shortened after a forest fire caused the cancellation of the fifth stage.[58]
  • ^4  – The Rally Poland was shortened after the fourteenth stage was cancelled due to large crowds not responding to safety crews instructions.[59]
  • ^5  – The Tour De Corse was shortened after a flood that damaged the roads caused the cancellation of the second and fourth stage.[60]

Results and standings

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FIA World Rally Championship for Drivers

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Points are awarded to the top ten classified finishers. There are also three bonus points awarded to the winner of the Power stage, two points for second place and one for third.

Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th 
Points251815121086421
Pos.DriverMON
SWE
MEX
ARG
POR
ITA
POL
FIN
GER
AUS
FRA
ESP
GBR
Points
1 Sébastien Ogier1111117121111121111151Ret1263
2 Jari-Matti Latvala23Ret15Ret126251221221322501183
3 Andreas Mikkelsen3332Ret3336323Ret34331132171
4 Mads Østberg410322375937WD647116
5 Kris Meeke1017161424717312234532112
6 Thierry Neuville52283Ret3836457238Ret90
7 Elfyn Evans7643644501269234689
8 Dani Sordo6WD552620101143873489
9 Hayden Paddon51716824Ret9556584
10 Ott Tänak1842210514325861041Ret63
11 Martin Prokop986410Ret117Ret1272139
12 Robert KubicaRet20189308Ret35222119311
13 Khalid Al Qassimi6241016159
14 Juho Hänninen68
15 Yuriy Protasov169131371315112014378
16 Nasser Al-Attiyah71112Ret1710127
17 Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari11716111223166
18 Sébastien Loeb826
19 Stéphane Lefebvre12RetRetRet1526RetEX1013115085
20 Esapekka Lappi12171284214Ret4
21 Diego Domínguez84
22 Paolo Andreucci84
23 Bryan BouffierRetRet84
24 Pontus Tidemand1713139Ret9WD4
25 Jan Kopecký91310WD3
26 Stéphane Sarrazin92
27 Nicolás Fuchs9Ret171520Ret182
28 Gustavo Saba92
29 Lorenzo Bertelli68RetRet19RetRet1610DNS18RetRet102
30 Jari Ketomaa131012Ret1736WD1
Pos.DriverMON
SWE
MEX
ARG
POR
ITA
POL
FIN
GER
AUS
FRA
ESP
GBR
Points
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleDid not finish (Ret)
BlackExcluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
BlankWithdrew entry from
the event (WD)

Notes:
1 2 3 – Indicate position on Power stage

  • Ott Tänak finished 11th in the Argentine
    rally, but was credited with one championship
    point because the driver who finished 10th
    was ineligible for championship points.

FIA World Rally Championship for Co-Drivers

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Points are awarded to the top ten classified finishers. There are also three bonus points awarded to the winner of the Power stage, two points for second place and one for third.

Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th 
Points251815121086421
Pos.Co-driverMON
SWE
MEX
ARG
POR
ITA
POL
FIN
GER
AUS
FRA
ESP
GBR
Points
1 Julien Ingrassia1111117121111121111151Ret1263
2 Miikka Anttila23Ret15Ret126251221221322101183
3 Ola Fløene3332Ret3336323Ret34331132171
4 Jonas Andersson410322375937WD647116
5 Paul Nagle1017161424717312234532112
6 Nicolas Gilsoul52283Ret3836457238Ret90
7 Daniel Barritt7643694501269234689
8 Marc Martí6552620101143873489
9 John Kennard51716824Ret9556584
10 Raigo Mõlder1842211*514325861041Ret63
11 Jan Tománek986410Ret117Ret1272139
12 Maciek SzczepaniakRet19189308Ret35232119311
13 Chris Patterson6241016159
14 Tomi Suominen68
15 Pavlo Cherepin169131371315112014378
16 Matthieu Baumel71112Ret1710127
17 Marshall Clarke11716111223166
18 Daniel Elena826
19 Stéphane Prévot12RetRetRet1526RetEX1013115085
20 Janne Ferm12171284214Ret4
21 Edgardo Galindo8254
22 Anna Andreussi84
23 Thibault De La Haye4784
24 Emil Axelsson1713139Ret9WD4
25 Pavel Dresler91310WD3
26 Fernando Mussano9Ret1715Ret2
27 Diego Cagnotti92
28 Jean-Jacques Renucci3429382433946332
29 Lorenzo GranaiRet1610DNS18RetRet102
30 Kaj Lindström131012Ret1736WD1
Pos.Co-driverMON
SWE
MEX
ARG
POR
ITA
POL
FIN
GER
AUS
FRA
ESP
GBR
Points
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleDid not finish (Ret)
BlackExcluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
BlankWithdrew entry from
the event (WD)

Notes:
1 2 3 – Indicate position on Power stage

  • Raigo Mõlder finished 11th in the Argentine
    rally, but was credited with one championship
    point because the driver who finished 10th
    was ineligible for championship points.

FIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers

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Points are awarded to the top ten classified finishers.

Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th 
Points251815121086421
Pos.ManufacturerNo.MON
SWE
MEX
ARG
POR
ITA
POL
FIN
GER
AUS
FRA
ESP
GBR
Points
1 Volkswagen Motorsport1111821121110Ret1413
22Ret7Ret1651221210
2 Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team3878149710103452230
469227583710647
3 Hyundai Motorsport7326Ret10364571184224
84545689845735
4 M-Sport World Rally Team5563311412969296181
694106573586810Ret
5 Volkswagen Motorsport II93Ret3102Ret34313131
6 Hyundai Motorsport N201097824Ret9856Ret67
7 Jipocar Czech National Team2178549Ret106Ret97953
8 FWRT s.r.l.3710RetRet9RetRet117DNS11RetRet813
Pos.ManufacturerNo.MON
SWE
MEX
ARG
POR
ITA
POL
FIN
GER
AUS
FRA
ESP
GBR
Points
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleDid not finish (Ret)
BlackExcluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
BlankWithdrew entry from
the event (WD)

References

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