GRR

Updated: 2021 WRC Calendar

12th October 2020
Ben Miles

The World Rally Championship (WRC) has announced its full 2021 calendar, featuring 12 rallies including a first ever WRC events for Rally Croatia and Ypres, a long-awaited return to Kenya for the Safari Rally and no date for Britain for the first time since 1996.

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Event

Date

Country

Location

1

21st-24th Jan.

Monte-Carlo

Gap

2

26th-28th Feb.

Finland

Rovaniemi

3

22nd-25th Apr.

Croatia

Zagreb

4

20th-23rd May

Portugal

Porto

5

3rd-6th Jun.

Italy

Alghero

6

24th-27th Jun.

Kenya

Nairobi

7

15th-18th Jul.

Estonia

Tartu

8

29th Jul.-1st Aug.

Finland

Jyväskylä

9

13th-15th Aug.

Belgium

Ypres

10

9th-12th Sep.

Greece

Acropolis

11

14th-17th Oct.

Spain

Catalonia

12

19th-21st Nov.

Italy

Monza

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Update: 2021 WRC season to end at Monza

Updated 10:45 Tuesday 14th September 2021. For the second year in a row the World Rally Championship will end its season at the Monza Rally in Northern Italy. The event, which as its name suggests is based around the Milanese circuit of Monza, famous for hosting the Italian Grand Prix, will replace Rally Japan, which was cancelled earlier this month due to the ongoing effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. This year’s event will take place earlier than the 2020 season-ender, which was pushed back into December, leading to extremely wet conditions. The 2021 rally will take place on 19th-21st November.

In 2020 the Monza event was added to the calendar at short notice after a number of cancellations due to the pandemic. As well as several stages around the track, oval and parks of Monza, a day of the rally took place in the mountains to the north of Milan.

It was on those mountain stages that long-time championship leader Elfyn Evans’ campaign came to an end after he hit black ice in his Toyota Yaris WRC.

WRC Promotor managing director Jona Siebel said: “There were plenty of thrills and spills at last year’s rally when wintry conditions played a crucial part.

“This year’s event will be held earlier, but the ‘Temple of Speed’ allied with tough roads in the foothills of the Alps will ensure the action will be equally breathtaking.”

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Update: Rally Japan cancelled

Updated 10:00 Tuesday 7th September 2021. Rally Japan, which had been set to return to the WRC calendar for the first time in well over a decade, has been cancelled for the second consecutive year due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The news comes as little surprise to most, given the cancellations of both the Japanese Grand Prix and Fuji 6 Hours over the last few weeks as well as the increase in infections Japan has suffered following the Olympic and Paralympic games.

The Japanese round of the World Rally Championship had been due to take place in mid-November, with the change reducing the number of rallies in 2021 down to 11 rounds.

The WRC has announced that a replacement event will take place, but has yet to announce which. It is expected that Monza, which stepped in to hold the final round in 2020, will again take a spot on the calendar.

Update: Acropolis returns to replace rally Chile

Updated 17:15 Friday 26th March. The tenth round of the WRC, first due to take place in Chile, will now move to Acropolis, from 9th-12th September. It returns to the WRC docket for the first time since 2013 and should be a regular going forward, with organisers citing a ‘multi-year’ agreement.

Acropolis is a staple in the history of the WRC, first appearing in the Championship’s inaugural 1973 running, with 38 rallies held there over the years. Details of the route for 2021 are still to be finalised.

“The Acropolis holds an illustrious chapter in WRC history and we appreciate the Greek government’s huge commitment in restoring it to world rallying’s top table,” said WRC Promoter managing director Jona Siebel.

“Its heritage will be recalled by all, but at the same time, this is a modern-era Acropolis that sits comfortably alongside our other eleven rounds. That doesn’t mean its challenge is diminished and we can be sure the tough mountain roads will bring the sternest of contests."

“We are delighted to be able to fulfil our promise to the Greek people and the hundreds of thousands of motorsport fans worldwide,” said Lefteris Avgenakis, Greece’s Deputy Minister for Sports.

“Greece is ready to welcome fans from all around the world in September and prove that it will be a major player in international events again.”

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Update: WRC Ypres Rally Belgium date confirmed

Updated 16:30 Monday 18th January. The final piece of the WRC 2021 calendar puzzle has been found with the announcement that the WRC Ypres Rally Belgium will take place from 13th-15th August 2021. The tarmac rally fills the gap left by the proposed rally in Northern Ireland that was deferred for 2021 owing to the coronavirus. It is the first time Belgium has held a round of the WRC, becoming the 35th nation to do so.

Updated: Arctic Rally Finland joins 2021 WRC calendar

Updated 10:30 Thursday 14th January 2021. The WRC is making its first trip to the Arctic Circle with the Arctic Rally Finland in 2021. It’ll take place in Rovaniemi, said to be Santa’s hometown, from 26th-28th February as the second round of the 2021 season, after the opening Monte Carlo round where the now cancelled Rally Sweden would have taken place. Unlike Rally Finland, the eighth round of the season set for 29th July-1st August, the Arctic Rally is a complete snow and ice event – there will be no gravel in sight, with temperatures as low as -30°C. There are ten stages covering 260km, and as you might expect the event will run under strict COVID-19 rules. Whether fans will be able to attend will be down to the local restrictions at the time.

Arctic Rally has become a well-established early season event over the last few years, with many VIP entries including Formula 1 racer Valtteri Bottas and current WRC runners looking for a bit of prep before they move on to Sweden. This year will be the first time that rally has become a full part of the WRC.

A truncated schedule will see shakedown take place on the morning of the first day, with the first stages getting underway later on the Friday, the majority of stages will follow on the Saturday and Sunday.

FIA rally director Yves Matton said: “With Arctic Rally Finland joining the WRC calendar, we will experience a rally in a region that has always made us dream and where conditions promise to be optimal for a snow event.

“Following the unfortunate cancellation of Rally Sweden in December, this is proof that with challenges can come opportunities.”

Update: No Rally GB in 2021, Ypres replaces

Updated 09:15 12th January 2021. The WRC has confirmed that the Britain's iconic Rally GB, which has only missed one season in the history of the WRC, will no longer have a place on a revised 2021 calendar. Instead Rally Ypres, a tarmac rally around the Belgian town of Ypres, will step up from its normal place on the European Rally Championship, to become a full WRC event. 

Ypres had been due to take a place in the truncated 2020 season, but was cancelled at short notice when Europe was hit by a second wave of COVID-19 infections. Now the tarmac-only event finds a place on the revised 2021 calendar after Rally GB organisers failed to find the funds for the event to take place at its proposed new home in Northern Ireland. 

The UK's round of the WRC had looked set to move from gravel to tarmac after promoters opted to move from Wales to Northern Ireland following a lack of government support. But they stuggled to convince Tourism Ireland that funding the event was value for money and as a result the event will not take place in 2021.

No formal date has been announced for the first ever Belgian round of the WRC, but it will take place in August.

The Safari rally, which has been absent from the WRC calendar since 2002, and was due to return in 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic brought an abrupt halt to proceedings. The calendar was paused, with several rallies cancelled, before rallying resumed in September with a revised timetable including new rallies in Estonia, Ypres and Monza.

Such was the success of the first ever Rally Estonia that it will return in 2021 to the full-time WRC calendar, alongside another event which was expected to step into the breach in 2020, Croatia. The Croatian round was mooted by the WRC themselves as a potential addition to the shortened 2020 calendar before it was announced that the season would end with rally Monza.

The new calendar features nine European rounds, and three outside the WRC’s home continent, with the flyaway rounds pushed later in the year to allow time for preparations for any impact the continued coronavirus crisis has on the season. As well as the return to the tracks of the Safari rally, the WRC will also return to Japan and Chile in 2021.

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The season is set to kick off with its traditional opener in Monte Carlo (just over a month after the final rally of 2020) before heading through Finland and the Arctic Circle, Croatia, Portugal and Italy before the convoy heads to Kenya in June.

Rally Estonia is currently pencilled in for mid-July, subject to final agreement, before trips to nearby Finland and Belgium. The final three rallies of 2021 see the WRC circus flying around the world, first to Chile, before they return to Europe for the Spanish round in Catlunya, and then fly to Japan to end the season.

WRC Promoter managing director Jona Siebel said: “The inclusion of Croatia to the WRC for the first time is an exciting new challenge to our fixture list and brings huge anticipation.

“COVID-19 has hit international sporting events extremely hard. WRC has not been spared, leading to the unfortunate cancellation of several events throughout 2020

“We could not foresee any long-haul events being held in a safe manner for the public, or for our large group of travelling staff, suppliers, competitors and media, for the first five months of 2021.

“It’s essential our event organisers are fully committed to managing the difficult COVID-19 controls we can expect to be in place next year while delivering high-quality championship rounds. I’m confident the 12 rallies chosen for next year will not let us down.”

In case of any drop offs due to COVID-19, rallies in Turkey Latvia, Greece, Italy (Monza) and Argentina are on a reserve list.

Images courtesy of Motorsport Images.

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