While not part of the factory team nor racing for World Rally-Raid Championship points, Tosha Schareina‘s move from KTM to Honda has been a smashing success so far. After finishing runner-up in his début with the Japanese manufacturer in Sonora, he was easily the top rider at the Desafío Ruta 40 in Argentina.
After finishing fifth in the Prologue, Schareina was virtually perfect as he won the first three stages. Argentina’s Luciano Benavides was the only reason he did not simply cruise to the overall win, having finished second to him in all three legs.
Not willing to let the Spaniard crash his homecoming, Benavides caught the leader in Stage #4 and averted a sweep as he edged out Schareina for the stage win by thirty-six seconds. Benavides was the only competitor with a feasible chance at overtaking Schareina for the overall entering the final day, but the gap between the top two and everyone else meant Benavides had all but secured the W2RC victory as the highest-running championship rider, which awards the standard max points even if one does not win the rally overall.
With this in mind, Benavides and Schareina elected to ride conservatively for the final stage. Both ironically received speeding penalties, though it did not affect their stage or overall finish as Schareina still won with eleven minutes on Benavides. The victory is Schareina’s second with Honda after the Baja España Aragón in his home country in July.
Honda factory rider Ricky Brabec joined them on the overall podium while Ross Branch got the final step for the W2RC top three. Despite winning the final stage (albeit inherited due to penalties), Adrien Van Beveren just missed out on the latter by two minutes.
As the W2RC winner, Benavides is the new RallyGP points leader with a nine-point advantage over Toby Price. Despite finishing Stage #1 in fourth, Price’s rally unravelled the next day when his rear shock broke. Red Bull KTM team-mate Matthias Walkner, who is mathematically out of championship contention, sacrificed parts from his bike for Price to continue. Too far back to catch Benavides, Price focused on completing the race to salvage as much points as possible and finished eighth, last among finishers. To add insult to injury, Price had won the final stage but received a six-minute speeding penalty that relegated him to fourth.
“Unfortunately, it’s probably wrecked the championship for us,” said Price. “It is what it is, so you just have to swallow it and move on to the next round.”
Walkner was one of three retirements in the class alongside Sebastian Bühler and Sam Sunderland. Sunderland fell sick the night before Stage #3 and withdrew while Bühler suffered a mechanical failure the following day. The former’s exit continues a difficult season for the 2022 Dakar Rally winner, who got hurt on the first stage of this year’s edition and missed the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge with another injury.
Benavides’ brother and 2023 Dakar Rally champion Kevin Benavides could not enter his home race due to a broken wrist in testing weeks prior. Daniel Sanders, who beat Schareina for the Sonora Rally win, also sat out Argentina after he broke his femur in May.
RallyGP overall results
Finish | Number | Rider | Team | Time | Margin |
1 | 68 | Tosha Schareina* | Honda Team | 15:58:46 | Leader |
2 | 77 | Luciano Benavides | Husqvarna Factory Racing | 16:10:22 | + 11:36 |
3 | 2 | Ricky Brabec | Monster Energy Honda Rally Team | 16:20:02 | + 21:16 |
4 | 16 | Ross Branch | Hero MotoSports | 16:25:31 | + 26:45 |
5 | 42 | Adrien Van Beveren | Monster Energy Honda Rally Team | 16:27:38 | + 28:52 |
6 | 7 | Pablo Quintanilla | Monster Energy Honda Rally Team | 16:37:54 | + 39:08 |
7 | 11 | José Ignacio Cornejo | Monster Energy Honda Rally Team | 16:51:03 | + 52:17 |
8 | 8 | Toby Price | Red Bull KTM Factory Racing | 17:24:00 | + 1:25:14 |
DNF | 1 | Sam Sunderland | Red Bull GasGas Factory Racing | DNF | N/A |
DNF | 14 | Sebastian Bühler | Hero MotoSports | DNF | N/A |
DNF | 52 | Matthias Walkner | Red Bull KTM Factory Racing | DNF | N/A |
RallyGP stage winners
Stage | Rider | Time |
Prologue | Adrien Van Beveren | 54:52 |
Stage #1 | Tosha Schareina* | 3:00:12 |
Stage #2 | Tosha Schareina* | 3:27:40 |
Stage #3 | Tosha Schareina* | 2:58:13 |
Stage #4 | Luciano Benavides | 2:53:57 |
Stage #5 | Adrien Van Beveren | 2:39:44 |
Overall winners
Class | Number | Competitor | Team | Time |
T1 | 200 | Nasser Al-Attiyah | Toyota Gazoo Racing | 15:10:03 |
T3 | 302 | Mitch Guthrie | Red Bull Off-Road Junior Team | 16:22:31 |
T4 | 403 | Gustavo Gallego* | South Racing Can-Am | 18:34:37 |
RallyGP | 68 | Tosha Schareina* | Honda Team | 15:58:46 |
Rally2 | 21 | Bradley Cox | BAS World KTM Racing Team | 17:01:01 |
Rally3 | 122 | Ardit Kurtaj | Xraids Experience | 23:15:45 |
Quad | 152 | Manuel Andújar | 7240 Team | 19:24:30 |
Open Auto | 650 | Blas Zapag* | Copetrol Rally | 23:06:34 |
Open T3 | 670 | Jeremías Gonzalez Ferioli* | Ferioli Racing Team | 17:34:31 |
Open T4 | 678 | Juan Jose Semino* | Xcorpion Rally Racing | 20:59:00 |
Open Moto | 608 | Rodrigo de Abreu Sallum* | MED Racing Team | 22:36:24 |
Open Quad | 623 | Santiago Rostan* | Pampa Rental Rally Team | 25:28:33 |
W2RC RallyGP standings
Rank | Rider | Points | Margin |
1 | Luciano Benavides | 80 | Leader |
2 | Toby Price | 71 | – 9 |
3 | Adrien Van Beveren | 66 | – 14 |
4 | Ross Branch | 45 | – 35 |
5 | Kevin Benavides | 43 | – 37 |
6 | José Ignacio Cornejo | 41 | – 39 |
7 | Daniel Sanders | 39 | – 41 |
8 | Pablo Quintanilla | 39 | – 41 |
9 | Ricky Brabec | 38 | – 42 |
10 | Skyler Howes | 34 | – 46 |
11 | Sebastian Bühler | 16 | – 64 |
12 | Matthias Walkner | 13 | – 67 |
13 | Franco Caimi | 11 | – 69 |
14 | Mason Klein | 4 | – 76 |