Loeb: Mettet is always good fun for a driver

Loeb: Mettet is always good fun for a driver

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Sebastien Loeb
photo: Red Bull Content Pool

Team Peugeot got off to a promising start on the first 2 rounds of the World RX, with 2 second places scored by Sébastien Loeb in Spain and Portugal, while teammates Timmy and Kevin Hansen showed plenty of speed as well – with Timmy also collecting a useful points haul. As a result, Team Peugeot Total is currently 3rd in the team standings, while Loeb is 4th in the driver rankings, 3 points ahead of Timmy Hansen. So there’s everything to play for as the circus heads to Belgium – but this venue provides a very different, and perhaps even greater, challenge.

The circuit Jules Tacheny, located close to Charleroi in Belgium, is one of the most technical tracks that the championship visits all year. The venue is famous for its jump and low-speed, zig-zag corners that require the utmost precision. The lap is 1.149 kilometres long, 61% asphalt and 43% gravel, with the lap record standing at 38.074s from last year. Unlike the previous round in Montalegre, the joker comes at the very end of the lap, which could lead to some exciting race finishes.

The weather in Belgium at this time of year can be uncertain: but after extreme conditions in both Spain (rain) and Portugal (snow), the Peugeot Sport team and drivers are prepared for almost anything! After Montalegre, the cars returned to base in Versailles, to be re-prepared before heading to Belgium.

Bruno Famin, Peugeot Sport Director:

“Our preparations for Belgium have been a little more serene than they were between Spain and Portugal because there were no breakages on the cars to deal with after Portugal, so that’s certainly positive. Mettet is a track that usually suits us quite well. We’ll keep an eye on the weather, but we don’t have any specific preparations for this track. We’ve just kept working on the overall technical developments that we have planned for this year, which aren’t yet ready for Mettet. So now we arrive with the cars in a very similar specification to what we had for the first two rounds.”

Sebastien Loeb
photo: Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool
Sébastien Loeb

“Mettet is a track I like: it’s a nice place and actually not too far from my hometown in Alsace, so usually I have a few friends coming to watch and there are plenty of fans from France coming too. The atmosphere is really friendly and it’s always a pleasure to be there: when I first came to Mettet I was on the podium, so happy memories for me. The circuit is quite a varied mix with some technical turns and also some complicated corners on gravel, as well as a sharp hairpin. The start here is never easy, so the first corner can be a bit of an adventure, but it’s always good fun for a driver.”

Timmy Hansen
photo: Red Bull Content Pool
Timmy Hansen

“I hope we can continue the great pace we’ve had so far in Belgium; there’s no reason why not, as last year I could have won, but I had a puncture at the jump on the final lap. That jump, and the corner after it is one of the most critical sections of the whole track: you have to jump and make sure that you land exactly on your braking point, which is really difficult to judge. But it’s all part of the job if you’re a rallycross driver. There’s also a super-fast chicane on the lap where you have to get so close to the tyre barrier: it’s one of the places where you have to be super-brave! So I would definitely describe Mettet as a ‘confidence track’ but luckily the PEUGEOT 208 WRX gives me the confidence that you need.”

Sebastien Loeb, Kevin Hansen
photo: Jaanus Ree/Red Bull Content Pool
Kevin Hansen

“From the very start of the year I’ve felt great with the car, but I just need to turn that good feeling into a final result. Mettet is very different from the last round in Portugal: it’s actually a bit more similar to Barcelona in feel. Last year it was very bumpy, and the 208 WRX was really fast. I’ve been doing my homework and I feel well-prepared to take every opportunity that comes. Things haven’t always gone my way so far this year, but in motorsport everything always comes around, so I’m feeling happy and confident as we head to Belgium.”

Did you know?

Belgium plays an integral part in the history of the Peugeot 208 in competition. The country was where the Peugeot 208 T16 made its first public outing in a competitive environment exactly 5 years ago when Kris Meeke drove it as a course car on the 2013 Ypres Rally (part of the European Rally Championship). And the most recent winner of the Ypres Rally last year was…again a Peugeot 208, in the hands of Kevin Abbring! Sebastien Loeb is another rally winner in Belgium, having triumphed on the Condroz Rally.

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