
The event itself s very compact with 6 stages and just 73
road miles linking them.
There are just two spectator areas, but then the sport was
never created for spectators, it was created for competitors. Catering for Spectators
these days is just another arduous, time consuming, and often thankless, task
for organisers.
Like F1, nowadays the World Rally Championship has more to do
with show business and money than motor sport. This is where the real sport is
these days, at amateur level. Wouldn’t it be nice to declare events at this
level as non-spectator events and those who do wish to turn up and watch do so
at their own risk? Sadly that won’t happen. Not in these ‘blame somebody else
and sue the arse off them for compensation’ times in which we live.
Reminds me of the McRae Challenge a couple of years back.
Four stages in one forest in one day. Started at 11.00 and finished
mid-afternoon. Competitors could do it all in one day and be home for supper after
30 miles of fast and furious fun. Competitors still talk about that format
today.
Rallying is changing and it either adapts or dies. The sport’s
governing body is also placing more restrictions on Press & Media attendance
at events these days, and this at a time when the sport needs to foster better
public relations and acceptance let alone the need to promote and advertise
the sport.
Cynical? You bet. But looking around the excellent entry
here at Milton of Crathes you can only wonder at the resilience and tenacity of
those who simply enjoy the thrill of high speed competition over uncertain surfaces
in unfamiliar surroundings.

Anyway, enough gripes for now, on with the sport, and there
will be a short roundup here at close of play today and a much more detailed
report in the on-line mag later in the week.