Elfyn Focused On The Job In Hand

This is the first time that Elfyn Evans will start a round of the FIA World Rally Championship leading the drivers’ standings, and with it comes the handicap of having to run first on the road, at least to start with. It will certainly be a disadvantage at this weekend’s Rally Mexico, as he’ll sweep the loose gravel clear and leave the road cleaner for his rivals running behind – although the Dolgellau ace vows to just ‘focus on the job in hand’ as he aims to continue his great start to the season. Evans has a pretty good record in Mexico, with a couple of fourth place finishes and a career best third last year. And this year has started well too, with fastest time on today’s Shakedown stage. However, the event can throw a curve ball too, as he found out in 2018 when he suffered a nasty sixth gear roll.

By Paul Evans

This is the first time that Elfyn Evans will start a round of the FIA World Rally Championship leading the drivers’ standings, and with it comes the handicap of having to run first on the road, at least to start with. It will certainly be a disadvantage at this weekend’s Rally Mexico, as he’ll sweep the loose gravel clear and leave the road cleaner for his rivals running behind – although the Dolgellau ace vows to just ‘focus on the job in hand’ as he aims to continue his great start to the season.

Evans has a pretty good record in Mexico, with a couple of fourth place finishes and a career best third last year. And this year has started well too, with fastest time on today’s Shakedown stage.

However, the event can throw a curve ball too, as he found out in 2018 when he suffered a nasty sixth gear roll.

Having moved to the Toyota Gazoo Racing World Rally Team for the 2020 season, Evans has led both rounds of the WRC this year – finishing third in Monte Carlo and becoming the first British driver to win Rally Sweden.

Having quickly bedded into his new Yaris WRC on two of the most specialised events in the series, Rally Mexico might be the WRC’s first gravel rally but it too contains its unique characteristics. The biggest one is that it’s the highest round of the series, rising 2,727 metres above sea level where engines, deprived of oxygen, can lose as much as 20% of their power. It’s physically tough on the driver too, with the teeth-rattling gravel stages taking place in 30°C temperatures.

Driving the best of his career, Evans arrives in Mexico high on confidence and knowing that, as with all rounds of the series, it’s a rally he is more than capable of winning. It will be a tough challenge of course, not least as his rivals include Thierry Neuville (Hyundai), with whom he shares the lead of the series, Toyota team-mate Sébastien Ogier, winner of five of the last seven Mexico rallies, and reigning world champion Ott Tänak (Hyundai) who is sure to be back up to full speed after his monster accident in Monte Carlo. And you can’t discount Esapekka Lappi, Teemu Suninen, Dani Sordo and Kalle Rovanperä to spoil the post-event tequila party either.

“It’s obviously been a great start to the year with the team, and I’m looking forward now to the first gravel event of the season,” says Evans.

“In a way, Mexico is quite like the first two rallies of the year, in that it has its own specific challenges that we have to try and adapt to. And this year, it’s another new surface for us to get used to with a new car. But we found a good feeling in the first two rounds, and we hope to do the same in Mexico. Leading the championship does mean we will be opening on the road on Friday, which will not make it easy for us, but we almost have to forget about that and just focus on the job in hand.”

Closer to home, this weekend’s West Cork Rally has been cancelled because of the coronavirus outbreak, meaning that Osian Pryce, Meirion Evans, Matt Edwards, Tom Cave and James Williams are already on their way home, having not turned a wheel in anger on what was an eagerly anticipated clash of the British and Irish Tarmac rally championships.

And next weekend’s opening round of the 2020 Protyre Motorsport UK Asphalt Rally Championship, the Legend Fires North West Stages, has been postponed, meaning that Jason Pritchard will have to wait before starting his title defence.

Related News

Mark Williams. Pic. Alamy

Triple Blow as Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Jackson Page are Sent Packing from the Welsh Open

Welsh hopes at the 2026 Welsh Open were extinguished in a single evening as Mark Williams, Jak Jones and Jackson Page all crashed out on Thursday.

Gareth James | Feb 27, 2026
Mark Williams. Pic: Alamy

Mark Williams . . . Carrying The Flag for Wales Again With Help From Jak Jones and Jackson Page

Mark Williams is once again carrying Welsh hopes at the Welsh Open after producing a vintage display to reach the last 16 in Llandudno.

Gareth James | Feb 26, 2026
Wales' Jonny Clayton celebrates after winning the final against Netherlands' Gian van Veen. Pic. Alamy

Jonny Clayton Hails Premier League Triumph as a Career Highlight

Jonny Clayton beamed with pride after conquering night three of the BetMGM Premier League in Glasgow and hailed the triumph as one of the stand-out moments of his career.

Gareth James | Feb 20, 2026
Gerwyn Price beats Michael van Gerwen in Belgium. Pic: Alamy.

Gerwyn Price is Right Again . . . Back to his Ice Man Best

If it’s Thursday and it’s Glasgow, then it must be Night Three of the Premier League of Darts and that means Gerwyn Price fancies his chances, as Ian Mitchelmore reports.

Ian Mitchelmore | Feb 19, 2026
Jamaica's Mica Moore. Pic. Alamy

Mica Moore Beats Adele Nicoll . . . But Both Have Olympic Memories to Last a Lifetime

Mica Moore won the Olympic battle of the Welsh bobsleigh queens.

Hannah Blackwell | Feb 17, 2026
Jeremiah AZU of Cardiff Athletics. Pic. Alamy

Jeremiah Azu Double Paves the Way for Welsh Glory at UK Indoor Championships

Jeremiah Azu admitted he felt the pressure even though the Welsh sprint star successfully defended his title at the UK Indoor Athletics Championships in Birmingham.

Paul Jones | Feb 16, 2026