The 2006 Dakar was full of changes for the Gringos racing The Dakar. Robby put a package together with Darrin Skilton in what is being called by the marketing people a “Hummer H3”. In a brilliant move, Gordon re-configured a Class 1 buggy his shop had built and placed a custom Fiberglass Hummer body on it. Skilton brought to deal valuable Dakar experience and support vehicles. Unfortunately, the effort was also ill fated, perhaps from the start. The entire program was a rush job from its inception.
A short digression:
A couple of years ago I came across Danny LaPorte at a Supercross race. Knowing his love for the Dakar, I asked Danny just what would it take to get him to go back? Danny laughed and said he highly doubted he would return because “to do the Dakar, you need to commit all of your energy for an entire year to that one event”. He said he just couldn’t afford to take that amount of time for a single event.
Besides trying to slap a Dakar team together in the last minuets, the other major mistake made was to try to hang with the front runners while not having a support vehicle entered as a race vehicle. What this means was that all of Robby’s help was sitting in the bivouac waiting for him not to show up at the end of the day! Radio communication from the race car on the course is strictly forbidden so there is no way to get word out as to where you are or what your problem is. The other thing is that in the Dakar only race vehicles are allowed on the race course and only after the course has closed non-racing support vehicles are allowed to go ou
t and retrieve their dead. Of course I under stand the great cost associated with doing the Dakar and that no one has unlimited budgets. However, if you are going to do the Dakar, you have to realize the importance of the support vehicles entered in the event as race vehicles before you start bragging about winning, to do otherwise just show how little you know about the event. Could it be that in his first attempt with his own team in Dakar, Robby was so far in over his head he and his fans didn’t even know it?? The pics of teh Hummbuggy jumping in the dunes while the rest of the teams were still racing do look go though don't they??
It was obvious to me that listening to the playground smack of the Rubby fans and the Robby Gordon Media Machine they had no idea what the Dakar is about. The arrogance and ignorance of the Rubby fanatics is simply amazing. “Flash” Gordon was in his element as far as media and fan hype was concerned. Photo opportunities abounded and the chance to win a meaningless early stage to grab attention continued to be too much to resist.
The Dakar rally is very much like the other event the organizing body ASO promotes Le Tour de France. You can not win the race by grabbing a couple of wins that gains little time advantage. Large teams also have tactics that are by design traps for other teams and competitors to fall into. Team tactics are more and more important the closer you get to Dakar. A “jackrabbit” member of the team will be sent out as a sacrificial lamb just to get others to chase at a pace that is impossible to maintain without damaging your equipment and wearing your support crew out. If the Jackrabbit has a problem, they still have others on the team who have held back at the proper race pace insuring a strong finish. Remember WINNING STAGES MEANS NOTHING!!! How much time you gain over your competition is the only thing that matters!
As with any type of endurance racing, pace is everything. When endurance racing with a team, the pace of the entire team must be taken into consideration. Break a transmission and you cause your team to work extra hard through the night, remember they too have had to travel from bivouac to bivouac. My conversations with those who have worked as support crew in the Dakar report that they don’t remember much about the event due to sleep deprivation, the event is a 15 day trash that is remembered as a haze. Hurting the race car causes a domino effect that will eventually come around and bite you in the butt. Tired people make mistakes, have short tempers, and low morale. There is more than one way to let the Dakar beat you and poor team dynamics is just one of them.