27th season of the FIA World Rally Championship
The 1999 World Rally Championship was the 27th season of the FIA World Rally Championship . The season consisted of 14 rallies. Tommi Mäkinen won his fourth drivers' world championship driving for Mitsubishi , ahead of Richard Burns and Didier Auriol . The manufacturers' title was won by Toyota , ahead of Subaru and Mitsubishi .
In an upset predicted two years earlier a two-wheel-drive car won a rally for the first time since Alain Oreille won the 1989 Rallye Côte d'Ivoire in his Renault 5 when Philippe Bugalski took his Citroën Xsara Kit Car to victory in the Rally Catalunya . Bugalski backed it up three weeks later winning the Tour de Corse . With such specialised tarmac cars now beating WRC cars while at the same time not competing in the FIA 2-Litre World Rally Cup designed for them a revamp of two-wheel-drive regulations was created for the 2000 season.
Calendar
The 1999 championship was contested over fourteen rounds in Europe, Africa, Asia, South America and Oceania.
Teams and drivers
Team
Manufacturer
Car
Tyre
No
Drivers
Rounds
Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart
Mitsubishi
Lancer Evo VI
M
1
Tommi Mäkinen
All
2
Freddy Loix
1–3, 5–14
Marcus Grönholm
4
22
Hamed Al-Wahaibi
2–13
Toyota Castrol Team
Toyota
Corolla WRC
M
3
Carlos Sainz
All
4
Didier Auriol
All
12
Ian Duncan
3
18
Neal Bates
13
Takuma Kamada
9, 11
19
Pasi Hagström
2, 4, 10
Pedro Chaves
4
26
Henrik Lundgaard
1, 5–6, 12
32
Isolde Holderied
1, 6, 12
42
Matthias Kahle
3, 8–9, 14
45
Martin Brundle
14
52
Jonny Milner
14
Subaru World Rally Team
Subaru
Impreza WRC 99
P
5
Richard Burns
All
6
Juha Kankkunen
1–4, 7–14
Bruno Thiry
5–6
14
Bruno Thiry
1–4
Juha Kankkunen
5
17
Possum Bourne
9, 13
Ford Motor Co Ltd
Ford
Focus RS WRC 99
M
7
Colin McRae
All
8
Simon Jean-Joseph
1, 5–6, 12
Thomas Rådström
2, 7–11, 13–14
Petter Solberg
3–4
20
Petter Solberg
2, 10, 12, 14
SEAT Sport
SEAT
Córdoba WRC
P
9
Harri Rovanperä
All
10
Piero Liatti
1, 3–8, 11–12
Marcus Grönholm
2
Toni Gardemeister
9–10, 13–14
16
Gwyndaf Evans
14
20
Toni Gardemeister
12
Škoda Motorsport
Škoda
Octavia WRC
M
11
Armin Schwarz
1, 4–5, 8, 10, 12, 14
12
Pavel Sibera
1, 5
Emil Triner
4, 8, 10, 12
Bruno Thiry
14
Peugeot Esso
Peugeot
206 WRC
M
14
François Delecour
6, 8, 10, 12–14
15
Gilles Panizzi
6, 12
Marcus Grönholm
8, 10, 13–14
21
Marcus Grönholm
12
22
Gilles Panizzi
10, 14
Citroën Sport
Citroën
Xsara F2
M
18
Philippe Bugalski
5–6, 12
19
Jesús Puras
5–6, 12
Renault Sport
Renault
Mégane Maxi
M
19
Oriol Gómez
5
22
Walter Suriani
7
23
Tapio Laukkanen
4, 6, 10, 12–14
27
Martin Rowe
4, 6, 10, 12–14
30
José Carlos Macedo
4
31
Benoît Rousselot
6
33
Pedro Azeredo
4
42
Raphael Sperrer
12
44
Kris Princen
8, 12
Hyundai World Rally Team
Hyundai
Coupe Evo 2
M
24
Alister McRae
2, 4–5, 8–14
26
Kenneth Eriksson
2, 4–5, 8–14
Results and standings
Drivers' championship
Key
Colour
Result
Gold
Winner
Silver
2nd place
Bronze
3rd place
Green
Points finish
Blue
Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple
Did not finish (Ret)
Black
Excluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
White
Did not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
Blank
Withdrew entry from the event (WD)
Manufacturers' championship
Key
Colour
Result
Gold
Winner
Silver
2nd place
Bronze
3rd place
Green
Points finish
Blue
Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple
Did not finish (Ret)
Black
Excluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
White
Did not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
Blank
Withdrew entry from the event (WD)
Notes:
1 2 3 – Indicate position on TV Covered Stage
FIA Teams' Cup
Production World Rally Championship
FIA 2 Litre World Cup for Manufacturers
() Denotes dropped score.
Pos
Entrant
R1
R2
R3
R4
R5
R6
R7
R8
R9
R10
R11
R12
R13
R14
Pts
1
Renault
16
(3)
0
(7)
10
16
10
10
(4)
16
0
16
8
(6)
102
2
Hyundai
0
0
10
16
0
0
0
13
16
4
16
0
13
7
95
NC(*)
Volkswagen
0
16
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
5
0
4
0
0
25
(*) – Volkswagen were not classified for not homologating their Golf Kit Car at the start of the season.
Events
References
External links