Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah won the Dakar Rally for the sixth time in the car category on Saturday as Argentina’s Luciano Benavides won by two seconds on two wheels, the narrowest margin ever.
Al-Attiyah, with Belgian co-driver Fabian Lurquin, had led overnight after taking his 50th career stage win and made no mistakes as he handed Dacia a first victory at their second attempt in the two-week event held entirely, in Saudi Arabia.
Toyota drivers dominated the second stage of the Dakar Rally with the fastest five placings on Monday but Nasser Al-Attiyah took over at the top of the car standings for the Dacia Sandriders team. https://t.co/g8SjrJew4Xpic.twitter.com/E5Dfl7wiU3
— SABC News (@SABCNews) January 5, 2026
Five-times winner Nasser Al-Attiyah hit trouble in the Dakar Rally on Wednesday, the latest frontrunner to struggle in the Saudi Arabian sands after the departures of Sebastien Loeb and defending champion Carlos Sainz. https://t.co/lzhkSxo8YJ
— SABC News (@SABCNews) January 8, 2025
The 55-year-old Qatari also won in 2011, 2015, 2019, 2022 and 2023 with four different manufacturers.
“We’ve worked very hard, since last year. This is my sixth victory, I still need to break Peterhansel’s record” he said after the final 13th stage.
Frenchman Stephane Peterhansel, still competing for Defender in the Stock category, won eight car titles and six on motorcycles. Ford’s Nani Roma finished second overall, nine minutes and 42 seconds behind, and teammate Mattias Ekstrom was third after winning the final stage.
Last year’s winner, Yazeed Al-Rajhi of Saudi Arabia withdrew in the opening week after mechanical problems. Al-Attiyah won two stages with Ekstrom taking the most, four including the prologue. Benavides had earlier taken the motorcycle title after American Ricky Brabec lost his way and saw victory slip through his fingers.
Mattias Ekstrom won stage seven of the Dakar Rally as the field started the second week in Saudi Arabia with late drama for Toyota’s Henk Lategan while Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah stayed top in the car category.#MorningLive#SABCNewspic.twitter.com/dLGiguvo1c
— SABCNews_MorningLive (@MorningLiveSABC) January 12, 2026
The KTM rider, whose older brother Kevin won the Dakar in 2021 and 2023, came home second in the 105-km stage in Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea port of Yanbu, with Honda’s overnight leader Brabec 10th.
In a grueling endurance event spanning two weeks and 8,000 km over rocky roads, through canyons and vast expanses of desert dunes, twice winner Brabec blew his chances with only a few kilometres remaining.
Spaniard Tosha Schareina finished third overall for Honda. “From the start to the finish I never stopped dreaming, I never stopped believing,” said Benavides, who had trailed Brabec by three minutes and 20 seconds, after Friday’s penultimate stage.
“I said to all my people around ‘I don’t know why but I still feel it’s possible, I still believe I can win and it’s going to go my way. In the last three kilometres, Ricky took a wrong piste and I took a good one… I just saw the opportunity and I took it,” said Schareina.
American Skyler Howes was fourth overall for Honda, ahead of Australia’s 2025 champion Daniel Sanders on a KTM.
Sanders crashed on stage 10 but refused to retire and raced on despite a suspected broken collarbone.
Lithuania’s Vaidotas Zala took his first title in the trucks category, dethroning Martin Macik of the Czech Republic who ended up fourth.
American Brock Heger won the SSV race.Original Article
