British Rally Championship announcement – Cronin returns – as predicted by Kerry Motorsport News two weeks ago

Four-time British Rally Champion, Keith Cronin, is to return to the series in 2022 in a bid to equal the five-title tally of record holder, Jimmy McRae. Cronin will campaign a Volkswagen Polo R5 backed by Hankook Tire, and will be guided by Mikie Galvin in the co-driver’s seat.  The BRC gets underway next weekend with the tarmac surface Rally Tendring & Clacton in Essex, and six further rounds follow between then and October.

“We did five events with Hankook last year as part of a development programme,” explains Cronin.  “We’re doing the full championship this time, and I’m confident the work we did in 2021 will have paid off.  I’m looking forward to getting out there with the Polo, the top two in last year’s BRC drove them, they’re a strong, well-engineered car, and seem to be especially suited to rallying in this part of the world.”

Cronin had his debut in the Volkswagen on the recent Birr Rally, and he and Galvin were running in second place before a broken propshaft forced the Killarney & District Motor Club crew to retire.   “We entered Birr as a test session really, it was our first event in the car and our first dry tarmac rally since 2018,” said Cronin following the event.  “Obviously it would have been nicer to finish, but it’s better that the prop went there rather than in Essex next weekend.  Josh Moffett had won three rallies already this year, but we matched him on one stage and had an outright fastest time on another, so that’s a cause for optimism”.

Rally Tendring and Clacton is one of a number of closed-road tarmac rallies which have been inaugurated in Great Britain following the introduction of new legislation, and the inclusion of the Essex event in the British Rally Championship marks a return of the series to the populous south east for the first time in many years.  Two runs over a short spectator stage on Clacton’s promenade will open the rally on Saturday evening, with three loops of four stages following on Sunday.  “The stages are shorter than what we’d be used to in Ireland”, noted Cronin.  “There are fourteen in total, but the longest of them is 10 kilometres, and the total distance is only 85 kilometres, so everyone will have to be on it from the outset, there will be no room for cautious starts”.


 
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