Irish Tarmac Rally Championship

Cronin dominates Galway Rally in Irish Tarmac return

Keith Cronin and Mikie Galvin sealed an impressive victory on their Irish Tarmac Rally Championship return – the season-opening Galway International Rally.

The duo overcame wet and mucky conditions, eventually finishing 38.1 seconds ahead of 2023 Irish Tarmac Champions Callum Devine and Noel O’Sullivan.



A brave tyre call on Saturday afternoon kept Devine in touch overnight, starting Sunday’s six stages 15.6 seconds behind Cronin.

Overnight rain made for difficult rallying conditions on Sunday morning. Cronin used all his experience to find the perfect balance of speed and safety to grab a hat-trick of stage wins.

Devine couldn’t match his new Irish Tarmac rival. The Derry-based driver admitted braking too early on Sunday’s initial tests, having never before driven on the wet tyres his Volkswagen Polo R5 was depending on.


Cronin held a 31.9-second lead with two stages remaining and was able to cruise home to take a dream result on ITRC’s opener.

The battle for third, and top position in the new Citroen C3 Rally2 Trophy, was heating up on Sunday morning.

Josh Moffett held a 6.4-second advantage over Desi Henry at the start of Sunday’s stages. As Moffett continued to learn how best to handle his new Citroen in the wet conditions, Henry knew he was in a prime position to pressurise.

Despite a trip up a bank and pushing too hard on stage 12, Henry cut the gap to Moffett to 2.1 seconds with two Galway tests to go.

Moffett upped his game on the drying roads setting a second- and first-fastest time. His podium position and 5000 euro C3 Trophy prize were confirmed when Henry slipped wide on a square left junction on Galway’s finale.


Henry’s rally rested in the spectators’ hands as his Citroen was beached stage-side. The eager fans pulled Henry, and Scottish co-driver Stuart Louden, out of trouble although the time loss cost them two positions to Declan Boyle and David Kelly.

Ryan Loughran was flying through the rain on stages nine and 11. His brace of top-three times moved him up to eighth overall but a puncture on the second pass through Colmanstown dampened his spirits.

Loughran changed his puncture but collided with a bridge and finished up in a field as his Ford Fiesta Rally2 was behind modified frontrunner Conor Murphy for the rest of the stage.

Modifieds

Frank Kelly, Rodney Wilton, and Conor Murphy found themselves in a three-way Ford Escort Mk2 fight for two-wheel-drive honours after Galway’s opening day of action.

Murphy blitzed his opposition on Sunday’s Belleville opener, beating Kelly by 18.1 seconds on the 16.8-kilometre test.

Wilton marked his intent on the next stage, taking his second stage win of the weekend. 2.5 seconds separated the trio of Escorts with three tests remaining.

Wilton blotted his copybook on stage 12, diving into a hedge and having to reverse out.

Meanwhile, Kelly couldn’t find the same speed he was utilising the previous day. With one stage to go Murphy held an 11-second lead over Kelly with Wilton a further 6.6 seconds back.

Disaster struck Murphy on Galway’s finale as his Escort’s engine pulled the pin at the end of the stage. The Kerry driver made it to the finish-line but ended the rally a mere four seconds off last-minute winner Kelly. Wilton had to settle for third.


Rally4

There was more last-minute drama in the Rally4 category. After slipping behind Ryan McHugh’s Ford Fiesta Rally4 on Sunday’s opener, Keelan Grogan bounced back with a brace of fastest times to grab a 12.5-second lead with two stages to go.

McHugh admitted that he was unable to find his usual rally-driving rhythm but managed to cut Grogan’s lead to 3.1 seconds before Galway’s decider.

The race was on for top points in ITRC’s Rally4 curtain raiser.

A collision with a round bale would prove pivotal – Grogan’s Peugeot 208 Rally4 arrived at the end of the stage showing its war wounds. The resulting seven-second time loss was enough for McHugh to slip ahead and clinch his first Rally4 victory of the year.

Joseph Kelly and Killian McArdle finished in third with Aoife Raftery and Jack Brennan some of the top names to fall away in the tricky Galway conditions.


Historics

Meirion Evans successfully defended his 2023 Historic Galway Rally victory with a 37-second victory alongside co-driver Anthony O’Sullivan.

Evans managed his overnight lead through Sunday with Tomas and Eurig Davies happy to start their year with a runner-up result.

John O’Donnell was on full attack in his BMW M3 on Sunday. A series of top times moved him ahead of Hugh McQuaid and Declan Casey in third. O’Donnell and Oisin Joyce eventually secured the final podium spot with over 30 seconds in hand over McQuaid.

O’Donnell’s Sunday form adds him to the list of Historic ITRC contenders ahead of the next round in West Cork.

Early pacesetter Ray Breen stormed his way back through the pack on Sunday. His stunning stage times aboard the Subaru Legacy ensured he sealed a top-six finish after lying in 14th on Saturday evening.



Juniors

Jason Wilkinson and Danny Cannon grabbed a near-three-minute victory in Juniors. Eoin Kelly and Darragh Kelly finished in second, one place ahead of rally-long leader Ronan Dorrian.

Dorrian looked set to seal Galway’s Junior victory until mechanical failure cost him several minutes on the final stage.

Photos by D Harrigan Images