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Honda made their first Moto category appearance in the Dakar Rally in 1981. It was with the winner of the previous two editions, Cyril Neveu (France), who finished six on his debut. The following year Neveu took Honda’s maiden victory. With new factory teams from other manufacturers entering the competition, the battle for the top spot became very tough, but in 1986, Neveu won again and Honda dominated the event with a 1-2-3 finish. Honda continued this winning streak with four consecutive victories through to 1989, with a new machine: the fantastic NXR750, a bike built especially for Dakar. Between 1981 and 1989, Honda bikes took the top spot on five occasions.
After a 24-year absence, Honda returned to Dakar in 2013. For that edition, they developed the CRF450 Rally based on the commercial CRF450X and entered three riders: Helder Rodrigues (Portugal), Javier Pizzolito (Argentina), and Johnny Campbell (U.S.). TEAM HRC reached their primary target of all machines reaching the end.
In 2014, with a completely new bike, the Honda CRF450 RALLY, brought to the big challenge a heterogeneous team with Joan Barreda (Spain), Helder Rodrigues (Portugal), Paulo Gonçalves (Portugal), Javier Pizzolito (Argentina) and Sam Sunderland (Great Britain). Barreda took five stage wins and Sunderland was also the fastest in another stage. Six wins that showed the great potential of the bike. With the support team Honda South America, Laia Sanz (Spain) was outstanding, finishing in 16th place.
The 2015 Dakar was a great success for Team HRC taking runner-up spot with Portuguese Paulo Gonçalves. Joan Barreda was forced to retire from the battle for the overall race title after a terrible day in the Uyuni saltflats in Bolivia, whilst leading the world’s toughest competition. Instead of throwing in the towel, Barreda went on to finish the Dakar showing his true fighting spirit. Teammate Jeremias Israel sacrificed his race to help out the Team. Another extraordinary team success was that of Spaniard Laia Sanz, who finished the Dakar 2015 in 9th position, the best result ever for a female in this race. Portuguese Helder Rodrigues ended his final Dakar with Honda in 12th position.
Team HRC came back to the Dakar in the 2016 edition where, unfortunately, current race leader Spaniard Joan Barreda once again suffered in the Bolivian stage which forced him to retire from the event definitively. Nevertheless, the race led to the discovery of one of Cross-Country Rallies’ rising stars: Argentinian Kevin Benavides, showed his skills and clinched a fantastic 4th position on home soil. Likewise, the young American Ricky Brabec made an excellent debut in the Dakar grabbing 9th place. Like Barreda, Portuguese Paulo Gonçalves and French Michael Metge were forced to retire.
Team Members
Brabec
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