The Hilux IMT Evo runs a 3.5-litre V6 twin-turbo engine. Picture: Supplied. Two full weeks of action.
Over 400 vehicles entered. 8 000km of flat out racing across some of the most unforgiving territory known to mankind. And I was there!
An invite from Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa ensured that I would get to spend the final two days of Dakar 2026 with the team in Yanbu, Saudi Arabia. Our first stop on day one of the trip was a long drive out into the desert where we would set up camp at a spectator point to witness stage 12 of the race. The heat relentless and it wasn’t even midday yet.
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Loaded up with as much water as we could carry, we headed out on foot to find the best vantage place to see the action. One moment the desert was silent, and the next it started to come alive as the first motorbike came winding through the canyons and right past us. We had found a good spot with some rocks for protection and the tiniest bit of shade under an acacia thorn tree.
Sand spraying up in the air. Front wheel in the air. The front runners flew past with confidence and control, while others arrived at our spectator point a bit battered and limping.
Clearly fighting both machine and fatigue. After what seemed like an eternity, the mountains filled with the sound of a wailing race engine. You could hear the first car from miles away.
Camera in hand. The car came into view and blasted past in complete opposite lock, and foot flat. These boys were not playing.
They had a Dakar to win. Saood Variawa and co-pilot François Cazalet, Guy Botterill and Oriol Mena, plus João Ferreira and Filipe Palmeiro make up Team Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa. And with all three cars safely through the stage, sunburnt and dusty, we headed to bivouac.
The bivouac is a special place. It’s a massive village in the middle of nowhere that plays home to around 2 500 to 3 500 people a day. 8 000 to 9 000 meals are also served daily.
There is a full suite of portable toilets, showers, power outlets, waste management and press facilities on site. Surrounded by 1 400 team vehicles and 350 organisational vehicles is a state-of-the-art medical facility manned by the best trauma specialists in world. With all the cars, bikes, trucks, competitors, support crew, caterers, and medical personnel running around the place.
The bivouac was buzzing with activity and talk of navigation errors and near crashes. As the sun set, the desert transformed again, cooling just enough to let people breathe. Under harsh artificial lights, mechanics worked with almost surgical focus, tearing down the cars and rebuilding them again in mere hours.
Tomorrow would be the final day of competition. Day 2 for us meant heading out to a spot literally on the Red Sea right near the finish for stage 13. The air off the ocean brought a little bit of relief from the heat coming off the beach sand.
From our vantage point we could see for miles in either direction up or down the coast. We waited in anticipation for the first cars to come into view.
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