Here's a rally truth that never makes the highlight reel: the classification that flashes up at the finish is provisional, and sometimes the stewards do more damage than the rocks. That's exactly how the eighth round of the 2026 World Rally Championship ended in Greece, where two one-minute penalties handed down after the cars were parked reshuffled positions four through seven — and quietly nudged the title fight. The official final classification tells the story the recaps mostly buried: M-Spo
Sami Pajari Calls Acropolis One of His 'Favourite Rallies' After a Late Penalty Shake-Up Lifts Him to P4
Here's a rally truth that never makes the highlight reel: the classification that flashes up at the finish is provisional, and sometimes the stewards do more damage than the rocks. That's exactly how the eighth round of the 2026 World Rally Championship ended in Greece, where two one-minute penalties handed down after the cars were parked reshuffled positions four through seven — and quietly nudged the title fight.
The official final classification tells the story the recaps mostly buried: M-Sport Ford's Josh McErlean dropped from fourth to sixth, and Hyundai's Adrien Fourmaux fell from sixth to seventh. Not for anything they did with the throttle. For seatbelts.
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Both crews were pinged for identical breaches — a co-driver whose belt wasn't properly fastened while the car was already moving. What makes it worth your time is how each crew ended up in that position, because it exposes a corner of the rulebook casual fans never think about.
Fourmaux's came on Saturday's SS12. He stopped his i20 N to swap a punctured front-right tyre — a routine mid-stage job — and, by his own account, set off again believing co-driver Alexandre Coria was strapped back in. When he realized Coria wasn't fully secured, he slowed to a crawl until the belt clicked home. Didn't matter.
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McErlean's was arguably crueler. On Sunday's penultimate stage he outbraked himself, ran wide, and briefly beached the Puma on a bank. Convinced the result was gone, co-driver Eoin Treacy had already popped his belts off — standard practice when you expect to be climbing out. McErlean then rocked the car free with a reverse-and-forward shuffle, got rolling again, and the belts weren't fully refastened in that window. The off itself carried no penalty. The recovery did.
Here's the part that teaches: the requirement that every crew member be belted before the car is in motion isn't a judgment call. It's a hard FIA safety line, and it's enforced as one. When a car stops mid-stage — puncture, off, mechanical — the co-driver often unbuckles for a reason: to jump out and change a wheel, to plant warning triangles for cars barreling up behind, or to be ready to display the OK/SOS board. All legitimate. None of it buys you a grace period to get moving again with a loose belt.
The stewards don't weigh intent, and they don't take "but we were only creeping along" as mitigation. They review the mandatory onboard footage, and if the video shows the car moving while a belt is undone, that's a one-minute time penalty applied to the affected stage. Frame-by-frame beats good intentions every time. It's the rally equivalent of a red-light camera: the story you tell afterward is irrelevant next to what the sensor saw.
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That severity is the point — belts are the single most important thing keeping a crew alive when a Rally1 car goes off at speed, and the FIA has decided the deterrent has to be blunt. A minute is enormous in a sport decided by tenths, and that's deliberate.
Sixth still counts as a career-best WRC finish for McErlean and Treacy, an Irish crew running with Motorsport Ireland Rally Academy backing rather than a manufacturer's bottomless budget — so on paper the headline result survived. But dropping two spots after a genuinely composed drive through one of the year's most brutal events, on a rule technicality during a moment they thought was already a disaster, is a gut-punch you feel more keenly when you're a driver still fighting to prove he belongs in the top tier. Fourmaux, meanwhile, had already spent the weekend hemorrhaging time to repeated punctures; the penalty was salt in a wound the Greek gravel had been grinding open for three days.
This is where the "hidden story" earns the name. The two crews who inherited those places were Toyota's Sami Pajari, promoted to fourth, and — crucially — championship leader Elfyn Evans, bumped up to fifth after crossing the line seventh on the road. Evans didn't drive his way into those extra points. Two rival crews' paperwork problems handed them over, and the man at the top of the drivers' standings padded his lead without turning a wheel differently. When your nearest challenger is your own teammate and the margin is razor-thin, points that fall into your lap after the finish are worth exactly as much as points you fought for on the stage.
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Sébastien Ogier took the actual win — his second on the Acropolis, 15 years after his first — after Thierry Neuville led for most of the weekend only to shred two rear tyres on the penultimate stage. That's the drama that led the bulletins. But the result that may matter more come November was written by a technical delegate with a video screen.
For Pajari, fourth is a tidy consolation and a springboard: the WRC now leaves the tyre-shredding Greek gravel for the fast, flowing stuff at Delfi Rally Estonia on 16–19 July, followed by Finland — precisely the high-speed gravel that plays to his strengths. He backed into fourth this time. On the rallies he likes best, he won't need the stewards' help.
The lesson to file away: in rallying, the clock stops at the finish line, but the result doesn't. Click in before you roll — or the fastest way to lose two places is to forget to.
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