Rally Sweden


The Rally Sweden, formerly the International Swedish Rally, and later the Uddeholm Swedish Rally, is an automobile rally competition held in Värmland, Sweden in early February. First held in 1950, as a summer rally called the Rally to the Midnight Sun with start and finish at separate locations, seventeen years later both start and finish became located in Karlstad. The main service park is located in the town of Torsby, which is actually much closer to the special stages than Karlstad. The competition is spread out over three days with the start of the first part on Friday morning and the finish on Sunday afternoon.
In 1973 the rally was introduced to the World Rally Championship and started to get international attention; the Swedish Rally has been also traditionally the only rally held on snow. Like Rally Finland, this rally is known to be very difficult for non-Nordic drivers. The first winning driver of the Swedish Rally that wasn't from Sweden or Finland was Frenchman Sébastien Loeb in 2004, Frenchman Sébastien Ogier was the second non-Nordic winner with wins in 2013, 2015 and 2016 with Belgian Thierry Neuville and Estonian Ott Tänak also recording wins in 2018 and 2019 respectively. Spaniard Carlos Sainz finished second four times and third two times.
The rally has been cancelled twice; in 1974 due to the oil crisis and in 1990 because of the mild weather. The rally was also not held in 2009 due to the WRC's round rotation system. Weather continues to be a concern, as rising global temperatures reduce the likelihood of appropriately snowy conditions every year. The 2005 event was one of the warmest ever, turning many stages into mud and destroying the special studded snow tires used by the teams.

Results

1950 through 1969

1970 through 1985

1986 through 1999

2000—

Multiple winners

WinsDrivers
7 Stig Blomqvist
5 Marcus Grönholm
Björn Waldegård
4 Jari-Matti Latvala
3 Sébastien Ogier
Kenneth Eriksson
Tommi Mäkinen
2 Arne Hertz
Carl-Magnus Skogh
Tom Trana
Bengt Söderström
Hannu Mikkola
Mats Jonsson
Mikko Hirvonen

WinsManufacturers
10 Saab
8 Porsche
8 Ford
6 Peugeot
5 Mitsubishi
5 Toyota
4-
4 Volvo
Volkswagen
3 Audi
2 Lancia
2 Mazda
Subaru
1 Talbot
1 Citroen