#TVS Dakar Rally
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motorsportverso · 10 months ago
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Programação Dias 17-21\01\2024
Quarta-Feira-17\01
08:00-Dakar rally-etapa 10-L'equip
22:00-Dakar rally-etapa 10-Arabia Saudita-ESPN 4
Quinta-Feira-18\01
08:00-Dakar rally-etapa 11-L'equip
22:00-Dakar rally-etapa 11-Arabia Saudita-ESPN 4
Sexta-Feira-19/01
08:00-Dakar rally-etapa 12-L'equip
16:00-Andros Trophy-Lans Van Cours-Dia 1-SITE
22:00-Dakar rally-etapa 12-Arabia Saudita-ESPN 4
Sabado-20/01
09:00-24h Daytona Iracing-Parte 1-Youtube
youtube
10:50-GT Winter Series-Portimão-Race 1-Youtube
youtube
15:00-Andros Trophy-Lans Van Cours-Dia 2-SITE
16:00-IMSA VP RACING-LMP3\GT4-Race 1-IMSA.TV
Domingo-21/01
02:00-6h De Abudhabi-Youtube
youtube
05:55-GT Winter Series-Portimão-Race 2-Youtube
youtube
14:20-IMSA VP RACING-LMP3\GT4-Race 1-IMSA.TV
youtube
15:25-24h Daytona-Qualyfing-IMSA.TV
Brasileiros competindo
DAKAR RALLY
CARROS:Lucas Moraes(Toyota GR Hylux T1+ de fabrica), Cristian Baugart(Prodrive Hunter T1+)
UTVS T3; Marcelo Gastaldi\Cadu Sachs(Taurus), Gustavo Gugelmin(Can-am),Lorival Roldam(Can-am), Gunter Hinkelmann(Taurus).
UTVS T4: Cristiano Batista(Can-am), Rodrigo Varela\Enio Bozzano(Can-am), Jorge Jr(Polaris).
24h Daytona:
GTP:Pipo Derani(Cadillac V Series R #31), Felipe Nasr(Porsche 963 #7), Augusto Farfus(BMW M LMDH V8 #24)
LMP2:Felipe Fraga, Felipe Massa(Oreca #74)
GTD Pró:Daniel Serra(Ferrari 296 GT3 #62)
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jenniferrails · 10 months ago
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🌧 Rain, Rain Go Away! 🌧
Happy Sunday! Hope you all are having a wonderful weekend. Down here in the lovely southwest, been raining since 2am last night, and supposed to be just drizzly and cold through Tuesday. I know, can't complain too much since the rest of the country is going through some serious cold snaps. 🥶
Been busy doing some odds and ends, so haven't been watching much TV or youtube, but I'm gonna get caught up on the Dakar Rally (this year it was held Jan 5-19). I'm a HUGE Dakar fan, especially the dirt bike class. If you are not aware of that race, it's almost 5,000 miles of the harshest terrain you can tackle, and you gotta get it done in two weeks! 😲
Anyway hope you all are having a wonderful day, even if you are going through some crummy weather. Spring will be here soon enough! 🌷💐
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mistressemmedi · 10 months ago
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Dakar seems fun, where do you watch it / how do I get into it?
It's a mix between following on the app, checking youtube for the highlights! You can check the Dakar's official channel, and here is the list of the broadcasters by country.
Red Bull TV used to have 30 min recaps each day but I guess they don't this year - pity, they were really good. That being said, they have a ton of videos on past editions/explaining the rally etc. for free - worth checking it out. This video explains the route this year :)
This reddit post also lists the various teams/competitors that have their own socmed that you can follow along.
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whipplefilter · 5 months ago
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I'm in a mood where all I wanna do is list meaningless things:
First Racetrack: Dodge City Raceway Park (2016)
First NASCAR Track: Kentucky Speedway (2017)
First Favorite Driver: Denny Hamlin (2017)
First Favorite Driver Slate: Denny Hamlin, Kasey Kahne, Kyle Busch, Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Larson (2017)
First Nemesis: Ryan Newman (2017)
Most Recent Racetrack: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (2024)
Most Recent NASCAR Track: Phoenix Raceway (2024)
Current Favorite Driver: Kyle Larson
Current Favorite Driver Slate: Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Kyle Larson (lol I am nothing if not consistent; the other two are just retired!
Current Nemesis: Ross Chastain
In Person Events: NASCAR, ARCA, IndyCar, BC39, AllStar Circuit of Champions, Great Lakes Super Sprints, M1 Concourse Speed Ring, High Limit, Sprint Cars on Ice, various local dirt/pavement/dragstrip events
TV/Streaming Events: NASCAR, ARCA, World of Outlaws, ARX Rallycross, F1, IndyCar, Chili Bowl, Dakar Rally, Rolex 24, IMSA
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advaitsingh · 8 months ago
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TVS Racing: The Pinnacle of Innovation and Speed
Since its founding in 1982, TVS Motor Company's motorsports division, TVS Racing, has been a racing industry leader. TVS Racing continuously pushes boundaries and breaks records by emphasizing innovation and performance. The team's accomplishments include being the first Indian manufacturer to compete in the Dakar Rally and starting the One Make Championship culture in India. The racing landscape is still dominated by TVS Racing.
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lady-nightmare · 2 years ago
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Translation:
The Russian wrote a request to the Chinese. The answer knocked him off his feet
Russian athletes have very limited room for maneuver when it comes to starts, so they are looking for other opportunities. Sergei Kariakin therefore wanted to compete in China and even made a special request. The answer might surprise him.
Since the unleashing of the war in Ukraine, Russians in many sports cannot compete with the rest of the world. Kariakin, who won the Dakar in 2017, turned to the Chinese. The reaction was interesting.
“I have a lot of plans for this year, it's just a shame they're not related to rallying. We have the Russian championship, but the international arena is still closed to us. A wise person suggested to me: write to the Chinese, they are our friends," the Russian driver told Match TV.
Kariakin continued his story. – I heard from this person that the participation of Russian athletes will be used to strengthen friendship between nations, because Xi Jinping came to Moscow and said that more competitions should be held. Weeks passed and silence, no response.
Then he sent another letter to which the Chinese had already replied. "It will be nice to see you, come." But write a letter to the FIA, he reported. This actually ended the correspondence, because the FIA agrees to the performances of Russian drivers only on one condition.
— This is a letter in which a special military operation (the war in Ukraine - editor's note) and the attitude of our country must be condemned. That's how the Chinese feel about our friendship. It was very embarrassing to read this, but nothing surprises me anymore, reported a disappointed Kariakin.
Kariakin 'will not turn his back on Putin' It is worth recalling that the Russian driver recently claimed that he would not turn his back on his country and Vladimir Putin. “They have already forced us to abandon the flag, anthem and national colors. Now they force us to abandon our beliefs and Russian values. I consider it a despicable act – he commented last year.
It is also worth adding that the concerns of athletes from Russia are justified. Putin has already introduced criminal penalties for his citizens for criticizing the actions of the military in Ukraine. This is punishable by imprisonment of up to 15 years.
................................................
"Now they force us to abandon our beliefs and Russian values."
Do you mean imperialistic ambitions, genocidal urges, racism, cruelty, sadism, arrogance?
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crosscountryrally · 4 years ago
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ESPN llevará el Dakar 2021 a las pantallas de Sudamérica
El Dakar 2021 será transmitido para Sudamérica por las señales de ESPN. Con un equipo conformado por un equipo periodístico con mucha experiencia en el Dakar liderado por  Pablo Schillaci, Juan Fossaroli y Mauricio “Damon” Gallardo además de los pilotos Martín Ponte (Turismo Carretera) y  Paco Gómez (competidor del Dakar en motos), ESPN traerá los habituales resúmenes diarios y la trastienda que tiene un evento de la magnitud del Dakar.
La transmisión se realizará por ESPN2, ESPN3 y ESPN App y comenzará con el prólogo y largada protocolar el sábado 2 de enero a las 12:30 horas de Chile.
Luego, se transmitirá un resumen diario entre el 3 y el 15 de enero a las 20 horas de Chile con lo mejor de cada jornada en todas las categorías con foco en los pilotos latinoamericanos. Después, a las 23 horas de Chile, se transmitirá “El Show del Dakar” con análisis, detalles y backstage de la carrera.
Programación Sudamérica
– Prólogo y podio de largada, el sábado 2 de enero, en vivo a las 12:30 ARG/CHI/PAR/URU 11:30BOL/VEN 10:30COL/ECU/PER (ESPN2)
– Llegada y podio final, el viernes 15, en vivo a las 09:30 ARG/CHI/PAR/URU 08:30BOL/VEN 07:30COL/ECU/PER
– Desde el 3 hasta el 15 de enero, diariamente: Dakar: El Resumen a las 20:00 ARG/CHI/PAR/URU 19:00BOL/VEN 18:00COL/ECU/PER
  – Desde el 3 hasta el 15 de enero, diariamente: El Show del Dakar a las 23:00 ARG/CHI/PAR/URU 22:00 BOL/VEN 21:00 COL/ECU/PER
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go-21newstv · 4 years ago
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2021 Dakar Rally To See Lowest Participation In 25 Years Due To COVID-19
2021 Dakar Rally To See Lowest Participation In 25 Years Due To COVID-19
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There has been a 22 per cent reduction in participants and a 24 per cent drop in registrations, the lowest since 1995 for the upcoming Dakar 2021. However, the silver lining is that the top names and brands are very much a part of the rally including the factory Indian teams.
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View Photos The 2020 Dakar Rally is scheduled…
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robinfrinjs · 3 years ago
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is there anywhere to watch dakar? 💖
Hi Anon!
So first of all it is not broadcasted live. You can follow up to date live timing through the Dakar website. it's pretty elaborate. And here's an alternative live timing
Then Dakar also has a Twitter account called dakarlive and i think it also helps following drivers/teams you like on social media.
At the end of the day there's always a highlights program. I know it's pretty elaborate in the Netherlands here (there's even a special part for it in the news)
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Here's all tv channels that should be doing those highlights. I can't tell you which channel actually does them well except for that RTL7 does pretty nice ones but it's mostly focused on T1 + Dutch drivers.
The Red Bull highlights are pretty good, but only really focused on Red Bull drivers.
Red Bull Rally
Red Bull Motorsports
Red Bull TV
And Dakar also has a youtube channel with highlights, in several languages themselves.
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motorsportverso · 10 months ago
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Programação Streaming & TV dias 11-14/01/2024
Quinta-feira-11/01
08:00-Dakar rally-Arabia Saudita-etapa 6-etapa de 48h -dia 1 -L'equipe
21:00-Boletim Dakar rally-Arabia Saudita-A mil por hora-Youtube
22:00-Dakar rally-Arabia Saudita-etapa 6-etapa de 48h -dia 1 -ESPN 4
Sexta-feira-12/01
08:00-Dakar rally-Arabia Saudita-etapa 6-etapa de 48h -dia 2-L'equipe
19:00-Formula E-Mexico-FP1-Youtube\Bandsports
youtube
youtube
21:00-Boletim Dakar rally-Arabia Saudita-A mil por hora-Youtube
22:00-Dakar rally-Arabia Saudita-etapa 6-etapa de 48h -dia 2-ESPN 4
Sabado-13/01
06:00-GT Winter Series-Estoril-Race 1-Youtube
youtube
10:15-Formula E-Mexico-FP2-Youtube\Bandsports
youtube
12:20-Formula E-Mexico-Qualyfing-Youtube\Bandsports
youtube
17:00-Formula E-México-Bandsports\Youtube
youtube
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xtruss · 3 years ago
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Here You Have Watches, There We Have Time
— January 19, 2016 | JosephHouse
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The landscape of northern Mali.
During his years spent in the Sahara Desert, Charles de Foucuald (1858-1916) was a solitary European and Christian presence among the indigenous Tuaregs of the region. Wanting to know them better, Charles learned their stories and poetry and worked on a French-Tuareg dictionary. He drew detailed pictures of everyday Tuareg life, from musical instruments to hair braids. He wanted to know the soul of the people. He wanted to be their brother.
Rene Voillaume, founder of the Little Brothers of Jesus, said that Charles joined “his total dedication to the welfare of the Tuaregs [with] an attentive, realistic charity and a very strong sense of justice.” Loving the Tuaregs was Charles’ school for loving God.
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Charles and Ouksem Ag Chikkat, a Tuareg friend.
The Tuaregs, these nomadic tribes with their distinctive blue robes, remain a mystery to many people today. Below is an interview with a modern-day Tuareg living in France. Moussa Ag Assarid was born in northern Mali around 1975. The desire for additional education led him to France in 1999. He has worked as a journalist, actor, tour guide, and writer. Moussa wrote an autobiographical account of his journeys in a book, There are No Traffic Jams in the Desert: Chronicles of a Tuareg in France.
Moussa was interviewed in 2011 by Victor M. Amelain for ARIEL Magazine (the link to the original article is below). This candid conversation gives insight into the world-view of a people who were important in the life of Charles, the spiritual father of the Joseph House and the Little Sisters.
An interview with Moussa Ag Assarid:
I don’t know my age. I was born in the Sahara desert, with no papers! I was born in a nomadic camp of Tuaregs, between Timbuktu and Gao, in the north of Mali. I have been a shepherd of camels, goats, sheep and cows for my father. Today I study Management in the University of Montpellier. I am a bachelor. I serve as an advocate for the Tuareg shepherds.
What a beautiful headdress!
It is a fine cotton fabric: it allows me to cover my face in the desert when the wind blows sand, and allows me to continue to see and to breathe through it.
It is a beautiful blue color.
We Tuaregs have long been called “the blue men” because of this color. Interestingly the fabric loses the color and transfers some of the blue ink onto our skin.
How do you get this intense blue?
From a plant called indigo, mixed with other natural pigments. The blue, for the Tuaregs, is the color of the world.
Why?
It’s the dominant color, of the sky, the roof of our home.
Who are the Tuareg?
Tuareg means ‘abandoned’, because we are an old nomadic tribe of the desert. We are lonely and proud: masters of the desert, they call us. Our ethnic group is Amazigh (or Berber), and our alphabet is the Tifinagh.
How many are there of you?
Approximately three million, the majority still are nomadic. But the population is decreasing. A wise man said it is necessary for a tribe to disappear to realize they existed. I am working to preserve this tribe.
What do they do for a living?
We shepherd camels, goats, sheep, cows and donkeys in an infinite kingdom of silence.
Is the desert really so silent?
If you are on your own in that silence you hear your heart beat. There is no better place to meet yourself.
What memories do you have of your childhood in the desert?
I wake up with the sun. The goats of my father are there. They give us milk and meat, and we take them were there is water and grass. My great-grandfather did it, and my grandfather, and my father, and me. There was nothing else in the world than that, and I was very happy!
Really? It doesn’t sound very exciting.
It is. At the age of seven you can go alone away from the compound, and for this you are taught the important things—to smell the air, to listen, to see, to orient with the sun and the stars…and to be guided by the camel if you get lost. He will take you where there is water.
This sounds like valuable knowledge, no doubt.
Everything is simple and profound there. There are very few things, and each one has enormous value.
So that world and this one are very different.
There, every little thing gives happiness. Every touch is valuable. We feel great joy just by touching each other, being together. There, nobody dreams of becoming, because everybody already is.
What shocked you most on your first trip to Europe?
I saw people running in the airport. In the desert you only run if a sandstorm is approaching! It scared me, of course.
They were going after their baggage.
Yes, that was it. I also saw signs with naked women. Why this lack of respect for the woman? I wondered. Then at the hotel I saw the first faucet of my life: I saw the water run and wanted to cry.
Because of the waste, the abundance?
Every day of my life had been involved in seeking water. When I see the ornamental fountains here and there, I still feel an intense pain.
Why?
In the early 90s there was a big drought, animals died, and we became sick. I was about twelve years old and my mother died. She was everything to me! She used to tell me stories and taught me to tell stories. She taught me to be myself.
What happened to your family?
I persuaded my father to let me go to school. Every day I walked fifteen kilometers, until one teacher gave me a bed to sleep in and a woman gave me food when I walked by her house. I then understood what was happening; my mother was helping me.
Where did you get interested in school?
A few years before the Paris-Dakar motor rally came through the compound and a journalist dropped a book from her backpack. I picked it up and gave it to her. She gave it to me and talked to me about that book: “The Little Prince.” I promised myself that I would be able to read it one day.
And you did.
Yes, and because of that I won a scholarship to study in France.
A Tuareg going to college!
Ah, what I most miss here is the camel milk. And the wood fires. And walking barefoot on the warm sand. And the stars. We watched them every night, every star is different, just as every goat is different. Here, in the evenings, you watch TV.
That is true. What do you dislike the most here?
You have everything, and it is still not enough for you. You complain. In France people complain all the time! You chain yourself to a bank; everyone is anxious to have things, to have possessions. Everyone is in a rush. In the desert there are no traffic jams, and do you know why? Because there nobody is interested in getting ahead of other people.
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Two Tuareg men in Mali.
Tell me about a moment of deep happiness for you in the desert.
It happens every day, two hours before sunset. The heat decreases, there is still no cold air, and men and animals slowly return to the compound, and their profiles are painted against a sky that is pink, blue, red, yellow, green.
That sounds fascinating.
It’s a magical moment. We all get into the tents and we boil tea. Sitting in silence we listen to the sound of the boiling water. We are immersed in calmness, with our the heart beating to the rhythm of the boiling water, potta potta potta……
How peaceful.
Yes…here you have watches; there, we have time.
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thecrownnet · 4 years ago
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Charles, Diana, and The Crown's best season yet: Review
*Spoilers*
The sad and maddening saga of Charles and Diana — and, of course, Olivia Colman's Queen Elizabeth II — hangs heavy over The Crown’s gripping and bittersweet fourth season.
One of the most heartrending moments, and there are many, in the new season of The Crown comes in episode 3, wryly titled “Fairytale.” We watch as 20-year-old Diana Spencer (Emma Corrin) leaves her London flat, and her former roommates wave and send well-wishes from the landing. The camera follows Diana’s point-of-view, spinning slowly as she descends the stairs, watching her trio of friends grow smaller and smaller above. Outside, a blitzkrieg of paparazzi awaits.
The sad and maddening saga of Charles (Josh O’Connor) and Diana hangs heavy over The Crown’s gripping and bittersweet fourth season (Sunday on Netflix), which spans the late ‘70s through 1990. It was a particularly plot-heavy period for the House of Windsor — an assassination, an avalanche, war, two(!) palace break-ins — which brings a welcome propulsion to this latest batch of episodes, following a somewhat sleepy start.
After a short prologue in 1977, the action leaps forward to 1979 and the initial meeting between Queen Elizabeth (Olivia Colman) and Margaret Thatcher (Gillian Anderson), the U.K.’s first female prime minister. Though they’re just six months apart in age and both hardworking leaders, Elizabeth and “The Iron Lady” — as Thatcher came to be known for her hardline approach to all things governance — soon discover they are far from like-minded peers. A few months later, Lord Mountbatten (Charles Dance) is killed by an IRA bomb, but not before sending his surrogate son Charles a scolding letter advising him to stop moping about Camilla (Emerald Fennell) and find a “sweet and innocent” girl to marry. Enter Diana Spencer. A brief courtship and one successful weekend with the royals at Balmoral later, Diana is declared a perfect match for the heir to throne… by everyone except the man who matters.
Thus begins Diana’s “very drastic transition from teenager to royal princess,” as the Queen Mother (Marion Bailey) puts it. Charles leaves for a six-week tour just after the engagement, and Diana finds herself spending long, isolating days at Buckingham Palace studying the intricacies of royal protocols. Battling loneliness and chilly disdain from her soon-to-be in-laws, Diana struggles with bulimia and consoles herself with the cartloads of letters and gifts from her adoring public. Corrin handles the burden of portraying Diana — one of the most beloved public figures of the 20th century — admirably, and she mirrors the late princess’ shy head tilt and pleading upward gaze perfectly. As Diana’s star rises, Charles feels increasingly overshadowed and undervalued, and he lashes out cruelly at his young wife. O’Connor is uncannily skilled at portraying the prince’s chimeric moods — the arrogance and entitlement, the hangdog malaise, the insecurity and yearning. Charles is a wretched beast, but your heart still breaks for him.
It’s a season of next-level performances, really. Anderson’s turn as Thatcher is so viscerally physical — her head held high under an armored bouffant, her replication of Thatcher’s raspy, received pronunciation simply impeccable — that it’s impossible to avoid the critical cliché: She is transformed. Late in the season, Elizabeth and Thatcher clash over South Africa’s apartheid government — the queen supports sanctions, the prime minister does not — and it results in a tensely repressed showdown so riveting, it’s like watching the Wimbledon finals of acting.
For all of her concerns about Thatcher’s “uncaring” nature, Elizabeth remains unable to offer any measurable form of compassion to her own family. When Thatcher’s son, Mark (Freddie Fox), goes missing in Algeria during the Paris-Dakar rally, the queen is spurred to reconnect with her own adult children. She finds them largely unhappy, and Colman renders Elizabeth’s dismay — present, but never fully felt — beautifully. Alas, this is Colman and company’s final season (Imelda Staunton takes over as HRH in season 5), but at least their sendoff is a sovereign success. Grade: A-
The Crown season 4 premieres Sunday [November 15] on Netflix.
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khaledshash · 5 years ago
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#Repost from @redbullqatar. We are still not over the #Dakar fever yet 😱 . Starting in Europe, moving through Africa, then onto South America, Dakar Rally entered a new chapter in the Middle East! 🗺️ 📍 . You can still catch Dakar Decoded on Red Bull TV 📺 Show link in Bio👆 . #rallydakar #dakarrally #DAKAR2020 #DAKARRALLY2020 #RALLY #rallyraid #motorsports #redbullmotorsports (at Doha4x4 Training Center) https://www.instagram.com/p/B7iR-ajHYRD/?igshid=kd4v0xz2jf1v
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mistressemmedi · 5 years ago
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Dakar 2020 - where to follow
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Here is a list of the official broadcasters for the Dakar. 
Your best bet to follow the Dakar for free is to watch the daily re-cap on Red Bull TV here https://www.redbull.com/int-en/events/dakar-rally-saudi-arabia-2020
Or to download the app 
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advaitsingh · 8 months ago
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TVS Racing: The Pinnacle of Innovation and Speed
Since its founding in 1982, TVS Motor Company's motorsports division, TVS Racing, has been a racing industry leader. TVS Racing continuously pushes boundaries and breaks records by emphasizing innovation and performance. The team's accomplishments include being the first Indian manufacturer to compete in the Dakar Rally and starting the One Make Championship culture in India. The racing landscape is still dominated by TVS Racing.
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gaadikey · 6 years ago
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Sherco TVS Rally Factory Team’s Aravind KP conquers Dakar 2019
Sherco TVS Rally Factory Team’s Aravind KP conquers Dakar 2019
Sherco TVSRally Factory Team’s Aravind KP has successfully completed the 2019 edition of Dakar making him the only Indian to finish the gruesome rally at 37th position. This is KP’s third appearance at Dakar and this successful attempt to finish the rally has brought glory to the team and the country. This edition of Dakar has been touted as one of the toughest in the history of the rally and…
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