It’s already the fourth stage win for a Porsche in the 27th Monte-Carlo Historic Rally, in seven stages contested in the Classification Stage since Saturday morning, but the first one for a 924 model that negotiated perfectly RS7 between Saint-Bonnet-le-Froid and Vanosc (28.8 km). The start of this stage was broadcast live on the YouTube channel of Automobile Club de Monaco (ACM), the event’s organisers, in the Haute-Loire village where hundreds of fans had come to spend their Sunday afternoon!
Germany’s Jörg Pohlemann and Marc Stoll, in their number 924 produced in 1976, outclassed another old-timer, the Alfa Romeo GTV (from 1971) of young Jules Picoreau and Camille Béal, two childhood friends from Valence, the rally’s HQ, who made up the youngest crew in this 2025 edition (see specific article this Sunday on the official acm.mc website). It was on a dry road but in a totally wintery setting, just like in the heyday of the Monte-Carlo in Haute-Loire, but in WRC version.
Women, children, teenagers and grandparents all turned out at Saint-Bonnet, and in the meadows all around, to see Jules and Camille finish joint 2nd with five other crews: the Porsche 911 turbo of Spaniards Alvaro Ochagavias Temino and Manuel Macho Gomez, the Peugeot 104 ZS of Jean-Pierre Verneuil and Philippe Mareschal, the Opel Kadett GTE of Raymond Durand and Patrick Monassier, the Renault 5 Alpine of Patrice and Benjamin Lamotte, and the Autobianchi A112 Abarth of Carlo and Enrico Merenda. It really was a family Sunday in the Haute-Loire, on the road and all around.
Once again, the Belgian tandem of Michel Decremer-Jennifer Hugo (Alfa Romeo Giulia TI) managed the situation perfectly, taking 8th place in this RS7 and consolidating their position as overall leader. An increasingly pertinent leader, ahead of the Spaniards in a BMW, the Lithuanians in a Jaguar, the Greeks in a Fiat 128 Rally and the Italians in an Austin Mini Cooper S. But there was still one last special stage, RS8, to be contested before returning to Valence to round off this spectacular Classification Leg.
The Spaniards Alvaro Ochagavias Temino and Manuel Macho Gomez (Porsche 911 turbo 2.4l), who had already won RS4 at the end of Saturday, did it again late on Sunday morning, winning the RS6 between Burzet and Saint-Martial, via Lachamp-Raphaël. It was another classic Monte-Carlo stage which they negotiated perfectly, slightly better than the steady and consistent overall leaders, Belgium’s Michel Decremer and Jennifer Hugo (Alfa Romeo Giulia TI).
Just like the previous stage, RS6 was contested on a generally dry road, in a dream landscape, with lots of snow on the slopes, in front of many fans who had made the trip to admire the rolling museum of the 27th Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique. The Spaniards finished ahead of the Decremer-Hugo tandem, tied with the Lancia Fulvia Coupé of Italians Fabrizio Rossi and Marco Frascaroli, who had won the previous stage and launched a fine comeback in the overall standings.
Just behind, a former winner, co-driver Sébastien Chol, perfectly navigated Ludovic de Luca, the driver of the small Peugeot 104 ZS bearing number 15, to 4th place in this RS6, tied with the BMW 323i of Luis Climent Asensio, the former Spanish rally champion, and Carles Jimenez Valls. As a direct consequence of this stage, the overall standings have shifted again behind the Belgian tandem Decremer-Hugo. The Spanish BMW is now in second place, just ahead of the Austin Mini Cooper driven by Italians Giorgio Schön and Francesco Giammarino, who won RS1 on Saturday morning.
After these two morning stages, a welcome break was organised in Saint-Agrève, on the Market Square, and as of each and every year, the town council had pulled out all the stops. More than 200 crews were able to enjoy local produce in a friendly atmosphere, in front of many nostalgic fans who didn’t want to miss the 27th Rallye Monte Carlo Historique for anything in the world. The next target was another long-standing ritual stopping-off point for the Monte Carlo: Saint-Bonnet-le-Froid, in Haute-Loire, to continue following in the footsteps of the greatest rally drivers of all time.
Heading to the Ardèche this Sunday morning from Valence, for the 2nd part of the Classification Leg. The first regularity stage, between Saint-Julien-du-Gua and the Col des Quatre Vios (SR5, 16.8km), started in cold conditions. As on the previous day, the temperature was below 0°C but the sky was of an immaculate blue and there was plenty of snow around, in the landscape. The result was very different from Saturday stages: a 1982 VW Scirocco GTI won this RS5, that of Ilya Kashin and Boris Kostyrko, tied with the BMW 2002 TI of Laurent and David Combier, on one hand, and the Lancia Fulvia Coupé of Fabrizio Rossi and Marco Frascaroli, on the other. The only crew in the Top 8 on this stage to have chosen to compete in the low average category.
These three crews were awarded just 50 penalty points on this stage. And the battle was fierce, on a very twisty route, as five other cars only took 60 penalty points over 16 km: two other BMWs, including that of young Isère chef Louis Chabran, two Porsches, a 911 and a 924, as well as a Lancia Fulvia in the hands of a Danish duo, Simonsen-Kristensen. And that was just the warm-up for the big event of the morning, the passage through the formidable Burzet stage on the way to Saint-Bonnet-le-Froid, where the ACM had prepared a live stream on its YouTube account from 3pm.
In the overall classification, nothing changed at the top, with the Belgian duo of Michel Decremer and Jennifer Hugo, in their 1965 Alfa Romeo Giulia TI, still leading after limiting damage in this stage (9th). But behind them, in the chasing pack, the small Austin Mini Cooper S of Italians Giorgio Schön and Francesco Giammarino (2nd) passed the Jaguar of Lithuanians Karolis Raysis and Ovidijus Meilunas (3rd), now followed very closely by the BMW 323i of Luis Climent Asensio, a former Spanish rally champion, and Carles Jimenez Valls (4th). And still in the Top 5, the Fiat 128 Rally of Greek drivers Aris Georgosopoulos and Ioulios Iatridis.
On the road to the Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique, episode 2
Even if their two ages are added together, Jules Picoreau and Camille Beal remain younger than the car they are navigating, with already a lot of experience. Meet crew no. 6, the youngest at the start of this 27th edition.
A generation separates this car from its crew. Jules Picoreau and Camille Beal, each 24 years old, are competing together for the third time in the Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique aboard a splendid 1971 Alfa Romeo Giulia GT 2000. A family collector’s vehicle, the 54-year-old red racing car no longer holds any secrets for these best childhood friends, who met in primary school.
Passionate about motorsport since their youngest age, the two Valentinois saw themselves as little ones one day teaming up on the course of an official event. “It was a dream to race together. We were able to make it come true three years ago and since then, we got caught up in the game”, confides Jules, who occupies the driver’s seat.
Sitting to his right in the car, Camille continues: “We really love cars and these models, we usually admire them in museums, without seeing them on the roads.” In addition to living their dream to the full, the youngest crew of this 27th edition finds themselves among other very iconic cars.
“It’s wonderful to follow Lancia Stratos or Porsches. And then, they’re so much more fun to drive than modern everyday cars”, they affirm confidently. Every noise, vibration or slip is experienced intensely by crew number 6, who finished 5th in 2024.
Jules Picoreau and Camille Beal were in 42nd place at the end of the Classification Leg 1, this Saturday at the end of the day. Just a few minutes after entering the Parc Fermé on the Place du Champ-de-Mars, the two young men analyzed: “We had a lot of fun on all the Regularity Stages, which were a little more challenging than in previous years, particularly because of the conditions.”
Neither the snow nor the ice deflected them from their trajectory. “Our goal is above all to have fun, and the most important thing is to bring the car home”, they confirm, before adding with honesty and ambition: “If we can do as well or better than last year, that would be great.” So let’s forget their young age, which many competitors must envy them, and let the golden youth of this Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique have fun on the roads and Regularity Stages that made them dream so much.
An absolute Classic rounded off the first day of the 27th Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique in style, between La Motte-Chalançon and Saint-Nazaire-le-Désert (RS4, 20.6km). Juste like RS2 around noon, it was won by a Porsche. The 911 turbo 2.4l of an all-Spanish tandem, Alvaro Ochagavias Temino and Manuel Macho Gomez, only took 70 penalty points on this special stage, 10 points less than the Belgian tandem Decremer-Hugo, again 2nd, as in RS3, and even more firmly established at the top of the overall classification in their 1965 Alfa Romeo Giulia TI.
Decremer, a two-time winner (2017, 2024) with two different co-drivers (Yannick Albert, Jennifer Hugo), but always in an Opel, chose this year to attempt an almost impossible challenge: to win the RMCH, overall, in the ‘low average’ category, which obliges him to drive more slowly than if he had chosen the high average, as on his two previous successes in the Principality. On Saturday, it was the right choice, because the conditions were really tricky, but nobody can say this evening that it will be the winning bet, right to the end.
On Sunday, the 2nd part of the Classification Stage promises much, with once again four regularity stages, including a much-anticipated passage through Saint-Bonnet-le-Froid, the Haute-Loire village made famous by its chefs and by Rally Monte-Carlo. This will be the occasion for the ACM to organise a second streaming event for internet users, live on its YouTube channel, following Friday’s finish in Valencia. At that point, we’ll know whether the Decremer-Hugo tandem has managed to resist the pressure of the many contenders for overall victory.
In Saturday evening’s standings, behind the Belgians, and only a quarter of the way through the rally, is the Jaguar of Lithuanians Karolis Raysis and Ovidijus Meilunas (2nd), chased by the small Austin Mini Cooper S of Italians Giorgio Schön and Francesco Giammarino (3rd), winners of RS1 on Saturday morning, the Fiat 128 Rally of Greeks Aris Georgosopoulos and Ioulios Iatridis (4th), winners of RS3 on Saturday afternoon, and the BMW 323i of Luis Climent Asensio, a former Spanish rally champion, and Carles Jimenez Valls (5th). And Bruno Saby (Ford Capri) is still around (10th). Very promising, indeed!
Greece struck again in the RS3 of the 27th Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique, on Saturday afternoon, as a new crew, also in a Fiat 128 Rally, took over from their compatriots and won the stage between La Piarre and Valdrôme (13.7km) with flying colours. Aris Georgosopoulos and Ioulios Iatridis only took 40 penalty points in this stage, which was snow-covered on the uphill section and then very wet on the downhill section, but without any icy patches.
This stage also did the trick for the rally’s absolute benchmark in the ‘medium-low’ category, Belgians Michel Decremer and Jennifer Hugo in a 1965 Alfa Romeo Giulia TI, two-time winners of the RMCH (2017, 2024). Behind the Fiat and the Alfa, the places of honour were taken by Schön-Giammarino, 3rd in their Austin Mini Cooper S. Behind them, multi-starred chef Michel Chabran (BMW 323i) was a joint 5th, ahead of his son Louis (BMW 1602) to whom he handed over the running of his gourmet restaurant in Pont-sur-l’Isère.
In the very provisional overall classification, before the last stage of this first day of racing, the Decremer-Hugo tandem, as formidable as ever, was in the lead, ahead of the two Greek Fiat 128 Rallye crews (2nd and 3rd), the Jaguar Mk2 3.8 of Karolis Raysis and Ovidijus Meilunas (4th), the Mini Cooper of the Italian crew (5th) and the Ford Capri of Bruno Saby (6th). But anything was still possible, including a complete shake-up of the standings after the RS4 at the end of the day…
On the road of the Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique, episode 1 – For the 27th edition, entry was open to cars that had competed in the event between 1911 and 1983. In the end, 219 cars were allowed to take part, including the oldest, a Sunbeam Alpine. James Pohl and Joyce Mordenti are in for the second time on the roads that have written the legend of the event, with their 1953 car.
It’s not the most powerful, nor the sportiest. But there’s no denying that this old-timer is reallycharming and must intrigue a good number of enthusiasts who came to admire the cars entered in this 2025 Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique. The Sunbeam Alpine, number 224, which set off from Monaco on Thursday evening in the pouring rain, is officially the doyenne of this 27th edition.
James Pohl, a.k.a. Jim, and Joyce Mordentin are no strangers to this car, which was completely rebuilt in the 90s by Joyce’s father, “an amazing mechanic”. Last year, they had already set out to conquer these roads and this legendary course. But the hard law of Monte Carlo had struck. “We started in Reims, and we broke down in the middle of the night of the Concentration Leg”, recalls the American driver, still marked by his first experience.
Their tenacity paid off in the end: after an express return trip to Yorkshire, England, to collect spare parts, Jim Pohl was able to repair his white Sunbeam Alpine and set off for Valencia. He adds: “We talked to the officials, and said ‘Please, can we just drive? We know we are dead last; we don’t care about winning, we want to participate’.”
A princely meeting
Crew 178 eventually reentered the race and managed to get to Monaco, their original target. Already very happy to have reached the Principality, Jim Pohl and Joyce Mordenti were not at the end of their surprises. “H.S.H. Prince Albert II of Monaco wanted to meet us because the Sunbeam Alpine is the same kind of car that his mother, Princess Grace, drove in the film To Catch a Thief. His father, Prince Rainier III, also drove one a lot.”
For 2025, there’s no question of taking revenge, but neither do the pair dream of emulating their hero, Sheila Van Damm, winner of the Coupe des Dames on the Rallye Monte-Carlo in 1955 in a Sunbeam MK III with Anne Hall. Jim Pohl and Joyce Mordenti agree: “This year, we just want to drive every mile on the Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique! We do not want to break down again.”
The good news is that the Parcours de Concentration went well for the seven-decade-old Sunbeam Alpine. Crew 224 arrived at the Place du Champs-de-Mars on Friday afternoon, along with 215 other competitors. Before tackling the Classification Stage 1 this Saturday, with the first four regularity stages.
A 1976 Porsche 911 Carrera, driven by Irishman Paul Okane and co-driven by Danish driver Tage Gelj, won the second regularity stage of the 27th Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique on Saturday, between Les Nonnières and Chichilianne (SR2, 16.3km). Behind this pairing, and in wintery and treacherous conditions, a venerable 1978 Saab 96, with a Lithuanian crew on board, took 2nd place in this RS2, tied with the Fiat 128 Rally of the Greek crew which had won SR1.
It was another beautiful stage, in wintery temperatures and with lots of people lining the road. It was a stage in which Bruno Saby, at the wheel of his Ford Capri bearing number 38, that of the Isère department, once again showed the tip of his nose. The winner of the Monte Carlo Rally in 1988, in a Lancia Delta HF, had already taken 8th place in SR1, and he did slightly better: tied 5th in RS2, thanks to his talent as a driver and the obvious qualities of his 1970 Ford Capri 2300 S. After the morning stages, Saby’s Capri was 3rdoverall.
Incidentally, it was the first win for a Porsche in this 2025 edition of the RMCH, given that 81 German cars took the start in Valence on Saturday morning, the majority of them Porsches. Three retirements were recorded on Friday in the German ranks, those of an Opel Kadett and two Porsches, on the route of the Concentration Leg to Valence. In this armada of six major makes (Porsche, Volkswagen, Opel, BMW, Audi and Mercedes), the Porsches are by far the cars best suited to a Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique in winter conditions, those of the start of this 2025 edition.
In the overall classification, and before the two afternoon stages (SR3 and SR4), there was a total surprise with a pair of Greek leaders, Georgios Alevizopoulos and Nikolaos Palyvos, in a Fiat 128 Rally, ahead of all the favourites. But not the Ford Escort RS2000 of Dane Henrik Bjerregaard and Czech Jaromir Svec, winners of the RMCH in 2022. The number 2 Ford was trapped on the uphill section of this RS2 and had to retire. The rally is still a long one, and a lot was meant to happen this afternoon before the return to Valence for a healthy dinner and a well-deserved night’s rest.
The first regularity stage of the 27th Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique, between Col Gaudissart, the entry point into the Massif du Vercors, and Cîme du Mas, just outside La-Chapelle-en-Vercors (SR1, 18.1km), started as scheduled at 9.20am on Saturday morning for the 215 crews who had checked in Valence on Friday (out of the 219 who started on Thursday from four cities, Monaco, Reims, Bad Hombourg and Turin). And it enabled two small cars, an Austin Mini Cooper S and a Fiat 128 Rallye, to beat all the big ones.
The first winning team of this 27th edition is not made up of unknowns. It is the Mini Cooper team of Italians Giorgio Schon and Francesco Giammarino, led by Giorgio, an endurance driver in his younger days. The Fiat team was 100% Greek, made of Georgios Alevizopoulos and Nikolaos Palyvos. They finished tied with the Italians, with only a 100-point penalty score on this RS1, quite a performance. At the other end of the standings, the car ranked 215th in this stage, a Porsche 911, took 30,000 penalty points over 18 km. But they made it to the finish!
This first RS1 in the Drôme (out of 17 scheduled until Tuesday evening) was covered in heavy snow in places (totally from km 2 to km 7, then partially from km 7 to km 15), and the ambient temperature at the start of the morning was just below 0°C. As a direct consequence, the many Porsche drivers of all ages (the drivers and the cars!), all equipped with a rear engine, had a lot of fun, while delighting the many spectators who braved the cold to get to the sides of this stage. The long drifts in slow motion, for fun, particularly on Col de l’Echarasson, can all be used as promotional videos for Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique, the most legendary event of all.
Out of 219 crews authorized to take part in the 27th Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique (RMCH), 215 cars arrived in Valence on Friday afternoon, and perfectly parked on Champ de Mars in the heart of the Drôme capital. Some had set off from Monaco, others from Bad Homburg in Germany, Torino and Reims. They had to cover between 400 and 800 km, depending on their starting city, and had to pass a number of compulsory checkpoints on the concentration route chosen by their crew.
The first car arrived in Valence just before 1pm. The Ford Escort RS2000 (1979) of Dane Henrik Bjerregaard and Czech Jaromir Svec, winners of the RMCH in 2022. They had set off from Monaco at 7pm on Thursday evening, with race number 2 on the doors. They were therefore the first to be fitted with their Tripy-R, the electronic box with GPS and timing that will enable the organisers, in the control room of the Automobile Club de Monaco (ACM), to record their performances and above all their averages on the 17 regularity stages (SR) on the very tough menu of this 2025 edition.
All the other cars entered then lined up at the entrance to the Parc Fermé. Finally, as the sun set over the Drôme, everyone but four cars had checked in, including the 1959 Austin Healey that had travelled all the way from Germany, and the Alfa Romeo Giulia TI of the two-time Belgian winners (2017, 2024), Michel Decremer and Jennifer Hugo, who left Reims on Thursday evening with the number 200.
Streaming on Champ de Mars
From 3pm onwards, the ACM streamed the arrival of the competitors live on its YouTube channel, with on-site commentary in minute detail by Alexandre Khaldi, the well-known motorsport presenter, and Gerry Mestre, Chairman of the ACM Historic Car Commission. It was a sequence that was closely followed by all regular ACM followers on the social networks as they awaited the start of the first part of the Classification Event at 7.30am on Saturday morning. The four regularity stages will provide an opportunity to sort out the former winners, the new contenders and some genuine rally champions, such as Frenchman Bruno Saby, Italy’s Maurizio Verini, Spain’s Luis Climent Asensio and American John Buffum, among several big names in this 27th edition.
Everything that happens on the roads of the Drôme and Ardèche, in the villages of Isère and Vercors, will be reported in real time on the official website and social networks of the ACM until the grand finale on Tuesday evening on Col de Turini, shortly before midnight. The next stream is scheduled for Sunday at 3pm in the village of Saint-Bonnet-le-Froid, in the heart of Haute-Loire. The line-up for this Rallye Monte-Carlo Historique has never been better, spicier or more exciting, a bit like the cuisine in many restaurants, Michelin-starred or not, of the beautiful host-city of Valence. More than ever the rally’s operational HQ, where crews will return on Saturday evening after a great day’s driving.