Mikko Hirvonen's dreams of winning the World Rally Championship for Abu Dhabi Ford took a dent on Friday as Sebastien Loeb, his championship rival, took charge of Rally Spain.
The pair had gone into the rally level on points, but Loeb will take a 30.6-second lead over Hirvonen's teammate Jari-Matti Latvala into Saturday's second leg, with Hirvonen a further 24.2 seconds adrift.
Latvala had led going into the sixth and final stage of Friday's first leg, but he hit problems, losing 46.2 seconds to see his advantage disappear.
Hirvonen, who was slowed by dust from cars running in front of him in the opening stages, had built up speed as the day had gone on, but he looks unlikely to be able to catch Loeb in the remaining two days of the event.
A victory for Loeb would mean that a win for Hirvonen in the final round of the championship in Britain next month would not be enough to take the title unless Loeb finished no higher than third.
It had been a three-way fight for the title going into the event, but Sebastien Ogier, Loeb's Citroen teammate, who had only been three points adrift of the lead pair, lost more than 90 seconds due to a puncture on stage five and his hopes of a podium finish are slim.
He is 1min 53secs behind his teammate, and his main focus will now be on helping Loeb by trying to catch Hirvonen and limiting the number of points that the Finn takes from the event.
Sheikh Khalid Al Qassimi, driving the third Abu Dhabi car, is in 16th place, more than four minutes off the pace.
Saturday's itinerary sees the drivers tackle six stages, with six more Sunday on the final day.
Honeymoonish
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Day 3, Dubai Test: At a glance
Moment of the day Lahiru Gamage, the Sri Lanka pace bowler, has had to play a lot of cricket to earn a shot at the top level. The 29-year-old debutant first played a first-class game 11 years ago. His first Test wicket was one to savour, bowling Pakistan opener Shan Masood through the gate. It set the rot in motion for Pakistan’s batting.
Stat of the day – 73 Haris Sohail took 73 balls to hit a boundary. Which is a peculiar quirk, given the aggressive intent he showed from the off. Pakistan’s batsmen were implored to attack Rangana Herath after their implosion against his left-arm spin in Abu Dhabi. Haris did his best to oblige, smacking the second ball he faced for a huge straight six.
The verdict One year ago, when Pakistan played their first day-night Test at this ground, they held a 222-run lead over West Indies on first innings. The away side still pushed their hosts relatively close on the final night. With the opposite almost exactly the case this time around, Pakistan still have to hope they can salvage a win from somewhere.
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