
When you are racing across rocks and sand at over 120 km/h; accurate navigation can be a matter of life and death. Reading 400 specially written pace notes which cover a 400km special stage, without rolling off the gas, takes hyper focus and nerves of steel.
What’s more if you want to win a Dakar, or even finish well in a stage then racing intuition needs to be teamed with military grade preparation.
So the burning question here is; are Dakar riders superhuman athletes, or highly trained navigation machines? Or both? Interestingly, while the route notes themselves - which are issued before each stage by the Dakar officials, are the same for each rider, the approach employed by each athlete varies hugely.
To get a better understanding of the challenges involved, we talked to two riders who excel in this dark art of the Dakar - Monster Energy Honda HRC Team’s Adrien Van Beveren and Nacho Cornejo…
If You Can Read Faster You Can Ride Faster
“Navigation has always been the key”, states Van Beveren, “If I look back when the Dakar Rally in the bike category was a question between Marc Coma and Cyril Despres [year 2001-2015], the battle was so tight that one was only winning because of a navigation mistake made by the other.
The point is that to make navigation accurate in our modern times of the Dakar, the roadbook has become so precise. In a sense there is less room for intuition, and you need a lot of training just to read and ride at top speed. We hardly close the throttle when we look down at the roadbook. Think that if we were given Marc Coma’s roadbooks, we wouldn’t be able to ride at our speed, which is averagely between 90 and 120 km/h according to the terrain.