Peugeot’s Legendary Group B Gold Standard and Kankkunen’s Rise to Fame

Drivers always have a soft spot‍ for machines that deliver a ‍maiden world title​ and that’s exactly why World Rally Championship legend Juha Kankkunen lists⁤ the Peugeot 205 T16 as his favourite⁤ car.

Kankkunen’s pick, which carried ⁢him to the first of four world titles in‌ 1986,⁢ is arguably one ‌of⁤ the WRC’s most ⁢revered vehicles. The Peugeot​ 205 T16 embodied the pinnacle of the infamous, dangerous and downright bonkers Group B era ⁤that spanned 1983 to 1986.

Peugeot, then led by ⁣Jean ‍Todt, debuted the 205 T16 midway through the 1984⁣ season and made a strong impression by winning three of the year’s final four rallies. It began life producing 350 horsepower but by the time Kankkunen arrived on the scene in 1986 ​- having‍ impressed Peugeot management with breakthrough wins in Kenya and the Ivory Coast for Toyota in 1985 – the fire-breathing E2 version was launched. Huge wings and noticeable front aero devices enhanced a chassis whose 1.8-litre⁢ turbo-charge ‍engine ⁤now delivered 500 horsepower.

The car won back-to-back manufacturers titles in 1985-86, winning 13 of the 25 rallies across those two seasons between Ari⁤ Vatanen, Timo Salonen, Bruno Saby and Kankkunen.

“This was my first title and you always remember the first one. Those​ cars were made for serious drivers,” Kankkunen⁣ tells Motorsport.com. “It was nice to drive but at the time there was a lot of danger, it was physically very hard⁣ and you had to think about driving ⁢a lot ⁣because you ​could destroy the tyres in five kilometres if ‍you went flat out.

“Back then you had​ 30km and 50km stages. There was much more tactical driving than nowadays.”

Kankkunen enjoyed the challenge of ‍driving the fearsome, unsophisticated Group B machine

Photo by: Motorsport Images

Kankkunen enjoyed the challenge of ‍driving the fearsome, unsophisticated Group B machine

Kankkunen met the challenge of driving the fearsome, unsophisticated Group B machine in a solitary​ season behind the wheel in 1986 as a replacement for Vatanen, who was injured in a Rally Argentina crash. ‍It was a season of ⁣success for the Finn in extremely difficult circumstances following the⁣ tragic deaths of Lancia superstar Henri Toivonen and co-driver Sergio Cresto in Corsica that triggered a call ⁢to end Group B rules at the end of‌ the year.

Kankkunen tamed the 205 T16 on his way to wins⁤ in Sweden, Greece (Acropolis) and New‌ Zealand, although his maiden world title wasn’t without controversy after the Peugeots were disqualified from the Sanremo Rally. ​A dispute initially arose from a timekeeping error that, when corrected, put⁢ the Peugeots further ahead of the Italian Lancia⁤ squad. Its boss Cesare Fiorio ⁤then suggested to stewards that the 205s were⁤ running unauthorised aerodynamic underbody sills.

Lancia’s Alen won the final ‌round – the⁤ Olympus Rally ⁤in​ the USA – and briefly was ⁢declared champion, only for‍ governing body FISA (now FIA) to annul the Sanremo results 11 days later,

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