ALULA, Saudi Arabia — South African driver Henk Lategan crushed the first half of the marathon stage out of AlUla in the Dakar Rally on Wednesday.
Lategan, last year's runner-up, celebrated his fifth career Dakar stage win after leading the 452-kilometer special with sandy canyons and stony plateaus from the 57-kilometer time check.
He started 23rd in the morning and his Toyota overtook 11 cars. He built a lead of 8 1/2 minutes and eventually won after nearly five hours by a massive seven minutes over Nasser Al-Attiyah's Dacia.
Five-time champion Al-Attiyah also moved to second overall behind Lategan, 3:55 behind. The only other driver within 13 minutes of the leader in the general standings was Ford's Mattias Ekström.
Lategan became the fourth different leader in four days in the general standings — not seen on the Dakar since 2014 — but will jeopardize that when he has to open the way in the second half of the marathon stage on Thursday, heading east to Ha'il.
Mitch Guthrie, Tuesday's stage winner and first-time Dakar leader, showed the pitfalls of opening the way when the American finished 44 minutes behind Lategan on stage four.
All racers have reached a barebones bivouac without service help from their teams. But drivers can help each other. Lategan was grateful to have protected all of his tires for the marathon finish on Thursday.
Lategan said he'd had nine punctures since the race began on Saturday but chose to gamble on Wednesday on taking on the savage rocky sections.