The race took place over in 11 stages from 30 December 1950 to 23 January 1951, including just 700 on asphalt roads, with 32 starting vehicles (75 teammates and 7 nations) for 31 finishers. A French military team on
a Delahaye pick-up, belonging to the First Category, that of all-terrain vehicles, won the event on one of the six vehicles of this type entered by the brand, divided into two groups. Captain Monnier and Colonel Henri Debrus were part of the victorious crew. For cars, in class >2L. Veglia won over Willys-
Jeep, in class 1.1 to 2L. Lapalu on
Land Rover was the winner, and in less than 1.1L. Ms.
D'Ieteren became the winner, on
Volkswagen. During the same period, André Mercier and Charles de Cortanze (class winner at
Liège-Rome-Liège in 1950 on 203) covered (independently) a route opposite to that of the event in less than 17 days only, on
a Peugeot 203 between 26 December 1950 and 11 January 1951 (). This record was beaten again by the Belgian Henri Loos and the Swiss Henri Maurice Berney, who rode from Cape Town through Algiers to Paris between 16 March and 29 March 1951 on a Ford V8 (), in 13 days, 13 hours and 19 minutes. == 2nd edition (1953) ==