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1982–1983 The existing Groups 1–4 were still permitted in the World Rally Championship during the first year of the new groups. Although some freshly homologated Group B cars were entered from the first round in Monte Carlo, no car from the group made podium at any of the season's 12 rallies. Although the
Audi Quattro was still in essence a Group 4 car, it carried
Hannu Mikkola to the driver's title in 1983.
Lancia had designed a new car to Group B specifications, but the
Lancia 037 still had
rear-wheel drive and was thus less stable than the Quattro over loose surfaces. Nevertheless, the 037 performed well enough for Lancia to capture the manufacturers' title, which was generally considered more prestigious than the drivers' title at the time, with a win to spare. In fact, so low was Lancia's regard for the Drivers Championship that they did not enter a single car into the season finale RAC Rally, despite the fact that driver
Walter Röhrl was still in the running for the title. This may have been, in part, because Röhrl "never dreamed of becoming a world champion." The lenient homologation requirements quickly attracted manufacturers to Group B.
Opel replaced their production-derived
Ascona with the Group B
Manta 400, and
Toyota built a new car based on their
Celica. Like the Lancia 037, both cars were rear-wheel drive; while proving successful in national rallying in various countries, they were less so at the World Championship level, although Toyota won the 1983
Ivory Coast Rally with
Björn Waldegård behind the wheel.
1984–1985 was developed to compete in the
1986 WRC. homologation special for Group B rallying; developed for the
1984 WRC. In 1984, Audi beat Lancia for both the manufacturers' title and drivers' titles, the latter of which was won by
Stig Blomqvist, but received unexpected new competition midway through the year.
Peugeot had joined with its Group B
205 T16. Like the Quattro, the T16 also had
four-wheel drive, but was smaller and lighter. At the wheel was 1981 driver's champion
Ari Vatanen, with future
Ferrari Formula One team manager and FIA President
Jean Todt overseeing the operation. A crash prevented the T16 from winning its first rally, but the writing was on the wall for Audi. Despite massive revisions to the Quattro, including a shorter
wheelbase, Peugeot dominated the 1985 season, although not without mishap—Vatanen plunged off the road in
Argentina and was seriously injured when his seat mounts broke in the ensuing crash. Fellow Peugeot driver
Timo Salonen won the 1985 driver's title with five wins. Although the crash was a sign that Group B cars had already become dangerously quick (despite Vatanen himself having a consistent record of crashing out while leading), several new Group B cars debuted in 1985: • Late in the year, Lancia replaced their outclassed 037 with the
Delta S4, which featured both a turbocharger and a
supercharger for optimum power output. •
Ford returned after several years away with the RS200 and the
Sierra RS Cosworth (though the latter went on to compete in Group A). •
Citroën developed and entered the
BX 4TC, which had proven too heavy and cumbersome to be successful. •
Rover created the distinctive
Metro 6R4, which featured boxy bodywork and a large wing on the front of the car.
1986 For the 1986 season, defending champion Salonen drove the new Evolution 2 version of Peugeot's 205 T16 alongside ex-Toyota driver
Juha Kankkunen. Audi's new Sport Quattro S1 boasted over 600 hp (450 kW) and a huge snowplow-like front end. Lancia's Delta S4 would be in the hands of Finnish prodigy
Henri Toivonen and
Markku Alén, and Ford readied its high-tech RS200 with
Stig Blomqvist and
Kalle Grundel. On the "Lagoa Azul" stage of the
Rally de Portugal near
Sintra, Portuguese driver
Joaquim Santos crested a rise, turning to his right to avoid a small group of spectators. This caused him to lose control of his RS200. The car veered to the right and slid off the road into another group of spectators. Thirty-one people were injured and three were killed. All of the top teams immediately pulled out of the rally and Group B was placed in jeopardy. Disaster struck again in early May at the
Tour de Corse. Lancia's Toivonen was the championship favorite, and once the rally got underway, he was the pace setter. Seven kilometers into the 18th stage, Toivonen's S4 flew off the unguarded edge of a tightening left-hand bend and plunged down a steep wooded hillside. The car landed upside down with its fuel tanks ruptured by the impact. The combination of a red-hot turbocharger,
Kevlar bodywork, and leaking fuel ignited the car and set fire to the dry undergrowth. Toivonen and co-driver
Sergio Cresto died in their seats. With no witnesses to the accident, it was impossible to determine what caused the crash other than that Toivonen had left the road at high speed. Some cite Toivonen's ill health at the time (he reportedly was suffering from the
flu); others suggest mechanical failure or simply the difficulty of driving the car (although Toivonen, like Vatanen, had a career full of crashing out while leading rallies). Up until that stage he was leading the rally by a large margin, with no other driver challenging him. Independent teams would enter the European Championship too, though the limited options of permitted Group B cars were not as competitive or ubiquitous as newer Group A cars. Porsche's
959 never entered a WRC event, though it did compete in the Middle East championship and won the
Paris-Dakar Rally in 1986. Peugeot adapted their T16 to run in the
Dakar Rally. Ari Vatanen won the event in 1987, 1989 and 1990. Improved Peugeot and Audi cars also competed in the
Pikes Peak Hillclimb in
Colorado. Walter Röhrl's Quattro S1 won the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb in 1987 and set a new record at the time. Audi used their Group B experience to develop a production based racing car for the
Trans-Am and
IMSA GTO series in 1988 and 1989 respectively. Many ex-rally cars found homes in European
rallycross events from the beginning of 1987 until the end of 1992. The
MG Metro 6R4 and Ford RS200 became frequent entries in national championships. For 1993, the FIA replaced the Group B models in the
European Rallycross Championship with prototypes that had to be based on existing Group A models.
Group S The cancellation of Group B, coupled with the tragedies of 1986, brought about the scrapping of Group B's proposed replacement:
Group S. Group S rules would have limited car engine power to 300 hp (225 kW). To encourage innovative designs, just ten examples of a car would have been required for
homologation, rather than the 200 required for Group B. By the time of its cancellation, at least four Group S prototypes had been built: the
Lancia ECV, the
Toyota MR2-based 222D, the Opel Kadett Rallye 4x4 (a.k.a. Vauxhall Astra 4S) and the Lada Samara S-proto, and new cars were also planned by both Audi (the 002 Quattro) and Ford (a Group S modification of the RS200). The cancellation of Group S angered many rally insiders who believed the new specification to be both safer than Group B and more exciting than Group A. The Group S concept was revived by the FIA in 1997 as the
World Rally Car specification, which persisted until 2021. WRC cars were limited to and required 2,500 examples of a model but, unlike Group S, also had to share certain parts with their base production models. == Circuit racing ==