Sébastien Ogier will join an elite group of drivers that have won the FIA World Rally Championship four times if he scores maximum points and other results go his way at this weekend's Tour de Corse.
The Frenchman, who is the reigning world champion after winning rallying's top prize in 2013, 2014 and 2015, starts his home event with a 59-point advantage over his Volkswagen Motorsport team-mate Andreas Mikkelsen in the drivers' standings.
If Ogier wins on Corsica's challenging twisty asphalt roads and scores maximum points on the closing Power Stage, his place in the WRC history books will be secured if Mikkelsen fails to score more than three points and the Hyundai duo of Hayden Paddon and Thierry Neuville register less than 19.
A further six crews still have a mathematical chance of winning the WRC crown but Ogier and co-driver Julien Ingrassia are in pole position to equal the record of Juha Kankkunen and Tommi Mäkinen in scooping four championship titles.
However, Ogier will have to be at his best to guarantee championship number four. His recent record on home soil isn't good after retiring with gearshift problems in 2015 and losing more than eight minutes on the first day in 2014 with engine issues.