Kiwi rally driver Hayden Paddon has quickly come to grips with his new car and was second after the first day of Rally Sweden, and he also played a leading hand in avoiding a driver's boycott.
Paddon and co-driver John Kennard won the last two stages of the day in their New Generation Hyundai i20 WRC, jumping from sixth to second overall, 26.9 seconds behind reigning world champion Sebastien Ogier in a Volkswagen. They were able to complete six stages - eight stages were originally scheduled - but a lack of snow initially played havoc with the plans. As heavy snow started to fall, three stages were run in reverse order, and Paddon excelled as others got into trouble or suffered mechanical woes.
Paddon is hopeful of benefitting again tonight (NZT) with their road position of ninth (running order is decided by championship places for the first two days) when more snow is forecast. Just 15 seconds separated Paddon in second and Andreas Mikkelsen in sixth.
Mikkelsen was Ogier's closest challenger until he hit a tree stump and spun, losing 20 seconds, and Kris Meeke was another casualty. The British driver had been second when he hit a stone buried in the road and the impact sent his car into retirement.
"To be in second was much more than we were expecting, especially after this morning," he said. "We had an advantage this afternoon [running ninth on the road] which was a disadvantage this morning when there was no snow. To come up to second, to be in a good close fight with four or five of us to be on the podium tomorrow is a nice position to be in, but it's going to be a big fight, very close. We have to try to find some improvements overnight, try to get a bit more comfortable in the car. There's a lot more room for improvement so we have to keep pushing."