Just three Tatras at the start of the 2016 Dakar

“Talking too much brings bad luck”
Ales Loprais raced his first seven Dakars in a Tatra before switching to a MAN in 2015 when he realised that his Tatra wasn’t going to be able to meet FIA regulations. He finished in 4th place that year but in 2016 raced an IVECO with the De Rooy team after getting chatting to De Rooy Junior while they were both getting a massage. Apparently De Rooy told Ales’ physio to give him a good massage because his back must be hurting! Unfortunately Ales went out early with mechanical problems but for 2017 he is back to his first love, the Tatra. It is the brand with which he has achieved his ‘only’ Dakar podium to date (3rd place in 2007) and with which he’d very much like to take his first Dakar win, something his uncle Karel Loprais achieved a staggering 6 times during his career.
“It is great to be back with the Tatra team, they made me a good offer but I was also persuaded by the Czech fans who really pushed me to go back to the brand. I don’t like to talk too much about what might happen on the Dakar -I think it brings bad luck- but obviously, after winning the Silk Way and finishing on the podium on the Dakar, I’m not entering just to make up the numbers. This year I have an excellent team behind me, a good truck and some very experienced co-drivers in the form of Jiri Stross and Martin Prokop’s WRC navigator, Jan Tomanek. Let’s just say that all the ingredients are there to be able to achieve a good result.”
Dakar2017Loprais
Just three Tatras are entered in the 2017 Dakar, mainly because the Bonver Dakar Team experienced health problems last year after the Silk Way Rally. They will head for the Africa Eco race instead.  The disabled Albert Llovera will therefore be the only BonverDakar  Project Tatra representative in South America.
With Marin Kolomy and Ales Loprais as drivers, the Buggyra Team can present the strongest Tatra team for years.
Ales Loprais: “Talking too much brings bad luck”

Ales Loprais raced his first seven Dakars in a Tatra before switching to a MAN in 2015 when he realised that his Tatra wasn’t going to be able to meet FIA regulations. He finished in 4th place that year but in 2016 raced an IVECO with the De Rooy team after getting chatting to De Rooy Junior while they were both getting a massage. Apparently De Rooy told Ales’ physio to give him a good massage because his back must be hurting! Unfortunately Ales went out early with mechanical problems but for 2017 he is back to his first love, the Tatra. It is the brand with which he has achieved his ‘only’ Dakar podium to date (3rd place in 2007) and with which he’d very much like to take his first Dakar win, something his uncle Karel Loprais achieved a staggering 6 times during his career.
“It is great to be back with the Tatra team, they made me a good offer but I was also persuaded by the Czech fans who really pushed me to go back to the brand. I don’t like to talk too much about what might happen on the Dakar -I think it brings bad luck- but obviously, after winning the Silk Way and finishing on the podium on the Dakar, I’m not entering just to make up the numbers. This year I have an excellent team behind me, a good truck and some very experienced co-drivers in the form of Jiri Stross and Martin Prokop’s WRC navigator, Jan Tomanek. Let’s just say that all the ingredients are there to be able to achieve a good result.”
Martin Kolomy: “The signing of Ales (Loprais) is a major advance for us”
Back with a new truck, the Tatra Phoenix, Martin Kolomy is hoping for a better result than in 2016, when he finished in 17th place overall, after having knocked on the door of the Top 5 earlier on in the race. To take on the might of the De Rooy and Kamaz teams he will be once again counting on his faithful crew members, the Kilian brothers, David and Rene. He will also be able to count on the support of the Tatra Buggyra Racing team’s latest recruit, none other than Ales Loprais.
M.K. “The signing of Ales is, in my opinion, a major advance for us. Team success comes from having more quick drivers. In addition, in the past two years Ales has been learning new things in foreign teams and I believe that his experience could be very interesting and inspiring for us.”
The Buggyra team in detail: http://www.buggyra.com/team
Albert Llovera
participated in the Dakar 2016 to the controls of a truck. A couple of months before the appointment, a pilot was injured and had to resign. They proposed to occupy his place. He showed up without ever having brought a truck. He thought that it would serve him to make miles and get experience for future editions. Despite the riskiness of the decision, it did not go wrong. It finished in the position 35.
This will be his fifth participation in the Dakar. In 2015 I managed to finish the test in a buggy after two years trying it – 2007 and 2014. He managed to fulfil a personal challenge: to complete the world’s toughest raid wheelchair rally. His desire for improvement is incontestable since at 18 years of suffering a ski accident that caused a spinal cord injury and loss of motor skills. Her life has always been closely linked to sport, before and after the accident. With 17 participated in the Olympic Games of Winter of Sarajevo. He then competed in Paralympic basketball, played adventure sports and developed a long career as a rally driver, showing his versatility to drive in snow, dirt or sand, to the controls of cars and trucks. He returns to the Dakar with the same truck as last year, after two tests in the Czech Republic and Morocco, and with the same spirit of struggle and improvement he has always demonstrated.
A.LL: “Last year I lived a very rewarding experience, despite being my first time in a truck. The first few days I had problems with the adjustment to the controls. We lost 7 or 8 hours. Another day we broke a transmission on the sand, we arrived very late and did not give us time other than to change monkeys and come out again. This year I would like to do better than last year and be among the top 20. The Dakar is an adventure that is getting faster and faster and I really like it. It looks more like a rally. People have to know how to go for sand but also for roads. I am very versatile. I like to do everything and try new things. With the wheelchair is something more difficult and tired, especially in the bivouac, since we can not move well through the sand or go to the toilet. However I go in store and sleep very at ease. Despite the limitations, I try to be one more. The chair is under my ass, not in the head. “