The USA has emerged as a contender to join the WRC schedule for the first time since the Olympus Rally in 1988.
A brand new event is being planned in Chattanooga in southeast Tennessee, utilising gravel roads located in in the Cherokee National Forest and around the Ocoee River region in Polk County.
The planning committee for the project features an experienced group of rally competitors and organisers, while also benefitting from the support of the American Rally Association (ARA), Chattanooga Tourism, the State of Tennessee, regional governments and private sponsors.
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Last month the organisers held a rally demonstration to showcase the discipline and test a couple of its proposed stages ahead of a full candidate rally expected to take place in September, which will determine if it will join the 2024 WRC calendar.
The demonstration included a traditional ceremonial start while seven crews tackled a 3-mile and 10-mile pair of stages which are being proposed for the event.
The 1982 WRC runner-up Michele Mouton, now the FIA's WRC safety delegate, was in attendance to assess the stages.
“We have had very positive feedback from the local authority,” said FIA rally director Andrew Wheatley when asked about the Rally USA demonstration by Autosport.
“I think they [the organisers] wanted to assess a number of issues and to understand how it could work in this particular region.
“Michele [Mouton] was out looking at stages to understand from a preliminary perspective to understand what work has to be done to get to the level they need to be.
Source: Autosport