The Toyota duo continued an enthralling head-to-head as championship leader Rovanpera applied pressure on long time leader Ogier to reduce the gap to 13.6s with three stages remaining.
Elfyn Evans remained on course to claim the final podium position despite a small scare. The Welshman headed to service 2m49.5s adrift and 35.7s ahead of Toyota team-mate Takamoto Katsuta.
Dani Sordo completed the loop as the leading Hyundai in fifth (+4m51.0s), ahead of M-Sport duo Ott Tanak (+8m56.8s) and Pierre-Louis Loubet (+15m09.5s). The top 10 was completed by leading WRC2 runner Kajetan Kajetanowicz (+23m49.0s), Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville, (+24m35.4s) and Oliver Solberg (+25m57.5s).
Rovanpera stated on Saturday that his main focus was securing points for his championship bid rather than thinking about victory.
However, come Sunday morning the Finn produced a blistering effort in the opening stage, held in dry conditions, to halve Ogier’s rally lead to 8.6s.
Rovanpera navigated through the roughest stage of the rally an impressive 8.1s faster than Ogier which surprised the Frenchman.
"For someone playing the championship, it was a nice talk,” said Ogier when referring to Rovanpera’s pace. "There are huge rocks everywhere on the road and I had to nearly stop because there was a massive rock in the line. No worries.”
Katsuta was third-fastest ahead of M-Sport’s Tanak, who joked that he had a “proper headache” afterwards due the rough roads..
Katsuta’s effort allowed the Japanese driver to close to within 11.4s of third-placed Evans, who suffered a half spin in the stage and damaged his GR Yaris’ rear wing.
In the Hyundai camp there were further woes as the returning Lappi, who retired from third yesterday due to a prop shaft failure, suffered a fourth suspected prop shaft failure of the weekend. The Finn managed to navigate through the stage but with only two-wheel-drive.
Source: Autosport