Dubai: Shaikh Abdullah Al Qasimi won the Sharjah Rally after an absorbing battle with Mohammad Bin Sulayem, before paying tribute to the 14-time FIA Middle East Champion for a stirring comeback 12 years after retiring from competitive motorsport.

“Mohammad was much faster on the technical sections and it was as if he had never been away,” said Shaikh Abdullah, who was partnered by Ghaby Khoury in a Mitsubishi Evo 9 for the second round of the UAE Rally Championship.

They had a winning margin of 45 seconds over Bin Sulayem and his long-time Irish co-driver Ronan Morgan, who were back together in the Ford Escort WRC they took to victory in the 1999 Jordan International Rally before the car was retired.

A time penalty accounted for 30 of those seconds and, but for mechanical problems in the 20-year-old Escort, it might have been a different story at the finish on Saturday.

Oman’s Khalid Al Manji and Saif Al Aisiri in a Subaru Impreza took third place and the top six was completed by two more Omanis, Faisal Al Rashidi and Walid Al Rashidi in another Subaru, Emiratis Ali Mattar Al Ketbi and Rabab Al Tajir in a Nissan Patrol, and Saudi Arabia’s Ibrahim Al Mohana with the UAE’s Rashid Al Ketbi in another Nissan Patrol.

“Mohammad’s car had been parked for the last 15 years and it gave him problems,” said Shaikh Abdullah, the founder and President of the Emirates Motorsport Club, organisers of the UAE National Rally Championship. “But he was back up to speed. Really, he was the winner.

“We are trying our best to revive rallying and it seems to be coming back better than I had expected, but now I hope it will get better and better. We are working together as friends to rebuild the spirit of rallying. We want to bring a new generation of drivers into this sport and I think in the next rally we will see many more.”

Bin Sulayem said: “Getting in a rally car for the first time in 12 years, the memories came flooding back and it was fun. But this is not about me. It’s about encouraging youth to come into rallying.

“Shaikh Abdullah is doing a great job to bring more drivers into the sport. He is working hard and I’m very grateful to him. This was a very well organised rally, supported by the Government of Sharjah, and we will work together now to attract the next generation of drivers.”

Bin Sulayem had not competed since scoring his 15th victory in the Dubai International Rally in December 2002, but he won the first special stage, beating Shaikh Abdullah by one second, despite a broken rear drive shaft.

That meant he was reduced to 2WD power on the next stage, which Shaikh Abdullah won by 43 seconds. Bin Sulayem took the next three stages to close the gap to 15 seconds, but his challenge faded when he lost fuel pressure and punctured on the last stage.