India Races to Glory: Naveen Puligilla & Musa Sherif Finish Second in the WRC3 Category at Saudi Arabia Rally
Indian rally racing has often remained in the shadows of mainstream sports, but the achievement of Naveen Puligilla and Musa Sherif in 2025 has changed that conversation. At the Saudi Arabia Rally held in Jeddah, the duo secured a second-place finish in the WRC3 category. For the first time ever, an Indian pair stood on a WRC podium. Their success comes in a sport dominated by factory-backed machines, multi-million-dollar teams, and decades of European dominance. Yet, in the middle of high-speed gravel sections, deep desert sands, and unpredictable dunes, an Indian team pushed their way into global relevance.The Challenge of WRC3: A Test of Skill, Stamina, and PrecisionThe World Rally Championship has long been considered one of the most demanding motorsport formats in the world. The WRC3 category is specifically crafted for Rally3 machinery, four-wheel-drive cars that demand finesse, technical understanding, and exceptional coordination between driver and co-driver. Unlike circuit racing, rallying tests athletes across changing terrains, unpredictable weather, and stages that stretch hundreds of kilometers. Puligilla and Sherif completed the Saudi Arabia Rally in 4 hours, 28 minutes, and 58.7 seconds, placing 26th overall among 41 competitors. Their Ford Fiesta Rally3, prepared by Africa Eco Sports in Nairobi, performed flawlessly in the desert. The car finished just 1 minute and 14.2 seconds behind the first WRC3 competitor, showcasing not only pace but also consistency. Despite competing against far superior Rally1 and Rally2 cars backed by giants like Hyundai, Toyota, and M-Sport Ford, the Indian crew held their ground with strategy, discipline, and courage.The Road to Jeddah: A Season of Patience and ProgressFor Naveen Puligilla, the podium finish was not a sudden spark but the result of a steady, upward journey. Throughout the 2025 season, he showed consistent development as a rally driver. A podium at the Tanzania Rally proved he could handle African terrain, while his category win at the Robusta Rally in Kodagu during India’s National Rally Championship showed his growing dominance at home. Musa Sherif, one of India’s most experienced co-drivers, played a pivotal role in navigating the 17 demanding special stages in Saudi Arabia. His experience, calmness, and precision in pace notes provided the direction that Puligilla needed to push the limits. Rallying is a sport where trust is everything, and their partnership demonstrated what perfect harmony inside the cockpit looks like.Inside the Rally: Battling the Elements, One Stage at a TimeThe Saudi Arabia Rally is known for its unforgiving terrain. Over fast-flowing gravel tracks, jagged desert routes, and sections of thick, shifting sand, every decision counts. Drivers must balance aggression and caution, knowing that a single misjudgment can end the race instantly. Across the 17 special stages, the Indian pair showcased remarkable consistency. They adapted to surface changes, maintained rhythm over long competitive distances, and managed the mechanical demands on their Ford Fiesta Rally3. When the provisional results put them second in WRC3, they not only beat expectations but also expanded the limits of Indian motorsport potential. This achievement is much bigger than a trophy. For decades, Indian drivers and co-drivers struggled to break into global motorsport due to limited infrastructure, sponsorship challenges, and lack of exposure to international rally formats. Puligilla and Sherif shattered that ceiling.A Milestone That Opens New RoadsPuligilla and Sherif’s success is a turning point for Indian rally racing. It invites a new era of ambition, one where Indian crews no longer participate abroad merely for exposure but compete for results. Their podium finish in Saudi Arabia is a foundation upon which future Indian rally champions will rise. As Puligilla himself said, this achievement proves something far more powerful than a podium position: that Indian crews belong on the world stage. And with this breakthrough, the road ahead for Indian motorsport looks faster, brighter, and filled with fresh possibilities.