Ekaterina at the 2014 Acropolis Rally
Ekaterina
Stratieva is a Bulgarian driver who competes in the European Rally Championship
(ERC). She has won two European Ladies’ Championships.
Her
family were motorsport fans, and she was a spectator at the circuits from a
young age. When she was 21, she took her first steps towards a competition
career of her own, starting with hillclimbs and club circuit racing in a Suzuki
Swift. She began rallying in 2006, at the age of 24, driving a Citroen Saxo in
Bulgarian events. This was a brave step, and Ekaterina claims herself that
being “Bulgarian and blonde” is not an ideal start to an international rally
career. Not one to shy away from a challenge, one of her first rallies was the
Rally of Bulgaria itself, then a European championship round. She was 25th,
and third in class. Her best result came from the Rally Victory Sofia, in which
she was 22nd, fifth in class. As well as rallies, she spent some
time competing in hillclimbs in Bulgaria, winning a class championship. She used her rally car.
Her
second year of rally competition, 2007, was spent in the Bulgarian championship. The
Saxo was run all year by Astra Racing. Ekaterina steadily improved her rally
performances, and had five top-twenty finishes. The best of these was
thirteenth in the YU Rally, which was part of the Bulgarian championship,
despite being held in Serbia. In the Rally Bulgaria, she was the winner of
class N2, and was 24th. Her first rally outside the Bulgarian
championship, the Saturnus Rally in Slovenia, ended in a retirement on the
first stage. She was 21st in the Bulgarian championship. Away from
rallying, she won another class championship in the Saxo, in the Bulgarian
hillclimb championship.
In
2008, she drove a Citroen C2 R2 in rallies the Bulgarian championship. This
year, she did not finish as many rallies as previously, but her final positions
kept improving. She scored the first top-ten of her career, a sixth place in
the Victory Rally Sofia, then followed it up with a tenth place in the Rally
Tvardica, at the end of the season. Her performances were enough to get her a
Pirelli Star award, which gained her entry to the ERC rounds in Italy, Croatia
and Bulgaria for 2009.
She ran
quite well in her three Pirelli Star rallies: she was 45th in the
Mille Miglia in Italy, 19th in Croatia (with a class second) and 20th
in the Rally of Bulgaria itself. Her year was more international than ever
before, with an entry into the Barum Czech Rally as well as the Bulgarian
championship. She was 52nd in the Czech Rally. The Bulgarian
championship was a happier hunting ground; she was tenth in the Serbia Rally,
and won class A6 in the Trayanovi Vrata and Vida rallies. Her finishing
positions were twelfth and thirteenth respectively. She was second in class in
the Bulgarian championship, and was never out of the top twenty.
Despite
her partnership with her long-term co-driver, Rumen Manolov, ending after the
2009 season, Ekaterina continued to improve in 2010. She began the year with
two gravel rallies in Greece, the Halkidiki Rallysprint and the Rally
Thermaikou, finishing a competent thirteenth and 19th. A rare
mechanical fault put her and the Citroen out of the Serbia Rally, then she was
excluded from the Rally of Bulgaria, for a technical infringement. A somewhat
disappointing Czech Rally and another retirement, from the Rally Sliven, then
gave way to two top-ten finishes. She was eighth in the Rally Tvardica, and
then fourth in the Hebros Rally, with a class win. This was enough to score her
a second in class for the championship.
2011
was very international in nature for Ekaterina. She spent quite a lot of time
competing in Romania. Her best finishes were two 22nd places, in the
Clujului and Iaşului rallies. Elsewhere, she managed a class win in the Croatia
Rally, finishing 18th overall, and a sixth in the Rally Tvardica.
Her 19th place in the Yalta Rally in the Ukraine, an IRC event, gave
her a class second. At the end of the year, she was second in class in the
Romanian championship, and was also named their female driver of the year. She also
gained a new navigator, Carmen Poenaru, who is also Romanian. Their first rally
together was the Rallye du Var in France, in which they were 91st,
in the Citroen.
In
2012, her season was split between the Eastern European and western European
rallies, in the C2. She entered five rounds of the IRC, in the Canary Islands,
Belgium, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria and Ukraine. Her best finish was eighth,
in the Yalta Rally. She was also eleventh in the Rally Sliven, the Bulgarian round.
Rally Bulgaria itself, an ERC round this year, gave her a ninth place, second
in class. She was tenth in the Sredna Gora Rally, and won her class. That year,
she also rallied in Romania and Switzerland, although she did not finish the
Rallye du Valais. She was third in the Bulgarian championship, third in the 2WD
class of the ERC (sixth overall), and won their unofficial Coupe des Dames. Her
performances in international rallies earned her the Richard Burns Award.
2013
was a mixed year. She entered rallies across Europe, with two eighteenth
positions, in the Hebros Rally and the Açores City Rally Show, her best finishes. She was also 21st in the
Tour de Corse, part of that year’s ERC. A couple of accidents, in the SATA
Rallye Açores and the Sibiu Rally
Romania, may have knocked her confidence. She was not quite on form, and lost
her European Ladies’ crown to the Australian, Molly Taylor.
Her
2014 schedule was similar, taking in the European Rally Trophy, including the Açores, Ypres and Czech Barum
Rallies. Her best result was 22nd, in the Acropolis Rally. She was 38th in the
ERC Production Cup. Of interest this year were two drives in a Subaru Impreza, in
the Acropolis Rally and the Rally Liepāja, in Latvia. She finished the
Acropolis Rally in 22nd, but the engine failed in Latvia. She spent
the rest of the season in her trusty Citroen C2. One consolation was her first
official ERC Ladies’ Trophy.
Her
2015 season continued in the same vein. She had a shorter schedule, and was
committed to ERC rallies. Her co-driver this year was Julianna Nyírfás, from
Hungary, a highly-experienced ERC navigator. Her best finish was 27th,
in the Circuit of Ireland, and she was also 28th in the Brasov Rally
in Romania. As before, she mainly stuck with the C2, but experimented with
bigger cars. She drove the Impreza again in the Bosphorus Rally, but did not
finish. A drive in a Mitsubishi Lancer Evo IX in the Barum Czech Rally gave her
a 48th place, which was not spectacular, but enough to net her another
Coupe des Dames. She ended the season as the Ladies’ champion once more.
In 2016, she did not defend her ERC Ladies' title. She competed less than before, around Europe, although she did pick up an ERC Coupe des Dames in the Barum Rally, in a C2. She was 57th overall.
In 2016, she did not defend her ERC Ladies' title. She competed less than before, around Europe, although she did pick up an ERC Coupe des Dames in the Barum Rally, in a C2. She was 57th overall.
2017 looked quite similar. She drove the C2 in some Balkan rallies, and picked up a few ERC Ladies' points via her participation in the Barum Czech Rally Zlin. Her best finish was fourteenth in the Rally Sliven, a Bulgarian rally.
She only did one major rally in 2018, the Barum event. Her car was a Hyundai i20 and she finished in 65th place. She was one of six female drivers contesting the rally.
Despite a relatively short rally schedule in 2019, Ekaterina regained her ERC Ladies' title in 2019. She drove a Peugeot 208 R2 and had a best ERC finish of 28th on Rally Hungary, third in the ERC3 class.
Away from the ERC, she entered the Ihtiman Rallysprint in Bulgaria and was seventh overall.
The ERC had a short season in 2020 due to the coronavirus crisis. Ekaterina only entered the Iberian rounds, driving the 208. She was 52nd in the Rally Islas Canarias but did not finish the Fafe Montelongo Rally due to mechanical problems. In Bulgaria, she was fifth in the Dryanovo Rallysprint and ninth in the Rally Tvarditsa-Elena. This was a good outcome for a year that started late, with a crash in the Serbian Rally Zlatibor.
Most of 2021 was spent rallying in and around Bulgaria and she did especially well in rallysprints, taking the Peugeot to fourth in the Dryanovo sprint and fifth in the Rallysprint Peshtera. In the Bulgarian championship, she was eighth in the Rally Stari Stolici and thirteenth in the International Rally Bulgaria. This came after a 17th place in the Evofone ESOK Rally in Turkey.
She entered two ERC events, the first of these being the Barum Czech Rally Zlin, in which she was 66th. A one-off drive in the Rally Islas Canarias in an Opel Corsa Rally4 finished early when the car lost a wheel.
Eastern and central Europe were the focus of her 2022 activities in the Corsa. She did particularly well in Serbia, finishing fourth in the Valjevski Rally and fifth in the Rally Mionica. At home, she was fourth in the Pamporovo Rallysprint.
She mainly stuck to Bulgarian rallies again in 2023, with the Pamporovo event being her best one again: she was fourth. She was also fifth in the Rally Tvarditsa and sixth in the Rally of Bulgaria. These were among five top tens she achieved during the year. Elsewhere, she did some rallies in Romanian and one day of the Fthiotidos Rally in Greece, in which she was tenth. She was seventh overall in the Bulgarian championship.
(Image
from http://2014.acropolisrally.gr/)
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