Mercedes planned to rally the 190E from the beginning. All-wheel-drive killed that plan before it started. Privateers did it anyway, across France, Spain, Greece, Germany and the Netherlands, with no factory support and considerable results.
When Mercedes commissioned Bruno Sacco's team to draw the W201 in the late 1970s, the motorsport brief pointed toward international rallying. The car's dimensions, rear-wheel drive layout and projected build quality put it in range of the Group A homologation categories that dominated the European Rally Championship.
By 1982, when the 190E arrived at Geneva, that plan was obsolete. Audi's quattro AWD system had redefined what winning required in international rallying. A rear-wheel drive car, however well-engineered, had no realistic path to outright results on the World Rally Championship stages that had become rallying's defining showcase.
Mercedes shelved the factory rally programme and redirected its motorsport resources toward circuit racing, where AWD was not yet a factor. The DTM and European Touring Car Championship became the W201's competitive homes.
But the car's structural integrity and handling balance attracted privateer teams across Europe who saw potential in the national and regional championships that the WRC machines didn't dominate. Over the next decade, 190Es appeared on stages from the French Alps to the Andalusian mountains, usually unsponsored, always privately funded, and often surprisingly fast.
France produced the highest concentration of 190E rally activity. The French Production Championship, a national series for Group A production cars, gave the 2.3-16 a competitive platform from 1985 onwards, and the Snobeck team's presence meant the car received genuine development attention rather than amateur preparation.
Dany Snobeck's team ran the 2.3-16 in both the French Production Championship and the ETCC from the car's first year of homologation. The French national championship was a useful laboratory, it ran on road surfaces familiar from the DTM calendar, allowed significant mechanical development under Group A rules, and attracted enough professional teams to provide meaningful competition data.
The roster of French drivers who appeared in 190Es across national and regional events includes names that went on to significant careers elsewhere: Didier Auriol and Philippe Bugalski (sharing a car in the late 1980s), Bernard Darniche, Alain Cudini, Jacques Selmi, Jean-Marc Texier, Jean-François Mourgues, and Bruno Bouscary.
1985 – 1993 · Pioneer
The Frenchman who started everything. Snobeck Racing Services ran the very first 190E 2.3-16 in competition, the 1985 French Production Championship and the European Touring Car Championship, before Mercedes had any works involvement at all. Snobeck prepared his own engine to approximately 240 bhp, resolved early reliability problems with the rear axle and clutch through two seasons of fieldwork, and then carried that knowledge into the DTM with three factory-supported seasons. He was simultaneously a rally driver of note, entering the 2.3-16 in French national events throughout his tenure. Without Snobeck there is no Mercedes motorsport programme for the W201.
1986 – 1988 · Rally driver
Before becoming a World Rally Champion with SEAT in 1994, Didier Auriol was a fast privateer in the French rally scene. He ran a 190E 2.3-16 across several French national events in the late 1980s, sharing the car at one point with Philippe Bugalski (later a WRC winner himself). Auriol's 190E was prepared to full Group A specification and placed competitively against the Peugeot 205 Turbos and Ford Sierra Cosworths that dominated the French stages at the time.
1986 – 1988 · Rally driver
Darniche was already a celebrated figure in French rallying, winner of Monte Carlo in 1977 with Lancia, when he took the 190E 2.3-16 to the stages. His campaigns brought significant press attention to the 190E as a rally car and proved the chassis could be driven at high pace on loose and tarmac surfaces. His involvement lent the car credibility it had not yet earned through results alone.
1985 – 1993 · Circuit and rally
Cudini drove for Snobeck in both circuit and rally competition over most of the W201's production life. He remained one of the most active 190E competitors in France across a decade and contributed to the development of the car's setup at Snobeck Racing Services alongside the DTM programme.
1988 – 1995 · Rally driver
Agelidis campaigned a 190E 2.3-16 through Greek national rallying for nearly a decade. His campaigns documented a broader pattern: across Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, and Belgium, private teams built and raced Group A 190Es in national championships largely independent of factory knowledge. The W201's combination of structural rigidity and well-calibrated multi-link rear suspension made it a capable basis on gravel.
Every 190E rally privateer we have a record of, with country and car provenance where known. 43 drivers and counting. Spotted a name we are missing, or have results to add? Tell us.
| Driver | Country | Car / provenance |
|---|---|---|
| Giorgos Agelidis | Greece | Greek national rallies, 2.3-16 |
| Gianki Albert | Italy | 2.3-16 |
| Paul Allerts | Netherlands | 2.3-16 |
| Holger Bohne | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Pierre Bos | France | 2.3-16 |
| Bruno Bouscary | France | 2.3-16 |
| Rubén Cabeza / Gema Carballeira | Spain | 2.3-16 |
| Robert Chenal | France | 2.3-16 |
| Philippe Chevallard | France | Ex-car of Jacques Selmi |
| Boris Cottier | France | 2.3-16 |
| John de Heijde | Netherlands | Ex-car of Hein Jonkers |
| Gerard de la Casa | Andorra | 2.3-16 |
| Harald Demuth | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Luigi Fracasso | Italy | 2.3-16 |
| Tomás Gimeno | Spain | 2.3-16 |
| Luis Gonzales | Spain | Ex-Gimeno car |
| Manfred Hinterreiter | Austria | 2.3-16 |
| Dave Holland | Great Britain | 2.3-16 |
| Peter Holub | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Michel Jongmans | Netherlands | 2.3-16 |
| Hein Jonkers | Netherlands | 2.3-16 |
| Fritz Köhler | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Josef Kraus | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Dominique Lambert | France | 2.3-16 |
| Gerard Magniette | Belgium | 2.3-16 |
| Tomasz Marciniak | Poland | 1990s |
| William Massias | France | Rally Dieppe winner 1990 |
| Marcin Miziak | Poland | 1990s |
| Russell Morgan | Great Britain | 2.3-16 |
| Jean-François Mourgues | France | 2.3-16 |
| Uwe Nittel | Germany | Ex-car of Harald Demuth |
| Frank Reiter | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Jose Luis Rivero | Spain | 2.3-16 |
| Peter Rumpfkeil | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Sven Rumpfkeil | Germany | Son of Peter Rumpfkeil |
| Claus Schreiner | Germany | 2.3-16 |
| Jacques Selmi | France | 2.3-16 |
| Jean-Marc Texier | France | 2.3-16 |
| Steve Thabard | France | 2.3-16 |
| Jan van de Marel | Belgium | 2.3-16 |
| Danny Vancoillie | Belgium | 2.3-16 |
| Valère Vandermaesen | Belgium | 2.3-16 |
| Dietmar Walter / Kurt Klein | Germany | 2.3-16 |
The 190E rally story extends well beyond France. In Spain, drivers including Tomás Gimeno, Jose Luis Rivero and Rubén Cabeza ran 2.3-16s in regional and national events through the late 1980s and early 1990s. In Germany, Holger Bohne, Harald Demuth and the Rumpfkeil family (father Peter and son Sven) competed across multiple seasons. In the Netherlands, John de Heijde, Michel Jongmans and Hein Jonkers built a small but active community around the car.
In Belgium, Jan van de Marel, Danny Vancoillie and Valéré Vandermaesen raced 190Es in national events. In Italy, Luigi Fracasso and Gianki Albert competed with the car. In Poland, Tomasz Marciniak and Marcin Miziak ran 190Es in the 1990s. The pattern repeats across the continent: a Group A car with genuine structural integrity, decent power under development, and parts availability from a major manufacturer. For a privateer without access to an M3 budget, it was a credible choice.