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LEGO® Speed Champions Rally

Three LEGO® Speed Champions sets cover rally — and the catalogue is unusual in that every entry tells a different rally story. One Group B all-wheel-drive icon, one classic-Mini-meets-modern-buggy pair-up, and one current World Rally Championship car. The category is concentrated in 2018-2020 and has been dormant since.

3 sets · Updated 2026-04-27

Ford Fiesta M-Sport WRC (LEGO® 75885, 2018) is the only set in the line covering current World Rally Championship competition. It depicts the 2017-spec Ford Fiesta WRC run by the M-Sport team — the privateer outfit Malcolm Wilson built up from a workshop in Cumbria into Ford's de-facto works rally team. M-Sport won the 2017 manufacturers' championship with this generation of Fiesta and Sébastien Ogier took back-to-back drivers' titles in 2017-2018. It's the only set in the wiki tied to a recent WRC season.

1967 Mini Cooper S Rally and 2018 MINI John Cooper Works Buggy (LEGO® 75894, 2019) is a heritage pair-up bridging fifty years. The 1967 Mini Cooper S won the Monte Carlo Rally three times in 1964, 1965, and 1967 — possibly the most famous David-and-Goliath story in motorsport, with the 1.3L front-wheel-drive shopping car beating Porsches and Ford Galaxies on snow and ice. The set pairs that car with the 2018 MINI John Cooper Works Buggy, the X-Raid Dakar entry — same name on the door, completely different vehicle underneath. The connection is the Cooper name itself, and the conversation the set wants to start is whether the modern buggy earns its lineage.

1985 Audi Sport quattro S1 (LEGO® 76897, 2020) is the line's only Group B set. The Sport quattro S1 was the final evolution of Audi's all-wheel-drive 1980-1986 rally programme, the car Walter Röhrl drove up Pikes Peak and Stig Blomqvist took to the 1984 drivers' championship. Group B was banned at the end of 1986 after a series of fatal accidents, making the S1 the high-water mark of an era of rallying that has never been repeated — turbocharged, lightweight, four-wheel-drive, and effectively unrestricted. It's the most historically significant single car in the rally category and the only one tied directly to Audi's first works motorsport programme.

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