Lithuanian driver Rokas Baciuska won the second stage of the Dakar 2025 rally on Monday, the fearsome ‘48-hour Chrono’ while Qatar’s five-time winner Nasser al-Attiyah finished fifth and is third in overall standings.“The last two days have been very difficult for us. The last 20 kilometres we had a puncture and issue with the power steering and the dust also made it more tough. But I am happy to have held on and hopefully it would be good for me tomorrow,” said al-AttiyahOrganisers had initially named Saudi driver Yazeed al-Rajhi as the stage two winner, but later announced that Baciuska, in an Overdrive, had recuperated 12 minutes that propelled him from fifth to first. The Lithuanian was timed at 10hr 54min 11sec over the 967km special, 2min 43sec ahead of Rajhi.“It was really, really hard. I feel like this is our 10th day on the Dakar,” said Rajhi on his arrival at the bivouac of the rally, which began on Friday. “The navigation was very, very difficult in some places, due to the divots and dust. You needed a rocket, not a car to pass through them. It wasn’t easy.”Defending champion Carlos Sainz retired from this year’s Dakar on Monday. The four-time winner rolled his Ford Raptor on the first day of the 48-hour test on Sunday. While he made it to the overnight halt and through the second half of the chrono stage on Monday, his slim hopes of a fifth victory were extinguished when the Spaniard made it back to the bivouac. For this long stage, which started on Sunday, the competitors had to bivouac in the desert and did not benefit from the assistance of their teams at the night stop.Nine-time world rally champion Sebastien Loeb, who is still looking for his first Dakar victory, was half an hour behind at the camp on Sunday evening, after a fan problem caused his engine to overheat. But the Frenchman had a better Monday, making up much of the deficit to finish seventh, 15min 51sec behind the leader.South African Henk Lategan tops the overall standings, 4min 45sec ahead of Rajhi with al-Attiyah in third. Loeb is sixth, 18min 56sec off the lead. “We looked after the car for the stage because we knew it was really, really long,” said Lategan. “If you don’t look after the car, it won’t look after you. It’s actually a big surprise to be first because we haven’t been really focusing on it. But I’m happy with that.”Australian Daniel Sanders continues to dominate on the bikes, his victory in their ‘48-hour Chrono’ making it three in a row after he also won the prologue and first stage. It is the first time any rider has taken the first three stages since Spaniard Joan Barreda in 2017 between Bolivia and Argentina.“It wasn’t too bad, pretty hard in the soft dunes, it was very tough for a lot of us,” said Sanders.“When opening, you didn’t know if it was going to be a soft dune or a hard dune. It was pretty tough. The dust kind of ruined it a lot. Everyone was bunched up fighting in the dust for the opening bonuses. It was a bit tough on that side.”Sanders took victory on his KTM in a time of 11hr 12min 13sec, 6min 45sec ahead of Frenchman Adrien van Beveren (Honda) with American Skyler Howes (Honda) in third. Sanders, who is aiming to become the second Australian to win the Dakar on a bike after Toby Price, holds a 12min 36sec lead over Howes in the provisional overall standings.Botswana’s Ross Branch (Hero) lies third, 4sec behind the American.