With 39.5sec in hand over his C3 Rally2 team-mate Yohan Rossel coming into Sunday, Bulgarian driver Gryazin applied a risk-free approach to the weekend’s final four asphalt speed tests – cruising to the final time control 38.5sec clear of the field. Citroën cars have now topped the WRC2 rostrum in every WRC Croatia Rally edition.
The result comes exactly 25 years on from Citroën's first WRC win when Philippe Bugalski and Jean-Paul Chiaroni won the 1999 Rally Catalunya with a Xsara Kit Car
"It feels really nice, especially with all the work we did before this event," Gryazin beamed. "I just need to drive like this more often, I need to remember this feeling."
Rossel could also afford to take a similar approach with more than two minutes separating himself from third-placed Pepe López, who was locked into a nip and tuck battle with Nicolas Ciamin for the final podium spot.
Campaigning a Hyundai i20 N Rally2, Ciamin started the final leg just 10.8sec down on López’s Škoda Fabia RS Rally2 but a brief spin 1.2km into the day’s opener cost the Frenchman five seconds and put paid to his podium aspirations.