IT is 25 years since 'Flying Finn' Juha Kankkunen and his Welsh co-driver Nicky Grist won what is still remembered as one of the toughest and most challenging Rally GBs in the famous event's long-running history.

To mark the silver anniversary of that snowy and icy victory, Abergavenny's Grist and Kankkunen will be honoured as the official 'Rally Legends' of this autumn's Dayinsure Wales Rally GB, which runs from October 4 to 7.

Both will be present throughout the four-day FIA World Championship event, assisting with ceremonial duties, signing autographs and sharing their incredible memories with fans.

Kankkunen and Grist will be reunited in the cockpit of a Toyota Celica GT-Four – similar to the car in which they won back in 1993 – to lead a special Sunday morning parade of historic rally cars through the closed roads of Llandudno.

The parade will be the curtain-raiser to the rally's street stage finale which, for the first time in the UK, will witness the spectacle of World Championship motor sport on closed public roads.

Between the two of them Kankkunen and Grist won 44 rounds of the FIA World Rally Championship – but few were more challenging and deserved than their hard-earned success on the 1993 Network Q RAC Rally.

Held late in November, that year's gruelling event was based in Birmingham with overnight stops in Lancaster and Gateshead.

As tradition then dictated, the action kicked off on Sunday with a succession of spectator stages set at race circuits and stately homes throughout central England with the route then venturing out into Wales, the Lake District, the Scottish Borders and Yorkshire Moors before the weary survivors returned to Birmingham late on Wednesday afternoon.

"It was absolutely treacherous," said Grist. "There was a reasonable amount of grip on the snow but, without studded tyres, those icy, frozen forest tracks were as hazardous as they come.

"Juha, though, was such a laid back character, brimming with natural talent – he took everything in his stride and, aside from getting away with one slight indiscretion in Yorkshire, it was plain sailing."

"The championship was already won but Juha really wanted to give me a first win on home soil – 'Boyo, we will win this for you' he promised before the start," explained Grist who won again four years later, this time alongside Colin McRae in a Subaru Impreza.

"To win at home is always very special but it was all the sweeter in 1993 as it was my first and the conditions had been just so treacherous throughout."

Now, 25 years on, the memories are all rushing back and both Grist and Kankkunen are thrilled that they will be sharing their amazing recollections with rally fans here in Britain.

"I'm really looking forward to getting back into the Toyota with Juha and whizzing around the street stage in Llandudno," grinned Grist. "In fact, the more I think about it, the more I'm excited about the whole event."

Grist now owns the GT-Four which they will be sharing for the parade. Poignantly, it's the very car in which he and Kankkunen won their final rally together in Portugal early the following season.

While admission to the momentous new Great Orme Llandudno finale is totally free for all-comers, spectators can secure a grandstand view of the action for £20 adult (£10 child) or, for food and the best possible views, book a strictly limited Rally Xtra pass for £125 adult (£90 child).

Tickets for the other 21 speed tests are now on sale with significant savings for those buying in advance.

Adult admission starts at£15 for the Thursday evening opener at Tir Prince Raceway with the premium four-day event pass remaining at £99 for the ninth successive year. Accompanied children aged 15 and under are admitted free to general admission areas.