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    race

    Nov 27 2023

    MEGA rides for another five years at Sydney Motorsport Park

    Bikes on the SMSP main Straight

    November 27, 2023

    • The Australian Racing Drivers’ Club (ARDC) and Motorcycling Events Group Australia (MEGA) jump onboard for another five years of SMSP Ride Days
    • Continues an association that commenced in 1997
    • Your Bike – Our Track program: from beginners to racers on the Brabham GP circuit at Australia’s premiere permanent race circuit

    Sydney: The Australian Racing Drivers’ Club (ARDC) is pleased to announce the signing of a new five-year contract with Motorcycling Events Group Australia (MEGA), ensuring the continued success of ‘Your Bike – Our Track’ riding experiences at Sydney Motorsport Park, a partnership that commenced in 1997.

    As operators of the NSW Government-owned Sydney Motorsport Park since 1996, the ARDC believes that to be the best you need to partner with the best; and certainly as far as motorcycle ride day operators go, none are better that Steve Brouggy and MEGA.

    With over 600 different events per year, Sydney Motorsport Park is arguably one of the world’s busiest permanent race facilities. Outside of major events, motorsport experiences such as Ride Days, Track Days and Fastrack V8 Race experiences contribute to a significant percentage of calendar slots each year.   

    No strangers to hosting the country’s hottest two-wheeled action, throughout the course of a year, over 3,500 individual riders take to the track at SMSP ride days alone, covering over a staggering 750,000 kilometres during the multiple events.  

    Glenn Matthews, ARDC CEO, acknowledged the strategy of the Club was to partner with industry-recognised experience providers to present world-class products to the thousands of motorsport enthusiasts looking for the adrenaline rush that only motorsport can deliver, on a globally recognised circuit and in a safe and professional environment.

    “Steve Brouggy and his MEGA team first joined the ARDC experiences family as far back as 1997, and have been the mainstay provider for that period. There is no better ride day operator in the country. His reputation and quality of product is without parallel, and the decision by the ARDC to ride pillion with MEGA for another five years to 2028 was a no-brainer”.

    Steve Brouggy, MEGA Director, was equally excited about the new contract extension.

    “I’m extremely happy to have signed with the ARDC to be the provider of SMSP Ride Days at Sydney Motorsport Park for another five years. Next year (2024) is the 30th year that Motorcycling Events Group Australia (MEGA) has been operating, and I can’t think of a better way to celebrate than with this new contract” said Steve.

    “We became (and maintain) our position as industry leaders due to our constant engagement and attention on what happens during each and every event, and that will not change during the course of this contract period, or indeed any future extensions there might be. We are committed to developing and evolving every element of SMSP Ride Days to maximise every rider’s enjoyment and safety, and can’t wait to welcome new and returning riders in 2024 and beyond!”

    Sydney Motorsport Park is located in Eastern Creek in Western Sydney, less than 40 minutes from the CBD, and is one of the country’s only racing facilities within a metro area. 

    About Motorcycling Events Group Australia (MEGA)

    Motorcycling Events Group Australia (MEGA) is an industry leading provider of non-competitive racetrack activities (Ride Days) to the Australian motorcycle market, with 30 years’ experience in running these type of events. As the provider of SMSP Ride Days, MEGA uses the skills and experiences gained from its core staff having operated a variety of motorcycle training and track activities in 10 x countries at 45 x racetracks, bringing truly world standard flavour to a world standard venue. For further information: www.smsprd.com

    Written by Samantha Stevens · Categorized: News, News Archive, SMSP News · Tagged: mega, moto, race, racing

    Oct 27 2023

    RACE SYDNEY 2023 for Members

    RACE SYDNEY // MEMBER ACCESS // MEMBER SUITE

    Race Sydney is nearly here! Taking place over two action packed days on Friday 3rd and Saturday 4th of November, Race Sydney is one the highlights of the SMSP calendar.
    The Kumho TCR World Tour will join the Supercheap Auto TCR Australia series, bringing the best of TCR in the world to Western Sydney.
    Plus, National Trans Am Series Workhorse Radical Cup Australia Hyundai Excels And more exciting news to come!    

    MEMBER DETAILS
    ARDC Members and their Guests will get in for FREE by showing their Member cards at the gate!
    On the day, you’ll have access to a Camping or Park’n’View upgrade:
    Park’n’View: $20
    Camping: $50
    Just show your Member Card at the box office, then let them know which upgrade you’d like.

    MEMBER SUITE DETAILS
    The ARDC Members Suite will be open on Friday and Saturday in Suite 4 for all ARDC Members and their guests.
     Friday 3rd: 3:30pm-9pm
    Saturday 4th: 2pm-9pm

    Swing by for a free cuppa, some nibbles, the racing on the big screen and a great view of all the action right in the heart of the paddock!
    Click here for a full size image of the pit building.

    RACE PROGRAM: Now live

    RACE SYDNEY PROGRAM

    We’ll see you trackside soon,
    The ARDC Membership Team

    Written by Samantha Stevens · Categorized: ARDC News, Major Events · Tagged: entry, guest, race, series, tcr, ticket

    Jun 05 2023

    2023 NSW MRC Round 3 Wrap

    Words by Garry OBrien
    Pics by Andrew Ryan

    It was a huge program at Sydney Motorsport Park for the third round of the NSW Motor Racing Championships with ten categories racing over the May 27-28.

    The mega meeting was bolstered by round three of the national RX8 Cup Series which joined nine other categories vying for points advantage in this mid-season outing on the popular Gardner layout.

    Two-time title winner Ryan Gorton who missed a year and the first round this year, continued his successful comeback to the RX8 Cup Series with the third-round win. He won the first two races before beaten away in the third by Brad Harris.

    Harris qualified last, finished eighth, then second, and won the third. Gorton beat him in the fourth. There were good scraps going on for third overall with Tom Shaw who ultimately took the final podium place ahead of Jack Pennacchia and Justin Barnes.

    Justin Lewis was next, although he DNF’d the last when he crashed into his spun brother Terry. Jackson Noakes was also involved in a clash with Luke Webber in race three, which caused a lot of damage to the Noakes Mazda.

    The round for Production Touring Cars comprised three sprint races. Simon Hodges (BMW M4) won all three races. The first came ahead of Chris Sutton (Mitsubishi EVO X) and Matt Holt (HSV Clubsport) before Sutton was relegated to third with a penalty. Anthony Soole (M4) was second before he retired with a wayward turbo hose.

    The latter fought back to third behind Sutton and just ahead of Holt in the second encounter before he finished ahead of the pair in the third. Michael Auld (M4) was next best ahead of Alex Bryden (Mercedes A45) and Brent Howard (BMW M3). They were split in one race by Andrew Miedecke in the Ford Mustang which had computer problems in the others.

    The three races in the Industrie Clothing Supersports were won by Alex Kenny in his Nova Proto NP-01. In race one he finished clear of Nick Kelly (Radical SR8), Justin Tigani and Chris Perini in RX3s. Jonathon Canavan (SR3) didn’t get off the line while Paul Palmer (Stohr) and Steven Shiels (SR3) had contact and didn’t finish.

    Tigani was second in the next encounter from Kelly, Gardner (SR3) and Canavan, and followed up with another second in the last. Garner was third ahead of Perini, and a tight finish between Kelly, Sergio Pires (SR3) and Canavan.

    In the leadup to the Yokohama Improved Production Nationals in June, South Australian Adam Poole brought his Holden Monaro over to NSW, easily won the three Over 2.0 litre races, and broke the lap record twice. Ben Algie (Nissan 200SX) scored three seconds and Ben Sheedy (Holden Commodore VE) edged out Steven Engel (EVO) for third overall.

    Kurt Macready (Nissan Silvia) accounted for the Under 2.0 Litre field each time where in close contest for second, Matt Birks (Toyota Corolla) finished ahead of Charlie Viola (Honda Integra), Graham Bohm and Aaron Giuntini in Honda Civics.

    In Formula Fords, Kaleb Belak (Spectrum) took the Formula Ford outings. In the first he beat fellow Duratec runner Jason Liddell (Van Diemen). The latter had a moment in the race two which allowed Will Lowing (Historic Van Diemen) to get the first of two seconds ahead of Thomas Kalamakis (Kent class Spirit). Dan Holihan (Spectrum) was next but spun out in the last after contact from Christian Read (Spirit).

    Racing in Formula Vees was at its usual competitive best over the three races between dual race winner Darren Williams (Sabre), race two victor Tyron Wiseman (Checkmate) and Craig Sparke (Jacer) with William Pym (Jacer) not far behind. In the older 1200s Stephen Butcher dominated.

    Reigning HQ Holden champ Chris Molle dominated with three big wins. The fight for the minors was much more fanatic where David Proglio was second three times but relegated four spots in race two with a penalty. Jason Molle was third overall while Dave Allan and Jarrod Harber finished equal fourth. Jeff Mulligan was on for a good result before he ran into a (helped) sideways Proglio in the last.

    Doug Barry netted his first Formula Race Car round win after two firsts and a second. In his Reynard 92D Formula Holden, he toppled AGI Sport prodigies Brodie Norris and Kristian Janev in Mygale F4s. Barry led all the way in the first, passed Norris on the final lap in the second, lost several places at the start of the last before he finished second to Norris in the last.

    Production Sports had several additions over the previous round and George Miedecke won both half-hour races in a Bentley Continental GT. The minor places went to Porsche drivers Jacque Jarjo and Tom McLennan with a second a third each while Geoff Morgan (Porsche) withstood numerous challenges for a pair of fourths.

    The NSW Motor Race Championships will return to Sydney Motorsport Park for round four, a day/night meeting on July 8.

    Written by admin · Categorized: News · Tagged: championship, motorsport, mrc, race, racing, state

    May 31 2016

    Event Wrap: NSW Motor Race Championships Rnd 3

    Event Wrap: NSW Motor Race Championships Rnd 3

    Returning to Sydney Motorsport Park for Rd3 of the NSW Motor Race Championships, competitors were forced to pull out their winter woollies and umbrellas for day one of racing. Rain, wind and cool temperatures spoke to the fact that we are entering the winter racing season, after pleasant but unseasonally warm weather lasted through to the end of autumn.

    This dramatic weather change tested race craft thinking and teams preparedness was being challenged. As well, qualifying and first races were run before the track dried out, which gave incentive to competitors to get clear of leading cars as water spray was an inhibitor to good lap times and poor visibility was a very real concern to reaction times. Several cars didn’t make it through this period. Peter Boylan (car #28) suffered a weekend ending heavy impact, so hard in fact that the door popped off on his Porsche 911. Lucky Peter always carries a spare (Porsche, that is!).

    The early qualifying categories were affected the worst, especially the lightweight Formula Vee’s with Pearce, Porter and Pace all skating and losing the racing line in this session. Formula Vee Championship leader Ryan Reynolds had a start to the weekend he’d rather forget. After throwing an oil filter in qualifying and being relegated to the back of the grid, his engine blew up in race one. Working from well behind the eight-ball, frenetic activity in his garage and help from a bunch of people, Ryan recovered in magnificent style with a win and a second in races two and three.

    Without the pressure of Reynolds in the first race, Dylan Thomas was able to take an aggressive race line and led from start to finish to keep his c’ship points ticking over. Not so easy pickings for him once Reynolds returned, and Thomas had to settle for a second and a third.

    After winning rookie-of-the-year Aaron Pace had a splendid weekend. The young man got a “new” car over the summer, (ex- Darren Williams Jacer) and it seems to be paying off. Seasoned veteran and top-field competitor (and Dad) Simon Pace, said: “…its a bittersweet day for me. I’m so proud of Aaron, he’s driving so well, but he’s just beaten me for the very first time.” In fact, by the end of the weekend, Aaron had beaten his Dad in all four outings. Simon beamed with pride as he introduced his youngest son, and soon to be Formula Vee racing rookie, Daniel. Watch that name, as it seems that the Pace family is creating a formidable Formula Vee racing dynasty. In other Vee racing, Jason Thorne was clipped in race two and completely lost his nose cone, causing all sorts of aerodynamic issues for him to contend with.

    Following a heady call-up to be the “Am” in the Pro-Am Carrera Cup two driver format, partnering with Nick McBride ( 2nd place on Championship ladder) several weeks ago, a busy Dylan Thomas also competed in Production Touring. This wasn’t quite as happy an excursion for him. Being used to being up the front of a field, Dylan had to be content with an 8th place start on the grid. Race one was forgettable as a valve stem let go and that ended up DNF. Following a couple of mid field finishes in races one and two, he finally exerted enough competitive pressure on the weekend dominant trio of Oosthuizen, Skinner and Symes (who between them owned eight of the nine available podium places) to take the final weekend top podium spot.

    Superkarts had a four race meeting and got their first race done in a down pour. Open karts give you no respite from the onslaught of weather hurled at you, and with several recent Australian Kart champions vying to relive their past glory, it made for an exciting spectacle. These pocket rockets, elevated off the bitumen only by 4 inch diameter tyres scarily scream down main straight at over 225 kph. So you can imagine that losing one of your tyres would be a rather hair-raising experience.

    This is exactly what happened to race one leader Ilya (Illy) Harpas. Coming into turn 16 on the very last lap, John Dunn moved across Harpas’ race line causing him to execute a fast “tank slapper”. Colloquially named, (Definition: Wobble, shimmy, tank-slapper, speed wobble are all words and phrases used to describe a quick oscillation of primarily just the steerable wheel(s) of a vehicle) for the action required to “get the hell out of the way” of a possible coming together of vehicles. Unfortunately his avoidance manouevre caused him to make contact with a curb throwing his tiny lightweight kart up and coming down hard resulted in it throwing a shoe. Now this would be fair cause for an “all-up” lift and return to the pits on the back of Rescue One, but no, these fella’s don’t give up so easily. As Harpas hit the deck he was still pointing forward. With incredible presence of mind, Illy jammed on the throttle and with two good steering wheels in the front he drove that sloppy jalopy all the way to the chequered flag with only three wheels for a second place finish. True professional or simply crazy? You be the judge…

    Reigning Kart champ Russell Jamieson showed why he is the incumbent No. 1. With classy runs netting two wins and a second, he kept Pecoraro and McIveen in his mirrors all weekend. Harpas made a strong claim as he pushed Jamieson back down the podium with two strong wins and his amazing second place. It should be said that if the wheel incident hadn’t happened only 700m from the finish line he would have had a third victory and been the debutante of the ball with even more reason to celebrate. Stay watching this young Illy Harpas.

    Sports Sedans is like a motorised version of the Big Bash League. Big American cars, big engines, big speed and big sound! Following his season ending major accident late last year, Birol Cetin brought Billy’s Camaro v2.0 out and gave it a big kick in the guts. The weekend leader board bolted Cetins name up there in first place and left it there. That’s the way it ended. How it all unfolded was another story altogether. Laceys run of bad luck continued from 2015. Looking good and his Camaro ostensibly running well with good power and handling, Lacey fought Cetin throughout the whole race, the twin yellow Camaro’s side by side. Twice with passing opportunities thwarted due to parked cars on the side of his favourite overtaking spot, just out of turn 14 under the corporate hill bridge. Third time lucky and Lacey took Cetin and was enjoying the last lap lead up through turn 17. The ground commentator over the loudspeakers nearly barfed a lung he shouted so loud trying to egg Laceys slowing car down as it became apparent that there was a serious problem with the #1 car. Cetin sailed on by to reclaim his lead and the glory while McCready ran down the 16 second gap to the front runners as Lacey glided slowly with only momentum down the agonizing distance from turn 18 to cross the finish line, only to unceremoniously pull up alongside the pit lane track marshall’s cage suffering a broken axle. His inspired drive had gotten him enough of a buffer on the rest of the field for him to still claim third as a consolation prize, a far cry from the result he must have seen in his minds eye as he rounded that last bend before the sickening sound and no go under him.

    Production Sports had their first Enduro of the season, with a Driver A and B race late on Sunday. A ding dong stoush between Matt Turnbulls Lamborghini and a gang of ten Porsches. Eventually the Porsches just outlasted the Lamborghini as it retired with gearbox issues, and Neale Mustons’ relentless pounding out the laps as he fended off fierce racing stalwart Geoff Morgans’ new 991 Cup car. After an hour race only 27 seconds split the single driver pair with the Cook/Meyer team one minute back. Young Andy Harris from Mittagong experienced massive disappointment as his newly purchased Mazda MX3 dropped a metre wide pool of oil from a blown engine under his stationary car. He’d been rotating in the top third of the field doing a good job in his first enduro.

    HQ’s again featured the Baxter-Osborn show As reported before, these two guys are so evenly matched that again this weekends race finish times were as little as three-one hundredths of a second apart. With these two having locked up the two top spots, Molle shared third with King. Newcomer to HQ, but a regular around the local racing fraternity, Scott Walker acquitted himself admirably with a 4th place start off the grid, and a 4th place finish in race one.

    In these difficult financial times for the racing industry, it was wonderful news to hear that Joe Lenthall (Improved Production O2L ) had secured sponsorship from MOTHERS care care products, who’s logos were emblazoned in huge white letters all over his red RX7 this weekend.

    Last year John McKenzie Improved Prod O2L was in a quandry as to how to lighten his cars weight. His Commodore had plenty of straightline power, but was carrying to much weight to be nimble enough to dance through the turns and maximise his power advantage. It seems this year John has found, if not all, surely a part of the answer, as his front grid qualifying and two seconds and a third place have given his championship aspirations an excellent boost. Hounded by the fire breathing twin RX7’s of the Ingram brothers sandwiching McKenzie at almost every turn, it was like a “red rose between two thorns”. Graeme Watts didn’t have it all his own way, but did get a pair of convincing wins.

    Words and pics by Rob Annesley
    www.shotbyrob.com.au

     

    Written by Samantha Stevens · Categorized: ARDC News, Major Events, Race Meetings, SMSP News · Tagged: 3, ARDC, cams, championship, champs, motor, mrc, nsw, race, round, three

    May 03 2016

    Porsche Rennsport Festival 2016

    Porsche Rennsport

    After a three year break, the single brand Porsche Rennsport Festival returned to Sydney Motorsport Park in spectacular style. It must be said that the atmosphere of the event in 2016 was more lively, with a wide range of fan activities ranging from the usual Show n’ Shine, exhibits of non-racing Porsche historics (including an original Porsche tractor), memorabilia outlets and classy sit-down food and bar facilities. A most clever and really practical participation activity was the Kids Driving School. Booking the kids in for early driver and road rules training in a fun and interactive fashion parents were able to partake of the many festival stalls and race viewing while the kids had a great time “driving” mini Porsches. The obligatory face painting was also provided. I must say I have never reported on an event that was this family-friendly.

    Sam Curtis, CEO of Porsche Australia was delighted with the active participation by the consumer public. Gazing across the top of the pit building to an almost capacity filled car park up on the hill, Sam said “….its a much better event than we put on last time. SMSP is a great fit for us, and we are thrilled with the level of support we have been given to make this a huge success”. Sam was obviously having a great time too, as during the few minutes we chatted Shane van Gisbergen stole 15 places in the first Carrera Cup GT3 race and we were both excitedly grinning from ear to ear watching an incredible demonstration of race-craft.

    In conditions closely emulating those of three years ago, the festival started under early wet and grey conditions however both days turned on bright blue skies with fluffy white clouds for the majority of racing. Over 5000 people enjoyed all that was on offer. As well as the festival having many quality off-track attractions, the calibre of racing on-track was also outstanding and electrifying. With many of the best drivers in the country piloting multi millions of dollars of the highest race tech machinery. With a list of elite names like Percat, Caruso, van Gisbergen, Tander, Wall, Slade, Reynolds and Richards participating, it was a no-brainer that the crowd was going to be entertained. Obviously these guys got leave passes from V8SC or just couldn’t resist the allure of driving entirely different race cars than they usually drive, certainly added to the grand spectacle of the two Pro-Am Carrera Cup enduro races.

    The weekend racing was spread across six categories. Firstly two Regularity divisions, novice and experienced. Regularity One fostered a wide spread of winners in this category with Doug Barbour (1976 911) pleased with his first and second places around his nominated time of 1:53. Terry Dickens (2010 GT3) enjoyed two first places in Regularity Two driving closest to his nominated time of 2:10.

    I have decided to coin a word to describe a Group S and N Historic race. BROUHAHA!! Meaning “a noisy and over-excited reaction to something”. I mean this in the nicest possible way, Watching some of these guys on the grid, they’ve got the twitchiest throttle feet. In both race three and four, Seabrook and Adler broke before the lights. Adler broke so early in race three, he was 100 mtrs down the track before the others cleared the start line. And that was from the second row of the grid. For that he earned himself a 30 second penalty. Wayne Seabrook (1976 911) dominated with all three race wins with Richard Watts (1976 911) two seconds and a third while Stan Adler (1975 911) took home to Victoria two thirds and a second.

    Scott Taylor (2013 997 GT3) holds the kingship of this category, taking home all the lollies in Porsche Sports Cars over the weekend. With his pals Indiran Padayachee (2011 GT3) and Anthony Skinner (2009 GT3 Cup) they owned the podium in the exact same positions for all three races.

    Porsche GT3 Cup lived up to its expected hype with young guns Jaxon Evans and Hamish Hardeman duelling up the pointy end of the pack. It was a coming of age as young Jaxon took out his first GT3 Cup Challenge victory as he held Hardeman out of the top spot in all three races, albeit in a nail biting finish in race three. Hardeman clearly had the best of Evans for the majority of that race but a little run wide on turn two allowed a quick thinking Evans to go shallow and steal the lead holding onto the last three laps to claim three wins and his inaugural Challenge win. Evans stated” …he ( Hardeman) made me work for it. Its great that we can race hard and fair against each other.” Hardeman is showing great promise in this his first full season in the GT3 Cup car. Third place for the weekend went to Porsche junior Jake Klarich.

    Carrera Cup race one on Saturday was no less exciting. David Wall grabbed the early lead from the second row off the grid. At the same time Percat shot from fourth to second. Van Gisbergen started from 20th after a penalty from qualifying saw him moved 4 positions backwards. Notwithstanding, as we have seen from him in V8Sc racing, undaunted he proceeded to carve through the field including pushing Percat and Davison wide at turn 15 in a daring display of his awesome driving ability. After twelve laps and only 20 minutes elapsed of the one-hour race SVG was nipping at the heels of second place. After a solid drive by Challenge driver Geoff Emery, he handed the wheel over to pro driver Matt Campbell, who placed well within the top ten. Campbell brought the car home for race one win.

    Race two and Emery wins the start but soon moves backwards through the field as the quicker Pros move on by. Campbell commented after the race: “Geoff (Emery) was smart enough to know who was quicker in the field and to let them on by. He positioned the car in a really good place for me.” As soon as the window for driver exchange opened, Emery hauled the car in for Campbell to jump in. Richards had the fastest lap with a 1:31.7 jumping Slade to take third spot. SVG once again had a heap of work to do, jumping into the car in 16th. He spent the next 18 laps working his way up to a credible finish in fourth place. Abela and Camillieri touched coming out of turn three and a coordinated spinning ballet unfolded as each plowed down through the grassy verges on opposite sides towards turn four in unison. Unfortunately only Camillieri continued on. As soon as McBride jumped in after Dylan Thomas’ solid drive, he worked up six places to ultimately finish in second. Following the two races the leader board in Carrera Cup has Campbell ( 1st) followed by McBride (2nd) and Davison ( 3rd).

    The “Urban Cowboy “ Magnus Walker came from the USA for the Rennsport event. Renowned international Porsche enthusiast, reputably owner of over 50 Porsche 911’s , replete in jeans, leather jacket and long dreadlocks, Magnus enthralled the crowd and kindly gave of his time, knowledge and enthusiasm for the marque, chatting and signing autographs until the long lines had dwindled.

    A spectacular and fun event, Rennsport featured over 450 cars, 200 of which graced the track in racing, and countless priceless racing and road going examples where on display in the PorscheStrasse. These included two original LeMans winning examples as well as rare specimens such as a 1989 911 Speedster. This second running of Porsche Rennsport Festival bettered the first one in all ways said CEO Sam Curtis. “ There were more Porsches on track, more Porsches on display, more activities for the public and as a result more Porsche fans attended. Porsche is a special brand in so far as its appeal extends through the age range. Whether its modern or historic race cars, road cars like the GT3 RS or open top cars like the original 356 Cabriolet, there is always a Porsche to admire.”

    Words and pics by Rob Annesley
    look@shotbyrob.com.au

     

    Written by Samantha Stevens · Categorized: Major Events, Race Meetings, SMSP News · Tagged: festival, porsche, race, rennsport

    Sep 10 2015

    Event Wrap – 2015 Muscle Car Masters

    2015 Muscle Car Masters

    The Annual “Muscle Car Master” carnival rolled into town at Sydney Motorsport Park on Fathers Day weekend September 4 – 6. It was a wonderful weekend of celebration of all that is exceptional about Australian motorsport combining the best of both Australian and US motoring muscle. Evergreen celebrity drivers such as Bob Holden, Jim Richards, John Bowe, Glenn Seton, ( Happy Birthday, Glenn – who turned 50 this week), Charlie O’Brien, Andrew Mediecke, Leo Tobin and Rusty French got behind the wheels of  various brands of muscle cars and over the weekend reminded us all why we love these heritage marques.

    Our past racing legends were oh so generous with their time and spent countless hours over the course of the weekend signing autographs, posing for photographs and chatting extensively, between racing commitments, with hundreds of fans many of whom recounted and relived exploits of these giants of Australian racing with blow-by-blow accounts of their favourite racing moments.

    As well stellar examples of original and restored classic metal including 50 of the best examples of heritage vehicles (30 of which are original cars) that graced our race tracks in decades gone by. Each and every one of the shiny concourse prepared cars played a significant part in the fabric of our rich Australian racing history.  These cars carried our hopes and dreams as we watched our race suited gladiatorial heroes do battle in their brightly coloured liveries. Commonplace throughout our magnificent history these steeds had colloquial names which easily rolled off our tongues…names such as “XU-1, A9X, ‘Cuda, Charger, GTHO, ‘Stang as well as a myriad of letters meaningful to the motoring initiated such as VL, VS, VH and VK.

    The headline feature category over the weekend is always the Touring Car Masters race series. This field is littered with racing masters, and 26 sensationally prepared hotted up V8 muscle cars. It was a surprise to see John Bowe in a Torana this weekend, especially as his most notable (and usual) ride was also running around in the field: Mustang Sally. This weekend she was in the capable hands on Neil Crompton. Although, one has to wonder how Bowe and Mustang Sally felt when Crompton got caught up in a mid field “nose to tail debacle which in fairness was not of his own doing. As it turned out Seton nudged Mediecke who spun 360 degrees right in the middle of the exit from turn two, and in the ensuing melee and bottleneck Compton had his front and rear crumpled. The carnage was not limited to him alone as some five cars all came back around the track sporting various assorted crumpled fenders and grills. The immediate resulting carnage at turn two looked like an untidy second hand car lot with cars pointing in all directions and those drivers trying to avoid the mess were mounting the ripple strips dodging and weaving through the infield to get some clear space to literally escape the blockage. In racing, John Bowe was sensational with three clear race wins in his personally race prepared Wilson Security Torana. This weekend brought John Bowe a double milestone. Firstly he celebrated his 200th career race win on Saturday and on Sunday competed in his 1000th career race event.  Congratulations John.

    Almost equal favourite racing category over the weekend was the mighty Trans AM Sports Sedans category. Featuring more legends of Australian motorsport driving 5 Litre+ American muscle cars made popular in the 60’s and 70’s. With teeth rattling power plants, the field of Mustangs, Firebirds, Camaro’s, GTO’s and even a Plymouth Barracuda growled and fiercely fought for supremacy around the Eastern Creek GP circuit. Seventeen cars from Qld and four from New Zealand rounded out the field for this tribute series second appearance at MCM. Charlie O’Brien (Firebird) drove gangbusters all weekend and took all three race wins. Crowd pleaser Glenn Allingham got the crowd roaring with his wheel spinning “drifting” style of driving. Plenty of smoke and noise: What more could you want at MCM 2015?

    The crowd was spoilt for merchandise choice as the semitrailers with TCM, Holden and other memorabilia were a part of the whole fantastic vibe. It was great to see the grandstand almost full and the rooftop above the pits was crammed with spectators cheering their heroes and enjoying all the racing that was on offer. This year there were three separate Heritage Hot Laps which meant their was ample time to see all your favourite cars of yesteryear. As well, a parade lap for the many car clubs that attended with their exquisitely prepared privateer vehicles was a marvelous sight with over a hundred cars. Featuring AC Cobras, classic Mustangs, Chargers, Corvettes, HSV Holdens, it was great to perve on some beautiful metal and chrome.

    Words and pics by Rob Annesley
    www.shotbyrob.com.au

     

     

    Written by Samantha Stevens · Categorized: ARDC News, Major Events, News Archive, Race Meetings, SMSP News · Tagged: car, father, Muscle. masters, race, touring, Trans-Am

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