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FROSTY UNLOADS: ‘CRAIG LOWNDES IS A PROTECTED SPECIES’ OLVED! EXCLUSIVE: We reveal all the 2016 driver, team and sponsor movements CHAMP IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE Why Scott Dixon is a champion off the track, too AUSTRALIAN GT’S GLOBAL AMBITION European GT supremo to meet with local bosses ONCE MORE WITH FEELING Jenson Button’s retirement on hold... for one more year ,!7HB3C0-cahaae!:n;R AutoActionMagazine Auto_Action SILLY SEASON PUZZLE NO. 1658 SEPTEMBER 07-13, 2015 $6.25 NZ $6.80

Auto action 7 2015

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QUICK KIWI Fabian Coulthard is set to lead a revived two-car assault by DJR Team Penske from next year, triggering major driver moves as big new team sponsorship deals also fall into place

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Page 1: Auto action 7 2015

FROSTY UNLOADS: ‘CRAIG LOWNDES IS A PROTECTED SPECIES’

OLVED!EXCLUSIVE:We reveal all the 2016 driver, team and sponsor movements

CHAMP IN MORE WAYS THAN ONEWhy Scott Dixon is a champion off the track, too

AUSTRALIAN GT’S GLOBAL AMBITIONEuropean GT supremo to meet with local bosses

ONCE MORE WITH FEELINGJenson Button’s retirement on hold... for one more year

,!7HB3C0-cahaae!:n;RAutoActionMagazine Auto_Action

SILLY SEASONPUZZLE

NO. 1658 SEPTEMBER 07-13, 2015 $6.25 NZ $6.80

Page 2: Auto action 7 2015
Page 3: Auto action 7 2015

3

QUICK KIWI Fabian Coulthard is setto lead a revived two-car assault byDJR Team Penske from next year,

triggering major driver moves as big new teamsponsorship deals also fall into place.

Coulthard’s imminent signing with DJRTPopens the way for revamped line-ups at BradJones Racing, Prodrive Racing Australia, NissanMotorsport and Garry Rogers Motorsport.

David Reynolds, James Moffat and DunlopSeries dominator Cameron Waters are in playand ready to move in a domino effect, while thefutures of Scott Pye,Tim Slade, Jason Bright,Dale Wood, David Wall and Tim Blanchard areunresolved.

Absent from the silly season conjecture isMarcos Ambrose, who has already decided notto pursue a full-time return next year.

As well as driver moves, sponsorshipreshuffles will see Supercheap Auto switch fromWalkinshaw Racing to PRA and Caltex step upas primary backer of a standalone Triple Eightentry for Craig Lowndes. Supercheap is to takeover as title sponsor of would-be championMark Winterbottom’s Falcon, with Pepsi Maxstaying on as the sponsor of Chaz Mostert’s car.

Along with Triple Eight’s expansion to threecars, DJRTP is almost certain to return torunning two Falcons, retrieving its leased licencefrom PRA-run Super Black Racing, which in turn

For the complete rundown on who goes where in 2016 turn to page 4

Major driver moves and big team sponsor changes are done dealsor in the works, as uncovered by Mark Fogarty

FABS MOVEUNLOCK V8 SILLYSEASON

Page 4: Auto action 7 2015

DESPITE RECENTconjecture overDJR Team Penskeexpanding to twocars next season,the move is not yet afait accompli.

“We’re stillworking throughthings,” ManagingDirector Ryan Storytold AA. “As we’vesaid before, we’rein the business ofrunning competitiveracecars and we’vehad our strugglesthis year. But for usto go back to twocars, the model hasgot to be right. We’renot interested inrunning a car that islean and not doingthe program justice.We’ve still got quite abit of work before weget to that point.

“In terms ofrunning two cars, thebenefits are along thelines of economiesand having driverswho can shareexperiences. It workswell in debriefs andhaving more bootson the ground acrossthe board.

“We’re fortunateto be in the positionwhere we own twoRECs. And if we dostep up to two cars,we’ll do it with ourown RECs.

“We, of course,have a responsibility,like all teams do,that we operate thecars and have thelargest grid we canpossibly have.”

The second REC,leased by Super Blackthis year, wouldleave the Kiwi teamin search of anotherlicence should itcontinue next year.

COSTINFLATI

4 Edge Photographics

will need to buy a Racing Entitlements Contract (REC) or organise an interim lease for another season.

There are more RECs potentially available than might appear, including Walkinshaw Racing’s third entry if funding to replace Supercheap can’t be found.

Coulthard’s impending transfer to DJRTP is a key placement that clears the way for Reynolds and Moffat to secure their futures, with the repercussions affecting Waters and those unplaced or unconfi rmed.

Garry Rogers is actively participating in the driver market ahead of the fi nal year of his existing deal with Volvo, while Tekno Autosports now appears committed to continuing and is again pursuing a replacement for Shane van Gisbergen, who is joining Triple Eight’s expanded three-car squad.

Rogers is looking at replacing David Wall, who has struggled this year, with an established performer to back-up super-talent Scott McLaughlin. He is also preparing his team for the likely withdrawal of Volvo from V8 racing at the end of 2016 and, according to informed sources, is already in serious talks with two new manufacturers.

Still an outside contender for this year’s championship, Coulthard is said to have been seeking a big salary hike – $600,000 a year, according to V8 pitlane scuttlebutt. Although the Melbourne-based Aucklander is yet to formally sign with DJRTP because he is not contractually free to commit until October, AA understands that he has agreed to a multi-year deal with the American-controlled squad.

It is also believed that with renewal talks stalled, BJR co-owners Brad and Kim Jones have given up on retaining Coulthard and, according to an insider, have “moved on”.

His replacement will be Albury born Reynolds, who won’t be renewed at PRA-run Rod Nash Racing and has agreed to move north. Reynolds is expected to fi t in well with the family run team, which should be more suited to his quirky character and be better placed to nurture his innate speed.

Reynolds’ slot at RNR is to be taken by PRA protégé Cam Waters, a more affordable signing who brings with him EnZed backing from his development series program to augment reduced Bottle-O backing. Although the Metcash-owned bottle shop chain was poised to pull out, latest word is that it will continue with RNR as a non-naming rights partner.

Along with Supercheap Auto’s arrival and Pepsi Max’s renewal, in addition to signifi cant continuing support from Castrol – which is understood to have brokered the auto accessory chain’s move – the combination of EnZed and Bottle-O will drive a turnaround of PRA’s fi nances.

With one of PRA’s drivers likely to take the title – as well as the teams’ championship – Supercheap will be joining a frontrunning squad after more than a decade of backing

strugglers. Its departure from Walkinshaw Racing casts doubts on the future of the entry and Tim Slade, who has been largely unconvincing at Clayton.

Depending on Bright and Wood, Moffat is also a contender to join BJR, as well as fi guring in a possible change at GRM. He also remains in the frame to stay at Nissan if funding can be raised and could also be in Tekno’s calculations.

Although he has expressed a desire to continue, the future of 42-year-old Bright – the oldest full-time V8 driver – depends on BOC continuing its long-running backing of a BJR car. BOC’s deal has always been year-to-year and another renewal is pending. In any event, Bright is expected to keep his REC at BJR, currently used to fi eld Wood’s entry and dependent on the funding the characterful former DVS champion brings.

Tekno’s renewed interest in continuing could be a lifeline for Pye, who is understood not to fi gure in DJR Team Penske’s plans for next year. But he could be attractive to Tekno as part of a boosted support package from Triple Eight, whose owner Roland Dane is Pye’s manager and mentor. Tekno is also an important part of Triple Eight’s expansion to three cars to

accommodate the addition of van GisbergeWith the mercurial Kiwi to be paired with Jamie Whincup in the Red Bull Racing Austline-up, Lowndes will switch to the third enwith title backing from Caltex.

Likely to run under revived Caltex Racingbanner, Lowndes’s car is scheduled to share the pit boom with Tekno in what would effectively be a satellite Triple Eight effort.

The fuel and oil giant is returning as the branding sponsor of a car for the fi rst time since being the primary sponsor of Russell Ingall’s Stone Bros Racing Falcon from 2003 to 2007. Caltex has been a major Triple Eight partner sponsor in recent years, with signifi cant signage on both RBRA Commodores since last year.

Lowndes, who has signed a two-year extension to his contract until the end of 2017, has a long association with Caltex as a brand ambassador. He also has a personal deal with Red Bull, which is expected to continue, along with branding for the energy drink giant on his Caltex car.

Coulthard’s teammate at DJRTP is the big question mark.

A return to Stapylton by Moffat has apparently been ruled out and the widespread

Coulthard s impending transfer to DJRTP is akey placement that clears the way for Reynoldand Moffat to secure their futures”

Page 5: Auto action 7 2015

5

THIS WEEK’S RACE CALENDAR Brought to you by: www.speedflow.com.au

DATE EVENT ROUND CIRCUIT/VENUE

Sep 11-13 V8 Supercars R9/14 Sandown, Vic

Sep 11-13 NASCAR R26/36 Richmond, USA

Sep 11-13 WRC R10/13 Australia

Sep 11-13 Carrera Cup R6/8 Sandown, Vic

Sep 11-13 Australian GT R5/6 Sandown, Vic

expectation is that Ambrose will confirm after the enduros that he will not be returning full-time. Unlike Nissan Motorsport, which will need a funded driver if Moffat leaves, DJRTP will look for a proven back-up for Coulthard or gamble on a promising young gun.

Although funding for a second car is still to be fi nalised, it is anticipated that DJRTP will reclaim its REC from Super Black for political and practical reasons. It is believed the team

is being ‘encouraged’ by V8 Supercars torun a two-car team befi tting its status, with suggestions the REC rules may be about to change to restrict leasing to one year.

Although currently eligible to lease the licence for two years, it is known that Super Black’s deal with DJRTP was for this year only. The NZ team plans to continue its customer arrangement with PRA and is on the hunt for a REC to buy or lease, with plenty of options said to be available.

“Supercheap Auto’sdeparture from Walkinshaw Racing casts doubts on the future of the entry and Tim Slade”

The pieces of the 2016 Silly Season puzzle are starting to fall into place

Page 6: Auto action 7 2015

6 Edge Photographics

Losing ourtraditions

I’VE BEEN thinking a lot about historyand tradition. What does that meanin motorsport? If you believe Bernie

Ecclestone, not a whole lot.Last weekend’s Italian Grand Prix

brought into sharp focus how importanttradition is in motorsport. Rumourscontinue to float around that the ItalianGrand Prix’s days are numbered, that theMonza circuit will not be able to affordBernie’s ever-increasing sanctioning feesand that 2017 could well be the last timeAutodromo Nazionale Monza hosts a grandprix, despite a rich heritage of grand prixracing that dates back to 1922.

Ditto, the French Grand Prix, gone fromthe F1 calendar since 2008 when FelipeMassa won for Ferrari at Magny-Cours.

Remember, the French invented grand prix racing with what is widely regarded as the fi rst-ever grand prix for motorcars held at Le Mans in 1906, won by Hungary’s Ferenc Szisz in a Renault.

This year, another marquee race, the German Grand Prix, disappeared from the calendar, ostensibly for the fi rst time since 1955 (in 2007, the Nürburgring hosted the European Grand Prix). And the British Grand Prix seems to face a now almost annual threat from Ecclestone’s Formula One Management group as it seeks to extract more and more money from circuits to host the F1 circus.

Of course, motorsport is a big business, where money rules over everything else. But we are also now seeing the stark reality of that cash-grab. Last week, news came through that the venue for the Turkish Grand Prix, Istanbul Park, which was opened in 2005 having cost and

estimated A$180million to build, has been turned into a car dealership. Meanwhile, India’s Buddh International Circuit, host of the Indian Grand Prix from 2011-2013 and built at a cost of A$640million is now overrun with grazing animals. And Korea’s International Circuit, host of the Korean Grand Prix between 2010 and 2013 and built at a cost of A$1billion, has fallen into disrepair and is, according to F1 insiders who have seen it, a “sinking wasteland”.

It’s a cautionary tale for Formula 1. State-of-the-art billion dollar facilities might look good on the prospectus, but without the rich heritage, the people won’t come in the numbers needed to keep the tracks in business. Meanwhile, the heritage venues are slowly disappearing, each lost ‘traditional’ race a hole in the fabric of history of grand prix racing.

In Australia, I fear for the day when the owners of Sandown Raceway, the horsey Melbourne Racing Club, decides it can no longer ignore the huge dollar value of the swathes of land it sits on deep in the heart of suburban Melbourne. Permanent circuits in Australia have a habit of turning into urban sprawl – think Warwick Farm, think Oran Park.

So maybe it’s time to do your little bit for our motorsport history and tradition and head on out to Sandown this weekend. It might not have the mystique or prestige of big brother Bathurst, but its history is every bit as steep as Australia’s Great Race. Go be a part of it, before it’s too late.

The French invented grand prix but history counted for nought

ED’SDESKRob Margeit

Page 7: Auto action 7 2015

NEW WHEELSAN INTERESTING pic popped into the Spy’sinbox the other day. A man, dressed in aRed Bull Racing Australia suit and wearingJamie Whincup’s helmet was seen jumpinginto an Audi R8 LMS at Sydney MotorsportPark. Is there some smoke with this fire?

SMALLER SETON, BIGGER PORSCHEAARON SETON, the son of Aussiemotorsport legend Glenn Seton, willmake his Carrera Cup debut at Sandown.Seton junior is only in his second yearof racing cars and competes full-time inPorsche’ GT3 Cup Challenge alongsideScott Taylor. The Spy hears Taylor will beunable to make it to the Carrera Cup roundat Sandown this weekendand has enlisted the secondgeneration racer to fill hisseat, as well as continue todrive his car in Australian G

TESTING TIMESEREBUS MOTORSPORTtook the surprise optionnot to test last week atQueensland Racewayahead of the enduros. Withmileage limited all year, itdoes ask a bigger questionabout why the team optedout of a rare opportunity to

run its cars, particularly when it wasset to share the track with Tekno andTriple Eight. No replacement day hasbeen confirmed.

GOOD CHATTHE SPY’S good mukka and colleaguePhil Branagan will be at the pub thisFriday. Nothing much new in that, butthe veteran motorsport journalist has anopen invitation to come and have a chatabout some of the funny things that havehappened during his 25-plus years inthe sport. He will joined by fellow scribeAndrew van Leeuwen at the ArcadiaHotel in Melbourne’s South Yarra, it startsat 7pm. Book or get more details [email protected].

The latest scoops and hottest gossipfrom AA’s man of mystery

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THE SPY

Aaron Seton gets a crack at

Carrera Cup

Page 8: Auto action 7 2015

8 Edge Photographics, LAT Photographic

Jayco backs girl racer FORMULA 4 will welcome its first female to the grid this weekend at Sandown.

Formula Ford racer Caitlin Wood will contest the CAMS Formula 4 round in Melbourne with backing from series sponsor Jayco, and the teenager is eager to impress on her debut.

“I think a win is out of the picture,” Wood told Auto Action. “But I have confidence in my own ability and know I will be competitive. By the end of the weekend I would like to be in the top-five.”

Wood currently competes in Formula Ford, and despite the visual difference between the two cars, is confident she will make the shift to F4 easily.

“I don’t think it will be too difficult making the transition,” she said. “The only difference between Formula Ford and F4 is really the wings and slicks, and it isn’t a huge leap so I will be able to transition pretty easily.”

While her 2015 F4 campaign could start and end at Sandown, the 2013 Women of Australian Motorsport Scholarship recipient has big plans for the rest of her career.

“The end goal for me is definitely V8 Supercars,” she concluded.

A number of Jayco dealers banded together to fund Wood’s cameo, ala ATCC Ford Dealer Team in the ’70s, with the possibility of sponsoring a car full-time in 2016.

Cameron Kirby

V8 SUPERCARS’ switch away from Dunlop’s softerSprint tyre may be reversed next year, following tyre testing conducted last week.

While the results of the test are still being assessed by V8 Supercars, Auto Action sources report that the early observations point to a possible expansion of the use of Dunlop’s Sprint tyre in more events in 2016.

This would represent something of reversal of policy for the category, which substantially reduced the amount of Sprint tyre usage for 2015 in the wake of teams’ concerns over costs. The overall tyre allocation was also reduced substantially, though there have been changes in the numbers involved during the course of the season.

Part of the recent test included assessing even softer variants of the current Sprint tyre in a bid to provide drivers with more grip and, presumably, greater opportunities to overtake. However, the recent performance of the Sprint tyre is believed to have somewhat diminished the calls for the softer rubber.

AA has been told that change may be due, in part,

to the experience that the teams have had withthe current Sprint tyre under the new guidelines, which include a minimum starting tyre pressure. Concerns over teams starting races with what might be considered artifi cially low pressures led to the introduction of a 17psi minimum pressure prior to last year’s Bathurst 1000. The pressures, which are now being monitored by a sophisticated pressure sensor system, have led to a reduction in the concerns of tyre failures during events.

One source told AA, “Most teams have got their heads around 17psi now. It’s taken a while, but nearly everyone has it working.”

The introduction of the even softer compounds now appears to be less likely than it did last month.

It is expected that the Sandown and Bathurst endurance events will continue to use Dunlop’s harder Control tyre.

V8 Supercars’ 2016 race formats are expected to be announced close to the end of the current season.

Phil Branagan

HOLDEN’S COMMODORE VE and Ford’s FG Falcon willbe seen in the 2016 Kumho Tyres Australian V8 Touring Car Championship.

The cars that currently feature in the Dunlop V8 Supercars Series are to become eligible for the ‘third-tier’ series that currently competes as part of the Shannons Nationals. That series has recently become wholly owned by CAMS and is expected to continue in a modifi ed series in 2016.

The changing of the eligibility rules provides current Dunlop Series teams with the opportunity to pass their existing cars to Kumho Series teams. Next season will be the fi rst in which ‘Car Of The Future’ V8 Supercars will be eligible for the

second-tier V8 category.The Kumho Series started in 2008, and has featured

‘retired’ V8 Supercars such as Holden’s VT/VX/VY/VZ Commodores and Ford’s AU, BA and BF Falcons.

The Commodore VE fi rst competed in the V8 Supercars Championship in 2007 before being replaced by the VF in 2013. Ford’s FG made is V8SCS debut in 2009 and continued in Project Blueprint form until 2014, when a COTF version of the car appeared. Phil Branagan

VE and FG for Kumho

The FG X has made all the difference

A super-soft option may be taken off the table for 2016

V8 Supercars tyre test prompt rethink on 2016 rubber

Page 9: Auto action 7 2015

MARK WINTERBOTTOM is putting hisSydney Motorsport Park disaster behindhim, insisting he is still the man to beat forthe championship.

After teammate Chaz Mostert closed the points gap to ‘Frosty’, the Ford star says he now has the package to challenge for the title, whereas last year he lost grip on the championship at this point.

“Before Eastern Creek [this year], we were running at about a 3.8 average fi nish, which shows that we have a good car,” he told AA. “Last year we were probably running at an average fi nish of seventh and still had a points lead, which proved that we really didn’t have the car speed to win the title. We’re in a similar position [points-wise to this time last year], but a completely different feel on how we’re tracking.

“We have speed now. Saturday [at Sydney]

was really good, Sunday not so much. We just have to be smart with our set-up on the car, and what we chase and what we don’t. We went into the trap of chasing a car that lost its strength and gave us weaknesses, really, and in qualifying it’s too close to be doing that, so we just have to be smart. But we have car speed.”

While Mostert is the clear qualifying king this year, Winterbottom’s own improvements are becoming apparent with his number of front-row starts.

“Last year, if we qualifi ed 10th, I was happy. It was a really tough car last year. It feels different than last year and our average fi nishing positions are a lot higher. Last year it wasn’t that high; it was just people were failing, which made our championship position look better than probably what it was.” Mark Fogarty

SYDNEY SPEEDBUMP

Page 10: Auto action 7 2015

1 0 Edge Photographics / LAT Photographic

AUSTRALIAN GT bigwigs will sit down with Stéphane Ratel in Europe next week to discuss the possibility of linking a New Zealand event with the Blancpain GT series. AGT owner Tony Quinn and category manager Ken Collier will meet with Ratel, head of the Stéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) to discuss his Asia-Pacifi c plans.

SRO runs both the Blancpain Sprint and

Endurance GT series, and conducts Balance of Performance tests used by both Australian GT and the Bathurst 12 Hour.

Collier denied rumours that the meetings could result in SRO purchasing a stake in AGT, instead stating both Quinn and Ratel are keen to form a partnership to get Blancpain to New Zealand.

“The primary reason for the meeting was

Hampton Downs and how we could do something with SRO at Hampton Downs,” Collier told AA. “That may lead into something for AGT, but at initially we were just going to talk about Hampton Downs. Stéphane’s discussion with Tony on the phone was that he wanted to know a little bit more about what Australian GT were doing, and how we could be getting more new cars over here, and more interest. Which for [Ratel], leads to more interest in his Asia activities.

“I defi nitely see the partnership as an interest in developing GT racing, and not as a fi nancial partnership.” Cameron Kirby

AGT+SRO = More GT3

TEION

The EvolUTEion platform was annoin 2014, but V8 Utes category manageCraig Denyer says plans to have a caron-track demonstrations this month hgone out the window.

“That would have been perfect in an world, but that isn’t going to happen,” hAuto Action. “We are very much still indesign phase of the vehicle and there hbeen a fair bit of to-and-fro regarding thfi nal specifi cations of the vehicle.

“We haven’t actually commenced theyet; we are still working with CAMS onthe fi nal specifi cations of what the vehiwill look like. It is a kind of work in pro

V8 Supercars and V8 Utes announcetechnical partnership earlier this year tensure the project’s success. However, Dexplains involving more people has fordeadlines to be pushed back.

“It really is just time, and basically coup with a concept that all parties are ha

with,” he said. “I include V8 Supercars and CAMS in that. We have gone back to our teams a number of times, we are working on what is probably the fi nal design, but it is unlikely that we will see a vehicle built before Sandown, Bathurst or Gold Coast.”

With specifi cations not fi nalised for the fi rst car to be built, the planned introduction of the EvolUTEion to the 2016 V8 Utes grid is on shaky ground.

“In an ideal world [a 2016 introduction] would be the case, but the longer we leave it the more diffi cult that is going to be,” Denyer added. “I would like to think probably within the next month we will totally fi nalise the specifi cations and then if CAMS signs off on those then we can

Page 11: Auto action 7 2015

BUMPER BATHURST GRID FOR ALL the talk that came about when V8 Supercars reached into the coffers and purchased a 50-percent stake in the Bathurst 12 Hour, the changeover hasn’t stopped entries from rolling in. Already there are 46 cars on the grid, with 55 the event’s capacity. Any interested parties (like Prodrive, Nissan and Belgium’s WRT which have all been touted) must get their paperwork fi lled out and faxed in or else they may miss out. Notables on the entry list so far include two cars each from previous winners Erebus and Maranello Motorsport, while Germany’s Phoenix Racing will also return.

NEW LOOKS FOR SANDOWN TODD KELLY and Lee Holdsworth will have some new stickerwork for the next V8 round. Both unveiled the looks ahead of their pre-endurance test and both had international co-drivers fl y in for the day. Alex Buncombe, the YouTube whiz who drives more cars than a hotel valet, got his second crack at the Altima, while Sébastien Bourdais, who just fi nished his IndyCar campaign, jumped in Holdsworth’s Commodore.

MAWSON WINS AGAIN AUSSIE LAD Joey Mawson won again in Europe last week. The German Formula 4 racer nabbed a victory and podium at the Sachsenring and currently sits third in the championship with two rounds remaining. He’s had the measure of his teammate, Mick Schumacher, all season and is hitting form at the right time.

THE NEXT FERRARI FOR OZ FERRARI’S NEXT GT weapon, the 488, got its fi rst run in Italy last week. The car is expected to compete as both a GTE racer and in GT3 categories. Aussie GT team Maranello Motorsport has already put its hand up to grab a couple of new cars when they’re available. However, given how late in the year testing and homologation is happening, it’s unlikely they will be ready for the Bathurst 12 Hour.

Read more at autoaction.com.au

All the big stories from the weekin motorsport

Several prominent teams have entered

the 2016 B12H

THE TOP UP

Todd Kelly’s Nissan is up for carsales

Page 12: Auto action 7 2015

1 2

WINTER’S OVER, and thank the lords of motorsport for that. With spring in the air, it’s time

to head to the coast, thaw out, and catch a glimpse of some of the world’s best.

Rally Australia begins this week at Coffs Harbour and it’s an event that’s growing in stature. The weather is perfect (touch wood), the world’s best drivers are in town, and no amount of words on any pages will ever do justice to seeing a WRC car racing in the fl esh.

You’ve really got to check it out fi rst hand. And then spend the next few minutes picking up your jaw.

Until you get that chance, here’s your quick-fi re guide…

With Rally Australia beginning this Friday, we give you the quick run down on what to watch at Coffs

SÉBASTIEN OGIERWELL, LIKE in the days of old, it’s pretty hard to go past the Frenchman name Séb. Ogier, not Loeb, that is. The Volkswagen driver can wrap up his third title in a row this weekend after a dominant season so far.

JARI-MATTI LATVALATHE FINN is the man who would be rallying’s king…if it weren’t for his VW teammate, Ogier. JML is bloody quick, but his results are as consistent as a gypsy’s postcode.

KRIS MEEKETHE NORTHERN Irishman broke through for an overdue debut win earlier this year but has struggled since. He’ll be driving for his career at Rally Oz.

Page 13: Auto action 7 2015

HAYDEN PADDONTHE FAST New Zealander was impressive at Rally Oz in 2014. This year he’s improved further and is the makeshift home hero with plenty of support from across the ditch.

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MADS ØSTBERGIT’S THE best name in the WRC, and Mads is earning himself a reputation as a safe pair of hands. The 27-year-old has come of age in 2015 and has been the best man not in a Polo

ANDREAS MIKKELSENANYONE WHO knows anything about rallying will tell you Mikkelsen is fast, but that fi rst WRC w remains elusive. Maybe Oz is t ct place to change that?

THIERRY NEUVILLETHE BELGIAN is earmarked as the WRC’s next big thing – but the bigger question remains; can Hyundai give him a car worthy of his talents and will he still be there to drive it?

THE COURSETHIS YEAR marks the fourth consecutive running of Rally Australia at Coffs Harbour. The dusty stages on the New South Wales north coast trek through forests and make

p one of the most compact events on the calendar.

The 17 stages are held over 311 kilometres of running, including a visit to Slim Dusty’s infamous ‘Pub with no Beer’ around Taylors Arm.

For 2015, the eight-kilometre Valla stage will be run on the Saturday night, replacing the SuperSpecial held downtown. It’s a proper chance to see the cars at full pelt as they battle through the dark.

THE LOCALSTHE CLOSEST thing we get to an Aussie driver in WRC this year is our neighbour, Hayden Paddon, but there’ll be a coupla Aussies in the WRC2 class looking to put on a good show on home turf.

Reigning Australian Rally Champion Scott Pedder will drive an M-Sport-prepared Ford Fiesta R5 in WRC2 as he hopes to further impress on the international rally scene. The Aussie has competed in select WRC2 events this year and scored an impressive fourth in class at Finland.

Nathan Quinn will also make a return to the event where he made a major impact back in 2013. The Aussie commandeered a WRC-spec Mini back then and impressed plenty of onlookers with his speed on the road and his laconic style off it. He’s back in a Mitsubishi EVO IX and hoping to kick butt in WRC2.

DOMESTIC BATTLERALLY AUSTRALIA doubles as the fourth round of the Australian Rally Championship.

Eli Evans and Glen Weston lead the points table for Citroën but Molly Taylor and Billy Hayes are hot on their tailpipe. The rally is also a chance to see former champion Simon Evans have his first crack at the Coffs Coast event and get a glimpse at Harry Bates – the son of local legend Neal –who already has a series podium to his name.

The Classic category is chockers again, while Mark Pedder will run a Peugeot 308 Maxi car as a preview of the future direction of the local series.

Page 14: Auto action 7 2015

IT’S BEEN intriguing to see how McLarenand Red Bull have handled the situationwith their underperforming engine

suppliers, Honda and Renault, respectively.How do you get the best out of a person, or

a group of people or a company in any modeof life, be it family, a company, sport or someother endeavour? Red Bull’s approach hasbeen aggressive, public and upfront. McLarenand Honda have kept things internal andpresented a united we-support-each otherfront to the media and to the world.

Red Bull certainly has lost patience withRenault’s inability to come up with a quickfix to make its power unit as competitiveas those of Ferrari and Mercedes.Yet therestill exists some camaraderie between thepeople from Renault and Red Bull, who work

believe Red Bull will become a Mercedes-Benz customer, even though there was nothing in writing between them as of late August.

Meanwhile, is McLaren losing patience with Honda? “No,” was the immediate reply from McLaren’s Racing Director Eric Boullier. “As we said many times, we are happy to have Honda as a partner and Honda is happy with McLaren. It is just a project that didn’t have the maturity to be performing as much as we were expecting. So we are working very hard as a works team, and this is very important for us to be a works team.”

McLaren has to make things work with Honda because there is no easy or immediate alternative. They are far more than just commercial partners: they are

together at the race tracks around the world.“The Renault guys here trackside, many

of them are the same guys who were herewhen we enjoyed a lot of success together,”said Red Bull boss Christian Horner. “Theyare as frustrated as anybody else.The biggerquestion is what Renault’s plans are for thefuture. And hopefully that will be forthcomingin the next few weeks.”

And what, I asked Horner, are Red Bull’splans for the future?

“It depends on Renault,” he replied. “Wehave an agreement with Renault until theend of 2016 and anything other than that ispurely speculation.”

With Renault closing in on buying thesame team for a second time – from Lotusnow and previously from Benetton – I

IMPERFECTPARTNERS

Dan Knutson

THE F1 INSIDER

1 4 LAT Photographic

RENAULT HAS a rival mystery bidder seeking to buy the fi nancially struggling Team Lotus, Auto Action has learned. For now all that the team members and drivers can do is wait and see what happens.

“There are a lot of rumours,” Pastor Maldonado told Auto Action. “But we don’t know. I wish the best for the team from my side. They are good people. I have a lot of

affection for my team. Even in my short time here I have made a lot of good friends. So I feel really good. We deserve a good car and we have all the facilities to have that car.”

Whatever happens, Maldonado is confi dent that he will be driving for the team in 2016.

“I have a contract for next year,” he said. “The team needs to confi rm that when they want to do so. I want to put the team in the top again.

They have all the tools and everything they need to be there fi ghting for good places and podiums. For sure we need a bit more budget. But that will come at some point because it is a good team and they deserve it.”

Any buyer would fi rst have to pass a vetting process by the FIA, which recently turned down two bids from new outfi ts wanting to join the Formula 1 ranks in 2016. Dan Knutson

A MYSTERY BIDDER

“We have an agreement with Renault until the end of 2016 and anything other than that is purely speculation” CHRISTIAN HORNER

Page 15: Auto action 7 2015

Red Bull andRenault willsoon part ways

Ferrari boss chuffedwith the team’s

ability to recover

GOING OFF in the wrong direction on carset-up and having problems during thetwo practice sessions on Friday is notthe ideal way for a team to start a grandprix weekend, yet Ferrari Team PrincipalMaurizio Arrivabene is pleased that theScuderia now has the depth to be able tofight its way out of such a situation. Hepoints out that in Hungary and Belgiumthe team was struggling on Friday only towork through it and win in Budapest andbe in contention for the podium in Spa.

“When you are looking for extremeperformance with the material that youhave in your hands, and what we havehad since the beginning of the year, it isnormal that you have many problems

in the car,” he said, “You could have athousand mini or maxi problems. And youneed to fix it. Now there are two ways:one the team is getting lost and the otherone is that the team is getting focusedand working well. I have to say that thereaction of the team makes me happy.”

Furthermore, Ferrari does not go forqualifying lap times on Friday by runningwith light loads of fuel.

“The fact that we are a bit moreconservative on Friday is a clear choiceof our Technical Director James Allison,”Arrivabene said. “He is makes more senseto be quite real on Friday instead of goingaround the track with 20 kilos of fuel.”

Dan Knutson

THE FIGHT IN FERRARI

married, and, for better or for worse, they are stuck together. And when things fi nally do click, which should happen given the racing pedigree of both organisations, it will become a happier marriage.

Red Bull, on the other hand, has had a wonderful and successful affair with its mistress Renault that has now fallen apart. Red Bull has had the choice of staying with Renault if they can patch things up and Renault can prove it will act like times past when it provided potent power plants, or Red Bull can look elsewhere for a new engine partner.

There will no doubt be a long honeymoon between Red Bull and Mercedes, but how will Red Bull react if things start to go bad after that?

Page 16: Auto action 7 2015

1 6 LAT Photographic

REDS RETAINEDNot that there really was any doubt, but Red Bull will retain Daniel Ricciardo and Daniil Kvyat in 2016. Both drivers have long-term contracts with the team, which is set to take up its options on them for next year.

HAAS HINT? Esteban Gutiérrez said on Facebook that he’s had an important meeting that will have a big repercussion on his personal life. This has to mean that he is closing in on a seat with the new Haas F1 team. Gene Haas said recently that Ferrari test drivers Gutiérrez and Jean-Éric Vergne were among his top three candidates along with Nico Hülkenberg.

SALES DATAIf Renault buys Team Lotus it would of course use its own engines in the cars and that would free up a supply of Mercedes engines for a another team – Red Bull for example. But what engines would Lotus use if the mystery buyer ended up owning it? The mystery buyer has complicated the situation. Renault’s offer was 65 million pounds [A$147m] for 65 percent of the team – 20 percent from Andrew Ruhan, 45 percent from Genii Capital, and Alain Prost would take over the 10 percent owned by the Russian company Megfon, with the payment coming from Renault. Meanwhile, Vijay Mallya offered to sell Renault 95 percent of Force India for US$150m [A$214m].

TYRE BOUNCE BACK “We have learnt from our mistakes and will bounce back even stronger!” Valtteri Bottas said of the gaff Williams made by fitting two different types of tyres on his car during the Belgian Grand Prix.

IN DEMANDNico Hülkenberg won’t be lacking for work anytime soon. Force India extended his contract for two years and Porsche wants him back for Le Mans in 2016. Hülkenberg, Nick Tandy and Earl Bamber won the endurance classic for Porsche this year. DK

SPARE PARTS Fath

advfor N

BERNIE ECCLESTONE has, according to Britain’sTimes newspaper, dipped into his own pocket to pay the August wages of the some 400 people who work for Team Lotus.

“I thought I should cover the wages of the people there to make sure they were all right and so that

Lotus would at least get to Spa and, hopefully, toItaly,” Ecclestone said. “But they really need to makeprogress with Renault [buying the team] now to makesure everything is okay.”

While Lotus has had its severe financial problems ithas at least until now always paid the staff on time.There have been a number of times in the past when Ecclestone quietly has spent his own money to bail out a team that has been struggling fi nancially. But it remains to be seen how long his generosity towards Lotus lasts. Dan Knutson

BERNIE’S BAILOUT

MCLAREN WAITED until December 11 last year toannounce it would retain Jenson Button rather than

Kevin Magnussen to be the teammate to Fernando Alonsowho rejoined the squad for 2015. Alonso has a long-termcontract, but Button’s deal is for one year and McLarenhas the option for a second year. McLaren’s three maincontenders for 2016 are Button, Magnussen or GP2championship leader Stoffel Vandoorne.

“I am not going to tell you which parameterswe are going to use,” McLaren’s racingboss Eric Boullier said. “This is our owndiscussion internally and our ownstrategy as well. What I can tell you isthat we are happy with both Jensonand Fernando. I hope that we willmake the decision much, muchsooner [than last year].”

McLaren is always pointing outhow it and Honda are one team,so will both parties be equallyinvolved in the driver decision?

“Yes, both parties will be

equally involved in the driver decision,” Boullier said, “but at the end we (McLaren) will decide.”

Gone are the days when Honda could dictate that its partner team takes on a Japanese driver.

But Honda is extremely happy with Button, who has had a long relationship with Honda and who has strong

ties with Japan.The limiting factors right now are the engine and, yes, even the

chassis, not the drivers. Boullier told Auto Action that Button’s rapport with the team’s partners and sponsors and cannot be underestimated, and this makes the 35-year-old Briton, who is still driving superbly, an invaluable asset to the team. AA can predict with certainty that Button will be back next year.

Dan Knutson

BUTTON SECURE McLaren likely to announce the retention of Jenson Button for 2016

“We are happy with both Jenson and Fernando” ERIC BOULLIER

Page 17: Auto action 7 2015

1 7

BECOMING A father, Romain Grosjean, afather of two, told Nico Rosberg will changehis life but should not affect his performanceon the racetrack. Nico and Viviane Rosbergare the proud parents of their baby daughterwho was born in Monaco on August 30.

“It helps your life in general,” Grosjeansaid. “You don’t do things for yourselfanymore, you do them for them. They areeverything for you. When you have a toughweekend – or a tough day – you call then,you Skype them in the evening, you see theface of your son, or your sons, and you just

laugh. It probably helps to relax your mindin the evening, to think about somethingelse and come fresh in the morning.”

Once the helmet visor goes down,however, Grosjean warned: “If you thinkabout your family, you’re not going to stayflat out.”

Getting married and having children (andworking with a sports psychologist) madea huge difference in Grosjean’s racingabilities and his personality as it helpedbring him out of a real rough time he hadbeen going through. Dan Knutson

SAUBER’S DIP in performance should be coming to a close since it received the updated Ferrari engine at the Belgian Grand Prix and will get aerodynamic upgrades for the chassis in Singapore.

The factory Ferrari team introduced an upgraded version of its power unit for its cars at the Canadian Grand Prix in June and another for the Italian Grand Prix in September. Sauber’s plan was always to have the fi rst upgrade in Belgium and the second one later on, possibly at the United States Grand Prix in late October. Sauber will not use the third upgrade that Ferrari will debut in the fi nal races. There’s a price for the lease of the basic version of the power unit, and then customer teams have to pay

extra for the upgrades. Sauber paid for two upgrades and that’s what they’ll get.

Sauber gets a fi ve-million euro [A$7.8m] discount because it is running Ferrari protégée Raffaele Marciello as its test and reserve driver. That, plus because driver Marcus Ericsson keeps paying in advance, means that Sauber is up to date on its payments to Ferrari.

Of course, other teams keep upgrading their cars as well, but Sauber should be back in the hunt for points.

“I’m always optimistic, actually, otherwise it is diffi cult in this job!” Sauber Team Principal Monisha Kaltenborn said when Auto Action asked about the upgrades. “We have a good feeling for the package.” DK

SAUBER RETURNS TO THE HUNT

GIVEN THE strong performances by Red Bull in some but not all of the recent races it is obvious that the team has made a signifi cant step forward on the chassis side while it copes with the Renault engine that can’t match the horsepower output of its rivals.

“It’s a big positive for us as a team that the car is working well,” Daniel Ricciardo said. “Sure we know about the lack of power from the engine, but there have been times when we feel that the chassis has been underperforming as well. In the last few races, particularly as we saw in Budapest, if we get it in the sweet spot it is back to where it was last year.

“It is a very strong car. Our understanding of where the sweet spot is is a lot better. I have confi dence that we will fi nd it more often than not, so the car has come a long way.”

Dan Knutson

Closer to the sweet spot

herlyvice

Nico

Sauber feels good about its next upgrade

The sweet spot is easier to fi nd now

Page 18: Auto action 7 2015

1 8 All Images: LAT Photographic

CHAMPIONBLOKE

CAPTAINAMERICACurt Cavin

SCOTT DIXON not only has nailed down another IndyCar Series championship, he confi rmed he has a contract extension to remain with Ganassi Racing.

“It’s more than two years,” he said of the deal signed in August.

Figure three years and probably more for the 35-year-old driver, who’s driving in the prime of his career. Dixon’s race win at Sonoma gave him 38, one short

of tying Al Unser for fourth place on the sport’s all-time list and within reach of Michael Andretti’s 42 next season.

Dixon has won at least two races per season since 2006 and this was the sixth time he’s won three or more. In 2008, another championship year, he won six races.

The fourth series title (second in three years) gave Dixon a spot alongside Mario Andretti, Sébastien

Bourdais and former teammate Dario Franchitti for second place in that category. A.J. Foyt won seven in his career.

Team owner Chip Ganassi called Dixon “arguably the IndyCar driver of our generation,” and there’s not much counter to that.

“There’s not anybody I’d rather have driving our cars, I can tell you,” he said.

Curt Cavin

Scott Dixon is proof that champions are born, not made

Page 19: Auto action 7 2015

1 9

TEAM PENSKE will have trouble digesting how it lost this year’s IndyCar Series because the turning point was last-race contact between teammates.

On the restart at lap 39 at Sonoma Raceway, Will Power was sizing up Josef Newgarden in Turn 4 when series leader Juan Pablo Montoya bumped him from behind. The contact sent Power’s car spinning, and Montoya was forced to make an unscheduled pitstop with a broken front wing.

The ensuing stops left them 23rd and 24th in the 25-car fi eld when the next restart came.

“Josef went up the inside,” Power said, trying to explain what happened. “I tried to switch back to get around and obviously Juan got my back bumper there. We spun and unfortunately [the contact] damaged his bloody wing.

“And yeah, that just set the day there.”Montoya refused to discuss the

incident. “It doesn’t matter what happened,” he said.

One of Roger Penske’s cars has fi nished second in the standings six consecutive years with only a single championships. It has failed to convert in seven of the past eight season fi nales. Curt Cavin

TeamPenske’sWTFmoment

INDYCAR SERIES drivers are not infavour of having some races worthtwice as many points as others, but it’sunclear what the sanctioning body willdo for the 2016 season.

Team Penske drivers Juan PabloMontoya and Will Power lashed out atthe double-points system minutes afterwatching Scott Dixon of Ganassi Racingswipe the title at Sonoma Raceway,one of the two events where additionalpoints where awarded. Never mindthat Montoya and Power received thestandings boost in May when theyfinished 1-2 in the Indianapolis 500.

“We’ll see if they change, but theylike the excitement for the last race,”Montoya said of IndyCar officials. “Is itfair for a normal championship? No, butit’s the rules they want to play with andif you don’t like the rules, don’t race.”

Graham Rahal said he didn’t think anyrace should have double points and he

didn’t like the plan to award extra pointsfor Indianapolis 500 qualifying, althoughthat was scrapped when IndyCarchanged the format after three Chevroletcars got airborne in practice.

“I know what they’re trying to do,trying to make it more interesting,trying to get everybody [involved],”Rahal said. “But everybody is alreadyhanging out on the [edge] and all you’redoing is benefitting the big teams.

“Just like we tried double-file restarts[last year]. We don’t need gimmicks inthis sport to make it exciting.”

Power’s beef with IndyCar is moreover the closing of the pits duringcaution periods. That disadvantagesleaders if they haven’t yet pitted.That hurt several leaders this season,especially Montoya at Mid-Ohio.

“We’ve got to decide if we’re a sportor a casino because it’s just the luck ofthe draw here,” Power said. Curt Cavin

BITTER BRIDESMAIDJuan Pablo Montoya saidScott Dixon had “a shitseason”, but it’s worthnoting Dixon won a series-leading three races anddelivered a win in the finalewhen Montoya couldn’t.Montoya almost led thestandings from the startof the season to the finish.Dixon, meanwhile, finished15th in the first race andnever was higher than thirdin the standings until takingthe lead at Sonoma.

MOST SWEETESTBecause of the way the#9 team kept fightingthis season, Dixon calledthis championship, hisfourth, “the most sweetestchampionship we’ve had”.Dixon described his marchto the title as “very Dario-esque”, in reference to hisformer Ganassi teammateDario Franchitti. “Quite niceto slip through there andtake it,” he said.

SIX FROM EIGHTChip Ganassi’s team haswon six of the past eightIndyCar titles, three each byFranchitti and Dixon.

LEAP OF FAITHGanassi had a simpleexplanation for deciding tobody surf into the crowd inSonoma’s victory lane. “Theyall came over and startedsaying, ‘Jump, jump’, orwhatever,” he said. “I linedmyself up for that, and Icouldn’t say no then.”

KILLER DROUGHTRemember when there waspre-season talk of TeamPenske’s stellar four-car team winning all the races? The team went the season’s final 98 days without a win. Montoya got the team’s final win in the Indianapolis 500.

ROOKIE AWARD Gabby Chaves, who finished 15th in IndyCar points, was named IndyCar’s Rookie of the Year.

KARAM COUNSELLED Sage Karam, the driver who crash debris struck Justin Wilson, admitted to seeing a psychologist to address his mental anguish. Karam still doesn’t know what caused him to spin, and he’s still asking the question “What if I didn’t spin?” CC

SPAREPARTS

SCOTT DIXON is called the Iceman forhis coolness under pressure. But don’tjust think racing. Think tragedy.

Dixon’s boss, the often-gruff ChipGanassi, was at the lectern for last week’sIndyCar Series championship celebrationin San Francisco when he got moist in theeyes and fought back tears. Ganassi wasspeaking about the champion who had donesomething heroic.

Dixon had stayed in Pennsylvania on thenight of August 23 to help a friend. JustinWilson, who was in a coma, didn’t knowhe needed Dixon, but Dixon knew Wilson’sfamily needed him and his family. So hestayed. They stayed.

Scott and Emma Davies-Dixon arechampions not because the driver scoredthe most points in this recently completedseason or the ones in 2003, 2008 and 2013.They are champions because they care.

They stayed in Pennsylvania, whereWilson had been struck by debris in thecrash of Sage Karam, and offered support,just as they had in 2011 when DanWheldon’s widow, Susie, needed help. AfterWheldon’s death, the Dixons moved theirfamily to St Petersburg, Florida, for muchof the off-season to help Susie and her twoyoung boys.

And they stayed with Wilson and hisfamily, even as others not named Dixonmight have gone about the business ofconcentrating on winning a championship.

“Nobody asked him to do that,”Ganassi said.

Dixon’s coolness was evident in the fi nale at Sonoma Raceway, too. He entered the fi nale 47 points behind Juan Pablo Montoya, a distance close enough to be considered a legitimate contender but not enough to be given much of a chance. He’d need to win a race expected to be dominated by Will Power, and he’d need to have Montoya stumble. One might happen, but both?

It didn’t help Dixon’s cause that Power led 26 of the fi rst 34 laps in pursuit of those two valuable bonus points for leading the most laps, but Dixon stayed calm and cycled to the lead on lap 51. Thirty-six laps remained. He could still overtake Power, and he could still win the race. And that’s what he did.

Stayed calm. Delivered in the clutch. Showed why he’s a champion, on and off the track. Again.

DOUBLE DRATS!

“Dixon knew Justin Wilson’s family needed him and his family so he stayed in Pennsylvania”

It was double or nothing for

JPM at Sonoma

Page 20: Auto action 7 2015

20 LAT Photographic

HIGGY’S LUCKY 13THManxman David Higginscontinued his astonishingrun with victory on theOjibwe Forests Rallyin Minnesota, his 13thconsecutive Americanvictory. He overcame apuncture and brokendriveshaft. Subaruteammate Travis Pastranawas second.

PAOLO POWERS ONItalian Paolo Andreucciclinched his ninthdomestic championshipwith victory on the Rallydel Friuli in his Peugeot208 T16. GiandomenicoBasso’s gas-poweredFiesta R5 was third.

TOYOTA TWINSToyota’s young Japanesedrivers Hiroki Arai andTakamoto Katsuta finishedthird and fourth in theirclass on Ralli Turku, thelatest Finnish round,driving Tommi Mäkinen-run Subaru Imprezas.

RUN, BABY, RUNIn a gruelling pre-RallyAustralia outing VWstar Andreas Mikkelsencompleted three ofeight stages on theTransalpine Run. He ran96.5 kilometres, climbing2083 metres en route fromOberstdorf in Germany toLandeck in Austria.

MALCOLM’S VISIONM-Sport boss MalcolmWilson wants drivers ElfynEvans and Ott Tänak totake second place in themanufacturers’ title race.“We’ve seen that whenthings are right, we’recapable of it,” Wilsonsaid. “We just need a bitmore consistency fromthe drivers.” M-Sport isfourth in the standings,23 points behind Hyundaiand 10 off Citroën.

POLE POSITIONPoland’s KajetanKajetanowicz extendedhis ERC standings leadwith a podium on theCzech-based BarumRally, moving 23 pointsclear of Ireland’s CraigBreen. Breen sufferedthree punctures, finishingseventh in his Peugeot208 T16. Škoda’s JanKopecký won the rally inan R5. JW

SPAREPARTS

Peugeot denies Dakar dramas

PEUGEOT SPORT Director Bruno Famin has dismissed talk that the French fi rm’s Dakar program is in disarray.

Despite not fi nishing in the top-10 on this year’s event, Famin described the 2008 DKR’s debut in South America as a success.

The car is now being systematically redesigned ahead of next year’s marathon, while ex-World Rally Champion Sébastien Loeb is still considering joining the team.

Last weekend the 2008 returned to competition on the China Silk Road Rally – already modifi ed with work on the suspension and engine.

This interim car will be known as 2015+. The 2016 car, to be tested as soon as possible after China, will be 200mm wider and longer – but is unlikely to compete ahead of next January’s event.

Although sources close to Peugeot’s drivers have said the program isn’t yielding the kind of success that had been hoped for, Famin rejected such views.

“On this year’s event we focused on reliability and we did quite well with this by bringing two cars to the fi nish,” Famin said. “There were some incidents, of course, and the result was the best we could do last year.

“Development of the car has been intensive since and its evolution will be ready for 2016. It will be wider and longer, but based on the same concept of two-wheel drive, diesel engine and big wheels.”

He avoided saying he hopes for a win in 2016.

“We are not even in the middle of this program yet,” he said. “We talk about three years of Peugeot in Dakar, but there’s no limit to how long.

“We could say we go to win in 2016, but most likely we say that for 2017.”

He said Loeb was welcome to test the car again.

“We don’t know whether Sébastien will join us again. Everybody knows he would like to do Dakar; everybody knows he visited the event in 2014 and everybody knows he tested with us.” Jerry Williams

DESPITE TOTAL opposition from WRC teams, FIA President Jean Todt has refused to rule out the possibility of next year’s WRC calendar ramping up to 14 events.

Citroën and M-Sport have insisted they cannot budget for an extra rally in 2016 but Todt said he would not bow to pressure from any of the WRC stakeholders.

WRC Promoter has accepted 13 as the optimum number of events. But if China came in then one of Portugal, Germany or France (Corsica) would have to go.

Østberg says he and Meeke are good together

MADS ØSTBERG is keen to stay atCitroën next season – with Kris Meeke as a teammate and a two-year deal for them both.

The Norwegian says he and the Ulsterman need a longer-term commitment from their team.

“It’s diffi cult [with] one year deals,” he said. “You can’t fi ght for the whole season if it’s like this; you feel you have to prove yourself all the time.”

He is talking to other teams but would rather stay with the French outfi t

alongside Meeke, whom he described asa “very good companion in the team”.

“We like to compete and neither of us likes to be beaten by the other – but that’s good,” Østberg said. “We speak well together and we test well together. My feeling, at least, is that it would be good to carry on.”

Citroën’s Yves Matton will not confi rm any drivers until the end of the season, after the fi rm’s future in the WRC has been decided.

Jerry Williams

Meeke and me, by Mads

Todt: ‘I call the shots’

Page 21: Auto action 7 2015

2 1

VWFULLSPEEDAHEAD

VW’s 2017 Polo hasstarted testing in the

hands of Grönholm

LESS THAN three weeks after saying its next-generation Polo would test this year, VW hasstarted evaluating the 2017 car.

The speed with which the German team ismoving ahead will further alarm rival teams.

Former double world champion MarcusGrönholm drove the car for three days in Finlandbut afterwards said he was limited in what hecould say about it.

“It’s been a while since I drove like this inFinland,” Grönholm added. “So, the first couple ofruns, it was like: ‘Okay, this is fast…’ It takes timeto come to the speed again. But the car was nice.

“We drove for three full days on stages like Hassiand Vaheri. Really, it was good. There are somechanges on the car, they changed many smallthings and, of course, it sounded nice – that is

Marcus Grönholm gives developing 2017 Polo the thumbs up after early evaluation

defi nitely in the right way.”YouTube footage shows that the Polo does sound

somewhat different to today’s cars, adding to speculation that it is more than a 2015 Polo with extra bits bolted on.

The test gave VW initial data for the 2017 season – 17 months before the car’s debut in Monte Carlo.

However, team boss Jost Capito downplayed the moment, saying, “We were ahead of schedule, so we adapted a car to take a fi rst look at the aero. We just wanted to see how it behaves in the high-speed stages.

“The car looks okay with the wider body and the front splitter, but it’s not so different from what we have now. And it will change before we get to 2017. These are just some parts we have added. It hasn’t been in the wind tunnel yet.”

Another team source added: “This is something which has been worked on for some time. Like Jost says, this is by no means the fi nished article.”

Meanwhile, Toyota Germany’s 2017-spec Yaris is expected to run early in 2016 as the Japanese program continues to spread confusion.

Tommi Mäkinen Racing is reportedly planning also to have four of its Yaris test cars running by February – double the number originally expected and a month earlier.

A Japanese source admitted Mäkinen was going to have his work cut out.

“Two test programs running early next year with two cars being run at each test is a big, big [thing to be] taking on,” the source told AA. “Everybody wants Tommi to succeed but we need to see some action now.”

Recent speculation in Germany was that Tokyo could soon lean on Toyota Motor Group Germany more heavily.

A source close to TMG said: “We’re looking at a natural evolution of our current car towards the 2017 WRC car we always set out to build. The whole program was and is geared towards 2017.”

Asked if there could be more assistance beyond the already agreed engine work, the source added: “Yes, it’s possible. We are here with a very workable car, which has been through an extensive testing program.” Jerry Williams

“It’s been a while since I drove like this in Finland. It takes time to come to the speed again. But the car was nice” MARCUS GRÖNHOLM

The fi rst two have reportedly been assured of a place on the calendar, leaving France in the fi ring line. Current speculation is that Frenchman Todt would not let that happen.

Todt would not be drawn on the question of whether there was room for both China and Corsica next season.

“It would be inappropriate for me to respond to speculation,” he said. “There is a specifi c process for the selection of a new event – the same applies for the formation of the calendar. The calendar is not a matter of two events, rather all of the

rallies applying for inclusion.”Citroën’s British-born CEO Linda Jackson said

in July: “We’re looking for something with the same number of races – 12 or 13, including China. We need to make sure we can work on the same budget or less. Yes, Citroën Racing and sport is important for us, but it would have to be within the budgets we have already got.”

M-Sport’s Malcolm Wilson echoed her words.Todt added: “I respect, of course, the opinion of

the manufacturers, but it is up to the FIA to decide the number of events in its championships.” JW

Page 22: Auto action 7 2015

2 2 Images: Edge Photographics, LAT Photographic

YOUR SHOUT

STACKS BETTER IT IS so nice to see two championship contenders battling it out at the front at the same team without double stacking ruining the others chances all the time! How many times have we seen Craig Lowndes being stacked behind Jamie Whincup in pitlane, being forced to lose positions hand over fi st just because he was running second and his teammate was fi rst? I think without the double stacking Whincup may not have been as dominant as he was.

But look at Prodrive; Chaz and Frosty are one and two in the championship, and always up the front in the races, and no bloody double stacking! It is a wonder Mr Dane and his brains trust never fi gured out how to do that!

James Fontanevia email

GETTING UP FOR SANDOWN THIS IS supposed to be the most exciting time of the year in V8s, but it’s hard to get a grasp on how everyone feels. It’s Sandown time but I can’t help but notice not having the races on free TV regularly and the gaps in the calendar has sapped some enthusiasm. It’s not fair on Sandown, which is usually a great race, but I hope for the sake of V8 Supercars it kicks up some interest for Bathurst. Otherwise we could be in for some amazing racing, but no one interested in seeing it.

Dave Broadheadvia email

BRIGHT IDEAS I THINK it is a great idea to get some lights put up at Sydney Motorsport

Park. Was there in the mid ’90s whenthey raced under lights and it wasspectacular. Definitely what the seriesneeds to boost it. They do need to make it more appealing to the fans, though. Maybe cheaper [tickets] and the grandstand is included in the price of general admission. With the lights, maybe if the state government stopped wasting money on Homebush they would easily be able to assist SMP with permanent lights?

Andrew Hayesvia Facebook

TRACKING NUMBERS SO V8 Supercars decide to lock in a venue for 10 years (Sydney Motorsport Park) which has one of the poorest spectator numbers, and, from what I’ve heard, is a poor track to view the racing. I like the idea of locking in a permanent track and not another street circuit, but they seriously need to look at what they can do to pull in the crowds. Everything else V8SC has done in the past has failed.

Steve Mackeyvia Facebook

BURNING THE RUBBER SUPER-SOFT TYRES? [AA #1657] You kidding me, V8 Supercars?! With current allocations we should be testing tyres that will last 10,000km. Racing on pre-used rubber? Even if it has been used in the same race, come off it! This super-

EDITOR Rob MargeitDEPUTY EDITOR Lewis IsaacsART DIRECTOR Kieran LiuSTAFF JOURNALIST Cameron KirbySUB EDITOR Matt ReekieEDITOR-AT-LARGE Mark FogartyDESIGNER Matt GraySTATEWIDE EDITOR Garry O’Brien

CONTACT USPhone: (02) 8268 4673Email: [email protected] Address GPO Box 4088, Sydney NSW 2001

CONTRIBUTING WRITERSPhil Branagan (V8s), Dan Knutson (F1), Curt Cavin(IndyCars/NASCAR), Jerry Williams (WRC), Michael andAndrew Cotton (Sportscars), Bernard Carpinter (NZ),John Doig (Drags/Sprintcars), Frank Joseph (Karts)

CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS/ARTISTSMark Horsburgh, James Baker, Ross Gibb, Torque Photos, Nathan Wong, LAT Photographic, Dirk Klynsmith, John Stoneham (cartoonist)

BAUER MEDIA GROUP CEO David Goodchild PUBLISHER – SPECIALIST DIVISION Cornelia Schulze ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER – SPECIALIST DIVISION Ewen PageDIRECTOR OF SALES Tony KendallGROUP MANAGER, BRAND ADVERTISING Simon DaviesGROUP SALES MANAGER, MOTORING Matt RiceBRAND MANAGER Tim MedwayNATIONAL CIRCULATION MANAGER Carrie RaissCIRCULATION MANAGER Thomas Dang

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Published by Bauer Media Limited (ACN 053 273 546), part of the Bauer Media Group, 54-58 Park Street, Sydney NSW 2000. The trade mark Auto Action is the property of Bauer Consumer Media Limited and is used under licence. © 2015. All rights reserved. Printed by PMP Print, 24 Industrial Avenue, Wacol, Qld 4076. ISSN 2204-9924

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Auto Action 2010 WinnerMotoring Magazine of the Year

Niche Magazine of the Year

WHO’S WHO

BRAIN TEASERS1. What year did Jamie Whincup fi rst win the Sandown 500? (Pictured)

2. Who partnered Geoff Brabham to victory in the 1993 Sandown 500?

3. How many times did Sébastien Loeb win Rally Australia?

4. Who won the fi rst Rally Australia held at Kingscliff?

5. Who was the fi rst winner of Nissan’s GT Academy?

6. How many times did Sebastian Vettel win the Singapore F1 Grand Prix?

7. Where did Mark Winterbottom

fi nish in his Bathurst 1000 debut?

8. What position did Mark Winterbottom start from on the grid the year he won the Bathurst 1000?

9. At what track did Scott Dixon win his fi rst IndyCar/CART race?

10. What year did Scott Dixon start from pole and win the Indianapolis 500?

Answers on page 47

Tyres are made for thrashing says one

AA reader

Page 23: Auto action 7 2015

soft nonsense will be even more of a headacheunless V8s can sort their mess out with tyreallocations. How hard can it be? Just give thema fresh batch of tyres for every single session,and then fresh tyres for each race.

I want to see who is the fastest driver,not who is best at racing on used tyres,or which car is ‘kinder’ to its tyres. It’s aracecar, it should be destroying tyres withoutprejudice! I’m sick of this pansy-footedconservation nonsense. Fix it or I am done!

Eric Cipplevia email

JUAN MASSIVE SOOKJUAN PABLO Montoya needs to stop hiscomplaining! In the end [Scott] Dixon wonthe IndyCar title because he won an extrarace than Montoya. It was Montoya who hithis own teammate in the last race. And yes,there may have been double points for thelast race of the year, but it’s not over untilthe final black and white flag is waved. Poorloser on Montoya’s part.

Regan Muirheadvia Facebook

DOUBLE THUMBS-DOWNI HATE the double-points finish in IndyCar.Montoya was the most consistent driver andthe last race saw him lose the title when inmost circumstances he wouldn’t have...

Not saying Dixon doesn’t deserve it, andI congratulate him, I just don’t like thedouble points.

Cameron Larry Tenardivia Facebook

“I want to seewho is the fastestdriver, not who isbest at racing onused tyres” ERIC CIPPLE

23

* We reserve the right to edit letters for brevity and accuracy. Letters will not be published without an email or a street address. We also reserve the right to check bona fides.

FACEBOOK FEEDBACKGOOD DEALERSHIP to go for a test drive.NATHAN WONG

HOLY CRAP, how big are car dealerships in Turkey that Istanbul Park seemed like a good choice?NATHAN DE ROVER

SUCH A shame as it was the best modern F1 track and only Bernie’s greed is to blame.BRAD CHILD

TILKE TRACKS are boring as all hell. This was one of the better ones, though.JASON ROBERTS

AFTER READING the FIA track spec document I can’t blame Tilke. Just an engineer/designer working to what he’s allowed.JOHN-ROSS MITCHELL

TURNING A track into a car yard is still better than into a housing estate...GUY MURPHY

AND YET we continue to pay squillions to Bernie and his thieves.SEAN CARTER

THE PERFECT circuit in the wrong place.

I’d love to have seen the WEC race there.DAN HAMMOND

THE FOOLS were – and still are – the governments and commercial promoters who swallowed F1’s blatantly uneconomic lure – hook, line and sinker.MIKE JACOBSON

IRACING, PLEASE immortalise this.BENNY SMITH

HOW AWESOME is this track? I remember Red Bull were the only team able to go full throttle through the quadruple Turn 8.JAMES MORGAN

AA’s Facebook mates tell us what they think about Turkey’s F1 track, Istanbul Park, being bought by acar dealership

Used car dealers will fi ll Bernie’s

shoes in Istanbul

Page 24: Auto action 7 2015

CLASSIC HOT SHOTDavid CoulthardWilliams FW17 Renault Italian Grand Prix, Monza, September 10, 1995Photo: LAT Photographic

Page 25: Auto action 7 2015
Page 26: Auto action 7 2015

LAT Photographic, Edge Photographics

IT’S CRUNCH time. Sandownand Bathurst loom, and withthem rest the fortunes of the V8championship contenders. Big

races, big points, big stakes.The man with the most to gain – or

lose – is title leader Mark Winterbottom,who is having his strongest seasonyet and has his best shot at claimingJamie Whincup’s crown. Yet there arequestions and concerns.

Winterbottom and Prodrive RacingAustralia (in its former guise of FPR)have a history of championshipcapitulation. This time it would seemPRA can’t lose because its FG X Falcon isthe car to beat and Frosty’s teammatesare also in title contention.

Winterbottom, though, is vulnerablebecause younger teammate ChazMostert is on a roll, with his recentconversion of poles into three wins inthe last four races vaulting him intosecond in the standings.

After a scrappy weekend at SydneyMotorsport Park, all eyes are on Frostyto see whether he consolidates orcollapses in the enduros. But in his10th season with the factory Fordteam, 34-year-old Winterbottom is inhis prime and, while being wary of theenemy within, remains confident abouthis title prospects.

26

UP FRONT WITH

FOGESOVER 40 YEARSOF AA’S EDITOR-AT-LARGEMARK FOGARTY

CHAMPINGAT THE BITAs he prepares to fend off friends and foes, would-be V8 champion Mark Winterbottom opens up to Mark Fogarty about the pressures and possibilities of what’s becoming a tense title race

Page 27: Auto action 7 2015

27

lap times. I’m qualifying second more often than not, which is seen to be a weakness, but it’s still pretty good. The car is not suiting the way I like to drive it, but I’m trying to adapt.

Chaz’s qualifying form is exceptional. He’s just nailing it. I can see where he’s doing it and it’s hard to replicate how he’s achieving his lap time.

And he’s putting it together in the races now, too.Yeah, he’s doing a good job in the races, but we should be able to out-qualify him, There’s no reason why we shouldn’t be able to do it, but in every condition, he and his car just seem to be in sync with the track. Dave [Reynolds], Andre [Heimgartner] and myself are more a bit hit-and-miss on weather conditions and track conditions, but Chaz is nailing it. He has a set-up that he’s not fl uctuating far from, so in any conditions it’s capable of working. We need to get better at that and just make sure we get on top of it because if he keeps out-qualifying you, he’s going to keep beating you.

Chaz has become your main title rival rather than Jamie Whincup. Didn’t think we’d be saying that earlier in the season.He’s quick and the car is quick. In the last few rounds he’s come on really strong. And you can’t see many weak tracks for him between now and the end of the year, either, so he’s defi nitely a big threat. If he keeps qualifying the way he has, that’s his biggest strength, it’s going to be tough.

I don’t imagine that you would have expected Jamie to be struggling as much as he has.No, but now we have good cars. We have four cars up there now and also Scott Pye when he’s going well. If we all perform, we instantly have fi ve cars fi lling the top spots, so Whincup might fi nish sixth or seventh or eighth. Our team’s really lifted and gone forward. But, yeah, you don’t expect him to back in the midfi eld. And even Eastern Creek, for him to do what he did Saturday (runaway win in the second sprint), it sort of looked like that on the softs he might be back and

Are you still in control of this championship battle or is it getting a bit shaky?I think I’m still in control. Eastern Creek was not a good round, but it hasn’t ever been for me. For some reason, it’s just a track that dislikes my style and although I fi nished second on Saturday (in the fi rst sprint), I fi nd it really hit-and-miss and it always has been for me. But I still feel like I’m in control.

I looked at last year’s championship and going into Sandown, I think Whincup only had a 100-point lead or something, so we’re in the right position to try to win it. Qualifying’s not that important for the next three rounds, which the other guys have been doing a better job at, so I think I’m still in control. If I’m good enough, I’ll win it and if I’m not, I won’t.

We’re in the perfect position to have a go at it, but it’s by no means home and hosed. A lot’s going to happen between now and the end of the year, but if we do it right, we can win and that’s the good thing.

It all started to unravel last year at Sydney Motorsport Park, didn’t it?Probably earlier. Townsville was horrible last year. At Willowbank, the tyres literally fell off the bus there and at Eastern Creek we really struggled. But in the run home, there’s no round I’m really nervous about. The rounds I was nervous about were Townsville, Willowbank and Eastern Creek. One of them I won 300 points (two wins at Townsville), Willowbank we scored really high and then Eastern Creek failed, but in the run home, there’s not really any track that you’re worried about, which is nice. Eastern Creek was the last of them.

Unusually, particularly given your form in the past, qualifying has been your weakness while Chaz is on fi re.It’s just that it’s working for him. I don’t think I’m doing a bad job, but he’s really hooked up. On Fridays I can beat him when we put greens on. At Eastern Creek, I was quicker than him with new tyres, but what he has is a lot of confi dence. He rolls into qualifying, and he and his engineer do something that just clicks, and he’s just nailing incredible

“You hit Lowndes and everyone hates you. He hits you and it’s just a racing incident. He’s a protected species” FROSTY

Determined to keep his grip on

the championship

Page 28: Auto action 7 2015

28

normally on Sunday they back it up, buthe faded.

So it’s interesting to see the way that teamand he are having to tackle the year. But,again, from this point to December last year,he gained 400 points on the field, so he hasthe potential to flick the switch and bounceback. But now he has to pass a lot of cars, notjust one car, so it’s going to be tough for him.

It’d be a huge mountain to climb.It would, but I still think he’ll get in frontof [Craig] Lowndes. I do think he’ll passLowndes pretty quickly. But, yeah, Chaz is thereal danger. It’s really hard to beat someonewhen they’re always out-qualifying you.

I guess we can confidently expect that atsome stage, probably in the enduros, thatJamie is going to become a nuisance.Yes, but you just have to monitor who you’reracing and who you’re not. But, yeah, he stillraces hard when he’s in the championshiplead, let alone when he’s not in it. So he’sgoing to race hard and try to win races, butit’ll be no different to any other year. He’salways up there and you expect him towin races between now and the end of theyear. Who knows, he might get back in thechampionship. You just don’t know. A lot’sgoing to happen, but it’s going to be toughfor him.

Are you under pressure?Not really.You are and you aren’t. Everyonehas different pressure. Someone likeWhincup’s under pressure because he hadn’twon a race for nearly five months [beforeSMP] and he’s under the pump. Reynolds isunder pressure to try to keep his drive. Chazre-signed, so he’s under pressure to try to uphis market rate. Lowndes is coming to theend of his career and he’s under pressureto win it. He might not ever win one again.

So everyone’s under pressure fordifferent reasons.

I want to win it, but you don’t gothinking about it all the time. Putthe helmet on and just try to dothe best job, not thinking about thechampionship. Leading is not a badfeeling, but you think about thatwhen you get to December. Once youget to Homebush with a 100-pointlead or 100-point deficit, then thepressure’s really going to hit hard.

Is it time for team orders?You can’t give team orders to thetwo battling for the championship.

You don’t think you deservepriority after the effort you’ve putin over a decade with the team?No, no. If it comes down to the lastround and I need help, and Chazs out of it, sure. But, otherwise, no.

We all think we’re in it. Chaz thinkshe can win it; I think I can win it;eynolds thinks he can win it. Andreroke my steering at Eastern Creek,

things just happen. He didn’t meanhit me, but sometimes you just end

up running into each other throughcircumstance or whatever. But there are noteam orders, no way – not at the moment.

You would obviously prefer to win the titlein a straight fight.Oh, you have to win it in a straight fight.You don’t want to be handed it. And I’m notowed anything. We work together, but it’severy man for himself. Last round, if I needpit priority or something and he’s 400 pointsoff, I’m sure they’ll look at it, but even then,you still want to win it fair and square. Youdon’t want people moving over.

Do you agree with the team pursuing theprotest against Lowndes (seeking a points

penalty for punting Winterbottom in theSunday race at SMP)?I’ve seen the footage and he smashed me offthe track, no doubt. On the in-car footage onthe TV, it doesn’t show who’s on the throttle,who’s on the brakes and everything, so fromthe data, I braked 10 metres deeper than anyother lap, so I braked deep and he’s on theaccelerator and hits me and bumps me offthe track.

He’s semi-out of control, though, isn’t he?Not by that point, I wouldn’t think. He wascoming back onto the track and whatever,but I wasn’t involved in that incident before(that put Lowndes off), so that’s his problem,not my problem. The fact was, I had passedhim cleanly, gave him room, got on thebrakes and was smacked off the track.

It’s just the inconsistency. Last year atSurfers, I passed Tim Slade (after bumpinghim through the final turn) and got knockedoff the podium for costing him one spot.With Lowndes, he smacks me off the trackand I lose effectively 10 spots but nothinggets done about it. It’s the same IPO (JasonBargwanna), the same everything. But Idon’t care.The best way to get back at themis to beat them, so I don’t really care aboutprotests, but the team felt it was worthy of it.

Is there any particular bad blood betweenyou and Lowndes?Lowndes is a funny one.You hit him andeveryone hates you. He hits you and it’s justa racing incident. He’s a protected species, abit. Anyway, I don’t really care, to be honest. Ithappens when you race people.

But people need to see the incident forwhat it is, not who are involved. He’s themost popular guy by a long way and theyturn a blind eye a little bit. They shouldn’t.They should see incidents as they are, notthe people involved. That’s where you getlost a bit when Lowndes is involved.

I don’t want to be going before the stewards

“Losingit whenyou’vebeen closein thepast justmotivatesyou andthis yearI’m reallyhungry.I’mdesperate”FROSTY

LAT Photographic, Edge Photographics

It feels good to have Triple Eight on the back foot

Page 29: Auto action 7 2015

and stuff – I just want to race – but the teamthought it was worthy of it and they thinkthey’ll win it. On the flipside, Roland [Dale]dragged me into the stewards’ box at PhillipIsland for something stupid, so [Triple Eight]would do the same if it were the other wayaround. His comment that it was a racingincident makes him a bit of a hypocrite.

It must feel good to finally have Triple Eighton the back foot after so long.It’s really good. Times are pretty tough forour team financially. Like, we lost somestaff last year, but we increased ourperformance, so it’s pretty rewarding,really. We’re rapt with the way we’re going.Morale’s good. It’s a team that everyonewants to come to now – drivers, personnel.

I’ve been there for a long time andthis is probably the calmest everyone hasbeen – and the results are showing it. Wehave fewer people, but people in the rightroles. We’re being more productive with fewerstaff, which is kind of bizarre. It’s good with(co-owners) Rod [Nash] and Rusty [French],too.They’re really steering the ship. Rod’sthere day-to-day, and he and Rusty play amassive part in how well we’re doing.

A lot of people have been waiting for theteam to descend into its old championship-losing ways, but it’s not happening.No – and it doesn’t feel like it’s going tohappen, either. People keep saying that, butit doesn’t feel like we have any weaknesseslike we previously had. It’s not like we’resitting on our hands thinking things aregood. We have heaps of things to test (at pre-enduro test at Winton last week) and we’restill going forward. So, yeah, it all feels good.

Last year it felt like the wheels werecoming off the bus. And that’s not a teamthing; that was just tracks and rule changesand stuff. Even this year, when they broughtthe soft tyre in for the Saturday sprints, wewere dominant on the hard tyre then theybring the soft tyre in and we still maintained

that performance. So even with thingschanging, we’ve still been competitive. Lastyear, tyre pressures, soft tyre, everything,that just ruined us.

The FG X factor is crucial to all this, isn’t it?Yeah, it is, but we’ve done a lot to the carsthat is underneath the bodywork. Adelaide’sa good example. We went to Adelaide withthe same external (new FG X body panelsand aero kit) and weren’t that competitive, tobe honest, and then we went to Townsville,which is a very similar track, and we werereally competitive.The outside hasn’tchanged, but the internals have changed, soI think we’re doing a good job underneath aswell as the external aero.

The guys have done a lot of work on thecars to get them up to speed. If you lookedat last year’s set-up compared with now,they’re massively different.

Mark Skaife declared that it’s now ornever for you – that if you don’t win thechampionship this year, you’ll never win achampionship. Harsh or fair?He’s said that every year for the past fiveyears. If I don’t win it this year, I have acontract for another three years, so I won’t beturning up just going, “Oh, well, that was it”.It’s a big statement. Who knows? We couldgo to Bathurst and (co-driver) Steve Owencould crash or we have a failure. Somethinghappens out of your control and suddenlyyour 170-odd point lead becomes a 230deficit.That’s not a now or never type ofthing, so it’s a big statement by him. But he’sentitled to his opinion. He’ll always throw outcomments like that. He has for the past fiveyears and he has again. It’s not surprising.

But there are some uncertainties after thisyear, aren’t there?Not really. Next year we’re in the same carand then in 2017 the whole sport changes.We could be running a V6 turbo, could berunning anything. But you still back your

team and believe you have the best team towin it.That’s why you sign long deals.

Next year we’ll have the same car, so if youwin this year, you’d be hopeful that you couldback it up. Or if you don’t win this year, you’dbe hopeful you could turn it around.

So you don’t have any concerns about theteam’s financial future?No. They’ve just signed a couple of newsponsors and commercially we have a reallygood set up. We’re getting the results and wehave two people involved, Rusty and Rod,who are pretty trustworthy. I have anotherthree years there, so I’m confident.

You got the Bathurst 1000 monkey off yourback, so explain how important it would beto finally win the championship?Oh, the championship’s the biggest prize.I’d pick it over Bathurst.To be the best for12 months and have #1 on the door, that’severything. If you finished your career anddidn’t win it, you still have to be proud ofwhat you’d done, but you’d feel empty.

I’ll just keep trying. I’ve come close a fewtimes and this year feels really good. I reallywant to win it and I sort of have one handon the trophy, but then a bad round can takethat hand away. Losing it when you’ve beenclose in the past just motivates you and thisyear I’m really hungry. I’m desperate to winthe championship. It’s the #1 on the doorthat’s always been most important to me.

I imagine you’re feeling pretty good aboutyour chances at Sandown and Bathurst.You could anchor the championship inthose two races, couldn’t you?Yeah, I need good results in both. Reliabilityhas been good so far and I have full trust inSteve Owen. I think he’s probably the pick ofthe people to put in with me.

We can really set ourselves up if we getgood results at Sandown and Bathurst – but,equally, we could really hurt ourselves if itgoes bad. Sandown should be good. The carshould be quick there. And for Bathurst Ithink we have a really good car.

Doing well would really help for thechampionship because after Gold Coastthere are only three rounds to go and thetracks all suit us. New Zealand’s really goodfor us; Phillip Island’s really good for us; andthen if you go to Homebush with the pointslead, you can be smart strategically. So if wecan do well in the enduros, it’s really onlythe run home then.

Do you expect the title to go down to thewire; that you’ll be fighting for it at SydneyOlympic Park?I hope not! Seriously, I hope not, but itusually does. Last year was a bit of a rubon the face (when Whincup had alreadysecured the title), but if you could wrap it upbefore Sydney, whoever it is, they’d be prettyhappy. The Sydney 500 is a big danger round.You could score zero points there easily.We’ll see what happens after the enduros,but if we get a good lead there, I think youcould wrap it up before Sydney, but if youhave a bad run, it could be anyone’s.

The team is not expected to ask Chaz to move over

Bathurst is one

thing, but it’s not a title

29

Page 30: Auto action 7 2015

NHRA Top Fuel co

SIR JACK Brabham is a legend of Australian motorsport for his incredible achievements in Formula 1,

the most signifi cant of which is becoming the fi rst, and likely only, man to design and build the car he raced to a world championship. It is incredibly unlikely that anyone will repeat that feat in Formula 1, or most other top-tier categories. However, one Aussie is doing his best.

Richie Crampton is already one of the most successful Australians to compete in American drag racing. In two seasons in the NHRA, the Adelaide native has earned himself six Top Fuel event victories with Morgan Lucas Racing, and is in with a serious chance of this year’s title.

But as Crampton explains, he didn’t get to where he is in the usual manner.

“My story is kind of a little unorthodox, being that I was a crew member that got given the golden ticket and the opportunity to drive,” he tells Auto Action. “I was able to achieve some success pretty early in my career because of the fact that I stepped right into top-class equipment. If it weren’t for that, I would be still trying to get to where I am at right now.

“It just speaks volumes about the MLR organisation and Toyota and everyone that allowed me as an unknown quantity to get into the driver’s seat and get out and race. It has kind of been up to me to repay them by doing my job in the driver’s seat and trying to win races for them.”

And win Crampton has. In his fi rst year in the seat, the 36-year old collected two wins – including the biggest and most prestigious Top Fuel event in the world, the US Nationals at Indianapolis – and was named the NHRA’s Rookie of the Year.

One of the secrets to Crampton’s success is his desire to get his hands dirty. He hasn’t stopped working as a crew member, and takes pride in the fact he wrenches on the same car he is strapped into on race day.

“That is what I do from week to week, that is what I did before I became a driver,” he explains. “I was a crew memberon the weekend and would work atthat chassis shop building racecars thatMorgan [Lucas] drove. Nothing has really

30

E

changed from that aspect aside from now I can get in the driver’s seat.

“It is pretty neat to have a hand in building your own racecar that you take to the track and then win races with; it is pretty rewarding. It is not that common anymore. It is kind of the old-fashioned way of doing things. I think the statistic is that the last person that won the US Nationals that had a hand in building their own car was Don ‘Big Daddy’ Garlits, who is a legend of our sport. I take pride in that and I don’t want that to change.”

It is esteemed company that Crampton is keeping in the record books, and it isn’t just for working on the car.

“The only other rookie to win at Indianapolis is Larry Dixon, only two rookies have ever done that,” he points out. “The statistics are just amazing and they still blow me away when I read them like that.”

Crampton has been a long-time fan of NHRA drag racing, and gets a major kick out of racing against the likes of Dixon, Tony Schumacher and Doug Kalitta – people he has looked up to and admired. Despite being only in his second year of Top Fuel

Crampton is a rare driver who helps prep his racecar

Ameriracingan und

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3 1

d in building yourhe track and thenmmon anymore”

RICHIE CRAMPTON

K

racing, he is not overawed when he looks across the start line and sees that he’s lined up alongside a legend.

“I have staked my claim in the Top Fuel fi eld,” he reasons. “A lot of that is because my team is so good, and my crew chief (Aaron Brooks) is one of the most respected and aggressive young crew chiefs in the sport. They know they are going to have to bring something good to the starting line just to compete with us just based on the performance that my team can give me in the racecar.

“I feel right at home. I think there is a mutual respect now, and I am still the rookie in a lot of senses, but I feel a lot more at home racing against these guys who are the best in the world. A lot of them I used to watch from the other side of the world sitting on a couch, so it’s pretty cool.”

Drag Racing in America is faster than ever. Although the NHRA only races to 1000 feet in contrast to the 1320 feet that ANDRA runs in Australia, records are being broken regularly, and speeds are as fast as ever. Such fi erce competition motivates Crampton.

“It is amazing,” he says. “The parity in Top Fuel this year is, it’s just… we have never seen it before. The races are being won and lost by the narrowest of margins, and the performance of the racecars, it is really staggering how far we have come really quickly in this last couple of years.

“To have won the event where fi nally that 3.6-second milestone was broken (the quickest 1000ft pass in Top Fuel history at Brainerd in August), to be the guy that walked away with the trophy from that event is pretty amazing to me. I am not sure what the next barrier is that we are working towards, but one thing is for sure, there are just so many great crew chiefs and drivers over here right now it is a very exciting series.”

Crampton was preparing to defend his US Nationals title as AA went to print. And, as he continues to turn spanners as well as taking the steering wheel in emulation of Australia’s greatest motor racing hero, he is well on his way to becoming one himself.

Page 32: Auto action 7 2015

323232

“I defi nitely don’t take it for granted. know that I am in tspotlight because thprogram is amazinMATT SIMMONS

REAT

Page 33: Auto action 7 2015

Matt Simmons is on a journey from postie to pro-racer, and he has the

attitude to become Australia’s next big global star, writes Cameron Kirby

3 3

A FEW months ago, Matt Simmons was a regular bloke just like you and me. The 26-year-old from

Brisbane used to drive an Australia Post courier van for a wage, which he would spend on his car. The closest he got to being a racing driver was having a crack at Gran Turismo on his lounge with mates.

That was then.Now, Simmons is a member of NISMO’s

Global Athlete Program. Catapulted into the life of a professional international racing driver, he is set to race a Nissan NISMO GT-R GT3 at the Dubai 24 Hour thanks to GT Academy.

The fi rst time I spoke to Matt was as a judge at the national GT Academy fi nals. Along with a panel of fellow journalists, I was tasked with grilling contestants to see if they were up to the task of dealing with the media attention given to a pro driver.

Simmons spoke well, didn’t crack under the pressure, passed all other tests and earned himself a nod from my colleagues

and I to represent Australia at the GT Academy international race camp in Silverstone. There he survived a week-long intensive contest against representatives from around the globe to be crowned the winner, and is now a member of NISMO’s global roster. He keeps esteemed company, with GT Academy racing in GP3, LMP1, and winning the Bathurst 12 Hour.

It sounds all well and good to go from racing video games to being a pro-racer, but it doesn’t happen overnight. In fact, it happens over three months.

After a brief return home to see friends and family, Simmons has already returned to the UK to begin his training, where he will undergo a three-month racing boot-camp to get the appropriate international licences.

Speaking to Simmons for the second time was in the Nissan Motorsport V8 Supercars garages. Decked out head-to-toe in Nissan gear, and wearing the grin of a man who has achieved his childhood dream, Simmons recalled what it was like trying to get through race camp.

“It was a pressure cooker,” he tells AA. “You don’t get much time to perform over there so you really have to prepare well. Because that gives you a sense of confi dence that whatever they throw at you, you will be ready to give it your everything. That is what I fed off in myself, I had an inherent confi dence I could do it, but when you are rocking up to a gymkhana course or buggy course and you haven’t done it before, you just go, ‘Ahh, I hope I can do well’.”

He can certainly speak like a racer. But despite the fact that he now writes ‘racing driver’ in the little box that asks for his occupation on customs documents, it hasn’t all been beautiful women and fast cars straight out of the box.

“I haven’t seen a GT-R for long enough yet, nor any ladies,” Simmons laughs. “But I don’t think my girlfriend would be too pleased with that.”

But for the ex-postie, the high life isn’t the life he strives for; just the fast life.

“For me it is not about that,” he says when asked about the potential riches he could make should this plan of his all work out. “I am really just happy about being able to chase my dream and hop in a racing car. I am still pinching myself that I get to wake up and go, ‘I don’t actually have a daily job. My job is I get to race cars.’ That is all that matters, everything else is obviously a bonus.”

Victory at race camp is a life-changing experience. Along with becoming a part of NISMO’s driver line-up Simmons was subject to intense media scutiny following his win. His story was national news. Simmons is brief in his summation of what it was like to be thrust into the spotlight literally overnight.

“Overwhelming,” he recalls. “It is one of those things where I try and take it all in my stride, but I am so grateful for it all. I defi nitely don’t take it for granted. I know that I am in the spotlight because this program is amazing and people really support what it is about.

“I am really here to enjoy the experience and try and have people follow my journey so they can feel like they are part of it.”

Along with the media attention, Simmons feels he now has the weight and expectation of a nation with him. But it doesn’t stress the laidback Aussie, who plans to just do his best to make us proud, and maybe encourage others to follow in his footsteps.

“I have defi nitely helped a lot of people get inspired, so that has been the most amazing, humbling, and overwhelming thing,” he says. “I achieved my dream, but I also feel like I have achieved some of the Australian community’s dream, and the celebration from that has made everything so much more amazing for me.”

As a former Nissan owner, the fact Simmons got his big break with NISMO gives the story a heart-warming symmetry. Out of all the cars in NISMO’s racing stables, Simmons already has his favourite picked out, and will make his international debut in it no less!

“I am a GT-R fan at heart, I have owned a road-going R33 GT-R, so for me it would have to the GT-R GT3,” he says with a grin. “I am so humbled that I get to drive that in Dubai, and hopefully a full-time race seat if everything works out well.

“I would be content with a GT-R GT3, and then working my way through the NISMO program to even maybe LMP1. It would be such an honour to be a part of such an innovative program.”

Although the R33 GT-R has been sold, Simmons joked about buying back his old ride with his fi rst pay packet as a pro-racer. He didn’t earn his spot as a pro in the traditional manner, but don’t think Matt Simmons won’t be doing Australia proud for years to come.

FOR

Simmons is in training for his

Dubai debut

TNESS

Page 34: Auto action 7 2015

34

Remember When...AUTO ACTION #301 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1982THE 1982 Formula 1 World Champion

will contest this year’s 47th Australian Grand Prix – whether it’s

Keke Rosberg or Alain Prost who ends up winning the coveted title.

Both Rosberg and Prost are confi rmed entries in this year’s race, to be held at Calder Park on November 7.

It is the third year in a row that the reigning world champion is set to contest the Australian Grand Prix for Formula Pacifi c cars. In 1980 it was Alan Jones and last year Nelson Piquet. Jones is again confi rmed for this year’s race, whilst negotiations are currently underway to bring back Piquet.

Like last year, Frenchman Jacques Laffi te will also start what is now the premier open-wheeler race in Australia, as will last year’s winner Roberto Moreno.

Prost and Laffi te will team together in two of Bob Jane’s Ralt RT4s, while Ralt

Prost did not put a foot wrong all day

at Calder Park

Moreno, Leffi te and Prost clowning on

the podium

Piquet’s car climbed over Williamson’s

distributor Graham Watson will run Rosberg. Moreno will drive a car run by manager Greg Siddle, with 1981 World Champion Piquet likely to join him in that team.

Auto Action #305, dated November 5, 1982, included a special AGP preview lift-out where it was noted that Keke Rosberg, who had won the 1982 World Championship, had pulled out of the AGP due to a confl icting tyre test on his Williams F1 car in the US.

The following issue, #306, dated November 19, carried a full report of the race, which was won by Alain Prost. From pole position, the French ace shot his Ralt into the lead and was never headed during the 100-lap race.

The Renault F1 star was chased all the way by fellow countryman Laffi te, who fi nished 15 seconds behind Prost but still 10 seconds ahead of third-placed Moreno.

Page 35: Auto action 7 2015

ALSO IN THIS ISSUE…

35

NO, ENZO ALAN JONES has knocked back an approach from Ferrari to replace the team’s injured F1 driver Didier Pironi. Enzo Ferrari has confirmed the team sought Jones to drive one of its 126Cs in the final three rounds of the World Championship this year with a view to a full contract. Jones declined due to being committed to a full program of races in Australia. With Jones’s decision not to accept, former world champion Mario Andretti has taken up the offer.

World ChampionRosberg was a last-minute cancellation

Prost edged aheadon the first lap andwas never headed

FEW BOB’S WORTH BOB JANE will pour millions of his own money into upgrading Calder Park in preparation for a round of the Formula 1 World Championship in 1984. Following the Victorian State Government’s decision to withdraw from the project, which was to have been joint funded by the state and federal governments, Jane will “go it alone”, pledging to pump in excess of $5million to develop a world standard 3.9-kilometre track. “This is not pie-in-the-sky or vague promise,” Jane told AA. “The new Melbourne Internationals Raceway, Calder Park, will be one of the finest motor racing circuits in the world.”

AD OF THE WEEK READING THE inside story on the new Brock Bathurst cylinder heads is liable to give you a migraine, but the bottom line is they’re going to make Brocky’s Commodore go faster for longer on the Mountain. Even if you struggle to understand all of this engineering jargon, you should probably get them for your road car anyway.

KATAYAMA BACKSIX-TIME JAPANESE Touring Car Champion Yoshimi Katayama will be back at Bathurst this year with Allan Moffat’s Peter Stuyvesant Mazda team. Katayama, whom Moffat drove with at Le Mans in June, will share Moffat’s RX-7 at Bathurst. Katayama is best remembered in Australia for his only other Bathurst appearance in 1977, where he barrel-rolled Allan Grice’s RX-3 at the end of Conrod Straight. Lucio Cesario will drive the team’s second RX-7 with fellow team newcomer Gregg Hansford at Sandown and Bathurst.

Moreno stalled his car at the start andgot away dead last after the field hadcleared out. He sliced back through thefield but simply could not catch the twoFrench frontrunners.

High drama came as the leading carswere completing their 35th circuit. As abunch of cars accelerated onto the backstraight, Peter Williamson (TolemanToyota) and Graham Watson (Ralt) collided,spinning in-field. John Smith (Ralt) was leftwith nowhere to go and hit Watson, whileNelson Piquet slammed into Williamson.Williamson, Watson and Piquet were donefor the day.

Prost continued to stretch his lead allthe way to the chequered flag, despiteLaffite recording the fastest lap of therace, a 39.62, well outside the record of39.4 previously set by multiple Australianchamp Alf Costanzo.

Costanzo claimed his fourth successiveAustralian Drivers’ Championship atCalder Park, despite almost throwing itaway with a spin on lap 94. He finishedthe race in fifth, two places ahead of hisnearest championship rival John Bowe toclinch the title by a slender four points.

“Smith was left with nowhere to go and hit Watson, while Piquet slammed into Williamson. Williamson, Watson and Piquet were done for the day”

Page 36: Auto action 7 2015

36

ACTIONMART CLASSIFIEDS TO ADVERTISE HERE CONTACT SHEHAN GUNAWARDANA ON (02) 9263 9712

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2001 HINO

3 seater with sleeper cab, Driving lights, air seat, 240 volt power, duel tanks turbo inter-cooled. Currently set up for open wheeler’s with an electric gantry lift but easily converted for sedan with fold down second level. Easily fits three Formula Fords and all the gear to run them, Fully maintained to a high standard with a recent oil and filter change. Cruises at 100km no prob fully loaded. Located Keilor VIC

$45,000 +GSTPH 0423 470 594

For lease, An as new 1174m2 tilt slab building in the Yamanto area only 12km from queensland raceway.

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Arrange an obligation free inspection todayGreg Boettcher - [email protected] or 0414 707 726.

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This one has been built with all the best equipment at no expense. Fully rebuilt 620hp Chev engine. New suspension set up by Glenn Seton Racing. The car has posted times equalling class lap records at Eastern Creek and Phillip Island. Good list of spares.

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$85,000Contact Jeff on 0418 712 654

Man 280LE Transporter/Motorhome. Can carry two cars if required. Overall length 11 mtrs, pan length 8.5 Mtrs, pan height inside 2.9 Mtrs. Seats three. Drivers seat is air ride, small storage/sleeping area behind

seats. Aircon, air bag just serviced, p/steering, cb radio & radio/cd player, multiple cabin 12v cig power outlets. Pan is one piece fi breglass side,

good tyres, new batteries, just been over pits, tailgate lifter, long range fuel tanks, tyre racks, rear aircon, fridge, tv/dvd, microwave oven, sink, elect water pump, heaps storage, cheap rego, too many features to list.

The best value for money transporter you can fi nd.

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Contact Mark Rundle on 0400 099 978 or [email protected] for more information

This is arguably Australia’s fastest racing car - and also the most successful in 2014. As well as helping simon hodge win the formula 3 Australian drivers championship in 2014, the car also set numerous lap records and remains

the outright lap record holder at Mount Panorama, Bathurst. Immaculately prepared and run by australia’s top open-wheel team,

Team BRM, the car comes complete and ready to race and with a spares package that will see any driver or team through the 2015 championship. Support from Mygale is also assured as the brand seeks to continue it’s

winning ways in 2015 and into the future.

$POA

Page 37: Auto action 7 2015

37

BRUCE WILLIAMS (VIC): 0418 349 555 JAMES SECHER (QLD): 07 3245 5049 ACTIONMART CLASSIFIEDS

Subaru WRX Sdoor – J Spec GN Motorsporthomologation

FOR S

The car is new and it happrox 16 KM’s in totalon speedometer.As delivered by STithis 11MY - GVBC4VHmodel is fitted with 2.0scroll turbo, this is a gemotorsport car and wasThis vehicle has been prepared for club day, circuit racing and tarmac rallies and wouldmake a great track day car and would be an extremely competitive vehicle. This is afantastic, low maintenance super reliable car. A list of performance upgrade options isavailable on request.Standard equipment includes Brembo 4 piston brakes and 17” ventilated discs front and rear, quick ratio power steering, option gearbox ratios.Now fitted with a full current spec CAMS approved Brown Davis multi point safety roll cage, STi factory alloy bonnet, STi factory- big capacity intercooler spay kit with auto timer kit, on board fire system, Cobra head restraint seats, Velo 6 point harness, window nets, carbon footrests on both sides, anti glare dash, braded fuel lines internally, bonnet pins, Project Mu brake pads, mounting for spare racing wheel.

Price of vehicle as described is $70,000 OBO - plus GST.Ph 0418 349 555 or email [email protected] for full spec sheet

STi 4Group

car.

SALE

as

Litre, twinenuine factorys purchased new for competition only use by Subaru Australia.

d f l b d i it i d t lli d ld

FOR SALETCM SLR 5000 TORANA

Car not yet runBuilt by Sunliner Racing

Complete ready to race with G Force dog box, 9 inch dif, 2 sets wheels, Bembro brakes, Bilsteins/coil over fronts, etc.

Comes complete with Holden 308 530hp steel engine

Price $89,000 or with 302 610 hp Chev $120,000 Ph Tony Hunter 0427 314 943

or BH 03 8761 6411 for full specs

HONDA INTEGRA DC5 TYPE R

Multiple 3 E AMCHAMP Class WinnerComplete with extensive Spares package too many to list

including S/H Tyres. Car comes with twelve Wheels--Factory Brembos with DBA 5000 Rotors. Hondata ECU--Transmission

Cooler--Quaife LSD. Eligible for Production Touring -- AMCHAMP--Tarmac/Targa Rallies.GREAT BATHURST 6 HOUR CAR

DOES 2 HOURS ON A TANKNew project reason for sale.

$26,000Contact Terry Conroy 0423 734532 M

[email protected]

PRICE - $85,000 + GSTContact Maurie Pickering – 0438 018 425

• Finance Ezi Falcon BA 032 002• Ready to race for upcoming Khumo V8 tour car series (very competitive)• Car has very good history as winner in V8

Supercars in 03 & 04 season A5 Supercheap Alloy• Sequential gear box installed and car has been

updated to latest specs for the time• Full restoration in 2012• Car now reduced to $85,000• Detailed spares available - POA

FALCON - V8 SUPERCAR

THIS IS A RACE WINNING CARTOURING CAR MASTERS

• Engine Built by Synergy Race Engines• 650 HP / 510 ft torque • 351 Cleveland Dry Sump• Dart Block, 3V Heads • Gearbox: G-Force• Diff: 9” Strange Spool • Brakes: AP Pedal Box & Rotors• Brembo Mono Block Callipers • Suspension: Watts Linkage• Adjustable Sway Bars & Shock Absorbers

Price: $130K (inc TCM licence)Further Options -- Spare Rolling shell with cage and Watts Link and spare Cleveland 351 Engine

Call Tony on 0414 228 921 or [email protected]

As new, only 53,000 km – Rego December 2015

$100,000 + GST or nearest offer

Call Robert 0428 644 614

FOR SALE VOLVO FH12 420 HP

1998 MAZDA ASTINA

$8,000CAR IS COMPLETE AND READY TO RACE.

Contact Terry Conroy 0423 734 [email protected]

Twice AMCHAMP Class E National Champion, has competed at Bathurst--Sandown and Sydney

Motorsport Park Enduros with 100% finishing record.Fitted with AP 4 Piston Calipers and DBA 5000 Rotors

--M Factory LSD--Factory Headers--4 Spare Alloy Rims and Tyres plus Spares. Eligible for Bathurst 12hr.

Contact Chris Bowden. Mobile: 0438 269 938$179K AUD ONO.

• Raced at Bathurst 1988 - 1993.

• Motorsport race shell and all the best Harrop and Perkins components.

• 2 owners from new.• Original CAMS logbook.

• New CAMS COD completed. • Mechanically restored by

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GROUP A VL WALKINSHAW EX-CALLAGHAN.

Page 38: Auto action 7 2015

ACTIONMART TRADER TO ADVERTISE HERE CONTACT SHEHAN GUNAWARDANA ON (02) 9263 9712

38

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Page 39: Auto action 7 2015

BRUCE WILLIAMS (VIC): 0418 349 555 JAMES SECHER (QLD): 07 3245 5049 ACTIONMART TRADER

39

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Page 40: Auto action 7 2015

BIANTE.COM.AU ALL DELIVERY DATES, STOCK AVAILABILITY AND INFORMATION CORRECT AT TIME OF PRINTING AND MAY BE SUBJECT TO CHANGE

Biante Model Cars are proud to be the exclusive Australian distributor for AUTOart. These models are now available at your local Biante stockist or can be purchased from Biante online (www.biante.com.au)

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BIANTE has yet again dropped some interesting model releases for collectors in the past month. In 1:18 scale, Biante has released a Ford Falcon Sprint which was driven by Jim Richards to win the 2013 Touring Car Masters. This model has been produced in a limited edition of 1200 pieces and comes with a signed Certifi cate of Authenticity by ‘Gentleman Jim’ himself.

Also now in stock is a plain body prototype of the Mercedes Benz E-63 AMG which is essentially a stripped back

version of an Erebus Motorsport V8 and the Holden Commodore V8 Supercar driven by Dale Wood and Chris Pither in last year’s Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000. Biante is also the Australian distributor for international manufacturer AUTOart and some of their recent releases can be seen on the right. The LM Spec Ford GT and the Red Bull X2010 are two models which are particularly impressive. All of these models can now be purchased from stockists or online from the Biante website. Ed

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FROM THE EDITOR

Page 41: Auto action 7 2015

4 1

VICTORIAN ROD Raatjes finallyclaimed his first HQ HoldenNationals at Symmons Plains on

August 30. The five-time state championhas finished runner-up in his previousNationals attempts, but was rewarded for a virtually fl awless weekend in Tasmania.

Track conditions were dry, but single-fi gure temperatures and a strong southerly wind made for a frigid weekend, but the conditions failed to slow Raatjes, qualifying pole position for heat one.

He went on to win all three of his heats and take pole position for the 20-lap fi nal, which he led for the entire distance, eventually claiming victory by 2.4 seconds from reigning Tasmanian champion Andrew

Toth and Victorian Warren Trewin.Raatjes was ecstatic about winning the

title in his first visit to Symmons Plains.“I had a strong engine and we made a

few changes to fuel and timing after Fridaypractice, but that was about it,” he said. “Everything went according to plan.”

Toth started alongside Raatjes on the front row and held second for most of the race after fending off early attacks from former national winner, Queenslander Gary Bonwick, Victorian John Wise, and Tasmanians Duane Preece and former Bathurst winner David Parsons, who was third briefl y in the opening laps but dropped off the pace by mid-race.

Victorian Andrew McLeod qualifi ed on grid

three, but gearbox issues off the line sawhim slip back to 11th before charging back tothird with two laps to go. Unfortunately, hischarge ended on the second-last lap whenhe pitted for good.

While Raatjes went on to win from Toth and Trewin, post-race scrutineering revealed anomalies with Toth’s carburettor, along with that of fourth-placed Preece. Both were excluded, with Preece accepting his penalty and Toth choosing to appeal his. If Toth is excluded, Trewin will be elevated to second and Bonwick, who crossed the line in fi fth place, could be elevated to third.

While Raatjes won three of the six heats on offer, other heat wins were recorded by Toth, McLeod and Trewin. Martin Agatyn

STATEWIDESTATE RACING / HILLCLIMB / OFF-ROAD / KARTS / CLUB RACING / MOTORKHANA / HISTORICS / RALLY

Raatjes broke through for his fi rst HQ Nationals win

Stu

art

Edw

ard

s

National HQ title at last

Page 42: Auto action 7 2015

42

yChampionship resumed on August

23 for the Pyrenees Rush Rally. Back with regular navigator Jamie Sargeant, the pair clinched both heats in their Subaru Impreza WRX.

The VRC round four was held in the forests of Avoca and Amphitheatre in central Victoria with a competitive 42-crew fi eld, including the return of Alan Roe with Brent McKenzie in a Mitsubishi Lancer after a couple of years contesting the ARC.

p g gof the next four to secure the morningheat, 31 seconds clear of Roe with WarrenLee and David Lethlean (Mitsubishi EVO)a further 10 seconds adrift.

Windus had an indiscretion with a treeon SS7, dropping his rear bumper and 28seconds. His son, Arron, driving an oldermodel WRX in only his fourth rally, wasthird-fastest on the stage. Justin Doweland Simon Ellis (VW Polo S2000) were thestars of the second heat, scoring two stage

outright,y th Lee

rounding out the podium.In the Excel Rally Series, former ARC

regular Glen Raymond made a guestappearance with Blaise McNamara callingthe notes, however, series leader AndrewMurdoch Jnr and Jamie Allan were toogood, winning the class. Brian Semmensand Dan Parry were victors in 2WDaboard their Nissan, a minute clear ofGrant Walker and Correne Seabrook (FordEscort RS1800). Craig O'Brien

THE IROC Challenge was the drawcard at round three of the Master of Mallala on August 22-23 where Victorian Sven Burchartz took the overall result.

Jason Palmer (Porsche 993) set the pace in qualifying and race one but problems in Sunday’s warm-up put him on the back foot. Burchartz (Porsche 911) was the man to beat on Sunday, although Amanda Sparks (911) got the jump on him at the start of race three and Burchartz had to work for his win. Graeme Cook (911) just edged Palmer out of third overall.

The Excels stole the show, with a 20-plus fi eld and the next generation of racers dominating. Fifteen-year-old Brodie Cook topped qualifying and took outright honours, beating state champion Asher Johnston fair and square in race three.

It looked to be business as usual

for Johnston after two wins but the competition got tougher and then he was excluded for a non-performance related technical infringement. Another teenager, Max Vidau, claimed second and displaced Johnston as the lap record holder.

Adam Allan (Datsun Bluebird) returned to his winning ways in Improved Production but Chris Brown (Toyota AE86) made him work for it until he was forced out of race four.

Keith Williamson (Farrell) took a well-deserved win in Historic Sports & Racing. Joel Heinrich (AU Falcon) won Saloon Cars on debut despite breaking the gearbox in race three. Darren Jenkins (HQs), Brenton Grigoul (Sports Cars), Michael Mohr (Formula Ford), Jackson Freer (Formula Vee 1600s) and Brian Pedersen (1200s) made clean sweeps in their classes. David Batchelor

Masters of IROCC

raig

OB

rien

TWO-FOR-ONE WINEric Schlifelner won the Bruce Fiske Memorial Enduro on August 22-23, taking out the fifth round of the Victorian Off Road Championship as well as round five of the Vic State Mallee Shield Series. Held at the Bagshot Motorsport Complex, the ProLite single-seat driver beat home the Super 1650 Southern Cross of Jim and Glenyce Coombs and the Pro Buggy of Tim Lloyd and Kevin Collier. Dean and Rebecca Bennett were fourth in their Extreme 4WD Holden-powered Nissan Patrol but since they were only competing in the VRC, it gave fifth-placed Alan Dixon and Johnny O’Conner’s ProLite fourth in the Shield.

TIGHT FINISH AHEADJust one point separates Mathew Galea and Justin Montesalvo heading into the final round of the Polaris RZR Australian Championship at Bacchus Marsh MX Track on September 19. Montesalvo narrowed the gap by finishing equal-second behind Tom Evans at Shepparton’s round five. Evans is fifth in the points, just 13 points adrift of Galea. In between and also in contention are Peter Carr and Ewan McClue. The series has featured the likes of guest drivers Matt Mingay, Shane Jacobson, Simon Evans and Molly Taylor.

SUPER SUPRAJohn MacKenzie and his big horsepower turbocharged Toyota Supra were well ahead of the opposition throughout the fifth round of the Victorian Supersprint Championship at Sandown on August 23. His best time of 1min16.5732sec bested the HSV Clubsport R8 of Francois Habib by almost two seconds. Third was Craig Wehner ahead of Peter Nowlan (Bullet Clubman), John Ippolito (Clubsport), Ross Tomaino (Mitsubishi EVO), Brett Zieren (Porsche 996), Adrian Allisey (Commoodore), Dirk Van Heer (Subaru WRX) and Kyle Reid (WRX).

SPARE PARTS

THIS YEAR’S Mogumber 240, round four of the West Australian Off Road Championship on August 22-23, was a wet and muddy affair won by Steven Phillips and Stephen Ketteridge-Hall in their Steveco/Cadillac Pro Buggy.

They fi nished over 15 minutes in front of the ProLite Buggy of Brett and Deanna Smith (Southern Cross/Nissan) with a further 22 minutes and 15 seconds to Greg Pickersgill and Greg Finlay in their Extreme 2WD Chev Silverado Trophy Truck.

Fourth outright and the winner of the Extreme 4WD class was Owen and Mitchell Davies (Nissan Navara) ahead of John and Jenni Flynn’s Super 1650 Bullet/Toyota and the Production 4WD Nissan Patrol of Travis Epis and Blake Pugh, the last car to fi nish on the lead lap.

One lap down in eighth was the V8 Nissan Patrol of Brad Krepp/Mal Yeardley, fi nishing third in Extreme 4WD. Tenth was the UTV-winning Polaris of Garry Connell/Tim Jackson.

Murky Mogumber

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43

IN THEIR Ginetta G50, Craig and Adam Burgess won theProduction Sports Car one-hour endurance race after a trouble-free run at Wakefield Park on August 23. They finished ahead ofAlex Cook/Damien Meyer (Porsche 911) and Glenn Townsend/Anthony Soole (Lotus Exige).

Marcel and Tadros Zalloua led the opening part of the racebut lost significant time when their Porsche would not restartimmediately during their compulsory pitstop. They eventuallyfinished sixth.

The Mazda RX-7 of Paul White qualified fourth for Over 2 LitreImproved Production, but a blinding launch in race one enabledhim to rocket to the lead by the first corner. From there, hewas able to take victory in all three races. Matt Ingram (RX-7)and Michael King (Mitsubishi EVO) were second and third,respectively, in the opening two races, but problems for both inthe last enabled Rod Thorpe (Mazda 808) and Andrew McMaster(BMW E30) to fill the podium positions.

Improved Production U2L delivered three different winners.Points leader Justin McClintock took a comprehensive victory inrace one, but retired in race two, allowing fellow Toyota Sprinterdriver Ben Algie to win. Algie drifted backwards in race three,with the Honda Civics of Mathew Harris and Graham Bohmfinishing first and second, respectively, with McClintock chargingfrom the rear to third.

Father and son win enduro

DYLAN THOMAS backed up his dominationof Formula Vee with an equally impressivewin in the Production Touring Car enduranceevent in round five of the CAMS NSW StateChampionships at Wakefield Park on theweekend of August 22-23.

Driving his Mitsubishi EVO X, Thomasqualified on pole position for the one-hourrace after topping Sunday morning’s Top-10Shootout but was beaten off the line by fellowMitsubishi driver Daniel Oosthuizen.

The majority completed their compulsorypitstops during a mid-race Safety Car, deployedwhen championship leader Matthew Holt’sClubsport was stopped on the side of the circuit.A swift pitstop allowed Thomas to gain almost alap advantage, and he cruised to victory ahead ofOosthuizen and the HSV Coupe of Cary Morsink.

Chevrolet Camaro drivers Steven Lacey andBirol Cetin battled for supremacy in the SportsSedans, Lacey winning the first race before Cetinturned the tables in race two. In the third race,

the two made contact at Turn 10, with Laceyspinning back to fourth place. Cetin capitalisedto take another win from Chris Jackson (HoldenCalibra) and Anthony Macready (Nissan 300ZX).

Andrew Kahl, Chris Lazarevic, Lachlan Gibbonsand Anthony Colombrita jostled for the lead ineach of the Formula Ford races. Kahl (Spectrum)won the first two races but was overtaken byGibbons (Mygale) at the start of race three, whowithstood extreme pressure from both Kahl andColombrita (Spectrum) to win by just 0.07sec.

Ric

card

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enve

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ti

Ric

card

oB

enve

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FVee racer Thomas proved just as quick in

a tin-top

Craig and Adam Burgess (#78)

came through

Page 44: Auto action 7 2015

44

THE TASMAN Cup was gone afterthe 1975 series and Australiapressed on alone with F5000 while

New Zealand went to Formula Atlantic.Pressure from within for Australia tofollow the same path led to our premieropen-wheeler formula losing stature.

In the midst of this, and to overcomesome of the complacency, the Rothmansseries for 1979 was allowed to include not-quite-up-to-date Formula 1 cars. And soTeddy Yip entered two of the Walter Wolfcars and an Ensign, all DFV Cosworth-powered. They won one race but struggledin the others.

I was reminded of this when visiting ‘Big

Dave’ Mawer a couple of weeks ago. Heand Bruce Cary were drafted into helpinglook after these cars while they were onour shores.

I’m quite sure that Dave, as one whoselife is totally involved in improvingracecars, looked upon this as a greatopportunity to see how things were done inthe much more-advanced world of Formula1 – a rare chance to get a real close-up lookat components and how they were made.

These things are always changing, of

Wolves at our doorThe sight of two WalterWolf cars and an Ensignin the 1979 RothmansInternational Series was arare one for the times

course. There is always a better way andit’s very often that Formula 1, with itsimmense budgets and lavish workshops,prized designers and intense competition,will find them first. And often it will bevery small things.

It’s this same thinking that had led JohnMcCormack to fund a trip to England forGarrie Cooper in the early ’70s when hewanted Elfin to build a new car to replacethe aging MR5. That the MR6 didn’t reallyinclude these advances, however, reflectson Garrie’s insistence on keeping the buildcosts down more than anything else.

Notably this led John to buy the McLarenM23, which was very much more ‘stateof the art’ in the immediate pre-groundeffects era.

But, returning to the 1979 appearance ofthe Wolf WR3, WR4 and the Ensign, thesewere the first relatively current cars torace on our shores that complied with thecurrent F1 since 1960.

Since then, of course, we’ve becomeused to seeing F1 come here annually withall its regalia. But we don’t see any localengineers or spanner men asked to jointhem for the duration of their stay.

Ray Bell

MAN OFTHE AGES

HISTORICS

One of the Wolf machines still in

Formula 1-spec with Jody Scheckter

Elge

e

“Teddy Yip entered two of the Walter Wolf cars and an Ensign, all DFV Cosworth-powered” RAY BELL

Page 45: Auto action 7 2015

45

THE SATURDAY of Barbagallo’s Spring Race Meetingon August 22-23 was exclusively for tin-tops, whileon Sunday it was all about open-wheelers. MichaelHenderson’s domination of Formula Classic in hisRalt RT4 was put to the test by Simon Barrett untilhis similar Formula Pacific was a retiree. Hendersoncarried on to win ahead of Lance Carwardine (JaneBrabham) and Glen Caple (Birrana 274).

Homan Ho took the first Formula Ford race fromJason Youd and Andrew Goldie in a tame VanDiemen shutout. But in the second race, the threeclashed and were all out. After a Safety Car period,Tayla Dicker won a two-lap dash from CalanWilliams and Declan O’Brien. Dicker and CadeBell touched going down pit straight in the last,which put both out. Oliver Baxter won after the

resumption from William and Ho.In Formula 1000, Jez Hammond and Stewart

Burns clashed at the rolling start. Jordon Oon wenton for three wins, Ben Riley scored two secondsand Adam Lisle two thirds and a second. RobAppleyard took the other third.

Austin Pearson (Jacer) and David Campbell(Stinger) battled hard in Formula Vee 1600s withmany lead changes. The first race went to Austinbut David came back to take the other two asRod Lisson, David Caisley and Cameron Edwardsshared thirds. In 1200s, Jason Fowler, FranzEsterbauer and Daniel Linehan each had a winand shared in the points. Mick Oliver

Formulas for Sunday

WHAT’S ON NEAR YOU September 11-13September 11-13 Australian Off Road Champs 4 Coffs Harbour New South WalesSeptember 12 State Supersprint Champs 8 Jack’s Hill Western AustraliaSeptember 12 Historic Race Meeting Collie Western AustraliaSeptember 12-13 State Hillclimb Champs 9 Huntley, Dapto New South WalesSeptember 12-13 State Hillclimb Champs 1 Collingrove South AustraliaSeptember 13 State Supersprint Champs 6 Wakefi eld Park New South WalesSeptember 13 State Race Series 3 Lakeside Park Queensland

SA Hillclimb headsto Collingrove

HEADLINING THE Spring Race Meeting atBarbagallo on August 22-23 was the annual Tander Trophy for Improved Production where Kevin Ledger and his Subaru Impreza WRX were comfortable victors in all three races.

Kerry Wade (BMW E30) was second in each, while third-places were shared between Matthew Stiles, Dion Panizza and Wayne Chrystal, all in Commodores. Stiles was third overall ahead of Glen Melling (Commodore). The Excels ran with them and Nikola Mitic was the best of them on all occasions.

Commodore drivers Garry Hills and GrantJohnson renewed their Saloon Car rivalry with the former taking a two-one winning advantage. Similarly, Ford Falcon drivers Michael Sciorio and Travis Sharpe battled for third with Sciorio netting two to Sharpe’s one. Among the older cars it was all Chris Kneafsey in his Holden.

In Historic Touring Cars, Will Colton (Falcon GT) won both scratch races ahead of Stuart Young (Holden Torana XU-1) and Owen Satchell (Ford Escort). Mike Gallagher (Jaguar) was out for the day after contact with the Graeme

Woodhouse Ford Mustang in race one.Ashly Barnett (Mazda RX-7) took out both

the Street Car scratch races, and a second in the reverse-grid. The Nissan 180SX of Andrew Stevens was second in the fi rst race but was unsighted from there on.

Super GTs started well for Ron Moller, who led race one until the Chev Camaro retired. Grant Hill (Falcon) won from Dean Kovacevich (Commodore) with John Zelesco (Ferrari) third. The second race ended with the same placegetters.

Mick Oliver

Elge

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A perfect Ledger

Mic

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46

RESULTSCity of Adelaide TitlesSouthern Go Kart Club,Bolivar, SA, Aug 29-30

CADET 91. Jessica Fortanier2. Christian Cowie3. James PiszcykCADET 121. Blake Purdie2. Troy Fortanier3. Aaron OliverJUNIOR NATIONAL LIGHT1. Jack Hutchins2. Jackson Rees3. Nikki WatsonJUNIOR CLUBMAN1. Benjamen Delaney2. Jacob Dowson3. Joshua DentonRESTRICTED 125 LIGHT1. Daniel Boorman2. Leigh Willians3. Scott BoormanRESTRICTED 125 HEAVY1. Craig Henderson2. Michael Mangos3. Anthony Di MauroRESTRICTED 125MASTERS1. Giuseppe Caon2. Paul Williams3. Giancarlo VantagiatoCLUBMAN HEAVY1. Luke Marquis2. Blaine Grills3. Hamish RibaritsCLUBMAN MASTERS1. David Rinaldi2. Robert Reid3. James GormanTAG 1251. Paul Pittam2. Tyler Morrison3. Julian LunettaKZ31. Daniel Price2. Jonathon Mangos3. Benjamin Redjepi

Klarich was handed the lead and went on to win the KZ3 fi nal

JAKE KLARICH has continued hisoutstanding year with victory in one of the most prestigious events on the

West Australian domestic calendar – the King of the Hill – on August 30.

With huge fi elds across all 16 classes, the Wundowie circuit was inundated by an impressive 286 entries, with Klarich taking an impressive win in the KZ3 class.

Klarich set the pace in qualifying before veteran BD Soutar-Dawson crossed the line fi rst in both the opening heat and the pre-fi nal. When Soutar-Dawson struck trouble on the opening lap it allowed Klarich to

open a commanding lead before crossingthe line well clear of Simon Gwilliam. Third place went to Amrit Kandola after starting eighth in the fi nal, while Hayden Patrizi charged from 10th to fourth. Soutar-Dawson’s damage and a mid-race excursion saw him cross the line 11th.

Gwilliam had to also settle for second in the Clubman Heavy class where Thomas Sparkes claimed the win.

In the younger classes, Luc Nici crossed the line fi rst in the Cadet 9 fi nal. His job was made easier when the early weekend pacesetter Jett DeMarte failed to start in the main event. Cody Leunen was too good for

the opposition in the Cadet 12 ranks.Damon Papasergio has spent a lot of

the year travelling to compete in the Australian Kart Championship rounds and he used this experience to take the win in the Junior National Light class ahead of Aaron Love. In Junior Clubman, Love went one better to take the win.

After dominating the early part of the weekend in Junior National Heavy, Terrence Flynn-Dowell dropped to the rear of the fi eld in the pre-fi nal. He then charged through in the fi nal to fall one place short of victory with Brock McGregor taking the win.

In the TaG 125 classes, Lewis Shugar proved too good in the Light division while Ryan Barron outpaced Taylor Thomas and Bayley Bell for the win in Heavy.

Other wins went to Nikola Mitic (Clubman Light), AJ Nash (Open), Saverio Ferraro (Rest 125 Light), Ryan Burke (Rest 125 Heavy), Thomas Gray (Snr Nat), Paul Hughes (Masters) and Thomas McPherson (Super Heavy). Frank Joseph

West Australian ace Jake Klarich stands tall in the KZ3 class at thecoveted King of the Hill event

THE CIK-FIA has released its 2016 schedule in a timely fashion compared to previous years with a draft calendar released on September 1.

Over the past few years the CIK-FIA has undertaken several signifi cant changes, however, it appears as though next year’s structure will look similar to 2015.

Once again, the European championships will be held over multiple events with three rounds for each of the KZ and KZ2 classes, while the champions in the new OK and OK-Junior categories will be decided across four events.

The world championship for the KZ

class and KZ2 International Super Cup (which has received 38 and 101 entries, respectively, for the 2015 event in LeMans, France this weekend), will be held in Kristianstad, Sweden next year.

Unlike 2015, Germany and Great Britain don’t feature on the schedule. The Bahrain International Circuit makes a return to host the world championship for the OK and OK-Junior categories to round out the year on November 20.

The calendar keeps the opening three months of the year free for the standalone Winter Cup in Italy and also the WSK Euro and Master Series events to be held prior to the CIK Championships kicking off. Frank Joseph

2016 INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR SET BENIK LANDS IN AUSTRALIA ANOTHER NEW kart brand will be launched on to the Australian karting market this month.

In a true multi-national operation, the BENIK Kart is designed by British duo Nick Mitchell and Ben Cruttenden, manufactured in Italy, and assembled in America. The brand is set to be distributed in Australia by long-time karting operation Pro Karting with Jace Lindstrom at the helm.

Unlike most brands on the market, the BENIK brand currently only focuses on the Cadet classes with the fi rst chassis set to take to the circuit for the fi rst time at the Junior Sprint Classic in Puckapunyal next weekend. Frank Joseph

KING KLARICH

Page 47: Auto action 7 2015

AUSTRALIAN RECORD holderLarry Dixon insists a first winof the season is just around the

corner after finishing runner-up fivetimes since returning full-time to theNHRA series in 2015.

“Yes, a win would be nice,” Dixon toldAuto Action. “And, as all ‘Aussies’ whofollow drag racing will know, three of thosefinal losses have been at the hands of yourvery own Richie Crampton.

“This season has gone great, better thanI would have expected or hoped for at thestart of the year. We have raced and won

against everyone in the top-10, includingRichie. We’ve had a strong car and greatset-up from the start of the season and I’mconfident the win will happen.”

The California native made his debut in1995 and has racked up an imposing recordof three Top Fuel championships and 62wins. He set an Australian record of 4.50secduring a short-lived stint with RapisardaAutosport International in 2013.Then, aftera fruitless chase to secure sponsorship torun his own team, returned to the Fuelranks when veteran team owner-driver BobVandergriff retired at the end of 2014.

The straight-talking Dixon was candid on the challenges of securing a drive in the Mello Yello series.

“For-hire rides are very few and far between in this sport,” he said. “So you have got to get out there and bring money to the table or, in my case, attempt put together a deal to run my own team. I spent a ton of money chasing sponsorship to make it happen and it didn’t come together. I failed miserably at doing that.”

Dixon’s comeback season will also be remembered for a spectacular crash at the Florida Gatornationals when his chassis split in half and was fl ung into the air in a mirror image to the Phil Lamattina crash at the 2015 Winternationals. Dixon was saved from serious injury when his car landed on the rear tyres.

“I hated what happened to Phil and the injuries he sustained,” said Dixon. “He’s a great guy. We were both lucky to walk away. It defi nitely made me feel blessed. I think the sport in Australia is really going to miss the Lamattina family.” John Doig

OCTOBER 2 and 3, 1965 are dates etched intothe history of Australian drag racing, for this was when the fi rst Australian Drag Racing Nationals were held at Riverside Dragway, Fishermans Bend. Flash forward 50 years and many of the warriors of that weekend will assemble in Melbourne on October 4 for the ‘First Nationals’ reunion.

Many of the pioneers from the early days of the sport are expected to attend the reunion,

including John Fleming, Max De Jersey, GregGoddard and Paul Rodgers. Driving force behind the event is Jack ‘Fizzball’ Collins, who won Top Eliminator in a 179 Holden rail over the legendary Eddie Thomas, who drove a supercharged Chrysler-powered dragster. Thomas is credited with introducing the fi rst fi reproof driving suit in Australia.

“Safety was not much of an issue back in the ’60s,”Thomas recalled. “There hadn’t

been many accidents. I remember reading in an American drag magazine about this new material Mylar, they had made fi re suits from it, and so I wondered if it was available in Australia. I rang the 3M company and they gave me enough to make a fi re suit.

“I only used it once, at Fishermans Bend, and that was the day I burst a clutch and the car caught on fi re at the end of the run.

“My hands were burned because they were not covered. The driving suit had holes all over from the molten metal. I spent about three months in hospital. A collector bought the driving suit and my helmet.” John Doig

CALENDAR CHANGESThe opening round of the 2015-16 Group One ANDRA series, The Spring Nationals, scheduled for Adelaide International Raceway on October 17-18 has been cancelled following the decision by the governing body to dump long-term venue operator Racing Onn Promotions. According to ANDRA Chairman Michael Fotheringham, “Racing Onn Promotions has made a number of unreasonable demands and has continued to change conditions that we had previously all agreed to. The delays have been extremely frustrating. We have made the difficult decision to replace the current promoter.”

RACING ONN FIRES BACK “Racing Onn has been advised that their services are no longer required for the running of the Spring Nationals,” said Rino D’Alfonso, Head of ROP. “We have worked so hard for so long and for it to be taken away by our governing body, who holds the current contract at the raceway, is gut wrenching.”

HOMETOWN STOUSHANDRA and Racing Onn have been involved in a major dispute over the future of the venue that has included an online petition, instigated by D’Alfonso, to force a members’ vote of no confidence in the ANDRA board and recently ousted CEO Malcolm Bulley in November 2014. D’Alfonso is believed to have been fined $5000 for bringing the sport into disrepute.

NEW TEAM IN WAITINGA new team is believed to be planning to enter the Group One category for the 2015-16 season. A car and transporter have been sourced and final approval from a sponsor is pending. No announcement is due until after the calendar is finalised. JD

SPARE PARTS

Dixon can feel thatelusive win is justaround the corner

4 7

TRIVIA 1/ 2007 2/ David Parsons 3/ Once 4/ Mikko Hirvonen 5/ Lucas Ordóñez 6/ Three 7/ DNF 8/ Second 9/ Nazareth Speedway, 2001 10/ 2008

Dixon on drought-breaking mission

1965 DRAG NATIONALS REUNION

Page 48: Auto action 7 2015

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