Back to the good, not just Ford n' Holden days!

By Ben Carter / Roar Guru

I have a confession to make. I haven’t watched the Australian Touring Car Championship for 15 years. Not one round has flashed past my eyes.

Not even the famed Bathurst 1000 during that time.

But I am prepared to dive back into a full-on interest level for next year’s series. Why? The arrival of both Nissan and Mercedes as additional manufacturers.

I was one of those people who happily sat, year after year during my school days, watching the Great Race around the Mount Panorama circuit, in-car cameras and all, on Channel Seven from my lounge room every October.

But the moment when the controlling body AVESCO joined forces with Channel Ten and decided to run their own version in 1997, dubbed the “Primus 1000 Classic”, in some desperate attempt to capture the die-hard fan via the media, I personally boycotted the entire thing.

There was still the AMP 1000 – the real deal on the real date – to enjoy, with Super Tourer class cars and international drivers.

That was always what Bathurst meant to me.

It should be a prestige, stand-alone event, designed to test the reliability of each car and the nerve of each driver.

Under the AVESCO/Ten partnership, it simply ended up becoming just another round of the championship, stripping it of all mystique.

Equally infuriating was the sudden, apparently-always-there assumption made by the new series promoters that Aussie motor racing was only about ‘Ford versus Holden’, when, in fact, both are brands with origins or considerable input from outside Australia – in particular the United States and United Kingdom.

If you believe some of the publicity surrounding the V8 Supercar series over the past decade, it would seem that since the beginning of the cosmos there had only been there two makes of car and nothing else at all.

What rubbish. The whole reason touring car racing used to be fantastic was the variety involved – the class sections, Morris Minors, Mini Coopers, Ford (Falcon, Sierras, etc), Holden, Nissan, Toyota, Volvo, BMW, etc. Marvellous stuff.

Although it’s only two added makes again next year, I can’t wait. Let’s hope a few more join like Audi, Toyota and so on. But Mercs and Nissans will be a solid start.

And then there was the vaguely funny aspect to it all with regard to the drivers themselves. I, too, had thrilled to the likes of mountain-king legends like Peter Brock (although I was always a Dick Johnson man myself), Larry Perkins, Alan Moffat et al.

But at some point after the AVESCO/Ten deal, the drivers also seemed, to me, to lose some degree of interest through over-familiarity.

It felt like the same drivers, the sons of the same drivers, the grandsons of the same drivers from the 70s and 80s, driving for the same teams owned by the same family of drivers. Sad to say, it simply did not interest me one iota whatsoever.

But now we are headed back in the direction of the proper, good old days – and ironically it’s all been tagged under the slogan ‘Car of the Future’.

Well, sometimes – as Marty McFly and Doc Emmett Brown would say – you have to go back to secure the future.

The Crowd Says:

2012-12-04T01:00:52+00:00

Michael

Guest


After watching Saturdays race at Olympic Park and the betting segment on the odds given to drivers in the race, I wondered after seeing Jamie Whincup pull over in the pits to allow his team mate, Craig Lowndes,to receive service before him, what would the Punters and Bookies have to say. Could you imagine what would happen if during a horse race a Flemington, one Jockey slowed and pulled over to allow a stable mate to pass just to improve the position of the owner or team. Public outrage and I'm sure a investigation. Once you introduce betting into a sport you cannot purposely and knowingly remove someone from a winning outcome without opening the door to questions from people making the bet, or paying out on the bet. Lets stick to Motor Sport and keep it clean.

2012-09-28T03:45:06+00:00

atlas

Guest


hooray - someone mentioned the Jags. After they and BMW etc finished up, so did I with Australian car racing. At least in early years of two-brand racing the cars looked different, recent years they all seem clones, if not for the Ford or Holden logo it has become just a procession of lookalikes.

2012-09-27T03:40:42+00:00

Blake

Guest


Wasn't the lap record at Bathurst was held for many years by George Fury in a turbo Nissan Bluebird? - possibly the 80's equivalent of the Prius? Ben, good article mate, I completely agree that the real appeal of touring car racing was in the variety of vehicles involved. The current Ford V Holden format pales in comparison to the era of the Walkinshaw Jaguars, Johnson's Mustang and John Bowe's Volvos, to name only a few.

2012-09-27T02:41:13+00:00

Rabbitz

Roar Guru


It would be interesting to see Toyota re-enter with their race hybrids. They are beginning to see success in the World Endurance Championship races - They just won the Le Mans 24hrs. Imagine the gnashing of Bogan teeth if a souped up Prius took on and beat the rest at Mt Panorama? I'd laugh so hard I'd have to change undies...

Read more at The Roar