Stage set for another wild Bathurst 1000

By Adrian Musolino / Expert

The 2015 edition of the Bathurst 1000 will struggle to replicate the drama of last year’s event, which saw an unprecedented mid-race stoppage, a string of heartaches for would-be winners and the victors coming from the back of the grid.

But last year’s event sets up this weekend’s race beautifully.

At the pointy end of the grid, Ford outfit Prodrive Racing Australia is aiming to become just the third team in Bathurst history to win three in a row. And having dominated the championship so far in 2015 and the Sandown 500 with the speedy FG X Falcon, a three-peat could be on the cards.

Holden’s leading entries look a long shot for the championship, so the likes of Craig Lowndes, Jamie Whincup, Garth Tander, Fabian Coulthard, Shane van Gisbergen and co will have more freedom to go all out for the win on Sunday.

And among that group are the drivers who suffered at the event last year and will be out for redemption. Whincup, who ran out of fuel while leading on the final lap; van Gisbergen, who stalled in his final pitstop while leading; Tander, who never even got to race following a practice accident, and so many more.

There are some interesting subplots throughout the grid. Veteran Russell Ingall steps in to replace the injured James Courtney alongside Jack Perkins at the Holden Racing Team. Twenty years ago, Ingall and Jack’s father, Larry Perkins, won the event with a last-to-first comeback drive.

Elsewhere, the first all-female since 1998 will hit up Mount Panorama with IndyCar driver Simona de Silvestro joining local racer Renee Gracie in a Prodrive Racing Australia-prepared wildcard entry.

Meanwhile, the pressure is on the non-Ford and Holden entries for a good result. Nissan Motorsport has only had one win since returning to the series in 2013, looking to go one better following a surprise runner-up placing for James Moffat and Taz Douglas last season.

Volvo’s Scott McLaughlin and Alexandre Premat led for most of the race last year before a late tangle with the wall. Another strong showing will help turn around a disappointing sophomore season for the Swedish manufacturer.

Privateer AMG Mercedes-Benz team Erebus Motorsport has welcomed new backers for the weekend, needing a strong result following concerns over the state of the team that doesn’t receive any backing from the manufacturer.

It’s set to be a blistering weekend in terms of speed and times with the V8 Supercars to definitively break the 300km/h barrier down Conrod Straight, following a change to taller gear ratios to stop the cars bouncing off the rev limiter in sixth gear down Conrod Straight.

Those changes combined with last year’s resurfacing means lap records are likely to tumble across the weekend, especially in qualifying.

Throwing a real curve ball in the mix is the forecast for storms around the time of the Shootout on Saturday evening and continued rain throughout race day.

It should help in producing another classic Bathurst 1000.

The Crowd Says:

2015-10-09T08:14:14+00:00

Mark Young

Roar Guru


Best event on the Australian Sporting Calendar - unless you are a sad-spirited killjoy

2015-10-09T02:51:42+00:00

Kevin dustby

Guest


The worst event on the australian sporting calendar- unless you are a bogan

2015-10-08T22:55:36+00:00

Harvey Wilson

Roar Rookie


I wouldn't say Holden are long shots. While Prodrive are deserved favourites, its 1000km. Anyone on the whole grid could win if things go their way.

2015-10-08T21:36:12+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Looking forward to getting trackside on Saturday certainly. This year's race might not replicate 2014, but there is that air of unpredictability which could see anyone win. Even at Sandown, Whincup was in control for the majority of the race but errors not of the driver's volition can rule them out.

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