Supercars 2021 off-season talking points

By Jawad Yaqub / Roar Guru

It’s been a long off-season for the Supercars championship, having concluded the truncated 2020 campaign at the Bathurst 1000 back on October 18 – as Shane van Gisbergen with Garth Tander claimed the Great Race for Holden and Scott McLaughlin clinched a third championship.

2021 shapes to be another enthralling chapter for the Australian touring car championship, with fresh opportunities for drivers at their new teams, significant changes to the broadcast product – as well as hopefully a 12-event calendar.

Here then are some talking points from the world of Supercars during the lengthy off-season, ahead of the start of the 2021 championship.

Penske departs, McLaughlin to IndyCar
There has been plenty of time to digest this piece of news, though 2021 will indeed look different without the reigning three-time Supercars champion in Scott McLaughlin – as well as the involvement of Team Penske.

McLaughlin announced after his IndyCar debut at St Petersburg in October, that he would be indeed making a switch full-time to the premier American open-wheel championship with Team Penske. As an addon to the Kiwi’s departure from Supercars, the Penske organisation also revealed an end to its involvement in the series.

A massive shock, perhaps not – given the difficulties involved logistically for Roger Penske in 2020 with the global pandemic and international travel. Controversies with Supercars, however, especially the fallout of the 2019 Bathurst 1000 and the debut of the Ford Mustang – seemingly also soured the taste of the giant of motorsport.

(Photo by Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

Life goes on though, as Dick Johnson Racing will continue to race on as DJR and with continual backing from Shell V-Power. Key engineering personnel such as Ludo Lacroix and Richard Harris will remain in place, as long-time staff member Ben Croke is promoted to team manager under the watchful eye of Ryan Story.

Shell V-Power Racing will also boast a fresh driver line-up, having discarded the Penske-favourite veteran in Fabian Coulthard for young-gun Anton De Pasquale and two-time Bathurst 1000 winner Will Davison.

The general belief is that the team will be a race-winning force, still being the factory Ford team – tasked with the homologation duties for Gen3 in 2022. Davison is tipped to have a crack at the championship – at 38, having only finished runner up in 2009 and third in 2013.

De Pasquale, however, will need to demonstrate some consistency, which was a feat that was seldom seen during his three-seasons at Erebus Motorsport. However, having been regarded as one of the most talented drivers on the grid, he could be one of 2021’s surprise packages.

Big driver changes
Despite Shell V-Power Racing boasting one of the biggest changes to its line-up, the off-season hasn’t been short of additional significant driver movement.

De Pasquale wasn’t the only driver to depart Erebus, with David Reynolds shocking most having left the team – a year into his landmark 10-year deal with Betty Klimenko’s squad. The 2017 Bathurst 1000 winner has found a home at Kelly Racing, in place of team owner Rick Kelly, who stepped down from full-time racing at the end of 2020.

Reynolds also brought the prized title sponsor in Penrite across from Erebus to his Kelly Racing ride, leaving the Holden squad with a new line-up of exciting rookies in Will Brown and Brodie Kostecki.

Tickford was forced to sadly offload Lee Holdsworth, having been unable to secure a sponsor for the REC he was racing in 2020. Whilst the veteran has found himself as co-driver to Chaz Mostert at Walkinshaw Andretti United for Bathurst, the Ford squad has cut down to three cars now.

(Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

They will share garages though with the Blanchard Racing Team, as Tim Blanchard and Cooldrive fields a one-car entry for Tim Slade’s full-time return in a Mustang.

Tekno Team Sydney come into 2021 with the experience of DJR Team Penske refugee in Coulthard, as well as adding Garry Jacobson to the books after his single season at Matt Stone Racing – whom in turn have promoted their SuperLite drivers in Jake Kostecki and Zane Goddard to both full-time seats.

Whincup announces retirement, promotion to Team Boss
Entering his 18th full-time season in the Supercars championship, the decorated Jamie Whincup has announced that 2020 will be his last as a full-time driver.

Seven titles, 122-race wins and four Bathurst 1000 victories, Whincup is arguably the greatest of all time when it comes to the Australian touring car championship and his success also is paired with his loyalty to the Triple Eight organisation.

An organisation which he will take over as the Managing Director and Team Principal of in 2021, as the man who entrusted the young Whincup in 2006, Roland Dane, will step down and retire from those positions at season’s end.

This announcement ahead of the new season does place a weight of expectation on the 38-year old, as he gets set to pursue a record eighth Supercars championship. Whincup himself has admitted that he intends to avoid a Craig Lowndes style ‘funeral tour’ but given that the veteran is still driving at a high level, he should be in the thick of it in 2021.

A lack of consistency and errors plagued the Red Bull squad in 2020, with the relentless McLaughlin holding them to account at almost every event – though without the three-time champion on the grid this year – the opportunity is there for the seasoned combination of Whincup and van Gisbergen to strike back.

Whether he can win an eighth title or not, Whincup’s stellar career is still one to be in envy of, as no other active driver is within reaching distance of the Victorian’s incredible records.

Broadcast changes
2021 marks the beginning of an all-new broadcast deal for Supercars, which will see the Seven Network regain the rights to telecast the championship, as well as Fox Sports continue as the Pay TV provider.

This new five-year deal, sees the series return to what’s widely regarded as the home of the Australian touring car racing and has confirmed that six rounds in 2021 will be shown live on the Seven Network.

(Photo by Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

Those events will include this weekend’s Mount Panorama 500 and then the Darwin Triple Crown, Townsville, Sydney SuperNight, the Bathurst 1000 and the season-ending Gold Coast event.

A new bespoke graphics package will also debut during the first round, having in the past been specifically tailored to the aesthetics of the primary broadcaster. However, Supercars have now tried to present their graphics in a similar, slick style to Formula One and MotoGP.

There was controversy aplenty though during the off-season in regards to the team that will be presenting the championship on our screens in 2021, as fan-favourite technical and pit-lane pundit Mark Larkham was scrapped from the line-up.

Following an intense backlash and petitioning to reinstate the former Ford driver, Larkham was allowed to return and will link up with his commentary stalwarts in Neil Crompton and Mark Skaife.

Craig Lowndes and Garth Tander will also join Larko in the pit-lane, with the latter having been tipped to even land himself in the commentary box in place of Skaife at selected rounds.

Seven brings with it the likes of Abbey Gelmi, Jack Perkins, Molly Taylor (pending Extreme E commitments), Charli Robinson, Brad Hodge and the former Supercars host in Mark Beretta.

Fresh faces are intended to liven up the broadcast, which according to Supercars has been ‘too technical’ in the past. However, this is a sentiment that fans have disagreed with, given the value that the insight that individuals such as Larko bring.

It all starts at Mt Panorama
The narrative will begin where it concluded last time out and it couldn’t be at a more special place than Mount Panorama – which for the first time will host sprint races at the fabled 6.2km behemoth.

Whilst there is some sadness that Supercars hasn’t descended upon the streets of Adelaide and we won’t hear the roar of 26 Mustangs and Commodores charge towards the Senna Chicane, Bathurst is still a great way to get the season underway.

(Photo: Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

Two 250km races will headline the season opener, with top-ten shootouts for both. Music to the ears of the likes of van Gisbergen and Cameron Waters, who were the benchmark drivers in the 1000km race at the end of 2020.

From Bathurst, the championship will head to Melbourne in March – however not to Albert Park and the Australian Grand Prix support categories. Due to the ongoing impact of COVID-19 globally, Formula One and the AGPC have elected to postpone the Grand Prix until November – though it remains to be seen if Supercars will be on the support bill.

Instead, a three-race sprint round at Sandown will take place on the March dates, before returning to the likes of Symmons Plains, The Bend and Winton. The majority of the 32-races on the calendar will be the same three-race sprint weekends as seen in 2020 – which brought with them plenty of close racing and a variety of winners.

The blue-riband Bathurst 1000 will again be the only endurance event in 2021, while Townsville and the Gold Coast season finale will feature two-250km races – as does the Mount Panorama 500.

By the time the cars first turn a wheel in anger for first practice at Mount Panorama, it would have been 131 days since the chequered flag fell at the very same venue. A long wait, which hopefully will pay off with one of the most exciting and enthralling Supercars seasons in recent history.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2021-02-27T09:42:34+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Would have thought continual world domination would be his style. :silly:

2021-02-27T07:41:18+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


Plus (thanks mainly to McLaughlin) he achieved everything he wanted to in the Supercars series.

2021-02-27T03:07:42+00:00


How out of touch were they?! Yep they soon found out how out of touch they were.....So glad people power had a win as the guy is pure genius...

2021-02-27T03:05:55+00:00


I thought Penski pulled out because he had bought a circuit and a competition and has become the boss of the whole comp so decided to reduce his footprint elsewhere?

AUTHOR

2021-02-26T09:39:28+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Definitely didn't expect that backlash did they!

AUTHOR

2021-02-26T09:35:19+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Great for all different fans Micko, I think he touches every spectrum. Never whilst trawling through social media feeds or forums, have I ever seen a bad word spoken about Larko - so indeed that basis upon which Supercars first gave him the sack is baffling.

AUTHOR

2021-02-26T09:32:22+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Precisely Damo, they did come across as amateur in dealing with the incidents. Considering too, if it wasn't for Penske's lobbying in Detroit, we would have seen Ford return to Supercars in a factory capacity and bring with them the Mustang. It does stink a little bit not having a name as big as Penske in the sport this year - for the reasons mentioned, but I hope that DJR can continue on their trajectory of success after doing things the Penske way. Indeed it is a great category, with world class drivers going wheel-to-wheel every weekend and some great circuits too. So all we can hope for is that the future is one that the fans can enjoy.

2021-02-26T07:51:13+00:00

Micko

Roar Rookie


I don't know much about motorsport and the specific cars, so Larko was great for people like me. Baffling they'd not realise what an asset the guy was. How out of touch were they?!

2021-02-26T01:38:57+00:00

shifty

Roar Rookie


Larko was just too good at explaining the nonsensical "parity" adjustments to suit one particular team that he had to replaced by a yes man in Lowndes. Supercars didn't expect the backlash.

2021-02-26T01:18:35+00:00

Damo

Guest


All very interesting talking points Jawad (as always). Unfortunately I think the most telling point for the series is the departure of Penske. To me that's a huge warning shot across the bow of Supercars which, quite frankly, are either ignoring it or are so incompetent they can't see it. This series needed Penske to stay, but the way they treated the new Mustangs, the constant technical changes and at times baffling excuses drove him away (amongst other things). If anyone else was thinking of joining the series the first thing they'll do is ring Penske and guess what he'll say? I'm not suggesting that Supercars should have bowed down to Penske's every whim but they really came across as amateur and it's hurt their reputation internationally. Then there's the whole off-season debacle around commentators too, showing how far removed from their supporter base Supercars have become. It all has a stench of Rugby Australia around it, being run by an old boys club who are way out of their depth and they're going to have to hit rock bottom before anything changes. I'll keep watching and supporting because I still believe in the series and I honestly hope I'm wrong about all this but at the moment I fear for the future of the series.

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