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Enduro Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromPirtek Enduro Cup)
Award
Pirtek Enduro Cup
Awarded forMost championship points across the threeSupercars endurance events.
CountryAustralia
Reward(s)Trophy
First award2013
Final award2019
Currently held byAustraliaJamie Whincup
AustraliaCraig Lowndes

TheEnduro Cup (formally known as thePirtek Enduro Cup for sponsorship reasons), was an award given out to the highest points scorers over the three endurance events inSupercars; theSandown 500,Bathurst 1000 and theGold Coast 600.

Format

[edit]
Main articles:Sandown 500,Bathurst 1000, andGold Coast 600

Qualifying for the Sandown 500 involved a twenty-minute session followed by a pair of 60 km "qualifying races" held on Saturday.[1] The grid for the first race was based on the qualifying session; the grid for the second race was based on the results of the first. The results of the second race determined the grid for the main race on Sunday. Co-drivers were mandated to compete in the first of the qualifying races with the main driver in the second.[2] The Bathurst 1000 featured a single forty-minute qualifying session on Friday afternoon followed by a top ten shootout on Saturday. The Gold Coast 600 had two thirty-minute qualifying sessions, one each on Saturday and Sunday, with the Saturday session followed by a top ten shootout. The Sandown 500 and Bathurst 1000 both had a twenty-minute warm-up session on Sunday morning.[1]

The Sandown 500 and the Bathurst 1000 featured single races held on Sunday, at 500 km and 1000 km in length respectively. The Gold Coast 600 consisted of two 300 km races with one held on Saturday and one on Sunday.[1] For each of these races, each driver in every car was mandated to drive at least one third of the total race distance.

Background

[edit]
See also:Australian Endurance Championship

From 1981 to 1986 and in 1990 and 1991, theAustralian Endurance Championship was held for touring cars over several races per year, however unlike today was not a part of that year'sAustralian Touring Car Championship. As per the Enduro Cup, the Sandown 500 and Bathurst 1000 regularly featured as championship rounds, and some years also had an event on the Gold Coast, atSurfers Paradise International Raceway.Allan Moffat andJim Richards were the only two-time championship winners in this era.

The Pirtek Enduro Cup was launched in 2013 as a way to link together the series' three two-driver endurance events.[3] These races are Australia's traditional two endurance races, the Sandown 500 and Bathurst 1000, and the Gold Coast 600, which switched to a two-driver, two-race endurance format in 2010. From 2010 to 2012, the Gold Coast 600 required teams to use an international driver to accompany the local series regulars. In 2013, this requirement was dropped and teams could now pick the same driver for all three events.[3] To accompany this, the Enduro Cup was introduced, as a championship within a championship. The award is sponsored byPirtek, who had previously sponsored the successfulStone Brothers Racing as a title sponsor from 1998 to 2005.[4] A collection of Pirtek hose fittings were used to create the trophy awarded to the winners.[4]

History

[edit]
Triple Eight Race Engineering, pictured in 2014, have won five Enduro Cups.

In 2013,Craig Lowndes andWarren Luff won the Enduro Cup, despite winning only the first race of the Gold Coast 600. In 2014,Jamie Whincup andPaul Dumbrell won the Enduro Cup, again forTriple Eight Race Engineering, winning both the Sandown 500 and the second race on the Gold Coast in the process. In 2015, Luff became the first driver to win the Enduro Cup on more than one occasion, this time driving withGarth Tander for theHolden Racing Team. Tander and Luff did not win any of the four races in the endurance season, with consistent results of two third and two fourth places instead accumulating enough points to win the trophy. In 2016, the all-international pairing ofShane van Gisbergen andAlexandre Prémat won the trophy, with three second-place finishes and one win amounting to the most dominant performance in the Enduro Cup era.[5] In 2017,Chaz Mostert andSteve Owen won the first Enduro Cup for Ford, with one win at the Gold Coast 600.[6]

The 2018 winners were Craig Lowndes, who joined his 2013 co-driver Luff as a two-time winner, andSteven Richards driving aHolden Commodore ZB for Triple Eight Race Engineering. Lowndes and Richards became the first winners of the Enduro Cup to have also won the Bathurst 1000 in the same year, while in the second Gold Coast 600 race they were under investigation for two separate infringements, prior to the race being abandoned due to bad weather.[7] Lowndes retired from full-time Supercars competition after 2018, but went on to win the Enduro Cup again in 2019 as co-driver to Jamie Whincup.[8] The 2019 series also featured the first shift in the endurance calendar since the cup's inception with the Sandown 500 moving from the first to the last of the three endurance events. The qualifying races at Sandown also became points-paying races, contributing to the Enduro Cup results.[9]

Demise

[edit]

The Sandown 500 was scheduled to drop out of the Enduro Cup in2020, to be replaced byThe Bend 500 atThe Bend Motorsport Park.[10] In a reshuffled calendar due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, both the Gold Coast 600 and The Bend 500 were cancelled and the2020 Bathurst 1000 was the only endurance event held.[11] No Enduro Cup was awarded for this single event, and the2021 Supercars Championship was again scheduled to contain only one endurance event, without an Enduro Cup.[12]

Points system

[edit]

Points were awarded as follows at the Enduro Cup events. Each of the three events were worth 300 points in total, with both drivers earning the total points awarded to the finishing position of the car. As the Gold Coast 600 was a two-race event, the 300 points was divided across each race with the winners taking 150 points.[13]

EventPosition, points per race
1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9th10th11th12th13th14th15th16th17th18th19th20th21st22nd23rd24th25th26th27th28th29th30th
Sandown and Bathurst300276258240222204192180168156144138132126120114108102969084787266605448423630
Gold Coast150138129120111102969084787269666360575451484542393633302724211815

Winners

[edit]
YearDriversTeamCar
2013AustraliaCraig Lowndes
AustraliaWarren Luff
Triple Eight Race EngineeringHolden Commodore VF
2014AustraliaJamie Whincup
AustraliaPaul Dumbrell
Triple Eight Race EngineeringHolden Commodore VF
2015AustraliaGarth Tander
AustraliaWarren Luff
Holden Racing TeamHolden Commodore VF
2016New ZealandShane van Gisbergen
FranceAlexandre Prémat
Triple Eight Race EngineeringHolden Commodore VF
2017AustraliaChaz Mostert
AustraliaSteve Owen
Rod Nash RacingFord Falcon FG X
2018AustraliaCraig Lowndes
New ZealandSteven Richards
Triple Eight Race EngineeringHolden Commodore ZB
2019AustraliaJamie Whincup
AustraliaCraig Lowndes
Triple Eight Race EngineeringHolden Commodore ZB

Multiple winners

[edit]

By driver

[edit]
WinsDriverYears
3AustraliaCraig Lowndes2013, 2018, 2019
2AustraliaWarren Luff2013, 2015
AustraliaJamie Whincup2014, 2019

By team

[edit]
WinsTeam
5Triple Eight Race Engineering

By manufacturer

[edit]
WinsManufacturer
6Holden

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Radical changes to V8 Supercars race formats".Speedcafe. 7 December 2012. Retrieved29 March 2013.
  2. ^"10 Fast Facts: Wilson Security Sandown 500".V8 Supercars. 9 September 2013. Archived fromthe original on 14 September 2013. Retrieved12 September 2013.
  3. ^ab"V8 Supercars Announces Prestigious Endurance Cup". 20 February 2013. Archived fromthe original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved31 August 2015.
  4. ^abLomas, Gordon (31 July 2013)."Pirtek to sponsor V8 Supercars Enduro Cup".Speedcafe. Retrieved31 August 2015.
  5. ^"Internationals clinch Pirtek Enduro Cup".Supercars. 23 October 2016. Retrieved24 October 2016.
  6. ^"Mostert/Owen win Pirtek Enduro Cup". Speedcafe. 22 October 2017. Retrieved22 October 2017.
  7. ^Bartholomaeus, Stefan (22 October 2018)."'Luck of the Irish' in Lowndes/Richards win". Supercars.com. Retrieved29 October 2018.
  8. ^O'Brien, Connor (10 November 2019)."Whincup/Lowndes win, McLaughlin secures title".Supercars. Retrieved10 November 2019.
  9. ^Bartholomaeus, Stefan (4 November 2019)."Sandown 500 format changes explained".Supercars. Retrieved10 November 2019.
  10. ^Howard, Tom (28 August 2019)."Supercars drops QR, Phillip Island in revised 2020 calendar".speedcafe.com.Speedcafe. Retrieved28 August 2019.
  11. ^van Leeuwen, Andrew (30 August 2020)."Official: 2020 Supercars season will end at Bathurst".Motorsport.com. Retrieved26 October 2020.
  12. ^Fogarty, Mark (25 November 2020)."BATHURST 1000 WILL BE ONLY TWO-DRIVER RACE IN 2021".Auto Action. Retrieved26 December 2020.
  13. ^"2014 V8 Supercar Operations Manual Division D"(PDF). V8 Supercars. 24 January 2014. Archived fromthe original(pdf) on 6 March 2014. Retrieved31 August 2015.
Australian Touring Car Championship
Shell Championship Series
V8 Supercar Championship Series
International V8 Supercars Championship
Supercars Championship
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