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Winton SuperSprint

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromWinton 360)
Annual motor racing event
Victoria (state) Winton SuperSprint
Race Information
VenueWinton Motor Raceway
Number of times held33
First held1985
Last held2022
Race Format
Race 1
Laps36
Distance110 km
Race 2
Laps36
Distance110 km
Race 3
Laps36
Distance110 km
Last Event (2022)
Overall Winner
AustraliaCam WatersTickford Racing
Race Winners
AustraliaCam WatersTickford Racing
New ZealandShane van GisbergenTriple Eight Race Engineering
AustraliaCam WatersTickford Racing

TheWinton SuperSprint was an annualmotor racing event forSupercars, held atWinton Motor Raceway inWinton,Victoria. The event has been a regular part of the Supercars Championship—and its previous incarnations, theAustralian Touring Car Championship,Shell Championship Series and V8 Supercars Championship—between1985 and2022.

The event was not held in 2020 and 2021 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, but returned in 2022 before being omitted again from the2023 calendar.[1][2]

Format

[edit]

The event was staged over a two-day weekend, from Saturday to Sunday. Saturday featured two thirty-minute practice sessions, then a three-stage knockout qualifying session which decided the grid positions for the following 110 kilometre race. Two separated ten-minute qualifying sessions were held on Sunday, which decided the grid for the following 110 km races.[3]

History

[edit]

Jim Richards won the first two Australian Touring Car Championship (ATCC) events at Winton in 1985 and 1986. The 1985 event marked the only time in the history of the ATCC that aHolden did not compete in the race. Richards won the race by a lap over his teammateNeville Crichton, both inBMW 635CSis, whileKevin Bartlett finished third in aMitsubishi Starion. Richards' 1986 win came only after theNissan Skyline of Gary Scott was excluded for using oversized front brake caliper pistons.[4][5] Nissan would go on to dominate the event, winning every year from 1989 to 1992.George Fury's win in 1989 ended a fifteen-race winning streak by theFord Sierra RS500, which had won every ATCC race in 1988 and the first six races of 1989.[4] The race was run in wet conditions and featured various leaders, includingPeter Brock in a Sierra, Fury andMark Skaife in Skylines andAllan Grice in aHolden Commodore. Brock finished in second despite a spin while Skaife took his first ATCC podium finish.[6]

The circuit was extended in 1997 andLarry Perkins took his first and only ATCC pole position at that year's event. His teammateRussell Ingall won all three races during the weekend to take overall victory ahead of Perkins andGlenn Seton.[4] In the second race of the 2000 round, Seton took his final career race victory, and was leading the third race until a sudden chain of events saw Seton and four other drivers in the leading pack have incidents in the space of two corners. EventuallyJason Bargwanna held offPaul Radisich in the closest race finish in the event's history, and in doing so won his second consecutive Winton round.[7] In the 2003 event,Greg Murphy was given a controversial drive-through penalty.Craig Lowndes lost the rear of his car going through the fast turn five and, as he applied the brakes to try to regain control, was hit by Murphy. The penalty was criticised by television commentatorNeil Crompton and Lowndes said that Murphy "had been treated harshly".[8]

There was more controversy in 2004, whenCameron McConville passedRick Kelly for the lead at the penultimate corner on the final lap.Brad Jones' car was stopped on the straight before the corner, with yellow flags being displayed and passing being disallowed as a result. Kelly was animated after the race, claiming that McConville had passed him in the yellow flag zone, but it was found that the pass had been made just as the two cars left the yellow flag zone and McConville kept the victory.[9] The race dropped from the calendar in 2005 and would only return in 2006 as a late replacement for the cancelledV8 Supercars China Round.[10] In wet conditions in 2007,Jamie Whincup moved from 20th on the grid to win the first race of the weekend, going on to win the round and breaking the then-record for the lowest starting position to win a round.[4] The 2009 event saw the introduction of theDunlop soft tyre, the first time that the tyre company had provided two different slick tyre compounds since becoming the control tyre supplier in 2002.[11]

The 2013 and 2014 events saw some success forMercedes-Benz,Nissan andVolvo, the manufacturers which had entered the series under, what was then known as, the Car of the Future V8 Supercar rules in those two seasons. Trialling a new blend of fuel,James Moffat, driving aKelly RacingNissan Altima L33, took his first career victory in the first race of the 2013 event,[12] whileLee Holdsworth gave Mercedes-Benz its first Supercars race win in the second race of the 2014 event.[13]Scott McLaughin took his first career pole position driving aVolvo S60 in 2014.[14]Chaz Mostert crashed out of a comfortable lead in the 2015 event, gifting team-mateMark Winterbottom with victory. In 2016,Tim Slade took his first two career race wins to win the event, also giving local teamBrad Jones Racing their first event win at the circuit.[15] In 2018, Rick Kelly won the Saturday race only days after Nissan announced they would be withdrawing their factory support of both Kelly Racing and the championship at the end of the season.[16] The 2020 event was postponed three weeks before being held due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, and was later cancelled altogether.[1] Its date was replaced by anadditional event atSydney Motorsport Park.[17] The 2021 event was then postponed only two days prior to the event after another COVID-19 outbreak inVictoria, before later being once again cancelled altogether.[18][19]

Winners

[edit]
The original 'Club' layout used from 1985 to 1995.
Tim Slade during practice for the 2010 event.
YearDriver[4]TeamCarReport
1985New ZealandJim RichardsJPS Team BMWBMW 635CSi
1986New ZealandJim RichardsJPS Team BMWBMW 635CSi
1987not held
1988AustraliaJohn BoweDick Johnson RacingFord Sierra RS500
1989AustraliaGeorge FuryGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline HR31 GTS-R
1990New ZealandJim RichardsGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline HR31 GTS-R
1991New ZealandJim RichardsGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline R32 GT-R
1992AustraliaMark SkaifeGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline R32 GT-R
1993AustraliaGlenn SetonGlenn Seton RacingFord EB Falcon
1994AustraliaGlenn SetonGlenn Seton RacingFord EB FalconReport
1995AustraliaJohn BoweDick Johnson RacingFord EF Falcon
1996not held
1997AustraliaRussell IngallPerkins EngineeringHolden VS Commodore
1998AustraliaJohn BoweDick Johnson RacingFord EL Falcon
1999AustraliaJason BargwannaGarry Rogers MotorsportHolden VT Commodore
2000AustraliaJason BargwannaGarry Rogers MotorsportHolden VT Commodore
2001AustraliaRussell IngallPerkins EngineeringHolden VX CommodoreReport
2002AustraliaJason BrightHolden Racing TeamHolden VX Commodore
2003AustraliaMarcos AmbroseStone Brothers RacingFord BA Falcon
2004AustraliaCameron McConvilleGarry Rogers MotorsportHolden VY Commodore
2005not held
2006AustraliaCraig LowndesTriple Eight Race EngineeringFord BA FalconReport
2007AustraliaJamie WhincupTriple Eight Race EngineeringFord BF FalconReport
2008AustraliaGarth TanderHolden Racing TeamHolden VE CommodoreReport
2009AustraliaCraig LowndesTriple Eight Race EngineeringFord FG FalconReport
2010AustraliaJames CourtneyDick Johnson RacingFord FG FalconReport
2011AustraliaJamie WhincupTriple Eight Race EngineeringHolden VE CommodoreReport
2012AustraliaCraig LowndesTriple Eight Race EngineeringHolden VE CommodoreReport
2013AustraliaJames CourtneyHolden Racing TeamHolden VF Commodore
2014AustraliaMark WinterbottomFord Performance RacingFord FG FalconReport
2015AustraliaMark WinterbottomProdrive Racing AustraliaFord FG X FalconReport
2016AustraliaTim SladeBrad Jones RacingHolden VF CommodoreReport
2017AustraliaJamie WhincupTriple Eight Race EngineeringHolden VF CommodoreReport
2018New ZealandFabian CoulthardDJR Team PenskeFord FG X FalconReport
2019New ZealandScott McLaughlinDJR Team PenskeFord Mustang GTReport
2020

2021
not held due toCOVID-19 pandemic
2022AustraliaCam WatersTickford RacingFord Mustang GTReport

Multiple winners

[edit]

By driver

[edit]
WinsDriverYears
4New ZealandJim Richards1985, 1986, 1990, 1991
3AustraliaJohn Bowe1988, 1995, 1998
AustraliaCraig Lowndes2006, 2009, 2012
AustraliaJamie Whincup2007, 2011, 2017
2AustraliaGlenn Seton1993, 1994
AustraliaJason Bargwanna1999, 2000
AustraliaRussell Ingall1997, 2001
AustraliaJames Courtney2010, 2013
AustraliaMark Winterbottom2014, 2015

By team

[edit]
WinsTeam
6Triple Eight Race Engineering
DJR Team Penske1
4Gibson Motorsport
3Garry Rogers Motorsport
Holden Racing Team
Tickford Racing2
2JPS Team BMW
Glenn Seton Racing
Perkins Engineering

By manufacturer

[edit]
WinsManufacturer
15Ford
12Holden
4Nissan
2BMW
Notes
  • ^1 – DJR Team Penske was known as Dick Johnson Racing from 1980 to 2014, hence their statistics are combined.
  • ^2 – Tickford Racing was known as Ford Performance Racing from 2003 to 2014 and as Prodrive Racing Australia from 2015 to 2017, hence their statistics are combined.

Event names and sponsors

[edit]
  • 1985, 1988–95, 1997–2004, 2006–10, 2012: Winton
  • 1986: Lusty-Allison Winton Roundup
  • 2011: Winton 300
  • 2013: Winton 360
  • 2014: Winton 400
  • 2015:NP300 Navara Winton Super Sprint
  • 2016: Woodstock Winton SuperSprint
  • 2017–18: Winton SuperSprint
  • 2019: Truck Assist Winton SuperSprint
  • 2022:Pizza Hut Winton SuperSprint

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abChapman, Simon (30 August 2020)."Supercars confirms double-header at The Bend".Speedcafe. Retrieved30 August 2020.
  2. ^Chapman, Simon (2 December 2020)."Supercars reveals long awaited 2021 calendar".Speedcafe. Retrieved3 December 2020.
  3. ^Supercars schedule for long-awaited Winton returnSpeedcafe.com 17 May 2022
  4. ^abcdeGreenhalgh, David; Howard, Graham; Wilson, Stewart (2011).The official history: Australian Touring Car Championship - 50 Years.St Leonards,New South Wales: Chevron Publishing Group.ISBN 978-0-9805912-2-4.
  5. ^Dale, Will (29 June 2024)."The Nissan race win that was taken away". Retrieved29 June 2024.
  6. ^"The Top 10 Aussie Touring Car races of all time – Part two".Auto Action. 31 May 2015. Retrieved8 July 2015.
  7. ^"Fast Facts - Winton SuperSprint". Supercars.com. 14 May 2018. Retrieved18 May 2018.
  8. ^"The Devil racer does it again, this time at Winton".Motorsport.com. 27 May 2003. Retrieved9 July 2015.
  9. ^"Race Flashback: Cam's Last Corner Pass".V8Supercars.com.au. 1 August 2013. Archived fromthe original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved9 July 2015.
  10. ^"Winton replaces Shanghai on V8 calendar". Drive.com.au. 21 February 2006. Retrieved1 July 2017.
  11. ^"Dunlop to introduce its new V8 Sport Maxx "Sprint" tyre at Winton".Jax Quickfit Tyres. April 2009. Retrieved9 July 2015.
  12. ^"Moffat leads Nissan one-two at Winton".Speedcafe. 24 August 2013. Retrieved9 July 2015.
  13. ^"Holdsworth hands Erebus maiden V8 Supercars win".Speedcafe. 5 April 2014. Retrieved9 July 2015.
  14. ^Bartholomaeus, Stefan (6 April 2014)."McLaughlin scores first V8 Supercars pole".Speedcafe. Retrieved9 July 2015.
  15. ^Bartholomaeus, Stefan (22 May 2016)."Slade and BJR do the double at Winton".Speedcafe. Retrieved22 May 2016.
  16. ^Herrero, Dan (19 May 2018)."Kelly snatches emotional win after late Safety Car". Speedcafe. Retrieved20 May 2018.
  17. ^McAlpine, Heath (2 July 2020)."Supercars Confirm SMP, Night Racing and Crowd Return".Auto Action. Retrieved3 July 2020.
  18. ^Chapman, Simon (27 May 2021)."Winton SuperSprint postponed".Speedcafe. Retrieved28 May 2021.
  19. ^"Supercars statement regarding planned Winton SuperSprint".Supercars. 16 September 2021. Retrieved16 September 2021.
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