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Tander does it again

April 23rd 2008 00:38
Garth Tander has done it again, reminding V8 Supercar fans just why he is the reigning series champion, taking out all three races in the inaugural Hamilton 400 last weekend.

Jamie Whincup, who was sitting pretty on top of the points table before the round began, had a major racing incident during qualifying after coming together with Todd Kelly’s Commodore halfway through the second session. A passing move went horribly wrong for Whincup when Kelly, with nowhere else to go, speared across the track off the ripple strip, clipping Whincup and sending him crashing into the wall. The car was so severely damaged that the weekend was over before it had even begun for the #88 Team Vodafone driver.

A brilliant qualifying lap saw Steven Richards take pole position for the first race on Saturday but that was to be the only time he was to lead the race as Tander leapfrogged over him at the start, maintaining his lead throughout the weekend and giving no other driver any chance to take control of the race.

Richards finished with a very respectable second place overall with third going to SBR driver James Courtney.

The weekend was an eventful one as the drivers familiarised themselves with the new venue, including a chicane which proved to be particularly damaging to many of the cars. The incident of the weekend belonged to Jim Beam driver Will Davison whose bonnet flew up while exiting pit lane, badly damaging his windscreen and forcing him to drive a whole lap with the bonnet almost completely obscuring his view.

A number of the younger, inexperienced drivers showed they had what it takes to compete with the best in the sport. Kiwi Fabian Coulthard ended the weekend with a stack of points in fifth overall and SBR’s Shane Van Gisbergen showed some excellent, mature driving to finish race three in tenth. Rod Nash Racing’s Tony D’Alberto was unlucky not to improve upon his 11th placing in race 2 after a racing incident finished his weekend early in race three.

But the weekend belonged to Garth Tander and Holden, consolidating Holden’s hold on the New Zealand round of the championship.
Image courtesy of www.holdenmotorsport.com
The inaugural Hamilton winners

“It was three very good races, there was gaps and then it flowed and then there were safety cars and it's a new circuit and it is quite easy to make mistakes here, so I was just trying to concentrate and look after the car as much as I could,” Tander said.

“We have seen all weekend cars being damaged by the chicane and the curbs so I just wanted to look after the car and tyres in case there was any late safety cars. As it turned out in two out of the three races we had late safety cars and I needed that little bit of a spurt to get away from Richo [Steven Richards] so we could bring it home.

“It's a fantastic result for us and fantastic for Holden, eighth in a row here in New Zealand and also a bit of revenge on New Zealand after last year so I had a fair bit of motivation to get this one.”

Steven Richards was also satisfied with how his weekend had panned out.

“I'm pretty happy, it been a while between drinks for pole position and we made the most of the differing conditions yesterday and Garth definitely had very good pace off the restart better than us,” Richards said.

“We went a little bit backward in the last race with set up, but overall pretty pleased all things considered. I think we made a big step forward in our championship chase and that's the main thing, to get some points on the board.

“We made a change for the last race and it definitely hurt the car a little bit, but toward the end of the race we definitely had as good a race pace as Garth. But at the start the car was bouncing around on the bumps a fair bit and was giving the old brain a bit of a rattle and we were struggling to keep up early.”

Another driver pleased with his performance was James Courtney who kept out of trouble all weekend, driving a series of clean races.

“It was a good result. We have had good speed all year but it has been an up and down start to the season and now it is good to have a clean weekend and let someone else have the bad luck,” said Courtney following the round.

“So it's good to get some strong points under our belt and now we can work on what we have found from this weekend.

“I guess when you are in the front you don't have to be as aggressive to get through. In the past I've been coming through from further back and you have to have calculated aggression and at times things have gone wrong. But with a clean qualifying and starting near the front you don't have to get involved in any mayhem and you can just concentrate on doing smooth, quick, clean and consistent lap times.

“And look what happens at the end of the day it was probably the easiest weekend I have had for as long as I can remember.”

Whincup has dropped back to fifth in the points table following his disastrous weekend with Rick Kelly taking control of the championship with 672 points. Tander has moved into second position on 626 points followed by Lee Holdsworth, third on the table. The highest placed Ford driver is now Mark Winterbottom in fourth.

The next round of the championship will be the Bigpond 400 in Perth on 9-11 May 2008.

Image courtesy of the official Holden Motorsport website.
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Hamilton ready to rumble

April 17th 2008 03:36
After almost three years in the making, the newest circuit on the V8 Supercars program has finally been completed, ready for this weekend’s round of the 2008 Series.

The street circuit in Hamilton, New Zealand, was first conceived in July 2005 when the then Mayor, Michael Redman, approached V8 Supercars Australia, attempting to convince them of the viability of a round in his beautiful city. By January 2006 a helicopter flyover had located a suitable circuit and the planning began later that year


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Greg Murphy set to make a comeback

April 14th 2008 23:50
Not that he ever went anywhere but fans of the Tasman Motorsport driver could be forgiven for wondering just what has happened to Murphy over the last few seasons.

This coming weekend’s round at Hamilton, New Zealand, will see not just a new paint job for the Kiwi racing favourite, get beyond the skin and Greg Murphy will be roaring around in a car described as being totally different from any other car Tasman have given him in the past


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Dean Canto v Garry Rogers

April 11th 2008 05:31
Former Garry Rogers Motorsport driver Dean Canto has spoken out following being dumped from the team and replaced with 2007 Fujitsu Series runner-up, Michael Caruso, for the 2008 V8 Supercar championship.
Image courtesy of www.v8x.com.au
Dean Canto

In an interview for the V8 Insiders Podcast show, Canto pointed the finger, stating there were a number of drivers in the main championship who were not there on talent alone, buying their way into major teams and pushing out other, less cashed-up, drivers, like himself and Steve Owen


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Ford news following the AGP

March 25th 2008 00:24
Following Holden’s success at the Sprint Gas V8 Manufacturers Challenge at the 2008 Australian Grand Prix, and the somewhat dubious decisions made by a number of the Ford drivers which resulted in numerous DNFs throughout the weekend, Ford Racing boss Ray Price has stood by his decision not to assist Falcon drivers with tactics designed to win races, including the non-points round, and ultimately the championship.

Jim Beam Racing’s Will Davison has prompted the comments form the Ford Racing Manager, after stating that the Red v Blue format has “a lot of potential to work as long as we are briefed properly by our manufacturer”. His main complaint being that the team as a whole received no direction from Ford regarding how to best tackle the new race format


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V8 Supercar drivers are joining together to call for an extended presence at future Australian Grand Prix race meetings. The success of the Sprint Gas V8 Supercar Manufacturers Challenge at last weekend’s AGP has seen a number of high profile drivers call for more laps per race for Australia’s premier race cars at the international event, with an ultimate view to making each race similar in length to a standard championship race meeting.

This is despite the fact that this year’s AGP saw the V8s race an extra ten laps when compared to their last visit in 2006. In total, 49 laps were raced in the Manufacturers Challenge, not too far short of the 58 laps the Formula 1 cars raced


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Holden proves dominance at AGP

March 17th 2008 01:18
This weekend’s V8 Supercars Manufacturers Challenge ended on a high note for Holden fans everywhere after Toll HRT’s Garth Tander led the Red corner to victory, taking out all three races and amassing a maximum 300 points for the team.

Total points for the weekend of racing saw Holden thrash Ford, finishing the competition on 2012 points, leaving Ford wondering what had happened after they scored just 1568 points in reply


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Toll HRT - the team to beat

March 14th 2008 06:03
Toll HRT are on a roll this weekend at the Sprint Gas V8 Supercars Manufacturers Challenge. Mark Skaife showed a positive turn of speed in qualifying yesterday, finishing the session in provisional pole position but it was Garth Tander who stole the show today in the top ten shoot out, blitzing the field to put his Holden Commodore on position one on the grid for this afternoon’s first race.

With a flying lap of 1min 58.2337sec, Tander was unbeatable, tearing past the impressive time set two cars before by Craig Lowndes in his Ford Falcon. He had to wait impatiently for another five cars to complete their flying laps before being declared pole position sitter, leading the Red team from the front


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Skaife - best on the day at the AGP

March 13th 2008 10:57
Mark Skaife has blasted his way into provisional pole position for this weekend’s Red v Blue Sprint Gas V8 Supercars Manufacturers Challenge at the Australian Grand Prix.

The Toll HRT veteran overcame all-comers to draw first blood for the Red corner at Albert Park today with an impressive 1:58.5086 lap, waiting until the dying seconds before leap-frogging the competition, including Steven Richards who had, moments before, jumped to the top of the qualifying leader board with a 1 min 58.6621 lap


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The Australian F1 Grand Prix next weekend will see the introduction of the newest V8 Supercar team, the Ausdrill Ford Rising Stars Racing Team. This will be the first time the team have wet their feet in the main series after a number of years in the development series.

“Our license purchase went through recently and the first meeting we could enter for was the AGP”, team Owner Jim Morton said. “The whole team is suffering from racing deprivation and after four years of racing in the V8 Development Series there is almost a surreal feeling that next week we get our first start in the main series


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