The 1985 Australian Touring Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing title for drivers of Touring Cars. It was the 26th running of the Australian Touring Car Championship and the first to be contested using regulations based on the FIA's International Group A regulations after having been run under CAMS home grown Group C rules between 1973 and 1984. The championship began on 10 February 1985 at Winton Motor Raceway (the track's first ever ATCC race) and ended on 14 July at Oran Park Raceway after ten rounds.
The championship was won by Jim Richards driving a BMW 635 CSi.
Season summary
editTriple Bathurst winner Jim Richards won his and BMW's first Australian Touring Car Championship driving a 3.5-litre 6 cyl BMW 635 CSi entered by JPS Team BMW. Defending champion Dick Johnson placed second in his Ford Mustang (the first time a Mustang had been seen in the ATCC since 1973), with Peter Brock finishing third in his Holden VK Commodore.
The first round of the series at Winton also created history when for the first time since the ATCC was first held in 1960, no Holden of any sort was on the grid. The race also saw the first ever ATCC race win by a BMW with Richards winning by a lap from his new JPS teammate, fellow New Zealander Neville Crichton. Richards' win in the BMW also saw the first ATCC round win by a European car since Jim McKeown won the 7th and final round of the 1970 ATCC at Symmons Plains in a Porsche 911S.
Swedish marque Volvo also joined the winners list when Kiwi Robbie Francevic won Round 3 at Symmons Plains in Tasmania in his Volvo 240T. Still a resident of Auckland, Francevic's win also saw him become the first non-Australian resident to win an ATCC race. The big Kiwi's win in Tasmania in the turbo Volvo was also the first of what would be an eventual 55 ATCC round wins (out of a possible 72) for cars powered by turbocharged engines up until the end of Group A racing in 1992. It was not the first turbocharged car to win an ATCC race however, as George Fury had won the Lakeside round in 1984 in a Nissan Bluebird Turbo.
Richards (Winton, Wanneroo, Adelaide, Calder, Surfers, Lakeside and Amaroo, which staged its first ATCC race since 1978), Brock (Sandown) and Francevic (Symmons Plains and Oran Park) were the only drivers to win a race in the series. That actually gave New Zealand born drivers 9 wins out of the 10 rounds, a record for non-Australian wins that still stands as of 2016.
Jim Richards and John Smith in his Toyota Team Australia Corolla were the only drivers to finish each round of the series. Smith won the Up to 2000cc class at the first nine rounds of the series before finishing a close second behind teammate Drew Price in the final round at Oran Park.
Other drivers/cars who made an impression in Australia's first foray into Group A included Sydney privateer Garry Willmington in his privately entered Jaguar XJS (built from a second hand road car) with its 5.3 litre, V12 engine which proved fast but underdone thanks to Willmington's small budget. The Jaguar was often the fastest car in a straight line when it appeared, but Willmington's lack of budget to develop the car saw it lack the handling needed to be competitive on the smaller Australian tracks. Also impressing were Perth based expat Kiwi Tim Slako in an ex-Andy Rouse BTCC Rover Vitesse powered by a 3.5 litre V8, another Kiwi in Jim Richards' JPS teammate Neville Crichton in his BMW, and yet another Kiwi Kent Baigent who joined the series in Adelaide driving his ex-Schnitzer Motorsport BMW 635. Also impressing with giant killing performances was 1980 Formula One World Champion Alan Jones in Colin Bond's second Network Alfa team Alfa Romeo GTV6. Jones, in an Luigi Racing (ETCC) built GTV6 generally out-performed Bond who drove his Alfa which had been converted from Group E to Group A specification in 1984. Jones, contesting his first ever ATCC finished 8th in the championship despite not contesting the final three rounds (Jones would return full-time to F1 in late 1985). Don Smith and Lawrie Nelson both drove a privately entered Ford Mustang each, and even though they would on occasions both achieve decent results in qualifying, lack of reliability and funding kept them well off the pace of Johnson's front running Greens-Tuf Zakespeed Ford Mustang GT.
Teams and drivers
editThe following drivers and teams competed in the 1985 Australian Touring Car Championship.
Team | Car | Class | No | Driver |
---|---|---|---|---|
Masterton Homes | Holden VK Commodore | 3001 to 6000cc | 2 | Steve Masterton |
H. Kent Baigent | BMW 635 CSi | 2001 to 3000cc | 3 | Kent Baigent |
Mobil Holden Dealer Team | Holden VK Commodore | 3001 to 6000cc | 05 | Peter Brock John Harvey* |
7 | Peter Brock* John Harvey Larry Perkins David Parsons | |||
Toyota Team Australia | Toyota Corolla | Up to 2000cc | 10 | John Smith |
11 | Drew Price | |||
Garry Willmington Performance | Jaguar XJ-S | 3001 to 6000cc | 12 | Garry Willmington |
Bob Holden Motors | Toyota Sprinter | Up to 2000cc | 13 | Bob Holden Mike Quinn |
Palmer Tube Mills | Ford Mustang GT | 3001 to 6000cc | 17 | Dick Johnson |
Ken Mathews Prestige Cars | Holden VK Commodore | 3001 to 6000cc | 19 | Ken Mathews |
Jim Keogh Automotive | Holden VK Commodore | 3001 to 6000cc | 20 | Jim Keogh |
Mark Petch Motorsport | Volvo 240T | 2001 to 3000cc | 21 | Robbie Francevic |
Glenn Molloy | BMW 635 CSi | 3001 to 6000cc | 22 | Glenn Molloy |
JPS Team BMW | BMW 323i | 2001 to 3000cc | 23 | Tony Longhurst |
BMW 635 CSi | 3001 to 6000cc | 31 | Neville Crichton | |
62 | Jim Richards | |||
Network Alfa | Alfa Romeo GTV6 | 2001 to 3000cc | 26 | Colin Bond |
27 | Alan Jones | |||
The Toy Shop | Alfa Romeo GTV6 | 2001 to 3000cc | 27 | Gregg Hansford |
Motorsport Performance | Ford Mustang GT | 3001 to 6000cc | 33 | Don Smith |
Ken Harrison | Ford Escort Mk.II | Up to 2000cc | 34 | Ken Harrison |
Mike Minear Racing | Volvo 360GLT | Up to 2000cc | 36 | Mike Minear |
Ross Burbidge | Mazda RX-7 | 2001 to 3000cc | 46 | Ross Burbidge |
Jagparts | Triumph Dolomite Sprint | Up to 2000cc | 49 | Martin Power |
Chris Heyer | Audi 5+5 | 2001 to 3000cc | 53 | Chris Heyer |
JL Hazelton | Ford Capri Mk.III | 2001 to 3000cc | 57 | Laurie Hazelton |
Capri Components | Ford Mustang GT | 3001 to 6000cc | 64 | Lawrie Nelson |
John Craft | Ford Capri Mk.III | 2001 to 3000cc | 65 | John Craft |
Ralliart Australia | Mitsubishi Starion | 2001 to 3000cc | 66 | Kevin Bartlett |
Greville Arnel | Mitsubishi Starion | 2001 to 3000cc | 68 | Greville Arnel |
Raymond Spencer | Mazda RX-7 | 2001 to 3000cc | 70 | Raymond Spencer |
Ian Thompson | BMW 323i | 2001 to 3000cc | 77 | Ian Thompson |
Peter Williamson Toyota | Toyota Celica Supra | 2001 to 3000cc | 77 | Peter Williamson |
Melbourne Brake & Clutch | Mitsubishi Starion | 2001 to 3000cc | 78 | Brian Sampson |
Phil Parsons | Ford Capri Mk.III | 2001 to 3000cc | 79 | Phil Parsons |
Alf Barbagallo | Rover Vitesse | 3001 to 6000cc | 96 | Tim Slako |
Russell Worthington | Mazda RX-7 | 2001 to 3000cc | 100 | Russell Worthington |
* Peter Brock and John Harvey both drove #05 and #7 during the season.
Race calendar
editThe 1985 Australian Touring Car Championship was contested over a ten-round series with one race per round.
Classes
editCars competed in three classes determined by engine capacity.
- Up to 2000cc
- 2001 to 3000cc
- 3001 to 6000cc[9]
Points system
editChampionship points were allocated on a three tier system, to Australian license holders only, for outright places gained in each round:
- Scale A was applied to drivers of cars in the Up to 2000cc class
- Scale B was applied to drivers of cars in the 2001 to 3000cc class
- Scale C was applied to drivers of cars in the 3001 to 6000cc class[9]
Outright Position[10] | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 |
Scale A | 30 | 27 | 24 | 21 | 19 | 17 | 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
Scale B | 28 | 26 | 23 | 20 | 17 | 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
Scale C | 25 | 23 | 20 | 17 | 15 | 13 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | – | – | – |
Points from the best nine round results were retained by each driver, any other points not being included in the nett total.
Results
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See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Australian Motor Racing Year 1985/86, pages 313–314
- ^ 1985 ATCC Round 4 Barbagello
- ^ 1985 ATCC Round 5 Adelaide International Raceway
- ^ "1985 ATCC". The Programme Covers Project. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
- ^ 1985 ATCC Round 7 Surfers Paradise
- ^ 1985 ATCC R8 Lakeside
- ^ 1985 ATCC Round 9 Amaroo
- ^ 1985 ATCC Round 10 Oran Park
- ^ a b CAMS Manual of Motor Sport, 1985, page 90
- ^ CAMS Manual of Motor Sport, 1985, page 86
- ^ a b c Graham Howard, Stewart Wilson, David Greenhalgh, The official history - Australian Touring Car Championship - 50 Years, page 261
External links
edit- Official V8 Supercar site Contains historical ATCC information.
- 1985 Australian Touring Car racing images at www.autopics.com.au
- 1985 Australian Touring Car Championship, touringcarracing.net