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Australian Touring Car Championship

 
Wikipedia: Australian Touring Car Championship
Australian Touring Car Championship
Category Touring car racing
Country or region Australia
Inaugural season 1960
Drivers 12
Teams 29
Tyre suppliers Dunlop
Drivers' champion Australia Jamie Whincup
Official website V8Supercars.com.au
Motorsport current event.svg Current season

The Australian Touring Car Championship (ATCC) is a touring car racing award held in Australia since 1960. The series itself is no longer contested, but the title lives on, with the winner of the V8 Supercar Championship Series awarded the trophy and title of Australian Touring Car Champion.

Contents

History

The first Australian Touring Car Championship was held in 1960 as a single race for Appendix J Touring Cars. This was an acknowledgement of the rising popularity of races held for passenger sedans as opposed to the more purpose built open wheel racing cars, or sports cars. The original race was held at the Gnoo Blas circuit in Orange in rural New South Wales, west of Sydney. The original race was won by journalist racer, David McKay racing a Jaguar saloon prepared by his own racing team, which to this point had been better known for its preparation of open wheel or sports racing Ferraris.

The early years of the ATCC saw the once a year event visit mostly rural circuits, before finally visiting a major city circuit, Lakeside Raceway on the outskirts of Brisbane in 1964. This race was also the first not won by a Jaguar saloon with Ian Geoghegan winning the first of his five titles in a Ford Cortina. From 1965 the title would largely be won by American V8 powered muscle cars, most notably the Ford Mustang which would win five consecutive titles. The first victory by an Australian car was the Holden Monaro driven by Norm Beechey.

1979 Champion Bob Morris (Holden Torana)

A major shift occurred in 1973. The championship had blossomed from a single race into a multi-event series in 1969, but the competition had not changed markedly. The 'Supercar scare' that had rocked the build up to 1972 Bathurst 500 forced sweeping changes through touring car regulations. The Improved Touring Car regulations which governed the ATCC, known at the time as Group C were amalgamated with the more basic Group E Series Production Touring Cars regulations which governed the Bathurst touring car endurance race in a compromise between the two, creating a single class for touring car racing that would hold sway of Australian Touring Car racing until the introduction of Group A in 1985.

This period saw a rise in the tribal style conflicts between Holden and Ford and in particular the two marques leading drivers, respectively Peter Brock and Allan Moffat who between them would claim seven of the eras 12 championships (and nine of the associated Bathurst victories). By the mid 1980s Group C had become wracked with infighting and almost random parity adjustments between competing marques.

Attention focussed purely on Holden and Ford had blurred as European and Japanese manufacturers joined the Australian agents of the two big American companies, the trend starting in 1981 with BMW, Mazda and Nissan. The international Group A regulations, already utilised by European and Japanese touring car series, allowed them to compete on equal terms. Holden was forced briefly into catchup phase, which they quickly did.

1992 saw the unhappy demise of Group A and with the international touring car scene fragmenting in several directions (moving towards DTM, Super Touring and Super GT) Australia forged its own path evolving the Group A specification Holden Commodores into the new Group 3A regulations that would later be renamed as V8 Supercar.

The ATCC continued to be used until the end of the 1998 season, after which V8 Supercar organisers altered the name of the series, eventually adopting its present identity, the V8 Supercar Championship Series.

ATCC Champions

Round Wins by Driver

Round Wins Drivers Manufacturers
39 Mark Skaife Nissan, Holden
37 Peter Brock Holden
33 Craig Lowndes Holden, Ford
32 Allan Moffat Ford, Mazda
23 Jamie Whincup Ford
22 Dick Johnson Ford
Jim Richards BMW, Nissan, Holden
21 Garth Tander Holden
17 Glenn Seton Nissan, Ford
15 John Bowe Ford
Marcos Ambrose Ford
12 Russell Ingall Holden, Ford
11 Greg Murphy Holden
10 Bob Jane Jaguar, Ford, Chevrolet
Colin Bond Holden, Ford
Allan Grice Holden
9 Ian Geoghegan Ford
Bob Morris Holden, Mazda
Todd Kelly Holden
8 George Fury Nissan
Jason Bright Ford, Holden
7 Norm Beechey Ford, Holden
6 Steven Richards Holden, Ford
5 Robbie Francevic Volvo
Tony Longhurst Ford, BMW, Holden
Will Davison Holden
Mark Winterbottom Ford
4 Larry Perkins Holden
Jason Bargwanna Holden
Rick Kelly Holden
3 Kevin Bartlett Chevrolet
Alan Jones Ford
Paul Radisich Ford
2 Jim McKeown Porsche
John Harvey Holden
Steven Johnson Ford
James Courtney Ford
1 David McKay Jaguar
Bill Pitt Jaguar
Charlie O'Brien Holden
Wayne Gardner Holden
Paul Morris Holden
David Besnard Ford
Simon Wills Ford
Greg Ritter Ford
Cameron McConville Holden
Yvan Muller Ford
Lee Holdsworth Holden
Michael Caruso Holden

Accurate to end of 2009

Most starts

Current drivers indicated in bold.

Starts Driver Manufacturers
225 John Bowe Volvo, Nissan, Ford
216 Mark Skaife Nissan, Holden
212 Peter Brock Holden, BMW, Ford
207 Glenn Seton Nissan, Ford, Holden
202 Dick Johnson Holden, Ford, Mazda
191 Tony Longhurst BMW, Ford, Holden
176 Russell Ingall Holden, Ford
168 Steven Richards Holden, Ford
165 Craig Lowndes Holden, Ford
160 Larry Perkins Holden
157 Greg Murphy Holden
153 Garth Tander Holden
146 Paul Morris BMW, Holden
Steven Johnson Ford, Holden
145 Jason Bright Ford, Holden
144 Jason Bargwanna Holden, Ford
139 Cameron McConville Holden
134 Todd Kelly Holden
131 Jim Richards Ford, BMW, Nissan, Holden
126 Colin Bond Holden, Ford, Alfa Romeo, Toyota
120 Steven Ellery Ford, Holden
119 Jason Richards Holden
112 John Faulkner Ford, Toyota, Holden
110 Rick Kelly Holden
109 Brad Jones Mitsubishi, Ford, Holden

Accurate to end of 2009

Australian Touring Car Championship Wins by Marque

  • 22 - Ford - 1964-1969, 1973, 1976-1977, 1981-1982, 1984, 1988-1989, 1993, 1995, 1997, 2003-2005, 2008-2009
  • 15 - Holden - 1970, 1974-1975, 1978-1980, 1994, 1996, 1998-2002, 2006-2007
  • 4 - Jaguar - 1960-1963
  • 3 - Nissan - 1990-1992
  • 2 - Chevrolet - 1971-1972
  • 2 - BMW - 1985, 1987
  • 1 - Mazda - 1983
  • 1 - Volvo - 1986

See also

List of Australian Touring Car Championship races


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