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Supercars Championship

The Supercars Championship is a touring car racing category in Australia, running as an International Series under Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) regulations, governing the sport.

Supercars Championship
CategoryTouring car racing
Country Australia
New Zealand
Inaugural season1997
Drivers25
Teams11
ConstructorsFord • Chevrolet
Tyre suppliersDunlop
Drivers' champion Shane van Gisbergen
Makes' championHolden
Teams' champion Triple Eight Race Engineering
Official websitewww.supercars.com
Current season

Supercars events take place in all Australian states and the Northern Territory,[1] with the Australian Capital Territory formerly holding the Canberra 400.[2] An international round is held in New Zealand, while events have previously been held in China, Bahrain,[3] the United Arab Emirates, and the United States.[1][4] A Melbourne 400 championship event is also held in support of the Australian Grand Prix. Race formats vary between each event, with sprint races between 100 and 200 kilometres (62 and 124 mi) in length, street races between 125 and 250 kilometres (78 and 155 mi) in length, and two-driver endurance races held at Sandown, Bathurst, and the Gold Coast.[5] The series is broadcast in 137 countries[6] and has an average event attendance of over 100,000, with over 250,000 people attending major events such as the Adelaide 500.[7]

The vehicles used in the series are loosely based on road-going cars. Cars are custom made using a control chassis, with only certain body panels being common between the road cars and race cars. To ensure parity between each make of car, many control components are used. All cars currently use 5.0-litre naturally aspirated V8 engines, but since 2017 have had the option of using four and six cylinder engines, as well as turbochargers.[8] Originally only for Ford Falcons and Holden Commodores, the new generation V8 Supercar regulations, introduced in 2013, opened up the series to more manufacturers.[9] Nissan were the first new manufacturer to commit to the series with four Nissan Altima L33s[10] followed briefly by Erebus Motorsport with Mercedes-Benz E63 AMGs[11] and Garry Rogers Motorsport with Volvo S60s.[12] The series returned to a Ford and Holden duopoly in 2020 with the departure of Nissan, while Ford replaced the Falcon with the Mustang in 2019.[13] Holden announced its final year of competition in 2022, to be replaced by the Chevrolet Camaro for the 2023 season.[14][15]

History

Group 3A

The concept of a formula centred around V8-engined Fords and Holdens for the Australian Touring Car Championship had been established as early as mid-1991. With the new regulations set to come into effect in 1993, Ford and Holden were both keen to know the details of the new formula by the end of 1991, putting pressure on the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS) to provide clarity on the matter. However, CAMS was waiting to see what the FIA did with its proposed international formula for 2.5- and 2.0-litre touring cars.[16]

The new rules for the ATCC were announced in November 1991 and indicated that the V8 cars would be significantly faster than the smaller-engined cars. In 1992, CAMS looked at closing the performance gap between the classes, only to have protests from Ford and Holden, which did not want to see their cars beaten by the smaller cars. In June 1992, the class structure was confirmed:[17]

  • Class A: Australian-produced 5.0-litre V8-engined Fords and Holdens
  • Class B: 2.0-litre cars complying with FIA Class II Touring Car regulations
  • Class C: normally aspirated two-wheel drive cars complying with 1992 CAMS Group 3A Touring Car regulations: This class would only be eligible in 1993.[18]

Both the Ford Falcon EB and Holden Commodore VP ran American-based engines, which were restricted to 7,500 rpm and a compression ratio of 10:1. The Holden teams had the option of using the Group A-developed 5.0-litre Holden V8 engine, although this was restricted to the second-tier privateer teams from 1994 onwards, forcing the major Holden runners to use the more expensive Chevrolet engine. The V8s were first eligible to compete in the endurance races of 1992. The distinctive aerodynamics package, consisting of large front and rear spoilers, was designed partly with this in mind, to give the new cars a better chance of beating the Nissan Skyline GT-Rs in those races.[17]

The new rules meant that cars such as the turbocharged Nissan Skyline GT-R and Ford Sierra RS500 Cosworth were not eligible to compete in 1993, while cars such as the BMW M3 were. However, the M3 received few of the liberal concessions given to the new V8s and also had an extra 100 kilograms (220 lb) added to its minimum weight, so[19] with the Class C cars eligible for 1993 only, the German manufacturer's attention switched to the 2.0-litre class for 1994.

Cars from all three classes would contest the 1993 Australian Touring Car Championship, as well as non-championship Australian touring car events such as the Bathurst 1000. However, for the purposes of race classification and points allocation, cars competed in two classes:

  • Over 2,000 cc
  • Under 2,000 cc

Originally, the 2.0-litre class cars competed in a separate race to the V8s. This was changed for the second round of 1993 after only nine entrants were in the 2.0-litre class for the first round at Amaroo Park.[19]

With the new regulations intended to be a parity formula, protests by the Holden teams indicated that the Fords had an aerodynamic advantage after they won the opening three rounds, beating the Commodores comprehensively. After round five at Winton, Holden was granted a new front and rear wing package. The BMWs were also allowed new splitters and full DTM-specification rear wings.[20] Disparity between the Fords and Holdens continued to be a talking point during the next few years, with various concessions given to each manufacturer to try to equalise the two cars.[21]

From 1995, the 2.0-litre cars, now contesting their own series as super touring cars, became ineligible for the Australian Touring Car Championship. They did not contest the endurance races at Sandown and Bathurst, leaving these open solely to the 5.0-litre Ford and Holden models.

V8 Supercars

 
Glenn Seton's 1997 Ford Falcon EL, pictured in 2011

The Australian Vee Eight Super Car Company (AVESCO) – a joint venture between the Touring Car Entrants Group of Australia (TEGA), sports promoters IMG and the Australian Motor Sports Commission – was formed in November 1996 to run the series. This set the foundation for the large expansion of the series during the following years. The category also adopted the name 'V8 Supercars' at this time,[22] though the cars themselves were much unchanged. A new television deal with Network Ten and Fox Sports was organised, although this had follow-on effects for the Bathurst 1000 later in the year.[23]

In February, Tony Cochrane and James Erskine left IMG. Together with David Coe, they formed Sports and Entertainment Limited (SEL) in April 1997.[24] TEGA would have a 75% share in AVESCO, with SEL owning the other 25%. TEGA was responsible for the rules and technical management of the series and the supply of cars and drivers, while SEL was responsible for capturing and maintaining broadcasting rights, sponsorship, licensing, and sanction agreements.[25]

The expansion of the series began in 1998, with the first round to be held in the Northern Territory taking place at Hidden Valley Raceway. In 1999, a new street race on a shortened version of the Adelaide Grand Prix Circuit became one of the first festival-style events, which would become common in later years. Australia's capital city, Canberra, hosted its first event on the Canberra Street Circuit in 2000. In 2001, a championship round was held in New Zealand for the first time, at Pukekohe Park Raceway.[26] In 2002, the V8 Supercar support event at the Indy 300 on the Gold Coast became a championship round, having been a non-championship event since 1994.[27]

Major format changes were made for 1999, with the incorporation of the endurance races into the championship. Control tyres were used for the first time, with Bridgestone selected as the supplier. The series was also renamed from the "Australian Touring Car Championship" to the "Shell Championship Series", by virtue of Shell's sponsorship of the category.[28] Reverse-grid races were introduced for multiple rounds in 2000[29] before being confined to just the Canberra round for 2001. Also in 2001, compulsory pit stops were introduced at certain rounds and the Top Ten Shootout was used at all rounds.[30] The control tyre supplier changed from Bridgestone to Dunlop in 2002 and the series name was changed to the "V8 Supercar Championship Series" after Shell discontinued their sponsorship.[31]

Project Blueprint

Discussions about parity had returned in 2000, with 100 millimetres (3.9 in) trimmed from the front spoiler of the Commodore after Holden, in particular, the Holden Racing Team, had dominated in 1998 and 1999. This was in response to the 300 millimetres (12 in) removed from the Falcon in previous seasons, and coincided with a 10 millimetres (0.39 in) trim from the Falcon's rear spoiler. The small reduction for the Holden teams was quickly addressed with both cars receiving the same front splitter shortly afterwards, but the Falcon's rear wing remained trimmed. Ford had threatened to withdraw from the series, but nothing came of this.[32] After Holden again dominated in 2001 and 2002, a new set of regulations, dubbed "Project Blueprint", was introduced in 2003 to close the performance gap between the Commodore and the Falcon,[33] thus creating closer, fairer racing.[34] Project Blueprint was developed by Paul Taylor and Wayne Cattach, who spent two years designing a formula which would eliminate most of the differences between the Fords and Holdens.[35]

Project Blueprint had the chassis pick-up points, wheelbase, track, and driving position become common across both manufacturers. The Holdens were now able and required to use double-wishbone front suspension, similar to that of the Falcon, rather than the MacPherson struts used previously, and a Watts link at the rear rather than a Panhard. The aerodynamic packages were comprehensively tested and revised and differences in the porting of each of the manufacturers' engines were also removed.[33][36] The performance of the new Ford BA Falcon and Holden VY and VZ Commodores was fairly even for the next four years, with Ford winning the championship in 2003, 2004, and 2005 and Holden winning in 2006.[37] Reverse-grid races were used at certain events in 2006 before unpopularity with the drivers, teams, and fans saw them abolished halfway through the season.[38]

 
Mark Skaife, five-time series champion and leader of the new generation V8 Supercar project

The Holden VE Commodore caused controversy when it was introduced in 2007. The production model was longer, wider, and taller than the rival Ford BF Falcon and outside of the limits set by Project Blueprint. As a result, the VE race car was granted custom bodywork – namely shortened rear doors and a lowered roofline to meet the regulations.[39] Despite this, the VE was approved for use in the series, along with the BF Falcon, after several months of preseason testing.[40] Sequential gearboxes were introduced in 2008 and became compulsory by the end of the year.[41] In 2009, E85 (a fuel consisting of 85% ethanol and 15% unleaded petrol) was introduced in an effort to improve the environmental image of the sport. Carbon dioxide emissions decreased by up to 50%, but fuel consumption was increased by 30% to produce the same power as before.[42] 2009 also had the introduction of a soft compound tyre at certain events to try to improve the quality of the racing and create different strategies.[43][44]

In 2005, AVESCO changed its name to V8 Supercars Australia (VESA).[22] The series continued to expand during this time, with races held outside of Australasia for the first time. The series travelled to the Shanghai International Circuit in China in 2005, originally on a five-year agreement,[45] however the promoter of the race dropped their support and the series did not return thereafter.[46] 2006 saw the series travel to the Middle East, with an event held at the Bahrain International Circuit in Bahrain.[3] Multiple new street circuits appeared on the calendar in 2008 and 2009, with new events held in Hamilton in New Zealand,[47] Townsville in North Queensland and at Sydney Olympic Park.[48] The series' Middle East expansion continued in 2010 with a second round held at the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi.[4] In November 2010, the series was granted international status by the FIA for the 2011 season, allowing the series to race at up to six international venues each year. As a result, the series name was changed to the 'International V8 Supercars Championship'.[49]

2008 saw the separate boards of directors of VESA and TEGA merge into a single board that was solely responsible for the administration of the category. The new board of directors was composed of four TEGA representatives, two members from SEL and two independent directors.[50] In 2011, TEGA and SEL entered a sale agreement with Australian Motor Racing Partners (AMRP), which had significant financial backing from Archer Capital. This agreement saw SEL lose its 25% stake in V8 Supercars, with Archer Capital taking up a 60% share and TEGA the other 40%. A new board of directors was appointed, with two TEGA representatives and two AMRP representatives.[51]

In 2011, Archer Capital purchased a 65% shareholding in the series with the teams owning the other 35%.[52] In December 2021, both Archer Capital and the teams sold their shareholdings to Race Australia Consolidated Enterprises.[53]

 
Through the new rules manufacturers such as Volvo were able to enter cars in the series.

New Generation V8 Supercar

In the middle of 2008, a project led by Mark Skaife was organised by V8 Supercars to investigate future directions for the sport. The project had the primary objective of cutting costs to $250,000 per car through the use of control parts and to create a pathway for new manufacturers to enter the series, provided that they have a four-door saloon car in mass production. The new formula, called "Car of the Future", was scheduled to be introduced before or during the 2012 season. The plan was publicly unveiled in March 2010 and was shown to incorporate several key changes to the internal workings of the car. The chassis and the cooling, fuel and electronics systems would all be changed to control parts, with changes to the engine, drivetrain, rear suspension, wheels and the control brake package. The safety of the cars was also to be reviewed and improved.[54] While the plans were well received by all of the teams, Holden Motorsport boss Simon McNamara warned potential new manufacturers to stay out of the championship just hours after the plans were released, claiming that they would "gain nothing" from entering the series.[55]

Major changes were revealed to include a switch from a live rear axle to independent rear suspension; the use of a rear transaxle instead of a mid-mounted gearbox; the repositioning of the fuel tank to in front of the rear axle to improve safety; replacing the windscreen with a polycarbonate unit; and a switch from 17 inches (430 mm) to 18 inches (460 mm) wheels.[54] In 2011, it was announced that the Car of the Future would not be introduced until 2013.[56] In February 2012, Nissan confirmed that they would enter the series under Car of the Future regulations with Kelly Racing.[10] Later in 2012, Australian GT Championship team Erebus Motorsport announced they would be running Mercedes-Benz cars in the championship, taking over Stone Brothers Racing.[11][57] In June 2013, Volvo announced it would enter the series in 2014 in a collaboration with its motorsport arm, Polestar Racing and Garry Rogers Motorsport.[12] In November 2013 the Car of the Future moniker was dropped in favour of the name "New Generation V8 Supercar".[58]

The series continued its international expansion in 2013, with the first event in North America held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas.[59] In 2015, five drivers took part in a series of demonstration races at the Kuala Lumpur Street Circuit as part of the KL City Grand Prix. This was intended to be a precursor to the series holding a championship event at the circuit in 2016, in a push from CEO James Warburton to build series exposure in Asia.[60] The event was later cancelled due to legal issues affecting the circuit.[61]

Supercars Championship

In April 2016, the series reached an agreement with Virgin Australia to rename the series to the Virgin Australia Supercars Championship on 1 July.[62][63]

Gen 2 Supercar

In December 2014, Supercars released details concerning the future of the category. New regulations, dubbed Gen2 Supercar, were introduced in 2017 to allow the use of two-door coupé body styles and turbocharged four- or six-cylinder engines. However, no teams have elected to build cars to these alternate engine specifications as of 2020. Cars are still required to be based on front-engined, rear-wheel drive, four-seater production cars that are sold in Australia. The chassis and control components will be carried over from the New Generation V8 Supercar regulations, while engine and aerodynamic parity will be reviewed.[64][65]

Supercar specifications

 
 
Teams race either the Ford Mustang GT (top) or the Chevrolet Camaro.
 
 
The interior of Jason Bright's 2011 Holden VE Commodore. The driver's seat, steering wheel, gear shifter and parts of the roll cage can be seen.
 
Control wheels fitted with soft compound tyres.

The current New Generation V8 Supercar regulations are an evolution of the previous Project Blueprint regulations. The regulations control many aspects of the car to ensure parity between the manufacturers, allowing for minor differences in the engines and body shapes so that the cars bear some resemblance to their production counterparts. The regulations were also designed to lower the costs of building and repairing a car.[54]

Bodyshell

The body of each car is based on its corresponding production car. However, due to the regulations governing the dimensions of the cars to ensure parity, the race cars are lowered and shortened or lengthened to meet the regulations.[66] As of 2020, only the Ford Mustang GT and Holden ZB Commodore are competing.[67] To save costs, the front guards, passenger-side front door, rear doors and rear quarter panels are made from composite materials.[68] The tail lamps are carried over from the road car, while the windscreen is replaced by a polycarbonate unit.[8] The 2023 Repco Supercars Championship will be the first under the new Gen3 ruleset. From 2023, the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 will join the Ford Mustang GT on the grid.

The bodies are built around a control chassis, featuring a full roll cage, originally designed by PACE Innovations but which can be made, or partially made, by other accredited builders, including certain race teams.[8] Many safety features are utilised to protect the driver in the event of a crash. The fuel tank is positioned in front of the rear axle to prevent it from being damaged or ruptured in a rear end impact. The driver is seated towards the centre of the car and extra reinforcement is used on the roll cage on the driver's side to lessen the risk of injury in a side-on collision. The cars also feature a collapsible steering column and a fire extinguisher system.[9]

Aerodynamics

All cars have an aerodynamics package consisting of a front spoiler and splitter, side skirts and a rear wing. The aerodynamics package for each manufacturer is homologated after a series of tests which ensure that the different body styles produce near-identical downforce and drag numbers.[69][70]

Weight

The minimum weight of each car is 1,395 kilograms (3,075 lb) including the driver, with a minimum load of 755 kg over the front axle. The minimum weight for the driver is 100 kg and includes the driver dressed in a full racing suit, the seat and seat mountings and any ballast needed to meet the minimum weight.[71] Some other components also have a minimum weight, such as the engine (200 kg) and the front uprights (10.5 kg each).[72]

Engine and drivetrain

All cars must be front-engined and rear-wheel-drive, powered by an engine configuration, be that 4, 6, or 8 cylinders (or other) that do not exceed the Supercars accumulated engine power output and weighted average. All cars currently use a 5.0-litre, naturally aspirated, V8-engine with indirect electronic fuel injection, capable of producing between 460 and 485 kW (620–650 bhp) at the maximum allowed 7500rpm. Manufacturers are free to choose between using an engine based on one from their own line up or a generic engine provided by Supercars.[73] Both Ford and Holden use US-based racing engines with pushrod actuated valves and two valves per cylinder. Mercedes, Nissan, and Volvo used modified versions of their own engines, with hydraulic-lift valves and four valves per cylinder.[66][74] All engines are electronically limited to 7,500 rpm and have a compression ratio of 10:1.[75]

Power is transferred from the engine to the rear wheels through a six-speed sequential transaxle with an integrated spool differential.[8] The individual gear ratios and the final drive ratio are fixed with drop gears at the front of the transaxle allowing the teams to alter the overall transmission ratio for different circuits.[76] The cars use a triple plate clutch.[8] The cars run on E85 fuel with a fuel tank capacity of 112 litres.[8][77]

An electronic control unit (ECU), provided by MoTeC, is used to monitor and optimise various aspects of the engine's performance. Numerous sensors in the car collect information which is then transmitted to the team, allowing them to monitor things such as tyre wear and fuel consumption and find potential problems with the car. The ECU is also used by officials during the scrutineering process.[78]

Suspension

All cars are required to use a double wishbone setup for the front suspension and independent rear suspension. Both the front and rear suspension systems feature adjustable shock absorbers and an anti-roll bar which can be adjusted from the cockpit.[8]

Brakes

The cars use disc brakes supplied by AP Racing on the front and rear, with the master cylinders provided by AP Racing or former control brake supplier Alcon. The front discs have a diameter of 395 millimetres (15.6 in) and a six-piston caliper, while the rear discs are 355 millimetres (14.0 in) diameter and have a four-piston caliper.[8][79]

Wheels and tyres

The cars use 18 inches (460 mm) control wheels, produced by Rimstock and supplied by Racer Industries, and control tyres from Dunlop. The slick tyre is available in both hard and soft compounds, with teams required to use either or both compounds in each race, depending on the event. A grooved wet tyre is used in damp conditions.[8][80]

Cost

The New Generation V8 Supercar regulations were intended to reduce the cost of building a car (without engine) from around $450,000 to $250,000,[34][54] with the cost of an engine coming down from around $120,000 to $50,000.[81][82]

Unfortunately the regulations didn't reduce the costs of making a new Supercar with costs estimated to be around $600,000 for a new car.[83]

The costs of competing in the championship are considerably higher than the purchase price of a car. There is no budget cap, though caps have been proposed. One estimate puts the season cost for teams at "1.2 to 3 million (Australian) dollars per car" per season.[84]

Series structure

 
Jamie Whincup (second from left), the most successful driver in the category's history, celebrates winning the 2011 series.

Teams and drivers

In order to compete in the Supercars Championship, drivers are required to hold a CAMS National Circuit Competition Licence, or a licence of an equivalent or higher level.[85] Each car entered is required to have a Teams Racing Charter (TRC), formerly known as a Racing Entitlements Contract. A TRC is a contract between Supercars and a team which outlines the team's entitlements and obligations.[86] TRCs may be leased by their owners to another party for a maximum of two years, after which the owner must either use it themselves or sell it.[87] A racing number is tied to each TRC, with teams able to apply for a TRC number to be changed. The defending series champion is entitled to use the number 1, with the original TRC number of that car reserved and not able to be used by another team without the agreement of its owner.[88]

The TRCs were originally issued in 1999. Known as TEGA franchise agreements, they were divided into three categories – Level 1, Level 2 and Level 3. Twelve Level 1 franchises were issued to those teams that had competed in the series full-time since its inception in 1997:[89]

A thirteenth was later issued to Bob Forbes Racing.[90] A Level 1 franchise required a team to race at least one car at all events, and at various times allowed a team to enter up to four cars. Other teams received Level 2 and Level 3 franchises based on their level of participation.[89] The structure was changed a number of times before the present system of 28 RECs was arrived at in 2011. Supercars bought a number of RECs as they became available in order to achieve a long-held desire to reduce the field to 28 cars.[91]

At the end of 2013, Lucas Dumbrell Motorsport, Tony D'Alberto Racing and Triple F Racing each returned a REC to Supercars.[92] These were put up for sale in 2014, but no bids were received.[93] One was reclaimed by Lucas Dumbrell Motorsport in 2015 after a legal fight.[94] At the end of 2014, a further REC was returned by James Rosenberg Racing.[95] In April 2015, Supercars launched a tender for one REC for the 2016 season, with Triple Eight the successful bidder.[96]

Teams consist of one to four cars, with most one-car teams forming a technical alliance with a larger team.[97] Only the REC holders are allowed to compete at each event, although "wildcard" entries are accepted for the endurance races, with a maximum of six extra cars on top of the regular 28.[98] Both Supercars and Development Series teams have entered wildcard entries in previous years.[99][100] In 2014, the first wildcard entry for a sprint race was issued when Dick Johnson Racing entered a third car for Marcos Ambrose at the Sydney 500.[101]

Teams are required to employ a co-driver for each car during the three endurance races due to the increased race distance and the need for driver substitutions during the race.[102] Teams were able to pair their full-time drivers in one car until a rule change in 2010 that required each full-time driver to remain in his own car and be joined by a co-driver not competing full-time in the series.[103] The Drivers Championship title is awarded to the driver who accumulates the most points over the course of the season. If there is a points tie for the series win, the champion will be decided based on the number of races won by each driver (if there is still a tie, it is based on second-place finishes and so on). Teams also compete for the Teams Championship, with the champion team being decided in the same manner as the Drivers Championship. For Teams Championship points scoring purposes, teams with four cars are separated into a pair of two-car teams, while teams with three cars are split into a two-car team and a single-car team.[104] The Teams Championship dictates the pit lane order for the following season.

The defending driver has the right to carry the number 1 the following year. However, Shane van Gisbergen and Scott McLaughlin elected to retain their existing numbers in 2017, 2019, 2020 and 2022.[105][106]

Development series

A second-tier series, the Dunlop Super2 Series, is run as a support category to the main series at certain events.[6] Initially for privateers who did not have the funding of the professional teams in the late 1990s, the series now serves the dual purpose of developing young drivers before they compete in the main series and a means for main series teams to give their endurance co-drivers more racing experience prior to the endurance races. Teams in the Dunlop Super2 Series compete with cars previously used in the main series.

A third V8 Supercar-based series, the Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series, has been run since 2008 but has no involvement with the Supercars Championship or Dunlop Super2 Series, instead running on the programme of the Shannons Nationals Motor Racing Championships.[107] However, since 2016, several rounds have been run as support categories at Supercars events.

Race formats

In 2023, there are three racing formats, SuperSprint, two-race rounds and endurance.[108]

In previous years formats included SuperSprint events, International SuperSprint events, SuperStreet events and Enduro Cup events.[109]

Qualifying

In 2023, there are two qualifying formats, format 1 and format 2. In format 1, the grid position for a race is determine a single qualifying session with all drivers taking part. In format 2, qualifying is split up into 3 sessions. In Q1 the back five grid positions are filled by the five slowest cars with the remaining cars advancing to Q2. In Q2 the same process is repeated for the next 10 grid positions. In Q3 the top 10 grid positions are filled either using a normal qualifying session or by giving each driver one chance to set a lap time in a 'top-ten shoot-out'.[108]

Multiple races in the same location during a race weekend may or may not use different qualifying formats.

SuperSprint

 
The start of a race at Queensland Raceway in 2011.

In 2023, the SuperSprint format will be used for the Melbourne SuperSprint (previously known as the Melbourne 400), the Perth SuperSprint, the Tasmania SuperSprint, the Sydney SuperNight, the Darwin Triple Crown and The Bend SuperSprint.[110]

The format was previously used for the Phillip Island SuperSprint, Winton SuperSprint and the Ipswich SuperSprint.[111]

The SuperSprint format generally involves two races, each with separate qualifying sessions, on the Saturday and the Sunday. Some races use the same qualifying format for each race while other use format 1 and 2 on different days.[108]

In previous years The Phillip Island and Sydney Motorsport Park events feature a single one-hour practice session on Saturday, while all other SuperSprint events have two one-hour practice sessions on the Friday with a fifteen-minute practice session on Saturday. The Winton and Ipswich events feature an extra thirty-minute session on Friday for endurance co-drivers. The SuperSprint format features a fifteen-minute qualifying session held on Saturday to decide the grid for the race on the same day. A single twenty-minute session is held on Sunday morning to decide the grid for the Sunday race. The Darwin event also features a top ten shootout (a session where the fastest ten qualifiers complete one flying lap each to determine the top ten on the grid) following the Sunday qualifying session. A single 120 or 150 kilometres (75 or 93 mi) race is held on Saturday with a single 250 or 300 kilometres (160 or 190 mi) race held on Sunday.[111]

International SuperSprint

The International SuperSprint format was used at the Auckland SuperSprint.[111]

Three thirty-minute practice sessions are held on Friday, while Saturday and Sunday both consist of two ten-minute qualifying sessions which set the grid for the pair of 200 kilometres (120 mi) races held on each day.[111]

Two-race Weekends

The two-race round format, previously known as the SuperStreet format, covers those races not branded as a SuperSprint or an endurance race. In 2023 the format will be used in the Newcastle 500, the Townsville 400, the Gold Coast 500 and the Adelaide 500.[108] The format was previously used for the Melbourne 400.[111]

This format generally involves two races on the Saturday and Sunday of the race weekend, 200 or 250 km in length. Unlike the SuperSprint, refuelling is allowed.

In previous years, two forty-minute practice sessions took place on the Friday at each SuperStreet event, while a twenty-minute practice session is held on the Saturday at Adelaide. The Adelaide event features a twenty-minute qualifying session on Friday to determine the grid for the Saturday race, while the Townsville and Newcastle events have a single twenty-minute session on Saturday. All three events feature a twenty-minute session followed by a top ten shootout on Sunday. Both the Adelaide 500 and the Newcastle 500 feature a single 250 kilometres (160 mi) race on each of Saturday and Sunday, while the Townsville and Melbourne event features a 200 kilometres (120 mi) race on each of Saturday and Sunday.[111]

Endurance races

In 2023, there are two endurance races, the Bathurst 1000 and the Sandown 500.[108] In previous years, the Gold Coast race was run as an endurance race and the driver who won the most points over the three races was awarded the Enduro Cup.[112]

This format is a single endurance race over either 500 or 1000 km with refuelling allowed and multiple drivers required. The Bathurst race takes around six hours to complete with the Sandown race taking around half that.

In previous years, the Sandown 500 and the Gold Coast 600 both featured three thirty-minute practice sessions held on Friday, with Sandown having an extra session on Saturday. Practice for the Bathurst 1000 consists of six one-hour sessions held across Thursday, Friday and Saturday.[111] Qualifying for the Sandown 500 involves a twenty-minute session followed by a pair of 60 kilometres (37 mi) "qualifying races" held on Saturday.[113] The grid for the first race is based on the qualifying session; the grid for the second race is based on the results of the first. The results of the second race determine the grid for the main race on Sunday. Co-drivers must compete in the first of the qualifying races while the main driver must compete in the second.[114] The Bathurst 1000 features a single forty-minute qualifying session on Friday afternoon followed by a top ten shootout on Saturday. The Gold Coast 600 has two twenty-minute qualifying sessions, one each on Saturday and Sunday, with the Sunday session followed by a top ten shootout. The Sandown 500 and Bathurst 1000 both have a twenty-minute warm-up session on Sunday morning.[111]

The Sandown 500 and the Bathurst 1000 feature single races held on Sunday, at 500 kilometres (310 mi) and 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) in length respectively. The Gold Coast 600 consists of two 300 kilometres (190 mi) races with one held on Saturday and one on Sunday.[111]

Points system

Points are awarded as follows at all championship events. Various different points scales are applied to events having one, two, three or four races, ensuring that a driver will be awarded 300 points for winning all races at any event.[115] Points are awarded to all cars that have covered 75% of the race distance, provided they are running at the completion of the final lap and with a final lap time within 200% of the race winner's fastest lap. At the endurance events, both drivers earn the total points awarded to the finishing position of the car.[116]

Points Scale Position
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd 23rd 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th
Single-race 300 276 258 240 222 204 192 180 168 156 144 138 132 126 120 114 108 102 96 90 84 78 72 66 60 54 48 42 36 30
Two-race 150 138 129 120 111 102 96 90 84 78 72 69 66 63 60 57 54 51 48 45 42 39 36 33 30 27 24 21 18 15
Three-race 100 92 86 80 74 68 64 60 56 52 48 46 44 42 40 38 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10
Four-race 75 69 64 60 55 51 48 45 42 39 36 34 33 31 30 28 27 25 24 22 21 19 18 16 15 13 12 10 9 7

Notable events

 
Cars on track during the 2005 Bathurst 1000.
 
The field on lap one at the 2014 Sydney NRMA 500.

Bathurst 1000

The Bathurst 1000, also known as the "Great Race" and held in some form since 1960, is the most famous race on the Supercars calendar,[117] as well as the longest both in terms of race distance and race time. The race is run over 161 laps of the Mount Panorama Circuit, 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) in total, taking between six and seven hours to complete. The event has historically attracted crowds of nearly 200,000 people.[7] The Peter Brock Trophy, named after nine-time Bathurst 1000 winner Peter Brock, is awarded to the winners of the race. The trophy was introduced in 2006 following Brock's death in a crash at the Targa West rally one month prior to the race.[118]

Adelaide 500

The Adelaide 500, also known as the "Clipsal 500" and "Superloop 500" under former sponsorship names, is the premier car race in South Australia. It is the largest V8 Supercars race in the country by crowd numbers.[119] Beginning in 1999, the race is held in the eastern streets of the Adelaide CBD, on a reduced version of the Adelaide Street Circuit previously used by the Grand Prix. After being shut down in 2020 by former Liberal premier Steven Marshall over alleged "cost-blow outs" due to Coronavirus,[120] the race has been revived by the victory of SA Labor Leader Peter Malinauskas in the 2022 South Australian state election, and is set for a blockbuster return in early December 2022, with Supercars Australia committed to bringing it back "bigger then ever".[121] Held over four days, the event consists of two 250 kilometre races for the V8 Supercars, and additionary practise and qualifying races. The event has several categories of races throughout the four days, including Super2 Series, Formula 5000, SuperUtes Series, Touring Car Masters, Australian GT, and the Australian Carrera Cup as well as others. The race is accompanied by live music performances, of which the likes of Kiss, Keith Urban and Robbie Williams have previously performed, as well as food, activities, and an RAAF F/A 18A Hornet display each day in the skies above the city. The last champion of the Adelaide 500 was Scott Mclaughlin in 2020.[122]

Sandown 500

The Sandown 500 was first held as a six-hour race in 1964[123] and has been labelled as the traditional "Bathurst warm-up" race.[124] Like the Bathurst 1000, the Sandown 500 is run over 161 laps. Due to the shorter track length of Sandown Raceway, the race is only 500 kilometres (310 mi) and runs for between three and four hours. The Sandown 500 was not held for Supercars from 1999 to 2002 and from 2008 to 2011. During these years, the 500 kilometres (310 mi) endurance races took place at Queensland Raceway (1999–2002)[125] and the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit (2008–2011).[126]

Gold Coast 600

The Gold Coast 600 was introduced in 2009 after the American IndyCar Series elected not to return to the Surfers Paradise circuit that year. The A1 Grand Prix series was scheduled to fill the void left by IndyCar,[127] however the owners of the series went into liquidation in June 2009 and,[128] as a result, the A1 Grand Prix cars were withdrawn from the event.[129] In order to compensate for this, Supercars introduced a new four-race format, with two 150 kilometres (93 mi) races held on each day.[130] In 2010 the format changed to include two 300 kilometres (190 mi) races and it became a two-driver event. To restore the event's previous international flavour, each team was required to have at least one co-driver with an 'international reputation' (that is, they were recognised for exploits in motorsport outside of Australia).[131] In 2011 and 2012, all entries required an international co-driver. In 2013 the international co-driver rule was dropped, due to a number of incidents during the 2012 event and the formation of the Endurance Cup, but teams could still choose to employ an international driver for the endurance races.[112]

Newcastle 500

In 2004, Supercars introduced the name "Grand Finale"[132] for the final round of the season (having called it "The Main Event" in 2003 and the "V8 Ultimate" in 2001 and 2002).[133] The Grand Finale was held at Sandown Raceway in 2001 and 2002, Sydney Motorsport Park in 2003 and 2004, Phillip Island in 2005, 2006 and 2007 and Oran Park Raceway in 2008. The Grand Finale name was used until 2008 before the Sydney 500 became the final event of the series in 2009.[134] The Sydney 500 was held around the streets of Sydney Olympic Park. Its format was similar to the Adelaide 500, with a 250 kilometres (160 mi) race held on both Saturday and Sunday. Despite having a relatively simple layout, the circuit was one of the more challenging on the calendar – as evidenced in the 2010 Saturday race when, in wet conditions, the top three championship runners all slid into the wall at the same time – effectively handing the title to James Courtney.[135] The Sydney 500 was held for the final time in 2016.[136] The event at Sydney Olympic Park was replaced in 2017 with a new street race in Newcastle, 150 kilometres (93 mi) north of Sydney, which consists of the streets in the eastern suburbs of the city.[137]

Media coverage

 
Long-time series commentator Neil Crompton at the 2020 season launch.

Television

The series is currently broadcast on Fox Sports and the Seven Network.[138] Fox Sports shows all practice and qualifying sessions live along with the races. Seven shows only seven events live which are Adelaide, Melbourne, Townsville, Sandown, Bathurst, Gold Coast and Newcastle with the rest shown as a highlights package after the races have finished. The coverage is produced by Supercars Media, a specialist production company for Supercars Australia.[138] Supercars Media provides the commentary for each race, with former champion and Bathurst winner Mark Skaife as lead commentator, along with Neil Crompton as expert commentator. Both Fox Sports and Seven use their own commentary team for pre- and post-race coverage.[139] Supercars Media records the series in 1080i high-definition, with many cars carrying four or more onboard-cameras, though HD coverage is available only to subscribers of Foxtel HD.[140]

In 2020, Seven Network and Foxtel signed a five-year deal worth $200 million to televise the Repco Supercars Championship from 2021 to 2025. Seven Network will broadcast six rounds live and show highlights for other races it is not able to broadcast. Foxtel's deal remains the same, it will show all races live and ad free on Fox Sports.

The series had previously been broadcast on Seven Network, from 1963 to 1996 and from 2007 to 2014,[141] Network Ten and Fox Sports from 1997 to 2006 and from 2015 to 2020,[23] During the years of Network Ten and Fox Sports continued to broadcast the series once a year for the Melbourne 400 championship races, which are a support category at the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix, which was broadcast by Ten and Fox Sports. Previously when the Nine Network held the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix broadcast rights in Australia, they would broadcast the Supercars support races at the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix. All support category races were tied up with the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix broadcast rights as a package.

Ten's television series RPM, which has aired from 1997 to 2008, in 2011 and from 2015 onwards, has covered Supercars, alongside other motorsports. From 2007 to 2014, Seven broadcast a weekly 25-minute show titled V8Xtra on non-racing weekends. The dedicated Supercars program covered news and feature items relating to the series. Since 2015, Fox Sports has broadcast a similar show, Inside Supercars, a weekly one-hour long program featuring a panel led by Rust and Mark Skaife.[142] In the same year, Fox Sports also launched an observational show Supercars Life, featuring behind the scenes footage from race weekends and features on drivers' lives away from the track. In 2018, Inside Supercars was superseded by a new show on Fox Sports, Supercars Trackside. Instead of being filmed in a studio midweek, the show is filmed on the Thursday before and the Sunday after each race meeting at the circuit.[143]

The television broadcast of the Bathurst 1000 has won a Logie Award for the Most Outstanding Sports Coverage seven times, most recently for the 2017 Bathurst 1000.[144] Foxtel broadcast the 2018 Bathurst 1000 in 4K resolution, the first such broadcast in Australian sport.[145]

Current TV broadcasters

Supercars races are broadcast on the following channels:

Country TV network Free/pay Coverage Notes
Australia Seven Network Free Live/Delayed Seven events shown live with all others delayed.
Fox Sports Pay Live Includes live coverage of practice and qualifying sessions.
New Zealand Sky Sport Pay
Asia SPOTV Pay Live/Delayed Only races are shown.
beIN Sports Pay Live coverage started in August 2020 (only races are shown)
Caribbean ESPN Pay Live/Delayed
Catalonia Esport3 (TVC) Free Live/Delayed Live online (in English), Delayed on TV (in Catalan)
Germany Sport1+[146] Pay Live/Delayed Only races shown. Highlights also on Motorvision.TV.
Hungary Arena4 Pay Live/Delayed
India Sony ESPN Pay Live/Delayed
Ireland BT Sport Pay Live Only races shown.
United Kingdom
Latin America ESPN Pay Live/Delayed
Netherlands Ziggo Sport Pay Live/Delayed
Nordics Viasat Pay Live
United States Motortrend Pay Live
Worldwide outside Australia and New Zealand YouTube via SuperView Pay Live and on Demand Includes live coverage of practice, qualifying sessions, and supporting races.

Other media

The series has its own live streaming pay-per-view service, Superview. The service, which started in 2013, currently shows all races as well as qualifying sessions. The service is not available in New Zealand and Australia due to their current broadcasting rights with Sky Sport and Fox Sports.

The series has its own website, which contains information about the series, drivers, teams and events and news articles, and a radio show, V8 Insiders. News is also featured on motorsport websites such as Speedcafe, V8X Magazine and Touring Car Times. A media deal with News Corp Australia has been in place since 2009.

Video games

Supercars have made several licensed appearances in video games, including in Codemasters' V8 Supercars series in the 2000s and Turn 10 Studios' Forza series in the 2010s. From 2011 to 2014, an online championship, sanctioned by Supercars, was contested on iRacing.[147] In 2017, Supercars launched an eSports competition using Forza Motorsport 6 and Forza Motorsport 7, which expanded to six rounds in 2018.[148][149] The Supercars Eseries moved to the iRacing platform in 2019 with championship teams including Triple Eight Race Engineering and Walkinshaw Andretti United entering teams into the series alongside eSports teams.[150][151] An additional Eseries was held in mid 2020 with all championship drivers competing during the hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[152]

Records

Driver championships[153] Driver race wins[154][155] Driver race starts Team race wins Manufacturer race wins
Pos. Driver Titles Pos. Driver Wins Pos. Driver Starts Pos. Team Wins Pos. Manufacturer Wins
1   Jamie Whincup 7 1   Jamie Whincup 124 1   Craig Lowndes 675 1 Triple Eight Race Engineering 244 1 Holden 617
2   Ian Geoghegan 5 2   Craig Lowndes 110 2   Garth Tander 643 2 Walkinshaw Andretti United 188 2 Ford 416
  Dick Johnson 5 3   Mark Skaife 90 3   Mark Winterbottom 600 3 Dick Johnson Racing 147 3 Nissan 31
  Mark Skaife 5 4   Shane van Gisbergen 75 4   Russell Ingall 589 4 Tickford Racing 74 4 BMW 17
5   Bob Jane 4 5   Garth Tander 57 5   Rick Kelly 580 5 HSV Dealer Team 50 5 Chevrolet 15
  Allan Moffat 4 6   Scott McLaughlin 56 6   Jason Bright 578 6 Gibson Motorsport 47 6 Volvo 11
  Jim Richards 4 7   Peter Brock 48 7   Jamie Whincup 555 7 Holden Dealer Team/Advantage Racing 42 7 Mazda 8
8   Peter Brock 3 8   Glenn Seton 40 8   Todd Kelly 540 Glenn Seton Racing 42 8 Jaguar 4
  Craig Lowndes 3 9   Mark Winterbottom 38 9   James Courtney 533 9 Stone Brothers Racing 40 9 Porsche 2
  Scott McLaughlin 3 10   Allan Moffat 36 10   Will Davison 524 10 Allan Moffat Racing 33 Mercedes-Benz 2
  Shane van Gisbergen 3
  • Figures accurate as of 2 April 2023 (after Race 6 of the 2023 Supercars Championship).
  • Bold text indicates active full-time drivers, teams and manufacturers.
  • Italics indicates drivers who are still active, but not on a full-time basis.
  • The above records relate to the Australian Touring Car Championship (1960–1998), the Shell Championship Series (1999–2001), the V8 Supercar Championship Series (2002–2010), International V8 Supercars Championship (2011–2016) and the Supercars Championship (2016–present).

See also

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Works cited

  • Clarke, Andrew; Wensley, Scott (2007). V8 Supercars: The First Decade. Carnegie, Victoria: Publishing 101. ISBN 978-0-9803909-0-2.
  • Greenhalgh, 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.
  • . V8 Supercars. 23 February 2016. Archived from the original on 4 May 2016. Retrieved 2 February 2019.

External links

  Media related to V8 Supercar at Wikimedia Commons

  • Supercars Australia website

supercars, championship, touring, racing, category, australia, running, international, series, under, fédération, internationale, automobile, regulations, governing, sport, categorytouring, racingcountryaustralia, zealandinaugural, season1997drivers25teams11co. The Supercars Championship is a touring car racing category in Australia running as an International Series under Federation Internationale de l Automobile FIA regulations governing the sport Supercars ChampionshipCategoryTouring car racingCountryAustralia New ZealandInaugural season1997Drivers25Teams11ConstructorsFord ChevroletTyre suppliersDunlopDrivers championShane van GisbergenMakes championHoldenTeams championTriple Eight Race EngineeringOfficial websitewww supercars comCurrent seasonSupercars events take place in all Australian states and the Northern Territory 1 with the Australian Capital Territory formerly holding the Canberra 400 2 An international round is held in New Zealand while events have previously been held in China Bahrain 3 the United Arab Emirates and the United States 1 4 A Melbourne 400 championship event is also held in support of the Australian Grand Prix Race formats vary between each event with sprint races between 100 and 200 kilometres 62 and 124 mi in length street races between 125 and 250 kilometres 78 and 155 mi in length and two driver endurance races held at Sandown Bathurst and the Gold Coast 5 The series is broadcast in 137 countries 6 and has an average event attendance of over 100 000 with over 250 000 people attending major events such as the Adelaide 500 7 The vehicles used in the series are loosely based on road going cars Cars are custom made using a control chassis with only certain body panels being common between the road cars and race cars To ensure parity between each make of car many control components are used All cars currently use 5 0 litre naturally aspirated V8 engines but since 2017 have had the option of using four and six cylinder engines as well as turbochargers 8 Originally only for Ford Falcons and Holden Commodores the new generation V8 Supercar regulations introduced in 2013 opened up the series to more manufacturers 9 Nissan were the first new manufacturer to commit to the series with four Nissan Altima L33s 10 followed briefly by Erebus Motorsport with Mercedes Benz E63 AMGs 11 and Garry Rogers Motorsport with Volvo S60s 12 The series returned to a Ford and Holden duopoly in 2020 with the departure of Nissan while Ford replaced the Falcon with the Mustang in 2019 13 Holden announced its final year of competition in 2022 to be replaced by the Chevrolet Camaro for the 2023 season 14 15 Contents 1 History 1 1 Group 3A 1 2 V8 Supercars 1 2 1 Project Blueprint 1 2 2 New Generation V8 Supercar 1 3 Supercars Championship 1 3 1 Gen 2 Supercar 2 Supercar specifications 2 1 Bodyshell 2 2 Aerodynamics 2 3 Weight 2 4 Engine and drivetrain 2 5 Suspension 2 6 Brakes 2 7 Wheels and tyres 2 8 Cost 3 Series structure 3 1 Teams and drivers 3 2 Development series 4 Race formats 4 1 Qualifying 4 2 SuperSprint 4 2 1 International SuperSprint 4 3 Two race Weekends 4 4 Endurance races 4 5 Points system 5 Notable events 5 1 Bathurst 1000 5 2 Adelaide 500 5 3 Sandown 500 5 4 Gold Coast 600 5 5 Newcastle 500 6 Media coverage 6 1 Television 6 1 1 Current TV broadcasters 6 2 Other media 6 3 Video games 7 Records 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 External linksHistory EditGroup 3A Edit Mark Skaife s 1994 Holden VP Commodore Craig Lowndes 1996 Holden VR Commodore The concept of a formula centred around V8 engined Fords and Holdens for the Australian Touring Car Championship had been established as early as mid 1991 With the new regulations set to come into effect in 1993 Ford and Holden were both keen to know the details of the new formula by the end of 1991 putting pressure on the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport CAMS to provide clarity on the matter However CAMS was waiting to see what the FIA did with its proposed international formula for 2 5 and 2 0 litre touring cars 16 The new rules for the ATCC were announced in November 1991 and indicated that the V8 cars would be significantly faster than the smaller engined cars In 1992 CAMS looked at closing the performance gap between the classes only to have protests from Ford and Holden which did not want to see their cars beaten by the smaller cars In June 1992 the class structure was confirmed 17 Class A Australian produced 5 0 litre V8 engined Fords and Holdens Class B 2 0 litre cars complying with FIA Class II Touring Car regulations Class C normally aspirated two wheel drive cars complying with 1992 CAMS Group 3A Touring Car regulations This class would only be eligible in 1993 18 Both the Ford Falcon EB and Holden Commodore VP ran American based engines which were restricted to 7 500 rpm and a compression ratio of 10 1 The Holden teams had the option of using the Group A developed 5 0 litre Holden V8 engine although this was restricted to the second tier privateer teams from 1994 onwards forcing the major Holden runners to use the more expensive Chevrolet engine The V8s were first eligible to compete in the endurance races of 1992 The distinctive aerodynamics package consisting of large front and rear spoilers was designed partly with this in mind to give the new cars a better chance of beating the Nissan Skyline GT Rs in those races 17 The new rules meant that cars such as the turbocharged Nissan Skyline GT R and Ford Sierra RS500 Cosworth were not eligible to compete in 1993 while cars such as the BMW M3 were However the M3 received few of the liberal concessions given to the new V8s and also had an extra 100 kilograms 220 lb added to its minimum weight so 19 with the Class C cars eligible for 1993 only the German manufacturer s attention switched to the 2 0 litre class for 1994 Cars from all three classes would contest the 1993 Australian Touring Car Championship as well as non championship Australian touring car events such as the Bathurst 1000 However for the purposes of race classification and points allocation cars competed in two classes Over 2 000 cc Under 2 000 ccOriginally the 2 0 litre class cars competed in a separate race to the V8s This was changed for the second round of 1993 after only nine entrants were in the 2 0 litre class for the first round at Amaroo Park 19 With the new regulations intended to be a parity formula protests by the Holden teams indicated that the Fords had an aerodynamic advantage after they won the opening three rounds beating the Commodores comprehensively After round five at Winton Holden was granted a new front and rear wing package The BMWs were also allowed new splitters and full DTM specification rear wings 20 Disparity between the Fords and Holdens continued to be a talking point during the next few years with various concessions given to each manufacturer to try to equalise the two cars 21 From 1995 the 2 0 litre cars now contesting their own series as super touring cars became ineligible for the Australian Touring Car Championship They did not contest the endurance races at Sandown and Bathurst leaving these open solely to the 5 0 litre Ford and Holden models V8 Supercars Edit Glenn Seton s 1997 Ford Falcon EL pictured in 2011 The Australian Vee Eight Super Car Company AVESCO a joint venture between the Touring Car Entrants Group of Australia TEGA sports promoters IMG and the Australian Motor Sports Commission was formed in November 1996 to run the series This set the foundation for the large expansion of the series during the following years The category also adopted the name V8 Supercars at this time 22 though the cars themselves were much unchanged A new television deal with Network Ten and Fox Sports was organised although this had follow on effects for the Bathurst 1000 later in the year 23 In February Tony Cochrane and James Erskine left IMG Together with David Coe they formed Sports and Entertainment Limited SEL in April 1997 24 TEGA would have a 75 share in AVESCO with SEL owning the other 25 TEGA was responsible for the rules and technical management of the series and the supply of cars and drivers while SEL was responsible for capturing and maintaining broadcasting rights sponsorship licensing and sanction agreements 25 The expansion of the series began in 1998 with the first round to be held in the Northern Territory taking place at Hidden Valley Raceway In 1999 a new street race on a shortened version of the Adelaide Grand Prix Circuit became one of the first festival style events which would become common in later years Australia s capital city Canberra hosted its first event on the Canberra Street Circuit in 2000 In 2001 a championship round was held in New Zealand for the first time at Pukekohe Park Raceway 26 In 2002 the V8 Supercar support event at the Indy 300 on the Gold Coast became a championship round having been a non championship event since 1994 27 Major format changes were made for 1999 with the incorporation of the endurance races into the championship Control tyres were used for the first time with Bridgestone selected as the supplier The series was also renamed from the Australian Touring Car Championship to the Shell Championship Series by virtue of Shell s sponsorship of the category 28 Reverse grid races were introduced for multiple rounds in 2000 29 before being confined to just the Canberra round for 2001 Also in 2001 compulsory pit stops were introduced at certain rounds and the Top Ten Shootout was used at all rounds 30 The control tyre supplier changed from Bridgestone to Dunlop in 2002 and the series name was changed to the V8 Supercar Championship Series after Shell discontinued their sponsorship 31 Project Blueprint Edit Todd Kelly s 2003 Holden VY Commodore Discussions about parity had returned in 2000 with 100 millimetres 3 9 in trimmed from the front spoiler of the Commodore after Holden in particular the Holden Racing Team had dominated in 1998 and 1999 This was in response to the 300 millimetres 12 in removed from the Falcon in previous seasons and coincided with a 10 millimetres 0 39 in trim from the Falcon s rear spoiler The small reduction for the Holden teams was quickly addressed with both cars receiving the same front splitter shortly afterwards but the Falcon s rear wing remained trimmed Ford had threatened to withdraw from the series but nothing came of this 32 After Holden again dominated in 2001 and 2002 a new set of regulations dubbed Project Blueprint was introduced in 2003 to close the performance gap between the Commodore and the Falcon 33 thus creating closer fairer racing 34 Project Blueprint was developed by Paul Taylor and Wayne Cattach who spent two years designing a formula which would eliminate most of the differences between the Fords and Holdens 35 Project Blueprint had the chassis pick up points wheelbase track and driving position become common across both manufacturers The Holdens were now able and required to use double wishbone front suspension similar to that of the Falcon rather than the MacPherson struts used previously and a Watts link at the rear rather than a Panhard The aerodynamic packages were comprehensively tested and revised and differences in the porting of each of the manufacturers engines were also removed 33 36 The performance of the new Ford BA Falcon and Holden VY and VZ Commodores was fairly even for the next four years with Ford winning the championship in 2003 2004 and 2005 and Holden winning in 2006 37 Reverse grid races were used at certain events in 2006 before unpopularity with the drivers teams and fans saw them abolished halfway through the season 38 Mark Skaife five time series champion and leader of the new generation V8 Supercar project The Holden VE Commodore caused controversy when it was introduced in 2007 The production model was longer wider and taller than the rival Ford BF Falcon and outside of the limits set by Project Blueprint As a result the VE race car was granted custom bodywork namely shortened rear doors and a lowered roofline to meet the regulations 39 Despite this the VE was approved for use in the series along with the BF Falcon after several months of preseason testing 40 Sequential gearboxes were introduced in 2008 and became compulsory by the end of the year 41 In 2009 E85 a fuel consisting of 85 ethanol and 15 unleaded petrol was introduced in an effort to improve the environmental image of the sport Carbon dioxide emissions decreased by up to 50 but fuel consumption was increased by 30 to produce the same power as before 42 2009 also had the introduction of a soft compound tyre at certain events to try to improve the quality of the racing and create different strategies 43 44 In 2005 AVESCO changed its name to V8 Supercars Australia VESA 22 The series continued to expand during this time with races held outside of Australasia for the first time The series travelled to the Shanghai International Circuit in China in 2005 originally on a five year agreement 45 however the promoter of the race dropped their support and the series did not return thereafter 46 2006 saw the series travel to the Middle East with an event held at the Bahrain International Circuit in Bahrain 3 Multiple new street circuits appeared on the calendar in 2008 and 2009 with new events held in Hamilton in New Zealand 47 Townsville in North Queensland and at Sydney Olympic Park 48 The series Middle East expansion continued in 2010 with a second round held at the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi 4 In November 2010 the series was granted international status by the FIA for the 2011 season allowing the series to race at up to six international venues each year As a result the series name was changed to the International V8 Supercars Championship 49 2008 saw the separate boards of directors of VESA and TEGA merge into a single board that was solely responsible for the administration of the category The new board of directors was composed of four TEGA representatives two members from SEL and two independent directors 50 In 2011 TEGA and SEL entered a sale agreement with Australian Motor Racing Partners AMRP which had significant financial backing from Archer Capital This agreement saw SEL lose its 25 stake in V8 Supercars with Archer Capital taking up a 60 share and TEGA the other 40 A new board of directors was appointed with two TEGA representatives and two AMRP representatives 51 In 2011 Archer Capital purchased a 65 shareholding in the series with the teams owning the other 35 52 In December 2021 both Archer Capital and the teams sold their shareholdings to Race Australia Consolidated Enterprises 53 Through the new rules manufacturers such as Volvo were able to enter cars in the series New Generation V8 Supercar Edit See also 2013 International V8 Supercars Championship New Generation V8 Supercar In the middle of 2008 a project led by Mark Skaife was organised by V8 Supercars to investigate future directions for the sport The project had the primary objective of cutting costs to 250 000 per car through the use of control parts and to create a pathway for new manufacturers to enter the series provided that they have a four door saloon car in mass production The new formula called Car of the Future was scheduled to be introduced before or during the 2012 season The plan was publicly unveiled in March 2010 and was shown to incorporate several key changes to the internal workings of the car The chassis and the cooling fuel and electronics systems would all be changed to control parts with changes to the engine drivetrain rear suspension wheels and the control brake package The safety of the cars was also to be reviewed and improved 54 While the plans were well received by all of the teams Holden Motorsport boss Simon McNamara warned potential new manufacturers to stay out of the championship just hours after the plans were released claiming that they would gain nothing from entering the series 55 Major changes were revealed to include a switch from a live rear axle to independent rear suspension the use of a rear transaxle instead of a mid mounted gearbox the repositioning of the fuel tank to in front of the rear axle to improve safety replacing the windscreen with a polycarbonate unit and a switch from 17 inches 430 mm to 18 inches 460 mm wheels 54 In 2011 it was announced that the Car of the Future would not be introduced until 2013 56 In February 2012 Nissan confirmed that they would enter the series under Car of the Future regulations with Kelly Racing 10 Later in 2012 Australian GT Championship team Erebus Motorsport announced they would be running Mercedes Benz cars in the championship taking over Stone Brothers Racing 11 57 In June 2013 Volvo announced it would enter the series in 2014 in a collaboration with its motorsport arm Polestar Racing and Garry Rogers Motorsport 12 In November 2013 the Car of the Future moniker was dropped in favour of the name New Generation V8 Supercar 58 The series continued its international expansion in 2013 with the first event in North America held at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin Texas 59 In 2015 five drivers took part in a series of demonstration races at the Kuala Lumpur Street Circuit as part of the KL City Grand Prix This was intended to be a precursor to the series holding a championship event at the circuit in 2016 in a push from CEO James Warburton to build series exposure in Asia 60 The event was later cancelled due to legal issues affecting the circuit 61 Supercars Championship Edit In April 2016 the series reached an agreement with Virgin Australia to rename the series to the Virgin Australia Supercars Championship on 1 July 62 63 Gen 2 Supercar Edit In December 2014 Supercars released details concerning the future of the category New regulations dubbed Gen2 Supercar were introduced in 2017 to allow the use of two door coupe body styles and turbocharged four or six cylinder engines However no teams have elected to build cars to these alternate engine specifications as of 2020 Cars are still required to be based on front engined rear wheel drive four seater production cars that are sold in Australia The chassis and control components will be carried over from the New Generation V8 Supercar regulations while engine and aerodynamic parity will be reviewed 64 65 Supercar specifications EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2023 Teams race either the Ford Mustang GT top or the Chevrolet Camaro The interior of Jason Bright s 2011 Holden VE Commodore The driver s seat steering wheel gear shifter and parts of the roll cage can be seen Control wheels fitted with soft compound tyres The current New Generation V8 Supercar regulations are an evolution of the previous Project Blueprint regulations The regulations control many aspects of the car to ensure parity between the manufacturers allowing for minor differences in the engines and body shapes so that the cars bear some resemblance to their production counterparts The regulations were also designed to lower the costs of building and repairing a car 54 Bodyshell Edit The body of each car is based on its corresponding production car However due to the regulations governing the dimensions of the cars to ensure parity the race cars are lowered and shortened or lengthened to meet the regulations 66 As of 2020 only the Ford Mustang GT and Holden ZB Commodore are competing 67 To save costs the front guards passenger side front door rear doors and rear quarter panels are made from composite materials 68 The tail lamps are carried over from the road car while the windscreen is replaced by a polycarbonate unit 8 The 2023 Repco Supercars Championship will be the first under the new Gen3 ruleset From 2023 the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 will join the Ford Mustang GT on the grid The bodies are built around a control chassis featuring a full roll cage originally designed by PACE Innovations but which can be made or partially made by other accredited builders including certain race teams 8 Many safety features are utilised to protect the driver in the event of a crash The fuel tank is positioned in front of the rear axle to prevent it from being damaged or ruptured in a rear end impact The driver is seated towards the centre of the car and extra reinforcement is used on the roll cage on the driver s side to lessen the risk of injury in a side on collision The cars also feature a collapsible steering column and a fire extinguisher system 9 Aerodynamics Edit All cars have an aerodynamics package consisting of a front spoiler and splitter side skirts and a rear wing The aerodynamics package for each manufacturer is homologated after a series of tests which ensure that the different body styles produce near identical downforce and drag numbers 69 70 Weight Edit The minimum weight of each car is 1 395 kilograms 3 075 lb including the driver with a minimum load of 755 kg over the front axle The minimum weight for the driver is 100 kg and includes the driver dressed in a full racing suit the seat and seat mountings and any ballast needed to meet the minimum weight 71 Some other components also have a minimum weight such as the engine 200 kg and the front uprights 10 5 kg each 72 Engine and drivetrain Edit All cars must be front engined and rear wheel drive powered by an engine configuration be that 4 6 or 8 cylinders or other that do not exceed the Supercars accumulated engine power output and weighted average All cars currently use a 5 0 litre naturally aspirated V8 engine with indirect electronic fuel injection capable of producing between 460 and 485 kW 620 650 bhp at the maximum allowed 7500rpm Manufacturers are free to choose between using an engine based on one from their own line up or a generic engine provided by Supercars 73 Both Ford and Holden use US based racing engines with pushrod actuated valves and two valves per cylinder Mercedes Nissan and Volvo used modified versions of their own engines with hydraulic lift valves and four valves per cylinder 66 74 All engines are electronically limited to 7 500 rpm and have a compression ratio of 10 1 75 Power is transferred from the engine to the rear wheels through a six speed sequential transaxle with an integrated spool differential 8 The individual gear ratios and the final drive ratio are fixed with drop gears at the front of the transaxle allowing the teams to alter the overall transmission ratio for different circuits 76 The cars use a triple plate clutch 8 The cars run on E85 fuel with a fuel tank capacity of 112 litres 8 77 An electronic control unit ECU provided by MoTeC is used to monitor and optimise various aspects of the engine s performance Numerous sensors in the car collect information which is then transmitted to the team allowing them to monitor things such as tyre wear and fuel consumption and find potential problems with the car The ECU is also used by officials during the scrutineering process 78 Suspension Edit All cars are required to use a double wishbone setup for the front suspension and independent rear suspension Both the front and rear suspension systems feature adjustable shock absorbers and an anti roll bar which can be adjusted from the cockpit 8 Brakes Edit The cars use disc brakes supplied by AP Racing on the front and rear with the master cylinders provided by AP Racing or former control brake supplier Alcon The front discs have a diameter of 395 millimetres 15 6 in and a six piston caliper while the rear discs are 355 millimetres 14 0 in diameter and have a four piston caliper 8 79 Wheels and tyres Edit The cars use 18 inches 460 mm control wheels produced by Rimstock and supplied by Racer Industries and control tyres from Dunlop The slick tyre is available in both hard and soft compounds with teams required to use either or both compounds in each race depending on the event A grooved wet tyre is used in damp conditions 8 80 Cost Edit The New Generation V8 Supercar regulations were intended to reduce the cost of building a car without engine from around 450 000 to 250 000 34 54 with the cost of an engine coming down from around 120 000 to 50 000 81 82 Unfortunately the regulations didn t reduce the costs of making a new Supercar with costs estimated to be around 600 000 for a new car 83 The costs of competing in the championship are considerably higher than the purchase price of a car There is no budget cap though caps have been proposed One estimate puts the season cost for teams at 1 2 to 3 million Australian dollars per car per season 84 Series structure Edit Jamie Whincup second from left the most successful driver in the category s history celebrates winning the 2011 series Teams and drivers Edit In order to compete in the Supercars Championship drivers are required to hold a CAMS National Circuit Competition Licence or a licence of an equivalent or higher level 85 Each car entered is required to have a Teams Racing Charter TRC formerly known as a Racing Entitlements Contract A TRC is a contract between Supercars and a team which outlines the team s entitlements and obligations 86 TRCs may be leased by their owners to another party for a maximum of two years after which the owner must either use it themselves or sell it 87 A racing number is tied to each TRC with teams able to apply for a TRC number to be changed The defending series champion is entitled to use the number 1 with the original TRC number of that car reserved and not able to be used by another team without the agreement of its owner 88 The TRCs were originally issued in 1999 Known as TEGA franchise agreements they were divided into three categories Level 1 Level 2 and Level 3 Twelve Level 1 franchises were issued to those teams that had competed in the series full time since its inception in 1997 89 Dick Johnson Racing Garry Rogers Motorsport Gibson Motorsport Glenn Seton Racing John Faulkner Racing Holden Racing Team Lansvale Racing Team Larkham Motor Sport Longhurst Racing Perkins Engineering Romano Racing Stone Brothers Racing A thirteenth was later issued to Bob Forbes Racing 90 A Level 1 franchise required a team to race at least one car at all events and at various times allowed a team to enter up to four cars Other teams received Level 2 and Level 3 franchises based on their level of participation 89 The structure was changed a number of times before the present system of 28 RECs was arrived at in 2011 Supercars bought a number of RECs as they became available in order to achieve a long held desire to reduce the field to 28 cars 91 At the end of 2013 Lucas Dumbrell Motorsport Tony D Alberto Racing and Triple F Racing each returned a REC to Supercars 92 These were put up for sale in 2014 but no bids were received 93 One was reclaimed by Lucas Dumbrell Motorsport in 2015 after a legal fight 94 At the end of 2014 a further REC was returned by James Rosenberg Racing 95 In April 2015 Supercars launched a tender for one REC for the 2016 season with Triple Eight the successful bidder 96 Teams consist of one to four cars with most one car teams forming a technical alliance with a larger team 97 Only the REC holders are allowed to compete at each event although wildcard entries are accepted for the endurance races with a maximum of six extra cars on top of the regular 28 98 Both Supercars and Development Series teams have entered wildcard entries in previous years 99 100 In 2014 the first wildcard entry for a sprint race was issued when Dick Johnson Racing entered a third car for Marcos Ambrose at the Sydney 500 101 Teams are required to employ a co driver for each car during the three endurance races due to the increased race distance and the need for driver substitutions during the race 102 Teams were able to pair their full time drivers in one car until a rule change in 2010 that required each full time driver to remain in his own car and be joined by a co driver not competing full time in the series 103 The Drivers Championship title is awarded to the driver who accumulates the most points over the course of the season If there is a points tie for the series win the champion will be decided based on the number of races won by each driver if there is still a tie it is based on second place finishes and so on Teams also compete for the Teams Championship with the champion team being decided in the same manner as the Drivers Championship For Teams Championship points scoring purposes teams with four cars are separated into a pair of two car teams while teams with three cars are split into a two car team and a single car team 104 The Teams Championship dictates the pit lane order for the following season The defending driver has the right to carry the number 1 the following year However Shane van Gisbergen and Scott McLaughlin elected to retain their existing numbers in 2017 2019 2020 and 2022 105 106 Development series Edit Main article Dunlop Super2 Series A second tier series the Dunlop Super2 Series is run as a support category to the main series at certain events 6 Initially for privateers who did not have the funding of the professional teams in the late 1990s the series now serves the dual purpose of developing young drivers before they compete in the main series and a means for main series teams to give their endurance co drivers more racing experience prior to the endurance races Teams in the Dunlop Super2 Series compete with cars previously used in the main series A third V8 Supercar based series the Kumho Tyres V8 Touring Car Series has been run since 2008 but has no involvement with the Supercars Championship or Dunlop Super2 Series instead running on the programme of the Shannons Nationals Motor Racing Championships 107 However since 2016 several rounds have been run as support categories at Supercars events Race formats EditIn 2023 there are three racing formats SuperSprint two race rounds and endurance 108 In previous years formats included SuperSprint events International SuperSprint events SuperStreet events and Enduro Cup events 109 Qualifying Edit In 2023 there are two qualifying formats format 1 and format 2 In format 1 the grid position for a race is determine a single qualifying session with all drivers taking part In format 2 qualifying is split up into 3 sessions In Q1 the back five grid positions are filled by the five slowest cars with the remaining cars advancing to Q2 In Q2 the same process is repeated for the next 10 grid positions In Q3 the top 10 grid positions are filled either using a normal qualifying session or by giving each driver one chance to set a lap time in a top ten shoot out 108 Multiple races in the same location during a race weekend may or may not use different qualifying formats SuperSprint Edit The start of a race at Queensland Raceway in 2011 In 2023 the SuperSprint format will be used for the Melbourne SuperSprint previously known as the Melbourne 400 the Perth SuperSprint the Tasmania SuperSprint the Sydney SuperNight the Darwin Triple Crown and The Bend SuperSprint 110 The format was previously used for the Phillip Island SuperSprint Winton SuperSprint and the Ipswich SuperSprint 111 The SuperSprint format generally involves two races each with separate qualifying sessions on the Saturday and the Sunday Some races use the same qualifying format for each race while other use format 1 and 2 on different days 108 In previous years The Phillip Island and Sydney Motorsport Park events feature a single one hour practice session on Saturday while all other SuperSprint events have two one hour practice sessions on the Friday with a fifteen minute practice session on Saturday The Winton and Ipswich events feature an extra thirty minute session on Friday for endurance co drivers The SuperSprint format features a fifteen minute qualifying session held on Saturday to decide the grid for the race on the same day A single twenty minute session is held on Sunday morning to decide the grid for the Sunday race The Darwin event also features a top ten shootout a session where the fastest ten qualifiers complete one flying lap each to determine the top ten on the grid following the Sunday qualifying session A single 120 or 150 kilometres 75 or 93 mi race is held on Saturday with a single 250 or 300 kilometres 160 or 190 mi race held on Sunday 111 International SuperSprint Edit The International SuperSprint format was used at the Auckland SuperSprint 111 Three thirty minute practice sessions are held on Friday while Saturday and Sunday both consist of two ten minute qualifying sessions which set the grid for the pair of 200 kilometres 120 mi races held on each day 111 Two race Weekends Edit The two race round format previously known as the SuperStreet format covers those races not branded as a SuperSprint or an endurance race In 2023 the format will be used in the Newcastle 500 the Townsville 400 the Gold Coast 500 and the Adelaide 500 108 The format was previously used for the Melbourne 400 111 This format generally involves two races on the Saturday and Sunday of the race weekend 200 or 250 km in length Unlike the SuperSprint refuelling is allowed In previous years two forty minute practice sessions took place on the Friday at each SuperStreet event while a twenty minute practice session is held on the Saturday at Adelaide The Adelaide event features a twenty minute qualifying session on Friday to determine the grid for the Saturday race while the Townsville and Newcastle events have a single twenty minute session on Saturday All three events feature a twenty minute session followed by a top ten shootout on Sunday Both the Adelaide 500 and the Newcastle 500 feature a single 250 kilometres 160 mi race on each of Saturday and Sunday while the Townsville and Melbourne event features a 200 kilometres 120 mi race on each of Saturday and Sunday 111 Endurance races Edit Main article Enduro Cup In 2023 there are two endurance races the Bathurst 1000 and the Sandown 500 108 In previous years the Gold Coast race was run as an endurance race and the driver who won the most points over the three races was awarded the Enduro Cup 112 This format is a single endurance race over either 500 or 1000 km with refuelling allowed and multiple drivers required The Bathurst race takes around six hours to complete with the Sandown race taking around half that In previous years the Sandown 500 and the Gold Coast 600 both featured three thirty minute practice sessions held on Friday with Sandown having an extra session on Saturday Practice for the Bathurst 1000 consists of six one hour sessions held across Thursday Friday and Saturday 111 Qualifying for the Sandown 500 involves a twenty minute session followed by a pair of 60 kilometres 37 mi qualifying races held on Saturday 113 The grid for the first race is based on the qualifying session the grid for the second race is based on the results of the first The results of the second race determine the grid for the main race on Sunday Co drivers must compete in the first of the qualifying races while the main driver must compete in the second 114 The Bathurst 1000 features a single forty minute qualifying session on Friday afternoon followed by a top ten shootout on Saturday The Gold Coast 600 has two twenty minute qualifying sessions one each on Saturday and Sunday with the Sunday session followed by a top ten shootout The Sandown 500 and Bathurst 1000 both have a twenty minute warm up session on Sunday morning 111 The Sandown 500 and the Bathurst 1000 feature single races held on Sunday at 500 kilometres 310 mi and 1 000 kilometres 620 mi in length respectively The Gold Coast 600 consists of two 300 kilometres 190 mi races with one held on Saturday and one on Sunday 111 Points system Edit Points are awarded as follows at all championship events Various different points scales are applied to events having one two three or four races ensuring that a driver will be awarded 300 points for winning all races at any event 115 Points are awarded to all cars that have covered 75 of the race distance provided they are running at the completion of the final lap and with a final lap time within 200 of the race winner s fastest lap At the endurance events both drivers earn the total points awarded to the finishing position of the car 116 Points Scale Position1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd 23rd 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30thSingle race 300 276 258 240 222 204 192 180 168 156 144 138 132 126 120 114 108 102 96 90 84 78 72 66 60 54 48 42 36 30Two race 150 138 129 120 111 102 96 90 84 78 72 69 66 63 60 57 54 51 48 45 42 39 36 33 30 27 24 21 18 15Three race 100 92 86 80 74 68 64 60 56 52 48 46 44 42 40 38 36 34 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10Four race 75 69 64 60 55 51 48 45 42 39 36 34 33 31 30 28 27 25 24 22 21 19 18 16 15 13 12 10 9 7Notable events Edit Cars on track during the 2005 Bathurst 1000 The field on lap one at the 2014 Sydney NRMA 500 Bathurst 1000 Edit Main article Bathurst 1000 The Bathurst 1000 also known as the Great Race and held in some form since 1960 is the most famous race on the Supercars calendar 117 as well as the longest both in terms of race distance and race time The race is run over 161 laps of the Mount Panorama Circuit 1 000 kilometres 620 mi in total taking between six and seven hours to complete The event has historically attracted crowds of nearly 200 000 people 7 The Peter Brock Trophy named after nine time Bathurst 1000 winner Peter Brock is awarded to the winners of the race The trophy was introduced in 2006 following Brock s death in a crash at the Targa West rally one month prior to the race 118 Adelaide 500 Edit Main article Adelaide 500 The Adelaide 500 also known as the Clipsal 500 and Superloop 500 under former sponsorship names is the premier car race in South Australia It is the largest V8 Supercars race in the country by crowd numbers 119 Beginning in 1999 the race is held in the eastern streets of the Adelaide CBD on a reduced version of the Adelaide Street Circuit previously used by the Grand Prix After being shut down in 2020 by former Liberal premier Steven Marshall over alleged cost blow outs due to Coronavirus 120 the race has been revived by the victory of SA Labor Leader Peter Malinauskas in the 2022 South Australian state election and is set for a blockbuster return in early December 2022 with Supercars Australia committed to bringing it back bigger then ever 121 Held over four days the event consists of two 250 kilometre races for the V8 Supercars and additionary practise and qualifying races The event has several categories of races throughout the four days including Super2 Series Formula 5000 SuperUtes Series Touring Car Masters Australian GT and the Australian Carrera Cup as well as others The race is accompanied by live music performances of which the likes of Kiss Keith Urban and Robbie Williams have previously performed as well as food activities and an RAAF F A 18A Hornet display each day in the skies above the city The last champion of the Adelaide 500 was Scott Mclaughlin in 2020 122 Sandown 500 Edit Main article Sandown 500 The Sandown 500 was first held as a six hour race in 1964 123 and has been labelled as the traditional Bathurst warm up race 124 Like the Bathurst 1000 the Sandown 500 is run over 161 laps Due to the shorter track length of Sandown Raceway the race is only 500 kilometres 310 mi and runs for between three and four hours The Sandown 500 was not held for Supercars from 1999 to 2002 and from 2008 to 2011 During these years the 500 kilometres 310 mi endurance races took place at Queensland Raceway 1999 2002 125 and the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit 2008 2011 126 Gold Coast 600 Edit Main article Gold Coast 600 The Gold Coast 600 was introduced in 2009 after the American IndyCar Series elected not to return to the Surfers Paradise circuit that year The A1 Grand Prix series was scheduled to fill the void left by IndyCar 127 however the owners of the series went into liquidation in June 2009 and 128 as a result the A1 Grand Prix cars were withdrawn from the event 129 In order to compensate for this Supercars introduced a new four race format with two 150 kilometres 93 mi races held on each day 130 In 2010 the format changed to include two 300 kilometres 190 mi races and it became a two driver event To restore the event s previous international flavour each team was required to have at least one co driver with an international reputation that is they were recognised for exploits in motorsport outside of Australia 131 In 2011 and 2012 all entries required an international co driver In 2013 the international co driver rule was dropped due to a number of incidents during the 2012 event and the formation of the Endurance Cup but teams could still choose to employ an international driver for the endurance races 112 Newcastle 500 Edit Main article Newcastle 500 In 2004 Supercars introduced the name Grand Finale 132 for the final round of the season having called it The Main Event in 2003 and the V8 Ultimate in 2001 and 2002 133 The Grand Finale was held at Sandown Raceway in 2001 and 2002 Sydney Motorsport Park in 2003 and 2004 Phillip Island in 2005 2006 and 2007 and Oran Park Raceway in 2008 The Grand Finale name was used until 2008 before the Sydney 500 became the final event of the series in 2009 134 The Sydney 500 was held around the streets of Sydney Olympic Park Its format was similar to the Adelaide 500 with a 250 kilometres 160 mi race held on both Saturday and Sunday Despite having a relatively simple layout the circuit was one of the more challenging on the calendar as evidenced in the 2010 Saturday race when in wet conditions the top three championship runners all slid into the wall at the same time effectively handing the title to James Courtney 135 The Sydney 500 was held for the final time in 2016 136 The event at Sydney Olympic Park was replaced in 2017 with a new street race in Newcastle 150 kilometres 93 mi north of Sydney which consists of the streets in the eastern suburbs of the city 137 Media coverage Edit Long time series commentator Neil Crompton at the 2020 season launch Television Edit The series is currently broadcast on Fox Sports and the Seven Network 138 Fox Sports shows all practice and qualifying sessions live along with the races Seven shows only seven events live which are Adelaide Melbourne Townsville Sandown Bathurst Gold Coast and Newcastle with the rest shown as a highlights package after the races have finished The coverage is produced by Supercars Media a specialist production company for Supercars Australia 138 Supercars Media provides the commentary for each race with former champion and Bathurst winner Mark Skaife as lead commentator along with Neil Crompton as expert commentator Both Fox Sports and Seven use their own commentary team for pre and post race coverage 139 Supercars Media records the series in 1080i high definition with many cars carrying four or more onboard cameras though HD coverage is available only to subscribers of Foxtel HD 140 In 2020 Seven Network and Foxtel signed a five year deal worth 200 million to televise the Repco Supercars Championship from 2021 to 2025 Seven Network will broadcast six rounds live and show highlights for other races it is not able to broadcast Foxtel s deal remains the same it will show all races live and ad free on Fox Sports The series had previously been broadcast on Seven Network from 1963 to 1996 and from 2007 to 2014 141 Network Ten and Fox Sports from 1997 to 2006 and from 2015 to 2020 23 During the years of Network Ten and Fox Sports continued to broadcast the series once a year for the Melbourne 400 championship races which are a support category at the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix which was broadcast by Ten and Fox Sports Previously when the Nine Network held the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix broadcast rights in Australia they would broadcast the Supercars support races at the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix All support category races were tied up with the Formula One Rolex Australian Grand Prix broadcast rights as a package Ten s television series RPM which has aired from 1997 to 2008 in 2011 and from 2015 onwards has covered Supercars alongside other motorsports From 2007 to 2014 Seven broadcast a weekly 25 minute show titled V8Xtra on non racing weekends The dedicated Supercars program covered news and feature items relating to the series Since 2015 Fox Sports has broadcast a similar show Inside Supercars a weekly one hour long program featuring a panel led by Rust and Mark Skaife 142 In the same year Fox Sports also launched an observational show Supercars Life featuring behind the scenes footage from race weekends and features on drivers lives away from the track In 2018 Inside Supercars was superseded by a new show on Fox Sports Supercars Trackside Instead of being filmed in a studio midweek the show is filmed on the Thursday before and the Sunday after each race meeting at the circuit 143 The television broadcast of the Bathurst 1000 has won a Logie Award for the Most Outstanding Sports Coverage seven times most recently for the 2017 Bathurst 1000 144 Foxtel broadcast the 2018 Bathurst 1000 in 4K resolution the first such broadcast in Australian sport 145 Current TV broadcasters Edit Supercars races are broadcast on the following channels Country TV network Free pay Coverage NotesAustralia Seven Network Free Live Delayed Seven events shown live with all others delayed Fox Sports Pay Live Includes live coverage of practice and qualifying sessions New Zealand Sky Sport PayAsia SPOTV Pay Live Delayed Only races are shown beIN Sports Pay Live coverage started in August 2020 only races are shown Caribbean ESPN Pay Live DelayedCatalonia Esport3 TVC Free Live Delayed Live online in English Delayed on TV in Catalan Germany Sport1 146 Pay Live Delayed Only races shown Highlights also on Motorvision TV Hungary Arena4 Pay Live DelayedIndia Sony ESPN Pay Live DelayedIreland BT Sport Pay Live Only races shown United KingdomLatin America ESPN Pay Live DelayedNetherlands Ziggo Sport Pay Live DelayedNordics Viasat Pay LiveUnited States Motortrend Pay LiveWorldwide outside Australia and New Zealand YouTube via SuperView Pay Live and on Demand Includes live coverage of practice qualifying sessions and supporting races Other media Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The series has its own live streaming pay per view service Superview The service which started in 2013 currently shows all races as well as qualifying sessions The service is not available in New Zealand and Australia due to their current broadcasting rights with Sky Sport and Fox Sports The series has its own website which contains information about the series drivers teams and events and news articles and a radio show V8 Insiders News is also featured on motorsport websites such as Speedcafe V8X Magazine and Touring Car Times A media deal with News Corp Australia has been in place since 2009 Video games Edit Main article Supercars Championship in video games Supercars have made several licensed appearances in video games including in Codemasters V8 Supercars series in the 2000s and Turn 10 Studios Forza series in the 2010s From 2011 to 2014 an online championship sanctioned by Supercars was contested on iRacing 147 In 2017 Supercars launched an eSports competition using Forza Motorsport 6 and Forza Motorsport 7 which expanded to six rounds in 2018 148 149 The Supercars Eseries moved to the iRacing platform in 2019 with championship teams including Triple Eight Race Engineering and Walkinshaw Andretti United entering teams into the series alongside eSports teams 150 151 An additional Eseries was held in mid 2020 with all championship drivers competing during the hiatus caused by the COVID 19 pandemic 152 Records EditDriver championships 153 Driver race wins 154 155 Driver race starts Team race wins Manufacturer race winsPos Driver Titles Pos Driver Wins Pos Driver Starts Pos Team Wins Pos Manufacturer Wins1 Jamie Whincup 7 1 Jamie Whincup 124 1 Craig Lowndes 675 1 Triple Eight Race Engineering 244 1 Holden 6172 Ian Geoghegan 5 2 Craig Lowndes 110 2 Garth Tander 643 2 Walkinshaw Andretti United 188 2 Ford 416 Dick Johnson 5 3 Mark Skaife 90 3 Mark Winterbottom 600 3 Dick Johnson Racing 147 3 Nissan 31 Mark Skaife 5 4 Shane van Gisbergen 75 4 Russell Ingall 589 4 Tickford Racing 74 4 BMW 175 Bob Jane 4 5 Garth Tander 57 5 Rick Kelly 580 5 HSV Dealer Team 50 5 Chevrolet 15 Allan Moffat 4 6 Scott McLaughlin 56 6 Jason Bright 578 6 Gibson Motorsport 47 6 Volvo 11 Jim Richards 4 7 Peter Brock 48 7 Jamie Whincup 555 7 Holden Dealer Team Advantage Racing 42 7 Mazda 88 Peter Brock 3 8 Glenn Seton 40 8 Todd Kelly 540 Glenn Seton Racing 42 8 Jaguar 4 Craig Lowndes 3 9 Mark Winterbottom 38 9 James Courtney 533 9 Stone Brothers Racing 40 9 Porsche 2 Scott McLaughlin 3 10 Allan Moffat 36 10 Will Davison 524 10 Allan Moffat Racing 33 Mercedes Benz 2 Shane van Gisbergen 3Figures accurate as of 2 April 2023 after Race 6 of the 2023 Supercars Championship Bold text indicates active full time drivers teams and manufacturers Italics indicates drivers who are still active but not on a full time basis The above records relate to the Australian Touring Car Championship 1960 1998 the Shell Championship Series 1999 2001 the V8 Supercar Championship Series 2002 2010 International V8 Supercars Championship 2011 2016 and the Supercars Championship 2016 present See also Edit Sports portalAustralian Touring Car Championship List of Australian Touring Car and V8 Supercar champions List of Australian Touring Car Championship races List of Australian Touring Car and V8 Supercar driver records Supercars Hall of FameReferences Edit a 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Wensley 2007 p 15 Timeline The Growth of V8 Supercars Speedcafe 17 May 2011 Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Clarke Wensley 2007 p 15 16 Clarke Wensley 2007 p 110 Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 388 389 Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 401 Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 411 Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 421 Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 404 a b Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 431 a b Lampton Christopher How the V8 Supercars Championship Series Works The Making of a V8 Supercar HowStuffWorks com Retrieved 22 March 2013 Paul Taylor Speedcafe 16 December 2011 Retrieved 22 March 2013 Clarke Wensley 2007 p 128 Clarke Wensley 2007 p 211 Clarke Wensley 2007 p 182 Grennhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 473 VE and BF ready to duke it out The Border Mail Fairfax Media 25 January 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Innes Stuart 16 February 2008 Supercars changing with times Fox Sports News Retrieved 27 March 2013 V8 Supercars to switch to ethanol The Sydney Morning Herald 10 October 2008 Archived from the original on 5 September 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2013 Dunlop to introduce its new V8 Sport Maxx Sprint tyre at Winton Jax Quickfit Tyres April 2009 Archived from the original on 27 April 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2013 Greenhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 492 China to host V8 Supercar championship ABC News 20 July 2004 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Grennhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 453 Grennhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 484 Grennhalgh Howard Wilson 2011 p 495 499 Jackson Ed 9 November 2010 V8 Supercars granted international series status The Courier Mail Retrieved 27 March 2013 V8 Supercars board streamlined Touring Car Times 28 March 2008 Retrieved 23 March 2013 V8 Supercars confirm new ownership structure Speedcafe 17 May 2011 Archived from the original on 25 June 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Supercars buy out plans revealed Auto Action 1 July 2021 https mumbrella com au race acquires supercars 715404 RACE acquired Supercars Mumbrella 29 November 2021 a b c d V8 s Car 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Retrieved 20 August 2017 Works cited Edit Clarke Andrew Wensley Scott 2007 V8 Supercars The First Decade Carnegie Victoria Publishing 101 ISBN 978 0 9803909 0 2 Greenhalgh 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 2016 V8 Supercar Operations Manual V8 Supercars 23 February 2016 Archived from the original on 4 May 2016 Retrieved 2 February 2019 External links Edit Media related to V8 Supercar at Wikimedia Commons Supercars Australia website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Supercars Championship amp oldid 1152396546, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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