Sandown SuperSprint explained

The Sandown SuperSprint was a Supercars motor racing event held at Sandown Raceway in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The event was a semi-regular part of the Supercars Championship—and its previous incarnations, the Australian Touring Car Championship, Shell Championship Series and V8 Supercars Championship between 1965 and 2011, and returned to the championship in 2021.[1]

Format

The event was staged over a three-day weekend, from Friday to Sunday. Three thirty-minute practice sessions were held, two on Friday, one of them was a co-driver session, and one on Saturday. Saturday featured a three-part qualifying session which decides the grid positions for the following 110 kilometre race. Two separated ten-minute qualifying sessions were held on Sunday, which decided the grid for the following 110 km races.[2]

History

Opened in 1962, Sandown Raceway has traditionally been known as the host of endurance races, the first of which was held in 1964, an event which later evolved into the Sandown 500 event. As well as this, Sandown has a long history of hosting sprint rounds of the championship with the circuit hosting the most rounds in championship history.[3] Sandown held its first championship sprint round in 1965, as the only event of the 1965 Australian Touring Car Championship. The race was won by Norm Beechey, who won by over a lap despite starting from towards the back of the grid after mechanical problems in qualifying.[4] Sandown would not hold another championship event until 1970, when the series had expanded to seven rounds.[3]

Since then, in various forms and with the exception of 1975, 1990 and 1993, Sandown has been included in every running of the Australian Touring Car Championship, which later became known as V8 Supercars. From 1972 to 1974, Allan Moffat won three consecutive event wins at the circuit, while in 1976 and 1977 Sandown hosted both a sprint round and the Sandown 500 as part of each championship. In 1978, five-time champion Ian Geoghegan won his last championship round in a Bob Jane Racing entry. Throughout the 1980s, Dick Johnson tied Moffat as the most successful driver at the event with four wins. Dick Johnson's eponymous team won three further events in 1992, 2000 and 2010. In 2000, Steven Ellery won his only career race at the event.[5] The 2001 and 2002 events were the final events of each championship, however in both years the championship had already been decided by the time of the Sandown round. In 2001, Todd Kelly scored his first championship round win. In 2002, Marcos Ambrose gave the Ford AU Falcon a round win in the last event of its largely unsuccessful era as the pre-eminent Ford model.

Meanwhile, in 1999 the annual 500 kilometre endurance race left Sandown and moved to Queensland Raceway, with the endurance events also joining the championship calendar for the first time since 1977. With the 500 kilometre endurance race and the Bathurst 1000 now regular fixtures of the championship, when the Sandown 500 returned to the calendar from 2003 to 2007, the sprint round became obsolete. The sprint round then returned from 2008 to 2011 in the period in which the Phillip Island 500 replaced Sandown's endurance race. In the final sprint round to date in 2011, Will Davison won the round despite only finishing fourth and third in a rain-affected weekend.[6]

In 2020, the 500 was again scheduled to be moved, this time to The Bend Motorsport Park, which itself was not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Because of this, Sandown was initially scheduled to host its first sprint event since 2011, but the event was also later cancelled altogether due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[7] Sandown was initially given reserve status on the 2021 calendar, and was then scheduled to replace the Melbourne 400 after the postponement of the 2021 Australian Grand Prix.[8] Shane van Gisbergen won all three races, including the first from 17th on the grid, only two weeks after breaking his collarbone in a mountain biking accident.[9]

Winners

YearDriverTeamCarReport
Norm BeecheyNeptune Racing TeamFord Mustang
1966

1969
not held
1970 Norm BeecheyBeechey Shell Racing TeamHolden Monaro HT GTS350
Bob JaneBob Jane RacingChevrolet Camaro ZL-1
Allan MoffatAllan Moffat RacingFord Boss 302 Mustang
Allan MoffatFord Works TeamFord XY Falcon GTHO Phase III
Allan MoffatAllan Moffat RacingFord XA Falcon GT Hardtop
1975event cancelled
1976 Colin BondHolden Dealer TeamHolden LH Torana SL/R 5000 L34
1977 Allan MoffatAllan Moffat RacingFord XB Falcon GT
1978 Ian GeogheganBob Jane RacingHolden LX Torana A9X
1979 Bob MorrisRon Hodgson MotorsHolden LX Torana SS 5000 A9X
Kevin BartlettNine Network Racing TeamChevrolet Camaro Z28
Dick JohnsonDick Johnson RacingFord XD Falcon
Dick JohnsonDick Johnson RacingFord XD Falcon
Allan GriceRoadways RacingHolden VH Commodore SS
1984 Peter BrockHolden Dealer TeamHolden VH Commodore SS
Peter BrockHolden Dealer TeamHolden VK Commodore
George FuryGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline DR30 RS
1987 Glenn SetonGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline DR30 RS
1988 Dick JohnsonDick Johnson RacingFord Sierra RS500
1989 Dick JohnsonDick Johnson RacingFord Sierra RS500
1990not held
1991 Jim RichardsGibson MotorsportNissan Skyline BNR32 GT-R
1992 John BoweDick Johnson RacingFord Sierra RS500
1993not held
1994 Mark SkaifeGibson MotorsportHolden VP CommodoreReport
1995 Larry PerkinsPerkins EngineeringHolden VR CommodoreReport
1996 Craig LowndesHolden Racing TeamHolden VR Commodore
1997 Glenn SetonGlenn Seton RacingFord EL Falcon
1998 Craig LowndesHolden Racing TeamHolden VS Commodore
1999 Mark SkaifeHolden Racing TeamHolden VT CommodoreReport
2000 Paul RadisichDick Johnson RacingFord AU Falcon
2001 Todd KellyKmart Racing TeamHolden VX CommodoreReport
2002 Marcos AmbroseStone Brothers RacingFord AU Falcon
2003

2007
not held
2008 Jamie WhincupTriple Eight Race EngineeringFord BF FalconReport
2009 Will DavisonHolden Racing TeamHolden VE CommodoreReport
2010 James CourtneyDick Johnson RacingFord FG Falcon
2011 Will DavisonFord Performance RacingFord FG Falcon
2012

2019
not held
2020not held due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 Shane van GisbergenTriple Eight Race EngineeringHolden ZB Commodore
2022 Shane van GisbergenTriple Eight Race EngineeringHolden ZB Commodore
Notes:

Multiple winners

By driver

WinsDriverYears
4 Allan Moffat1972, 1973, 1974, 1977
Dick Johnson1981, 1982, 1988, 1989
2 Norm Beechey1965, 1970
Peter Brock1984, 1985
Glenn Seton1987, 1997
Craig Lowndes1996, 1998
Mark Skaife1994, 1999
Will Davison2009, 2011
Shane van Gisbergen2021, 2022

By team

WinsTeam
7Dick Johnson Racing
4Gibson Motorsport
Holden Racing Team
3Allan Moffat Racing
Holden Dealer Team
Triple Eight Race Engineering
2Bob Jane Racing

By manufacturer

WinsManufacturer
16Ford
Holden
3Nissan
2Chevrolet

Event names and sponsors

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Coch . Mat . Supercars confirms Grand Prix alternative . 12 January 2021 . . 12 January 2021.
  2. https://www.supercars.com/news/championship/penrite-oil-sandown-supersprint-schedule-set/ Penrite Oil Sandown SuperSprint schedule set
  3. Book: The official history: Australian Touring Car Championship - 50 Years . Greenhalgh . David . Howard . Graham . Wilson . Stewart . Chevron Publishing Group . 2011 . 978-0-9805912-2-4 . St Leonards, New South Wales.
  4. News: Fogarty . Mark . The best of the V8 Supercars 500 . 9 March 2019 . The Sydney Morning Herald . 15 April 2016 . en.
  5. News: Noonan . Aaron . Saturday Sleuthing: Steve Ellery . 25 March 2019 . Supercars . 17 March 2018 . en.
  6. News: Jack Daniel’s Racing happy with Sandown first race - Supercars News . 25 March 2019 . . 19 November 2011 . en.
  7. News: van Leeuwen . Andrew . Official: 2020 Supercars season will end at Bathurst . 3 December 2020 . . 30 August 2020 . en.
  8. News: Chapman . Simon . Supercars puts Sandown on standby . 3 December 2020 . . 2 December 2020.
  9. News: Pavey . James . Van Gisbergen beats Kostecki to seal Sandown sweep . 22 March 2021 . Supercars . 21 March 2021 . en.