2000 Australian Super Touring Championship
The 2000 Australian Super Touring Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing competition open to Super Touring Cars. It was the eighth running of an Australian series for Super Touring Cars and the sixth to be contested under the Australian Super Touring Championship name. The series, which was promoted as the '2000 BOC Gases Australian Super Touring Championship',[1] began on 28 May 2000 at Oran Park Raceway and ended on 11 February 2001 at Oran Park Raceway after eight rounds.
Future Touring Cars
[edit]With Super Touring competitor numbers dropping after the withdrawal of the factory supported Audi and Volvo teams, the grids for the 2000 championship were bolstered with cars from the Future Touring Car category. This category, which catered for V8 powered cars that had competed previously in AUSCAR racing, made its debut in a support event to the 1999 Bathurst 500. While the Future Touring Cars and the Super Touring Cars raced together in the same events, drivers competed for two separate titles with separate points scoring for each category.
Teams and drivers
[edit]The following teams and drivers competed in the 2000 Australian Super Touring Championship.
Race Calendar
[edit]The 2000/2001 Australian Super Touring Championship was contested over an eight-round series. Three races were held at the first round and two races were held at all subsequent rounds. The Future Touring cars competed at seven of the eight rounds, with no entries being received for Round 2 at Lakeside International Raceway.
Points system
[edit]Points were awarded on a 15-12-10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis for the top ten race positions in each race.[2] A bonus point was allocated for the fastest lap time set in each qualifying session, with the first three rounds including a separate qualifying session for each race and the remaining rounds each featuring only a single qualifying session.
Results
[edit]Drivers Championship
[edit]
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Note: Alan Gurr retained third place in Race 1 of the final round despite losing his championship points as a consequence of his involvement in an on-track incident with Jamie Miller's Toyota.[5]
Independents Cup
[edit]A separate award was reserved for Super Touring drivers who were classified as "Independents".
Position | Driver | Points[3][4] |
1 | David Auger | 218 |
2 | Luke Searle | 135 |
3 | Jamie Miller | 111 |
4 | Allan Letcher | 66 |
5 | Jim Cornish | 49 |
6 | Michael Downard | 33 |
7 | Matthew Fox | 32 |
8 | Sam Dale | 30 |
9 | Paul Leabeater | 24 |
10 | John Saunders | 22 |
11 | Anthony Robson | 20 |
12 | Brad Stratton | 8 |
13 | Carlos Rolfo | 6 |
= | Mike Fitzgerald | 6 |
Teams Championship
[edit]Multi-car Super Touring teams also competed for a Teams Championship.
Position | Team | Points[3][4] |
1 | Knight Racing | 312 |
2 | Paul Morris Motorsport | 144 |
3 | Hi-Tech Motorsport | 131 |
4 | McGill Motorsport | 112 |
5 | Motorsport Developments | 12 |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Loaded Guns, 2000 BOC Gases Australian Super Touring Championship, Official Program, Round 5, Mallala, 11–12 November 2000, pages 6- 8
- ^ How Points Are Scored, Official Program, Round 5, Mallala, 11–12 November 2000, page 8
- ^ a b c TOCA Points Archive Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 28 July 2001 – Site no longer active
- ^ a b c 2000 Australian Super Touring Archived 29 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 17 December 2010
- ^ Garry O'Brien, Morris makes half tonne, Auto Action, 16–22 February 2001, pages 24-25