As we approach the endurance season, let’s take a look back at the key decade-on anniversaries from the long-distance races over the years.
V8 engines ruled the single-race Australian Touring Car Championship, with the Ford Mustang the car to beat in the hands of Ian Geoghegan. But smaller capacity cars such as the Morris Coopers had previously dominated at Mount Panorama.
Australian-built V8 muscle cars arrived that year in the shape of the Ford XR Falcon GT with the backing of Ford Australia and a strong driver line-up that included team boss Harry Firth and co-driver Fred Gibson in one car and Ian Geoghegan and brother Leo in another.
The Falcons qualified first and second, with Ian Geoghegan taking pole. In the race positions were reversed and Firth and Gibson claimed the win, albeit following conjecture over whether a lap-count error meant it was the Geoghegans who should have been declared the winners, a debate that raged on for decades.
The V8 had arrived at Mount Panorama, though the Alfa Romeo 1600 GTV showed there was still some fight from smaller cars by finishing third and fourth, on the same lap as the Falcons.
EVENT WINNERS
BATHURST 500: Harry Firth/Fred Gibson (Ford XR Falcon GT)
1977
The 1977 Australian Touring Car Championship included endurance races at Sandown and Phillip Island but, curiously, not the Bathurst 1000 – not that Allan Moffat needed the points from Bathurst for what was a dominant championship win.
Moffat had to settle for third at Sandown, two laps adrift of winner Peter Brock, driving for Bill Patterson Racing, and behind Allan Grice, who completed a one-two for the Holden LX Torana SS A9X.
This story is from the August - September 2017 edition of V8X Supercar Magazine.
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This story is from the August - September 2017 edition of V8X Supercar Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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