Wednesday 23 April 2014
V8 history in the making at Pukekohe
Jason Bargwanna is out to make history when the New Zealand V8 Touring Car Championship concludes at Pukekohe’s ITM 500
meeting this weekend.
He leads the series by 69 points and if he clinches his second straight title it will be the first time that Toyota – or
indeed any manufacturer apart from Ford and Holden – has won an official V8 touring car championship in New Zealand or
Australia.
The experienced Aussie, who won the 2013 championship in a Holden Commodore, now races a Toyota Camry for Paeroa-based
Richards Team Motorsport.
In spite of his good points lead over Cambridge driver Nick Ross, Bargwanna plans to go all-out at Pukekohe, where the
Kiwi V8s support the V8 Supercars.
“What tends to happen in my experience is that when you start driving conservatively you start making mistakes that you
wouldn’t normally make,” he said. “If we go there to win the races, and win the round, we’ll wrap up the championship as
well.”
The Camry works well at Pukekohe, a track that Bargwanna loves.
“The car’s got a very good high-speed balance, it’s very strong under braking and its power-down is good,” he said.
“They’re all things you need for success at Pukekohe.
“I love circuits with a bit of character and it’s one of the old-school style of circuits. It’s very demanding, it’s got
the hard braking, the high speed basically from the hairpin right down through turn one.
“It’s very exciting, it’s a driver’s track. It separates the men from the boys. I’ve always had good success there so
I’m confident we can go there and have a positive weekend.”
His teenage team-mate, AJ Lauder from Turua in the Coromandel, returns to the fray now his car has been fixed after its
big crash at Manfeild in February.
“If AJ can get up there and take some points off Nick that’d make it even better for us but at the same time AJ could
take points away from me -- there’s no team orders,” Bargwanna said.
Meanwhile Ross has challenged Bargwanna all season and has certainly not given up hope of winning his first
championship. The meeting will probably be the last time he races his Holden, as he has a brand-new Nissan Altima being
built for the next season and he plans to display this car at Pukekohe.
“Working with the team on putting this car together and while at the same time concentrating on winning a championship
has been hard work but it should all be worthwhile in the end -- especially if I can put that number one on the new
car!” Ross said.
These two compete in the TLX class for the new-generation, faster cars. In the TL class for the original NZV8 cars the
attraction of racing at the big meeting has drawn extra entries, with a total of 14.
The TL class is very close, with Lower Hutt driver James McLaughlin just 11 points ahead of Hamilton’s Ian Booth, both
driving Holdens.
McLaughlin and his team of supporters have done a wonderful job this season to enjoy such success while operating with
virtually no sponsorship – at times he has had to use old tyres because there was no budget for new ones. Now he has
gained sponsorship for the final round, and extra power as well thanks to a tune-up.
“I would say that the whole field will be very fast and all on pace at this track, everyone has done some testing so
there will be no walk in the park that's for sure,” McLaughlin said. “I think it's going to come down to who has the
least amount of damages over the weekend.”
AJ Lauder’s younger brother Brad had been challenging for the title in his Ford Falcon but after a non-finish in one
race at the previous round he stands 71 points behind the leader, with a maximum of 300 points available over the four
races.
But he can still be expected to be going for race wins, as can several other drivers including Aucklander Kevin Williams
and Timaru’s John Hepburn, both in Fords.
The New Zealand V8 Touring Cars have qualifying on Friday, two races on Saturday and another two on Sunday.
Attached photo shows Jason Bargwanna just ahead of Nick Ross at Timaru earlier this season. It is free to use for
editorial purposes.
Ends