Melbourne SuperSprint

Last updated

Flag of Victoria (Australia).svg Melbourne SuperSprint
Albert Park Circuit 2021.svg
Race Information
Venue Albert Park Circuit
Number of times held6
First held2018
Race Format
Race 1
Laps19
Distance100 km
Race 2
Laps19
Distance100 km
Race 3
Laps14
Distance70 km
Race 4
Laps14
Distance70 km
Last Event (2024)
Overall Winner
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Will Brown Triple Eight Race Engineering
Race Winners
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Broc Feeney Triple Eight Race Engineering
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Will Brown Triple Eight Race Engineering
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Broc Feeney Triple Eight Race Engineering
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Nick Percat Matt Stone Racing

The Melbourne SuperSprint (known for sponsorship reasons as the MSS Security Melbourne SuperSprint) is an annual motor racing event for Supercars, held at the Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne, Victoria since 2018. The 2018 edition was the first time that a championship round was contested at the circuit, after several years of supporting the Australian Grand Prix as a non-championship event. [1] [2] The event was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [3]

Contents

Format

The event is staged over a four-day weekend, from Thursday to Sunday, as a support category in the lead-up to the Australian Grand Prix. Two thirty-minute practice sessions, two fifteen-minute qualifying sessions to determine the starting grid for the first and second races, and the first 100 kilometre race are held on Thursday; the second 80 km race is held on Friday; two further fifteen-minute qualifying sessions to determine the starting grid for the third and fourth races, with the 70 km race three are held on Saturday; the 70 km race four is held on Sunday. [4]

Larry Perkins Trophy

The driver who accumulates the most points across the four races receives the "Larry Perkins Trophy", named in honour of the Supercars Hall of Fame inductee who also started eleven Formula One Grands Prix. [5] The perpetual trophy was designed in collaboration between a student and senior lecturer at RMIT University and was partly created using 3D printing. [6]

History

Supercars Championship have held non-championship events at the Australian Grand Prix dating back to its first appearance on the Formula One calendar in 1985. The support event, most recently known as the Supercars Challenge, was held in every year from 1985 to 2017 except 2007. After the demise of the event, the series finally attained championship status for the 2018 season. [1]

The inaugural event saw four different winners across the four races, including Scott Pye's first championship race win in a dramatic third race of the weekend. Pye had taken the lead early in the race, and was among the drivers to remain on slick tyres during a late-race shower. Despite a brief off-track moment in the changing conditions, Pye held on for a narrow victory, the first for Walkinshaw Andretti United since the foreign investment in the team. [7] One victory and three further podiums across the weekend saw Jamie Whincup take the overall event victory and the first Larry Perkins Trophy. [8]

In the event's second year, Scott McLaughlin failed to win the event despite winning three of the four races across the weekend, including the 1,000th Australian Touring Car Championship race. In the other race, McLaughlin and Cameron Waters, who were first and second on the grid, clashed on the way to the grid, leaving both drivers out of the race. The race was won by Chaz Mostert, who also went on to win the round and the trophy. [9]

The 2020 event, along with the 2020 Australian Grand Prix, was cancelled on the Friday morning of the event due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Two qualifying sessions had already been held the previous day. [10] The event was included in the 2021 calendar, however was cancelled along with the Formula One round. [11] The Grand Prix returned in 2022 to record crowds in Melbourne. The four races were shared equally between Mostert and Shane van Gisbergen, with the latter winning the trophy despite finishing the final race in 20th position due to a tyre failure. [12]

Winners

The original circuit layout used prior to 2022. Albert Lake Park Street Circuit in Melbourne, Australia.svg
The original circuit layout used prior to 2022.
YearDriverTeamCarReport
2018 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Jamie Whincup Triple Eight Race Engineering Holden ZB Commodore Report
2019 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Chaz Mostert Tickford Racing Ford Mustang GT Report
2020 cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic Report
2021not held due to COVID-19 pandemic Report
2022 Flag of New Zealand.svg Shane van Gisbergen Triple Eight Race Engineering Holden ZB Commodore Report
2023 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Brodie Kostecki Erebus Motorsport Chevrolet Camaro ZL1-1LE
2024 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Will Brown Triple Eight Race Engineering Chevrolet Camaro ZL1-1LE

Multiple winners

By team

WinsTeam
3 Triple Eight Race Engineering

By manufacturer

WinsManufacturer
2 Holden
2 Chevrolet

Event names and sponsors

See also

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References

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