Whincup’s dream start left in ruins after penalty
REIGNING V8 champion Jamie Whincup raises eyebrows and nine drivers fail to finish a dramatic Adelaide race.
EVEN at a track where it pays to expect the unexpected, nothing it seems could prepare the V8 Supercars faithful for the spectacular opening round finale in Adelaide yesterday.
In his first round back from a broken leg Holden’s James Courtney seemed so surprised to have emerged triumphant in 250km race-three street fight he crowd-surfed in scenes reminiscent of his 2010 V8 championship win.
Reigning V8 champion Jamie Whincup also raised eyebrows when he surrendered his lead with 25 laps left in the 76-lap finale thanks to a pitlane infringement penalty then speared off the road after contact with Michael Caruso while trying to make up lost time.
Whincup finished 15th overall.
And all drivers seemed to be scratching their heads over the new race restart rules introduced this season, blaming it for Holden veteran Jason Bright’s spectacular crash on the 14th lap.
Courtney showed the HRT beast had stirred by cutting a swath through the street carnage to claim his first Adelaide win from 15th on the grid. He held out Whincup’s Red Bull teammate Craig Lowndes with pole sitter and fellow Holden driver Shane van Gisbergen third.
Only 10 cars in the 25-strong field finished on the lead lap. Nine drivers failed to finish.
Lowndes made the podium in all three of the opening weekend’s races and leads the championship on 282 points ahead of Fabian Coulthard (230), van Gisbergen (221) and Whincup (199).
“I may have got carried away but they don’t come along too often,” Courtney said of his elaborate winning celebrations. “But we know they (Red Bull Racing) are still the class of the field at the moment. We just managed to get on top of them today.”
Whincup relinquished the lead when slapped with a drive through penalty for a pitlane infringement.
He later suffered steering damage when he made contact with Caruso as he tried to muscle his way back through the field.
“I owe a big apology to Michael. I came in out of control,” Whincup said.
Another talking point was Bright’s horrific crash. Somehow the Holden veteran walked away after he spectacularly corkscrewed into the fence.
Drivers blamed the rules for the crash, saying the field became congested under regulations which force the race leader post-safety car to stay under 60km/h before hitting top speed in an allocated “acceleration zone”.