The New Zealand Herald

Supercars’ super downer

Teams lack motivation at F1 meeting which doesn’t offer points — just chance to test tyres

- Dale Budge

Supercars teams and drivers will turn up to the Australian Grand Prix meeting this weekend with little motivation to put it all on the line when they have nothing to gain.

The weekend serves as essentiall­y a test run with championsh­ip points not on offer and only a short race scheduled across the three-day event.

A frustrated James Courtney echoed the thoughts of the field as Supercars continues to lobby for bigger slice of the action on Formula One’s opening race of the season.

“You can’t really get anything out of it,” said the Walkinshaw Racing driver. “As for championsh­ip points and all that sort of stuff it is a waste of time for us.

“Not a lot really comes out of this weekend. It is a bit disappoint­ing that the races aren’t a bit longer and we can’t get more out of it.”

The only thing that really appeals to teams is the chance to collate some data about the super soft tyre being used at the Albert Park track. Teams will use the super soft in competitio­n for the first time at the next round of the championsh­ip at Symmons Plains in Tasmania.

“It is going to be the first time that we get a longer run — although it is only about 12 laps — on super soft tyres,” Courtney explained.

“We get to do a bit of running on the new tyre and get a better understand­ing. We didn’t really run the super soft tyre at the test day so we’ll be working to get a better understand­ing of that so when we get to Tasmania we can hit the ground running.

“Every team — not just us — will have a plan on how to understand that new tyre a bit more. Every team will use it as a bit of a test and hopefully we come out of it a bit wiser.”

Supercars would like to make the round part of their championsh­ip but are not allocated enough track time to hold proper full-length races. There have been further calls this week to try to cut a deal for 2018 and beyond but Courtney isn’t optimistic.

“I can’t see it happening. It would be awesome if we could have it as a championsh­ip round but the trouble with making it a championsh­ip round would be getting the time we need to have proper-length races.

“Here [at Albert Park in Melbourne] we are only doing 12-lap races — we are only just warming up after 12 laps.

“Until we can get a decent run at the track and decent length races we can’t have it as a championsh­ip round.”

Courtney, who claimed a third and a fourth place finish at the seasonopen­ing Clipsal 500 on the streets of Adelaide, is hopeful that with the offseason structural moves at Formula One maybe there could be some change on the horizon.

“I know the guys are meeting this weekend. With the change of ownership in Formula One maybe that will open up some doors,” Courtney said.

“It is frustratin­g for all the teams that it isn’t a championsh­ip round,” he added.

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