Editor's Note: We asked Gerald McDornan, Assistant Editor of Australia's
Motorsport News, to give us a bit of background on the recent problems
with drag racing in that country. We've kept the Aussie spelling. For
reference, the Australian dollar currently is worth about $1.66 in U.S.
money.
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA -- Hailed by the
NHRA's Carl Olson as the greatest example of the sport of drag racing
outside the United States, Australian drag racing was thrown into turmoil
on December 20, when down-under promoter Bob Jane cancelled the remainder
of the season at his tracks.
The
tyre-retailing magnate (left), said to be Goodyear's biggest customer
in the world, owns both Calder Park Raceway in Melbourne and Adelaide
International Raceway in Adelaide.
His decision - which cancelled two events at each track while also
leaving any future seasons in doubt - effectively means that three of
Australia's five biggest cities are now without championship drag racing.
Australia's largest city, Sydney, has been without professional level
racing since late 1997.
In addition to that, it also means that top level drag racing is now
split between Perth's new AUS$18.5 million Kwinana Beach Motorplex (which
opened just last month) and Brisbane's impressive $12 million Willowbank
Raceway, with some 2,000 miles separating the two!
Ironically, Jane's decision came just a week after Kwinana Beach opened
and a week prior to Willowbank's Castrol Summer Championships round
of the $1.5 million Australian Drag Racing Series, an event which Jim
Read broke the 300mph barrier for the first time.
The sport is now a long way from where it was hailed, just five years
ago, in Australia's biggest daily newspaper as the country's biggest
motorsport, with in-excess of one million people annually attending
a drag racing event. Jane, 72, cited falling crowd numbers, higher costs,
prize money pay-outs and insurance problems as the reasons behind his
seemingly inexplicable decision.
"There are three or four major factors that are affecting my mind on
promoting drag racing," Jane said in a prepared statement. "One is the
continued drop in paying crowds, the second, increasing costs generally,
the third, the level of prize money paid and, finally, the cost of public
risk insurance and the increasing chances of being sued."
But many disappointed racers and industry insiders rejected Jane's
claims, saying the majority of the problems lay with Jane's organisation.
The finger for falling crowds has been pointed directly back at Jane's
alleged poor marketing of events and advertising cutbacks, along with
major increases in entrance fees and on-site catering - entry for a
Saturday night 'show' now costing $38, while a can of Coke and hotdog
would set a race fan back $8.
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