Australian Muscle Car

Australia’s mightiest race meeting

It wasn’t just the finest race meeting ever held at Oran Park, according to Racing Car News: it was ‘Australia’s mightiest race meeting ever’. Half a century on it’s a day that’s still talked about. It might even today still be our ‘mightiest race meeting’.

As the final round title decider, it culminated in a straight fight between two of our all-time touring car greats, Bob Jane and Allan Moffat. But there was more to it than simply two great drivers competing for a title. The rivalry that had developed between these two fiercely competitive men was personal and it was bitter. Any time in the early ‘70s when Moffat faced off against Jane was one not to be missed; there was always the feeling when those two met on track, that anything might happen. And when the was a championship at stake…

They were matched like a pair of heavyweight prize fighters; the brooding intensity of Moffat versus the extroverted aggression of Jane. Fittingly the machines they took to the fight were themselves heavyweight contenders: two of the all-time greatest Australian touring cars in Moffat’s Trans Am Boss Mustang 302 and Jane’s 7.0-litre Chev Camaro ZL1.

At the time, the Oran Park circuit wasn’t yet 10 years old. It was still in the transition phase from club circuit to a proper national-level venue. It had already hosted a round of the Gold Star, but proper national championship motor racing in Sydney was something that generally took place elsewhere – namely at Warwick Farm. The 3.6km Warwick Farm’s covered grandstands, superb facilities and central metropolitan Sydney location were in stark contrast with the rather less lavish amenities on offer 20km out of town at the 1.9km Oran Park. Where ‘The Farm’ was resplendent with beautifully manicured lawns, Oran Park was surrounded by cow paddocks and actual farms. Only a few years earlier they were still using an old double-decker bus as the control tower.

But big plans were afoot. Excavations had already been completed to build a drag strip complex adjacent to the main straight. When Oran Park finally closed 38 years later the drag strip still hadn’t been built, but in early 1971 those earthworks showed the level of ambition the circuit’s custodians had for the place – just three years later they would complete the 2.6km ‘grand prix’ track extension, with its trademark Bridgestone Bridge ‘flyover’.

One thing they did get done in time for the ’71 ATCC round was the circuit’s first grandstand, situated on the main straight just out of BP Bend. As it happened, they’d be needing every inch of it at the ATCC round…

The crowd

Oran Park’s management, the self-styled ‘Action Circuit of the Seventies’ urged punters not to miss ‘motor racing’s biggest ever carnival!’ It was billed (significantly, perhaps) as the only chance to see the ATCC in NSW, after the cancellation of the planned Warwick Farm round. The advert also pointed out the additional ‘great entertainment features’ on offer at the meeting, which included drag racing demos (presumably to promote the planned drag strip), sky divers, marching girls, bands, Dulux Rally race events and Miss Hot Pants 1971…

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Muscle Car

Australian Muscle Car3 min read
Steve Normoyle
If you’re a motorsport fan, you’ll always remember the first time you saw racing live, at the track. The first actual car racing I ever saw was at the Sydney Showground Speedway in 1970. It was a very exciting night for an eight-year-old obsessed wit
Australian Muscle Car3 min read
Muscle Stuff
The ESR-450 Engine Stand from Hare & Forbes Machinery House is an easy to use rotary design offering many approach angles to make your engine building more accessible . The new geared manual crank handle feature mounted at the rear of the stand uses
Australian Muscle Car11 min read
Aussie Legend
Over the years, much has been written about the ‘Bill Bourke Special’, the gold-flecked, black 428 V8-powered Falcon XW GT that had been specially built for Ford Australia’s Managing Director at the time, American Bill Bourke. The story has been well

Related Books & Audiobooks