Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia

Clipsal 500 V8s: Courtney holds off Whincup in Race 2

James Courtney held off Jamie Whincup to win what was a thrilling second race at the Clipsal 500.

James Courtney, Holden Racing Team

Photo by: Dirk Klynsmith

Jamie Whincup, Triple Eight Race Engineering Holden
Craig Lowndes, Triple Eight Race Engineering Holden
Rick Kelly, Nissan Motorsports
Cameron Waters, Prodrive Racing Australia Ford
Fabian Coulthard, Team Penske Ford
James Moffat, Garry Rogers Motorsport Volvo
Mark Winterbottom, Prodrive Racing Australia Ford
James Courtney, Holden Racing Team
Jason Bright, Brad Jones Racing Holden
Craig Lowndes, Triple Eight Race Engineering Holden

Pole-sitter Chaz Mostert controlled the early running of the race, leading right up until after the round of compulsory stops.

But on Lap 21 Courtney turned the race on its head. The Holden Racing Team driver barged his way past Mostert at Turn 9 to take the lead, with Race 1 winner Whincup following the red Commodore through into second place.

What followed was a thrilling battle for the lead, Whincup looking faster in the closing stages, but Courtney executing flawless car positioning to keep the #88 behind.

The battle went down to the wire, Courtney just holding on to take an impressive win.

“That was an amazing battle,” said Courtney.

“It shows why Jamie is such a champion. It’s an awesome feeling; we’ve been in a huge hole, and to have a couple of good strong qualifying [sessions], good strong races, I can’t thank everyone enough.”

“JC deserved that,” added Whincup. “I made him work for that. That was madness, that was good quality motorsport.”

Mostert finished third, after holding off a charge from Scott McLaughlin late in the race, while Shane van Gisbergen worked hard to bag fifth.

The Kiwi had been running with the front group in the first stint, before a long stop dropped towards the back of the Top 10. But he made good ground in the second stint, charging his way past Craig Lowndes and Michael Caruso on his way to a Top 5.

Caruso capped off a decent day for Nissan with sixth, ahead of Scott Pye, Jason Bright, Will Davison, and Lowndes, who all staged a decent battle for the back end of the Top 10 in the closing laps.

Hits and Misses

Chris Pither became the first of the main series drivers to be bitten by the notorious Turn 8 this weekend, the Kiwi hitting the wall hard on just the second lap of the race. It started with a scrape on the outside of the corner, before the Super Black Falcon lurched into the wall on the other side.

Either emerged unhurt, but his race was done on the spot.

Nick Percat, meanwhile, didn’t even make the start of the race. The LD Motorsport driver had barely left pit-lane for the formation lap when the bonnet on his Commodore flew open. Several metres later, the car shut down. As a result, Percat didn’t even make the grid.

“The bonnet was a minor part of the issue,” he said. “I got to Turn 3 and it all went quiet. I looked down and the dash had gone out, everything had gone out. I tried to restart, I tried to power cycle, but I think the battery has just gone flat.”

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Clipsal 500 V8s: Whincup cruises to Race 1 win
Next article Courtney: I wouldn’t have stayed in front last year

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia