Darwin Triple Crown

{{Short description|Supercars Championship event held in Darwin, Australia}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}

{{EngvarB|date=July 2019}}

{{V8 supercar race

|flag = Northern Territory

|title = Darwin Triple Crown

|logo =

|circuit = Hidden Valley Raceway

|track_map = Hidden Valley Raceway (Australia) track map.svg

|times_held = 28

|first_held = 1998

|last_held =

|race1_laps = 42

|race1_distance = 120

|race2_laps = 42

|race2_distance = 120

|race3_laps = 70

|race3_distance = 200

|last_year = 2024

|last_event_link = 2024 Darwin Triple Crown

|overall_winner = {{flagicon|AUS}} Broc Feeney

|overall_team = Triple Eight Race Engineering

|race1_winner = {{flagicon|AUS}} Broc Feeney

|race1_team = Triple Eight Race Engineering

|race2_winner = {{flagicon|AUS}} Broc Feeney

|race2_team = Triple Eight Race Engineering

|race3_winner =

|race3_team =

}}

The Darwin Triple Crown (formally known as the Betr Darwin Triple Crown) is an annual motor racing event for Supercars, held at Hidden Valley Raceway in Darwin, Northern Territory. The event has been a regular part of the Supercars Championship—and its previous incarnations, the Australian Touring Car Championship, Shell Championship Series and V8 Supercars Championship—since 1998.

Format

The event is held over three days, from Friday to Sunday. On Friday, two thirty-minute practice sessions are held. On Saturday, a three-part knock-out qualifying session is then held, determining the grid for the 100 kilometre race to follow. Sunday features two fifteen-minute qualifying sessions that set the grid for each of the day's two 100 km races.[https://www.supercars.com/news/championship/2023-darwin-supercars-track-schedule-entertainment-confirmed/ Darwin track schedule, entertainment confirmed] Supercars 23 May 2023

The event has been known as the Triple Crown since 2006, which originally referred to the three races in the weekend format of the time. Currently, the title refers to the two races during the event and the first qualifying session.{{cite news | url=http://www.supercars.com/news/championship/fast-facts-hidden-valley/ | title=Fast Facts: Hidden Valley | work=Supercars.com | date=16 June 2019 | access-date=16 June 2018}} The Triple Crown remained elusive until Scott McLaughlin was fastest in the top ten shootout and won both races in 2019.{{cite news |last1=Herrero |first1=Daniel |title=McLaughlin dominates Race 16 to claim Triple Crown |url=https://www.speedcafe.com/2019/06/16/mclaughlin-dominates-race-16-to-claim-triple-crown/ |access-date=16 June 2019 |work=Speedcafe |date=16 June 2019}} From 2020, the Triple Crown trophy was awarded to the driver that scored the most points across the weekend.{{cite news |title=Triple Crown twist for 2020 |url=https://www.supercars.com/news/championship/triple-crown-twist-for-2020/ |access-date=8 August 2020 |work=Supercars |date=8 August 2020 |language=en}}

History

Image:Hidden Valley Raceway.jpg during the 2007 Skycity Triple Crown.]]

Hidden Valley Raceway had existed for several years prior to being upgraded for its first national championship event in 1998, a round of the Australian Touring Car Championship (ATCC). Mark Skaife had been on course to take victory in the opening race when an engine issue on the final lap allowed teammate Craig Lowndes past, with Skaife finishing 2nd.{{cite book | title=V8 Supercars: The First Decade | last1=Clarke | first1=Andrew | last2=Wensley | first2=Scott | publisher=Publishing 101 | year=2007 | isbn=978-0-9803909-0-2 | location=Carnegie, Victoria | page=45}} Lowndes' car then failed to fire prior to the start of the second race and both he and Skaife failed to make the grid, leaving the front row empty. Russell Ingall, who had a stop-go penalty in the first race for spinning Jason Bright, charged from 13th on the grid to take victory and went on to win the inaugural round with another win in race three of the weekend. In 1999, Bright took his first career round win in what was Ford's only round win of the year.{{cite book | title=The official history: Australian Touring Car Championship – 50 Years | last1=Greenhalgh | first1=David | last2=Howard | first2=Graham | last3=Wilson | first3=Stewart | publisher=Chevron Publishing Group | year=2011 | isbn=978-0-9805912-2-4 | location=St Leonards, New South Wales}} It was also the first round win for Stone Brothers Racing, who saw further success at the event in 2001 when Marcos Ambrose scored his first round win, despite not winning a race over the weekend.{{cite news |last1=Pavey |first1=James |title=No wins, no worries: Ambrose's rare Darwin feat |url=https://www.supercars.com/news/championship/no-wins-no-worries-ambroses-rare-darwin-feat/ |access-date=14 June 2021 |work=Supercars |date=12 June 2021 |language=en}}

In 2004, Ambrose made contact while attempting to overtake Skaife for the lead on the final corner of the race, delaying both and granting victory to Ambrose's teammate Ingall. In the following race, Ambrose then spun Ingall off on the first corner of the race.{{cite web|url=https://www.carsguide.com.au/oversteer/bent-cars-and-broken-egos-the-top-five-moments-from-the-hidden-valley-raceway-56636|title=Bent cars and broken egos: The top five moments from Hidden Valley raceway|last=Tulk|first=Mitchell|date=16 June 2017|publisher=Carsguide.com.au|access-date=4 June 2018}} Todd Kelly went on to win the round, his first of two consecutive event wins. Michael Caruso took his first Supercars race win at the event in 2009, holding off a late charge from Alex Davison. At a late safety car restart in the first race of the 2011 event, the top four tangled into turn one, allowing fifth-placed Rick Kelly to take the race win. In 2013 Jonathon Webb, driving for his family team Tekno Autosports, won his first career round.{{cite news|url=https://www.speedcafe.com/2013/06/18/v8-predictor-jonathon-webb-and-nodster-top-weekend-standings/|title=V8 PREDICTOR: Webb springs surprise in Darwin|date=18 June 2013|work=Speedcafe|access-date=4 June 2018}} At the 2015 event, Lowndes became the first to achieve 100 race wins in ATCC and Supercars, capitalising on a collision between Rick Kelly and Fabian Coulthard on the opening lap.{{cite news | url=http://www.v8supercars.com.au/news/championship/lowndes-wins-his-100th-race | title=Lowndes wins his 100th race | work=V8Supercars.com.au | date=20 June 2015 | access-date=9 July 2015}} In 2016, Caruso provided Nissan with their first round victory since 1992. At the same event, Lee Holdsworth suffered a broken pelvis in a first lap accident, forcing him out of the next three events.{{cite news|url=https://www.speedcafe.com/2016/06/19/holdsworth-sidelined-with-fractured-pelvis/|title=Holdsworth sidelined with fractured pelvis|date=19 June 2016|work=Speedcafe|access-date=4 June 2018}}

From 2017 to 2019, Scott McLaughlin became the first driver to win three consecutive events in Darwin. Most notably, this included McLaughlin becoming the first driver to win the Triple Crown in 2019, qualifying fastest in the top ten shootout (albeit only by a margin of under two hundredths of a second) and winning both races for DJR Team Penske. The Triple Crown was again awarded in 2020 but only due to a change in criteria which saw the trophy guaranteed to be awarded to the round winner. Jamie Whincup tied for points with Fabian Coulthard but won the trophy on countback, meanwhile Anton de Pasquale won his first championship race in the first race of the weekend.{{cite news |last1=Herrero |first1=Daniel |title=Whincup holds off McLaughlin to prevail in Race 15 |url=https://www.speedcafe.com/2020/08/16/whincup-holds-off-mclaughlin-to-prevail-in-race-15/ |access-date=16 August 2020 |work=Speedcafe |date=16 August 2020}} In addition to the Triple Crown, Hidden Valley hosted a second event in consecutive weeks, known as the Darwin SuperSprint, as part of the calendar changes caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.{{cite news |last1=Chapman |first1=Simon |title=Supercars confirms Darwin doubleheader |url=https://www.speedcafe.com/2020/07/18/supercars-confirms-darwin-doubleheader/ |access-date=18 July 2020 |work=Speedcafe |date=18 July 2020}} In 2021, it was announced the event would become the championship's Indigenous Round, with some teams running special liveries for the event.{{cite news |last1=Gover |first1=Paul |title=Indigenous Round For Supercars In June |url=https://www.race.news/2021/03/20/indigenous-round-for-supercars-in-june/ |access-date=27 March 2021 |work=Race News |date=20 March 2021 |language=en-AU}} Over the weekend, the event also incorporated Superbikes and drag racing with Supercars, for the first time since the Winfield Triple Challenge events at Sydney Motorsport Park in the early 1990s.{{cite news |last1=Bartholomaeus |first1=Stefan |title=HIDDEN VALLEY'S TRIPLE CHALLENGE THROWBACK {{!}} V8 Sleuth |url=https://www.v8sleuth.com.au/hidden-valleys-triple-challenge-throwback/ |access-date=19 July 2021 |work=V8 Sleuth |date=17 June 2021}}

Winners

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
Year

! Driver

! Team

! Car

! Report

1998

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Russell Ingall

| Perkins Engineering

| Holden VT Commodore

|

1999

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jason Bright

| Stone Brothers Racing

| Ford AU Falcon

|

2000

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Mark Skaife

| Holden Racing Team

| Holden VT Commodore

|

2001

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Marcos Ambrose

| Stone Brothers Racing

| Ford AU Falcon

| Report

2002

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Mark Skaife

| Holden Racing Team

| Holden VX Commodore

|

2003

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Marcos Ambrose

| Stone Brothers Racing

| Ford BA Falcon

|

2004

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Todd Kelly

| Holden Racing Team

| Holden VY Commodore

|

2005

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Todd Kelly

| Holden Racing Team

| Holden VZ Commodore

|

2006

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Craig Lowndes

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Ford BA Falcon

|

2007

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Craig Lowndes

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Ford BF Falcon

| Report

2008

| {{flagicon|NZL}} Steven Richards

| Ford Performance Racing

| Ford BF Falcon

| Report

2009

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Craig Lowndes

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Ford FG Falcon

| Report

2010

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jamie Whincup

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Holden VE Commodore

| Report

2011

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Craig Lowndes

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Holden VE Commodore

| Report

2012

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jamie Whincup

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Holden VE Commodore

| Report

2013

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jonathon Webb

| Tekno Autosports

| Holden VF Commodore

| Report

2014

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jamie Whincup

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Holden VF Commodore

| Report

2015

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Chaz Mostert

| Prodrive Racing Australia

| Ford FG X Falcon

| Report

2016

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Michael Caruso

| Nissan Motorsport

| Nissan Altima L33

| Report

2017

| {{flagicon|NZL}} Scott McLaughlin

| DJR Team Penske

| Ford FG X Falcon

| Report

2018

| {{flagicon|NZL}} Scott McLaughlin

| DJR Team Penske

| Ford FG X Falcon

| Report

2019

| {{flagicon|NZL}} Scott McLaughlin

| DJR Team Penske

| Ford Mustang GT

| Report

rowspan=2 | 2020{{ref|1|1}}

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Jamie Whincup

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Holden ZB Commodore

|

{{flagicon|NZL}} Scott McLaughlin

| DJR Team Penske

| Ford Mustang GT

|

2021

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Chaz Mostert

| Walkinshaw Andretti United

| Holden ZB Commodore

| Report

2022

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Anton de Pasquale

| Dick Johnson Racing

| Ford Mustang GT

| Report

2023

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Broc Feeney

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Chevrolet Camaro ZL1-1LE

|

2024

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Broc Feeney

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

| Chevrolet Camaro ZL1-1LE

|

;Notes:

  • {{note|1|1}} – Hidden Valley Raceway hosted two events of the 2020 Supercars Championship, Rounds 5 and 6, in consecutive weekends.

Multiple winners

=By driver=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
Wins

! Driver

! Years

rowspan="3" |4

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Craig Lowndes

| 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011

{{flagicon|AUS}} Jamie Whincup

| 2010, 2012, 2014, 2020-1

{{flagicon|NZL}} Scott McLaughlin

| 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020-2

rowspan="5" |2

| {{flagicon|AUS}} Mark Skaife

| 2000, 2002

{{flagicon|AUS}} Marcos Ambrose

| 2001, 2003

{{flagicon|AUS}} Todd Kelly

| 2004, 2005

{{flagicon|AUS}} Chaz Mostert

| 2015, 2021

{{flagicon|AUS}} Broc Feeney

| 2023, 2024

=By team=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
Wins

! Team

10

| Triple Eight Race Engineering

rowspan="2" |5

| Walkinshaw Andretti United{{ref|2|2}}

Dick Johnson Racing{{ref|3|3}}
3

| Stone Brothers Racing

2

| Prodrive Racing Australia{{ref|4|4}}

=By manufacturer=

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%;"
Wins

! Manufacturer

13

| Ford

12

| Holden

2

| Chevrolet

;Notes

  • {{note|2|2}} – Walkinshaw Andretti United was known as Holden Racing Team from 1990 to 2016, hence their statistics are combined.
  • {{note|3|3}} – Dick Johnson Racing was known as DJR Team Penske from 2015 to 2020, hence their statistics are combined.
  • {{note|4|4}} – Prodrive Racing Australia was known as Ford Performance Racing from 2003 to 2014, hence their statistics are combined.

Event names and sponsors

  • 1998–2004: Hidden Valley
  • 2005: Skycity V8 Supercars
  • 2006–15: Skycity Triple Crown
  • 2016–18: CrownBet Darwin Triple Crown
  • 2019–20: BetEasy Darwin Triple Crown
  • 2020: CoreStaff Darwin SuperSprint
  • 2021–22: Merlin Darwin Triple Crown
  • 2023–24: Betr Darwin Triple Crown

See also

References