H2O Full Throttle
New member
Rnd#1
2009 Continental Tyres Australian Superboat Championships
McPhersonPark, Melton, Victoria
To say that Melton’s Continental Tyres Australian Superboat Championship season opener was incredible is a serious understatement, it was the kind of event that we’ll be talking about for decades..
From the mere hundredths and thousandths of seconds separating combatants, to the astonishing Superboat final where not one boat recorded a time, Melton had it all.
After setting an early benchmark on Saturday, Tony Giustozzi continued his winning form to claim the top qualifying spot, but was shadowed to the hundredth of a second by team-mate Mick Carroll - neither Carroll nor Excalibur carrying any ill-effects from Saturday afternoon’s contact with the tyres. Behind the Excalibur duo, local favourite and reigning Australian Group A champion Phonsy Mullan was getting quicker and quicker with his awesome new Triple X 2 boat, whilst Dean Finch was back to his best in Kamakazi, but clearly keeping plenty in reserve. Throw in reigning champion Phil Dixon (True Blue) and former world series champion Daryl Hutton (Hooters), and you had all the ingredients for one awesome top ten..
In Group A, as was expected the battle for supremacy was being waged between former world champion Slade Stanley (Hazardous) and recently crowned world champ Nathan Pretty (True Blue Too). Stanley threw down the early gauntlet with a time not too far shy of Giustozzi’s Superboat best; in fact, Stanley held the second fastest time of the weekend on Saturday, and ultimately claimed the top qualifying position for the Group A finals.
One driver however that many of the Group A drivers were keeping tabs on was Phonsy Mullan’s replacement in the Triple X team, Ted Sygidus. Sygidus had been the ‘B’ driver during 2008 and showed that he’d quite clearly taken on board plenty of advice from the ‘boss’ as he threatened the leaders with a cracking qualifying time. Behind him, Rohan Smith, Tremayne Jukes (‘B’ driving Stanley’s boat Hazardous), Greg Mercier and Brooke Dixon were also in close quarters. Despite some new bits for his jet unit just prior to Melton, Mercier’s attack on the top three all but ended in the opening run on Sunday morning after he slipped off the track sending the ‘shark’ backwards into the tyres..
“A bit over-zealous too early in the morning,” he shrugged afterwards. “I thought I’d hit a tyre or something, but clearly the grip in that corner wasn’t there, and I just torpedoed off the circuit.”
Mercier wasn’t the first to suffer in the difficult water conditions, nor was he to be the last.. “The track is very slippery,” Slade Stanley admitted, an opinion echoed by Nathan Pretty.
“It’s full of bore water,” Greg Mercier explained. “It makes a huge difference to the way the boat handles, it’s like water skiing on a fresh water river, as opposed to water-skiing on saltwater. Because of the salt content in bore water, it’s similar to seawater, and as such, the boat, like a skier sits up on top of the water more, and when mixed in with the clay, it becomes a slippery customer to deal with. I thought I’d sorted it, but clearly the bump in the back of the boat shows I hadn’t.. We’ll fix it and be out for the next run..!”
The 350 class too was providing action aplenty with father and son duo Mark and Jake Garlick (Grumpy) battling at the front of the field in their recently modified boat, with Daniel James (Stingray Racing) and Jamie Taylor (Red Roar) fighting over the podium with Conti-Racer’s Brooke Lucas and Chris Bollins. Conti was earning its fair share of attention from fans in its stunning new black and orange livery, but whilst it looked good, it was also fast.. “I’m just going to ease myself into it,” Chris Bollins admitted, “then once we start toget towards the finals, we’ll have a bit of a go.” And go he did, setting a top four time in the penultimate qualifying round to edge out his team-mate, reigning champion Brooke Lucas.
Sadly for the Conti team they had also discovered an intermittent electrical fault that had cost both Bollins and Lucas valuable track time. “We’ll see what we can do to fix it for today, then make sure it’s well and truly resolved before the next round,” team-boss John Bollins confirmed. “It’s just teething problems, all a part of having a new boat.”
Melton presented not just a new season, but one of the biggest fields in Unlimited Superboats Australia has ever seen. Tony Giustozzi showed that he was finally comfortable with his ex-Peter Caughey Sprintec to set a stunning sub-44 second time (43.538) in his third qualifying round to top the timesheets. Behind him team-mate Mick Carroll also went sub-44 (43.997), whilst Phonsy Mullan (44.143), Phil Dixon (44.242), Dean Finch (44.525) and Daryl Hutton (44.703) were all within reach. The stage was set for a stunning round of finals, and the boys didn’t disappoint..
It wasn’t just boys either, with both Louise Dixon and new Australian championship recruit Cheryl Welch also making the top ten. For Dixon the competition was pushing her harder and harder, her 46.535 in the third qualifier well in advance of her best time at Melton and comfortably placed her inside the ten. For Welch, who had journeyed from Perth with son Jamie to tackle the country’s best, her fourth round 46.787 showed just why she is a multiple West Australian champion, neither though were able to make the top three.
By the close of the top ten, it was clear from Tony Giustozzi’s trademark grin that he’d retained the top spot with a stunning 43.280 second lap, but behind him the action was intense. Kiwi Daryl Hutton had been doing an amazing job with Peter Freckleton’s ageing powerplant to set an outstanding time of 43.635 for second, just 0.003 seconds faster than the smiling assassin Dean Finch, with Mick Carroll a whopping six one hundredths further back, but amazingly, out of the finals. Phonsy Mullan elevated himself to fifth, just half a second behind the lead quartet, with Phil Dixon an incredible sixth, seven one thousandths slower than Mullan and well outside a Superboat final, something a little alien to the reigning champion.
“We’re a little down on power to the rest of these guys,” Dixon admitted. “I can’t take anything away from them though they’ve all done a brilliant job, but as disappointed as I am about missing the final three, I’m stoked in a way that I have because it means that Superboats finally has a strong enough field to start some serious rivalries, I can’t wait for Temora..
2009 Continental Tyres Australian Superboat Championships
McPhersonPark, Melton, Victoria
To say that Melton’s Continental Tyres Australian Superboat Championship season opener was incredible is a serious understatement, it was the kind of event that we’ll be talking about for decades..
From the mere hundredths and thousandths of seconds separating combatants, to the astonishing Superboat final where not one boat recorded a time, Melton had it all.
After setting an early benchmark on Saturday, Tony Giustozzi continued his winning form to claim the top qualifying spot, but was shadowed to the hundredth of a second by team-mate Mick Carroll - neither Carroll nor Excalibur carrying any ill-effects from Saturday afternoon’s contact with the tyres. Behind the Excalibur duo, local favourite and reigning Australian Group A champion Phonsy Mullan was getting quicker and quicker with his awesome new Triple X 2 boat, whilst Dean Finch was back to his best in Kamakazi, but clearly keeping plenty in reserve. Throw in reigning champion Phil Dixon (True Blue) and former world series champion Daryl Hutton (Hooters), and you had all the ingredients for one awesome top ten..
In Group A, as was expected the battle for supremacy was being waged between former world champion Slade Stanley (Hazardous) and recently crowned world champ Nathan Pretty (True Blue Too). Stanley threw down the early gauntlet with a time not too far shy of Giustozzi’s Superboat best; in fact, Stanley held the second fastest time of the weekend on Saturday, and ultimately claimed the top qualifying position for the Group A finals.
One driver however that many of the Group A drivers were keeping tabs on was Phonsy Mullan’s replacement in the Triple X team, Ted Sygidus. Sygidus had been the ‘B’ driver during 2008 and showed that he’d quite clearly taken on board plenty of advice from the ‘boss’ as he threatened the leaders with a cracking qualifying time. Behind him, Rohan Smith, Tremayne Jukes (‘B’ driving Stanley’s boat Hazardous), Greg Mercier and Brooke Dixon were also in close quarters. Despite some new bits for his jet unit just prior to Melton, Mercier’s attack on the top three all but ended in the opening run on Sunday morning after he slipped off the track sending the ‘shark’ backwards into the tyres..
“A bit over-zealous too early in the morning,” he shrugged afterwards. “I thought I’d hit a tyre or something, but clearly the grip in that corner wasn’t there, and I just torpedoed off the circuit.”
Mercier wasn’t the first to suffer in the difficult water conditions, nor was he to be the last.. “The track is very slippery,” Slade Stanley admitted, an opinion echoed by Nathan Pretty.
“It’s full of bore water,” Greg Mercier explained. “It makes a huge difference to the way the boat handles, it’s like water skiing on a fresh water river, as opposed to water-skiing on saltwater. Because of the salt content in bore water, it’s similar to seawater, and as such, the boat, like a skier sits up on top of the water more, and when mixed in with the clay, it becomes a slippery customer to deal with. I thought I’d sorted it, but clearly the bump in the back of the boat shows I hadn’t.. We’ll fix it and be out for the next run..!”
The 350 class too was providing action aplenty with father and son duo Mark and Jake Garlick (Grumpy) battling at the front of the field in their recently modified boat, with Daniel James (Stingray Racing) and Jamie Taylor (Red Roar) fighting over the podium with Conti-Racer’s Brooke Lucas and Chris Bollins. Conti was earning its fair share of attention from fans in its stunning new black and orange livery, but whilst it looked good, it was also fast.. “I’m just going to ease myself into it,” Chris Bollins admitted, “then once we start toget towards the finals, we’ll have a bit of a go.” And go he did, setting a top four time in the penultimate qualifying round to edge out his team-mate, reigning champion Brooke Lucas.
Sadly for the Conti team they had also discovered an intermittent electrical fault that had cost both Bollins and Lucas valuable track time. “We’ll see what we can do to fix it for today, then make sure it’s well and truly resolved before the next round,” team-boss John Bollins confirmed. “It’s just teething problems, all a part of having a new boat.”
Melton presented not just a new season, but one of the biggest fields in Unlimited Superboats Australia has ever seen. Tony Giustozzi showed that he was finally comfortable with his ex-Peter Caughey Sprintec to set a stunning sub-44 second time (43.538) in his third qualifying round to top the timesheets. Behind him team-mate Mick Carroll also went sub-44 (43.997), whilst Phonsy Mullan (44.143), Phil Dixon (44.242), Dean Finch (44.525) and Daryl Hutton (44.703) were all within reach. The stage was set for a stunning round of finals, and the boys didn’t disappoint..
It wasn’t just boys either, with both Louise Dixon and new Australian championship recruit Cheryl Welch also making the top ten. For Dixon the competition was pushing her harder and harder, her 46.535 in the third qualifier well in advance of her best time at Melton and comfortably placed her inside the ten. For Welch, who had journeyed from Perth with son Jamie to tackle the country’s best, her fourth round 46.787 showed just why she is a multiple West Australian champion, neither though were able to make the top three.
By the close of the top ten, it was clear from Tony Giustozzi’s trademark grin that he’d retained the top spot with a stunning 43.280 second lap, but behind him the action was intense. Kiwi Daryl Hutton had been doing an amazing job with Peter Freckleton’s ageing powerplant to set an outstanding time of 43.635 for second, just 0.003 seconds faster than the smiling assassin Dean Finch, with Mick Carroll a whopping six one hundredths further back, but amazingly, out of the finals. Phonsy Mullan elevated himself to fifth, just half a second behind the lead quartet, with Phil Dixon an incredible sixth, seven one thousandths slower than Mullan and well outside a Superboat final, something a little alien to the reigning champion.
“We’re a little down on power to the rest of these guys,” Dixon admitted. “I can’t take anything away from them though they’ve all done a brilliant job, but as disappointed as I am about missing the final three, I’m stoked in a way that I have because it means that Superboats finally has a strong enough field to start some serious rivalries, I can’t wait for Temora..