<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Sean Henshelwood, Author at Powerboat Racing World</title>
	<atom:link href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/author/sean-henshelwood/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://powerboatracingworld.com/author/sean-henshelwood/</link>
	<description>Circuit and Offshore Powerboat Racing News</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Mon, 05 Sep 2022 21:02:41 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-GB</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>
	hourly	</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>
	1	</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3</generator>

<image>
	<url>https://i0.wp.com/powerboatracingworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/cropped-icon.png?fit=32%2C32&#038;ssl=1</url>
	<title>Sean Henshelwood, Author at Powerboat Racing World</title>
	<link>https://powerboatracingworld.com/author/sean-henshelwood/</link>
	<width>32</width>
	<height>32</height>
</image> 
<site xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">109893608</site>	<item>
		<title>V8 Superboats delivers again at Cabarita</title>
		<link>https://powerboatracingworld.com/v8-superboats-delivers-again-at-cabarita/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Henshelwood]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Sep 2022 08:22:59 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Australian V8 Superboat Championships]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://powerboatracingworld.com/?p=27048</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>After a strong start to the 2022 Australian V8 Superboats Championship at Cabarita in mid-July, the series returned to the popular coastal venue for round two, with one of the biggest fields of entries in many seasons, promising two more outstanding delays of competition - and the drivers didn’t fail to deliver.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/v8-superboats-delivers-again-at-cabarita/">V8 Superboats delivers again at Cabarita</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After a strong start to the 2022 Australian V8 Superboats Championship at Cabarita in mid-July, the series returned to the popular coastal venue for round two, with one of the biggest fields of entries in many seasons, promising two more outstanding delays of competition &#8211; and the drivers didn’t fail to deliver.</p>
<p>Reigning World and Australian Unlimited Superboat Champion Phonsy Mullan came under fire from New Zealanders Daryl Hutton and Rob Coley, but again prevailed to claim his second win of the season, whilst his 19-year old son Bastian &#8211; the reigning LS-Class Champion &#8211; faced his own battle for victory, but again drove away from his rivals in the final for another convincing win.</p>
<p>Whilst the Mullan’s added to their victory tallies, in 400-Class, their team-mate and points leader Jody Ely faced his own reckoning, reigning champion Justin Roylance, and 2019 champion Paul Kelly firing broadsides at the points leader all weekend, but come finals time, Ely was the last man standing, again joined by Brendan Doyle and Danny Knappick on the podium. Meanwhile, 2021 Junior Development champion Koby Bourke again claimed top honours over Connor Smith.</p>
<p>A dramatic change to the navigation for the weekend caught a number of teams by surprise, the stop-start nature of the rotation very different to those used in the past causing a number of boats to lose direction mid run, but whilst it provided more directional miscues, the tricky navigation also provided some of the closest racing we’d seen in many seasons, a welcome change for the fans who had become accustomed to seeing wins measured in seconds rather than tenths.</p>
<p>Like the opening round, the weekend was not without incident, Justin Roylance and Darrin Kesper suffering big offs during the elimination finals, both clipping banks &#8211; and as a result earned themselves notoriety on Queensland news reports Sunday night &#8211; Roylance flipping the boat which rolled over in the channel but landed right side up, whilst Kesper clipped the entry to the spinout pool and sunk ‘Let’s Boogie’ as a result. Fortunately in both situations, neither crew was injured.</p>
<p>For the race teams, focus now turns south with the remaining five rounds of the season to be held between the New South Wales Riverina and Keith’s popular Spitwater Arena which will host the third round of the season on Saturday, October 8.</p>
<p>UNLIMITED SUPERBOAT<br />
The big news ahead of the second round was the return of the mighty ‘Hazardous’ hull of 2019 champion Slade Stanley, and the appearance of Rob Coley’s stunning new twin-turbo Nissan V8 powered ‘Poison Ivy’, both teams threatening to take the fight to points leader Phonsy Mullan.</p>
<p>The second round saw teams facing a very different rotation to that they’d contested in July, and it was a rotation that caught many by surprise. Reactions were mixed, although one big criticism was that it didn’t flow, although the reality was each and every team was faced with the same navigation, and for a lot of the teams, it took a long while to commit to memory, in fact most drivers made navigational errors..</p>
<p>For many, the big question was just how quickly former champion Daryl Hutton would settle into ‘Hazardous’ a boat he’d battled against for a number of seasons, and whilst cautious to make predictions, the racer in him was dying to see whether it would help him take the fight to Mullan.. the answer was a resounding yes!</p>
<p>Fast from the outset, Hutton was staggered just how fast 800-horsepower would take him from point to point, the nimble ‘Stinger’ setting an impressive opening qualifying time, before Hutton found his mojo to really push the boat to see what it could do, getting to within nine tenths of a second of Mullan by Q2, before both pushed even harder ahead of the finals, Mullan setting the benchmark at a 40.589, Hutton’s best a 42.128.</p>
<p>Behind them Rob Coley was having an horrendous time just getting a lap on the board, and by the close of Saturday’s three qualifiers, he’d carded just a 55.604. Come Sunday morning though he’d settled into the rotation and jumped into the 45s alongside Scott Krause and Tremayne Jukes.</p>
<p>By the finals things got serious, Mullan faced with a storming Daryl Hutton, the expat Kiwi charging to the top spot with a best of 42.347, Mullan a 42.549, but perhaps the biggest surprise was Glenn ‘Spider’ Roberts who had overcome an oil pump issue on the eve of the event to be last to arrive at the circuit, his 45.043 moving him to third at the close of the opening elimination round ahead of Jukes, Krause and Coley.</p>
<p>Sadly for the new owner of the ‘Hazardous’ machine &#8211; Chris Edmonds &#8211; he suffered a tough weekend, a last-minute dash to bolt his LSA into his new ’Stinger’ hull leaving him with some question about how well the package would work, and in the end, it turns out that his fuel system had been compromised with debris in the fuel lines forcing him to run on as few as five cylinders during the later rounds, ultimately eliminating him from the finals. Some more homework on his return to base will see the boat ready for its next event, although for the coming round, Edmonds fully expects to make his own debut behind the wheel of ‘Hazardous’..</p>
<p>Mullan meanwhile found form in the second elimination final to top the timesheets, a 40.762 within a tenth of his best of the day, whilst Hutton went quicker again to card a 41.862. With elimination a very real threat, Rob Coley chose the perfect time to nail the rotation, the New Zealander finding four seconds to jump straight into the final with an impressive 42.159.</p>
<p>Behind them Scott Krause and Tremayne Jukes turned up the wick, both nailing a 44.05, Krause though six one thousandths of a second faster to claim P4, whilst for Glenn Roberts, he was the only one not to improve, a 46.0 dropping him back to sixth.</p>
<p>Rob Coley was first out in the final and he knew he’d need something special if he was going to take the fight to Mullan and Hutton, and his lap was impressive given the fact it was only his fifth lap all weekend on the correct rotation, a 41.807 putting his rivals on notice that they’d need to push that little bit harder.</p>
<p>Hutton was next out and whilst getting more and more comfortable in the ‘Hazardous’ hull, he was also playing with a level of caution, keen to ensure he didn’t put the package in any jeopardy as he went after Coley. Half a second down at the first split, he was closing the gap over the final rotation but rode the bank at the exit of the final 90-degree right-hander, losing valuable tenths to ultimately cross the line with a 43.524 &#8211; 1.7-seconds down on his Top 6 best.</p>
<p>Then it was down to points leader Phonsy Mullan, the reigning champion knowing just what he needed to do to take the win, and whilst admitting afterwards that he could have gone quicker, he played it safe with a 41.082, half a second down on his best, but eight tenths quicker than Coley to claim his second win of the season.</p>
<p>Phonsy Mullan; “This track direction was a bit treacherous, I was hoping to clock a 39 but played it safe in the end and got it home, but still good enough to take the win by eight tenths of a second which was a fair margin, but I think we could have gapped a fair bit more &#8211; realistically it wasn’t my best lap, but it got the job done.”</p>
<p>400-CLASS (GROUP A)<br />
With 2019 champion Paul Kelly back in the saddle, 400-Class was poised to be a four-horse race for top honours with Brendan Doyle also looking to take the fight to 2021 title contenders Justin Roylance and Jody Ely.</p>
<p>It started perfectly for the returning Greg Harriman, the V8 Superboats veteran back in the seat after a long break and whilst many of his rivals failed to perfect the navigation, ‘Apache’ topped the unofficial practice lap times by more than seven seconds over Danny Knappick and Daniel Warburton, whilst Jody Ely messed up the rotation, and Justin Roylance failed to even make it into the boat after dislocating his back on the way to the circuit.. The discomfort so intense that the team needed to go looking for a physio..</p>
<p>Navigation continued to be the big issue throughout the qualifiers, but by the end of five rounds it was clear that it would again be a battle between 2021 title rivals Roylance and Ely, the pair more than half a second up on the next best &#8211; emerging contender, Brendan Doyle &#8211; who was all smiles after having out-qualified former champion Paul Kelly, albeit by just six one thousandths of a second.</p>
<p>Roylance had set the benchmark during Saturday afternoon’s final qualifier despite ongoing back pain with a best of 45.684, but had dropped his pace on Sunday morning. That opened the door for points leader Jody Ely who crept into the high 45s, whilst Brendan Doyle closed the qualifiers with the third fastest time from Paul Kelly, Danny Knappick, Greg Harriman, Darrin Kesper and Daniel Warburton.</p>
<p>The first final though became what could well be the key moment in the Championship, reigning champion Justin Roylance enduring a wild ride across the islands on the final run to the line after running wide on the final 90 degree right hander, which put him off line for the zig-zag home, clipping the first island as a result of being too wide, before heading straight across the second which pitched the ‘Spitwater’ machine sideways into the channel. A fast rollover doused both driver and navigator, before the boat righted itself to the cheers of the big Cabarita crowd, but for the Roylance team, it was game over and their exit in the first elimination final.</p>
<p>Unfortunately they weren’t to be the only ones to exit the Top 12 final, Darrin Kesper and new navigator Reece Meanwell suffering a scary moment in the pit pool after clipping the bank on the run in. The boat spun into the pool backwards causing a big wave of water which filled the back of the boat, immediately sinking it in chest deep water. Fortunately the safety crew were quickly on the scene to release driver and navigator, but not before a few anxious moments as they disappeared below the waterline. Both were okay, but the result of the incident also saw them forced to retire despite having qualified for the second final.</p>
<p>With Jody Ely leading the charge in the second final, all eyes were on Brendan Doyle and Paul Kelly to take the fight to the ‘Rampage’ machine. Doyle turned in a 47.19 to get within half a second, although he was seven tenths down on his best, whilst for Kelly, his return to the sport and debut with the new methanol injection system saw a setback on the ramp..</p>
<p>Unable to start the boat to complete his lap, the team returned to the tent to discover the gasket beneath the air filter had come apart and fallen into the throttle body, jamming it wide open &#8211; by that stage though it was all over. Despite the setback, Kelly was all smiles, pondering just why he hadn’t continued to compete over past seasons, such is the rush of circulating in a V8 Superboat..</p>
<p>With Kelly and Roylance eliminated, that allowed Danny Knappick and the ‘Tuff’n Up’ crew through to the final, and despite taking a more relaxed approach into the final they improved their best again to a 49.654, although they were faced with Jody Ely’s best of the weekend, a stellar 45.815.</p>
<p>Brendan Doyle emerged last of the contenders, the ‘PULSE’ team very happy with their performance after claiming third during the opening round, Doyle this time getting to within tenths of the outright contenders to flag his position in the title race, his 46.761 three tenths down on his best, but less than a second slower than Ely, promising an epic close to the season with four outright contenders fighting for championship victory.</p>
<p>Jody Ely; “That was a great weekend actually. Two on the trot, it’s looking good. Getting your head around the rotation was pretty tricky, even in the finals the shadows changed, the islands looked a little different, it forced you to second guess yourself sometimes but we had a few little issues with the boat, but others had their own issues &#8211; we don’t like to talk about that but it happens from time to time.”</p>
<p>LS-CLASS<br />
The LS-Class has proven to be the perfect tonic for the growth of V8 Superboats, 18-entries pencilled in for the second round, 17 teams actually making the line after the late withdrawal of Darren Pollard’s ‘Disturbed’, and the big field &#8211; which included three rookie teams &#8211; didn’t fail to entertain.</p>
<p>Like the Unlimited and 400-Class fields, the rotation closed up the advantage the points leaders had enjoyed during the opening round, Bastian Mullan having to work very hard for the round win, with former champion Kyle Elphinstone, Matt Malthouse and West Australian Daniel Salter throwing their hats into the ring for the outright win.</p>
<p>In the end, it was Elphinstone who top qualified with a best of 44.232 in Sunday’s final session to Bastian Mullan’s 44.397. Daniel Salter’s Cabarita debut netted a best of 45.964 in Q4, whilst Matt Malthouse played his conservative best with a 46.316 in Q5 to comfortably qualify for the finals. Nate Mullan was fifth fastest at the close of qualifying with a best of 47.064, with Cabarita specialist Paul Hill rounding out the six with a 53.030, although despite his experience at the circuit he was struggling to put a time on the board after a string of ‘wrong ways’.</p>
<p>Lawrie Howlett was another that was battling to get a time on the board, ‘Drop Bear’ however taking the seventh fastest time heading into the finals, ahead Tyler O’Day and Jim Beaman with Noel Verning an impressive tenth in just his second ever V8 Superboats event, splitting the son-and-father ‘Agro-Vation’ team with Ron O’Day 11th.</p>
<p>Mike Hessell qualified 12th in ‘Borrowed Time’ ahead of Lance Edmonds on his debut with ‘Solid Gold’, whilst Rodney Norton grabbed 14th from Jade Atchison who made an impressive recovery from a testing crash at Temora earlier in the year, this event her first back behind the wheel and she drove with great maturity to focus on getting comfortable in her new ‘Twisted’ hull and recorded a string of correct navigations to be on the tail of the top ten.</p>
<p>Sadly for the new ‘The Spartan’ team of Luke Walters, they suffered the teething problems experienced by so many teams in their formative events, the crew working tirelessly throughout Saturday to overcome a starter issue, in the end firing the boat late on Saturday to be ready for Sunday’s final two qualifiers. The boat looked great on the water, and Walters settled into a comfortable rhythm, but four lost sessions on a testing rotation saw them fail to get the navigation right, although you’d never have known it with the broad smiles the team were wearing on Sunday night &#8211; another team bitten by the V8 Superboats bug!</p>
<p>With just 12 boats qualifying for the first elimination final, Hessell, Lance Edmonds, Norton, Atchison and Walters were forced to watch the finals from the bank.</p>
<p>Sadly for Jim Beaman &#8211; who was a top six contender throughout season 2021 &#8211; he suffered an issue in the pit pool with the engine flaming out, a quick return to the trailer and he was good to go for his run, but the setback had clearly upset his momentum, the ‘JB Racing’ machine suffering a ‘wrong way’ which ultimately dropped him outside the six, joining Mitch Curtis, Noel Verning, Ron O’Day, Tyler O’Day and Lawrie Howlett on the bank.</p>
<p>For Paul Hill, he was looking to find a return to form after a horror run through the qualifiers. A rebuilt boat after his contact with the barriers at ‘Bennies’ during the opening round had him full of confidence, but he’d struggled to card more than one competitive lap prior to his impressive Top 12 run, but no sooner had he found form than it departed, another navigational error in the Top 6 keeping him outside the final three.</p>
<p>That left Nate Mullan and West Australian Daniel Salter who was keen to make it through to the final, both falling just shy, Mullan carding a 45.817 &#8211; his best of the event &#8211; to Salter’s 45.561. The benchmark, Matt Malthouse’s 45.443..</p>
<p>By this stage it was tight between Bastian Mullan and Kyle Elphinstone &#8211; Elphinstone on top in the first elimination final with a 44.780 to Mullan’s 44.828, Mullan turning the tables in the second final to card a 44.085 to Elphinstone’s 44.994 which brought them to the final where they knew Malthouse was capable of finding just a little bit extra.</p>
<p>Malthouse was out first and as expected he kept his best till last but could only improve to a 45.364. Elphinstone was next out, and he found seven tenths over his Top 6 time to card a 44.293 and put Mullan on notice, but the teenager was ready, and as he had done through the closing rounds of the 2021 season, and the 2022 season opener, he stepped up another level again to record a stunning 43.746 to put the result completely out of question.</p>
<p>Bastian Mullan; “It was good competition, me and Kyle [Elphinstone] were going at it all day, so in the top three I just had to put down a lap and got a 43.7 so only four tenths up on him, but it was a good run.”</p>
<p>JUNIOR DEVELOPMENT<br />
After making his junior Development debut last time out, Connor Smith was back into the action at Keith looking to close some ground on reigning champion Koby Bourke. Like their senior counterparts, they too had a challenging rotation (although shorter in length), but aside from having to right any wrongs during their runs, Smith suffered just a single DNF whilst Bourke completed every rotation.</p>
<p>In the end the experienced points leader set the mark in the qualifiers at a 50.412 to Smith’s 59.476, Smith improving by more than a second in the final to a 58.232 to Bourke’s 51.503.</p>
<p>For the Australian V8 Superboats Championship presented by Penrite the teams prepare to return to Keith &#8211; the scene of the 2021 final earlier this year, for the third round of the season on October 8.</p>
<p>For fans of the Penrite Australian V8 Superboats Championship, they can catch all the action on 7mate and 7+ (Rnd#1 airs on Saturday, 24 September on 7mate). We will also post updates on social media channels with respect to on air times.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p>Rnd#2 2022 Australian V8 Superboats Championship presented by Penrite<br />
Tweed Valley Jet Sprint Club, Cabarita Beach, NSW<br />
27-28 August, 2022</p>
<p>FINAL RESULTS</p>
<p>TOP 3 FINAL<br />
Unlimited Superboat<br />
1. 23. Phonsy Mullan/Leigh Stuart (RAMJET) &#8211; 41.082<br />
2. 111. Rob Coley/Scott Munro (Poison Ivy) &#8211; 41.807<br />
3. 28. Daryl Hutton/Mick Parry (Phoenix Lubricants) &#8211; 43.524</p>
<p>400-Class (Group A)<br />
1. 33. Jody Ely/Olivia Parnis (Rampage) &#8211; 45.815<br />
2. 4. Brendan Doyle/Rory Doyle (PULSE) &#8211; 46.761<br />
3. 45. Danny Knappick/Darren Tickell (Tuff’n Up) &#8211; 49.654</p>
<p>LS-Class<br />
1. 1A. Bastian Mullan/Tahleah James (RIPSHIFT) &#8211; 43.746<br />
2. 219. Kyle Elphinstone/Jacob Bellamy (Blackout Racing) &#8211; 44.293<br />
3. 69. Matt Malthouse/Leighton Collins (Nood Nutz) &#8211; 45.364</p>
<p>Junior Development*<br />
1. 97A. Koby Bourke (Lil Pyscho) &#8211; 51.503<br />
2. 97B. Connor Smith (Lil Pyscho) &#8211; 58.232<br />
* different circuit rotation to other classes</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>TOP 6 FINAL<br />
Unlimited Superboat<br />
1. 23. Phonsy Mullan/Leigh Stuart (RAMJET) &#8211; 40.762<br />
2. 28. Daryl Hutton/Mick Parry (Phoenix Lubricants) &#8211; 41.862<br />
3. 111. Rob Coley/Scott Munro (Poison Ivy) &#8211; 42.159<br />
4. 37. Scott Krause/Rachel Parsons (KAOS) &#8211; 44.052<br />
5. 214. Tremayne Jukes/Tracey Little (The Girlfriend) &#8211; 44.058<br />
6. 888. Glenn Roberts/Tia McGifford (Blown Budget) &#8211; 46.023</p>
<p>400-Class (Group A)<br />
1. 33. Jody Ely/Olivia Parnis (Rampage) &#8211; 46.619<br />
2. 4. Brendan Doyle/Rory Doyle (PULSE) &#8211; 47.190<br />
3. 45. Danny Knappick/Darren Tickell (Tuff’n Up) &#8211; 57.299<br />
4. 360. Greg Harriman/Wendy Wheelhouse (Apache) &#8211; 71.245<br />
5. 40. Paul Kelly/Naomi Gow (4Zero Racing) &#8211; DNS<br />
6. 43. Darrin Kesper/Reece Meanwell (Let’s Boogie) &#8211; DNS</p>
<p>LS-Class<br />
1. 1A. Bastian Mullan/Tahleah James (RIPSHIFT) &#8211; 44.085<br />
2. 219. Kyle Elphinstone/Jacob Bellamy (Blackout Racing) &#8211; 44.994<br />
3. 69. Matt Malthouse/Leighton Collins (Nood Nutz) &#8211; 45.443<br />
4. 26. Daniel Salter/Mitchell Hade (The Hustler) &#8211; 45.561<br />
5. 1B. Nate Mullan/Jayden Vella (RIPSHIFT) &#8211; 45.817<br />
6. 512. Paul Hill/Alex Singleton (Slicer) &#8211; DNF</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>TOP 12 FINAL<br />
Unlimited Superboat<br />
1. 28. Daryl Hutton/Mick Parry (Phoenix Lubricants) &#8211; 42.347<br />
2. 23. Phonsy Mullan/Leigh Stuart (RAMJET) &#8211; 42.549<br />
3. 888. Glenn Roberts/Tia McGifford (Blown Budget) &#8211; 45.043<br />
4. 214. Tremayne Jukes/Tracey Little (The Girlfriend) &#8211; 45.228<br />
5. 37. Scott Krause/Rachel Parsons (KAOS) &#8211; 45.309<br />
6. 111. Rob Coley/Scott Munro (Poison Ivy) &#8211; 46.993<br />
7. 169. Chris Edmonds/Jamie Maroney (4PLAY) &#8211; ww</p>
<p>400-Class (Group A)<br />
1. 40. Paul Kelly/Naomi Gow (4Zero Racing) &#8211; 45.812<br />
2. 33. Jody Ely/Olivia Parnis (Rampage) &#8211; 45.917<br />
3. 4. Brendan Doyle/Rory Doyle (PULSE) &#8211; 48.096<br />
4. 360. Greg Harriman/Wendy Wheelhouse (Apache) &#8211; 50.370<br />
5. 45. Danny Knappick/Darren Tickell (Tuff’n Up) &#8211; 50.881<br />
6. 43. Darrin Kesper/Reece Meanwell (Let’s Boogie) &#8211; 52.792<br />
7. 81. Daniel Warburton/Ryan Loft (Team Attitude) &#8211; 54.434<br />
8. 67. Justin Roylance/Tracey Little (Outlaw67) &#8211; DNF</p>
<p>LS-Class<br />
1. 219. Kyle Elphinstone/Jacob Bellamy (Blackout Racing) &#8211; 44.780<br />
2. 1A. Bastian Mullan/Tahleah James (RIPSHIFT) &#8211; 44.828<br />
3. 69. Matt Malthouse/Leighton Collins (Nood Nutz) &#8211; 45.642<br />
4. 26. Daniel Salter/Mitchell Hade (The Hustler) &#8211; 45.960<br />
5. 512. Paul Hill/Alex Singleton (Slicer) &#8211; 46.854<br />
6. 1B. Nate Mullan/Jayden Vella (RIPSHIFT) &#8211; 46.868<br />
7. 14. Lawrie Howlett/Karen Howlett (Drop Bear) &#8211; 47.799<br />
8. 29B. Tyler O’Day/Xavier Jackson (Agro-Vation) &#8211; 49.356<br />
9. 29A. Ron O’Day/Paris O’Day (Agro-Vation) &#8211; 50.541<br />
10. 269. Noel Verning/Nathan Garrett (Quiet Time) &#8211; 50.868<br />
11. 248. Mitch Curtis/Georgia Aungle (Smoke &amp; Mirror) &#8211; 51.870<br />
12. 46. Jim Beaman/Harrison Collins (JB Racing) &#8211; 55.619</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/v8-superboats-delivers-again-at-cabarita/">V8 Superboats delivers again at Cabarita</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">27048</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Big field set for V8 Superboats Cabarita return</title>
		<link>https://powerboatracingworld.com/big-field-set-for-v8-superboats-cabarita-return/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Henshelwood]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Aug 2022 08:53:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Australian V8 Superboat Championships]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://powerboatracingworld.com/?p=26843</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>After a dramatic opening round to the 2022 season, the Australian V8 Superboats Championship presented by Penrite returns to the Tweed Valley on August 27-28 for the second round of the season buoyed by an increase in entries including the return of a popular local champion.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/big-field-set-for-v8-superboats-cabarita-return/">Big field set for V8 Superboats Cabarita return</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After a dramatic opening round to the 2022 season, the Australian V8 Superboats Championship presented by Penrite returns to the Tweed Valley on August 27-28 for the second round of the season buoyed by an increase in entries including the return of a popular local champion.</p>
<p>Those that witnessed the opening round just five weeks prior were treated to some fantastic racing, and some big offs, one of which was replayed on Brisbane television for a number of days after the event, the subject of that incident &#8211; Goondiwindi’s Chris Edmonds &#8211; continues to play a part in the coming round, having recently taken delivery of one of the fastest boats in the world, Slade Stanley’s appropriately named ‘Hazardous’.</p>
<p>Edmonds had made no question of the fact that once the Stanley’s had put the 2019 title-winning Unlimited boat on the market, that he was keen to take delivery, and after damaging Daryl Hutton’s ‘Phoenix Lubricants’ boat during the opening elimination final, he felt compelled to ensure that his fellow expat New Zealander had an alternative ride to continue his championship assault &#8211; and what better alternative than the most successful boat of the last three seasons!</p>
<p>For his part, Hutton and his team have been working tirelessly to get their twin-turbo Unlimited machine back on the water, and whilst the boat has been repaired, the technical nature of the engine has meant a few more delays in ensuring everything is ‘ship-shape’ ahead of a return to the water, Hutton instead taking the helm of ‘Hazardous’, an experience he’s looking forward to, although the two-time Australian Champion has warned not to raise expectations too high..</p>
<p>Coming back to Cabarita the field will be chasing eight-time AUS#1 Phonsy Mullan, the reigning World Champion claiming the top spot in July with a time that would have forced one of the greatest finals in the history of the sport had Stanley continued to compete, Mullan breaking Stanley’s ‘lap record’ on the same rotation the field contested back in June 2021.</p>
<p>Hutton had been on target to claim second, but his early retirement elevated 2018 co-Champion Scott Krause to the podium alongside Mullan and Cabarita favourite, Glenn ‘Spider’ Roberts, the Superboat veteran suffering a litany of setbacks before graduating through to the final for yet another podium at his local venue (local being 1500-kilometres from home).</p>
<p>In 400-Class, 2021 vice-Champion Jody Ely once again outlasted good friend and rival Justin Roylance to claim his second victory at Cabarita, whilst Brendan Doyle and Danny Knappick filled out the top four places in the category’s transition year across to new rules in 2023. Sadly 400-Class also saw the retirement of former Champions Brett and Lin Thornton, the popular Queenslanders coming off at the notorious ‘Bennies’ corner in the final qualifier, the impact of the sudden stop seeing both transported to hospital with lower back pain &#8211; they were later released but have decided as a result to hang up the boots.</p>
<p>For the burgeoning LS-Class, a big field of entries was led by reigning Champion Bastian Mullan, the second-generation racer embroiled again in a great battle with 2021 rivals Matt Malthouse and Kyle Elphinstone before upping the tempo in the final to put the result completely out of question. This round though he’ll have West Australian Champion Daniel Salter back in the saddle, in what many hope will see a return of the combative 2021 season final at Keith earlier this year, an event which saw Salter set the pace right up until Mullan’s committed final lap.</p>
<p>And for reigning Junior Development Champion Koby Bourke, the Queenslander was at last able to race more than just the clock with the addition of Speedway Champion Connor Smith to the Championship last round, the two youngsters again doing battle for round two.</p>
<p><strong>UNLIMITED SUPERBOAT</strong></p>
<p>Unlike round one, the circuit rotation for the second round of the season will be a departure from those used in the past, a circuit which is expected to be more reliant on boat performance than engine performance, although that said, you would be remiss to rule out a result very similar to the opening round.</p>
<p>Yes, Daryl Hutton is likely to be back in the mix, but the experienced Superboat campaigner admits that jumping straight into Slade Stanley’s Championship winning package and finding his feet first time out is an unrealistic expectation, although typical of the racer in Hutton &#8211; a driver who has battled big horsepower supercharged and twin-turbo powerplants in the past &#8211; he’s intrigued about just how Stanley was able to raise the mark as high as he did with a lot less power. Watch this space!</p>
<p>For New Zealand’s Rob Coley, he will finally get his hands on his all new ‘Poison Ivy’ package, the brand-new twin-turbo Nissan powered ‘Sprintec’ he’d sent from New Zealand a number of weeks ahead of the opening round only to find a late shipping change had seen the new machine trapped in a shipping container, and still in New Zealand as July 23 came around. A quick deal with Daniel DeVoigt saw Coley campaign ‘DEVO2’ for the season opener, gifting him fifth place after a spin in the second elimination final, but valuable championship points in a season that will see at least one clash with his New Zealand campaign.</p>
<p>Coley could be expected to take the fight to Mullan, although his new package may take some sorting, whilst Mullan has proven more than comfortable with his new Australian-made ‘PULSE’ hull and his self-built 583ci powerplant, he’s also well versed with the Cabarita venue and a multiple race winner there, so Coley will have his work cut out.</p>
<p>Expect too that Tremayne Jukes will be back in the mix. Campaigning ‘The Girlfriend’ with the new iteration of 400-Class powerplant with alloy heads running methanol fuel and the methanol injection system. Jukes was typically impressive last time out, taking the fight to Hutton and Krause, the former Unlimited winner at Cabarita ultimately though forced to settled for fourth after hitting an island during the second elimination final, spinning an impressive 360-degrees but landing in the wrong channel, the renavigation costing him valuable seconds and an almost certain place on the podium. What he lacks in power against the Unlimited machines, he will certainly make up for with experience, so keep a close eye on the brilliant blue ‘PULSE’ machine.</p>
<p>For Chris Edmonds &#8211; who has contributed significantly to building the awareness of the sport in the ‘Sunshine State’ thanks to his opening round antics &#8211; he will arrive at Cabarita with yet another new package, his fourth in just over a year.. Sadly last time out he suffered an engine setback with the crowd-pleasing supercharged monster he calls ‘Yippee Ki-Yay’ whilst his round ending incident in Daryl Hutton’s boat saw him searching for two new boats to continue his season &#8211; one for Hutton, the other for him..</p>
<p>To be fair, he had already purchased Slade Stanley’s proposed LSA project, having taken delivery of the engine last June to run in ‘Solid Gold’ the Aitchison hull he’s now moved on to nephew Lance Edmonds (to run in LS-Class), whilst the engine will power Stanley’s second ‘Stinger’ hull which was purchased ahead of the start of this season, Stanley applying the finishing touches to the hull in recent weeks. Named ‘4 PLAY’, Edmonds admitted he has no idea how the boat will handle, but based on his most recent laps in the Unlimited category, you can guarantee they’ll be exciting!</p>
<p>Glenn ‘Spider’ Roberts &#8211; like many of the drivers in the field &#8211; has endured a love-hate relationship with the Cabarita circuit, with it providing both his greatest moments and his toughest moments across a career that’s spanned almost 20 years in the sport.</p>
<p>Facing a third-placed finish in the Championship to close out the 2019 season, Roberts made heavy contact with the bank after running wide at ‘Bennies’ doing significant damage to his ‘Blown Budget’ hull, whilst the following two years saw that drama extend to residual mechanical and electrical issues that the predominantly self-funded driver had to resolve, a setback that often saw him miss valuable track time. Those issues continued into the opening round, but support from rival drivers Daryl Hutton and Scott Krause saw him back into the equation for the elimination finals, where one by one he outlasted many of them to once again finish on the podium, a fitting reward for never giving up, even when the odds were stacked against him.</p>
<p>This weekend Roberts will be back in action again, his 632ci big-block having received some more vital attention between rounds with Roberts intent on returning to the title battle, a big ask, but as the opening round showed, there’s never a ‘sure thing’..</p>
<p><strong>400-CLASS (International Group A)</strong></p>
<p>The big news ahead of the second round was the return of 2019 Champion Paul Kelly. Always a welcome addition to the 400-Class field, Covid setbacks and business commitments have kept the popular Queenslander away since his title winning season, but many expect to see the bright orange ‘4Zero Racing’ machine right back into the thick of the action from the outset, although that said, the pace at the front has certainly increased since he was last on the water!</p>
<p>Like Justin Roylance, Kelly will embrace the new look 400-Class formula that allows aluminium heads and methanol injection, Kelly joining Roylance in adopting the methanol injection system, both though having elected to retain cast-iron heads, the new formula a blueprint for the future of the class, although after a recent vote between stakeholders, it was acknowledged that all competitors will compete for Championship points this season.</p>
<p>After returning to the top step of the podium at the opening round, Jody Ely comes back to Cabarita as the points leader having won two of the last three races at the Tweed Valley circuit. This weekend he will look to consolidate his points lead, although he will be aware that it was actually Roylance who set the fastest time during the season opener, the reigning champion however failing to duplicate that mark during the all-important final. Kelly too is expected to present a challenge, although what three years out of the seat has done will quickly be evident, so too what is expected to be a very challenging track rotation.</p>
<p>Brendan Doyle’s podium finish in the new ‘PULSE’ hull was a welcome result during the opening round, a result which cements his reputation as a driver to watch this season, whilst Danny Knappick’s fourth placed finish likewise, is the result of some solid performances during the 2021 season, the ‘Tuff’n Up’ team finally starting to find form.</p>
<p>Whilst the burgeoning profile of the sport has attracted back a number of former competitors, the second round of the Championship may see the return of a former class champion, with two-time 400-Class title holder [2005-2006] Ken Kesper looking to jump back into the driver’s seat to sub for his brother Darrin who suffered a broken arm on the eve of the opening round, so keep a keen eye on the ‘Let’s Boogie’ machine.</p>
<p>Greg Harriman is another who will return to the fray, the ‘Apache’ driver though without team-mate Hugh Gilchrist who was expected to debut his own hull this weekend, work commitments however keeping him from the field, whilst Daniel Warburton rounds out the eight-boat field.</p>
<p><strong>LS-CLASS</strong></p>
<p>An impressive 18-boat field headlines the LS-Class for the second round, a record for the category despite a number of drivers still missing from the entry list promising a great future for the sport.</p>
<p>Leading the charge will be reigning champion Bastian Mullan, the 19-year old son of eight-time Australian Champion Phonsy Mullan, who has proven to be the new benchmark for the category, his pace at the opening round a real eye-opener for his rivals, although this weekend he will face another hard charger in West Australian Champion Daniel Salter.</p>
<p>Salter was slated to run at the opening round but a last minute setback saw the team sidelined, but this weekend he’s intent on reigniting the battle for the top spot on the podium having taken the fight to Mullan during the 2021 season final at Keith, Mullan sneaking through to take the round win by the narrowest of margins after Salter had led the timesheets for much of the day.</p>
<p>Whilst likely to put himself on the podium, laps at the notoriously tricky Cabarita venue may work against Salter, but the battle for a podium finish will certainly be something to watch.</p>
<p>Don’t discount 2019 champion Kyle Elphinstone either, victory over Mullan during the rain-shortened round at Cabarita earlier this year [2021 season] shows the New South Welshman has good pace at Cabarita, whilst Matt Malthouse has continued to prove that he is a contender and can never be discounted.</p>
<p>Throw in Paul Hill who despite his opening round crash at ‘Bennies’ is almost always a contender at his home track, the second of the Mullan brothers &#8211; Nate &#8211; who can turn on a stunning pace when he needs to, Jim Beaman, Lawrie Howlett and the O’Day father and son combination, and you have a strong field of drivers looking for any opportunity to sneak onto the podium, but behind them, the field is no less impressive.</p>
<p>Mike Hessell is always exciting to watch in ‘Borrowed Time’, and it’s only a matter of time before he makes his presence felt on the timesheets, whilst Darren Pollard &#8211; who debuted the ex-Justin Roylance ‘Stingray’ in the new look ‘Disturbed’ livery last time out &#8211; has the experience and the determination to make his presence felt as the team work to get themselves comfortable in the new package &#8211; although ahead of the round they were still battling technical challenges. They’ll also have their hands full as they campaign again their second hull ‘Twisted’ which was run by Matt Riley during the opening round as he waited for his new engine package to come together, sadly ‘Toe Cutter’ was a late scratching for this weekend, but will likely reappear at Keith for round three, the second boat instead run by Jade Atchison who will return to the seat for the first time after a practice crash at Temora earlier this year.</p>
<p>One driver who will make a popular return to competition is Cabarita’s Mitch Curtis, an important member of the Tweed Valley Jet Sprint Club who transitioned across from being a driver to managing the upkeep and maintenance of the Cabarita facility. Usually a man wearing a number of different hats across a race weekend, it’s great to see him get back to his passion and jump behind the wheel of ‘Smoke &#038; Mirror’ again. Knowing the circuit as well as he does, he could provide a few surprises this weekend.</p>
<p>And then there’s the rookies.. Noel Verning and Rodney Norton made solid starts to their Superboat careers last time out, Verning in particular coming to grips with the sport quite quickly, whilst Lance Edmonds moves from supporting his Uncle’s efforts in ‘Yippee Ki-Yay’ to the driver’s seat of Chris Edmonds’ former ‘Solid Gold’ package. Throw in Luke Walters who makes his debut in ‘Spartan’ and you have a big field of drivers all intent on putting on a show across the two days of competition.</p>
<p><strong>Junior Development</strong></p>
<p>The opening round of the 2022 season also saw a welcome challenge to reigning Junior Development champion Koby Bourke &#8211; rising speedway star Connor Smith transitioning across from four corners to the challenge of navigating a multi-corner V8 Superboat circuit, but he did so with great commitment and despite a few early setbacks, started to make gains on Bourke late in the weekend before the reigning champion threw in a blinding lap in the final to take the win.</p>
<p>Smith is back in action this weekend, and the ‘Drop Bear’ supported driver is already talking about a full-time transition across from Speedway to focus on building a career in the sport. Keep an eye on the 13-year old this weekend as he looks to take another step forward in his progression and apply more pressure to the reigning title holder.</p>
<p>For those that can’t be at the Tweed Valley venue, action from Sunday (August 28) will be streamed LIVE on YouTube (the link will be posted on www.facebook.com/V8Superboats) whilst a post-produced highlights package will be released on 7mate, and then 7+ in the weeks following (the opening program is scheduled for Saturday, September 24).</p>
<p>Tickets are available at the gate or via; <a href="https://www.ticketebo.com.au/v8superboats" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://www.ticketebo.com.au/v8superboats</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/big-field-set-for-v8-superboats-cabarita-return/">Big field set for V8 Superboats Cabarita return</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">26843</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Record crowd witnesses dramatic weekend at Cabarita</title>
		<link>https://powerboatracingworld.com/record-crowd-witnesses-dramatic-weekend-at-cabarita/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Henshelwood]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Jun 2021 06:27:29 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Australian V8 Superboat Championships]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://397566-www.web.tornado-node.net/?p=21002</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The Cabarita round of the Penrite Australian V8 Superboats Championship provided plenty of surprises across the two days of competition.</p>
<p>Arguably the greatest of those surprises came in Unlimited Superboat, with runaway points leader and reigning champion Slade Stanley coming unstuck for the first time since the debut of his new package at the World Series in 2018.</p>
<p>The ‘Hazardous’ driver inverted his boat whilst holding a comfortable advantage over title rival Phonsy Mullan in the second final.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/record-crowd-witnesses-dramatic-weekend-at-cabarita/">Record crowd witnesses dramatic weekend at Cabarita</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Cabarita round of the Penrite Australian V8 Superboats Championship provided plenty of surprises across the two days of competition.</p>
<p>Arguably the greatest of those surprises came in Unlimited Superboat, with runaway points leader and reigning champion Slade Stanley coming unstuck for the first time since the debut of his new package at the World Series in 2018.</p>
<p>The ‘Hazardous’ driver inverted his boat whilst holding a comfortable advantage over title rival Phonsy Mullan in the second final.</p>
<p>That was the only invitation Mullan needed, the seven-time AUS#1 taking his first win since he wrapped up the 2018 UIM World Series title at Cabarita in late 2018, the final though presenting a significant challenge with former champions Daryl Hutton and Scott Krause also taking a forward step in performance.</p>
<p>Mullan’s win wasn’t the only one for the Victorian-based team, team-mate Jody Ely finally broke Justin Roylance’s stranglehold on 400-Class, whilst Mullan’s eldest son Bastian claimed his second consecutive LS-Class win with a dominant display in the final to draw equal in the points race with Keith winner Matt Malthouse.</p>
<p>Supported by a new look Tweed Valley Jet Sprint Club committee, the event was an unmitigated success with sell-out crowds on both days of racing, whilst the media exposure for the sport also rated off the charts, laying more solid foundations for the ongoing growth of the sport.</p>
<p><b>UNLIMITED SUPERBOAT</b><br />
The big news of the Cabarita round was the debut of Sam Everingham’s ‘Thirsty Merc’, an all new package powered by a twin-turbo 6.3-litre Mercedes-AMG V8 powerplant and fibreglass ‘Sleekline’ hull.</p>
<p>Resplendent in a dark grey Mercedes paint with brilliant orange flashes within the engine bay, the big concern ahead of the boats debut was whether it would run as planned, but with an experienced team onboard, the new machine was soon fired up and running perfectly on the water, Everingham focusing on returning to the wheel after a lengthy sabbatical away from the seat in preparing the new boat for its debut.</p>
<p>Another driver coming back from a lengthy period away from competition was Mildura’s Andrew Page, the popular Unlimited driver unsure about how he would fare after more than five years out of the seat to return one of the most dramatic boats in the sport’s history to the water, a big crowd circling ‘Kamakazi’ as it was fired up for the first time, the supercharged 427 with more than 1850-horsepower making the ground shake as it started.</p>
<p>With the engine firing Pagey’s second concern was remembering how to steer it.. “I’ve been away from the sport so long I’m past rusty, I’m corroded..”, he quipped.</p>
<p>Ultimately it all came back to him, the thunderous Unlimited machine raising the big Cabarita crowd to their feet every time it circulated.</p>
<p>Sadly we weren’t without casualties, the first of which was Adam Fairbairn who failed to make the event, such is the temperamental nature of the Unlimited boats, whilst for crowd favourite Glenn Roberts, he completed the third qualifier with smoke pouring from the rear of ‘Blown Budget’. Initially it looked to be just an oil leak, but the team discovered a bigger issue with the number two cylinder, retiring the boat from the round, although in true V8 Superboats fashion, the six foot, eight Victorian was soon offered options to continue his weekend, in the end, stepping in with former champion Daryl Hutton.</p>
<p>“There’s been times across the years when ‘Spider’ [Roberts] has come to our aid and offered me not just a boat to drive, but also an engine, in some cases that loan has led to a win, so there was no question we’d make the offer,” Hutton confirmed.</p>
<p>Andrew Page was another to offer Roberts a lifeline, but on jumping in the boat it was pretty clear that major modifications would need to be made, Roberts quipping that he could drive ‘Kamikazi’ but with one hand on the wheel and the other operating Pagey’s [foot] throttle..!</p>
<p>Coming into the Cabarita round, reigning Unlimited World Champion Phonsy Mullan confirmed he’d made further changes to his ‘Jetspeed’ hull since the second round, the ‘RAMJET’ team leader hoping to further close down Slade Stanley’s advantage, and whilst happy with some more gains, the track rotation really suited Stanley’s style, the points leader quickly circulating in the 41s, his best qualifying time in the end 2.2-seconds clear of Mullan.</p>
<p>By the close of qualifying, former 400-Class Champion Ben Hathaway had thrown down the gauntlet to his rivals to be third fastest in Matt Malthouse’s ‘NoodNutz’ LS-Class machine, although the result didn’t come cleanly, a reverse bucket failure in the final qualifier landing him hard on the bank below the control tower, fortunately without too much damage, although it wasn’t to be the last time the orange ‘Stinger’ would end a session that way.</p>
<p>With a best of 44.224 in Sunday’s fourth qualifier, Hathaway went into the finals third, mere tenths clear of Scott Krause (44.443) and Daryl Hutton (44.657), whilst Mitch Roylance (45.222) and Daniel de Voigt (45.298) weren’t far behind.</p>
<p>Times continued to improve in the first final [Top 12], Stanley coming ever so close to breaking into the 40s, his 41.108 blitzing the field, with everyone else left to fight over second, Mullan holding the advantage with a 44.213, but only just, with Hutton improving by four tenths to set a 44.237, the closest he’d been to his long-time rival for many years.</p>
<p>Scott Krause was fifth fastest behind the giant-killing efforts of Ben Hathaway, but only just, with Daniel de Voigt &#8211; who had recovered overnight from an engine fire post Q2 which fried some vital electrics &#8211; claiming fifth, his 45.085 just three one hundredths slower than the former champion, the pair just four tenths faster than Mitch Roylance.. It was getting tight at the top!</p>
<p>Sadly though, despite being within reach of a podium finish, Mitch Roylance missed the cut for the second final, joining Sam Everingham (49.406), Glenn Roberts (50.926) and Andrew Page (55.145) on the bank to watch the final two runs play out &#8211; and they were certainly entertained..</p>
<p>The action came thick and fast, with first Daniel de Voigt out after an issue in the closing stages of the run, ending up on top of an island after a relatively innocuous off pushing for time, fortunately with little damage.</p>
<p>Scott Krause was out next for his run in the new look ‘Burson Auto Parts’ machine, to go top with a 45.112, three quarters of a second off his best, putting him within striking distance of Daryl Hutton and Ben Hathaway.</p>
<p>Hathaway was next up, the 2017 400-Class champion just running wide after recording the first split time, a time which may well have put him into the final three, but unfortunately his weekend was over despite a less aggressive exit than his final qualifier, the team’s biggest concern being the condition of the boat ahead of Matt Malthouse’s run in the LS-Class final.</p>
<p>That brought Daryl Hutton to the line, the expat New Zealander running a slightly longer pedal than usual after modifying the boat to allow Glenn Roberts to ‘B’ drive, but the change had done him no harm, Hutton putting down a blistering lap of 44.695 to go P1, with Mullan and Stanley to come.</p>
<p><img data-recalc-dims="1" fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-21004" src="https://i0.wp.com/397566-www.web.tornado-node.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/R321_Cabarita_Phonsy_Mullan_cheq_flag_PCI2368_med2-1.jpg?resize=1000%2C557&#038;ssl=1" alt="" width="1000" height="557" srcset="https://i0.wp.com/powerboatracingworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/R321_Cabarita_Phonsy_Mullan_cheq_flag_PCI2368_med2-1.jpg?w=1000&amp;ssl=1 1000w, https://i0.wp.com/powerboatracingworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/R321_Cabarita_Phonsy_Mullan_cheq_flag_PCI2368_med2-1.jpg?resize=768%2C428&amp;ssl=1 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></p>
<p>Phonsy Mullan (above) was next out, the reigning world title holder returning to the 43s to put Scott Krause on the bubble, with points leader Stanley yet to record a lap.</p>
<p>Sadly though for the husband and wife team, their nine-race winning streak was to come to an end after just two corners, Stanley running wide on the exit of the left-hander immediately after the opening 180-degree turn, to roll sideways across the island and gently roll upside-down into the channel.</p>
<p>The experienced Safety Crew were quickly on the scene, Slade emerging first whilst Vanessa was out soon after, the team’s run at a tenth straight win and their ongoing lead of the championship coming to a sudden end.</p>
<p>“It wasn’t part of the plan, but anyway, it’s all part of racing,” Stanley lamented afterwards. “I’ve been cutting the banks all day [and] just cut it a little fine and it bounced me off &#8211; I expected it to bounce me off and run wide, then get back on it, but it just kept sliding and over we went. I was keen to drop down into that 40-second bracket &#8211; but it just wasn’t to be. I went in a little hard &#8211; didn’t need to, but I’m here to race, so I’m always pushing.”</p>
<p>With Stanley out, that gave Scott Krause a reprieve and entry into the final three, the Temora local needing no second invitation to close out the day with his fastest run of the weekend and put his rivals on notice &#8211; the bar set at a 44.408.</p>
<p>Relishing a much nicer hull and coming to terms with his twin-turbo powerplant, Daryl Hutton admitted to dialling down the boost for the finals at Cabarita making the boat easier to drive, the ‘American Automotive’ machine too carding its best time of the day to go sub-44 with a 43.855.</p>
<p>Needing to find the form he showed during the final qualifier, Phonsy Mullan pushed just hard enough to take the top step and return to victory lane for the first time since November 2018, in the process taking the championship points lead, albeit by just two points over Slade Stanley.</p>
<p>“Pretty happy overall we got it done,” Mullan admitted afterwards. “To get three boats here and get three wins was just amazing at the end of the day, especially with everything we had to go through with Melbourne’s Covid restrictions, but we made it with all three teams, so thanks to everyone involved both here and back at the shop.”</p>
<p><b>400-CLASS</b> (GROUP A)<br />
The 400-Class field was buoyed by the addition of reigning World#3 Daniel James just days out from the Cabarita event, the former 350-Class champion joining Brendan Doyle in ‘The Girlfriend’ to build on data for the introduction of a second ‘PULSE’ hull for round four.</p>
<p>Sadly though their event was short-lived after Doyle suffered a big exit from the track during the third qualifier whilst fighting Brett Thornton for the third fastest time, the impact whilst slightly bending the deck of the hull upward, also saw a 9000rpm rev on the engine, JRE’s Brad James suggesting the safest option was to retire the boat, leaving his brother with just a single run to his name in the opening session.</p>
<p>They weren’t the only casualties either.. Hugh Gilchrist also suffered a big off during Sunday’s final qualifier, the notorious ‘Benny’s’ corner claiming him on the run into the corner &#8211; fortunately he and Narelle Pellow-Djukic were okay, but the ‘Apache’ boat was forced into retirement, ending the weekend for both he and team-mate Greg Harriman.</p>
<p>By the close of qualifying a pattern had emerged, and that pattern had a familiar feel to it, with Jody Ely (below) and Justin Roylance separated by mere hundredths, the pendulum swinging both ways all the way up until the final session, Ely ultimately grabbing the top spot with a best of 45.512, Roylance close behind with a 45.682, the pair holding an advantage of more than a second over Brett Thornton’s 46.853.</p>
<p><img data-recalc-dims="1" decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-21005" src="https://i0.wp.com/397566-www.web.tornado-node.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/R321_Cabarita_P_Ely_PCI0864_med2.jpg?resize=1000%2C557&#038;ssl=1" alt="" width="1000" height="557" srcset="https://i0.wp.com/powerboatracingworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/R321_Cabarita_P_Ely_PCI0864_med2.jpg?w=1000&amp;ssl=1 1000w, https://i0.wp.com/powerboatracingworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/R321_Cabarita_P_Ely_PCI0864_med2.jpg?resize=768%2C428&amp;ssl=1 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></p>
<p>With the ‘Apache’ and ‘The Girlfriend’ teams both sidelined, that paved the way for former ski-race regulars Danny Knappick and Darren Tickell to break into the finals, the rookie team carefully negotiating the challenging Cabarita layout to gain valuable experience and championship points before sadly coming to a premature stop in the Top 6 with a technical issue, smoke pouring from the rear of the boat, but not before claiming fifth for the round.</p>
<p>Despite Justin Roylance’s best efforts, he couldn’t top his rival at any stage throughout the three finals, Ely ultimately extending his advantage in the final three to claim the win by the biggest margin of the season to date, his blistering 45.018, nine tenths faster than Roylance’s 45.969.</p>
<p>Behind them former champion Brett Thornton had thrown his hat into the ring to comfortably out-pace four-time AUS#1 Mark Garlick, the ‘Still Obsessed’ team making it into the final three where he fell eight tenths shy of Roylance after closing the gap to less than half a second in the Top 6.</p>
<p>An elated Ely celebrated finally breaking through to end Roylance’s four-race winning streak, the Victorian claiming his first win since back-to-back Temora victories in 2018..</p>
<p>“It’s been a hard year but we’ve certainly been working very hard for this,” Ely admitted. “Consistency has been the key, if you’re not consistent, you’re not going to be there, but we’ve thrown everything at it to get here so I’m very happy to be back on top of the podium.”</p>
<p><b>LS-CLASS</b><br />
The biggest challenge to the LS-Class field at Cabarita was the efforts of local drivers Dwayne Mezzadri and Mitch Curtis, the two drivers having spent countless hours working on behalf of the Tweed Valley Jet Sprint Club towards what quickly became their biggest event in recent years with sellout crowds on both days &#8211; their challenge, juggling driving with countless hours behind the scenes organising the event.</p>
<p>That ultimately had an impact on both their performances, reigning AUS#2 Mezzadri suffering the greatest setback after a big rollover in the final qualifier brought a premature end to the round in what so far has been a very frustrating season for the popular ‘Unleashed’ driver.</p>
<p>Sadly Mitch Curtis didn’t fare too much better after a strong showing at Temora, ‘Smoke and Mirror’ though making it through to the Top 12 unscathed to grab some more valuable championship points, but it was clear in both counts their efforts to ensure a great event had come at a cost to their performances on track.</p>
<p>For Mike Hessell he too had a weekend to forget, mechanical issues sidelining ‘Borrowed Time’ on Saturday afternoon, to join Mezzadri in retirement ahead of the finals.</p>
<p>Despite the setbacks for the local drivers though, the LS-Class racing continued to impress with a mix of solid performances from the points leaders &#8211; all of whom were rookies at Cabarita &#8211; whilst some of the locals who were returning to the Penrite Series at their ‘local’ circuit, put in their own strong performances to mix it with some of their more experienced rivals.</p>
<p>Ultimately though the battle for class supremacy continued between points leader and Keith round winner Matt Malthouse, and rising star Bastian Mullan, the teenager looking to add to his Temora victory with a win at Cabarita on his 18th birthday.</p>
<p>Both teams though were mindful they were new to the demanding Cabarita layout and mindful too that any setback could have a big impact on the championship, especially with such a big field of entries.</p>
<p>Ultimately it was Bastian Mullan who emerged fastest after the five rounds of qualifying, the ‘RIPSHIFT’ driver setting his best lap during Sunday’s final session to be comfortably clear of the field, with Nick Druery an impressive second, the ‘Hazzmat’ driver able to put prior Club Day experience at Cabarita to good use, although his 49.673 was down on Mullan’s impressive 46.747.</p>
<p>Behind Druery things were tight, reigning champion Kyle Elphinstone (49.936), points leader Matt Malthouse (49.990) and Darren Pollard (50.241) making it four boats within half a second all vying for a position in the top six.</p>
<p>Heading into the Top 12 things started to heat up with Matt Malthouse stepping up another gear to close to within 37 one hundredths of Mullan, whose 47.225 saw him continue to hold P1. Nick Druery continued his impressive form to be third, ahead of Kyle Elphinstone and ‘Solid Gold’ team-mate Chris Edmonds, whilst local driver Paul Hill put in a stunning drive to claim the final position in the Top 6, the ‘Slicer’ driver finding form at the right time of the day.</p>
<p>By the second final we were right in the thick of the title fight with Mullan continuing to set the pace, dropping back into the 46s, but his margin over title rival Malthouse had dropped to just 13 one hundredths, whilst Paul Hill caught the field by surprise to find almost two full seconds and claim a position in the final despite improvements from reigning champion Kyle Elphinstone and Chris Edmonds. Nick Druery sadly fell marginally short of his best, but in the battle with employer Edmonds, was able to hold onto fifth for the weekend and work his way forward in the championship standings.</p>
<p>Heading into the final the fans were ready for another great battle between Mullan and Malthouse, but whilst both ran near flawless laps, it was Mullan who proved to have more in reserve, the teenager claiming a dominant win on his 18th birthday to carve 1.2-seconds off his best to join Malthouse at the top of the championship points table.</p>
<p>Malthouse meanwhile was able to continue his finals consistency to claim second, whilst sadly for Paul Hill, he made a navigational error in his final run but nonetheless impressed to claim third on his return to the championship.</p>
<p>“It was a good run, the boat felt good all weekend, I’m just really happy with the result for all three of us [GM Motorsport team drivers],” Mullan said. “I just said to myself that I needed to keep it in the middle of the track and creep up on it and it should be alright.”</p>
<p><b>JUNIOR DEVELOPMENT</b><br />
Unfortunately for the Junior Development class, the second driver expected for the Cabarita round was a last minute cancelation, leaving Koby Bourke to again fly the flag for the juniors, the Queenslander mixing football commitments with his efforts in the boat on what was a big weekend that saw a rare error that very nearly inverted him on an island during qualifying. Once on top of that though he was again a picture of consistency.</p>
<p><b>2021 Penrite Australian V8 Superboat Championships &#8211; Series Points</b><br />
<b>Unlimited Superboat </b>(after round three of seven)<br />
1. <b>Phonsy Mullan</b> (RAMJET) &#8211; 102-points, 2. Slade Stanley (Hazardous) &#8211; 100, 3. Scott Krause (KAOS) &#8211; 90, 4. Ben Hathaway (NoodNutz Racing) &#8211; 80, 5. Daryl Hutton (Phoenix Lubricants) &#8211; 77, 6. Mitch Roylance (BlackJack) &#8211; 72, 7. Glenn Roberts (Blown Budget) &#8211; 62, 8. Mick Carroll (Excalibur) &#8211; 28, 9. Daniel de Voigt (DEVO Racing) &#8211; 24, 10. Sam Everingham (Thirsty Merc) &#8211; 20, 11. Andrew Page (Kamakazi) &#8211; 16</p>
<p><b>400-Class </b>(Group A) (after round three of seven)<br />
1. <b>Justin Roylance</b> (Outlaw67) &#8211; 105-points, 2. Jody Ely (Rampage) &#8211; 102, 3. Brendan Doyle (The Girlfriend) &#8211; 78, 4. Greg Harriman (Apache) &#8211; 74, 5. Hugh Gilchrist (Apache) &#8211; 68, 6. Brett Thornton (Still Obsessed) &#8211; 58, 7. Mark Garlick (Grumpy) &#8211; 54, 8. Danny Knappick (Tuff N Up) &#8211; 44, 9. Ron O’Day (Agro-Vation) &#8211; 26, 10. Daniel James (The Girlfriend) &#8211; 22, 11. Tyler O’Day (Agro-Vation) &#8211; 20</p>
<p><b>LS-Class</b> (after round three of seven)<br />
1. <b>Matt Malthouse </b>(NoodNutz Racing) &#8211; 102-points, 1. <b>Bastian Mullan </b>(Ripshift) &#8211; 102, 3. Nate Mullan (Ripshift) &#8211; 81, 4. Chris Edmonds (Solid Gold) &#8211; 76, 5. Kyle Elphinstone (Blackout Racing) &#8211; 72, 6. Jim Beaman (JB Racing) &#8211; 64, 7. Dwayne Mezzadri (Unleashed) &#8211; 42, 8. Robert Westerink (The Contractor) &#8211; 42, 9. Nick Druery (Hazzmat) &#8211; 40, 10. Mitch Curtis (Smoke &amp; Mirror) &#8211; 38, 11. Matt Riley (Toe Cutter) &#8211; 32, 12. Paul Hill (Slicer) &#8211; 30, 12. Bill Biggin (JB Racing) &#8211; 30, 14. Darren Pollard (Toe Cutter) &#8211; 28, 15. Rob Johnston (Almost There) &#8211; 22, 16. Mike Hessell (Borrowed Time) &#8211; 18</p>
<p><b>Junior Development</b> (after round three of seven)<br />
1. <b>Koby Bourke</b> (Lil Psycho) &#8211; 108-points</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/record-crowd-witnesses-dramatic-weekend-at-cabarita/">Record crowd witnesses dramatic weekend at Cabarita</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">21002</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Penrite V8 Superboats make welcome return to the Tweed Valley</title>
		<link>https://powerboatracingworld.com/penrite-v8-superboats-make-welcome-return-to-the-tweed-valley/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Henshelwood]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jun 2021 14:13:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Australian V8 Superboat Championships]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://397566-www.web.tornado-node.net/?p=20927</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The 2021 Penrite Australian V8 Superboats Championship returns to the Tweed Valley on June 19-20 after more than 18-months away, the after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic very nearly forcing another postponement after a recent Melbourne outbreak would have left many of the leading contenders caught up in lockdown.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/penrite-v8-superboats-make-welcome-return-to-the-tweed-valley/">Penrite V8 Superboats make welcome return to the Tweed Valley</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The 2021 Penrite Australian V8 Superboats Championship returns to the Tweed Valley on June 19-20 after more than 18-months away, the after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic very nearly forcing another postponement after a recent Melbourne outbreak would have left many of the leading contenders caught up in lockdown.</p>
<p>Fortunately, despite forcing some teams to race against the clock to make the Cabarita round, we expect that all 37 teams will be in attendance, a field which will break most recent records, such is the momentum behind the sport after a long period in hibernation during 2020.</p>
<p>The Unlimited Superboat field will once more lead the way with an expanded entry list for the first of the back-to-back Cabarita rounds (the second scheduled for August 7-8), an entry which includes one of the most anticipated debuts in recent years, Sam Everingham’s ‘Thirsty Merc’.</p>
<p>Those fans of the sport who have been keeping a close eye on what’s been going on behind closed doors may have been party to some recently circulated images of an immaculate 6.3-litre twin-turbo Mercedes-AMG V8 powerplant, that will power an all-new hull, the new setup campaigned by V8 Superboats part-timer Sam Everingham.</p>
<p>The project has been a long time in development, the nature of most V8 Superboats being the many and varied bespoke parts in each package, Everingham adding another level of challenge by adopting a powerplant that has never seen Jetboat competition (certainly in Australia) before, the challenge of adapting parts as well as the twin-turbo induction system providing plenty of headaches.</p>
<p>That said, Everingham has made no secret of the fact that he would not debut the boat until he was satisfied it was right and that it not only performed, but in adapting the iconic German three-pointed star to V8 Superboats, it had to look the part as well..  Whilst Everingham’s debut will attract plenty of attention, arguably the greatest attention will be focused on the ongoing battle for the top step of the podium between reigning Australian Champion Slade Stanley and reigning World Champion, Phonsy Mullan.</p>
<p>Stanley has continued his impressive 2019 form into back-to-back wins to fire up the 2021 Penrite season, but Mullan has been slowly closing the gap, and whilst improving the new ‘Jetspeed’ package for Temora, he’s spent countless hours in recent weeks working to improve the boat even further, ahead of what could be a huge forward step for the fourth round of the season on our return to Cabarita. The seven-time AUS#1 has admitted to working on a backup project that may have been ready for the June event, however with a complete repair required on the ‘RIPSHIFT’ LS machine after another big off at Temora, the team just didn’t have the time to complete both projects ahead of round three..</p>
<p>With new entries in all four categories, and a record 14 teams for the LS-Class for this round, there will be no shortage of action across the two days of competition, with three rounds of qualifying set for Saturday, and two rounds and the finals scheduled on Sunday &#8211; all racing conducted between 10:00am and 3:00pm on both days.</p>
<p>For those that can’t be at the Tweed Valley venue, Sunday’s action will be streamed LIVE on Facebook (www.facebook.com/V8Superboats) whilst a post-produced highlights package will be released on Fox Sports Australia and Kayo Sports (running at the same time as Fox) a month afterwards, check local guides for details.</p>
<p><strong>UNLIMITED SUPERBOAT</strong></p>
<p>The Cabarita venue is arguably the most popular on the V8 Superboat calendar, not the least because of it’s coastal location, being situated just south of the iconic Gold Coast, providing an idyllic venue for the southern-based teams as they face the onset of winter..</p>
<p>Despite it’s popularity though, the relatively straight forward layout often provides some big moments for the teams, with the likes of Phonsy Mullan, Daryl Hutton and Glenn Roberts all falling victim to the demanding Cabarita layout in past seasons, whilst for those new to the sport, the nine-island layout presents its own challenge, regardless of the speed you’re traveling..!</p>
<p>He may have suffered a setback last time he was at Cabarita with his all-new ‘Jetspeed’ hull, and the subsequent mechanical issue that sidelined him ahead of the finals, but Phonsy Mullan returns to the Tweed Valley venue looking to make an impression on long-time rival Slade Stanley in the championship race. The team are hoping that further tweaks to the RAMJET hull and ongoing development with their jet unit will close the gap even further and spice up the competition.</p>
<p>The points leaders though won’t have things all their own way, as former champion Scott Krause will also be in the mix, whilst fellow former AUS#1 Daryl Hutton will be looking to improve on his Temora performance in his new ‘Stinger’ hull, having taken delivery of Slade Stanley’s spare after suffering that boat destroying off at Keith during the season-opener.</p>
<p>Sadly, a rare navigational error at Temora kept the two-time champion from an assault on the podium, although he’d already signalled that the new hull will significantly close the gap to the leaders, promising for a great fight at the top of the timesheets.</p>
<p>The leading quartet though won’t be alone, certainly not when it comes to Cabarita, which is a venue that is well known to Glenn ‘Spider’ Roberts, the Victorian having placed second to Stanley in 2019, whilst he also claimed second in 2018 &#8211; the popular Unlimited driver always a threat at a circuit he regularly attends on Club Days, the fact that the races occur during daylight hours another advantage given his compromised eyesight.</p>
<p>Round three will also see a number of returning drivers, including Daniel deVoigt (DEVO Racing), Andrew Page (Kamakazi) and Sam Everingham (Thirsty Merc).</p>
<p>Page campaigns one of the most aggressive boats in the sport, a supercharged 427ci, 1400-horsepower monster that’s frightening at idle, much less at speed.. Pagey has been battling technical issues all season, but was entered to return to the seat at both Keith and Temora, with late setbacks keeping the boat from round two, but he’s all set for Cabarita and will surely entertain!</p>
<p>Everingham too is an entertainer, his new Mercedes-AMG powered machine though likely to see a conservative start, such has been the team’s investment in time and resources, seat time and the acquisition of data the main focus for round three.</p>
<p>With Ben Hathaway expected to push the top drivers in the underpowered ‘Nood Nutz’ LS entry of Matt Malthouse, and Mitch Roylance continuing to apply pressure to the leaders with his ‘little’ naturally-aspirated 410, there will be plenty to keep the fans entertained, whilst for Adam Fairbairn, his Unlimited debut will provide yet another element to what promises to be an outstanding weekend of competition.</p>
<p><strong>400-CLASS (International Group A)</strong></p>
<p>We had hoped that reigning 400-Class champion Paul Kelly may have returned for his ‘home’ round, but sadly work commitments off the back of a challenging 2020 will see the popular Queenslander miss yet another event, although it’s likely he’ll be part of the big Tweed Coast crowd cheering on his rivals, and the ongoing battle between ‘Jetspeed’ team-mates Justin Roylance and Jody Ely..</p>
<p>Roylance returns to the venue that handed him his maiden V8 Superboats victory at the close of the 2019 season as points leader. Since that first win, the ‘Outlaw’ driver has been undefeated, having won every 400-Class final since, Ely though getting closest last time out at Temora to miss the top spot of the podium by just eight one hundredths of a second!</p>
<p>This weekend they’ll continue the fight for the top step of the podium, but can expect to see increased challenges from former champions Mark Garlick and Brett Thornton, for which Cabarita is their home circuit, and a venue on which they have tasted success in the past.</p>
<p>Throw in the surprise package of the 2021 season in Brendan Doyle, and you have the potential of a five-way fight for victory with any number of drivers sitting in the wings to pick up a podium position should the contenders falter &#8211; and history has shown, they often do..!</p>
<p><strong>LS-CLASS</strong></p>
<p>Arguably the big story of 2021 has been the emergence of the LS-Class, a category that has developed it’s own following since the opening round of the season with some outstanding racing and some even bigger action..!</p>
<p>Whilst the reigning champion may well have started as pre-season favourite with a new multiple championship winning hull and updated engine package, for Kyle Elphinstone the opening two rounds have provided anything but joy.. A drive belt failure on his dry-sump engine system saw an expensive rebuild after just a single run at Keith, whilst a persistent electrical issue &#8211; which was a big feature for many of the LS-Class teams at Temora &#8211; sidelined him whilst in contention last time out, leaving him well behind in the points.</p>
<p>The drivers to take advantage though have been either end of the experience spectrum &#8211; former competitor Matt Malthouse, who has been sharing his ‘Nood Nutz’ machine with 2017 400-Class title holder Ben Hathaway, and brothers Bastian and Nate Mullan (the teenage sons of seven-time AUS#1 Phonsy) going head-to-head, the trio filling all three finals positions in both finals so far this year.</p>
<p>The outcome of those finals has been another story, the Mullan brothers both exiting in spectacular style at Keith, whilst Nate delivered another memorable exit in the final at Temora, providing the team with a second hull rebuild in as many months.</p>
<p>Malthouse meanwhile has continued to impress, using maturity to his advantage to attack when ready, with some measured drives across both events to lead the points coming into the third round, although it is Bastian Mullan who comes in as the most recent winner of a final, having topped the timesheets at Temora, to sit just three points off the championship lead.</p>
<p>How the Mullan brothers will fare at Cabarita will be the focus of much speculation, although both have shown they are not afraid to have a go, Bastian arguably the more experienced and measured, whilst Nate has shown that across an event, he is capable of adapting to the conditions quickly, and could be expected to deliver the same again this weekend &#8211; as to whether that’s good enough to deliver him his third final, time will tell. The other unknown is just how well the boat will fare, having been repaired in-house at GM Motorsport after a second big knock, whilst across the paddock, Matt Malthouse comes into the round with Ben Hathaway’s past experiences to call on, the Victorian also turning laps in the boat in the Unlimited category, so they will have plenty of data to call on.</p>
<p>Whilst the title contenders will be the ones to watch, a return to Cabarita also provides the local teams with an opportunity, whilst you could also expect that former round winner and reigning champion Kyle Elphinstone will be keen to get his title defence back on track.</p>
<p>Dwayne Mezzadri, Mitch Curtis, Chris Edmonds, Nick Druery and Paul Hill have all turned laps at Cabarita over the last 12 months during club days at the Tweed Valley circuit, so will have the jump on some of those teams who have not competed at Cabarita in the past, Mezzadri one who will be keen to revive his 2019 performances where he ran second to points leader Kyle Elphinstone in every round he entered.</p>
<p>On top of that, Robert Westerink returns to Cabarita having narrowly missed a podium berth at Temora, whilst Matt Riley, Darren Pollard, Mike Hessell and Jim Beaman will be looking to build on their experiences from Keith and Temora, Beaman this round running a single entry with Bill Biggin committed elsewhere for the weekend.</p>
<p>And for the fans of the new Junior Development concept, great news for Koby Bourke who will share the ‘Lil Pyscho’ machine with Slater Ruby this weekend, giving the points leader some additional motivation for the round.</p>
<p>The third round of the 2021 Penrite Australian V8 Superboat Championships will be contested at the Tweed Valley Jet Sprint Club across two days (19-20 June), with gates open at 8:00am on both Saturday and Sunday.</p>
<p>Tickets are available at the gate or via;</p>
<p><a href="https://www.v8superboats.com.au/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">v8superboats.com.au</a></p>
<p>For those unable to make the event this weekend, a live stream can be viewed on Sunday, June 20 via <a href="https://www.facebook.com/V8Superboats" target="_blank" rel="noopener">facebook.com/V8Superboats</a> where results and updates will also be posted, but if you live in the area, do yourself a big favour, and drop down to the Tweed Valley Jet Sprint Club on Round Mountain Road, Cabarita Beach to take in some of the action live, you certainly won’t be disappointed!</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com/penrite-v8-superboats-make-welcome-return-to-the-tweed-valley/">Penrite V8 Superboats make welcome return to the Tweed Valley</a> appeared first on <a href="https://powerboatracingworld.com">Powerboat Racing World</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">20927</post-id>	</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
