Rod Nash Racing
Manufacturer | Ford |
---|---|
Team Principal | Rod Nash |
Team Manager | Darron Tait |
Race Drivers | 55. Chaz Mostert |
Chassis | Ford FG X Falcon |
Debut | 1998 |
Drivers' Championships | 0 |
Round wins | 1 |
Race wins | 4 |
Pole positions | 9 |
2015 position | 8th (2,910 points) |
Rod Nash Racing is a V8 Supercar racing entity, owned by Rod Nash. The current driver is Chaz Mostert. Nash owns a V8 Supercar Racing Entitlement Contract and his #55 entry is currently run by Prodrive Racing Australia, utilising a Ford FG X Falcon.
Racing history
Privateer entry
Rod Nash first appeared in the series in 1998 after purchasing a Holden VS Commodore from Wayne Gardner Racing.[1] Nash ran the car again in 1999 debuting a new VT Commodore at Bathurst. In 2000 Nash hired Cameron McConville to drive the car before appearing in a 2nd VT later in the year.[2] In 2001 Tony Longhurst drove the car with Nash and Tony Ricciardello driving the car in the endurance races.[3]
Team Brock
For 2002, Nash formed an alliance with Peter Brock and ran Craig Baird under the Team Brock banner with Mark Noske co-driving at the Queensland 500 and Brock at the Bathurst 1000.[4]
Ford Performance Racing
In 2003, Nash leased his Racing Entitlement Contract to Ford Performance Racing allowing them to enter a third Ford BA Falcon for David Besnard.[5]
Perkins Engineering
For the 2004 Season, Nash did a deal with Larry Perkins to run a Castrol sponsored VX Commodore out of the Perkins Engineering workshop with Tony Longhurst driving. Alex Davison replaced Longhurst for the last two rounds and drove a Perkins VZ Commodore for most of 2005, being replaced by Owen Kelly for the last two rounds.[6][7]
Paul Morris Motorsport
In 2006, Nash purchased a VZ Commodore from Paul Morris Motorsport with Steve Owen driving, teaming with Tony Longhurst to finish 7th at Bathurst.[8] In 2007, Owen once again drove with the same car but now prepared by International Racing Cars Australia. They became a privateer team over the season as well, losing support from Holden. The team struggled at the beginning of the season, but started to find form finishing 6th at Bathurst. Owen finished 19th while the team finished just outside the top 10 in 11th in the teams' championship.[9]
Tony D'Alberto Racing
In 2008, Nash formed an alliance with Tony D'Alberto Racing, who acquired a Walkinshaw Racing built VE Commodore. Tony D'Alberto shared the Car with Jason Bargwanna in the endurance races.[10] The relationship continued in 2009 with Andrew Thompson joining for the endurance races.[11] After two seasons together, Nash had a new opportunity with Ford Performance Racing and Tony D'Alberto Racing and Nash separated.[12]
Ford Performance Racing/Prodrive Racing Australia
Late in 2009, Nash signed a deal with Ford Performance Racing for a fully prepared Ford FG Falcon, with continued sponsorship from the Bottle-O chain of liquor stores. The car was driven by Paul Dumbrell.[13][14] After winning a race at Sandown, Dumbrell again raced the car in 2011 before retiring and being replaced for 2012 by David Reynolds.[15] A season of promise was highlighted by 2nd place at Bathurst.[16]
In January 2013, Rod Nash in partnership with Rusty French purchased Ford Performance Racing from Prodrive.[17]
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David Reynolds driving the #55 Bottle-O Racing Team Ford FG Falcon in 2012
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David Reynolds drove the #55 Bottle-O Racing Team Ford FG Falcon in 2014
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The Ford FG Falcon of David Reynolds at the 2015 Clipsal 500 Adelaide
V8 Supercar drivers
The following is a list of drivers who have driven for the team in V8 Supercars, in order of their first appearance. Drivers who only drove for the team on a part-time basis are listed in italics.
- Rod Nash (1998–2001)
- Dean Wanless (1999)
- Cameron McConville (2000)
- Geoff Brabham (2000)
- Paul Dumbrell (2000, 2010–11)
- Tony Longhurst (2001, 2006)
- Tony Ricciardello (2001)
- Craig Baird (2002)
- Mark Noske (2002)
- Peter Brock (2002)
- Steve Owen (2006–07)
- Tony D'Alberto (2007–09)
- Jason Bargwanna (2008)
- Andrew Thompson (2009)
- Dean Canto (2010–15)
- Jacques Villeneuve (2010)
- Christian Klien (2011)
- David Reynolds (2012–15)
- Nick Heidfeld (2012)
- Chaz Mostert (2016–present)
References
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (1998). V8 Bathurst 2. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1329-3184.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2000). The Great Race 20. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2001). The Great Race 21. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2002). The Great Race 22. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2003). The Great Race 23. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2004). The Great Race 24. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2005). The Great Race 25. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2006). The Great Race 26. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2007). The Great Race 27. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2008). The Great Race 28. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2009). The Great Race 29. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Rowley, Grant (8-14 September). "D'Alberto Hunt For Licence". Motorsport eNews (121). Brighton East: Australasian Motorsport News: 8. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
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mismatch (help) - ^ Gunther, Briar (2009-10-27). "FPR does it in threes". Official site of the Australian V8 Supercar Championship Series. Retrieved 2009-12-31.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2010). The Great Race 30. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ David Reynolds confirmed at the Bottle-O Speedcafe 9 February 2012
- ^ Whincup holds out Reynolds in Bathurst thriller Speedcafe 7 October 2012
- ^ FPR Confirms Ownership Change Speedcafe 7 January 2013