Foggy looking for glory at BNT V8 SuperTourers this weekend

16 June, 2014

 


Photo: Geoff Ridder

Photo: Geoff Ridder

Photo: Geoff Ridder

The Aucklander became the only driver to beat champion Greg Murphy so far this year when he won race two at last month’s TR Group 250 meeting at Pukekohe. The BNT V8 SuperTourers race at Pukekohe’s V8 Supercar meeting over Anzac weekend and driver Angus Fogg is looking for more glory.

‘Foggy’, a fan favourite for his flamboyant driving and quick wit,  is a former champion in the old NZV8 class and frustratingly for him, and his fans, his results over the first two seasons were below what he was expecting.

A crash on the first lap of the new season at Cromwell’s Highlands circuit put him out of the first two meetings of 2014. He repaired his Holden Commodore in his Auckland workshop, rolled up at the March Pukekohe meeting without any testing, and found the car transformed.

“It felt good, it was a different car,” he said. “I can’t really explain why, but we did do a lot of work in the off season which we never got a chance to show at Cromwell.


Photo: Geoff Ridder

Photo: Geoff Ridder

“I have historically gone better at Pukekohe than anywhere else in the SuperTourers for whatever reason, and we just got in the zone and everything was good and we just put our heads down and got on with it.”

After a solid fifth-place finish in race one, he got a good start to race two and did what no one else has been able to do all season.

“I dived inside Murph at the hairpin on the first lap, which I’m sure he wasn’t expecting. Then I basically just drove away. I don’t think his car was magic for that race, to be fair, but mine was awesome.

“I was just driving right on the limit but not really making any mistakes. I was very determined to finally have a decent result in the thing because it has been trying. We hadn’t really got on top of it till that meeting.

“Hopefully now we’ve got a taste and we’ve got a little bit of confidence that we can run up the front and we’ll be away.”

The BNT V8 SuperTourers are appearing at the Supercar meeting for the first time, to Fogg’s delight.

“It’s cool,” he said. “We all used to love going with the old cars [NZV8s]. It’s a whole lot of buzz racing there and it’s great to have the SuperTourers there. We certainly missed being there the last year or two.”

Last year, at separate meetings, Kiwi star Shane Van Gisbergen found that his BNT V8 SuperTourer was only one second slower around the extended Pukekohe circuit than his supercar.

That showed what fast, serious cars the BNT V8 SuperTourers are, Fogg said, although they are a lot less expensive than the Aussie supercars.

“They’re a neat car for New Zealand,” he said. “There’s nobody here really got the budget to run a V8 Supercar at the front, that’s for sure.”

Fogg reckoned the Kiwi cars could go even faster if they used softer tyres, but drivers and teams are very happy with the current Hankook tyres as they are very consistent and keep costs down — even in endurance races, teams do not need to change tyres.

“It’s going to be an awesome meeting,” Fogg said. “All the classes are basically going to be V8s – Supercars, my favourite Muscle Cars, the Utes, SuperTourers, NZ V8 Touring Cars, GT1.

“We’re hanging out for Pukekohe, it looks like we’ve got some form so bring it on.”

Lunch with … Rodger Anderson

At first, I wondered if I’d driven up the wrong driveway. The car in the garage was an early Mustang resplendent in royal blue with two broad gold stripes, which was not what I was expecting. I knew that Rodger Anderson, who made his name in Minis and a BMW 2002, was a Porsche man these days — the other end of the spectrum from American muscle. I had no idea of his affection for Detroit iron. It didn’t take long to discover just how passionate this former Saloon Car Champion is about cars, as long as they’re interesting.

Back from the brink – 1968 MGB GT

Auckland classic car enthusiast Kerry Bowman soon realised he had a massive job on his hands in restoring his classic 1968 MGB GT. When Kerry and his MGB first appeared in New Zealand Classic Car in March 2021, in “Behind The Garage Door”, the stripped-out shell had revealed some nasty surprises. Once the true extent of the hidden damage was discovered, the work would normally have been handed over to a professional fabricator. However, with the assistance of experts such as MG specialist restorer, Paul Walbran, Kerry has completed an impressive restoration and saved this car from the scrapheap.