View Full Version : Another Aussie Legend Lost
AussieJohnDoe
09-08-2006, 01:36 AM
Brock killed in rally crash
http://www.news.com.au/common/imagedata/0,,5239475,00.jpg
RACING driver Peter Brock is reported to have been killed in a crash during a rally in Western Australia.
More to come soon.
DarkCypher
09-08-2006, 01:38 AM
****ing hell...
2 in one week :|
RIP.
Racing legend Brock killed in car crash
Australian motor-sport legend Peter Brock is dead after his car hit a tree east of Perth today.
Brock was competing on the first day of the Targa West Rally when his vehicle hit a tree near the small community of Gidgegannup.
His co-driver has been taken to hospital but his condition is not known.
Brock was 61 years old. No other cars are believed to have been involved.
Known as 'Peter Perfect' and the 'King of the Mountain', Brock won the Bathurst 1000 nine times in the 1970s and 1980s and won the 1979 race by a record six laps.
He retired from full-time racing in 1997 but returned to Bathurst to win the 24-hour race in 2003.
source (http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1736485.htm)
Kilgor
09-08-2006, 01:48 AM
This is just so f*cked :(
MitchG
09-08-2006, 01:52 AM
damn thats pretty sad another aussie legend dieing doing what they love.. :-(
well i hope it doesnt come in three's..
Kiwi_Gunner
09-08-2006, 01:53 AM
^was thinking the same thing
shorty
09-08-2006, 01:55 AM
What the hell man? This blows!....
h_rnzir
09-08-2006, 02:01 AM
thats sad news to hear ,i remember as a young fella watching him race in bathurst coming over a Mt Panorama in a holden Torana...
Him and holdens...you cant picture one without the other
another legend passes...RIP
PaulClift
09-08-2006, 02:33 AM
Sad, I dont know much about Aussie racing but I'd heard of him and if I'm ever visiting family in Oz I intend doing it when theres racing at Bathurst.
EasyC
09-08-2006, 02:47 AM
Un****ingbelieveable. My favourite V8 driver gone.
ShotOver
09-08-2006, 03:01 AM
This sucks. Great people. On the bright side, atleast he died doing what he loved. Most of us could only wish to be so lucky.
Violet Fashion by Mindy
09-08-2006, 06:54 AM
Peter Brock
Peter Brock, Australia's biggest motor racing star for the last 30 years, has been killed in a rallying accident in Western Australia. The 61-year-old was driving a 1964 AC Cobra Daytona Coupe on the Targa West in Western Australia. The car went off at Gidgegannup, about 25 miles to the north-east of Perth during a tarmac special stage, and went into a tree on the driver's side. Medical crews worked on Brock briefly but there was little that could be done.
Peter Brock was the dominant figure in Australian motor sport from the 1970s onwards and even in recent years his presence at racing events created bigger queues for autographs than the V8 Supercar stars of the modern age. Brock's fame rested on an almost supernatural talent. For him racing was simply a natural thing and he gloried in the gift he had been given. Peter might have been a great open-wheeler racer and was keen to try but could not raise the money to race in Formula 5000 in 1971 and did just a handful of races the following year in Birrana F2 cars. He then turned his back on single-seaters, saying that he did not like driving them and one can only wonder what might have been if he had pushed a little harder to make it in Europe. The lure of the Australian lifestyle and the hero worship of his fellow countrymen and women, kept Peter in Australia, happy to be a big fish in a smaller pool. He won the Bathurst 1000 race, Australia's biggest race until the arrival of the F1 Grand Prix, on nine occasions; was the Australian touring car champion on three occasions and the country's first rallycross champion as well.
In the end Brock became much more than just a racing star. He was "Brockie", the "King of the Mountain" or "Peter Perfect". He was a household name and adored by his fans not just for his speed but also for his charisma and his genuine interest in people in general. Brock loved to be a man of the people and no kid ever forgot the moment when he signed an autograph, in that moment the full power of Brockie's personality was concentrated on them. It was an amazing thing to watch.
I first met Brock in the mid 1980s at Monza when he came to Europe with his Mobil Holden Dealer Team to take on the world's best touring car racers in a programme of races in preparation for the World Touring car Championship that was planned for the following year.
"We played with a totally straight bat, and thought that was the common agreement," he remembered years later. "We were given some rude awakenings and didn't have the wherewithal to respond rapidly."
During that period I got to know Brock well and ended up writing a book about his adventures in Europe. At the time he was going through a curious period in his life having become convinced that he had invented a device that would make cars all over the world perform better. It was caused "the energy polariser" and polarised opinion. I cannot say that I was a believer but I was impressed at Brockie's wide-eyed innocence and belief in the device. It cost him his relationship with General Motor Holden and much credibility but he came back from that and in time became Holden's favoured son again. That was Brock. His charm and enthusiasm for everything if life was enthralling and refreshing and it was a great pleasure to see him each year in Melbourne, where he acted as a ambassador for the Australian Grand Prix and sat on the board as well.
Although he retired from racing in 1997 he could not stay away and raced whenever he could. Racing was his life.
His father was a garage owner and Brock grew up surrounded by cars. He started racing at 22 in an Austin A30 with a Holden engine. That was in 1967 and two years later he was spotted by Harry Firth, the manager of the new Holden Dealer Team and was offered a ride in a Holden Monaro at Bathurst. He won the race for the first time in 1972 and followed up with wins in 1975, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1984 and 1987. He was the Australian Touring Car Champion of 1974, 1978 and 1980. In 1979 he also won the Repco Round Australia Trial.
In 1976 he took a team to the Le Mans 24 Hours with a BMW 3.5CSL which he ran for himself, Brian Muir and Jean-Claude Aubriet but that programme did not lead to the international career he had hoped. He would return to Le Mans in 1984 in a Porsche 956 tacing under the Team Australia banner with Larry Perkins but Perkins crashed the car in the middle of the night.
In 1980 he established Holden Special Vehicles to build road-going specials based on Holden models. This was a huge success until 1987 when the partnership broke up over the energy polariser. Brock continued to race in private teams before returning to the factory Holden Racing Team in 1994. He played an active role in promoting road safety with the .05 campaign to alert Australians to the dangers of drinking and driving, racing for many years in a car with 05 as its number. In 1980 he was awarded the Australian Medal in 1980 in recognition of his contribution to motor sport and road safety.
Brock's foray to Europe was seen by some as a significant point in the history of Australian Touring Car racing as it helped transport the sport into the professional activity it is today.
Neal Lowe, one of Brock's team mates during the European adventure, probably summed him up best.
"He had an incredible talent for driving," Lowe said. "He could drive around any problem with the car."
Racing has lost one of its best ambassadors and Australia has lost a national hero, its second within a few days following the death of Steve Irwin, the celebrated Crocodile Hunter.
As an indication of Brock's standing in Australia, even the Prime Minister John Howard felt the need to comment.
"It's been a pretty sad week for Australia," he said. "And Brockie will be very sadly missed."
Joe Saward
http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns17424.html
getl0st
09-08-2006, 09:05 AM
:-( What a crap week to be an Aussie :-(
I think we have lost two of our greatest Aussies (ever) this week.
I can't for the life of me think of any other Aussies who come close to the Greatness of these guys.
At least they both went doing what they love, if that count's for anything.
Why can't some of the F#cking Assholes in the world pop off the Planet before their time instead of the Good Guys going before their's.
RIP Peter Brock
RIP Steve Irwin
pegasus
09-08-2006, 09:17 AM
your right there mate, no justice in this world. rip brocky
Digital Marine
09-08-2006, 09:23 AM
This has been one messed up week:-(
RIP Peter Brock
2Sheds_Jackson
09-08-2006, 10:23 AM
Well that sucks.
But the man died doing what he loved...and if I had to pick a car to buy the farm in, the Cobra Daytona Coupe would be on my short list. R.I.P.
http://media.militaryphotos.net/photos/albums/2shedsjackson/aew.gif
kamarian
09-09-2006, 11:23 AM
He was such a legend! RIP
DarkCypher
09-09-2006, 10:20 PM
Yeah he was a hero of mine and the main reason I got interested in motorsport.
Bryson C
09-09-2006, 10:27 PM
R I P
This has been a sad week.
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