1998 New Zealand Grand Prix
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| 1998 New Zealand Grand Prix | |||
|---|---|---|---|
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| |||
| Race details | |||
| Date | 6 December 1998 | ||
| Official name | XLIV New Zealand Grand Prix | ||
| Location | Ruapana Park, Christchurch, New Zealand | ||
| Course | Permanent racing facility | ||
| Course length | 2.841 km (1.765 miles) | ||
| Distance | 34 laps, 96.6 km (60 miles) | ||
| Weather | Light rain/overcast | ||
| Pole position | |||
| Driver | SH Racing | ||
| Time | 1:15.782 | ||
| Fastest lap | |||
| Driver |
| Greg Murphy Racing | |
| Time | 1:17.031 on lap 32 | ||
| Podium | |||
| First | Birrana Racing | ||
| Second | SH Racing | ||
| Third | Greg Murphy Racing | ||
The 1998 New Zealand Grand Prix event for open wheel racing cars was held at Ruapana Park near Christchurch on 6 December 1998. This event marked the events return after a two-year hiatus. It was the forty-fourth New Zealand Grand Prix and was the first to be run to Formula Holden regulations. The event also served as part of the briefly revived Tasman Series.
The event was won by Simon Wills driving for Birrana Racing, while Scott Dixon and Greg Murphy rounded out the podium.
Ever since the inaugural event in 1950, the New Zealand Grand Prix had attracted some of the best racing drivers from home and abroad, with the honours roll consisting of some of the greatest drivers in the sports history. However, by the turn of the 1990s, the relevance of the event began to wane and eventually culminated in the 1995 iteration only receiving seven entries. The event would lay dormant for two years before making its return in 1998, with the aim to restore the status of the marquee event back to its golden years.
Running to Formula Holden regulations, the grid contained drivers from a mixture of different backgrounds. This included front-running drivers in the Australian Drivers' Championship, which also utilised Formula Holden cars. An array of local drivers were also entered, one of whom was former All Blacks player, Graham Sims. There were also three international drivers, which included Wouter van Eeuwijk from the Netherlands, Robert Lechner from Austria and Akihiro Asai from Japan, who had also been running in the Australian Drivers' Championship that season.[1]
The favourites heading into the event were Greg Murphy and Scott Dixon. Murphy had won the 1994 iteration of the event and by this stage was an established driver throughout the Australasian motor racing scene. Dixon was still in his formative years of racing but had won the national Formula First and Formula Ford championships back-to-back. He had also competed in the Australian Drivers' Championship the previous year, finishing third, and would go on to win the championship later this year.