Baskerville Raceway

Motor racing circuit in Tasmania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baskerville Raceway is a 2.010 km (1.249 mi) permanent motor racing circuit located at 473 Baskerville Rd, Old Beach - a northern suburb of Hobart, Tasmania,[1] Australia. Founded in 1954, the Hobart Sporting Car Club built the circuit in a natural amphitheatre on land provided by Calvin Morrisby (after whom turn 7 is named). The circuit was officially opened on 9 February 1958 by then Tasmanian Premier Robert Cosgrove with 20,000 spectators in attendance, and has been operating continuously ever since. Baskerville is the second-oldest continuously operating motor racing venue in Australia, with only Mount Panorama (which opened in 1938) being older.[2]

Location473 Baskerville Rd Old Beach Tasmania
Coordinates42°44′44″S 147°17′44″E
OwnerMotorsports Tasmania
Opened1 February 1958; 68 years ago (1958-02-01)
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...
Baskerville Raceway
Full Circuit (1958–present)
Location473 Baskerville Rd Old Beach Tasmania
Coordinates42°44′44″S 147°17′44″E
OwnerMotorsports Tasmania
Opened1 February 1958; 68 years ago (1958-02-01)
Major eventsCurrent:
Baskerville Historics
Former:
Australian Improved Production Nationals (2006, 2019)
Aussie Racing Cars (2006, 2018)
Australian GT (1982)
Full Circuit (1958–present)
Length2.010 km (1.249 mi)
Turns9
Race lap record0:48.8269 (Australia Josh Kean, Benetton B186, 2018, F1)
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History

Previously, Baskerville had hosted the Winfield 25's Touring Car Challenge, Australian Sports Car Championship, Australian Formula 2 Championship, Australian Road Racing Championships (motorcycles), Australian Superbike Championships and other races.[3] Baskerville was the location for the 2006 and 2019 Australian Improved Production Nationals and for the 2009 Formula Vee Nationals, with the latter won by Daniel Reynolds in a Sabre 01.

Baskerville Raceway hosted the inaugural Tasmanian Historic Motorcycle Championships from 25 to 27 November 2011.[4]

In recent years Baskerville Raceway has hosted the Baskerville Historics, the largest event at Baskerville Raceway. The event includes both cars and bikes over a three-day event, and has brought the likes of former V8 Supercars driver Glen Seton and current co-owner of V8 Supercar team Prodrive racing Australia, Rusty French.

In 2012 the owning club, Hobart Sporting Car Club, launched the Baskerville Foundation, a fundraising initiative to bring the circuit to a more modern standard with the ultimate goal of a full resurface of the track.

In 2015 the circuit gained a naming rights sponsor in Pepsi Max, with the circuit changing its name to Pepsi Max Baskerville Raceway

The circuit now holds several events including the Tasmanian Circuit Racing Championship, the Baskerville Historics, the Baskerville 2-Hour Motorcycle Race and several smaller events. The Circuit also hosts several non-Motorsport events such as the Raw Challenge.

In January 2021, the circuit also hosted non-championship round for the Touring Car Masters, TCR Australia Touring Car Series, and Trans-Am Australia Series after their first round in Symmons Plains Raceway.[5][6]

Motorcycle Racing and Track Days

Motorcycle racing and public ride days are currently run by the Sports Riders Club of Tasmania (SRCT), one of only two club-run ride days in Australia.[7]

Lap records

As of September 2024, the fastest official race lap records at the Baskerville Raceway are listed as:[8]

More information Category, Time ...
CategoryTimeDriverVehicleDate
Full Circuit: 2.010 km (1958–present)[9]
Formula One0:48.8269[8]Josh KeanBenetton B18623 September 2018
Formula 50000:48.8869[8]Jason WhiteMcLaren M10A23 September 2018
Formula Mondial0:50.16[8]John BoweRalt RT421 February 1982
Australian Formula 20:50.24[8]Jonathan CrookeCheetah Mk 816 March 1986
Sports Sedans0:51.4048[8]Brad SheriffNissan Skyline22 October 2022
Trans-Am Australia0:53.1265[8]Aaron SetonFord Mustang30 January 2021
TCR Touring Car0:53.9170[8]Aaron CameronPeugeot 308 TCR30 January 2021
Touring Car Masters0:55.5505[8]Adam GarwoodChevrolet Camaro RS30 January 2021
Improved Production Cars0:56.1829[8]Jason HouseBMW M3 (E92)20 April 2024
Group C0:56.80[8]Steve MastertonFord Falcon XE25 November 1984
Aussie Racing Cars0:57.2485[8]Joel HeinrichNissan Altima20 May 2006
Excel Cup1:04.1150[8]Oliver WickhamHyundai Excel21 April 2024
HQ Holden1:06.1211[8]Andrew MagiltonHQ Holden14 September 2024
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See also

References

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