Everything about the London-sydney Marathon totally explained
The
London-Sydney Marathon is a
rally racing event from the
United Kingdom to
Australia. It was first run in 1968, a second event was organised in 1977 and a third in 1993 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the original. Two further races have subsequently been contested in 2000 and 2004.
The original event was won by
Andrew Cowan, Colin Malkin and Brian Coyle, driving a
Hillman Hunter. Fifty-six cars finished.
1968
Background
The original Marathon was the result of a lunch in late 1967, during a period of despondency in
Britain caused by the
devaluation of the
pound.
Sir Max Aitken, proprietor of the
Daily Express and two of his editorial executives, Jocelyn Stevens and Tommy Sopwith, decided to create an event which their newspaper could sponsor, and which would serve to raise the country's spirits. Such an event would, it was felt, act as a showcase for British engineering and would boost export sales in the countries through which it passed.
The initial
UK£10,000 (
AU$21,429) winner's prize offered by the
Daily Express was soon joined by a £3,000 ($6,438) runners-up award and two £2,000 ($4,285) prizes for the third-placed team and for the highest-placed Australians, all of which were underwritten by the
Daily Telegraph newspaper and its proprietor
Sir Frank Packer, who was eager to promote the Antipodean leg of the race.
The remaining crews departed Bombay at 3am on Thursday
December 5, arriving in
Fremantle at 10am on Friday
December 13 before they restarted in
Perth the following evening. Any repairs attempted on the car during the voyage would lead to the crew's exclusion.
| Australia |
| Leg |
Date |
Start |
Finish |
Allowed time |
Description |
| 12 |
December 14–15 |
Perth |
Youanmi |
7h 00m |
Depart 1800hrs from Gloucester Park, traversing smooth but unsurfaced road; 0100hrs arrive deserted mining town of Youanmi. |
| 13 |
December 15 |
Youanmi |
Marvel Loch |
4h 03m |
Through semi-desert via Diemal to asphalt road at Bullfinch; 0503hrs arrive Marvel Loch. |
| 14 |
December 15 |
Marvel Loch |
Lake King |
1h 59m |
Into the Nullarbor Desert; 0702hrs arrive Lake King (crossroads). |
| 15 |
December 15 |
Lake King |
Ceduna |
14h 52m |
2154hrs arrive Ceduna. |
| 16 |
December 15–16 |
Ceduna |
Quorn |
6h 18m |
0412hrs arrive Quorn. |
| 17 |
December 16 |
Quorn |
Moralana Creek |
1h 17m |
0529hrs arrive Moralana Creek. |
| 18 |
December 16 |
Moralana Creek |
Brachina |
1h 30m |
0659hrs arrive Brachina. |
| 19 |
December 16 |
Brachina |
Mingary |
4h 10m |
1109hrs arrive Mingary. |
| 20 |
December 16 |
Mingary |
Menindee |
2h 12m |
1329hrs arrive Menindee. |
| 21 |
December 16 |
Menindee |
Gunbar |
5h 18m |
1839hrs arrive Gunbar. |
| 22 |
December 16 |
Gunbar |
Edi |
4h 26m |
2305hrs arrive Edi. |
| 23 |
December 16–17 |
Edi |
Brookside |
1h 00m |
0005hrs arrive Brookside. |
| 24 |
December 17 |
Brookside |
Omeo |
1h 55m |
0200hrs arrive Omeo. |
| 25 |
December 17 |
Omeo |
Murrindal |
2h 06m |
0406hrs arrive Murrindal. |
| 26 |
December 17 |
Murrindal |
Ingebyra |
1h 31m |
0537hrs arrive Ingebyra. |
| 27 |
December 17 |
Ingebyra |
Numeralla |
1h 29m |
0706hrs arrive Numeralla. |
| 28 |
December 17 |
Numeralla |
Hindmarsh Station |
0h 42m |
0748hrs arrive Hindmarsh Station. |
| 29 |
December 17 |
Hindmarsh Station |
Nowra |
2h 01m |
0949hrs arrive Nowra. |
| 30 |
December 17 |
Nowra |
Warwick Farm |
3h 30m |
1319hrs arrive Warwick Farm. |
| 31 |
December 18 |
Warwick Farm |
Sydney |
|
Arrive in procession, Sydney. |
Result
Roger Clark established an early lead through the first genuinely treacherous leg, from Sivas to Erzincan in Turkey, averaging almost 60 mph in his
Lotus Cortina for the 170 mile stage. Despite losing time in
Pakistan and
India, he maintained his lead to the end of the Asian section in
Bombay, with
Simo Lampinen's
Ford Taunus second and
Lucien Bianchi's
DS21 in third. to take an unexpected victory in his
Hillman Hunter and claim the £10,000 prize. Hopkirk finished second, while Australian Ian Vaughan was third in a factory-entered
Ford Falcon.
1977
While the original event was to prove a triumph for the
Rootes Group and
BMC, 1977's rerun, this time sponsored by
Singapore Airlines, belonged to
Mercedes. The German marque claimed a 1–2 finish and had two other cars in the top eight, with
Andrew Cowan in a
280E repeating his success of nine years previous, followed home by team-mate
Tony Fowkes in a similar car.
Paddy Hopkirk, this time driving a
Citroën, took the final podium spot.
1993
Nick Brittan, a competitor in the original event in a
Lotus Cortina, established his company as an organiser of modern endurance rallies with a 25th anniversary re-run of the marathon in 1993. He persuaded 21 drivers who had competed in 1968 to return, including
Andrew Cowan and
Roger Clark, and altogether 106 teams from 17 countries entered. Cowan drove the same car as the first time, having his
Hillman Hunter loaned to him by the Scottish Automobile Club museum, while other competitors drove pre-1970 era cars. The entry fee was
£12,900, and the estimated cost of participating was put at £45,000.
The 16,000 km race had three major differences to its ancestor. First, the changing political climate in the
Middle East meant that several countries such as
Iraq and
Afghanistan were now out of bounds, although in
Europe,
Turkey and
Australia much of the original route was retraced. Also, the old scheduled open road sections were replaced with more modern timed special stages for safety reasons. Finally, with the demise of the great passenger liners there would be no great voyage across the
Indian Ocean to Australia, Brittan instead negotiating for two
Antonov An-124 cargo planes to take the vehicles to
Australia. Again, much of
Asia was inaccessible for political reasons, with two airlifts instead of the single one of 1993. Now, after crossing
Europe and
Turkey in the first fourteen days, the competitors would be loaded on to the
Antonovs for the trip to northern
Thailand, driving south through the country and into
Malaysia for twelve days before being flown to
Australia for the last eight days of the race.
Of the 100 starters who left
London 78 reached
Sydney, with
Stig Blomqvist and Ben Rainsford scoring victory ahead of
Michèle Mouton in a
Porsche 911, whose co-driver was 1993 winner
Francis Tuthill. Rick Bates and Jenny Brittan in another
911 took third.
2004
The third rerun was a combination of modern
Group N (showroom-class) cars, and pre-1977 classics, all limited to two wheel drive and a sub-two litre engine.
New Zealand, in tandem with
Lincolnshire,
England race-preparation specialists Langworth Motorsport, scored a 1–2–3 podium clean sweep with three Kiwi-piloted
Honda Integras; overall winners
Joe McAndrew and Murray Cole, runners-up
Mike Montgomery and Roy Wilson, and
Shane Murland and John Benton in third. The highest-placed classic car was a
Ford Escort RS1600 driven by
Britain's Anthony Ward and Mark Solloway, which finished sixth overall.
Footnotes
Further Information
Get more info on 'London-sydney Marathon'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://london-sydney_marathon.totallyexplained.com">London-Sydney Marathon Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |