James Rosenberg Racing was a V8 Supercar racing team owned by South Australian agricultural business identity, James Rosenberg. The team was reformed in 2010 with Tim Slade as the team's driver after a toe-in-the water year working with Paul Morris Motorsport in 2009.
Manufacturer | Holden |
---|---|
Team Principal | James Rosenberg |
Team Manager | Adrian Burgess |
Race Drivers | 222. Nick Percat |
Chassis | Holden VF Commodore |
Debut | 1995 |
Drivers' Championships | 0 |
Round wins | 0 |
Pole positions | 1 |
2014 position | 11th (1,946 points) |
Biography
editThe team began in the 1980s as a Sports Sedan team with Rosenberg himself as driver. In 1995 the opportunity presented to step into the Australian Touring Car Championship with the 1993 Bathurst winning Perkins Engineering Holden VP Commodore for Formula Holden front-runner Mark Poole.[1] The team was considered a second-tier team within the ranks of the privateers, capable of reaching the top ten results on occasion. In mid-1999 the team upgraded to an ex Holden Racing Team VT Commodore[2] before folding part way through the 2000 season.
Rosenberg became involved in the running of Australian Formula 3, and the emerging career of Tim Slade, assisting him into the Paul Morris Motorsport team for 2009.[3] Rosenberg announced the reformation of the team in December 2009 after acquiring a Racing Entitlement Contract from Paul Cruickshank Racing, to race a Stone Brothers Racing Ford FG Falcon for Tim Slade in 2010.[4][5] This arrangement continued in 2011 and 2012 with a few podium positions. Between 2010 and 2012, The team shared a pit boom with Rod Nash Racing's entry.
As part of the sale of Stone Brothers Racing to Erebus Motorsport, James Rosenberg Racing campaigned a Mercedes-Benz E63 in 2013.[6] The team struggled in 2013, with Slade recording just 4 Top 10 race finishes, at season's end Slade was 22nd in points. In 2013, the team shared a pit boom with Britek Motorsport.[7]
In November 2013 James Rosenberg announced he would be taking his REC to operate a car out of the Walkinshaw Racing operation in 2014[8] with Nick Percat signed to drive.[9]
The team closed at the end of 2014, with the REC returned to V8 Supercars.[10]
Results
editComplete Bathurst 1000 results
editYear | No. | Car | Drivers | Position | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | 38 | Holden Commodore VP | Mark Poole Ed Ordynski Bernie Stack |
DNF | 136 |
1996 | 38 | Holden Commodore VR | Mark Poole Peter Gazzard |
20th | 141 |
1997 | 38 | Holden Commodore VS | Mark Poole Tony Scott |
DNF | 74 |
1998 | 38 | Holden Commodore VS | Mark Poole Tony Scott |
DNF | 34 |
1999 | 66 | Holden Commodore VT | Mark Poole Tony Scott |
15th | 157 |
2010 | 47 | Ford Falcon FG | Tim Slade Jack Perkins |
18th | 161 |
2011 | 47 | Ford Falcon FG | Tim Slade Daniel Gaunt |
12th | 161 |
2012 | 47 | Ford Falcon FG | Tim Slade Andrew Thompson |
7th | 161 |
2013 | 47 | Mercedes-Benz E63 W212 | Tim Slade Andrew Thompson |
26th | 137 |
2014 | 222 | Holden Commodore VF | Nick Percat Oliver Gavin |
3rd | 161 |
Gallery
editReferences
edit- ^ Normoyle, Steve (1995). The Great Race 15. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (1999). The Great Race 19. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Normoyle, Steve (2009). The Great Race 29. Hornsby: Chevron Publishing. ISSN 1031-6124.
- ^ Three out of four RECs sold Speedcafe 19 November 2009
- ^ Slade's V8 Supercar future confirmed Speedcafe 21 November 2009
- ^ Erebus secures major sponsor for #47 Mercedes Speedcafe 17 January 2013
- ^ V8 Supercars pit lane order confirmed Speedcafe 14 December 2012
- ^ Bartholomaeus, Stefan (29 November 2013). "Walkinshaw confirms expansion four cars". SpeedCafe. Archived from the original on 7 September 2020. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
- ^ Bartholomaeus, Stefan (26 February 2013). "Nick Percat reveals Coates Hire Holden". SpeedCafe. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
- ^ "Rosenberg dumps license in Walkinshaw shock". Speedcafe. 3 December 2014. Archived from the original on 16 April 2015. Retrieved 2 December 2014.