Australian Grand Prix From 1980 to 1984, the
Australian Grand Prix was held at his Calder Park Raceway in the outer suburbs of Melbourne, Jane taking over the promoting and staging of the Grand Prix in the hope of Calder Park being granted a round of the
Formula One World Championship (an ambitious plan at best as Calder was a 1.6 km long circuit which the faster cars lapped in less than 40 seconds). The
1980 Grand Prix was open to
Formula 5000,
Formula Pacific and
Formula One cars and was won by Australia's
1980 Formula One World Champion Alan Jones driving his World Championship winning
Williams FW07B-
Ford. Second home was fellow F1 driver
Bruno Giacomelli driving his
Alfa Romeo 179, with
Ligier F1 driver
Didier Pironi finishing 3rd, driving an
Elfin MR8 Formula 5000 for leading Australian team
Ansett Team Elfin. From 1981 until 1984, the races were run under
Formula Mondial regulations and Jane succeeded in attracting many of the best Formula One drivers of the era. Each race from 1981 to 1984 was won by those driving the popular
Ralt RT4-
Ford. The
1981 Australian Grand Prix was won by future F1 driver
Roberto Moreno from
Brazil. Finishing second, also in an RT4 was
1981 World Champion Nelson Piquet (Brazil) with Australian international
Geoff Brabham (the eldest son of
Sir Jack Brabham who was carving out a successful motor racing career in
America) finishing 3rd in his RT4. Alan Jones and Ligier's
Jacques Laffite also participated in the race, though both failed to finish. The 1981 race was the first time since
1968 at
Sandown that the AGP had two or more, current or past World Champions, on the starting grid. On that occasion,
Jim Clark (first),
Graham Hill (third),
Denny Hulme (ninth), and Australia's own triple World Champion
Jack Brabham (DNF) participated as the race was part of the popular off-season
Tasman Series. For the
1982 Australian Grand Prix, Jane again attracted F1 drivers in Piquet, Laffite, the then retired Jones, plus future Formula One World Champion
Alain Prost.
Frenchman Prost won the 100 lap race from Laffite and 1981 winner Roberto Moreno. When Prost later won his second AGP in
Adelaide in
1986 to win his second of four Formula One World Championships, he became the only driver to ever win the Australian Grand Prix in both World Championship and Australian domestic formats (the 1982 AGP also counted as a round of the
1982 Australian Drivers' Championship, though none of the overseas drivers were eligible for series points). The
1983 race, while only attracting one current F1 driver in Jacques Laffite, as well as Alan Jones who had made an abortive F1 comeback earlier in the year, did attract 24 entries (mostly the Ford powered RT4), including former winner Moreno, Geoff Brabham and future F1 driver
Allen Berg. Moreno won his second AGP from local drivers
John Smith and Laffite. Geoff Brabham finished 4th with Jones in 5th and
Charlie O'Brien in sixth. Reigning
Australian Drivers' Champion Alfredo Costanzo led for the first ¼ of the race in his
Tiga FA81 before suffering a differential failure on his 26th lap 26. Moreno would later claim that had 'Alfie' not retired then he would likely have won as he didn't believe he would have caught the Italian born Aussie. The 1983 race was the last time the Grand Prix was included as a round of the Australian Drivers' Championship. During 1984, it was announced that from 1985, the Australian Grand Prix would be held on the
Streets of Adelaide and would be the 16th and final round of the
1985 Formula One season, giving the Grand Prix "World Championship" status for the first time in its history. Despite this, Jane was still able to successfully attract current Formula One drivers to participate in the
1984 Australian Grand Prix. Headlining the 'imports' was three time World Champion
Niki Lauda who had won his
third World title just one month earlier in
Portugal, and
1982 World Champion
Keke Rosberg. Joining them were 1984 Ligier drivers
Andrea de Cesaris and
François Hesnault and 1981 and 1983 AGP winner Roberto Moreno to face off against local stars Costanzo and
1984 Gold Star champion
John Bowe. Moreno would win his third AGP in four years from Rosberg, who fought back from a bad start and a collision another car, with de Cesaris putting in the drive of the race to finish third after starting early from the pit lane and being almost half a lap down when he took the green flag.
NASCAR Jane is credited with bringing
stock car racing to Australia. Long resistant to oval racing (seeing it as dull and monotonous when compared to circuit racing, although speedway (
Dirt track racing), held on smaller ¼ or ⅓ mile oval tracks, has been popular in Australia since the 1920s), Australian motorsport fans finally had their own
NASCAR-style high banked
superspeedway when Jane spent
A$54 million building the
Thunderdome on the grounds of Calder Park Raceway. The 1.801 km (1.119 mi) Thunderdome, with 24° banking in the turns, was built as a quad-oval with Jane modelling the track on the famous
Charlotte Motor Speedway. Opened on 3 August 1987, the Thunderdome played host to the first ever
NASCAR event held outside North America on 28 February 1988 with the
Goodyear NASCAR 500. Several prominent drivers from the
United States came to Australia for this race including
Alabama Gang members
Bobby Allison and
Neil Bonnett, along with
Kyle Petty,
Michael Waltrip,
Dave Marcis, and others from the
Winston West Series. Bonnett, who had won the
Winston Cup's Pontiac Excitement 400 at the
Richmond International Raceway the previous weekend, and Allison, who had won the
1988 Daytona 500 just one week prior to that, dominated the race, swapping the lead several times on a hot summer afternoon in which cabin temperatures were reported to reach over 57 °C (135 °F). Bonnett won the 280 lap race from Allison with Dave Marcis finishing 3rd. The race was marred by an early multi-car crash in turns 3 and 4 involving 8 cars including the
Ford Thunderbird of local touring car champion
Dick Johnson, and the
Oldsmobile of
Allan Grice who, after running out of brakes, couldn't slow down coming off the back straight and ran into the wreck at speed. Grice, whose car was a
write-off, suffered a broken collarbone and was taken to hospital for x-rays. Jane also owned the
Adelaide International Raceway which features the only other paved NASCAR type oval in Australia with its half mile Speedway Super Bowl, which, unlike the Thunderdome, is a permanent part of the road circuit. In 1992, Jane and Sydney based speedway promoter and
Channel 7 television commentator Mike Raymond also announced plans to turn the old half mile
harness racing track that surrounded the
Parramatta Speedway in
Sydney into a paved oval for NASCAR and the Australian
AUSCAR category, giving Australia a third paved oval speedway. However, the project never got past the planning stage. ==Personal life==