- Norm Beechey
-
Norm Beechey Nationality Australian Australian Touring Car Championship Years active 1963-1972 Teams Scuderia Veloce
Neptune Racing Team
Trident Racing
Shell Racing TeamStarts 25 Wins 7 Best finish 1st in 1965 & 1970 Australian Touring Car Championship Championship titles 1970
1965Australian Touring Car Championship
Australian Touring Car ChampionshipAwards 2000 V8 Supercar Hall of Fame Norm Beechey was an Australian race car driver, given the nickname "Stormin Norman". To some, he was the closest thing Holden had to a star racing driver, before Peter Brock.[1] Beechey competed in the Australian Touring Car Championship from 1963 [2] to 1972 winning the title in 1965 driving a Ford Mustang and in 1970 at the wheel of a Holden Monaro.[3] Along the way, he won seven round wins, and one pole position. His championship win in 1970 was the first victory by a Holden driver in the Australian Touring Car Championship.
Beechey began racing at the age of 22 in a Ford Customline V8. He came to prominence only a year later when he won the Olympic Touring Car Race at Albert Park, a support event at the Australian Grand Prix meeting which was held in conjunction with the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. As the expense of running this and two subsequent Customline V8s proved too prohibitive he reverted to a Holden 48-215 in 1959. After becoming part of David McKay’s Scuderia Veloce team he again returned to V8s, developing a Chevrolet Impala with which he won the New South Wales Touring Car Championship at Catalina Park. He progressed to a Ford Galaxie owned by Len Lukey and was then instrumental in forming the Neptune Racing Team in 1964. He raced a Holden EH S4 as part of that team alongside Jim McKeown’s Lotus Cortina and Peter Manton’s Morris Cooper S. He subsequently developed and raced a series of V8 powered Touring Cars with which he contested the Australian Touring Car Championship and other events. The first Ford Mustang to race in Australia was followed by a Chevrolet Chevy II Nova, a Chevrolet Camaro, a Holden Monaro GTS 327 and a Holden Monaro GTS 350.[4]
Beechey retired from racing at the end of the 1972 season.[5] He was inducted into the V8 Supercar Hall of Fame in 2000.
Career results
Season Title Position Car Team 1964 Australian Touring Car Championship 2nd Holden EH Special S4 Neptune Racing Team 1965 Australian Touring Car Championship 1st Ford Mustang Neptune Racing Team 1966 Australian Touring Car Championship 2nd Chevrolet Chevy II Nova Neptune Racing Team 1969 Australian Touring Car Championship 3rd Holden HK Monaro GTS327 Norm Beechey 1970 Australian Touring Car Championship 1st Holden HT Monaro GTS350 Norm Beechey Shell Race Team 1971 Australian Touring Car Championship 5th Holden HT Monaro GTS350 Shell Racing 1972 Australian Touring Car Championship 13th Holden HT Monaro GTS350 Shell Racing References
- ^ 2008 V8 Supercar Eastern Creek round official event programme
- ^ Graham Howard & Stewart Wilson, The Australian Touring Car Championship, 30 fabulous years, 1990, page 47
- ^ Series Champions - History - The Official Website of V8 Supercars Australia
- ^ Australian Motor Racing Annual, 1971, pages 26-27
- ^ Graham Howard & Stewart Wilson, The Australian Touring Car Championship, 30 fabulous years, 1990, page 111
External links
- Norm Beechey racing images Retrieved from Autopics on 12 September 2008
- 1970 ATCC film clips featuring Norm Beechey Retrieved from Australian Screen on 12 September 2008
Sporting positions Preceded by
Ian GeogheganWinner of the Australian Touring Car Championship
1965Succeeded by
Ian GeogheganPreceded by
Ian GeogheganWinner of the Australian Touring Car Championship
1970Succeeded by
Bob JaneAustralian Touring Car Championship / V8 Supercar champions Five-time Four-time Bob Jane · Allan Moffat · Jim Richards
Three-time Two-time Marcos Ambrose · Norm Beechey · Glenn Seton · Jamie Whincup
One-time Colin Bond · John Bowe · James Courtney · Robbie Francevic · Russell Ingall · Rick Kelly · David McKay · Bob Morris · Bill Pitt · Garth Tander
Categories:- Australian racecar drivers
- Australian Touring Car Championship drivers
- Living people
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.