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・ 1984 ATP Challenger Series
・ 1984 Auburn Tigers football team
・ 1984 Australia rugby union tour of Britain and Ireland
・ 1984 Australia rugby union tour of Fiji
・ 1984 Australian Drivers' Championship
・ 1984 Australian Endurance Championship
・ 1984 Australian Formula 2 Championship
・ 1984 Australian Grand Prix
・ 1984 Australian GT Championship season
・ 1984 Australian Open
・ 1984 Australian Open – Men's Doubles
・ 1984 Australian Open – Men's Singles
・ 1984 Australian Open – Women's Doubles
・ 1984 Australian Open – Women's Singles
・ 1984 Australian Rally Championship
1984 Australian Sports Car Championship
・ 1984 Australian Touring Car Championship
・ 1984 Australian Touring Car season
・ 1984 Austrian Grand Prix
・ 1984 Avon Cup
・ 1984 Balkan Bulgarian Tupolev Tu-134 crash
・ 1984 Baltimore Orioles season
・ 1984 Barneveld, Wisconsin tornado outbreak
・ 1984 Batticaloa Jailbreak
・ 1984 Bavarian Tennis Championships
・ 1984 Bavarian Tennis Championships – Doubles
・ 1984 Bavarian Tennis Championships – Singles
・ 1984 BC Lions season
・ 1984 BDO World Darts Championship
・ 1984 Beer Hausen Brewmasters season


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1984 Australian Sports Car Championship : ウィキペディア英語版
1984 Australian Sports Car Championship

The 1984 Australian Sports Car Championship was a national motor racing title for drivers of Sports Cars complying with CAMS Group A regulations. Due to the relatively small number of Group A Sports Cars competing, grids were often filled with amateur Clubman racers.
Queensland based owner/driver Bap Romano won the series driving his Romano WE84 Cosworth from 1982 champion Chris Clearihan (driving the Kaditcha-Chevrolet that Peter Hopwood used to win the 1983 Championship) and Andrew Roberts driving a self designed Roberts S2 Ford.
Romano dominated the series, continuing on from the final round of the 1983 Championship at Winton. Despite only being seen only a 'gentleman racer', and with engineering help from former Williams and Tyrrell Formula One mechanic Wayne Eckersley transforming the Barry Lock built car, Romano put the renamed WE84 (formerly called a Kaditcha K583) on Pole Position at every round, scored fastest lap at for each race he contested (Clearihan scored fastest lap in Heat 2 of Round 1) and he won all bar Round 1 at Calder Raceway where he crashed heavily in Heat 1, and was a non-starter in Heat 2.
The expected challenge from Alan Newton in his Elfin MS7-Chevrolet came to a premature end during the first lap of the second heat at the opening round at Calder. Sitting in second behind Clearihan going down Calder's back straight, the cars throttle jammed and Newton veered left and ran at high speed across the infield until hitting a small rise which saw the Elfin literally fly across the track (it was airborne for approximately 20 metres) before landing and hitting the guardrail at undiminished speed. Thankfully Newton survived the crash with nothing more than a busted knee and broken ankle. Although the Elfin suffered heavy damage in the crash, it was later repaired though it took no further part in the series.
Romano could have benefited from the fact that his cars 3.0L Cosworth engine allowed him to run in Class B (1601 - 3000cc) which meant he scored more points for a win or place than his main challenger Clearihan did driving in Class C (Over 3000cc), i.e. a win for Romano meant 28 points while a win for Clearihan scored only 25. As it was, by actually winning 4 of the 5 rounds, and with Clearihan scoring a DNF in Round 3 at Lakeside with damaged suspension, Romano would have still won the series 100-94 had they both been driving for equal points.
==Schedule==
The championship was contested over a five round series:
* Round 1, Calder Raceway, Victoria, 29 April
* Round 2, Surfers Paradise Raceway, Queensland, 13 May
* Round 3, Lakeside, Queensland, 22 July
* Round 4, Oran Park, New South Wales, 19 August
* Round 5, Winton, Victoria, 14 October
Round 1 was contested over two heats. All other rounds over a single race.
Round 1 of the championship was originally to be run at Melbourne's Sandown Park. However, due to the circuit's closure while it was rebuilt and lengthened in time for the 1984 Sandown 1000 World Endurance Championship round, the meeting was cancelled. Former racer and millionaire tyre retailer Bob Jane then came to the rescue and restored the series to five rounds by hosting Rd.1 at his Calder Park Raceway. Round 4 at Sydney's Oran Park was also originally cancelled, but was later restored after the circuit owners had a vacant spot to fill in the support categories for the Valvoline 250 endurance race for touring cars. The Oran Park round was run on the circuits shorter, 1.960 km (1.218 mi) 'South Circuit' rather than the full 2.620 km (1.62 mi) GP circuit.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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