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・ 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
・ 1984 Belgian Grand Prix


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

The 1984 Australian Touring Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned Australian motor racing title for Group C Touring Cars.〔Conditions for Australian Titles, 1984 CAMS Manual of Motor Sport, pages 88-93〕 It was the 25th running of the Australian Touring Car Championship,〔Graham Howard, Stewart Wilson & David Greenhalgh, 1984 - Bye bye big bangers, The official history - Australian Touring Car Championship - 50 Years, 2011, pages 244-253〕 and the last to be contested by Group C cars as new regulations,〔 based on international Group A,〔Touring Cars, 1985 CAMS Manual of Motor Sport, pages 300-303〕 were introduced for 1985.〔 The championship, which began on 18 February 1984 at Sandown Raceway and ended on 1 July at Adelaide International Raceway after seven rounds, was won by Dick Johnson driving a Ford XE Falcon.
Johnson's win gave Ford and its Falcon both the first and last ATCC wins under Group C regulations as Allan Moffat won the 1973 ATCC in a Falcon XY GTHO Phase III.〔2004 V8 Supercars TV Guide〕 The win was also Ford's 12th ATCC win since the championship began in 1960 and the Falcon's 6th win overall after having previously won in 1973, 1976, 1977, 1981 and 1982. It was also the Falcon's last championship win until 1993.
1984 saw the first ever ATCC race win by a turbocharged car when George Fury won the 6th round at a wet Lakeside Raceway just north of Brisbane driving a Nissan Bluebird Turbo.
Peter Brock, driving a Marlboro Holden Dealer Team entered Holden Commodore, was the only driver to win more than once, with victories in the opening rounds at Sandown and Symmons Plains. Johnson's only win in the series was at the 4th round at Surfers Paradise, though he never finished lower than 3rd in any other round. Allan Grice won the last round at Adelaide, and thus the distinction of winning the last ATCC race run under Group C rules. Defending champion Allan Moffat only won one round of the series, at Wanneroo Park, and suffered a crash at Surfers Paradise in which he not only wrote off his Mazda RX-7, but also broke bones in his right hand and suffered a fractured sternum, forcing him out of the series. The only other winner was former champion Bob Morris who introduced some flavour to the series when he made a comeback to the sport in 1984, winning Round 5 at Oran Park in an RX-7 fitted with a standard gearbox after the race unit was broken in practice. Holden Commodore driver Warren Cullen was the only driver other than Dick Johnson to finish every round of the series.
Unfortunately for the final ATCC run under the local Group C rules, with the exception of Dick Johnson, Jim Richards contesting his first ATCC in his JPS Team BMW 635 CSi, Warren Cullen's two car Commodore team backed by K-Mart (with new team mate Andrew Harris in his 1982 and 1983 Bathurst winning ex-HDT Commodore), and 1983 Australian Endurance Champion Peter McLeod in his Slick 50 Mazda RX-7, the series was devoid of many of its big name drivers from mid-season. Peter Brock missed both Queensland rounds due to his commitment to race a Porsche 956 with his Bathurst winning co-driver Larry Perkins at the 1000 km of Silverstone and 24 Hours of Le Mans races and was substituted in both races by team mate John Harvey having his first ATCC drive since 1979. After the Roadways team lost their STP sponsorship (though still running a single car for Steve Harrington), Allan Grice struggled to find enough sponsorship to run his rented Roadways Commodore for the entire series and missed most of the mid-season rounds, during which time he drove the ex-Bob Jane DeKon Chevrolet Monza on his way to winning the Australian GT Championship, and he also drove at Le Mans in a Porsche 956. George Fury was also missing mid-season when Nissan team boss Howard Marsden decided to concentrate on car development, while reigning champion Moffat missed the last three rounds of the series through injury.
The 1984 ATCC saw the ABC televise each round of the series live throughout Australia. It was the first time that one television station had covered the entire series, previously the ABC and Channel 7 had shared the broadcast rights. It would be the last time the ABC covered the ATCC as Seven took over from 1985 when the locally developed Group C rules were replaced by the FIA's Group A touring car regulations.
==Teams and drivers==
The following teams and drivers competed in the 1984 Australian Touring Car Championship.

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