All are back for the 20th anniversary Targa South Island event and event director Peter Martin says that right now it is 'anyone's event.'
"Traditionally the overall winner has come from the Instra Allcomers 4WD ranks but as Martin and Jona proved last year a well-driven two-wheel-drive car can still come through."
Clark Proctor in his V6 Ford Escort. Photo /Fast Company,GroundSky Photography.
Definite dark horse, in this case, is long-time event competitor and supporter Clark Proctor and co-driver Sue O'Neill. For the 20th anniversary event, high-profile Auckland businessman/racer Proctor has leased his hi-tech four-wheel-drive Nissan GT-R35 to Aucklander Peter Baker and co-driver James Thorne, and reverted to the two-wheel-drive Nissan V6 turbo-engined Ford Escort he originally ran in the event.
The car was a pace-setter the last time Proctor ran it and he believes in its latest evolutionary state it can be again.
It is also too close to call in the Metalman Classic 2WD ranks despite defending class title-holder - and one of only two drivers to start all 19 previous Targa events - Barry Kirk-Burnnand, and his co-driver Dave O'Carroll, carrying favourite status in their BMW M3.
As well as competition from Barry's Wellington-based brother Chris and nephew Mark Kirk-Burnnand in their similar BMW M3, and Barry's Auckland-based son Carl and his co-driver Scott Hay in their BMW 325i, last year's class runner-up Bevan Claridge from Foxton is back with new co-driver Campbell Tannock in his Holden Commodore V8, and returning after missing last year's event are experienced Auckland pair Neil Tolich and Cully Paterson in Tolich's V8-engined Ford Capri Perana.
Martin Dippie and Jona Grant in Dippie's Porsche 911 GT3. Photo / Fast Company, ProShotz
Dippie and Grant remain the top South Island prospects in their 'home event' but there will also be interest in the performance of veteran Christchurch driver Trevor Crowe and co-driver Andy Oakley in Crowe's mid-engined Subaru Justy, as there will in the progress of fellow Cantabrians Gary Cliff and James Cowles in a Mitsubishi Evo 5, and Deane Buist and Andrew Bulman in Buist's BDA-engined Ford Escort.
The 20th anniversary Targa South Island event starts at Christchurch's Addington Raceway on Monday October 27 before a prologue stage in the Port Hills and afternoon at Mike Pero Motorsport Park.
On Tuesday the field heads south for stages in mid-Canterbury, before the first of two days based in Dunedin where the cars will be housed overnight in the Forsyth Barr stadium.
After a day full of stages in the North Otago hinterland (and lunch and service stop in Oamaru's historical precinct) on Wednesday the field returns to Dunedin before heading south on Thursday to Invercargill - and a day's end stage at Teretonga Park.
Friday October 31 is then spent completing stages through Eastern Southland, West and Central Otago before finishing at Cromwell's Highlands Motorsport Park.
Competitors then spend the final day (Saturday November 01) in the Lakes County with stages to and from Glenorchy and across the Crown Range before the official finish in downtown Queenstown and the prize giving function the next day.
All told, just on 200 entrants will contest 807kms over 34 closed special stages linked by 1828km of open road transport stages.