I cant see a situation where SS will ever be mainstream and big fields while there is no limit on expenditure and only very loose technical rules.
Unfortunately the technical freedom is part of the appeal for many in the class. Personally I like the fact that people can build a car of their own to their particular engineering outlook, it sure makes a nice change from all the tightly controlled race categories around these days and that's not just in our corner of the world. The minimum weight has put a cost cap on people going crazy with weight saving materials but like in any class if you restrict people in one area they'll find another area to put more time and money into.
Big fields can be achieved, we have had quite a few over the last 18 months its just a matter of events being run at the right time (in regards to other sport sedan races) and at tracks that people want to race at. We'll only ever be a sideline category to the mainstream if we ever get on the same meetings as them again. We simply don't have the financial backing or exposure to be the big show in town, really every other category in Australia plays second fiddle to the V8 Supercars but that's just the way it is for various reasons.
I am not being a sook, but after attending 3 rounds of the Shannon's Nationals (and will be attending the Finale this weekend) i have lost the desire to prepare and field a car in the National Championship.
That is disappointing, it would be good to get another out there and have new people running in the class.
With not one person in the Grandstand at Eastern Creek (even though the racing was topnotch) it is impossible to make a cogent financial argument to a sponsor on the merit of supporting a participant in the Kerrick series.
Your only chance with a sponsor is guaranteeing TV coverage which we do get some decent exposure through. You can forget spectator numbers because the way things are run now it is never going to happen. This though is not directly a Sport Sedan problem, its the whole issue with the Shannon's Nationals series. I have been to a few of these meetings in three states and they have always been poorly attended as far as spectators go. I have no idea what kind of budget they have for promotion (I'd guess its minimal) but really there isn't a massive effort put in to get the word out. To be fair the website they have for the series is not bad but the problem is no one knows about it. At Wakefield and Eastern Creek there wasn't even a sign out the front saying there was a race meeting on!
I am not marketing or promotions guru but a few simple things could lead to an improved turnout but I won't hold my breath. Crowds will come if it is made interesting and its properly promoted, the truck meetings that Sport Sedans ran with at Oran Park in the mid 1990s used to pull heaps of people and there wasn't a V8 Supercar to be seen!
I am at a loss to where i will go in my motorsport pursuit, but I need the best method of getting the talented 18 year old i am assisting to a V8 Supercar drive. Sport sedans arnt that but they are the most exciting, diverse and spectacular class in Australia. Dont shoot the messenger but find fault with my argument if you can. Cheers and speak over the weekend.
Sport Sedans will give your driver a good handle on a fast car with loads of adjustability but it is way off the radar of team owners looking for the next big thing although hopefully James Sera can prove me wrong on this point!!!!