Plenty to celebrate for Historic Leyburn Sprints

Warwick racer Matt Campbell's racing successes have thrilled Southern Downs and Granite Belt motorsport fans.

By Chris Nixon

The Historic Leyburn Sprints will celebrate the 75th anniversary of the Leyburn 1949 Australian Grand Prix when it return for the 28th year on 17-18 August but for some of the event’s family and friends celebrations have started early.

The Historic Leyburn Sprints celebrated the major achievement of two personalities closely connected with the event earlier this month.

At Mount Panorama on Sunday 18 February, Warwick-born prodigy-turned-international-driving superstar Matt Campbell won one of the world’s most prestigious sports car endurance races, the Bathurst 12-Hour, which he had also won in 2019.

Meanwhile Leyburn local Steve Kirby was awarded for his bravery in rescuing a junior driver from a blazing race car. Accompanied by his wife Tracy, Steve received the Donald Thompson Award at the annual Motorsport Australia champions presentation gala in Melbourne.

Early in his racing career, Campbell, now 29, won the Sprints Rookie of the Year award. He last competed on the closed-street course at the wheel of an Asp single-seater in 2015, when he was already on track to becoming a Porsche rising star.

He’s now a member of the elite squad of drivers employed by the German factory. Assigned to the prestigious American Team Penske, he recently won the 24 Hours of Daytona, Florida, with three co-drivers.

Sprints President Tricia Chant said they were proud to have been part of his motorsport journey.

“We’re super-proud that Matt, a graduate not so long ago of our grassroots event at Leyburn, has already won the Bathurst 12-Hour and Daytona 24-Hour this year and is a Porsche factory driver,” Chant said.

At Bathurst, the Porsche 911 of Campbell and his two co-drivers overcame the challenges of an official penalty, heavy rain, race strategy and a field of the world’s best grand touring sports cars and drivers to take a famous win.

The former apprentice chippy, who cut his teeth at Morgan Park Raceway in a variety of cars including a humble Datsun, now ranks among the best professional drivers in world motorsport.

Steve Kirby’s career might not have taken him as far, but the Leyburn resident and Sprints competitor and volunteer official is known widely in Queensland motor-racing circles.

He earned his Motorsport Australia award – for performing an “act of courage and selflessness under unique circumstances” – for his role in rescuing young Hyundai driver Stevie Chant from her burning Hyundai Excel at Queensland Raceway in April.

Chant’s car had rolled at the high-speed Turn One and collided with a second Hyundai as it burst into flames.

Stevie, niece of Sprints President Tricia Chant, was lucky to escape the violent crash.

“We witnessed the crash from the sidelines and there is no doubt in our mind that he saved her life, so we are forever grateful,” Tricia Chant said.

The Sprints return for the 28th year on 17-18 August.