First Blood to Ruiterman as 2020 JG Civil NZ Offroad Racing Championship Kicks Off

Pukekohe racer Carl Ruiterman has scored the first win of the 2020 JG Civil New Zealand Offroad Racing Championship – though today he is nursing bruises and muscle pain from the pummelling dished out by the deceptively rough farm course.

The opening round, the Daltons 250, was a 232 km endurance race held on Saturday across the hills and valleys of a massive farm west of the Waitomo Caves in the King Country . After scoring pole position in the qualifying, Ruiterman started from pole and only briefly relinquished the lead to team-mate Joel Giddy on lap 10 before taking control for the sprint to the finish. Aiming for a top position in qualifying, Torbay (Auckland) racer Chris Whyte (main picture) instead crashed out spectacularly, hitting a fence post and almost rolling his Chev V8 engines class one car.

The team ran their modified Yamaha YXZ on the highest suspension setting they have ever used.

Carl Ruiterman stirs the dust on his way to winning the Daltons 250

“I was glad we did, and still I’m feeling the beating we took. It’s that trade-off – do you go slow and miss the chance to get past someone or do you just take the hammering?”

The course shook loose several body panels on the car, which otherwise ran without a fault.

Dust was an issue from the second lap onward as Ruiterman, Giddy, Dion Edgecombe and Scott Munro formed a flying four-pack of UTVs and set out to dominate the race.

Munro fell back behind Brian Rutgers and was also overtaken by leading unlimited class racer Regan Swensson who had started from 11th but was charging through the field and would finish up fourth.

Leading U class racer Leigh Bishop was one of a number who struck overheating issues as the race wore on.

Shane Huxtable of Napier was making the championship debut for his new self-built race truck. He started 15th, and was enjoying the power of the truck’s modified LS1 Chev V8. Then on lap ten he had the unique experience of being driven into from the front.

“We were chasing a class one, and there aren’t many places to pass when your vehicle has similar pace to the one you are trying to pass. The guy went wrong at an intersection, and we had to stop as well – then he reverse straight into us!”

The impact destroyed the Huxtable truck’s front bumper and broke the mounts of the bonnet. A quick stop to remove the bonnet and the truck was back on course. He finished 11th and won his class, the truck having forced him to lap slower near the end as it overheated.

Arin Riwhi was in more terminal trouble after four laps (nearly 100 km) of the race. His 4WD Bits class four Toyota Hilux broke a front right lower suspension.

“We also found the gas tank was cracked so we were lucky we stopped!”

Event co-organiser Maurice Bain brought his US-built Crumco VW Baja out in class nine and won the class, while there were two entries in class ten for motorcycle-engined cars – Neil Hook and Mark Seymour.

Hook started 25th and shot up through the field in the first lap, overtaking 11 others. He completed 16 laps to win his class and finish 12th overall.

Only three competitors completed the full 18 laps: Ruiterman, Giddy and third-placed Dion Edgecombe of Matamata, the trio creating an all-UTV podium. Ruiterman thus also won the Concrete Treatments S class for modified UTVs while the standard class went to Scott Munro. Giddy set the fastest race lap of the day: 11.19.618.

The Cougar Race Cars Kiwitruck youth category races were won by Matthew Bishop (M class for cars with motorcycle engines) with a second place and a win, while Asher Morgan won both races for the less modified J class.

The next northern round is at Makarau, northwest of Auckland, during Easter Weekend.

Mark Baker has been working in automotive PR and communications for more than two decades. For much longer than that he has been a motorsport journalist, photographer and competitor, witness to most of the most exciting and significant motorsport trends and events of the mid-late 20th Century. His earliest memories of motorsport were trips to races at Ohakea in the early 1960s, and later of annual summer pilgrimages to watch Shellsport racers and Mini 7s at Bay Park and winter sorties into forests around Kawerau and Rotorua to see the likes of Russell Brookes, Ari Vatanen and Mike Marshall ply their trade in group 4 Escorts. Together with Murray Taylor and TV producer/director Dave Hedge he has been responsible for helping to build New Zealand’s unique Toyota Racing Series into a globally recognized event brand under category managers Barrie and Louise Thomlinson. Now working for a variety of automotive and mainstream commercial clients, Mark has a unique perspective on recent motor racing history and the future career paths of our best and brightest young racers.

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