Chris Clearihan

Australian racing driver
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian racing driver
PlacesAustralia
isAthlete Driver
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
BirthGriffith, Australia
The details

Biography

Christopher Alfred Clearihan is an Australian motor racing driver and Air Race pilot. Born and raised in the New South Wales town of Griffith, Clearihan began his competitive lifestyle with elite high school football.

Motor racing

Clearihan's first race car was the Canon Bolwell Nagari. It was with this car, previously operated by Terry Spooner, that he showed up to Oran Park, Toby-Lee Series in 1972. With an audience of 20,000 people Clearihan claimed his first win, in his first car, at his first race. He then continued to win a lot of production sports car races in the Nagari, establishing a name for himself. Clearihan then bought a Formula Ford open wheeled Elfin and proceeded to win the TAA Driver to Europe Formula Ford race in raining conditions at Surfers Paradise.

Clearihan won two Australian Sports Car Championships in 1982 and 1985 (while finishing 2nd in 1984 and 3rd in 1983, 1986 and 1988), in addition to various state titles, the Pie Series and Scratch Races at Amaroo Park in Sydney. Finished in the top 10 in the Bathurst 1000, and eighth in the 1988 Indonesian Grand Prix. He competed consistently between 1986–92. After purchasing the Tony Edmondson Alfa Romeo Alfetta-Chevrolet Sports Sedan, Clearihan spent the next 10 year breaking all lap records.

At the 1984 Castrol 500 touring car race at the Sandown Raceway in Melbourne, Clearihan, who was to have co-driven with David Grose in a Mazda RX-7, was excluded from the meeting after qualifying following an altercation in the pits with Allan Moffat in which punches were allegedly thrown. Moffat (also driving an RX-7) and Clearihan had tangled out on the circuit with a confrontation following in the pits. After Clearihan's exclusion, the 1983 Sports Car Champion Peter Hopwood who was driving in the final round of the 1984 Australian Drivers' Championship at the meeting, was given permission to take his place in the RX-7. Moffat went on to take second place in the 500.

He won the 2008 Wakefield 300.

Aircraft

Developing an interest in aircraft in 1992, Clearihan switched to flying in search of a new challenge. In 1992 and 1994 he won the Twin Engine Pylon Air Race, coming second in 1993 while still racing cars. In 1998 Clearihan won the Around Australia Air Race and continued to win other twin engine races.

More recently he has worked on developing an airstrip in Michelago, New South Wales.

Career results

SeasonSeriesPositionCarTeam
1982Australian Sports Car Championship1stKaditcha ChevroletChris Clearihan
1982Formula Ford Driver to Europe Series10thBowin P4Chris Clearihan
1983Australian Sports Car Championship3rdKaditcha ChevroletCanberra Sports Car Club
1984Australian Sports Car Championship2ndKaditcha ChevroletSteve Webb
1984Australian Touring Car Championship16thMazda RX-7Chris Clearihan
1985Australian Sports Car Championship1stKaditcha ChevroletChris Clearihan
1986Australian Sports Car Championship3rdJWS Kaditcha ChevroletChris Clearihan
1986Australian Endurance Championship46thToyota Corolla
Holden VK Commodore SS Group A
Toyota Team Australia
Fred Geissler
1988Australian Sports Car Championship3rdKaditcha ChevroletChris Clearihan
2004Aussie Racing Car Super Series25thFalcon-YamahaChris Clearihan Racing
2005Aussie Racing Car Super Series50thFalcon-YamahaChris Clearihan Racing
2006ARMS Thunder Sports Series3rdFuture Racer-Yamaha
2007Thunder Sports Series7thFuture Racer-Yamaha
2009Australian Rocket Sports Championship11thFuture Racer-Yamaha
2011Miniature Race Cars Championship6thFuture Racer-Yamaha

Complete World Touring Car Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearTeamCar1234567891011DCPoints
1987Peter Williamson ToyotaToyota Celica SupraMNZJARDIJNURSPABNOSILBAT
CLD
WELFJINC0
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 18 May 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.