News | January 25, 2024

Cameron Mcleod: 24H DUBAI “perfect situation” to prepare for Australian Supercars 

Australian Supercars Championship aspirant Cameron Mcleod on the 24H SERIES Middle East Trophy. 
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Australian young gun Cameron Mcleod is full of praise for the 24H SERIES Middle East Trophy as he hopes his experiences in both the Hankook 6H ABU DHABI and the upcoming Hankook 24H DUBAI is the “perfect situation” to prepare for his 2024 season in Australia’s Super2 Series. 

 

Words – James Gent

Images – Nico Mombaerts

Australian up-and-comer Cameron Mcleod has cited the 24H SERIES Middle East Trophy as the “perfect situation” to get “a great head start on the competition” ahead of his upcoming 2024 season in the V8 Supercars-supporting Super2 Series. 

 

Mcleod made his debut in the 24H SERIES at last year’s Hankook 24H DUBAI, impressing with a run to 2nd in GT4 aboard a Simpson Motorsport BMW M4 GT4. After contesting last year’s Super3 Series, during which the 19-year-old took eight wins from 12 races and started from pole nine times en-route to 3rd in the title chase, returned to the 24H SERIES at this past weekend’s Hankook 6H ABU DHABI in the 992 class.

 

Ahead of this weekend’s Hankook 24H DUBAI, at which Mcleod will race in the GT4 class (again with AGMC Racing team by Simpson Motorsport), the young Aussie has expressed how significant both the 24H SERIES Middle East Trophy has proven to his pre-season preparation for the 2024 Super2 season, during which he will race a PremiAir Racing Holden Commodore.

“Racing in the 24H SERIES gives me such a great head start on the competition: no one will really race in Australia before the start of our season” McLeod told Sports Car 360. “By the time we roll out for practice one in Australia, I’ve already competed the equivalent of two or three rounds of Supercars racing. 

 

“During these great events, I’ve driven different cars, on different tyres and in varying conditions, so I’ve well and truly blown out all the cobwebs from the off-season, and I hit the track ready to go. It means I’ve been focusing on training, racing and competing for at least a month longer than the people I’m racing against.”

 

“The 24H SERIES events are so well-organised and run at such a professional level, so it’s a perfect situation for me to place myself in order to be able to perform at a high level against great opposition.”

 

Ahead of only his second start at the Hankook 24H DUBAI, Mcleod, grandson of 1987 Bathurst 1000 winner Peter, is buoyed by his recent performance at the Hankook 6H ABU DHABI: despite completing only six laps during Free Practice, and although he’d never raced a Porsche 992 GT3 Cup before last weekend, the young Aussie posted the fastest lap, in his category, during his 15-minute qualifying run – a 1m 58.245s – and the third quickest lap of any 992 runner across the full session. Recurrent delays relating to the bodywork unfortunately meant the #937 KKrämer Racing Porsche eventually finished 7th in-class, though Mcleod reinforced his speed by setting the car’s fastest lap during his opening stint. 

 

A similarly mature drive this weekend would prove equally beneficial to both Simpson Motorsport and teammate Fabian Duffieux, who go into the 24H SERIES Middle East Trophy title finale at the top of the GT4 Teams’ and GT4 Drivers’ standings respectively. 

 

“Whilst I didn’t get many laps in practice, I did get to qualify and start the race in the car, which was a great opportunity afforded to me by the team,” Mcleod continues. “It was great experience and I raced for more than two hours over the two stints I was in the car. I’m very thankful to Karsten and his KKramer team for giving me the opportunity.”

 

Asked whether he can carry momentum into this weekend’s Hankook 24H DUBAI, in a different class and now aboard a BMW M4 GT4, Mcleod explained that a good performance at the Dubai Autodrome could prove crucial to his hopes of moving further up the ladder to Australia’s Supercar Championship. 

“With the PremiAir Supercar team, there's a real long-term option. A pathway to perhaps turn PRO and race with Supercars, or even GT. I know I have to perform at my best to maximize the opportunities in front of me, so for me, so this current experience counts. It keeps me sharp and gives me confidence, and it exposes me to new circumstances and puts me in front of new people. I think it gives me an edge. And that's why I'm here in the Middle East, to gain an advantage.”

 

Mcleod, a former runner in Australia’s British Formula 4 and Formula Ford junior categories, and winner of the Marc Cars Australia Championship in 2023, continues the 24H SERIES journey started by his father, Ryan, at the Hankook 24H BARCELONA back in 2013. Two years later, Ryan completed nearly the full season with MARC Cars Australia, picking up an SP2 class win at Mugello, and most recently raced with CREVENTIC in 2019, also, fittingly, at Barcelona.

 

-       Our thanks to Cameron and Ryan Mcleod, Sports Car 360, and Overdrive Media for the interview.

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