Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Rally - Knockhill Stages

Expect the un-expected and prepare for the worst! …. As the ‘Big Yin’ once said, “There is no such thing as bad weather, just the wrong clothing.” So bear that in mind this coming weekend when Knockhill Circuit opens its gates to the Scottish Tarmack Rally Championship on Sunday 1st of March.

The Border Access Knockhill Stages Rally has a full entry list of 70 cars and crews and there is plenty in amongst that lot to titillate the thrill seekers and warm the cockles of decibel starved souls.

The Border Ecosse CC organised event also counts towards the Scottish Single Venue Rally Championship, the Back to Roots Tarmack Championship and the North of England Tarmacadam Rally Championship so there will be plenty of variety both personality and automotive on offer.

Pick a winner? Nae chance.

Not that I’m going to make any weather predictions, but just for a bit of fun here’s a selection of foties from past events! So wrap up warm and bring your wellies as well!

I should be there too with the book-tique, so if you didn’t get some informative and illustrated entertaining reading material for your Christmas, here’s your chance. Look out for the red Transit, but I’ll be wandering about anyway, so flag me down and we’ll take it from there. Copies of the first books in the series also available!

Entry List:

https://www.rallies.info/webentry/2026/knockhill/entries?type=s

Knockhill:

https://www.knockhill.com/events/fixture-Border-Access-Knockhill-Rally-Stages-id870?srsltid=AfmBOoqbkV3zgD704eyXDlakUOsabOI7jO0smcEZfQIwbsE2t8JR1XfX

Book Sales:

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Monday, 23 February 2026

2025 SAMSC Awards

The 2025 Scottish Motorsport Awards were presented by the Scottish Association of Motor Sports Clubs at a rather exclusive reception in the Jim Clark Room in Duns last Saturday 21st February, and the winners were:

Lifetime Achievement Awards

Needing no introduction, the deserving winners were:

Jim McRae and Hugh McCaig

**

Scottish Motorsport Volunteer of the Year Award

This award recognises the volunteers who keep Scottish motorsport running. Our marshals and officials give their time with commitment and enthusiasm, often going above and beyond. Their contribution shapes every Club and Event, and this award celebrates those who make a real and lasting difference.

The winner: Rhona Dickie.
Highly Commended: Anona Gauld and Dawn Henderson

**

Youth Voice Award

The future of motorsport depends on the opportunities we create for young people. This award celebrates those who support children and young people to get involved, whether as competitors, mechanics, marshals, trainee officials, or other volunteer roles. It recognises the people who help young talent gain confidence, skills, and a lifelong connection to motorsport.

Winners: Monklands Sporting Car Club and East Ayrshire Car Club

**

Sustainability in Motorsport Award

This award highlights individuals, teams, clubs, and organisations that are leading the way in environmentally responsible motorsport. It celebrates those who introduce creative solutions, reduce environmental impacts, and demonstrate genuine leadership. This is a chance to recognise the people who are helping Scottish motorsport stay exciting, forward thinking, and environmentally aware.

Winner: Ian Smith, Technical Director of Motorsport UK

**

Equity and Inclusion Award

This award honours people who open doors within motorsport and help remove barriers to participation. It recognises anyone working to make our sport more inclusive, more supportive, and more reflective of the diverse community we want to build.

Winner: Scottish MX5 Hillclimb and Sprint Register (known as Eunos Ecosse)

**

Best Grassroots Motorsport Event

“Grassroots” motorsport is where passion begins. It covers accessible disciplines that do not require costly equipment or highly modified cars, such as Autotests, Autosolos, Car Trials, Single Venue Targa Road Rallies, 12 Cars, and smooth Road Rallies. Many of Scotland’s biggest names in circuit racing and rallying started their journeys here. This award recognises events and organisers who make a real impact at local level.

Winner: Highland Car Club

**

Engagement Award

Growing our sport begins with sharing it. This award celebrates those who introduce motorsport to new audiences and create welcoming pathways for newcomers. Whether through outreach, education, or imaginative ideas, these efforts inspire the next generation of marshals, officials, competitors, and support crews.

Winner: East Ayrshire Car Club
Highly Commended: Scottish Sporting Car Club

Friday, 20 February 2026

Rally - Snowmageddon!

Two weeks ago the Snowlessman Rally opened the Scottish Forest Rally Championship and in a week’s time the Border Access Knockhill Stages Rally (1st March) will flag off the start of the Scottish Tarmack Championship season, but rally crews (and Border Ecosse CC organisers and Knockhill staff) will be hoping for rather better weather than greeted crews 15 years ago.

It was all looking hunky dory in the run up to the event but overnight it snowed, and then it snowed some more, and just when folk thought it had stopped, it snowed even more, with folk waking up on the Sunday morning to eight inches of snow right across the circuit and car sized drifts in awkward places.

That the event ran at all was tribute to the stoicism and hard work of volunteers and staff but even so as the first cars nosed out of the Paddock, Eskimos, hairy dugs and sledges would have been of more use than rally navigators. However, at the end of the first exploratory lap there were sufficient tyre trails to follow and guide the crews around and competition got underway.

The event was won by John and Jim Rintoul and in an Evo9 from the similar car of Ian Campbell and Lyndsey Paton but in third place was the wee Peugeot 206 of Des Campbell and Alex Orr! According to Dangerous Des his secret lay in his tyres – Polish manufactured Profil remoulds! Equally impressive was Sean Robson’s fifth place as he and Stuart Cant slipped and slithered their way around in their Peugeot 205.

It might not have been the fastest and most competitive rally ever, but by goad it wis pretty! Those ice dancers at the Olympics had nothing on the pirouettes seen that day way back in the year 2011.

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Sunday, 15 February 2026

Rally - Ten years ago

The aul’ git and the boy! One went on to great success, and t’other one didn’t!

Donnie MacDonald scored his first Scottish Championship round victory on the 2016 Snowman with Andrew Falconer while a young Vauxhall Nova graduate debuted his new Evo7 in the forests. This followed his first trial run out in the new car at the Knockhill Stages, coincidentally with an experienced co-driver called Andrew Falconer!

Back then on a snowy and slippery Snowman Rally the youngster obviously took no heed of the advice offered by ‘The Sheriff’ (see photo) because he finished 21st overall with Ian MacIvor, while the ‘Lawman’ and Caroline Will were 42nd!

Fast forward to the year 2026 and the MacBeth boy and seasoned campaigner Falconer shared the champagne at this year’s opening round in the frozen far north.

Gaun yersel Scott, well done to both you and Andrew.

Somehow I don’t think this photo will make the next book – or maybe it will !!

Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Rally 40 Years ago

With this year’s Snowman Rally just a few days away now, it brought to mind another Snowman Rally – exactly 40 years ago! The following tale first appeared in a certain columnist’s reminiscences in a February 2010 edition of ‘Motorsport News’. It read as follows:

       ““ It was 25 years ago this year in 1985 that a 17 year old assortment of gangly limbs and unkempt hair went rallying. First of all, he did a couple of events as co-driver with his ‘Uncle Shooey’ Steele and ‘Rockers’ Gray – and then he got his driving licence. He got two events in as a driver before the season closed. He crashed on both, but finished one of them.

Armed with this 50% finishing record he went to the opening round of the 1986 Esso Scottish Rally Championship, the Ladbroke Snowman Rally in Inverness.

It was next weekend’s forthcoming Snowman Rally, once again the opening round of our national series, that reminded me of this auspicious occasion. In that year of ’86, seven stages had been planned, but two were cancelled because of snowdrifts, although a third was saved after some strenuous 4x4 activity.

Seeded at 105 in the 134 car entry was ‘our hero’ in a wee red Talbot Sunbeam. People took little notice of the youngster at first, and many wondered why Ian Grindrod was co-driving for this ‘unknown’. In fact seeing Grindrod without Jim McRae was like seeing Shep without John Noakes, or Ant without Dec, but therein lies the reason. He was co-driving for ‘son of Jim’, Colin.

Colin had never driven on snow before but on the first stage he passed three cars, on the second he spun and just passed two. He caught and passed two more in the third test and two more on the fourth. On the fifth a brake pipe burst and dumped its fluid. He finished 27th that day and went on to finish 18th overall in the 1986 Scottish Championship – in a 1600cc Sunbeam!

But proving that rallying is an incestuous sport, Barrie Lochhead was also competing on that same Snowman Rally in a similar Sunbeam. He finished 34th before hanging up his helmet and donning his welding gloves to service for Colin. It was a task that kept him just as busy between events as it did during them. It must have seemed like painting the Forth Rail Bridge at times. No sooner was the Sunbeam straight and shiny, than it was bent and battered once again.

In another stroke of coincidence, Derek Ringer was also contesting that Snowman in his Clan Crusader as a driver. He finished 78th but at the end of the rally had to be lifted out of the car. He and his co-driver had lost the windscreen early on and had borrowed ski goggles. They were like two white frosted fish fingers by the finish, and literally put the word ‘snowman’ into the Snowman Rally.

Also competing that day was Colin’s first regular co-driver, Nicky Jack, who was driving an Opel Kadett and he finished in 91st place. Perhaps it was obvious to both he and Derek that their rallying talents lay elsewhere!

I’ll be thinking of those good times as I head north once again next week.””

Speaking of ‘Motorsport News’ there may be a bit of good news on the near horizon. I hear they have been ‘consulting’ with other journalists (not me!) as the new owner is keen to bring back the ‘clubman (clubperson?) element’ to the weekly paper.

Fingers crossed, eh?

More tales from times past here:

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