The Hill is dead. Gone is Burnout Boulevard. Gone are the smoking car husks. Gone are the flaming toilet rolls. In their place? Coffee carts, dodgem cars and young families.

Sign of the times: somewhere down there is a shameless smoothie-drinker

The Hill, for non-members of the V8 sub-culture, is the imaginative name for the top of Mount Panorama, home of the annual Bathurst 1000 race.

For years the Hill was an almost mythical place; a lawless oasis where men were free to be men, if your definition of being a man includes drinking to the point of vomiting, yelling “show us ya tits” a lot and burning stuff.

Admittedly, that kind of thing goes on at your average Mad Monday celebration too, but the denizens of the Hill were über-bogans: the bogans that other bogans looked up to. (And please note, I do not use the word “bogan” in a pejorative sense but as a way of describing a certain kind of V8-loving, suburban super-Aussie.)

Hill-dwellers exhibited an heroic commitment to boganism. They farkin’ loved their cars, farkin’ loved sinking piss, and farkin’ loved not changing their underwear for four days. Unfortunately, some of them also farkin’ loved blowing up toilets and chopping down power poles and that, kids, is how you ruin a good thing.

At the behest of event organisers, the NSW Police launched a massive crackdown on booze, drugs and “anti-social” behaviour in 2007, “restricting” beer to one carton per person per day and setting loose roving packs of police. The crackdown worked, if by “worked” you mean they arrested and cautioned way more people than usual – about 150 instead of the usual couple of dozen.

I had my own run-in with Bathurst’s over-eager men and women in blue that year. My friends and I had gone to a Bathurst pub to watch the Wallabies take on England in the quarter-finals of the Rugby World Cup. It was not going well for the Australians, so at regular intervals I would let loose an expletive of frustration.

Towards the end of the game, and after another four-letter outburst, I received a tap on my shoulder and turned to find a wall of blue uniforms behind me. The chap at the end of the finger looked me squarely in the eye and said, “Settle down.”

Unsurprisingly, after a day of drinking and in a heightened state of pique, this failed to quell my passion. I tried to make him understand that I wasn’t doing anything wrong but if you send out squads of police looking for trouble, chances are they’ll find it. Thankfully, my mates dragged me away before I started using words like “fascism”.

Anyway, the crackdown worked: five years later, the Hill is no more. And that is a sad thing. Yes, technically some laws were being broken and damage was done, but they weren’t harming anyone other than themselves and the odd Datsun 120Y. In fact, the Hill was notable for its lack of violence.

There was a spirit of community and mateship, of like-minded people coming together and inhaling toxic chemicals. And correct me if I’m wrong but isn’t the right to get smashed and hurl a flaming toilet roll at your mate what the Anzacs died for?

There is a degree of inevitability about this. Few of those great male rituals that form the backbone of Australian masculinity – the Boxing Day Test, the Big Day Out – remain the debauched free-for-alls they once were, and that is not an altogether bad thing.

There should be limits to behaviour; it’s how societies function (although how the hell a beer snake threatens the Australian way of life I’ll never know).

But the real reason for the great Bathurst purge is predictably far less noble than issues of societal cohesion. The V8 Supercars series is an increasingly valuable competition, generating $100m-plus annual revenues, and the Bathurst 1000 is the jewel in its petrochemical-burning crown.

Turning a blind eye to a couple of thousand beer-drenched idiots was easy enough in the rough-and-tumble era of Dick Johnson and Peter Brock, but the sponsored-up-the-wazoo 2012 series is a different beast altogether – polite and sanitised, just like the drivers themselves.

I’ve been going to the Bathurst 1000 almost annually since 2002. I have no interest in the vehicular shenanigans – I go to see my friends, drink beer at times of the day when a coffee would be more appropriate, and sit in camping chairs for hours on end.

Those carcinogen-breathing nutcases on the Hill were most certainly not my kind of people, anymore than I would have been theirs. But Bathurst without the Hill feels like a lesser, blander thing. Like Steve Waugh without the streak of bastardry or Mad Max without the hacksaw scene.

This year’s race, the 50th, plumbed new depths of corporatised insipidness, with more merchandise tents per square metre than ever before and a team of radio announcers blathering endlessly about how “crazy” and “fantastic” everything was. Children ran free and fans queued patiently for overpriced mid-strength beer.

I’m also pretty sure I saw someone with a fruit smoothie. I may not go back next year.

Comments on this post close at 8pm AEST

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37 comments

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    • Dan says:

      09:33am | 08/10/12

      Bathurst hill boganism is like boxing. You know it’s not good for you and should be banned - but, geeze, I love it!!

    • Tubesteak says:

      03:02pm | 08/10/12

      “Bathurst hill boganism is like boxing.”

      Agree with this.

      “You know it’s not good for you and should be banned”

      Disagree. To each their own and if you choose to partake then you choose the consequences and should be adult enough to know what you’re in for and decide accordingly.

      “but, geeze, I love it!!”

      Agree with this. No harm in some fun between adults who really don’t harm anything but their livers.

    • Jay says:

      09:39am | 08/10/12

      I can’t get over the sight of grown men wearing driving overrals pretending they are divers. It’s not a sport and should incur a massive carbon tax for the damage it does to the environment.

    • craig3 says:

      09:51am | 08/10/12

      Wonder how many carbons are used to submit a post on The Punch?

    • Expat Ozzie says:

      10:26am | 08/10/12

      Shane: If your judgement is based on that article then you rule out many “professional” sports these days. Basketball, baseball etc. aren’t level playing fields since the clubs with the most money by the best players and coaches.

      Motorsport is a sport. It’s a team based sport. It involves direct completion and a drive to win. The claim it isn’t a sport based on the current dominance of a few teams is shallow and ridiculous otherwise cricket wasn’t a sport while Australia dominated.

    • Bertrand says:

      11:26am | 08/10/12

      Wasn’t Hemingway incorrectly quoted as saying the only real sports are motor racing, mountaineering and bullfighting. Everything else is just a game.??

    • bananabender56 says:

      11:57am | 08/10/12

      @jay, would show jumping then not be a sport, or horse racing (the sport of kings?), or yacht racing etc

    • Dman says:

      12:27pm | 08/10/12

      @ Jay
      “I can’t get over the sight of grown men wearing driving overrals pretending they are divers”

      Assuming that last word is supposed to be “drivers”, how exactly are professional race car drivers “pretending” to be drivers? And the effect that motorsport has on the environment is completely negligible compared to the hordes of cars driving on the roads every day.

    • Shane* says:

      12:29pm | 08/10/12

      @Bertrand.

      I like Hemingway’s writing, but the man himself was a loon.

      @bananabender56.

      No, none of those are sports.

    • expat says:

      01:36pm | 08/10/12

      There is always an enviro out to spoil all the fun. Can’t go fishing, can’t race cars, can’t develop this, can’t develop that.

      If one wants to protect the environment, then they should go buy some land and practice what they preach, just leave the rest of us to enjoy ourselves.

    • Ben says:

      09:45am | 08/10/12

      >Unsurprisingly, after a day of drinking and in a heightened state of pique, this failed to quell my passion. I tried to make him understand that I wasn’t doing anything wrong

      A “heightened state of pique” is translation for ‘Dutch courage’.

    • v8Fan says:

      09:49am | 08/10/12

      @jay,
      i suppose you sit there and watch grown men chase a little white ball around a course all day calling themselves athletes?

    • Forplay says:

      10:04am | 08/10/12

      Average Golf course is approx 5.3 kilometres,Exercise is required to walk this distance.Average fridge is 4.1 metres form slob.

    • driver says:

      12:53pm | 08/10/12

      yes Forplay, but golf ruins a good walk.

    • TChong says:

      09:54am | 08/10/12

      “The Hill"of 2007 was only a pale ,yuppy orientated , family + girl guide type of event when compared to “The Hill"during the 1985 Easter Bike Races.
      Fortunately , maybe , for both sides that the lads were mostly disorientated , and the TRG hadnt perfected tighter crowd control.

    • Not the same without Brock says:

      10:00am | 08/10/12

      “The V8 Supercars series is an increasingly valuable competition, generating $100m-plus annual revenues, and the Bathurst 1000 is the jewel in its petrochemical-burning crown.”

      That may be, but in essence it was a poorly telecast fuel economy battle.  Zzzzzz. Won’t be rushing out to buy Dunlops either.

      Can’t wait for next year’s less powerful ‘Car of the Future!’

    • Expat Ozzie says:

      10:01am | 08/10/12

      Guy: I couldn’t agree more. I still lament the loss of the “hill” at the GABBA. I’ve been to only one cricket match there since it was replaced with an ugly grandstand. It’s just not cricket without a hill much like Bathurst is not Bathurst without the bogans.

    • Tator says:

      01:38pm | 08/10/12

      the rot started when the SCG trust built the grandstands on Yabba’s Hill beginning the demise of the grassy slopes that the working class would favour when attending the cricket.  Guess the only two “real” cricket grounds left are the Adelaide Oval where the new development is retaining the northern scoreboard hill and the WACA which still has a grassed area in front of its scoreboard.  There is nothing like sitting at Adelaide Oval on the hill watching the cricket as you get a better view down the pitch than what the members get from their stand which is side on to the pitch.  Bring on the Ashes 2014 when it will be opened for all its glory.

    • Andye says:

      10:01am | 08/10/12

      I spent a few years in Bathurst, including staying around over a few race weeks, though many people get out of town during that time. It would get pretty horrendous. Many local (and student) girls would not go out anywhere around race week, which was referred to by its local nickname “rape week”.

    • AFR says:

      10:12am | 08/10/12

      So, news limited has given up its witch hunt of the Bulldogs, and returned to what it knows best, hey?

    • Rossco says:

      10:53am | 08/10/12

      Wowsers, the nanny state, and angry feminists are probably responsible.

    • James says:

      11:06am | 08/10/12

      Dont paint this as a normal males behaviour, it is not and never will be.

    • Philip says:

      11:14am | 08/10/12

      I know where those rev head bogans went.
      They went to Subiaco Oval to barrack for West Coast Eagles and upset the Geelong Coach!

    • SuckItFreo says:

      02:54pm | 08/10/12

      This just in - away sides dont receive the warm reception that home sides receive. More at eleven.

    • Inky says:

      11:15am | 08/10/12

      I got about halfway through this, which is a fair effort.

      As someone who used to regularly work bars at sporting events, if what you’ve described here in the pre days isn’t far exagerated, I feel sorry for the poor bastards who had to work the bars. Then again…

      “fans queued patiently for overpriced mid-strength beer.”

      I still feel sorry for them, there’s a reason i got out of that gig. The word patiently in there is certainly optimism.

    • Andrew says:

      11:25am | 08/10/12

      It’s just a bunch of blokes cutting loose for the weekend! You behave and work all year and look forward to something like this…..
      My mates and I do the Philip Island GP and drink beer for breakfast and talk about crap all weekend!
      Then it’s good to get home to the wife and kids and do it all again.

    • andye says:

      05:27pm | 08/10/12

      @andrew - Assuming you never assaulted, abused or raped anybody and didn’t vandalise the town, good for you. Many locals and students (in the early 90s at least) had a very different experience of that week. Some very bad things would happen sometimes. Even the race and TV people they would rent university dorms to during that week would trash them.

    • Michael S says:

      12:08pm | 08/10/12

      I’ve never been to the Bathurst 1000, but the lawless, booze-fuelled atmosphere sounds like what the day-night cricket games were like.

      The problem is that there are two types of drunks - funny drunks and aggressive drunks.
      Funny drunks say and do outrageous things. They’re completely harmless, but their stunts are great entertainment; as they stuff up their lines and struggle to stand up. If all drunks were like that, there’d be no problem.
      But there’s too many people around who can’t handle their alcohol. Particularly after the tea break, in the early overs of the second session, there’d be people punching on, and fights breaking out. Even with enormous numbers of security on hand, it was a scary place to be. I stopped going to day-night cricket internationals in 1999 after the complete stranger in the row behind me attempted to land a king-hit on me (thankfully he missed) because I didn’t go up during a Mexican wave.

      Have these events needed to be cleaned up? Absolutely. Don’t blame the corporates; blame the idiots who can’t handle their beer without getting violent.

    • Millsy says:

      12:09pm | 08/10/12

      Is this celebration of boorish bogan behaviour supposed to be a satire piece?

    • fml says:

      12:35pm | 08/10/12

      There is nothing like poor national economic performance to encourage male camaraderie at national sport events, conversely when the country is performing well nothing distances oneself from their fellow man with greater effect.

      Those bogans that were once able to spend their whole weeks rations on beer and burgers while shouting profanities at the local ‘smelly’ are now working in the mines for two to three times their previous wage. This coupled with the fact most of these individuals are now married with children and that their better halves have drained them of every single drop of their previous bogan affliction and instilling in them a more refined palette,  has resulted in the gentrification of the motor racing industry.

      Gone are the days you describe and here now is the speed limited, mid-strength sunday afternoon car drive. The organisers are more than likely pandering to the clientele with the fatter wallets. If you wish to counteract this and see a return to the good ol’ beer swillin’, stick bangin’, caveman, cro-magnon, big d**K days. I suggest you shout bama lama down in alabama and do your hardest not to contribute to the economy.

    • Cam says:

      12:46pm | 08/10/12

      Australian supercars? what a crock.  Holden or Ford, Ford or Holden?  It’s like two football teams playing each other every weekend, or only Ferrari vs Redbull in every F1 GP.  Yaaaaawn.

      Let the Australian ‘car industry’ die the natural death it would have years ago by withdrawing the massive funding life-support it gets from the Government.

    • Tator says:

      01:54pm | 08/10/12

      Supercars, I don’t think so, they don’t even have any common parts with the bog stock falcodores and do nothing for improving Ford or Holden engineering.  But next year, with Nissan and Mercedes both coming on board, will bring a little more competition under the “Car of the Future” rules.

    • Carolyn says:

      02:31pm | 08/10/12

      Like many other adult amusements, it’s been sanatised and dumbed-down so to not offend “da famblees” who want to ensure little Jaxxon, Tahlie, Kouhrtknee have their trendy, “I was there too” moment to remember.

      The Gabba has not been the same since they got rid of the the ‘hill’.

      Sad.

    • S.L says:

      03:38pm | 08/10/12

      The end of group C (1983) was the time I quit going to “the mountain”. I had seen a HR ute roll with occupants in the tray! All survived and were only concerned that the eskies were ok. I saw Dick (it wasn’t my fault) Johnson over power Forest Elbow in the Green Machine and hit the trees in qualifying. I saw Brocky win….....twice and survived the drive there and back over the Bells Line of road!
      Bathurst of old is a mythical place like camelot. Today it’s yuppieville. The tele is the closest I’ll go these days!

    • the cynic says:

      05:20pm | 08/10/12

      Agree totally was a Bathurst devotee way back in the mid ‘60s after the race moved from PI. in ‘63,  would drive up from Melbourne after work on the Friday night with a mate and come back on the Tuesday after recouperating. Haven’t been back since the late ‘80s as well.  Since then it has been mates around the telle, now it is a big screen with wall to wall sound, the women doing the BBQ and the wine roster ( we have evolved, beer is so yesterday!)  and the kids scattered far and wide !  After the race it’s clothes off , onto the Champagne and into the SPA. Yes Bathurst has changed, and for us for the better.

    • Wickerman says:

      04:27pm | 08/10/12

      Hear Hear. Never been on the hill but would have liked to. Sanitisation/family atmosphere/“duty of care” BS all have something to answer the disappearence of things like this. Places like the hill should have a notice /wavier like:
      “Beyond here is “the hill”. In here is a modern day case study into the Lord of the Flies. Behaviour will be self-regulated, do what you will & there no duty of care, nor OSH, so dont go crying to mummy/lawyer/police/media. Civilised people will turn into tribalistic baboons - deal with it. Not for children or wowsers. Enjoy”

 

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