Tony Roberts (racing driver)


Antony Martin Roberts,, was an Australian race and rally driver.

Career

Roberts won the 1968 Datsun 3 Hour Trophy at Sandown in Melbourne with Bob Watson, giving the Holden HK Monaro GTS327 a debut victory. In 1969 Roberts, then a prominent rally driver competing for a major Holden dealership, and with just a single season of circuit racing experience, was invited by Harry Firth to join his newly formed Holden Dealer Team and went on to take victory co-driving with Colin Bond in the 1969 Hardie-Ferodo 500 HDT Holden HT Monaro GTS350.
Roberts and Bond won the 1970 Rothmans 12 Hour at Surfers Paradise, also in an HDT Monaro GTS350. Then Roberts drove a Holden Torana sports sedan which was used as a prototype for the Torana GTR XU-1 which debuted later in the year.
During the 1970 Hardie-Ferodo 500 Roberts was involved in a sensational incident late in the race when, after losing control, he launched his Ford XW Falcon GTHO Phase II backwards over Skyline before tumbling down the hillside.
Roberts made seven starts in the history of the Bathurst 1000, after his impressive debut with a third place in 1968. Roberts won Bathurst in 1969.
Roberts was the first three-time winner of Australia's Alpine Rally in 1966, 1967 and 1968.
Tony Roberts died in 2000.
Roberts was posthumously inducted into the Victorian Rally Hall of Fame in 2014. The award was accepted by his daughters Samantha and Tiffany.

Personal life

Roberts was born Antony Martin, on 17 November 1938 at home in Walmer, Kent, England, the eldest of two sons.
In 1951 at the age of 12 years, Roberts, his parents and younger brother migrated to Australia as ten pound POMS. They settled in Melbourne.
Roberts attended Prahran Technical School and graduated at the end of year 10. He worked for a time at General Motors Holden as a draftsman.
In 1963, Roberts married Helen Marjorie Renfree, an accomplished equestrian.
In 1970, their first daughter Samantha Marjorie was born and in 1972, their second daughter Tiffany Elizabeth.
In 1976, Helen died at the age of 32 leaving Roberts to raise their young daughters single-handed.
Roberts continued to run and manage his own automative service business and later became a Saab dealer. Unfortunately in the mid 1980s, Roberts was forced to close his business and as a result, his mental health deteriorated.
Roberts suffered from mostly untreated clinical depression for the last 15 years of his life as a result of a cumulation of very challenging life events including widowhood and unresolved grief, single parenthood and the loneliness this entails, the difficult transition from sporting fame and accolades to a civilian life and losing his sense of identity with the closure of his business, at a time when men did not seek help and acknowledgement of mental health issues was taboo. Combined with type II diabetes that was poorly managed, Roberts died at home in 2000 at the age of 61.

Career Results

Complete Bathurst 500/1000 results

Complete Sandown Enduro results