
Speedy pit stop sets up emphatic Supercars win
After a tough day on Friday, Feeney returned to the form that led to him winning five straight races across the Perth and Darwin legs.
The Red Bull Ampol star finished more than six seconds ahead of Walkinshaw Andretti United's Chaz Mostert, who made up 15 places after qualifying 17th.
Kiwi Matt Payne was the other driver to secure a podium finish.
Pole-sitter David Reynolds, who was battling illness, was overtaken by Payne on lap one.
Feeney made his move during the safety car, jumping ahead of Payne and Reynolds on lap 14.
After the race, Feeney started off by paying tribute to motorsport personality Tim Miles, who died in a road accident last week.
The championship leader then heaped praise on his team.
"The turnaround from this team overnight has been pretty fantastic," Feeney said.
"I had my doubts coming into today, even qualifying.
"But to get in there, we made a change to the shootout, and the thing was a rocket ship.
"What a great job by this pit crew, once again, to get us in the lead.
"From there, I could just manage the race, which I like doing up front.
"These guys were super quick, but I can't believe we turned that around to a win.
"That first one (pit stop) after the safety car, I was lucky.
"I just got Davey (Reynolds), and I knew I was going to be tight with Matty.
"I can't thank those guys enough for what they're doing at the moment."
Brodie Kostecki, who on Friday broke through for his first win since joining Shell V-Power at the start of the season, came in fifth.
Heading into Sunday's race, Feeney has a 201-point championship lead over Penrite's Payne.
Reigning champion Will Brown, Feeney's Triple Eight teammate, is 210 points behind in the title race.

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Cars 2 features Frosty, a character based Mark Winterbottom, who voices the car in the film. Picture: Disney/Pixar/All Rights Reserved. With HarperCollins publishing his co-written memoir, Frosty, next month, Winterbottom said the process brought him 'relief to just write stuff down'. 'Lots of people have very similar upbringings,' he said. 'Motorsport might not be what they're trying to achieve, but they might go, 'Well, he turned that into a positive, maybe I can do the same'.' A self-made Aussie success story from humble Doonside roots, for Winterbottom, the need for foundation literacy is elementary and universal. 'You always want to improve,' he said. 'You become a better person and then you try to pass that on to your kids. (If) each one learns from the other one and upskills a little bit more, that's how you build generations.' Registrations and the school round of the Prime Minister's Spelling Bee close at 5pm AEST Friday 22 August. Visit Registrations and the school round close at 5pm AEST – BEE in it to win it! ABOUT THE BEE ● The Prime Minister's Spelling Bee is a free, online competition for students in Years 3-8. ● Students compete at their school in three levels: Green level for Years 3-4, Orange level for Years 5-6 and Red level for Years 7-8. ● They get 30 randomly selected words from their competition level and have 25 seconds to type each answer. The students with the most correct words in the fastest time progress to finals. ● Teachers can register their students until August 22, when the school round ends. ● State and territory finals will be held September 1-5 and the national finals on September 10-11. ● The national champion in each age group wins a trip to Canberra to meet the Prime Minister, an iPad, HarperCollins book pack and a $1000 voucher for their school. Details: