Theo and  James  Koudouris have  been racing Porsches for many  years and are two Australian Greeks right at  the  very  competitive  edge  of sports car racing in this  country.

Their two Porsche GT3 997 Cup cars were competing in the Australian GT Championship “three race” Australian Formula One meeting.

Up against sports cars such as Ferrari 430’s, Lamborghini Gallardo’s, Aston Martin DBRS9’s, Dodge Viper V10’s, Mosler MT900’s, Lotus, BMW’s ,Corvettes and a  gaggle  of other Porsche 997’s, the  brothers held  their own.

They are often found in top ten positions of the starting grid in a class with fields of 40 plus exotic sports cars.

In the support paddock enclosure, and  right next  to Eric Bana’s Porsche pit, were the  two Kondouris  Porsches.

They were changing into their  driving suits in preparation for racing when I caught up with them in their huge transporter.

I asked  Theo Koudouris  to give  me a  back ground  on their passion for motor sport.

“We were both born,  bred and  went  to school in Canberra but we  have  always been car  nuts and as we  got  older, we  took our opportunity and  love for cars a  little  further,  and ended up here.”

“We started  in an old  1973 Porsche 2. 4 litre with track days at  Gouldburn and  we went  from there, we feel comfortable  in Porsches and  they last -They don’t  break, but just  wear  out. After a brief  stint  in a  borrowed  Ferrari, we have  been driving GT Cup cars  for seven years  now. We started off  in the  old Porsche Cup, then we  moved onto the Nations Cup which was  the  old version of the  current  GT Cup series, then Carrera Cup, and  back here in the GT3 series again.”

James explained that  their Porsches  with the eye-catching paintwork enjoyed healthy sponsorship through their family supermarket chain.

“Theo works  on the Supabarn Supermarket side  of the  business and I work on property development which takes up most  of our daily  lives. We race  when we  can and we like to be  competitive and  race  in every  round  of the series. Our  head  mechanic Michael Newton, and  his  first cousin, who are both half  Kytherian (by the way) do a  great job preparing  the cars for each race meeting.”

James continued to say that  the  Melbourne  Grand  Prix  track was  very  quick and  certainly helped the Ferrari’s and  Lamborghinis because of their superior downforce, unlike  the  Adelaide  Clipsal track with its stop-start type layout that suited their cars better.

I also asked the brothers, what their plans were for the future of the Supabarn racing team and if they were going to move ahead into a more prolific class of racing.

“The  next  obvious move  is to get  into V8 Supercars. However both James and I are too old as most of the drivers in that category today are in their early 20’s. We are quite happy to compete with our current Porsches in GT for a while longer,” replied Theo.

With Theo and  James now fully suited up for the race in 30 minutes, we ran out of time for a longer chat.

I watched the eight lap GT Championship race on Saturday afternoon. The Koundouris brothers did well, leading  most of the Porsche entries and finishing in sixth and eighth position against the formidable Aston Martins and Ferraris.