JUST OCCASIONALLY, MOTOR RACING THROWS UP A one-on-one contest so raw, so brazenly gladiatorial, it’s as though just two cars are on track. Villeneuve versus Arnoux at Dijon in 1979. Mansell hounding Senna at Monaco in ’92. And Brands Hatch, July 1988, when two giants of touring car racing clashed in their Ford Sierra RS500 Cosworths.
Britain’s Andy Rouse and Steve Soper were arguably the pre-eminent touring car drivers of their era. Rouse, a talented engineer, began in grasstrack racing, and worked at the famous Broadspeed team before going it alone. By 1984 he was BTCC champion in a Rover V8 engineered and run under his name, at which point his and fellow Rover driver Soper’s paths first crossed. For Soper, 31, this was his first year as a works…