Supercars great Will Davison has turned heads after teaming up with racer-turned-OnlyFans star Renee Gracie.
Davison, 43, won’t be appearing on the adult platform – he has come out of retirement to co-drive a Ferrari alongside the most controversial figure in Australian motorsport.
Gracie walked away from the circuit in 2019, declaring ‘racing cars is not my passion anymore’ and has since become a millionaire for her risqué online content.
In what will come as a shock to many Supercars fans, two-time Bathurst winner Davison has agreed to slide into Gracie’s OnlyFans-backed Ferrari 296 GT3 ahead of the GT World Challenge Australia season, competing under the OnlyFans Racing banner.
‘Ultimately, this was a decision about racing,’ Davison told News Corp.
‘At this stage of my career, all I am concerned about is what happens on the track.
Supercars great Will Davison has turned heads after agreeing to team up with racer-turned-OnlyFans star Renee Gracie
Davison, 43, won’t be appearing on the adult platform – he has come out of retirement to co-drive a Ferrari alongside the most controversial figure in Australian motorsport
Two-time Bathurst winner Davison has agreed to slide into Renee Gracie’s OnlyFans backed Ferrari 296 GT3 ahead of the GT World Challenge Australia season
‘It’s a great opportunity for me to race in a top car, with a top team, in a category I’ve been wanting to race in for ages. So I’m thrilled for the opportunity.’
Davison retired from Supercars at the end of last season. It followed a controversial late selection decision from Dick Johnson Racing which left the veteran of 600 Supercars starts without a drive.
Last October, Gracie lifted the lid on the dark side of Australia’s most famous car race, the Bathurst 1000.
Gracie teamed up with Switzerland’s Simona de Silvestro to create the first all-female Bathurst 1000 driving team in 2015 – but they soon made headlines for the wrong reasons.
During an interview in the lead-up to the race, rival driver Dave Reynolds referred to the all-female team’s car as the ‘P***y Wagon’.
The comments were widely condemned by the motor racing community as sexist and distasteful, with Reynolds later issued a $25,000 fine.
Gracie wasn’t offended by Reynolds’ remarks, but the abuse she suffered following the incident changed her relationship with the sport.
‘There was death threats, I had a beer can thrown at me, I had people abusing me, I got booed,’ she recalled.
Renee Gracie quit Supercars in 2019, declaring ‘racing cars is not my passion anymore’ and has since become a millionaire for her online content
In 2025, Gracie told the Daily Mail about the blatant sexism and harassment she faced during her career in motorsport, which ultimately led to her quitting Supercars
Renee Gracie competed in the 2015 Bathurst 1000, but felt she was used as a ‘marketing tactic’
‘If you’re a motorsport fan, we all know the type of people that hang up on the top of the (Bathurst) mountain, and it was all of those people who were really quite nasty and horrible.
‘Some of them really didn’t want a female (competing) and they really let me know about it.’
Gracie added the overall experience ‘wasn’t overly positive’ and felt she was used as a ‘marketing tactic’.
In 2025, Gracie told the Daily Mail about the blatant sexism and harassment she faced during her sporting career, which ultimately led to her quitting the track.
‘I think a lot of people assumed that things were easy for me, being a girl in motorsport, but it was the opposite,’ she said.
‘People didn’t want to talk to me because I was a girl. People would tell me, to my face, they didn’t think girls should be in motorsports.’








