2008_IndyCar_Series_season

2008 IndyCar Series season

The 2008 IndyCar Series season is the 13th season of the series. Its premier event was the 92nd Indianapolis 500 on May 25. The first race was held March 29 at Homestead. It is the 97th recognized season of top-level American open wheel racing.

All races were televised on ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, or ESPN Classic. All IndyCar Series broadcasts continued to utilize the popular Side-By-Side format in their first year of HD. Races were also broadcast on the IMS Radio Network and XM.

On February 26, 2008, the managements of IRL and Champ Car came to an agreement to become one entity. The move effectively ended a twelve-year split and reunited American Open Wheel racing.

2008 IndyCar Series schedule

Date Race Name Track Location Pole Position Fastest Lap Most Laps Led Winner
March 29 GAINSCO Auto Insurance Indy 300 Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead Scott Dixon Ryan Briscoe Marco Andretti Scott Dixon
April 6 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg Streets of St. Petersburg St. Petersburg Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Graham Rahal Graham Rahal
April 20 Indy Japan 300 (see below) Twin Ring Motegi Motegi Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves Scott Dixon Danica Patrick
April 20 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach (see below) Streets of Long Beach Long Beach Justin Wilson Antonio Pizzonia Will Power Will Power
April 27 RoadRunner Turbo Indy 300 Kansas Speedway Kansas City Scott Dixon Scott Dixon Scott Dixon Dan Wheldon
May 25 92nd Indianapolis 500 Indianapolis Motor Speedway Speedway Scott Dixon Marco Andretti Scott Dixon Scott Dixon
June 1 ABC Supply Company A.J. Foyt 225 The Milwaukee Mile West Allis Marco Andretti Scott Dixon Scott Dixon Ryan Briscoe
June 7 Bombardier Learjet 550 Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth Scott Dixon Dan Wheldon Hélio Castroneves Scott Dixon
June 22 Iowa Corn Indy 250 Iowa Speedway Newton Scott Dixon Ryan Briscoe Hélio Castroneves Dan Wheldon
June 28 SunTrust Indy Challenge Richmond International Raceway Richmond Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan
July 6 Camping World Watkins Glen Grand Prix Watkins Glen International Watkins Glen Ryan Briscoe Ryan Briscoe Ryan Briscoe Ryan Hunter-Reay
July 12 Firestone Indy 200 Nashville Superspeedway Lebanon Hélio Castroneves Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Scott Dixon
July 20 Honda 200 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course Lexington Hélio Castroneves Ryan Briscoe Ryan Briscoe Ryan Briscoe
July 26 Rexall Edmonton Indy Edmonton Street Circuit Edmonton Ryan Briscoe Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves Scott Dixon
August 9 Meijer Indy 300 Kentucky Speedway Sparta Scott Dixon Ed Carpenter Scott Dixon Scott Dixon
August 24 Peak Antifreeze & Motor Oil Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma County Infineon Raceway Sonoma Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves
August 31 Detroit Indy Grand Prix presented by Firestone The Raceway on Belle Isle Detroit Scott Dixon Tony Kanaan Hélio Castroneves Justin Wilson
September 7 Peak Antifreeze & Motor Oil Indy 300 Chicagoland Speedway Joliet Ryan Briscoe Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves
Date Race Name Track Location Time (EDT) TV
October 26 Nikon Indy 300 Surfers Paradise Street Circuit Queensland 11:00 p.m. ESPN Classic
Non-championship race

Schedule details

  • The original official 16-race schedule was announced September 19, 2007. On February 26, 2008, it was announced that former Champ Car events at Long Beach, Edmonton, and Australia would be added to the 2008 schedule.
  • An unresolvable scheduling conflict occurred between Motegi and Long Beach. Existing IndyCar teams competed in the Indy Japan 300, while some of the former Champ Car teams raced at Long Beach using their 2007 Panoz DP01 chassis. Both races counted toward the 2008 title.
  • All times are EDT and are subject to change.
  • Race names and sponsors are subject to change
  • The Indy Japan 300 was scheduled for 12:00 a.m. EDT, but was delayed to 10:00 p.m. EDT. Persistent "weepers" due to earlier rain delayed the race a day in Japan.
  • The Edmonton race was moved to Saturday instead of Sunday to avoid conflict with the NASCAR Allstate 400 at the Brickyard; the Indianapolis Motor Speedway has an agreement not to hold IRL races directly against the NASCAR race at their circuit.
  • The Richmond race has been extended by 50 laps (37.5 miles), turning it from a 250-lap race to 300 laps.

Team and Driver Chart

Team Chassis Engine No Drivers Sponsor(s) Notes
Team Penske Dallara Honda 3 Helio Castroneves Kodak/Mobil 1 Both cars appear with unbranded Marlboro colors and logos in accordance with the MSA. #77 car was also entered for the Indy 500 but did not appear.
6 Ryan Briscoe Kodak/Mobil 1
Target Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara Honda 9 Scott Dixon Target/Fujifilm/Polaroid  
10 Dan Wheldon Target/Fujifilm/Polaroid  
Dario Franchitti Target/Fujifilm/Polaroid Nikon Indy 300 only
Andretti Green Racing Dallara Honda 7 Danica Patrick Motorola/XM  
11 Tony Kanaan 7-Eleven  
26 Marco Andretti NYSE/Meijer/Gillette/Blockbuster The car was painted with Indiana Jones livery at Indianapolis and Milwaukee. It was painted with Star Wars: The Clone Wars livery at Infineon.
27 Hideki Mutoh (R) Panasonic/Formula Dream
Rahal Letterman Racing Dallara Honda 16 Alex Lloyd Wii Fit Indy 500 only; run in conjunction with Chip Ganassi Racing
17 Ryan Hunter-Reay Ethanol Promotion and Information Council
Panther Racing Dallara Honda 4 Vitor Meira National Guard/Delphi The #83 car was also entered for the Indy 500 but did not appear
Dan Wheldon National Guard/Delphi Nikon Indy 300 only
A.J. Foyt Racing Dallara Honda 14 Darren Manning ABC Supply Company  
Vitor Meira ABC Supply Company Nikon Indy 300 only
41 Jeff Simmons ABC Supply Company Indy 500 only
Franck Perera (R) ABC Supply Company Chicagoland only
Vision Racing Dallara Honda 2 A. J. Foyt IV Eli Lilly  
20 Ed Carpenter Menards  
22 Davey Hamilton HP Indy 500 only
22 Paul Tracy Subway/ Edmonton.com Edmonton only; run in conjunction with Walker Racing
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara Honda 15 Buddy Rice Jordache/Operation Homefront/ Express Auto Delivery/Roll Coater
23 Milka Duno Citgo Duno (11 races), Bell (6 races)
Townsend Bell William Rast/Emu Australia/Rigid Building Systems
99 Townsend Bell William Rast In addition to Bell's six races in the #23, he will run the Indy 500 in a third car, #99.
Roth Racing Dallara Honda 24 Jay Howard (R) Ran first 4 races and Watkins Glen, unclear if #24 team will return
John Andretti 1-800-LAS-VEGAS Drove at Indy, Milwaukee, Texas, Iowa, and Richmond
25 Marty Roth LIDS/Men's Warehouse
KV Racing Technology Dallara Honda 5 Oriol Servià Plantronics/CDW/Wall Street Journal/Angie's List Will work with Target Chip Ganassi Racing this season. Servià declared veteran driver by the IRL.
8 Will Power (R) Aussie Vineyards/Smart & Final
Conquest Racing Dallara Honda 34 Jaime Camara (R) Sangari Perera raced first 3 races, replaced by Camara for rest of season
Franck Perera (R) Opes Prime Group/Ares
36 Enrique Bernoldi (R) Sangari Tagliani replaces Bernoldi at final three races due to injury
Alex Tagliani Ubisoft/Sennheiser/Sangari
Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing Dallara Honda 02 Justin Wilson (R) McDonald's Will work with Rahal Letterman Racing this season
06 Graham Rahal (R) Rexall/Hole in the Wall Camps
Dale Coyne Racing Dallara Honda 18 Bruno Junqueira Z-Line Designs Will work with Andretti Green Racing this season
19 Mario Moraes (R) Sonny's Real Pit Bar-B-Q
HVM Racing Dallara Honda 33 E. J. Viso (R) PDVSA Former Minardi Team USA in CCWS. Will run in all races with the exception of Nashville (illness).
Pacific Coast Motorsports Dallara Honda 96 Mario Dominguez (R) Mexico City Tourism Board Ran at Long Beach and planned to run full-time starting at Indy (DNQ), but a team re-evaluation after Texas prompted a road/street course focus. Absent from Detroit and Chicago, but they plan the full 2009 season.
Part time entries
Luczo Dragon Racing Dallara Honda 12 Tomas Scheckter Symantec Kansas, Indy 500, Texas, Infineon, Detroit, and Chicagoland only.
Rubicon Race Team Dallara Honda 44 Max Papis LifeLock Indy 500 Only - Failed to qualify
Sarah Fisher Racing Dallara Honda 67 Sarah Fisher Dollar General/text4cars.com Indy 500, Kentucky, and Chicagoland only
CURB/Agajanian/Beck Motorsports/Wellman Racing Dallara Honda 77 Roger Yasukawa Interush Motegi Only
98 Curb Records/hhgregg/Real Power Indy 500 only - Failed to qualify
American Dream Motorsports Panoz Honda 88 Phil Giebler Gardner Trucking Indy 500 only - practiced for Indy but wrecked and failed to make a qualifying attempt; formerly Playa Del Racing.
Hemelgarn Johnson Racing Dallara Honda 91 Buddy Lazier LifeLock, MDA Indy 500 only
PDM Racing Panoz Honda TBA TBA TBA Indy 500 only - did not appear
Long Beach only entries
Forsythe/Pettit Racing Panoz Cosworth 3 Paul Tracy INDECK
7 Franck Montagny INDECK
37 David Martínez INDECK
Minardi Team USA/HVM Racing Panoz Cosworth 4 Nelson Philippe Muermans Group
14 Roberto Moreno Muermans Group
Rocketsports Panoz Cosworth 9 Antonio Pizzonia Borla Exhaust
10 Juho Annala Pulp Agency/Rockstar Energy Drink
/ KV Racing Technology Panoz Cosworth 12 Jimmy Vasser Plantronics/HP
Walker Racing Panoz Cosworth 15 Alex Tagliani CEC Wheels
Pacific Coast Motorsports Panoz Cosworth 29 Alex Figge Imperial Capital Bank

  • All entries utilize Firestone tires
  • On March 5, the IRL announced that former Champ Car teams would be paired with current IndyCar teams to aid their transition.

Series news

  • PEAK will be the official oil product of the Indy Racing League.
  • DirecTV will be the IndyCar Series presenting sponsor.
  • Coca-Cola will be the official soft drink sponsor of the IndyCar Series through 2010.
  • Raybestos will be the preferred competition brake friction through 2009, and sponsor the Raybestos Road and Street Course Challenge, awarding $5,000 to the winner of each road/street course race and $25,000 to the driver with the highest average finish on road and street courses at the end of the season.
  • Izod has signed a multi-year deal to be the official clothing supplier of the IndyCar Series

Schedule development

Unification with Champ Car

On January 23, 2008, Robin Miller reported that Tony George had offered to Champ Car management a proposal that included free cars and engine leases to Champ Car teams willing to run the entire 2008 IndyCar Series schedule in exchange for adding Champ Car's dates at Long Beach, Toronto, Edmonton, Mexico City, and Australia to the IndyCar Series schedule, effectively reuniting American open wheel racing. The offer was initially made in November 2007. On February 10, 2008, Tony George, along with IRL representatives Terry Angstadt and Brian Barnhart, plus former Honda executive Robert Clarke, traveled to Japan to discuss moving the Indy Japan 300 at Twin Ring Motegi. Moving that race, or postponing it, would be required in order to accommodate the Long Beach Grand Prix, which is scheduled for the same weekend. Optimism following the meeting was high.

On February 19, 2008, Robin Miller reported on SPEED and Curt Cavin blogged on IndyStar.com that the managements of Indy Racing League and Champ Car have come to an agreement to become one entity. The move would effectively end a 12-year split and reunite American Open Wheel racing. Meanwhile, Brian Barnhart announced that Tony George is negotiating the unification, and an inventory of available IndyCar chassis and equipment for the Champ Car teams is underway. On February 22, Cavin initially reported that no deal had been reached between the IRL and CCWS in a lengthy dinner meeting between George and CCWS president Kevin Kalkhoven the previous evening. Later in the day, however, it was reported that the merger deal had been completed, confirmed by George, and that it would be formally announced at a press conference the following week.

Driver & Team news

Rule changes

  • Full-time IndyCar Series entries will begin utilizing mandatory paddle shifters in 2008. Paddle shifters for Indianapolis 500-only entries will be optional.
  • The cars will be fitted with a "Zylon" synthetic-fiber intrusion barrier.
  • For the oval track events, qualifying will change from single-lap to four-lap average speed, similar to that used at Indianapolis in most years since 1920.
  • Fuel mixture adjustment control will be reinstated for 2008.
  • Due to the added cars brought by unification, the road and street course qualifying procedure will be altered to a knockout qualifying format, beginning with a pair of preliminary sessions, each composed of half of the field, the six fastest drivers from each preliminary session will go to a third session and the six fastest drivers from that session will compete for the pole in the Firestone Fast Six.

Revenue sharing

In an effort to enhance full-time participation, the IndyCar Series announced a revenue sharing plan entitled IndyCar TEAM (Team Enhancement and Allocation Matrix) for 2008. The details are as follows:

  • Teams will receive a minimum of $1.2 million for each car competing in the full schedule.
  • Race purses will be eliminated for all events except for the Indianapolis 500.
  • The top five finishers in each race are eligible for special cash bonuses.
  • The total purse for the 2008 Indianapolis 500 will increase with the winner receiving $2.5 million, 33rd place paying no less than $270,000. Indy-only entries will be eligible for the $270,000 minimum along with the full-season entries. The entire race purse will total at least $13.4 million, not including contingency awards. In 2007, race winner Dario Franchitti received $1,645,233, and last place Roberto Moreno won $224,805.
  • The season champion will win $1 million, as has been in seasons' past. Second through fifth in the season championship will be eligible for cash bonuses.

Testing

The following open tests were held:

Race summaries

Round 1: GAINSCO Auto Insurance Indy 300

After qualifying, the Vision Racing qualifying times of Ed Carpenter and A. J. Foyt IV (2nd and 3rd) were disallowed, and forced to move to the rear of the field. After a crash during qualifying, Dan Wheldon was forced to a back-up car at the rear of the field as well.

At the start, Scott Dixon beat Danica Patrick into the first turn. Dixon went on to lead most of the way through lap 71. After a series of pit stops, Marco Andretti moved into the lead. On lap 127, Milka Duno spun in turn two, and collected Ryan Briscoe, who was running sixth. Later, Tony Kanaan moved back into the lead until the final round of pit stops. By pitting out-of-sequence Danica Patrick unlapped herself, and moved up to second place. The position was short-lived, as she was forced to pit for fuel before the end of the race. With seven laps to go, E. J. Viso spun directly in front the leader Kanaan, and clipped his right-front suspension. Kanaan attempted to limp around and hold on to the victory if the race finished under caution. With four laps to go, the green came out, and Kanaan was forced to pull out of the way. Scott Dixon got by, and held on for the victory.

Despite starting at the rear of the field, Dan Wheldon charged to the front, managed to lead 9 laps, and came home third. In addition, both Vision cars rebounded to finish in the top 10.
Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 1:44:03.5914 67
2 4 26 Marco Andretti Andretti Green Racing 200 align=right
0.5828
85
3 22 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 align=right
1.4278
9
4 5 3 Helio Castroneves Penske Racing 200 align=right
8.0340
4
5 24 20 Ed Carpenter Vision Racing 199 align=right
1 lap
0
Race average speed: 171.248 mph
Lead changes: 12 between 5 drivers
Cautions: 3 for 24 laps

Round 2: Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg

Heavy rain in the morning soaked the track, and left considerable standing water. The race was started under 10 laps of caution as the track dried. At the start, Tony Kanaan assumed the lead, but soon was passed by Justin Wilson. The early part of the race saw several spins by several cars, including Danica Patrick, Marco Andretti and Mario Moraes.

On the 37th lap after a restart, rookie Graham Rahal was hit from behind by Will Power while running 3rd. He was able to continue. Several cautions slowed the race, including a crash by Ryan Briscoe, and a multi-car incident involving Vitor Meira, Franck Perera, and Townsend Bell. On the restart that followed, Rahal-Letterman Racing driver Ryan Hunter-Reay led Graham Rahal. Rahal got the jump and took the lead into the first turn. With time running out before the two-hout time limit, the race was poised to end before the scheduled distance. On the final restart, just under 4 minutes of racing remained. Rahal held off a charging Helio Castroneves and won his first race.

At 19 years, 93 days old, Rahal became the youngest driver ever to win an Indy-style race, as well as the youngest winner in IndyCar Series history. He broke Marco Andretti's record from 2006. He also became the fourth driver to win an IndyCar Series race in his first start, joining Buzz Calkins, Juan Pablo Montoya and Scott Dixon.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 9 06 Graham Rahal Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing 83 2:00:43.5562 19
2 4 3 Helio Castroneves Penske Racing 83 align=right
3.5192
0
3 1 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 83 align=right
5.5134
15
4 15 33 E. J. Viso HVM Racing 83 align=right
8.8575
12
5 18 36 Enrique Bernoldi Conquest Racing 83 align=right
9.6360
3
Race average speed: 74.251 mph
Lead changes: 7 between 8 drivers
Cautions: 6 for 29 laps

Round 3A: Indy Japan 300

At the start, Marco Andretti lost control in turn one due to cold tires and crashed out of the race. Meanwhile, Helio Castroneves took the lead, and led the first 92 laps. On the 48th lap, Ed Carpenter and Danica Patrick pitted, but moments later the caution came out when Hideki Mutoh crashed. The pits became closed, and the remainder of the leaders had to wait to make their respective pit stops. After the field was shuffled, Castroneves still maintained the lead.

On the 92nd lap, Vitor Meira brushed the wall. In the pits, Vision Racing teammates Carpenter and A.J. Foyt IV made contact in their pit stalls. Scott Dixon exited the pits first, and took over the lead.

On lap 142, Roger Yasukawa stalled on the mainstrech with a brake failure. The ensuing caution period set up a exciting finish due to fuel strategy, as most teams were getting 51 laps on a single tank of fuel. The top seven leaders all pitted together, with Dixon coming out in the lead once again. On lap 148, Castroneves, Patrick, and Carpenter all returned to the pits to top off their tanks, in hopes of going the distance without one last pit stop, hoping that the race would go green to the finish.

Shortly after the restart on lap 149, Patrick dropped back to seventh place (last car on the lead lap) in a fuel conservation strategy to have enough fuel to challenge the leader at the end of the race. With the race remaining green, during the final ten laps, most of the leaders, not having enough fuel to get to the end, ducked off the track for "splash-and-go" pit stops for fuel. Despite topping off his tank earlier, Ed Carpenter, getting poorer fuel economy than the rest of the lead-lap cars, was forced to pit for fuel. Castroneves inherited the lead with less than 5 laps to go, with Patrick charging in second place. Castroneves slowed his pace to conserve fuel, and Danica Patrick took the lead with 2 laps to go. Patrick held on to win, and became the first female to win a race in the history of top-level American open wheel racing.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 6 7 Danica Patrick Andretti Green Racing 200 1:51:02.6739 3
2 1 3 Helio Castroneves Penske Racing 200 align=right
5.8594
94
3 2 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 +10.0559 101
4 5 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 +13.1116 2
5 3 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 200 +16.0731 0
Race average speed: 164.258 mph
Lead changes: 5 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 29 laps

Round 3B: Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach

The final race of the Champ Car era took place less than a day after the checkered flag fell at the Indy Japan 300. Teams which raced in ChampCars in 2007 stayed in North America for the 34th annual Long Beach Grand Prix, while teams which planned to compete in IRl before the merger raced at Motegi.

The contingent of former Champ Car teams produced a 20-car field, all utilizing the turbocharged Cosworth/Panoz DP01 for the final time. From a standing start (the first such at Long Beach since 1983; Champ Car had utilised the start from June 2007), Will Power got the jump from fourth position to take the lead into turn one. Power led 81 of the 83 laps, relinquishing the top position only during pit stops.

All participants entering other IndyCar races earned points towards the 2008 IndyCar Series championship. All the teams raced together again a week later at Kansas Speedway, and for the remainder of the schedule together.

The race was run under Champ Car rules, which included the standing start, option tire, two-day qualifying format, ran on time (1hr 45 mins) rather than a set number of laps.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 4 8 Will Power KV Racing 83 1:45:25.415 81
2 6 7 Franck Montagny Forsythe/Pettit Racing 83 align=right
5.094
0
3 10 96 Mario Dominguez Pacific Coast Motorsports 83 align=right
15.516
0
4 8 36 Enrique Bernoldi Conquest Racing 83 align=right
25.677
0
5 12 5 Oriol Servia KV Racing 83 align=right
26.276
0
Race average speed: 92.964 mph
Lead changes: 3 between 3 drivers
Cautions: 3 for 9 laps

Round 4: RoadRunner Turbo Indy 300

At the start, Scott Dixon took the lead from the pole position. Meanwhile, Enrique Bernoldi spun and headed to the pits. On lap 23, Will Power crashed in turn 2. While the field pitted under the caution, Justin Wilson stayed out and took the lead.

Dixon took the lead back on the restart, and maintained the lead through the next series of pit stops. On lap 98, the caution came out again for a crash involving E. J. Viso and Tomas Scheckter. After another long green flag segment, Buddy Rice brought out the yellow on lap 153 with a heavy crash in turn 2. In the pits, Danica Patrick retired from the race with a broken wheel hub. Meanwhile Scott Dixon, who had dominated most of the race, was shuffled back to seventh place.

The race resumed after a long yellow with Dan Wheldon leading. Wheldon pulled away and led the final 49 laps to record his first IndyCar Series victory since April 2007.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 2 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 1:52:49.9806 49
2 11 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 200 align=right
2.1778
0
3 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 +4.3922 145
4 8 3 Helio Castroneves Penske Racing 200 +9.2889 1
5 14 26 Marco Andretti Andretti Green Racing 200 +9.2986 0
Race average speed: 161.774 mph
Lead changes: 5 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 41 laps

Round 5: 92nd Indianapolis 500 broadcast presented by GoDaddy.com

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 3:28:57.6792 115
2 8 4 Vitor Meira Panther Racing 200 align=right
1.7498
12
3 7 26 Marco Andretti Andretti Green Racing 200 +2.3127 15
4 4 3 Helio Castroneves Penske Racing 200 +6.2619 0
5 10 20 Ed Carpenter Vision Racing 200 +6.5505 2
Race average speed: 143.567 mph
Lead changes: 18 between 9 drivers
Cautions: 8 for 69 laps

Round 6: ABC Supply Company A.J. Foyt 225

Marco Andretti took the lead from the pole position, and led the first 40 laps. He was chased early by Scott Dixon and teammate Tony Kanaan. Graham Rahal, who started on the outside of the front row, shuffled back, but remained in the top 5 for the first half of the race.

The first half was mostly green, with only a minor caution involving Oriol Servia and another for debris. Later in the first fuel segment, Andretti's handling started to suffer, and Scott Dixon took over the lead. Helio Castroneves took over second, and Andretti fell back as deep as tenth.

On lap 130, Graham Rahal went high in turn three to pass Darren Manning. He got into the marbles, and brushed along the wall in turn four. After holding the lead for 136 laps, Dixon was finally challenged by Ryan Briscoe. Briscoe took over the lead on lap 177, and held it until a green flag pit stop on lap 194. After a sequence of pit stops, Castroneves, Andretti and Wheldon all cycled near the front. When all pit stops were complete, Briscoe held a half-second lead over Dixon. The two battled for the lead over the final 21 laps.

With less than three laps to go, Marco Andretti dove underneath Ed Carpenter in turn one. The cars touched, and both cars spun into the wall. Vitor Meira became caught up in the smoke, and rode up over Andretti, becoming airborne. He landed upright, and all drivers were uninjured. The race finished under caution with Ryan Briscoe picking up his first career IndyCar victory, and 300th overall win for the Mooresville, North Carolina-based Penske Racing in all motorsports series.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 11 6 Ryan Briscoe Penske Racing 225 1:42:41.7387 36
2 3 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 225 align=right
0.0487
147
3 6 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 225 +1.8413 0
4 7 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 225 +2.9314 0
5 5 3 Helio Castroneves Penske Racing 225 +4.6704 2
Race average speed: 133.428 mph
Lead changes: 5 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 29 laps

Round 7: Bombardier Learjet 550

In the first half, three single-car incidents involving Mario Dominguez, Justin Wilson, and Oriol Servia slowed the race. The lead changed hands between Helio Castroneves, Bruno Junqueira, and Scott Dixon for the first 100 laps.

Two sequences of green flag pit stops occurred under a long strech of green flag conditions. A caution for debris came out on lap 165, sending the leaders to the pits once more. Vitor Meira stayed out to take over the lead.

With 21 laps to go, Meira was forced to pit for fuel, giving up the lead to Marco Andretti. Moments later, Enrique Bernoldi crashed in turn four. Andretti led the field back to green on lap 219.

With six laps to go, Scott Dixon slipped by Andretti to take the lead. On the next lap, down the backstrech, third place Ryan Hunter-Reay dove below Andretti heading into turn three. Hunter-Reay pinched his left wheels onto the apron, lost control, and touched wheels with Andretti. Both cars spun and crashed hard into the wall. The race finished under caution with Dixon the winner, and Helio Castroneves slipping by the accident to finish second.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 228 2:04:36.3153 58
2 2 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 228 align=right
0.0479
85
3 3 6 Ryan Briscoe Penske Racing 228 align=right
0.6173
12
4 7 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 228 align=right
3.3000
0
5 6 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 228 align=right
4.3124
0
Race average speed: 159.740 mph
Lead changes: 21 between 6 drivers
Cautions: 8 for 52 laps

Round 8: Iowa Corn Indy 250

At the green flag, Helio Castroneves took the lead in turn 1 from polesitter Scott Dixon. Tony Kanaan quickly moved up to second position. Over the next 10-15 laps, Castroneves and Kanaan battled back-and-forth for the lead, side-by-side on many laps. Kanaan finally muscled the lead away on lap 16, and gained a lead of roughly one second.

On lap 39, Ed Carpenter brushed the outside wall in turn 2. The leaders pit, and Kanaan exited the pits as the leader. On lap 51, the green came back out, and a lap later, Castroneves got by Kanaan for the lead. Jaime Camara brought out the yellow on lap 106 when his car lost power and stopped on the course. After another sequence of pit stops, Tony Kanaan led Dan Wheldon and Marco Andretti. On the restart, Wheldon lost control and slid up the track, falling to 8th place.

On lap 157 Mario Moraes spun into the pit apron, bringing out a caution, and the leaders pitted. John Andretti's pitcrew had trouble engaging the fuel hose, and he dropped back the end of the running order. Prior to this he had been running in 7th place, one of the highest positions ever for a Roth Racing car.

Castroneves regained the lead on lap 170, and held it until another yellow came out on lap 188 for a spin by Enrique Bernoldi. Most of the leaders pitted, but Dan Wheldon, Hideki Mutoh, and Danica Patrick stayed out to lead the field. On the restart Mario Moraes spun for the second time of the day, and prolonged the yellow until lap 202. On lap 212, Tony Kanaan (running third) suddenly lost control and crashed in turn 1.

On the lap 227 restart, Marco Andretti and Scott Dixon passed Danica Patrick to take third and fourth place respectively. Over the final 15 laps, Mutoh and Andretti battled for second, with Mutoh holding off Andretti's challenge. Dan Wheldon went on to win, and Chip Ganassi Racing donated their race winnings from both cars to Iowa flood relief. After getting by Danica Patrick late in the race, A. J. Foyt IV finished in the top 5, while John Andretti just missed the top 10, working his way back to 11th.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 3 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 250 1:30:50.3110 61
2 7 27 Hideki Mutoh Andretti Green Racing 250 align=right
0.1430
0
3 8 26 Marco Andretti Andretti Green Racing 250 align=right
0.9028
26
4 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 250 align=right
1.2726
0
5 18 2 A. J. Foyt IV Vision Racing 250 align=right
1.3564
0
Race average speed: 136.007 mph
Lead changes: 9 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 6 for 57 laps

Round 9: SunTrust Indy Challenge

At the start, Ryan Hunter-Reay spun just before the start/finish line, which brought the yellow out immediately. The first 7 laps were run under yellow with Tony Kanaan leading from the pole position. On lap 8, the green came out, but only one lap was completed before the next yellow. Will Power was driving below Hélio Castroneves, lost control, and crashed in turn 4. The race finally got going on lap 21, when the green came out once again.

On lap 31, A. J. Foyt IV touched wheels with John Andretti, and Foyt crashed in the wall in turn 2. His Vision Racing teammate Ed Carpenter ran over debris from the crash, and both cars were sidelined. During the caution, a handful of cars pitted, including Danica Patrick and rookie Jaime Camara, but most of the leaders stayed on the track.

Kanaan continued to lead when debris brought out the caution again on lap 67. All of the leaders pitted, while Camara and Patrick stayed out and took the first two spots. On the restart, Camara led the field, but Buddy Rice spun and tagged the wall on the frontstrech. The field checked up, and Darren Manning, Ryan Briscoe and Bruno Junqueira were involved in a separate crash.

Camara led at the next restart, while Kanaan, Patrick, and Castroneves went 3-wide for second. Behind them in turn 2, John Andretti and Vitor Meira tangled, and crashed hard in the wall. Patrick returned to the pits, and topped off with fuel. Camara continued to lead, and impressively held off Kanaan on the restart. On lap 116, Marco Andretti caught up to Camara, and took the lead for the first time.

Graham Rahal crashed on lap 133 in turn 4. Many of the leaders pitted, but Andretti stayed out to lead. Another restart saw only three green laps, as yet another crash occurred, this time involving Ryan Hunter-Reay and Mario Moraes. Around this time, some teams anticipated that rain might end the race early.

Marco Andretti gave up the lead on lap 204 when he made his final pit stop. That put Tony Kanaan back into the lead. On lap 217, after a brilliant run in the top five, Jaime Camara lost control and crashed on the frontstrech. The yellow trapped Andretti a lap down, and kept Kanaan in the lead after the final sequence of pits stops. The rain held off, and Kanaan led the rest of the way for his first victory of the season.
Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 1 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 300 2:04:05.5111 166
2 18 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 300 align=right
4.7691
0
3 4 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 300 align=right
6.6504
0
4 6 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 300 align=right
7.7270
0
5 10 5 Oriol Servia KV Racing 300 align=right
10.7701
0
Race average speed: 108.790 mph
Lead changes: 3 between 3 drivers
Cautions: 9 for 102 laps

Round 10: Camping World Watkins Glen Grand Prix

Polesitter Ryan Briscoe led from the start, but Scott Dixon, who qualified fourth, quickly passed Justin Wilson and Ryan Hunter-Reay to move into second for most of the first half of the race. Dixon was unable to pass Briscoe, but posed a serious challenge and posted comparable lap times.

The start of the race was relatively attrition-free, expect for incidents involving two championship contenders. Dan Wheldon made contact with Darren Manning on the first lap, leading to suspension damage for Wheldon. On lap 6 Hélio Castroneves, who had started last after being unable to post a time in qualifying due to a broken throttle, snapping his streak of three consecutive poles at Watkins Glen, had a gearbox problem and stopped just shy of pit lane. With few other drivers dropping out in the first 40 laps, Dixon was poised to massively increase his points lead.

After a brief interlude when Vitor Meira led during a pit stop cycle, Briscoe and Dixon returned to the top two positions and thoroughly dominated the race, leading third-place Hunter-Reay by over 20 seconds. However, Meira and E. J. Viso made contact in turn 8 and the ensuing caution period allowed the other lead-lap cars to catch up to Briscoe and Dixon. All drivers pitted on this caution period except Manning, who stayed out of the pits in an attempt to stretch his fuel mileage. Dixon beat Briscoe and Hunter-Reay out of the pits, but Manning took the lead.

A brief green-flag period on lap 44 ended when Enrique Bernoldi crashed in turn 1, and then the race took a rather unusual turn, with two wrecks occurring under the caution period, before the race returned to green. A restart was waved off when A. J. Foyt IV and Milka Duno crashed in turn 9. Once that was cleaned up, and the IRL officials attempted to restart the race again, Dixon, who was swerving his tires to clean them, unexpectedly spun out and collected Briscoe. Hunter-Reay, who avoided the wreck, suddenly found himself second to Manning.

On lap 51, the race returned to green, with Manning ahead of Hunter-Reay. Hunter-Reay, who had no need to conserve fuel, newer tires, and a stronger car, easily dispatched of Manning in a short green-flag period before another caution came out for Jaime Camara's crash in turn 6. This was the final caution of the race, and Hunter-Reay won easily, claiming his first win in IndyCar, his first American open wheel win since 2004, and the Rahal Letterman Racing team's first win since 2004, with Buddy Rice. Manning did not come close to running out of fuel with all the cautions and finished second, his best career finish. With Castroneves, Wheldon, and Dixon's trouble, Tony Kanaan, who finished third, was the big gainer in the points standings, but Dixon still held a lead of 48 points on Castroneves, and 51 on Wheldon.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 3 17 Ryan Hunter-Reay Rahal Letterman Racing 60 1:54:01.1795 9
2 8 14 Darren Manning A.J. Foyt Racing 60 align=right
2.4009
10
3 6 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 60 align=right
4.1054
0
4 17 15 Buddy Rice Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 60 align=right
4.8111
0
5 7 26 Marco Andretti Andretti Green Racing 60 align=right
5.3132
0
Race average speed: 106.403 mph
Lead changes: 5 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 6 for 14 laps

Round 11: Firestone Indy 200

Pole winner Hélio Castroneves led at the start, with Danica Patrick second. On lap 3, Marco Andretti's car wiggled in turn 2, made contact with Ryan Briscoe, and both cars crashed into the outside wall. After the caution, Castroneves continued to lead, and Patrick held on to second.

On lap 45, Patrick attempted to take the lead, but Castroneves was able to hold the position. The move shuffled Patrick back to fifth position. After the first sequence of pit stops, the lead changed hands between Scott Dixon and Tony Kanaan. Kanaan held the lead through the next caution, when Ryan Hunter-Reay crashed in turn 3 on lap 100. All of the leaders pitted under the yellow on lap 102.

On lap 139, Kanaan continued to lead when a light rain brought out the caution. On lap 149, Kanaan, Vitor Meira, Patrick, Castroneves, and others, pitted for tires and fuel. Scott Dixon and Dan Wheldon, however, stayed out and moved into the lead. When the rain stopped, the race went back to green on lap 152.

Scott Dixon led Dan Wheldon as the race passed the 160 lap mark (40 laps to go). With fuel running low, both cars gambled on the rain resuming. On lap 166, rain began to fall, with Dixon the leader. Heavy rain put out the red flag after lap 171. Fifteen minutes later, the race was called, and Scott Dixon was declared the winner.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 5 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 171 1:30:04.6499 53
2 6 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 171 align=right
1.0680
0
3 1 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 171 align=right
4.1054
54
4 7 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 171 align=right
6.4612
59
5 2 7 Danica Patrick Andretti Green Racing 171 align=right
7.8301
0
Race average speed: 148.072 mph
Lead changes: 5 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 37 laps

Round 12: The Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio presented by Westfield Insurance

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 2 6 Ryan Briscoe Penske Racing 85 2:01:22.8496 43
2 1 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 85 align=right
7.2640
5
3 6 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 85 align=right
7.6967
0
4 12 8 Will Power KV Racing 85 align=right
12.7569
3
5 8 5 Oriol Servia KV Racing 85 align=right
13.4713
0
Race average speed: 94.873 mph
Lead changes: 7 between 7 drivers
Cautions: 5 for 19 laps

Round 13: Rexall Edmonton Indy

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 4 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 91 1:51:05.7039 30
2 2 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 91 align=right
5.9237
35
3 6 02 Justin Wilson Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing 91 align=right
13.4009
0
4 15 22 Paul Tracy Vision Racing 91 align=right
28.1462
0
5 3 5 Oriol Servia KV Racing 91 align=right
28.7132
0
Race average speed: 96.967 mph
Lead changes: 9 between 6 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 19 laps

Round 14: Meijer Indy 300

This race had a shuffling finish, with Dixon, Andretti and Meira each leading at least one lap in the dying stages before pitting for splash-and-go stops. Castroneves inherited the lead, stayed out as his team assumed he would have enough fuel to finish, and was still leading when the white flag came out. But on the final corner, Castroneves ran out of fuel and Dixon flew past to take his sixth win of the season.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 1:36:42.3467 151
2 6 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 200 align=right
0.5532
5
3 9 26 Marco Andretti Andretti Green Racing 200 align=right
0.5707
38
4 2 4 Vitor Meira Panther Racing 200 align=right
0.9102
5
5 3 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 align=right
2.1472
0
Race average speed: 183.650 mph
Lead changes: 10 between 5 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 19 laps

Round 15: Peak Antifreeze & Motor Oil Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma County

After so many second places, this was the race Castroneves had been waiting for, with a smooth, dominant drive to claim his long-awaited first win of the season and close the gap on Dixon in the title race.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 1 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 80 1:50:15.8282 51
2 2 6 Ryan Briscoe Penske Racing 80 align=right
5.2926
19
3 4 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 80 align=right
16.6032
1
4 16 10 Dan Wheldon Chip Ganassi Racing 80 align=right
17.7720
0
5 9 7 Danica Patrick Andretti Green Racing 80 align=right
25.8458
0
Race average speed: 100.254 mph
Lead changes: 8 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 1 for 2 laps

Round 16: Detroit Indy Grand Prix presented by Firestone

The finish to this race was not without controversy. Late in the race, Castroneves led Wilson by less than a second, and Castroneves appeared to make an illegal block, causing IRL officials to penalize him, allowing Wilson to move past and take the win by more than 4 seconds.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 4 02 Justin Wilson Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing 87 2:00:10.7618 15
2 2 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 87 align=right
4.4058
53
3 8 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 87 align=right
17.6815
0
4 3 5 Oriol Servia KV Racing 87 align=right
26.5468
0
5 1 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 87 align=right
27.7185
18
Race average speed: 89.911 mph
Lead changes: 4 between 4 drivers
Cautions: 4 for 11 laps

Round 17: Peak Antifreeze & Motor Oil Indy 300

  • Sunday September 7 - 2:30 p.m. CDT / 3:30 p.m. EDT
  • Chicagoland Speedway - Joliet, Illinois (1.52 mile oval)
  • Distance: 200 laps / 304 miles
  • Race weather:
  • Television: ABC (Marty Reid, Scott Goodyear, Jack Arute, Vince Welch, Brienne Pedigo)
  • Nielsen Ratings: 0.8
  • Attendance:
  • Pole Position winner: #6 Ryan Briscoe, 215.818 mph (347.325 km/h)
  • Race Summary: The final points race sees Hélio Castroneves winning his second round of the season, having started dead last after being demoted to the rear of the grid due to him illegally moving his car below the white line during qualifications. His drive from 28th to first was the farthest back a driver has won an IndyCar Series race from. The Brazilian held off the newly-crowned champion Scott Dixon by 0.0033 seconds or 12⅛ inches, in the second closest finish in the twelve-year history of the series. The race was originally given to Dixon by what would have been a closest winning margin of 0.0010 seconds, but the result was changed following a review. Hideki Mutoh claimed rookie of the year after he finished 22nd and Justin Wilson could finish no higher than 11th.

Top Five Finishers
Fin.
Pos
St.
Pos
Car
No.
Driver Team Laps Time Laps
Led
1 28 3 Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing 200 2:01:04.5907 79
2 2 9 Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 200 align=right
0.0033
15
3 1 6 Ryan Briscoe Penske Racing 200 align=right
0.0811
41
4 4 11 Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing 200 align=right
0.6128
47
5 10 8 Will Power KV Racing 200 align=right
1.3613
0
Race average speed: 150.649 mph
Lead changes: 22 between 6 drivers
Cautions: 7 for 53 laps

Final driver standings

Pos Driver HMS
STP
MOT1
LBH1
KAN
INDY
MIL
TXS
IOW
RIR
WGL
NSH
MDO
EDM
KTY
SNM
DET
CHI
SRF2
Pts
1 Dixon 1 Ret 3* DNP 3* 1* 2* 1 4 3 11 1 3 1 1* 12 5 2 646
2 Castroneves 4 2 2 DNP 4 4 5 2* 14* 2 16 3 2 2* 2 1* 2* 1* 629
3 Kanaan 8 3 5 DNP 2 Ret 3 5 Ret 1* 3 4* 7 9 8 3 3 4 513
4 Wheldon 3 12 4 DNP 1 12 4 4 1 4 Ret 2 17 7 5 4 20 6 492
5 Briscoe Ret Ret 9 DNP 7 Ret 1 3 7 Ret 12* Ret 1* 6 7 2 9 3 447
6 Patrick 6 10 1 DNP Ret Ret 9 10 6 6 14 5 12 18 11 5 16 10 379
7 M. Andretti 2* Ret Ret DNP 5 3 Ret Ret 3 9 5 Ret Ret 17 3 14 Ret 8 363
8 Hunter-Reay 7 17 7 DNP 18 6 15 Ret 8 Ret 1 Ret 10 8 9 18 6 9 360
9 Servià 12 7 DNP 5 11 11 6 Ret 16 5 Ret 16 5 5 12 15 4 17 358
10 Mutoh Ret 6 11 DNP 6 7 12 6 2 Ret 9 14 9 Ret Ret 13 11 22 346
11 Wilson 15 9 DNP Ret 9 Ret 7 Ret 12 7 Ret 18 11 3 Ret 9 1 11 340
12 Power Ret 8 DNP 1* Ret 13 14 13 9 Ret 15 11 4 22 Ret 25 8 5 331
13 Meira 10 Ret Ret DNP Ret 2 Ret 7 15 Ret Ret 6 6 19 4 7 17 Ret 324
14 Manning 13 13 8 DNP Ret 9 13 Ret Ret 12 2 9 8 10 Ret 22 12 7 323
15 Carpenter 5 Ret 6 DNP 10 5 Ret 9 Ret 11 17 8 15 13 6 23 14 Ret 320
16 Rice 11 15 12 DNP Ret 8 10 8 Ret Ret 4 7 20 11 10 11 Ret Ret 306
17 Rahal Wth 1* DNP 13 12 Ret Ret 11 10 Ret 8 12 16 Ret Ret 8 13 Ret 288
18 Viso Ret 4 DNP 9 14 Ret 8 14 13 10 10 Inj 22 15 13 6 Ret Ret 286
19 Foyt IV 9 11 Ret DNP 8 21 17 12 5 Ret Ret Ret 18 12 Ret 20 10 13 280
20 Junqueira Ret Ret DNP 12 15 20 18 15 DNS Ret 6 15 13 14 14 17 7 20 256
21 Moraes 16 16 DNP Ret 17 18 23 18 Ret Ret 7 10 Ret 20 17 10 15 Ret 244
22 Bernoldi Ret 5 DNP 4 Ret 15 16 Ret 17 Ret Ret Ret Ret 16 Ret 21 Inj Inj 220
23 Camara 21 Ret 24 24 Ret Ret Ret Ret 14 Ret 16 24 Ret 18 174
24 Roth Ret Ret DNP Ret Ret DNS 22 DNS Ret 13 21 21 Ret 26 DNS 16 166
25 Duno Ret DNP 16 19 17 Ret Ret 17 23 Ret Ret 14 140
26 Bell Ret 10 DNP 10 11 8 Ret 19 117
27 Domínguez DNP 3 DNQ Ret Ret 13 19 Ret 16 112
28 Howard Ret 14 13 DNP 13 Rpl Ret 72
29 Perera 14 Ret DNP 6 Rpl 15 71
30 J. Andretti 16 19 16 11 Ret Rpl 71
31 Scheckter Ret Ret Ret Ret 21 Ret 66
32 Fisher Ret 15 Ret 37
33 Tracy 113 4 32
34 Tagliani 74 22 12 30
35 Yasukawa 14 DNP DNQ 16
36 Hamilton 14 16
37 Lazier 17 13
38 Lloyd Ret 10
39 Simmons Ret 10
Giebler DNQ 0
Papis DNQ 0
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th & 5th place
(Top 5)
Light Blue 6th-10th place
(Top 10)
Dark Blue Finished
(Outside Top 10)
Purple Did not finish
(Ret)
Red Did not qualify
(DNQ)
Brown Withdrawn
(Wth)
Black Disqualified
(DSQ)
White Did not start
(DNS)
Blank Did not
participate
(DNP)
Driver
replacement
(Rpl)
Injured
(Inj)
No race held
(NH)
Bold - Pole
* - Most Laps Led (3 bonus points)
Note 1: Motegi and Long Beach run on same day (Motegi for IRL and Long Beach for ChampCar).
Note 2: Surfers Paradise is a non-championship round.
Note 3: As Tracy drove for Vision at Edmonton, he scored no points for his Long Beach appearance.
Note 4: As Tagliani drove for Conquest at Detroit, he scored no points for his Long Beach appearance.
Note 5: Orange background signifies driver running for Bombardier Learjet Rookie of the Year.

Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Wth/DNS
Points 50 40 35 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 5

  • Ties in points broken by number of wins, or best finishes.

References

See also

External links

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