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2006 IndyCar Series

The 2006 IRL IndyCar Series began on March 26 and concluded on September 10. Sam Hornish Jr. won his third IndyCar Series championship. Hornish also won the 90th Indianapolis 500, passing rookie Marco Andretti on the final lap less than 500 feet (150 m) from the finish line. The title chase was very dramatic between Penske drivers Hornish and Hélio Castroneves battling Ganassi drivers Dan Wheldon and Scott Dixon. The four drivers occupied the first four positions in the final race at Chicagoland Speedway, with Wheldon leading Dixon home for a Ganassi 1–2, but Hornish finishing third, edging out reigning champion Wheldon on a tiebreak. Third would have been enough to catapult fourth-place finisher Castroneves to take the title, but he instead ended up two points behind Hornish and Wheldon. Dixon was also in strong title contention, finishing a mere 15 points adrift of the championship.

2006 IndyCar season
IndyCar Series
Season
Races14
Start dateMarch 26
End dateSeptember 10
Awards
Drivers' champion Sam Hornish Jr.
Rookie of the Year Marco Andretti
Indianapolis 500 winner Sam Hornish Jr.
← 2005
2007 →
Sam Hornish Jr. (left) won his third Drivers' Championship while Dan Wheldon (right) finished second in the championship on tiebreaker because Hornish had four race wins compared to Wheldon who had two race wins.

The season was marred by the death of Paul Dana during practice at Homestead.

2006 also the final season for Panoz chassis as an official chassis manufacturer in the series.

Commentators

The official commentators were Marty Reid, Scott Goodyear, and Rusty Wallace, with pit reports from Jack Arute, Jerry Punch, Vince Welch, and Jamie Little, and pre race hosting from Brent Musburger.

Off season changes

2006 for the Indy Racing League was much different from 2005. The biggest change being the withdrawal of Chevrolet- and Toyota-powered cars from the series, leaving Honda as the only engine manufacturer. There was much speculation after this announcement that because there would not be nearly as much money provided to teams by engine providers as in previous years, many of them would scale back. To some extent, this was true: Ganassi Racing pared its team from three to two cars and Panther Racing and Cheever Racing from two to one. However, Tony George and Patrick Dempsey's Vision Racing added a car for displaced Tomas Scheckter. Honda also reduced the costs of both year-long and Indy-only engine leases, promised that all teams would be provided with identical engines and technical support, and that engines would last two races between scheduled rebuilds—all significant cost-cutting measures compared to previous years.

The chassis situation is little changed from 2005, the largest change being Ganassi Racing's switch from Panoz to Dallara for oval races. The full-season runners using the Panoz in 2006 were Rahal Letterman Racing's three cars and Delphi Fernandez Racing's Scott Sharp.

2006 also saw the elimination of three rounds of the championship from the 2005 season. The Phoenix International Raceway race was cancelled because of scheduling conflicts. The California Speedway round was not retained because the IRL wanted to move its date earlier in the season so as to not conflict with the NFL season, but a date that was available for both the speedway and the league could not be found. Both the IRL and California Speedway hoped that a race there would return for 2007. The Pikes Peak International Raceway was eliminated from the 2006 schedule as the track was sold by its owners and subsequently closed. Further explanation for this new schedule was given by the league as being more "compact" and "exciting" and as a method of avoiding lost television ratings and race attendance by finishing their race season before the NFL season. Many critics viewed this shortened schedule as a definite setback for the series, not an improvement.

There were also a handful of significant driver moves, most important of which was 2005 series champion Dan Wheldon moving to Ganassi Racing from Andretti Green Racing, where he was replaced by Marco Andretti. Additionally, Tomas Scheckter moved from Panther Racing to a new car at Vision Racing and Vítor Meira moved from Rahal Letterman to Scheckter's seat at Panther. Paul Dana and his personal sponsor filled Meira's spot at Rahal Letterman. Eddie Cheever announced that he would return to the role of owner-driver of his single car team for the first four races, including the Indianapolis 500, and Michael Andretti announced he would return to the cockpit to drive alongside his son in the "500". A. J. Foyt IV, who left for NASCAR, was replaced by Felipe Giaffone in Foyt Enterprises' car, while Buddy Lazier returned to a full-time ride in the series by replacing the struggling Roger Yasukawa at Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. Hemelgarn Racing signed P. J. Chesson late in the offseason with backing from Carmelo Anthony to replace the outgoing Paul Dana.

There were also ongoing rumors during the offseason that Tony George and Champ Car principal Kevin Kalkhoven had been meeting and discussing a potential merger, or a new series that would re-unite open wheel racing in America. The two men have admitted to meeting and enjoying each other's company in skiing and golf, and in separate March 2006 interviews with the Los Angeles Times admitted that they were in fact discussing the prospects of combining the two series [1].

Mid-season changes

  • Following Paul Dana's death in a crash before the first race, Rahal-Letterman hired Jeff Simmons to drive the #17 car two races later at Motegi.
  • Roberto Moreno replaced an injured Ed Carpenter for round 2 only. Carpenter returned for all the remaining races.
  • Following an Indy 500 where both Hemelgarn cars crashed into each other and finished in the last two positions, Hemelgarn Racing, which had been running full-time with P. J. Chesson, ceased operations.
  • After the Kansas Speedway race, Cheever Racing ceased operations due to lack of sponsorship. Also, Foyt Enterprises replaced Felipe Giaffone with Jeff Bucknum.
  • Dreyer & Reinbold Racing announced that Ryan Briscoe, who drove their car to a third place at Watkins Glen, would drive their car in the remaining short oval and road course races instead of Buddy Lazier and that Sarah Fisher would race the car at the remaining 1.5-mile (2.4 km) tracks, Kentucky and Chicagoland.
  • Marty Roth returned to the series after crashing in Indy 500 practice and missing the race to drive his own Roth Racing machine in the final 3 oval races of the season (Michigan, Kentucky, and Chicagoland).

Confirmed entries

Team Chassis No Drivers Rounds
A. J. Foyt Enterprises Dallara 14   Felipe Giaffone 1–8
  Jeff Bucknum 9–14
41   Larry Foyt  R  4
Andretti Green Racing Dallara 1   Michael Andretti 4
7   Bryan Herta All
11   Tony Kanaan All
26   Marco Andretti  R  All
27   Dario Franchitti 1–13
  A. J. Foyt IV 14
Cheever Racing Dallara 51   Eddie Cheever 1–2, 4–8
  Tomáš Enge 3
52   Max Papis 4
Delphi Fernández Racing
Aguri Fernández Racing
Panoz 8   Scott Sharp 2, 5, 13
Dallara 1, 3–4, 6–12, 14
55   Kosuke Matsuura All
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara 5   Buddy Lazier 1–4, 6–8, 11
  Ryan Briscoe 5, 9–10, 13
  Sarah Fisher 12, 14
31   Al Unser Jr. 4
Hemelgarn Racing Dallara 91   P. J. Chesson  R  1–4
92   Jeff Bucknum 4
Luyendyk Racing Panoz 61   Arie Luyendyk Jr. 4
Marlboro Team Penske Dallara 3   Hélio Castroneves All
6   Sam Hornish Jr. All
Panther Racing Dallara 4   Vítor Meira All
PDM Racing Panoz 18   Thiago Medeiros  R  4
Playa del Racing Panoz 12   Roger Yasukawa 4
21   Jaques Lazier 4
Rahal Letterman Racing Panoz[N 1]
Dallara
15   Buddy Rice All
16   Danica Patrick All
17   Paul Dana  R  1
  Jeff Simmons  R  3–14
Roth Racing Dallara 25   Marty Roth  R  4, 11–12, 14
Sam Schmidt Motorsports Panoz 88   Airton Daré 4
Target Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara
Panoz[N 2]
9   Scott Dixon All
10   Dan Wheldon All
Team Leader Motorsports Panoz 97   Stéphan Grégoire 4
98   P. J. Jones 4
Vision Racing Dallara 2   Tomas Scheckter All
20   Ed Carpenter 1, 3–14
  Roberto Moreno 2
90   Townsend Bell 4

Race summaries

Toyota Indy 300

This race held at Homestead-Miami Speedway was run on March 26 and covered by ABC. Sam Hornish Jr. won the pole.

The race was marred by a violent crash in the final practice session. Paul Dana was killed in the crash and teammates Danica Patrick and Buddy Rice withdrew from the race to honor his memory. He was the third driver to lose his life in the IRL. Ed Carpenter was also injured and would miss this race plus the next race.

Top ten results

  1. 10- Dan Wheldon 200 laps
  2. 3- Hélio Castroneves +0.0147 (9th closest finish in IRL history)
  3. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +0.4744
  4. 27- Dario Franchitti +0.9401
  5. 9- Scott Dixon +1.1989
  6. 55- Kosuke Matsuura +2 laps
  7. 8- Scott Sharp +2 laps
  8. 14- Felipe Giaffone +2 laps
  9. 2- Tomas Scheckter +3 laps
  10. 51- Eddie Cheever +4 laps

IRL Video Synopsis of the Race

Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg

The Streets of St. Petersburg race was held on April 2 and covered by ESPN. Dario Franchitti won the pole, but was knocked out early due to mechanical failure. The race finished under the yellow flag after Tomas Scheckter and Buddy Rice hit the barrier with 4 laps to go. Roberto Moreno replaced Ed Carpenter for this race as Ed recovered from his injury's but finished 18th due to steering issues.

Top ten results

  1. 3- Hélio Castroneves 100 laps
  2. 9- Scott Dixon +0.1386
  3. 11- Tony Kanaan +0.6284
  4. 7- Bryan Herta +0.7813
  5. 4- Vítor Meira +2.5995
  6. 16- Danica Patrick +3.0433
  7. 55- Kosuke Matsuura +52.7172
  8. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +1 lap
  9. 14- Felipe Giaffone +1 lap
  10. 8- Scott Sharp +1 lap

Indy Japan 300

The Twin Ring Motegi, Japan race was run on April 22 and covered (via tape delay) by ESPN. Qualifying was rained out and the field was set by entrant points. As a result, Hélio Castroneves sat on pole, and for the second race running, Castroneves won the race. This race also saw the return of Ed Carpenter after the accident at Homestead. Rahal Letterman Racing also returned the #17 car to competition after sitting out a second race, as Indy Pro Series driver Jeff Simmons moved up to the seat. While Simmons has two IndyCar Series races to his experience (one the 2004 Indianapolis 500), he is eligible for the Bombardier series Rookie of the Year contest for 2006. However, on lap 42, Simmons was involved in a crash with Scott Sharp and P. J. Chesson which resulted in Simmons sliding along the track upside down. Simmons was uninjured.

Top ten results

  1. 3- Hélio Castroneves 200 laps
  2. 10- Dan Wheldon +6.3851
  3. 11- Tony Kanaan +8.6163
  4. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +9.0011
  5. 15- Buddy Rice +9.7491
  6. 7- Bryan Herta +13.8972
  7. 55- Kosuke Matsuura +14.7633
  8. 16- Danica Patrick +15.4456
  9. 9- Scott Dixon +1 lap
  10. 4- Vítor Meira +1 lap

90th Indianapolis 500

The Indy 500 was run on May 28 and covered by ABC. Sam Hornish Jr. won the pole with a 4-lap average of 228.985 mph (2:37.2155). It was Hornish's 10th pole of his short, but yet outstanding career. Hornish then went on to win the race, beating Marco Andretti in the second-closest finish in Indy 500 history. Dan Wheldon led most laps with 148.

Top ten results

  1. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. 200 laps
  2. 26- Marco Andretti +0.0635
  3. 1- Michael Andretti +1.0087
  4. 10- Dan Wheldon +1.2692
  5. 11- Tony Kanaan +1.6456
  6. 9- Scott Dixon +3.0566
  7. 27- Dario Franchitti +5.6249
  8. 16- Danica Patrick +5.7263
  9. 8- Scott Sharp +11.1252
  10. 4- Vítor Meira +17.9554

Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix presented by Tissot

The Watkins Glen International race was run on June 4 and covered by ABC. Qualifying was cancelled due to fog and the field was set based on Friday practice speeds. Hélio Castroneves sat on pole. The race was shortened to 55 laps from the scheduled 60 due to the 2 hour time limit. The race also made history as the first ever IRL race to be run in wet conditions. Scott Dixon won from Panther Racing's Vítor Meira and Australia's Ryan Briscoe, of Dreyer & Reinbold Racing.

As of 2020 it was the last-ever IndyCar Series victory for Panoz chassis to date.

Top ten results

  1. 9- Scott Dixon 55 laps
  2. 4- Vítor Meira +2.3311
  3. 5- Ryan Briscoe +2.7999
  4. 15- Buddy Rice +9.2284
  5. 14- Felipe Giaffone +11.4811
  6. 20- Ed Carpenter +12.4427
  7. 3- Hélio Castroneves +13.0455
  8. 16- Danica Patrick +13.3289
  9. 8- Scott Sharp +16.6462
  10. 2- Tomas Scheckter +48.4872

Video Synopsis of Race

  1. Annotated Version of IRL Race Summary

Bombardier Learjet 500

The Texas race was run on June 10 and covered by ESPN. Sam Hornish Jr. won the pole. Hélio Castroneves captured his second Texas win and third win of the season. Dan Wheldon had led most of the race and looked in control only for a short delay on his final pit stop to drop him back to third.

Top ten results

  1. 3- Hélio Castroneves 200 laps
  2. 9- Scott Dixon +0.2402
  3. 10- Dan Wheldon +0.2981
  4. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +14.5389
  5. 8- Scott Sharp +14.5895
  6. 4- Vítor Meira +15.9294
  7. 11- Tony Kanaan +16.1398
  8. 55- Kosuke Matsuura +22.3327
  9. 20- Ed Carpenter +22.9791
  10. 2- Tomas Scheckter +1 lap

IRL Race Summary

  1. Annotated Race Summary Video 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine

SunTrust Indy Challenge

The Richmond International Raceway race was run on June 24 and covered by ESPN. Qualifying was rained out and Hélio Castroneves won the pole based on combined practice speeds. Sam Hornish Jr. has won the race, leading 212 of 250 laps. The race finished in yellow flag at 4 laps to go due a blown tire from Hélio Castroneves which dropped him to 10th place.

Top Ten Results

  1. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. 250 laps
  2. 4- Vítor Meira +0.3907
  3. 27- Dario Franchitti +1.5895
  4. 26- Marco Andretti +6.5400
  5. 8- Scott Sharp +6.6677
  6. 7- Bryan Herta +10.9217
  7. 2- Tomas Scheckter +1 lap
  8. 20- Ed Carpenter +1 lap
  9. 10- Dan Wheldon +1 lap
  10. 3- Hélio Castroneves +1 lap

Kansas Lottery Indy 300

The Kansas Speedway race was run on July 2 and covered by ABC. Dan Wheldon won the pole. Sam Hornish Jr. won the race taking the lead from Wheldon with two laps to go. This was the 50th IRL race where 1st and 2nd were separated by less than a second.

Top ten results

  1. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. 200 laps
  2. 10- Dan Wheldon +0.0793
  3. 4- Vítor Meira +5.3892
  4. 9- Scott Dixon +5.5158
  5. 11- Tony Kanaan +5.7762
  6. 3- Hélio Castroneves +7.0432
  7. 2- Tomas Scheckter +9.6925
  8. 55- Kosuke Matsuura +9.9881
  9. 26- Marco Andretti +1 lap
  10. 17- Jeff Simmons +1 lap

Firestone Indy 200

The Nashville Superspeedway race was run on July 15 and covered by ESPN. Dan Wheldon won the pole. Scott Dixon won his second race of the season and captured his first win on an oval since 2003.

Top ten results:

  1. 9- Scott Dixon 200 laps
  2. 10- Dan Wheldon +0.1176
  3. 4- Vítor Meira +1.2756
  4. 16- Danica Patrick +2.5019
  5. 3- Hélio Castroneves +3.5647
  6. 27- Dario Franchitti +11.9449
  7. 17- Jeff Simmons +1 lap
  8. 26- Marco Andretti +1 lap
  9. 5- Ryan Briscoe +1 lap
  10. 20- Ed Carpenter +2 laps

ABC Supply Company A. J. Foyt 225

The Milwaukee Mile race was run on July 23 and covered by ESPN. Hélio Castroneves won the pole. Tony Kanaan led most of the race and gave Andretti Green Racing its first win of the season.

Top ten results

  1. 11- Tony Kanaan 225 laps
  2. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +1.8276
  3. 2- Tomas Scheckter +2.0114
  4. 16- Danica Patrick +8.4708
  5. 26- Marco Andretti +10.2611
  6. 27- Dario Franchitti +11.2373
  7. 7- Bryan Herta +14.1195
  8. 10- Dan Wheldon +1 lap
  9. 17- Jeff Simmons +2 laps
  10. 9- Scott Dixon +2 laps

Firestone Indy 400

The Michigan International Speedway race was run on July 30 and covered by ABC. The race start was delayed almost 3 hours and the race was aired tape delayed on ESPN2. Hélio Castroneves got his fourth race win of the season from the pole.

Top ten results:

  1. 3- Hélio Castroneves 200 laps
  2. 4- Vítor Meira +1.6229
  3. 10- Dan Wheldon +6.2259
  4. 11- Tony Kanaan +6.9874
  5. 2- Tomas Scheckter +27.9005
  6. 8- Scott Sharp +28.5560
  7. 20- Ed Carpenter +1 lap
  8. 26- Marco Andretti +1 lap
  9. 55- Kosuke Matsuura +1 lap
  10. 17- Jeff Simmons +1 lap

Meijer Indy 300 presented by Coca-Cola and Secret

The Kentucky Speedway race was run on August 13 and covered by ABC. Hélio Castroneves won the pole. Sam Hornish Jr. captured his 4th win of the year and re-took the points lead. This was also the second IRL race with two female drivers in the field, the first was the 2000 Indianapolis 500.

Top ten results:

  1. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. 200 laps
  2. 9- Scott Dixon +0.5866
  3. 3- Hélio Castroneves +0.6511
  4. 10- Dan Wheldon +1.8913
  5. 11- Tony Kanaan +2.3049
  6. 4- Vítor Meira +2.5191
  7. 2- Tomas Scheckter +2.8124
  8. 16- Danica Patrick +3.2408
  9. 27- Dario Franchitti +4.7070
  10. 7- Bryan Herta +4.7966

Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma

The Infineon Raceway race was run on August 27 and covered by ESPN. Scott Dixon won the pole. Marco Andretti became the youngest winner of a major open wheel race and the first new IRL winner since Adrian Fernandez in 2004.

Top ten results:

  1. 26- Marco Andretti 80 laps
  2. 27- Dario Franchitti +0.6557
  3. 4- Vítor Meira +10.6535
  4. 9- Scott Dixon +11.1867
  5. 3- Hélio Castroneves +12.5049
  6. 10- Dan Wheldon +13.4493
  7. 17- Jeff Simmons +13.8754
  8. 16- Danica Patrick +15.7417
  9. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +16.3369
  10. 7- Bryan Herta +18.5571

Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 presented by Mr. Clean

The Chicagoland Speedway race was run on September 10 and covered by ABC. Sam Hornish Jr. won the pole and clinched the championship by finishing third. Dan Wheldon won the race and tied Hornish in season points, but lost the title due to the tiebreaker (most wins).

Top ten results:

  1. 10- Dan Wheldon 200 laps
  2. 9- Scott Dixon +0.1897
  3. 6- Sam Hornish Jr. +0.2323
  4. 3- Hélio Castroneves +2.6913
  5. 20- Ed Carpenter +1 lap
  6. 4- Vítor Meira +1 lap
  7. 11- Tony Kanaan +1 lap
  8. 17- Jeff Simmons +1 lap
  9. 8- Scott Sharp +1 lap
  10. 2- Tomas Scheckter +1 lap

Season summary

Schedule

Rnd Date Race Name Track City
1 March 26 Toyota Indy 300  O  Homestead-Miami Speedway Homestead, Florida
2 April 2 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg  S  Streets of St. Petersburg St. Petersburg, Florida
3 April 22 Indy Japan 300  O  Twin Ring Motegi Motegi, Japan
4 May 28 90th Indianapolis 500  O  Indianapolis Motor Speedway Speedway, Indiana
5 June 4 Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix presented by Tissot  R  Watkins Glen International Watkins Glen, New York
6 June 10 Bombardier Learjet 500  O  Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas
7 June 24 SunTrust Indy Challenge  O  Richmond International Raceway Richmond, Virginia
8 July 2 Kansas Lottery Indy 300  O  Kansas Speedway Kansas City, Kansas
9 July 15 Firestone Indy 200  O  Nashville Superspeedway Lebanon, Tennessee
10 July 23 ABC Supply Company A. J. Foyt 225  O  The Milwaukee Mile West Allis, Wisconsin
11 July 30 Firestone Indy 400  O  Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Michigan
12 August 13 Meijer Indy 300 presented by Coca-Cola and Secret  O  Kentucky Speedway Sparta, Kentucky
13 August 27 Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma  R  Infineon Raceway Sonoma, California
14 September 10 Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 presented by Mr. Clean  O  Chicagoland Speedway Joliet, Illinois

 O  Oval/Speedway
 R  Road course
 S  Temporary street circuit
BOLD indicates Superspeedways.

Race results

Rnd Date Race Name Pole position Fastest lap Most Laps Led Winner Winning chassis
1 March 26 Toyota Indy 300   Sam Hornish Jr.   Scott Dixon   Sam Hornish Jr.   Dan Wheldon Dallara
2 April 2 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg   Dario Franchitti   Tony Kanaan   Hélio Castroneves   Hélio Castroneves Dallara
3 April 22 Indy Japan 300   Hélio Castroneves   Scott Dixon   Hélio Castroneves   Hélio Castroneves Dallara
4 May 28 90th Indianapolis 500   Sam Hornish Jr.   Scott Dixon   Dan Wheldon   Sam Hornish Jr. Dallara
5 June 4 Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix
presented by Tissot
  Hélio Castroneves   Marco Andretti   Dan Wheldon   Scott Dixon Panoz
6 June 10 Bombardier Learjet 500   Sam Hornish Jr.   Dan Wheldon   Dan Wheldon   Hélio Castroneves Dallara
7 June 24 SunTrust Indy Challenge   Hélio Castroneves   Hélio Castroneves   Sam Hornish Jr.   Sam Hornish Jr. Dallara
8 July 2 Kansas Lottery Indy 300   Dan Wheldon   Hélio Castroneves   Sam Hornish Jr.   Sam Hornish Jr. Dallara
9 July 15 Firestone Indy 200   Dan Wheldon   Dan Wheldon   Dan Wheldon   Scott Dixon Dallara
10 July 23 ABC Supply Company A. J. Foyt 225   Hélio Castroneves   Tomas Scheckter   Tony Kanaan   Tony Kanaan Dallara
11 July 30 Firestone Indy 400   Hélio Castroneves   Kosuke Matsuura   Vítor Meira   Hélio Castroneves Dallara
12 August 13 Meijer Indy 300
presented by Coca-Cola and Secret
  Hélio Castroneves   Bryan Herta   Dan Wheldon   Sam Hornish Jr. Dallara
13 August 27 Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma   Scott Dixon   Tony Kanaan   Scott Dixon   Marco Andretti Dallara
14 September 10 Peak Antifreeze Indy 300
presented by Mr. Clean
  Sam Hornish Jr.   Sam Hornish Jr.   Dan Wheldon   Dan Wheldon Dallara

Final driver standings

Pos Driver HMS STP MOT INDY WGL TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MIS KTY SNM CHI Pts
1   Sam Hornish Jr. 3* 8 4 1 12 4 1* 1* 14 2 19 1 9 3 475
2   Dan Wheldon 1 16 2 4* 15* 3* 9 2 2* 8 3 4* 6 1* 475
3   Hélio Castroneves 2 1* 1* 25 7 1 10 6 5 14 1 3 5 4 473
4   Scott Dixon 5 2 9 6 1 2 11 4 1 10 16 2 4* 2 460
5   Vítor Meira 16 5 10 10 2 6 2 3 3 15 2* 6 3 6 411
6   Tony Kanaan 11 3 3 5 11 7 18 5 12 1* 4 5 11 7 384
7   Marco Andretti  RY  15 15 12 2 16 14 4 9 8 5 8 17 1 18 325
8   Dario Franchitti 4 19 11 7 14 13 3 12 6 6 12 9 2 311
9   Danica Patrick DNS 6 8 8 8 12 15 11 4 4 17 8 8 12 302
10   Tomas Scheckter 9 12 13 27 10 10 7 7 15 3 5 7 17 10 298
11   Bryan Herta 13 4 6 20 13 11 6 13 11 7 11 10 10 15 289
12   Scott Sharp 7 10 16 9 9 5 5 18 17 12 6 16 14 9 287
13   Kosuke Matsuura 6 7 7 15 18 8 12 8 13 17 9 19 13 11 273
14   Ed Carpenter DNS 20 11 6 9 8 16 10 16 7 11 12 5 252
15   Buddy Rice DNS 13 5 26 4 18 13 17 16 11 13 15 15 13 234
16   Jeff Simmons  R  18 23 19 15 19 10 7 9 10 14 7 8 217
17   Felipe Giaffone 8 9 15 21 5 16 17 19 142
18   Buddy Lazier 14 14 14 12 19 16 15 15 122
19   Eddie Cheever 10 11 13 17 17 14 14 114
20   Jeff Bucknum 32 18 13 14 13 18 17 97
21   Ryan Briscoe 3 9 18 16 83
22   P. J. Chesson  R  12 17 17 33 54
23   Marty Roth  R  DNQ 18 18 19 36
24   Michael Andretti 3 35
25   Sarah Fisher 12 16 32
26   A. J. Foyt IV 14 16
27   Max Papis 14 16
28   Roger Yasukawa 16 14
29   Jaques Lazier 17 13
30   Roberto Moreno 18 12
31   Airton Daré 18 12
32   Tomáš Enge 19 12
33   P. J. Jones 19 12
34   Townsend Bell 22 12
35   Al Unser Jr. 24 12
36   Arie Luyendyk Jr. 28 10
37   Stéphan Grégoire 29 10
38   Larry Foyt  R  30 10
39   Thiago Medeiros  R  31 10
40   Paul Dana  R  DNS 6
  Jon Herb Wth 0
Pos Driver HMS STP MOT INDY WGL TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MIS KTY SNM CHI Pts
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th & 5th place
Light Blue 6th–10th place
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)
Not competing
In-line notation
Bold Pole position
Italics Ran fastest race lap
* Led most race laps
(3 points)
DNS Any driver who qualifies
but does not start (DNS),
earns half the points
had they taken part.
Fatal accident
Rookie of the Year  RY 
Rookie  R 
  • Ties in points broken by number of wins, followed by number of 2nds, 3rds, etc., and then by number of pole positions, followed by number of times qualified 2nd, etc.
  • Paul Dana collided with Ed Carpenter's disabled car in the practice session at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Dana was transported to a hospital, where he died due to complications from his injuries sustained in the crash. He was 30 years old.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Used from Homestead to Watkins Glen, and at Sonoma.
  2. ^ Used in the road courses.

External links

  • Indianapolis 500 – official site

2006, indycar, series, 2006, indycar, series, began, march, concluded, september, hornish, third, indycar, series, championship, hornish, also, 90th, indianapolis, passing, rookie, marco, andretti, final, less, than, feet, from, finish, line, title, chase, ver. The 2006 IRL IndyCar Series began on March 26 and concluded on September 10 Sam Hornish Jr won his third IndyCar Series championship Hornish also won the 90th Indianapolis 500 passing rookie Marco Andretti on the final lap less than 500 feet 150 m from the finish line The title chase was very dramatic between Penske drivers Hornish and Helio Castroneves battling Ganassi drivers Dan Wheldon and Scott Dixon The four drivers occupied the first four positions in the final race at Chicagoland Speedway with Wheldon leading Dixon home for a Ganassi 1 2 but Hornish finishing third edging out reigning champion Wheldon on a tiebreak Third would have been enough to catapult fourth place finisher Castroneves to take the title but he instead ended up two points behind Hornish and Wheldon Dixon was also in strong title contention finishing a mere 15 points adrift of the championship 2006 IndyCar seasonIndyCar SeriesSeasonRaces14Start dateMarch 26End dateSeptember 10AwardsDrivers championSam Hornish Jr Rookie of the YearMarco AndrettiIndianapolis 500 winnerSam Hornish Jr 20052007 Sam Hornish Jr left won his third Drivers Championship while Dan Wheldon right finished second in the championship on tiebreaker because Hornish had four race wins compared to Wheldon who had two race wins The season was marred by the death of Paul Dana during practice at Homestead 2006 also the final season for Panoz chassis as an official chassis manufacturer in the series Contents 1 Commentators 2 Off season changes 3 Mid season changes 4 Confirmed entries 5 Race summaries 5 1 Toyota Indy 300 5 2 Honda Grand Prix of St Petersburg 5 3 Indy Japan 300 5 4 90th Indianapolis 500 5 5 Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix presented by Tissot 5 6 Bombardier Learjet 500 5 7 SunTrust Indy Challenge 5 8 Kansas Lottery Indy 300 5 9 Firestone Indy 200 5 10 ABC Supply Company A J Foyt 225 5 11 Firestone Indy 400 5 12 Meijer Indy 300 presented by Coca Cola and Secret 5 13 Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma 5 14 Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 presented by Mr Clean 6 Season summary 6 1 Schedule 6 2 Race results 6 3 Final driver standings 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 External linksCommentators EditThe official commentators were Marty Reid Scott Goodyear and Rusty Wallace with pit reports from Jack Arute Jerry Punch Vince Welch and Jamie Little and pre race hosting from Brent Musburger ABC TelevisionBooth Announcers Pit garage reportersHost Brent MusburgerAnnouncer Marty ReidColor Scott GoodyearColor Rusty Wallace Jack AruteJerry PunchVince WelchJamie LittleOff season changes Edit2006 for the Indy Racing League was much different from 2005 The biggest change being the withdrawal of Chevrolet and Toyota powered cars from the series leaving Honda as the only engine manufacturer There was much speculation after this announcement that because there would not be nearly as much money provided to teams by engine providers as in previous years many of them would scale back To some extent this was true Ganassi Racing pared its team from three to two cars and Panther Racing and Cheever Racing from two to one However Tony George and Patrick Dempsey s Vision Racing added a car for displaced Tomas Scheckter Honda also reduced the costs of both year long and Indy only engine leases promised that all teams would be provided with identical engines and technical support and that engines would last two races between scheduled rebuilds all significant cost cutting measures compared to previous years The chassis situation is little changed from 2005 the largest change being Ganassi Racing s switch from Panoz to Dallara for oval races The full season runners using the Panoz in 2006 were Rahal Letterman Racing s three cars and Delphi Fernandez Racing s Scott Sharp 2006 also saw the elimination of three rounds of the championship from the 2005 season The Phoenix International Raceway race was cancelled because of scheduling conflicts The California Speedway round was not retained because the IRL wanted to move its date earlier in the season so as to not conflict with the NFL season but a date that was available for both the speedway and the league could not be found Both the IRL and California Speedway hoped that a race there would return for 2007 The Pikes Peak International Raceway was eliminated from the 2006 schedule as the track was sold by its owners and subsequently closed Further explanation for this new schedule was given by the league as being more compact and exciting and as a method of avoiding lost television ratings and race attendance by finishing their race season before the NFL season Many critics viewed this shortened schedule as a definite setback for the series not an improvement There were also a handful of significant driver moves most important of which was 2005 series champion Dan Wheldon moving to Ganassi Racing from Andretti Green Racing where he was replaced by Marco Andretti Additionally Tomas Scheckter moved from Panther Racing to a new car at Vision Racing and Vitor Meira moved from Rahal Letterman to Scheckter s seat at Panther Paul Dana and his personal sponsor filled Meira s spot at Rahal Letterman Eddie Cheever announced that he would return to the role of owner driver of his single car team for the first four races including the Indianapolis 500 and Michael Andretti announced he would return to the cockpit to drive alongside his son in the 500 A J Foyt IV who left for NASCAR was replaced by Felipe Giaffone in Foyt Enterprises car while Buddy Lazier returned to a full time ride in the series by replacing the struggling Roger Yasukawa at Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing Hemelgarn Racing signed P J Chesson late in the offseason with backing from Carmelo Anthony to replace the outgoing Paul Dana There were also ongoing rumors during the offseason that Tony George and Champ Car principal Kevin Kalkhoven had been meeting and discussing a potential merger or a new series that would re unite open wheel racing in America The two men have admitted to meeting and enjoying each other s company in skiing and golf and in separate March 2006 interviews with the Los Angeles Times admitted that they were in fact discussing the prospects of combining the two series 1 Mid season changes EditFollowing Paul Dana s death in a crash before the first race Rahal Letterman hired Jeff Simmons to drive the 17 car two races later at Motegi Roberto Moreno replaced an injured Ed Carpenter for round 2 only Carpenter returned for all the remaining races Following an Indy 500 where both Hemelgarn cars crashed into each other and finished in the last two positions Hemelgarn Racing which had been running full time with P J Chesson ceased operations After the Kansas Speedway race Cheever Racing ceased operations due to lack of sponsorship Also Foyt Enterprises replaced Felipe Giaffone with Jeff Bucknum Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing announced that Ryan Briscoe who drove their car to a third place at Watkins Glen would drive their car in the remaining short oval and road course races instead of Buddy Lazier and that Sarah Fisher would race the car at the remaining 1 5 mile 2 4 km tracks Kentucky and Chicagoland Marty Roth returned to the series after crashing in Indy 500 practice and missing the race to drive his own Roth Racing machine in the final 3 oval races of the season Michigan Kentucky and Chicagoland Confirmed entries EditTeam Chassis No Drivers RoundsA J Foyt Enterprises Dallara 14 Felipe Giaffone 1 8 Jeff Bucknum 9 1441 Larry Foyt R 4Andretti Green Racing Dallara 1 Michael Andretti 47 Bryan Herta All11 Tony Kanaan All26 Marco Andretti R All27 Dario Franchitti 1 13 A J Foyt IV 14Cheever Racing Dallara 51 Eddie Cheever 1 2 4 8 Tomas Enge 352 Max Papis 4Delphi Fernandez RacingAguri Fernandez Racing Panoz 8 Scott Sharp 2 5 13Dallara 1 3 4 6 12 1455 Kosuke Matsuura AllDreyer amp Reinbold Racing Dallara 5 Buddy Lazier 1 4 6 8 11 Ryan Briscoe 5 9 10 13 Sarah Fisher 12 1431 Al Unser Jr 4Hemelgarn Racing Dallara 91 P J Chesson R 1 492 Jeff Bucknum 4Luyendyk Racing Panoz 61 Arie Luyendyk Jr 4Marlboro Team Penske Dallara 3 Helio Castroneves All6 Sam Hornish Jr AllPanther Racing Dallara 4 Vitor Meira AllPDM Racing Panoz 18 Thiago Medeiros R 4Playa del Racing Panoz 12 Roger Yasukawa 421 Jaques Lazier 4Rahal Letterman Racing Panoz N 1 Dallara 15 Buddy Rice All16 Danica Patrick All17 Paul Dana R 1 Jeff Simmons R 3 14Roth Racing Dallara 25 Marty Roth R 4 11 12 14Sam Schmidt Motorsports Panoz 88 Airton Dare 4Target Chip Ganassi Racing DallaraPanoz N 2 9 Scott Dixon All10 Dan Wheldon AllTeam Leader Motorsports Panoz 97 Stephan Gregoire 498 P J Jones 4Vision Racing Dallara 2 Tomas Scheckter All20 Ed Carpenter 1 3 14 Roberto Moreno 290 Townsend Bell 4All IndyCar Series entries utilized Honda Indy V8 HI6R enginesRace summaries EditToyota Indy 300 Edit Main article 2006 Toyota Indy 300 This race held at Homestead Miami Speedway was run on March 26 and covered by ABC Sam Hornish Jr won the pole The race was marred by a violent crash in the final practice session Paul Dana was killed in the crash and teammates Danica Patrick and Buddy Rice withdrew from the race to honor his memory He was the third driver to lose his life in the IRL Ed Carpenter was also injured and would miss this race plus the next race Top ten results 10 Dan Wheldon 200 laps 3 Helio Castroneves 0 0147 9th closest finish in IRL history 6 Sam Hornish Jr 0 4744 27 Dario Franchitti 0 9401 9 Scott Dixon 1 1989 55 Kosuke Matsuura 2 laps 8 Scott Sharp 2 laps 14 Felipe Giaffone 2 laps 2 Tomas Scheckter 3 laps 51 Eddie Cheever 4 lapsIRL Video Synopsis of the RaceAnnotated Video of Race Summary Honda Grand Prix of St Petersburg Edit Main article 2006 Honda Grand Prix of St Petersburg The Streets of St Petersburg race was held on April 2 and covered by ESPN Dario Franchitti won the pole but was knocked out early due to mechanical failure The race finished under the yellow flag after Tomas Scheckter and Buddy Rice hit the barrier with 4 laps to go Roberto Moreno replaced Ed Carpenter for this race as Ed recovered from his injury s but finished 18th due to steering issues Top ten results 3 Helio Castroneves 100 laps 9 Scott Dixon 0 1386 11 Tony Kanaan 0 6284 7 Bryan Herta 0 7813 4 Vitor Meira 2 5995 16 Danica Patrick 3 0433 55 Kosuke Matsuura 52 7172 6 Sam Hornish Jr 1 lap 14 Felipe Giaffone 1 lap 8 Scott Sharp 1 lapIndy Japan 300 Edit The Twin Ring Motegi Japan race was run on April 22 and covered via tape delay by ESPN Qualifying was rained out and the field was set by entrant points As a result Helio Castroneves sat on pole and for the second race running Castroneves won the race This race also saw the return of Ed Carpenter after the accident at Homestead Rahal Letterman Racing also returned the 17 car to competition after sitting out a second race as Indy Pro Series driver Jeff Simmons moved up to the seat While Simmons has two IndyCar Series races to his experience one the 2004 Indianapolis 500 he is eligible for the Bombardier series Rookie of the Year contest for 2006 However on lap 42 Simmons was involved in a crash with Scott Sharp and P J Chesson which resulted in Simmons sliding along the track upside down Simmons was uninjured Top ten results 3 Helio Castroneves 200 laps 10 Dan Wheldon 6 3851 11 Tony Kanaan 8 6163 6 Sam Hornish Jr 9 0011 15 Buddy Rice 9 7491 7 Bryan Herta 13 8972 55 Kosuke Matsuura 14 7633 16 Danica Patrick 15 4456 9 Scott Dixon 1 lap 4 Vitor Meira 1 lap90th Indianapolis 500 Edit Main article 2006 Indianapolis 500 The Indy 500 was run on May 28 and covered by ABC Sam Hornish Jr won the pole with a 4 lap average of 228 985 mph 2 37 2155 It was Hornish s 10th pole of his short but yet outstanding career Hornish then went on to win the race beating Marco Andretti in the second closest finish in Indy 500 history Dan Wheldon led most laps with 148 Top ten results 6 Sam Hornish Jr 200 laps 26 Marco Andretti 0 0635 1 Michael Andretti 1 0087 10 Dan Wheldon 1 2692 11 Tony Kanaan 1 6456 9 Scott Dixon 3 0566 27 Dario Franchitti 5 6249 16 Danica Patrick 5 7263 8 Scott Sharp 11 1252 4 Vitor Meira 17 9554Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix presented by Tissot Edit The Watkins Glen International race was run on June 4 and covered by ABC Qualifying was cancelled due to fog and the field was set based on Friday practice speeds Helio Castroneves sat on pole The race was shortened to 55 laps from the scheduled 60 due to the 2 hour time limit The race also made history as the first ever IRL race to be run in wet conditions Scott Dixon won from Panther Racing s Vitor Meira and Australia s Ryan Briscoe of Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing As of 2020 it was the last ever IndyCar Series victory for Panoz chassis to date Top ten results 9 Scott Dixon 55 laps 4 Vitor Meira 2 3311 5 Ryan Briscoe 2 7999 15 Buddy Rice 9 2284 14 Felipe Giaffone 11 4811 20 Ed Carpenter 12 4427 3 Helio Castroneves 13 0455 16 Danica Patrick 13 3289 8 Scott Sharp 16 6462 2 Tomas Scheckter 48 4872Video Synopsis of Race Annotated Version of IRL Race SummaryBombardier Learjet 500 Edit The Texas race was run on June 10 and covered by ESPN Sam Hornish Jr won the pole Helio Castroneves captured his second Texas win and third win of the season Dan Wheldon had led most of the race and looked in control only for a short delay on his final pit stop to drop him back to third Top ten results 3 Helio Castroneves 200 laps 9 Scott Dixon 0 2402 10 Dan Wheldon 0 2981 6 Sam Hornish Jr 14 5389 8 Scott Sharp 14 5895 4 Vitor Meira 15 9294 11 Tony Kanaan 16 1398 55 Kosuke Matsuura 22 3327 20 Ed Carpenter 22 9791 2 Tomas Scheckter 1 lapIRL Race Summary Annotated Race Summary Video Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback MachineSunTrust Indy Challenge Edit The Richmond International Raceway race was run on June 24 and covered by ESPN Qualifying was rained out and Helio Castroneves won the pole based on combined practice speeds Sam Hornish Jr has won the race leading 212 of 250 laps The race finished in yellow flag at 4 laps to go due a blown tire from Helio Castroneves which dropped him to 10th place Top Ten Results 6 Sam Hornish Jr 250 laps 4 Vitor Meira 0 3907 27 Dario Franchitti 1 5895 26 Marco Andretti 6 5400 8 Scott Sharp 6 6677 7 Bryan Herta 10 9217 2 Tomas Scheckter 1 lap 20 Ed Carpenter 1 lap 10 Dan Wheldon 1 lap 3 Helio Castroneves 1 lapKansas Lottery Indy 300 Edit The Kansas Speedway race was run on July 2 and covered by ABC Dan Wheldon won the pole Sam Hornish Jr won the race taking the lead from Wheldon with two laps to go This was the 50th IRL race where 1st and 2nd were separated by less than a second Top ten results 6 Sam Hornish Jr 200 laps 10 Dan Wheldon 0 0793 4 Vitor Meira 5 3892 9 Scott Dixon 5 5158 11 Tony Kanaan 5 7762 3 Helio Castroneves 7 0432 2 Tomas Scheckter 9 6925 55 Kosuke Matsuura 9 9881 26 Marco Andretti 1 lap 17 Jeff Simmons 1 lapFirestone Indy 200 Edit The Nashville Superspeedway race was run on July 15 and covered by ESPN Dan Wheldon won the pole Scott Dixon won his second race of the season and captured his first win on an oval since 2003 Top ten results 9 Scott Dixon 200 laps 10 Dan Wheldon 0 1176 4 Vitor Meira 1 2756 16 Danica Patrick 2 5019 3 Helio Castroneves 3 5647 27 Dario Franchitti 11 9449 17 Jeff Simmons 1 lap 26 Marco Andretti 1 lap 5 Ryan Briscoe 1 lap 20 Ed Carpenter 2 lapsABC Supply Company A J Foyt 225 Edit The Milwaukee Mile race was run on July 23 and covered by ESPN Helio Castroneves won the pole Tony Kanaan led most of the race and gave Andretti Green Racing its first win of the season Top ten results 11 Tony Kanaan 225 laps 6 Sam Hornish Jr 1 8276 2 Tomas Scheckter 2 0114 16 Danica Patrick 8 4708 26 Marco Andretti 10 2611 27 Dario Franchitti 11 2373 7 Bryan Herta 14 1195 10 Dan Wheldon 1 lap 17 Jeff Simmons 2 laps 9 Scott Dixon 2 lapsFirestone Indy 400 Edit The Michigan International Speedway race was run on July 30 and covered by ABC The race start was delayed almost 3 hours and the race was aired tape delayed on ESPN2 Helio Castroneves got his fourth race win of the season from the pole Top ten results 3 Helio Castroneves 200 laps 4 Vitor Meira 1 6229 10 Dan Wheldon 6 2259 11 Tony Kanaan 6 9874 2 Tomas Scheckter 27 9005 8 Scott Sharp 28 5560 20 Ed Carpenter 1 lap 26 Marco Andretti 1 lap 55 Kosuke Matsuura 1 lap 17 Jeff Simmons 1 lapMeijer Indy 300 presented by Coca Cola and Secret Edit The Kentucky Speedway race was run on August 13 and covered by ABC Helio Castroneves won the pole Sam Hornish Jr captured his 4th win of the year and re took the points lead This was also the second IRL race with two female drivers in the field the first was the 2000 Indianapolis 500 Top ten results 6 Sam Hornish Jr 200 laps 9 Scott Dixon 0 5866 3 Helio Castroneves 0 6511 10 Dan Wheldon 1 8913 11 Tony Kanaan 2 3049 4 Vitor Meira 2 5191 2 Tomas Scheckter 2 8124 16 Danica Patrick 3 2408 27 Dario Franchitti 4 7070 7 Bryan Herta 4 7966Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma Edit The Infineon Raceway race was run on August 27 and covered by ESPN Scott Dixon won the pole Marco Andretti became the youngest winner of a major open wheel race and the first new IRL winner since Adrian Fernandez in 2004 Top ten results 26 Marco Andretti 80 laps 27 Dario Franchitti 0 6557 4 Vitor Meira 10 6535 9 Scott Dixon 11 1867 3 Helio Castroneves 12 5049 10 Dan Wheldon 13 4493 17 Jeff Simmons 13 8754 16 Danica Patrick 15 7417 6 Sam Hornish Jr 16 3369 7 Bryan Herta 18 5571Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 presented by Mr Clean Edit The Chicagoland Speedway race was run on September 10 and covered by ABC Sam Hornish Jr won the pole and clinched the championship by finishing third Dan Wheldon won the race and tied Hornish in season points but lost the title due to the tiebreaker most wins Top ten results 10 Dan Wheldon 200 laps 9 Scott Dixon 0 1897 6 Sam Hornish Jr 0 2323 3 Helio Castroneves 2 6913 20 Ed Carpenter 1 lap 4 Vitor Meira 1 lap 11 Tony Kanaan 1 lap 17 Jeff Simmons 1 lap 8 Scott Sharp 1 lap 2 Tomas Scheckter 1 lapSeason summary EditSchedule Edit Rnd Date Race Name Track City1 March 26 Toyota Indy 300 O Homestead Miami Speedway Homestead Florida2 April 2 Honda Grand Prix of St Petersburg S Streets of St Petersburg St Petersburg Florida3 April 22 Indy Japan 300 O Twin Ring Motegi Motegi Japan4 May 28 90th Indianapolis 500 O Indianapolis Motor Speedway Speedway Indiana5 June 4 Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix presented by Tissot R Watkins Glen International Watkins Glen New York6 June 10 Bombardier Learjet 500 O Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth Texas7 June 24 SunTrust Indy Challenge O Richmond International Raceway Richmond Virginia8 July 2 Kansas Lottery Indy 300 O Kansas Speedway Kansas City Kansas9 July 15 Firestone Indy 200 O Nashville Superspeedway Lebanon Tennessee10 July 23 ABC Supply Company A J Foyt 225 O The Milwaukee Mile West Allis Wisconsin11 July 30 Firestone Indy 400 O Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn Michigan12 August 13 Meijer Indy 300 presented by Coca Cola and Secret O Kentucky Speedway Sparta Kentucky13 August 27 Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma R Infineon Raceway Sonoma California14 September 10 Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 presented by Mr Clean O Chicagoland Speedway Joliet Illinois O Oval Speedway R Road course S Temporary street circuitBOLD indicates Superspeedways Race results Edit Rnd Date Race Name Pole position Fastest lap Most Laps Led Winner Winning chassis1 March 26 Toyota Indy 300 Sam Hornish Jr Scott Dixon Sam Hornish Jr Dan Wheldon Dallara2 April 2 Honda Grand Prix of St Petersburg Dario Franchitti Tony Kanaan Helio Castroneves Helio Castroneves Dallara3 April 22 Indy Japan 300 Helio Castroneves Scott Dixon Helio Castroneves Helio Castroneves Dallara4 May 28 90th Indianapolis 500 Sam Hornish Jr Scott Dixon Dan Wheldon Sam Hornish Jr Dallara5 June 4 Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prixpresented by Tissot Helio Castroneves Marco Andretti Dan Wheldon Scott Dixon Panoz6 June 10 Bombardier Learjet 500 Sam Hornish Jr Dan Wheldon Dan Wheldon Helio Castroneves Dallara7 June 24 SunTrust Indy Challenge Helio Castroneves Helio Castroneves Sam Hornish Jr Sam Hornish Jr Dallara8 July 2 Kansas Lottery Indy 300 Dan Wheldon Helio Castroneves Sam Hornish Jr Sam Hornish Jr Dallara9 July 15 Firestone Indy 200 Dan Wheldon Dan Wheldon Dan Wheldon Scott Dixon Dallara10 July 23 ABC Supply Company A J Foyt 225 Helio Castroneves Tomas Scheckter Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Dallara11 July 30 Firestone Indy 400 Helio Castroneves Kosuke Matsuura Vitor Meira Helio Castroneves Dallara12 August 13 Meijer Indy 300presented by Coca Cola and Secret Helio Castroneves Bryan Herta Dan Wheldon Sam Hornish Jr Dallara13 August 27 Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma Scott Dixon Tony Kanaan Scott Dixon Marco Andretti Dallara14 September 10 Peak Antifreeze Indy 300presented by Mr Clean Sam Hornish Jr Sam Hornish Jr Dan Wheldon Dan Wheldon DallaraFinal driver standings Edit Further information List of American Championship car racing point scoring systems Pos Driver HMS STP MOT INDY WGL TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MIS KTY SNM CHI Pts1 Sam Hornish Jr 3 8 4 1 12 4 1 1 14 2 19 1 9 3 4752 Dan Wheldon 1 16 2 4 15 3 9 2 2 8 3 4 6 1 4753 Helio Castroneves 2 1 1 25 7 1 10 6 5 14 1 3 5 4 4734 Scott Dixon 5 2 9 6 1 2 11 4 1 10 16 2 4 2 4605 Vitor Meira 16 5 10 10 2 6 2 3 3 15 2 6 3 6 4116 Tony Kanaan 11 3 3 5 11 7 18 5 12 1 4 5 11 7 3847 Marco Andretti RY 15 15 12 2 16 14 4 9 8 5 8 17 1 18 3258 Dario Franchitti 4 19 11 7 14 13 3 12 6 6 12 9 2 3119 Danica Patrick DNS 6 8 8 8 12 15 11 4 4 17 8 8 12 30210 Tomas Scheckter 9 12 13 27 10 10 7 7 15 3 5 7 17 10 29811 Bryan Herta 13 4 6 20 13 11 6 13 11 7 11 10 10 15 28912 Scott Sharp 7 10 16 9 9 5 5 18 17 12 6 16 14 9 28713 Kosuke Matsuura 6 7 7 15 18 8 12 8 13 17 9 19 13 11 27314 Ed Carpenter DNS 20 11 6 9 8 16 10 16 7 11 12 5 25215 Buddy Rice DNS 13 5 26 4 18 13 17 16 11 13 15 15 13 23416 Jeff Simmons R 18 23 19 15 19 10 7 9 10 14 7 8 21717 Felipe Giaffone 8 9 15 21 5 16 17 19 14218 Buddy Lazier 14 14 14 12 19 16 15 15 12219 Eddie Cheever 10 11 13 17 17 14 14 11420 Jeff Bucknum 32 18 13 14 13 18 17 9721 Ryan Briscoe 3 9 18 16 8322 P J Chesson R 12 17 17 33 5423 Marty Roth R DNQ 18 18 19 3624 Michael Andretti 3 3525 Sarah Fisher 12 16 3226 A J Foyt IV 14 1627 Max Papis 14 1628 Roger Yasukawa 16 1429 Jaques Lazier 17 1330 Roberto Moreno 18 1231 Airton Dare 18 1232 Tomas Enge 19 1233 P J Jones 19 1234 Townsend Bell 22 1235 Al Unser Jr 24 1236 Arie Luyendyk Jr 28 1037 Stephan Gregoire 29 1038 Larry Foyt R 30 1039 Thiago Medeiros R 31 1040 Paul Dana R DNS 6 Jon Herb Wth 0Pos Driver HMS STP MOT INDY WGL TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MIS KTY SNM CHI Pts Color ResultGold WinnerSilver 2nd placeBronze 3rd placeGreen 4th amp 5th placeLight Blue 6th 10th placeDark 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 notparticipate DNP Not competingIn line notationBold Pole positionItalics Ran fastest race lap Led most race laps 3 points DNS Any driver who qualifiesbut does not start DNS earns half the pointshad they taken part Fatal accidentRookie of the Year RY Rookie R Ties in points broken by number of wins followed by number of 2nds 3rds etc and then by number of pole positions followed by number of times qualified 2nd etc Paul Dana collided with Ed Carpenter s disabled car in the practice session at Homestead Miami Speedway Dana was transported to a hospital where he died due to complications from his injuries sustained in the crash He was 30 years old See also Edit2006 Indianapolis 500 2006 Indy Pro Series season 2006 Champ Car season 2006 Champ Car Atlantic seasonFootnotes Edit Used from Homestead to Watkins Glen and at Sonoma Used in the road courses External links EditIndyCar com official site Indianapolis 500 official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2006 IndyCar Series amp oldid 1149423927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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