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Championship Auto Racing Teams

Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) was a sanctioning body for American open-wheel car racing that operated from 1979 to 2003. It sanctioned the PPG Indy Car World Series from 1979 until dissolving after the 2003 season.

Championship Auto Racing Teams
SportAuto racing
Jurisdiction United States
Canada
AbbreviationCART
Founded1979
HeadquartersTroy, Michigan, United States (1979-2002)
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States (2002-2003)[1]
Closure date2003

CART was founded in 1979 by United States Auto Club (USAC) Championship Division team owners who disagreed with the direction and leadership of USAC, with the then-novel idea of car owners sanctioning and promoting their own series collectively instead of relying on a neutral body to do so. Through the 1980s, the Indy Car World Series became the pre-eminent open-wheel auto racing series in North America, featuring street circuits, road courses, and oval track racing. CART drivers continued to compete at the USAC-sanctioned Indianapolis 500.

Even as the series prospered, concerns about costs, competitiveness, and revenue sharing began to create opposition to CART's organizational structure. Attempts at reform, which saw the company rebranded as IndyCar in 1992[2] and a compromise board formed, failed. In 1996, an open wheel "split" saw the newly created Indy Racing League (IRL) take full control over the Indianapolis 500 and start a competing oval-based open-wheel series. CART ceased using the IndyCar name but continued its series without participating in the Indianapolis 500.

The "split" saw a dramatic fall in general interest for open wheel racing in the United States, which was compounded by the growing popularity of NASCAR, creating a downward trend in sponsorship and attendance at some tracks. After a series of setbacks in the early 2000s saw the departure of major racing teams and engine manufacturers to the IRL, CART went bankrupt at the end of the 2003 season.

In 2004, a trio of team owners acquired the assets of the series from bankruptcy, renaming it the Champ Car World Series. Continuing financial difficulties caused Champ Car to file for bankruptcy before its planned 2008 season; its assets and history were merged into the IRL's IndyCar Series, reuniting both series of American open-wheel racing.

Vehicles Edit

 
Emerson Fittipaldi in a Penske-Chevrolet at Mid-Ohio, 1992.

Champ Cars (before 1997, advertised as IndyCars) were single-seat, open-wheel racing cars, with mid-mounted engines. Champ cars had sculpted undersides to create ground effects and prominent wings to create downforce. The cars would use different aerodynamic kits depending on whether they were racing on an oval or a road-course.

Teams typically purchased chassis constructed by independent suppliers such as Lola, Swift, Reynard, and March, with some owners, such as Dan Gurney and Roger Penske, constructing their own. The series exclusively used Goodyear tires until 1995, when Firestone entered, creating a spirited competition between the brands. Firestone ultimately became the exclusive supplier in 2000, with their parent company Bridgestone taking over the role in 2003.

Champ Cars used turbocharged engines that ran on methanol fuel. Cosworth (branded as Ford-Cosworth), Ilmor (branded as Chevrolet), and Buick engines were common until the mid-1990s, which saw Mercedes-Benz take over as Ilmor's branding and Honda and Toyota enter factory efforts. Engines were typically leased from manufacturers, who conducted research and development during the racing season; one engine could easily dominate competition in the first part of the season and then fall behind. The exclusive availability of more advanced versions of engines to certain teams in the early-1990s became a major source of contention within the organization, and manufacturers fiercely resisted proposals to have engines simply be purchased by teams. In 2003, after the withdrawal of Honda and Toyota, CART purchased a series of identical 2.65L V-8 turbocharged Cosworth engines and leased them to teams under Ford branding.[3]

Champ Cars were visually similar, and often compared to, the higher budget and more technical Formula 1 cars, which also featured wings, mid-engines, and an open-wheel design. Due to their use on ovals, Champ Cars weighed more and were more substantial in size, were slower to accelerate but were higher in top speed. Sometimes they had more powerful engines depending on the formulas and regulations of the season (although F1 cars in the mid-80s could regularly be double the power in qualifying set up). Both series tended to downplay comparisons for commercial reasons, but 2002 saw a rare occurrence in both series running the same track (Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal) within a month of each other. Former Chip Ganassi Racing driver Juan Pablo Montoya won the pole position for the Formula One race with a lap time of 1'12.836, with the slowest being Alex Yoong's 1'17.34; Several weeks later, Cristiano da Matta won pole position in a Champ Car race with a lap time of 1'18.959.

History Edit

Foundation Edit

American open-wheel car racing (Indy car) sanctioning timeline
Sanctioning body 1905- 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s
AAA   unofficial   WWI   WWII                  
USAC               *                
CART                   * CART IndyCar CART Champ Car      
IRL                     IRL IndyCar  
Golden bar indicates which body sanctioned the Indy 500 each year. White text indicates name of racing series (when applicable).
 
Original logo of CART, used from 1979 to 1991.
 
A. J. Foyt March/Cosworth at Pocono in 1984.

In 1905 the AAA established a national driving championship and became the first sanctioning body for auto racing in the United States. The AAA ceased sanctioning auto racing in the general outrage over motor racing safety that followed the 1955 Le Mans disaster. In response, Indianapolis Motor Speedway president Tony Hulman formed the United States Auto Club (USAC) to take over the sanctioning of what was called "championship" auto racing, or open wheel racing, whose biggest event was the annual Indianapolis 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. USAC sanctioned the championship exclusively until 1978, and was the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile's recognized American authority with regard to open wheel racing.

Competitors in the championship circuit, coalescing around Dan Gurney, began to become critical of USAC's sanctioning though the 1970s. Notable incidents included the loss of a lucrative sponsorship by Marlboro in 1971 after USAC failed to enforce the brand's exclusivity at events, the existence of dirt tracks, purses that teams said would result in a loss in money even if the team made the podium, and a lack of modern promotion for the non-Indianapolis events in the series.

In early 1978, Gurney wrote what came to be known as the "Gurney White Paper", the blueprint for an organization called Championship Auto Racing Teams.[4] Gurney took his inspiration from the improvements Bernie Ecclestone had forced on Formula One with his creation of the Formula One Constructors Association. The White Paper called for the owners to form CART as an advocacy group to promote USAC's national championship. The group would also work to negotiate television rights, sponsorship agreements, and race purses, and ideally hold seats on USAC's governing body. In 1978, the last season that USAC was sole sanctioning body for Championship racing, their 18 race schedule had 4 road course races and 14 oval track races.

On April 23, 1978, eight top USAC officials died in an airplane crash,[5] creating an organizational vacuum that severely hampered the 1978 season. In November 1978 Gurney, joined by other leading team owners including Roger Penske and Pat Patrick, took their requests to USAC's Board, but the proposal was rejected, leading to the creation of a new stand-alone series. The first CART race was held on 11 March 1979, with the Sports Car Club of America sanctioning the series.[6]

USAC initially tried to ban all CART drivers from the 1979 Indianapolis 500, informing CART teams by telegram during their event at Atlanta Motor Speedway, until CART succeeded in obtaining an injunction to allow its cars to qualify.[7] Of the 20 races held in 1979, 13 were part of the 1979 CART Championship. An attempt by USAC and CART to jointly sanction races in 1980 as the Championship Racing League saw USAC withdraw after 5 races, and by the end of 1981 the only USAC sanctioned asphalt championship race was the Indianapolis 500.

CART PPG Indy Car World Series (1982–1991) Edit

 
In order, Rick Mears, Mario Andretti, and Bobby Rahal at Laguna Seca, 1991.

By 1982, the CART PPG Indy Car World Series was unilaterally recognized as the American national championship in open wheel racing. In 1983, USAC agreed to allow CART to add the Indy 500 to its schedule and have drivers be awarded points in the CART championship in return for retaining the authority to sanction the 500. Beginning with a schedule mainly based on oval speedways like its USAC predecessor, the series began to move into prominent North American road racing circuits such as Road America, Mid-Ohio, and Laguna Seca, replacing the declining Can-Am series. Many racing stars, including Mario Andretti, Bobby Rahal, and Danny Sullivan found success in CART, which by the mid-1980s moved into sanctioning street races, taking over the Detroit Grand Prix and the Grand Prix of Long Beach from Formula One, and expanding to Toronto and Cleveland. CART founded the first full-time driver safety team that traveled with the series, instead of depending on local staff provided by promoters.

For the first time, open-wheel racing outside of Indianapolis had developed a stable schedule, enabling more generous sponsorship and television opportunities for the owners. Despite the corresponding increases in attendance, TV revenue, and purses, CART's egalitarian governing structure created its own headaches. CART owners were incredibly diverse: For example, owners such as Carl Haas and Roger Penske owned speedways and had generous contracts with tire, chassis, and engine manufactures, while other teams simply purchased older cars and ran the races they could afford to attend. The diversity of interests led to annual fights and accusations of real and apparent conflicts of interest with regard to rules, sponsorship, driver safety, track selection, and other matters.

In 1988, CART joined ACCUS, allowing foreign drivers to compete without risking their FIA Super Licences.[8][9] This, combined with former F1 champion Emerson Fittipaldi's series title in 1989, attracted drivers from South America and Europe to join what had previously been a mostly American dominated series. A growing contingent of international drivers helped make the series a valuable television property for growing sports cable networks worldwide. CART would host its first race outside North America, in Surfers Paradise, Australia, in 1991.

IndyCar and the "Split" (1992–1996) Edit

 
Nigel Mansell racing in a Lola-Ford in 1993.

As the larger teams and engine and chassis manufactures competed for victories, costs were rapidly increasing, pricing out smaller teams. Tony George, by 1989 the president of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS), and others viewed foreign drivers and street circuits as discouraging predominantly American USAC sprint racing talent, such as Jeff Gordon, from competing in IndyCar.[10] NASCAR, which ran predominantly on ovals, was gaining in popularity in IndyCar's traditional Midwestern US market.

CART was regularly accused of only serving the interests of team owners, especially the richest ones, and not of the sport as a whole. CART owners believed that the teams, who took the most risks, paid the drivers, and expended the most cash, should control the general direction of the sport. CART owners also resented George, and felt that his close relationship with USAC meant he could jeopardize the series' involvement in the Indianapolis 500 on a whim. Debate continued for a number of years over the proper oversight mechanism for the sport, with IMS resisting any revenue sharing or control over Indianapolis and owners not wanting to give too much power to track promoters. In an attempt to address these concerns, in 1992, CART rebranded as IndyCar, and later in 1992 formed a compromise board with owners electing five members with voting rights, with the IndyCar CEO (representing the other owners) and George (representing IMS) having non-voting seats.

1993 would see British driver Nigel Mansell, the 1992 F1 Driver's Champion, switch to IndyCar and beat Fittipaldi for the championship. The new board collapsed at the end of the season after a series of controversial decisions, mainly shutting out Japanese manufacturers, cancelling a planned race at Brands Hatch in the United Kingdom, and keeping the schedule exactly the same, that were seen as driven by conflicts of interest of George and the five owners elected to the new board.[11]

In March 1994, George announced his resignation from the IndyCar board. That year, Team Penske introduced a Mercedes-Benz engine specifically designed for the 1994 Indianapolis 500 that exploited a rule difference between the USAC and IndyCar, dominating the race and prompting fears that costs would continue to grow out of control.[12] In July, IMS announced the founding of the Indy Racing League, which would be cost controlled and race solely on American ovals and be sanctioned by USAC.[13]

 
Target-Chip Ganassi Racing would win CART drivers championships with Jimmy Vasser (1996, car pictured), Alex Zanardi (1997 and 1998), and Juan Pablo Montoya (1999).

After the 1995 Indianapolis 500 saw driver complaints about USAC's oversight, George announced that for the 1996 Indianapolis 500 the top 25 drivers in IRL points would be guaranteed a spot in the race, leaving only eight of the 33 grid positions available to others. This was known as the "25/8 Rule,"[14] and was unprecedented, as the 500 had traditionally always put every spot up for open qualification.[14] CART declared they had been locked out of the event and would no longer race at Indianapolis, while George declared that CART was boycotting.[15] To placate sponsors who contractually required the accommodation of large contingents to attend Indianapolis, CART created a rival showcase event, the U.S. 500, at Michigan International Speedway on the same day as the Indy 500 in 1996.[15] In March, Indianapolis Motor Speedway attempted to terminate CART's license to their "IndyCar" trademark in Federal Court.[16]

The lead-up to Memorial Day 1996 saw a public relations war, pitting the owners and drivers of CART against George and IMS, which included Indianapolis legends like the Unser and Andretti families publicly criticizing the new rules and labeling the race with less experienced drivers as unsafe.[17]

The 1996 Indianapolis 500 did see a series of accidents, with a quarter of the race run under caution before Buddy Lazier won his first race.[17] The US 500, starting halfway through the Indy 500, had a disastrous start with a twelve-car crash, delaying the race for an hour.[17] Jimmy Vasser, who won by 11 seconds, quipped "Who needs milk?" while exiting his car for the podium, referring to the tradition of the Indy 500 winner drinking milk. Both at the time and in retrospect, the weekend was seen as a fiasco that began a serious decline in open-wheel racing, with both the Indy 500 and other Indycar events seeing drastic decline in prominence, TV viewership, and attendance.

CART FedEx Championship Series (1997–2000) Edit

 
Greg Moore in a 1996 Reynard-Mercedes. Moore's death in 1999 left the series without one of its rising stars.

After a number of competing lawsuits, CART agreed to revert to their formal initialism following the 1996 season, on the condition that the IRL would not use the name before the end of the 2002 season.[18] CART began promoting its vehicles as "champ cars," a term that had previously been used by USAC's championship division.

In the early years after the launch of the IRL in 1996, CART was in a far stronger position: It held most of the prestigious races, sponsorship money, most of the "name" drivers and teams, and was the preferred series for manufacturers due to the IRL's ban on engine leases. IRL's primary asset was Indianapolis Motor Speedway and its 500. 1996 and 1997 saw generally well regarding racing with stars such as Jimmy Vasser, rookie sensation Alex Zanardi, and Michael Andretti leading the points standings, while the IRL experienced growing pains, including a rain-soaked 1997 Indianapolis 500, off-putting engine sounds from their new normally-aspirated engines, and the abandonment of USAC sanctioning due to incompetence.[19]

CART, in further contrast to IMS's sole ownership of the IRL, opted to proceed with a public stock offering, selling on the NASDAQ as stock symbol MPH. The offering raised US$100 million by selling 35% of the company. While this allowed CART to have sufficient cash reserves to expand and purchase the Indy Lights series, commentators suggested it was short-sighted to subject the notoriously secretive and fluctuating finances of the auto racing industry to public trading requirements.[20]

Efforts, led mostly by engine manufacturers, to pressure CART and the IRL to at least adopt uniform engine standards were met with a cold refusal from the IRL, which started to carve a niche in the motorsports landscape by leveraging close relationships with the new NASCAR spec ovals being built, with the series' substantial losses being underwritten by the other revenue streams of IMS.[21]

Despite the split, CART saw its annual revenues increase from $38,000,000 in 1995 to $68,800,000 by 1999, street races remained lucrative, and teams were able to make some gains on sponsorship revenues.[22] The success was uneven, as the series' traditional oval races in Michigan and Nazareth began to see dramatic attendance declines,[23] which CART blamed on substandard marketing.[24] Television ratings and revenue were anemic, with the series receiving $5,000,000 annually for the entirety of its television package, less than the rate for some individual NASCAR races.[25] While CART's stock was generally considered healthy, investors noted that the company's valuation tended to fluctuate with the perceived success or failure of IRL merger talks.[26]

CART's championship battle in 1999 between young stars Juan Pablo Montoya and Dario Franchitti was overshadowed by the deaths of drivers Gonzalo Rodríguez and Greg Moore within two months of each other. Moore's death at the 1999 Marlboro 500 especially raised serious concerns about safety in the 500 mile races conducted in Fontana and Michigan that saw Champ Cars average speeds of near 240 mph (390 km/h).

In 2000, after years of frustration building behind the scenes, CART owners forced Andrew Craig to resign as CEO, and popular driver/owner Bobby Rahal stepped in as his interim replacement. Seeing the continued success of street racing and the decline of the series' oval dates, the board announced an intention of moving away from traditional venues toward overseas ovals and more street races to generate sanctioning fees, to the frustration of some of the traditional owners and United States based sponsors.

Chip Ganassi, under pressure from his main sponsors, also persuaded the board to leave Memorial Day open on the schedule and returned to the Indy 500 with Vasser and Montoya. Montoya put on a dominating performance at Indy, leading 167 of the 200 laps to win. The Ganassi team's primary advantage was the greater engineering put into their IRL-spec car. 2000 would see Team Penske's return to prominence as Gil de Ferran won the driver's title.

Decline (2001–2003) Edit

 
Adrian Fernandez in a 2002 Lola-Honda.
 
Final logo of CART before its bankruptcy, used in 2003.

For 2001, CART unveiled their most ambitious schedule yet, with 22 races in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Japan, the United Kingdom, Germany and Australia. The loss of Homestead-Miami and Gateway to the IRL was to be offset by the addition of Texas Motor Speedway, which had seen an exciting IRL race the year prior. Rahal retired to head Jaguar Racing in Formula 1, leading to marketing expert Joseph Heitzler taking the helm.[27]

Brazil was cancelled after track promoters defaulted. The race at Texas Motor Speedway had to be cancelled on race day, due to concerns of drivers blacking out at the high G forces created by Champ cars on the heavily banked course during qualifying. While applauded for putting driver safety first, the cancellation was a publicity disaster, and CART was criticized for not testing cars on the track earlier as requested. A resulting lawsuit, while settled, produced a quarterly loss for CART's stock and forever harmed its relationship with Speedway Motorsports.[28]

Despite CART teams sweeping the top 6 positions in the 2001 Indianapolis 500 and a highly competitive four-way points battle among Gil de Ferran, Kenny Brack, Hélio Castroneves, and Michael Andretti, headlines centered on a technological controversy regarding a turbo pop off valve that Honda and Ford had developed, prompting complaints by Toyota. [29] When CART mandated changes in the valve to help equalize the competition, Honda successfully obtained an injunction barring the change, leading to all three manufacturers being upset. Toyota would announce it would move to the IRL for 2003 at the end of the season.[30]

The series' first foray into Europe, the German 500, was overshadowed by the 9/11 attacks that occurred the Tuesday before the Saturday race. With the teams unable to leave due to the worldwide shutdown of airspace, CART decided to run the race as scheduled after some controversy, with ESPN refusing to air the race live. The race would see popular former champion Alex Zanardi lose both legs in an accident. The series inaugural event in the United Kingdom would come close to being cancelled due to track concerns.[31]

To keep coverage of the Indianapolis 500, ABC/ESPN signed an exclusive television deal for 2002 onwards with the IRL, forcing CART to turn to Speed Channel for cable coverage and buy time on CBS to maintain a broadcast presence.[32] Team Penske announced after the season that they would become permanent entrants in the IRL for 2002 due to pressure from sponsor Marlboro resulting from the American tobacco settlements that prevented cigarette advertising in multiple series.[33]

The loss of ESPN/ABC's exposure and engine manufacturer sponsoring began a downward spiral for the series, as race promoters began demanding reduced sanctioning fees for 2002 and sponsors began to review their agreements.[34] Heitzler was fired by the CART board in the offseason, being replaced by Chris Pook, the well-regarded CEO of the Long Beach Grand Prix.[35] Making matters worse was CART's growing ownership instability due to the public offering: Despite an initial agreement for the car owners to maintain 65% of the stock, agreements allowed owners to divest shares in the company.[34] As car owners began to sell off their shares, the board's chronic issues grew more complicated with aggressive stockholders beginning to pressure the board alongside owners.[36]

During the 2002 season, Honda announced that it would move to the IRL the following year, causing a drastic decline in CART's stock and leaving Cosworth/Ford as the sole engine manufacturer for 2003.[37] Attempts to subsidize teams to have enough cars racing to avoid breaching sanctioning contracts led to a further decline in cash reserves and the stock price.[38] Team owner Gerald Forsythe was able to purchase enough stock to control 22.5% of the voting shares in concert with the board.[38] Star driver Michael Andretti purchased the prominent Team Green and moved them to the IRL with heavy direction from Honda,[39] and Chip Ganassi Racing left due to pressure from its primary sponsor, Target.

Beginning in 2003, after the withdrawal of FedEx as series sponsor, CART re-branded itself as "Bridgestone Presents The Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford".[40] The series ran a near complete schedule of road course races, featuring chassis from the year before.

Reformation as Champ Car Edit

CART, running out of cash reserves, declared bankruptcy after the 2003 season and its assets were liquidated. The IRL made a strategic bid to keep the series dormant, while a trio of CART owners (Forsythe, Paul Gentilozzi, and Kevin Kalkhoven) along with Dan Pettit made a bid for CART's assets as Open Wheel Racing Series, LLC. The bankruptcy court ruled in favor of the OWRS bid as more beneficial to creditors than the IRL bid, despite it being smaller.

Champ Car would continue to run until declaring bankruptcy and being "reunified" with the IRL in February 2008. IndyCar recognizes the records and champions of both series in its historical records.

Television Edit

In its early years, television coverage of CART races were shared by NBC, ABC and ESPN. NBC left after the 1990 season, and returned for 1994's race in Toronto only. CBS also aired races from 1989 to 1991 and also aired the 1995 race at Nazareth. ABC, ESPN and ESPN2 continued as broadcasters until 2001.

In the 2002 and 2003 Champ Car seasons, coverage was split between CBS and Speed Channel (Fox aired the 2002 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach). Also from 2002 to 2004, select races aired on high definition channel HDNet such as Road America race in 2003.

Outside the United States, Screensport showed CART in the UK, Ireland, Scandinavia, France, Germany and the Benelux countries including the Indy 500 from 1984-1992.

Eurosport aired CART and Champ Car in Europe from 1993 until its demise. In the UK Sky Sports showed the races in 1992 on a tape delay and the Indy 500 live.

ITV showed races on World of Sport and later on as a bought in programme as part of the Night Time service in 1988 and later highlights between 1993 and 1994.

From 1997 to 2001, Channel 5 showed races on early Wednesday mornings though in 1998 showed them as live on the Sunday night.

In Brazil, Rede Record aired the Indy 500 in 1984. From 1985 until 1992, Rede Bandeirantes aired the race and from 1989 onwards, they aired the whole season on TV. Between 1993 and 1994, the CART season was broadcast by Rede Manchete.[citation needed]

Following economical difficulties by the former broadcaster and to battle Rede Globo for the lead of audience, SBT took the rights to transmission from Manchete, including its trio of narrators (Téo José, Luiz Carlos Azenha, and Dedê Gomes), and even sending one of their helicopters to get exclusive images from the races. They broadcast the entire season live between 1995 and 2000, although from 1999 onwards, following complaints by Gugu Liberato because of audience size, the races were delayed and transmitted at 11:00PM, after the Programa Silvio Santos, although a few races remained live, such as Surfers' Paradise (because of the time, which was in the middle of the night) and the Rio 200. From 1997 onwards, the series was referred to as "Fórmula Mundial" (Worldwide Formula), following the split between CART and the Indy Racing League. In the first years, the category was able to challenge Globo and its F1 transmission, but after most of the races were reallocated to VT in the night, the audience stagnated. After the contract expired in 2000, SBT opted to not renew it.[citation needed]

Record once again broadcast the series between 2001 and 2002, again mostly in VTs (with commentary provided by Oscar Ulisses), but the transmissions were delayed to around 7PM, rather than skipping to the end of the night. After an declining audience in 2002, the broadcaster didn't renovated the contract.[citation needed]

In 2003, RedeTV! broadcast the Champ Car series, bringing back commentator Téo José. However, although the races were back on being live, the audience was still rather low and following the decline of the category, they chose to not renew the contact after the end of the 2004 season.

The Globo-owned SporTV channel broadcast the 2004 season to replace the IRL, but following the contract expiring at the end of the season, they didn't renovated, marking the end of the CART/Champ Car broadcasting in Brazil.[citation needed]

Champions Edit

Season Driver Team Chassis/Engine Jim Trueman
Rookie of the Year
SCCA/CART Citicorp Cup
1979   Rick Mears Penske Racing Penske/Cosworth   Bill Alsup
CART PPG Indy Car World Series
1980   Johnny Rutherford Chaparral Racing Chaparral/Cosworth   Dennis Firestone
1981   Rick Mears Penske Racing Penske/Cosworth   Bob Lazier
1982   Rick Mears Penske Racing Penske/Cosworth   Bobby Rahal
1983   Al Unser Penske Racing Penske/Cosworth   Teo Fabi
1984   Mario Andretti Newman/Haas Racing Lola/Cosworth   Roberto Guerrero
1985   Al Unser Penske Racing March/Cosworth   Arie Luyendyk
1986   Bobby Rahal Truesports March/Cosworth   Dominic Dobson
1987   Bobby Rahal Truesports Lola/Cosworth   Fabrizio Barbazza
1988   Danny Sullivan Penske Racing Penske/IlmorChevrolet   John Jones
1989   Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing Penske/IlmorChevrolet   Bernard Jourdain
1990   Al Unser Jr. Galles-Kraco Racing Lola/IlmorChevrolet   Eddie Cheever
1991   Michael Andretti Newman/Haas Racing Lola/IlmorChevrolet   Jeff Andretti
1992   Bobby Rahal Rahal/Hogan Racing Lola/IlmorChevrolet   Stefan Johansson
1993   Nigel Mansell Newman/Haas Racing Lola/CosworthFord   Nigel Mansell
1994   Al Unser Jr. Penske Racing Penske/Ilmor   Jacques Villeneuve
1995   Jacques Villeneuve Team Green Racing Reynard/CosworthFord   Gil de Ferran
1996   Jimmy Vasser Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard/Honda   Alex Zanardi
PPG CART World Series
1997   Alex Zanardi Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard/Honda   Patrick Carpentier
CART FedEx Championship Series
1998   Alex Zanardi Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard/Honda   Tony Kanaan
1999   Juan Pablo Montoya Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard/Honda   Juan Pablo Montoya
2000   Gil de Ferran Penske Racing Reynard/Honda   Kenny Bräck
2001   Gil de Ferran Penske Racing Reynard/Honda   Scott Dixon
2002   Cristiano da Matta Newman/Haas Racing Lola/Toyota   Mario Domínguez
Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford
2003   Paul Tracy Player's/Forsythe Racing Lola/CosworthFord   Sébastien Bourdais

By team Edit

Fatalities Edit

Four drivers died in CART-sanctioned events:

References Edit

  • Whitaker, Sigur E. (2015). The Indy Car Wars: The 30 Year FIght for Control of American Open-Wheel Racing. North Carolina: McFarland and Company. ISBN 978-1-4766-1980-4.
  1. ^ "CART Headquarters Move to Indianapolis Set for May 20". The Auto Channel. 2002-05-17. Retrieved 2021-12-19.
  2. ^ "CART now IndyCar". The Indianapolis News. February 19, 1992. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  3. ^ "How Champ Cars Work". 2 June 2000. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
  4. ^ Eagle-eye Feature: CART White Paper
  5. ^ "8 race officials among 9 dead in plane crash". Arizona Republic. 25 April 1978. Retrieved 14 August 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "Indy champion makes SCCA pit stop". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. 26 February 1979. Retrieved 14 August 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Hinton, Ed (17 May 2010). "Honor, blood and a brewing battle". ESPN.com. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  8. ^ Whitaker, p. 51.
  9. ^ Robert Markus (18 September 1988). "Vince Granatelli has threatened to withdraw from..." Chicago Tribune.
  10. ^ Hinton, Ed (17 May 2010). "Honor, blood and a brewing battle". ESPN.com. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  11. ^ Weber, Jack (7 Aug 1993). "IndyCar Racing is at Important Crossroads". The Courier News. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  12. ^ "Mercedosaurus Rex at Indianapolic Park, Part 23: The loose ends that didn't fit in anywhere else and the epilogue". forix.autosport.com.
  13. ^ Whitaker, p. 68.
  14. ^ a b Whitaker, p. 70.
  15. ^ a b Whitaker, p. 73.
  16. ^ Whitaker, p. 76.
  17. ^ a b c Whitaker, p. 78.
  18. ^ Whitaker, p. 81.
  19. ^ Whitaker, p. 84-86.
  20. ^ Whitaker, p. 80.
  21. ^ Hinton, Ed (17 May 2010). "May '96 memorable for wrong reasons". ESPN.com. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  22. ^ Middlemiss, Jim (8 Jul 2000). "Off the track, CART is casting its net in other markets". National Post. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  23. ^ Miller, Robin (22 Jul 1999). "Where the crowds are". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
  24. ^ Koenig, Bill (October 1, 1999). "CART Aims to Rev Up Series, Falling Shares". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  25. ^ Koenig, Bill (October 1, 1999). "CART Aims to Rev Up Series, Falling Shares". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  26. ^ Koenig, Bill (October 1, 1999). "CART Aims to Rev Up Series, Falling Shares". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  27. ^ Whitaker, p. 94.
  28. ^ "The writing was on the wall long ago". ESPN.com. 2001-04-29. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
  29. ^ Whitaker, p. 94-5.
  30. ^ Whitaker, p. 97.
  31. ^ Whitaker, p. 96.
  32. ^ Whitaker, p. 96-7.
  33. ^ Reinhard, Paul (December 11, 2001). "For Penske, switch to IRL was quite easy". The Morning Call. from the original on December 22, 2018. Retrieved December 22, 2018.
  34. ^ a b Whitaker, p. 98.
  35. ^ Whitaker, p. 100.
  36. ^ Whitaker, p. 98-99.
  37. ^ Whitaker, p. 102.
  38. ^ a b Whitaker, p. 101-104.
  39. ^ Glick, Shav (18 September 2019). "Andretti to Put IRL Before CART". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  40. ^ Whitaker, p. 107.

See also Edit

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Championship Auto Racing Teams news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Championship Auto Racing Teams CART was a sanctioning body for American open wheel car racing that operated from 1979 to 2003 It sanctioned the PPG Indy Car World Series from 1979 until dissolving after the 2003 season Championship Auto Racing TeamsSportAuto racingJurisdictionUnited States CanadaAbbreviationCARTFounded1979HeadquartersTroy Michigan United States 1979 2002 Indianapolis Indiana United States 2002 2003 1 Closure date2003CART was founded in 1979 by United States Auto Club USAC Championship Division team owners who disagreed with the direction and leadership of USAC with the then novel idea of car owners sanctioning and promoting their own series collectively instead of relying on a neutral body to do so Through the 1980s the Indy Car World Series became the pre eminent open wheel auto racing series in North America featuring street circuits road courses and oval track racing CART drivers continued to compete at the USAC sanctioned Indianapolis 500 Even as the series prospered concerns about costs competitiveness and revenue sharing began to create opposition to CART s organizational structure Attempts at reform which saw the company rebranded as IndyCar in 1992 2 and a compromise board formed failed In 1996 an open wheel split saw the newly created Indy Racing League IRL take full control over the Indianapolis 500 and start a competing oval based open wheel series CART ceased using the IndyCar name but continued its series without participating in the Indianapolis 500 The split saw a dramatic fall in general interest for open wheel racing in the United States which was compounded by the growing popularity of NASCAR creating a downward trend in sponsorship and attendance at some tracks After a series of setbacks in the early 2000s saw the departure of major racing teams and engine manufacturers to the IRL CART went bankrupt at the end of the 2003 season In 2004 a trio of team owners acquired the assets of the series from bankruptcy renaming it the Champ Car World Series Continuing financial difficulties caused Champ Car to file for bankruptcy before its planned 2008 season its assets and history were merged into the IRL s IndyCar Series reuniting both series of American open wheel racing Contents 1 Vehicles 2 History 2 1 Foundation 2 2 CART PPG Indy Car World Series 1982 1991 2 3 IndyCar and the Split 1992 1996 2 4 CART FedEx Championship Series 1997 2000 2 5 Decline 2001 2003 2 6 Reformation as Champ Car 3 Television 4 Champions 4 1 By team 5 Fatalities 6 References 7 See alsoVehicles Edit nbsp Emerson Fittipaldi in a Penske Chevrolet at Mid Ohio 1992 Champ Cars before 1997 advertised as IndyCars were single seat open wheel racing cars with mid mounted engines Champ cars had sculpted undersides to create ground effects and prominent wings to create downforce The cars would use different aerodynamic kits depending on whether they were racing on an oval or a road course Teams typically purchased chassis constructed by independent suppliers such as Lola Swift Reynard and March with some owners such as Dan Gurney and Roger Penske constructing their own The series exclusively used Goodyear tires until 1995 when Firestone entered creating a spirited competition between the brands Firestone ultimately became the exclusive supplier in 2000 with their parent company Bridgestone taking over the role in 2003 Champ Cars used turbocharged engines that ran on methanol fuel Cosworth branded as Ford Cosworth Ilmor branded as Chevrolet and Buick engines were common until the mid 1990s which saw Mercedes Benz take over as Ilmor s branding and Honda and Toyota enter factory efforts Engines were typically leased from manufacturers who conducted research and development during the racing season one engine could easily dominate competition in the first part of the season and then fall behind The exclusive availability of more advanced versions of engines to certain teams in the early 1990s became a major source of contention within the organization and manufacturers fiercely resisted proposals to have engines simply be purchased by teams In 2003 after the withdrawal of Honda and Toyota CART purchased a series of identical 2 65L V 8 turbocharged Cosworth engines and leased them to teams under Ford branding 3 Champ Cars were visually similar and often compared to the higher budget and more technical Formula 1 cars which also featured wings mid engines and an open wheel design Due to their use on ovals Champ Cars weighed more and were more substantial in size were slower to accelerate but were higher in top speed Sometimes they had more powerful engines depending on the formulas and regulations of the season although F1 cars in the mid 80s could regularly be double the power in qualifying set up Both series tended to downplay comparisons for commercial reasons but 2002 saw a rare occurrence in both series running the same track Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal within a month of each other Former Chip Ganassi Racing driver Juan Pablo Montoya won the pole position for the Formula One race with a lap time of 1 12 836 with the slowest being Alex Yoong s 1 17 34 Several weeks later Cristiano da Matta won pole position in a Champ Car race with a lap time of 1 18 959 History EditFoundation Edit American open wheel car racing Indy car sanctioning timelineSanctioning body 1905 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020sAAA unofficial WWI WWII USAC CART CART IndyCar CART Champ Car IRL IRL IndyCar Golden bar indicates which body sanctioned the Indy 500 each year White text indicates name of racing series when applicable nbsp Original logo of CART used from 1979 to 1991 nbsp A J Foyt March Cosworth at Pocono in 1984 In 1905 the AAA established a national driving championship and became the first sanctioning body for auto racing in the United States The AAA ceased sanctioning auto racing in the general outrage over motor racing safety that followed the 1955 Le Mans disaster In response Indianapolis Motor Speedway president Tony Hulman formed the United States Auto Club USAC to take over the sanctioning of what was called championship auto racing or open wheel racing whose biggest event was the annual Indianapolis 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway USAC sanctioned the championship exclusively until 1978 and was the Federation Internationale de l Automobile s recognized American authority with regard to open wheel racing Competitors in the championship circuit coalescing around Dan Gurney began to become critical of USAC s sanctioning though the 1970s Notable incidents included the loss of a lucrative sponsorship by Marlboro in 1971 after USAC failed to enforce the brand s exclusivity at events the existence of dirt tracks purses that teams said would result in a loss in money even if the team made the podium and a lack of modern promotion for the non Indianapolis events in the series In early 1978 Gurney wrote what came to be known as the Gurney White Paper the blueprint for an organization called Championship Auto Racing Teams 4 Gurney took his inspiration from the improvements Bernie Ecclestone had forced on Formula One with his creation of the Formula One Constructors Association The White Paper called for the owners to form CART as an advocacy group to promote USAC s national championship The group would also work to negotiate television rights sponsorship agreements and race purses and ideally hold seats on USAC s governing body In 1978 the last season that USAC was sole sanctioning body for Championship racing their 18 race schedule had 4 road course races and 14 oval track races On April 23 1978 eight top USAC officials died in an airplane crash 5 creating an organizational vacuum that severely hampered the 1978 season In November 1978 Gurney joined by other leading team owners including Roger Penske and Pat Patrick took their requests to USAC s Board but the proposal was rejected leading to the creation of a new stand alone series The first CART race was held on 11 March 1979 with the Sports Car Club of America sanctioning the series 6 USAC initially tried to ban all CART drivers from the 1979 Indianapolis 500 informing CART teams by telegram during their event at Atlanta Motor Speedway until CART succeeded in obtaining an injunction to allow its cars to qualify 7 Of the 20 races held in 1979 13 were part of the 1979 CART Championship An attempt by USAC and CART to jointly sanction races in 1980 as the Championship Racing League saw USAC withdraw after 5 races and by the end of 1981 the only USAC sanctioned asphalt championship race was the Indianapolis 500 CART PPG Indy Car World Series 1982 1991 Edit nbsp In order Rick Mears Mario Andretti and Bobby Rahal at Laguna Seca 1991 By 1982 the CART PPG Indy Car World Series was unilaterally recognized as the American national championship in open wheel racing In 1983 USAC agreed to allow CART to add the Indy 500 to its schedule and have drivers be awarded points in the CART championship in return for retaining the authority to sanction the 500 Beginning with a schedule mainly based on oval speedways like its USAC predecessor the series began to move into prominent North American road racing circuits such as Road America Mid Ohio and Laguna Seca replacing the declining Can Am series Many racing stars including Mario Andretti Bobby Rahal and Danny Sullivan found success in CART which by the mid 1980s moved into sanctioning street races taking over the Detroit Grand Prix and the Grand Prix of Long Beach from Formula One and expanding to Toronto and Cleveland CART founded the first full time driver safety team that traveled with the series instead of depending on local staff provided by promoters For the first time open wheel racing outside of Indianapolis had developed a stable schedule enabling more generous sponsorship and television opportunities for the owners Despite the corresponding increases in attendance TV revenue and purses CART s egalitarian governing structure created its own headaches CART owners were incredibly diverse For example owners such as Carl Haas and Roger Penske owned speedways and had generous contracts with tire chassis and engine manufactures while other teams simply purchased older cars and ran the races they could afford to attend The diversity of interests led to annual fights and accusations of real and apparent conflicts of interest with regard to rules sponsorship driver safety track selection and other matters In 1988 CART joined ACCUS allowing foreign drivers to compete without risking their FIA Super Licences 8 9 This combined with former F1 champion Emerson Fittipaldi s series title in 1989 attracted drivers from South America and Europe to join what had previously been a mostly American dominated series A growing contingent of international drivers helped make the series a valuable television property for growing sports cable networks worldwide CART would host its first race outside North America in Surfers Paradise Australia in 1991 IndyCar and the Split 1992 1996 Edit nbsp Nigel Mansell racing in a Lola Ford in 1993 As the larger teams and engine and chassis manufactures competed for victories costs were rapidly increasing pricing out smaller teams Tony George by 1989 the president of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway IMS and others viewed foreign drivers and street circuits as discouraging predominantly American USAC sprint racing talent such as Jeff Gordon from competing in IndyCar 10 NASCAR which ran predominantly on ovals was gaining in popularity in IndyCar s traditional Midwestern US market CART was regularly accused of only serving the interests of team owners especially the richest ones and not of the sport as a whole CART owners believed that the teams who took the most risks paid the drivers and expended the most cash should control the general direction of the sport CART owners also resented George and felt that his close relationship with USAC meant he could jeopardize the series involvement in the Indianapolis 500 on a whim Debate continued for a number of years over the proper oversight mechanism for the sport with IMS resisting any revenue sharing or control over Indianapolis and owners not wanting to give too much power to track promoters In an attempt to address these concerns in 1992 CART rebranded as IndyCar and later in 1992 formed a compromise board with owners electing five members with voting rights with the IndyCar CEO representing the other owners and George representing IMS having non voting seats 1993 would see British driver Nigel Mansell the 1992 F1 Driver s Champion switch to IndyCar and beat Fittipaldi for the championship The new board collapsed at the end of the season after a series of controversial decisions mainly shutting out Japanese manufacturers cancelling a planned race at Brands Hatch in the United Kingdom and keeping the schedule exactly the same that were seen as driven by conflicts of interest of George and the five owners elected to the new board 11 In March 1994 George announced his resignation from the IndyCar board That year Team Penske introduced a Mercedes Benz engine specifically designed for the 1994 Indianapolis 500 that exploited a rule difference between the USAC and IndyCar dominating the race and prompting fears that costs would continue to grow out of control 12 In July IMS announced the founding of the Indy Racing League which would be cost controlled and race solely on American ovals and be sanctioned by USAC 13 nbsp Target Chip Ganassi Racing would win CART drivers championships with Jimmy Vasser 1996 car pictured Alex Zanardi 1997 and 1998 and Juan Pablo Montoya 1999 After the 1995 Indianapolis 500 saw driver complaints about USAC s oversight George announced that for the 1996 Indianapolis 500 the top 25 drivers in IRL points would be guaranteed a spot in the race leaving only eight of the 33 grid positions available to others This was known as the 25 8 Rule 14 and was unprecedented as the 500 had traditionally always put every spot up for open qualification 14 CART declared they had been locked out of the event and would no longer race at Indianapolis while George declared that CART was boycotting 15 To placate sponsors who contractually required the accommodation of large contingents to attend Indianapolis CART created a rival showcase event the U S 500 at Michigan International Speedway on the same day as the Indy 500 in 1996 15 In March Indianapolis Motor Speedway attempted to terminate CART s license to their IndyCar trademark in Federal Court 16 The lead up to Memorial Day 1996 saw a public relations war pitting the owners and drivers of CART against George and IMS which included Indianapolis legends like the Unser and Andretti families publicly criticizing the new rules and labeling the race with less experienced drivers as unsafe 17 The 1996 Indianapolis 500 did see a series of accidents with a quarter of the race run under caution before Buddy Lazier won his first race 17 The US 500 starting halfway through the Indy 500 had a disastrous start with a twelve car crash delaying the race for an hour 17 Jimmy Vasser who won by 11 seconds quipped Who needs milk while exiting his car for the podium referring to the tradition of the Indy 500 winner drinking milk Both at the time and in retrospect the weekend was seen as a fiasco that began a serious decline in open wheel racing with both the Indy 500 and other Indycar events seeing drastic decline in prominence TV viewership and attendance CART FedEx Championship Series 1997 2000 Edit nbsp Greg Moore in a 1996 Reynard Mercedes Moore s death in 1999 left the series without one of its rising stars After a number of competing lawsuits CART agreed to revert to their formal initialism following the 1996 season on the condition that the IRL would not use the name before the end of the 2002 season 18 CART began promoting its vehicles as champ cars a term that had previously been used by USAC s championship division In the early years after the launch of the IRL in 1996 CART was in a far stronger position It held most of the prestigious races sponsorship money most of the name drivers and teams and was the preferred series for manufacturers due to the IRL s ban on engine leases IRL s primary asset was Indianapolis Motor Speedway and its 500 1996 and 1997 saw generally well regarding racing with stars such as Jimmy Vasser rookie sensation Alex Zanardi and Michael Andretti leading the points standings while the IRL experienced growing pains including a rain soaked 1997 Indianapolis 500 off putting engine sounds from their new normally aspirated engines and the abandonment of USAC sanctioning due to incompetence 19 CART in further contrast to IMS s sole ownership of the IRL opted to proceed with a public stock offering selling on the NASDAQ as stock symbol MPH The offering raised US 100 million by selling 35 of the company While this allowed CART to have sufficient cash reserves to expand and purchase the Indy Lights series commentators suggested it was short sighted to subject the notoriously secretive and fluctuating finances of the auto racing industry to public trading requirements 20 Efforts led mostly by engine manufacturers to pressure CART and the IRL to at least adopt uniform engine standards were met with a cold refusal from the IRL which started to carve a niche in the motorsports landscape by leveraging close relationships with the new NASCAR spec ovals being built with the series substantial losses being underwritten by the other revenue streams of IMS 21 Despite the split CART saw its annual revenues increase from 38 000 000 in 1995 to 68 800 000 by 1999 street races remained lucrative and teams were able to make some gains on sponsorship revenues 22 The success was uneven as the series traditional oval races in Michigan and Nazareth began to see dramatic attendance declines 23 which CART blamed on substandard marketing 24 Television ratings and revenue were anemic with the series receiving 5 000 000 annually for the entirety of its television package less than the rate for some individual NASCAR races 25 While CART s stock was generally considered healthy investors noted that the company s valuation tended to fluctuate with the perceived success or failure of IRL merger talks 26 CART s championship battle in 1999 between young stars Juan Pablo Montoya and Dario Franchitti was overshadowed by the deaths of drivers Gonzalo Rodriguez and Greg Moore within two months of each other Moore s death at the 1999 Marlboro 500 especially raised serious concerns about safety in the 500 mile races conducted in Fontana and Michigan that saw Champ Cars average speeds of near 240 mph 390 km h In 2000 after years of frustration building behind the scenes CART owners forced Andrew Craig to resign as CEO and popular driver owner Bobby Rahal stepped in as his interim replacement Seeing the continued success of street racing and the decline of the series oval dates the board announced an intention of moving away from traditional venues toward overseas ovals and more street races to generate sanctioning fees to the frustration of some of the traditional owners and United States based sponsors Chip Ganassi under pressure from his main sponsors also persuaded the board to leave Memorial Day open on the schedule and returned to the Indy 500 with Vasser and Montoya Montoya put on a dominating performance at Indy leading 167 of the 200 laps to win The Ganassi team s primary advantage was the greater engineering put into their IRL spec car 2000 would see Team Penske s return to prominence as Gil de Ferran won the driver s title Decline 2001 2003 Edit nbsp Adrian Fernandez in a 2002 Lola Honda nbsp Final logo of CART before its bankruptcy used in 2003 For 2001 CART unveiled their most ambitious schedule yet with 22 races in the United States Canada Mexico Brazil Japan the United Kingdom Germany and Australia The loss of Homestead Miami and Gateway to the IRL was to be offset by the addition of Texas Motor Speedway which had seen an exciting IRL race the year prior Rahal retired to head Jaguar Racing in Formula 1 leading to marketing expert Joseph Heitzler taking the helm 27 Brazil was cancelled after track promoters defaulted The race at Texas Motor Speedway had to be cancelled on race day due to concerns of drivers blacking out at the high G forces created by Champ cars on the heavily banked course during qualifying While applauded for putting driver safety first the cancellation was a publicity disaster and CART was criticized for not testing cars on the track earlier as requested A resulting lawsuit while settled produced a quarterly loss for CART s stock and forever harmed its relationship with Speedway Motorsports 28 Despite CART teams sweeping the top 6 positions in the 2001 Indianapolis 500 and a highly competitive four way points battle among Gil de Ferran Kenny Brack Helio Castroneves and Michael Andretti headlines centered on a technological controversy regarding a turbo pop off valve that Honda and Ford had developed prompting complaints by Toyota 29 When CART mandated changes in the valve to help equalize the competition Honda successfully obtained an injunction barring the change leading to all three manufacturers being upset Toyota would announce it would move to the IRL for 2003 at the end of the season 30 The series first foray into Europe the German 500 was overshadowed by the 9 11 attacks that occurred the Tuesday before the Saturday race With the teams unable to leave due to the worldwide shutdown of airspace CART decided to run the race as scheduled after some controversy with ESPN refusing to air the race live The race would see popular former champion Alex Zanardi lose both legs in an accident The series inaugural event in the United Kingdom would come close to being cancelled due to track concerns 31 To keep coverage of the Indianapolis 500 ABC ESPN signed an exclusive television deal for 2002 onwards with the IRL forcing CART to turn to Speed Channel for cable coverage and buy time on CBS to maintain a broadcast presence 32 Team Penske announced after the season that they would become permanent entrants in the IRL for 2002 due to pressure from sponsor Marlboro resulting from the American tobacco settlements that prevented cigarette advertising in multiple series 33 The loss of ESPN ABC s exposure and engine manufacturer sponsoring began a downward spiral for the series as race promoters began demanding reduced sanctioning fees for 2002 and sponsors began to review their agreements 34 Heitzler was fired by the CART board in the offseason being replaced by Chris Pook the well regarded CEO of the Long Beach Grand Prix 35 Making matters worse was CART s growing ownership instability due to the public offering Despite an initial agreement for the car owners to maintain 65 of the stock agreements allowed owners to divest shares in the company 34 As car owners began to sell off their shares the board s chronic issues grew more complicated with aggressive stockholders beginning to pressure the board alongside owners 36 During the 2002 season Honda announced that it would move to the IRL the following year causing a drastic decline in CART s stock and leaving Cosworth Ford as the sole engine manufacturer for 2003 37 Attempts to subsidize teams to have enough cars racing to avoid breaching sanctioning contracts led to a further decline in cash reserves and the stock price 38 Team owner Gerald Forsythe was able to purchase enough stock to control 22 5 of the voting shares in concert with the board 38 Star driver Michael Andretti purchased the prominent Team Green and moved them to the IRL with heavy direction from Honda 39 and Chip Ganassi Racing left due to pressure from its primary sponsor Target Beginning in 2003 after the withdrawal of FedEx as series sponsor CART re branded itself as Bridgestone Presents The Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford 40 The series ran a near complete schedule of road course races featuring chassis from the year before Reformation as Champ Car Edit Further information Champ Car World Series CART running out of cash reserves declared bankruptcy after the 2003 season and its assets were liquidated The IRL made a strategic bid to keep the series dormant while a trio of CART owners Forsythe Paul Gentilozzi and Kevin Kalkhoven along with Dan Pettit made a bid for CART s assets as Open Wheel Racing Series LLC The bankruptcy court ruled in favor of the OWRS bid as more beneficial to creditors than the IRL bid despite it being smaller Champ Car would continue to run until declaring bankruptcy and being reunified with the IRL in February 2008 IndyCar recognizes the records and champions of both series in its historical records Television EditIn its early years television coverage of CART races were shared by NBC ABC and ESPN NBC left after the 1990 season and returned for 1994 s race in Toronto only CBS also aired races from 1989 to 1991 and also aired the 1995 race at Nazareth ABC ESPN and ESPN2 continued as broadcasters until 2001 In the 2002 and 2003 Champ Car seasons coverage was split between CBS and Speed Channel Fox aired the 2002 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach Also from 2002 to 2004 select races aired on high definition channel HDNet such as Road America race in 2003 Outside the United States Screensport showed CART in the UK Ireland Scandinavia France Germany and the Benelux countries including the Indy 500 from 1984 1992 Eurosport aired CART and Champ Car in Europe from 1993 until its demise In the UK Sky Sports showed the races in 1992 on a tape delay and the Indy 500 live ITV showed races on World of Sport and later on as a bought in programme as part of the Night Time service in 1988 and later highlights between 1993 and 1994 From 1997 to 2001 Channel 5 showed races on early Wednesday mornings though in 1998 showed them as live on the Sunday night In Brazil Rede Record aired the Indy 500 in 1984 From 1985 until 1992 Rede Bandeirantes aired the race and from 1989 onwards they aired the whole season on TV Between 1993 and 1994 the CART season was broadcast by Rede Manchete citation needed Following economical difficulties by the former broadcaster and to battle Rede Globo for the lead of audience SBT took the rights to transmission from Manchete including its trio of narrators Teo Jose Luiz Carlos Azenha and Dede Gomes and even sending one of their helicopters to get exclusive images from the races They broadcast the entire season live between 1995 and 2000 although from 1999 onwards following complaints by Gugu Liberato because of audience size the races were delayed and transmitted at 11 00PM after the Programa Silvio Santos although a few races remained live such as Surfers Paradise because of the time which was in the middle of the night and the Rio 200 From 1997 onwards the series was referred to as Formula Mundial Worldwide Formula following the split between CART and the Indy Racing League In the first years the category was able to challenge Globo and its F1 transmission but after most of the races were reallocated to VT in the night the audience stagnated After the contract expired in 2000 SBT opted to not renew it citation needed Record once again broadcast the series between 2001 and 2002 again mostly in VTs with commentary provided by Oscar Ulisses but the transmissions were delayed to around 7PM rather than skipping to the end of the night After an declining audience in 2002 the broadcaster didn t renovated the contract citation needed In 2003 RedeTV broadcast the Champ Car series bringing back commentator Teo Jose However although the races were back on being live the audience was still rather low and following the decline of the category they chose to not renew the contact after the end of the 2004 season The Globo owned SporTV channel broadcast the 2004 season to replace the IRL but following the contract expiring at the end of the season they didn t renovated marking the end of the CART Champ Car broadcasting in Brazil citation needed Champions EditSeason Driver Team Chassis Engine Jim TruemanRookie of the YearSCCA CART Citicorp Cup1979 nbsp Rick Mears Penske Racing Penske Cosworth nbsp Bill AlsupCART PPG Indy Car World Series1980 nbsp Johnny Rutherford Chaparral Racing Chaparral Cosworth nbsp Dennis Firestone1981 nbsp Rick Mears Penske Racing Penske Cosworth nbsp Bob Lazier1982 nbsp Rick Mears Penske Racing Penske Cosworth nbsp Bobby Rahal1983 nbsp Al Unser Penske Racing Penske Cosworth nbsp Teo Fabi1984 nbsp Mario Andretti Newman Haas Racing Lola Cosworth nbsp Roberto Guerrero1985 nbsp Al Unser Penske Racing March Cosworth nbsp Arie Luyendyk1986 nbsp Bobby Rahal Truesports March Cosworth nbsp Dominic Dobson1987 nbsp Bobby Rahal Truesports Lola Cosworth nbsp Fabrizio Barbazza1988 nbsp Danny Sullivan Penske Racing Penske Ilmor Chevrolet nbsp John Jones1989 nbsp Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing Penske Ilmor Chevrolet nbsp Bernard Jourdain1990 nbsp Al Unser Jr Galles Kraco Racing Lola Ilmor Chevrolet nbsp Eddie Cheever1991 nbsp Michael Andretti Newman Haas Racing Lola Ilmor Chevrolet nbsp Jeff Andretti1992 nbsp Bobby Rahal Rahal Hogan Racing Lola Ilmor Chevrolet nbsp Stefan Johansson1993 nbsp Nigel Mansell Newman Haas Racing Lola Cosworth Ford nbsp Nigel Mansell1994 nbsp Al Unser Jr Penske Racing Penske Ilmor nbsp Jacques Villeneuve1995 nbsp Jacques Villeneuve Team Green Racing Reynard Cosworth Ford nbsp Gil de Ferran1996 nbsp Jimmy Vasser Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard Honda nbsp Alex ZanardiPPG CART World Series1997 nbsp Alex Zanardi Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard Honda nbsp Patrick CarpentierCART FedEx Championship Series1998 nbsp Alex Zanardi Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard Honda nbsp Tony Kanaan1999 nbsp Juan Pablo Montoya Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard Honda nbsp Juan Pablo Montoya2000 nbsp Gil de Ferran Penske Racing Reynard Honda nbsp Kenny Brack2001 nbsp Gil de Ferran Penske Racing Reynard Honda nbsp Scott Dixon2002 nbsp Cristiano da Matta Newman Haas Racing Lola Toyota nbsp Mario DominguezBridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford2003 nbsp Paul Tracy Player s Forsythe Racing Lola Cosworth Ford nbsp Sebastien BourdaisBy team Edit Team Championships Last nbsp Penske Racing 9 2001 nbsp Newman Haas Racing 4 2002 nbsp Chip Ganassi Racing 4 1999 nbsp Truesports 2 1987 nbsp Chaparral Racing 1 1980 nbsp Galles Kraco Racing 1 1990 nbsp Team Green Racing 1 1995 nbsp Rahal Hogan 1 1992 nbsp Patrick Racing 1 1989 nbsp Player s Forsythe Racing 1 2003Fatalities EditFour drivers died in CART sanctioned events Jim Hickman August 1 1982 Tony Bettenhausen 200 Milwaukee Mile practice Jeff Krosnoff July 14 1996 Molson Indy Toronto Exhibition Place 3 laps from finish Gonzalo Rodriguez September 11 1999 Honda Grand Prix of Monterey Laguna Seca Raceway qualifying Greg Moore October 31 1999 Marlboro 500 California Speedway lap 10 References EditWhitaker Sigur E 2015 The Indy Car Wars The 30 Year FIght for Control of American Open Wheel Racing North Carolina McFarland and Company ISBN 978 1 4766 1980 4 CART Headquarters Move to Indianapolis Set for May 20 The Auto Channel 2002 05 17 Retrieved 2021 12 19 CART now IndyCar The Indianapolis News February 19 1992 Retrieved 18 February 2019 How Champ Cars Work 2 June 2000 Retrieved 1 June 2022 Eagle eye Feature CART White Paper 8 race officials among 9 dead in plane crash Arizona Republic 25 April 1978 Retrieved 14 August 2020 via Newspapers com Indy champion makes SCCA pit stop Fort Worth Star Telegram 26 February 1979 Retrieved 14 August 2020 via Newspapers com Hinton Ed 17 May 2010 Honor blood and a brewing battle ESPN com Retrieved 8 September 2018 Whitaker p 51 Robert Markus 18 September 1988 Vince Granatelli has threatened to withdraw from Chicago Tribune Hinton Ed 17 May 2010 Honor blood and a brewing battle ESPN com Retrieved 8 September 2018 Weber Jack 7 Aug 1993 IndyCar Racing is at Important Crossroads The Courier News Retrieved 4 May 2019 Mercedosaurus Rex at Indianapolic Park Part 23 The loose ends that didn t fit in anywhere else and the epilogue forix autosport com Whitaker p 68 a b Whitaker p 70 a b Whitaker p 73 Whitaker p 76 a b c Whitaker p 78 Whitaker p 81 Whitaker p 84 86 Whitaker p 80 Hinton Ed 17 May 2010 May 96 memorable for wrong reasons ESPN com Retrieved 23 September 2018 Middlemiss Jim 8 Jul 2000 Off the track CART is casting its net in other markets National Post Retrieved 4 May 2019 Miller Robin 22 Jul 1999 Where the crowds are The Indianapolis Star Retrieved 4 May 2019 Koenig Bill October 1 1999 CART Aims to Rev Up Series Falling Shares The Indianapolis Star Retrieved 1 June 2019 Koenig Bill October 1 1999 CART Aims to Rev Up Series Falling Shares The Indianapolis Star Retrieved 1 June 2019 Koenig Bill October 1 1999 CART Aims to Rev Up Series Falling Shares The Indianapolis Star Retrieved 1 June 2019 Whitaker p 94 The writing was on the wall long ago ESPN com 2001 04 29 Retrieved 2009 03 14 Whitaker p 94 5 Whitaker p 97 Whitaker p 96 Whitaker p 96 7 Reinhard Paul December 11 2001 For Penske switch to IRL was quite easy The Morning Call Archived from the original on December 22 2018 Retrieved December 22 2018 a b Whitaker p 98 Whitaker p 100 Whitaker p 98 99 Whitaker p 102 a b Whitaker p 101 104 Glick Shav 18 September 2019 Andretti to Put IRL Before CART Los Angeles Times Retrieved 30 June 2019 Whitaker p 107 See also EditIndyCar Series List of Champ Car circuits List of Champ Car drivers List of Champ Car fatal accidents List of Champ Car pole positions List of Champ Car teams List of Champ Car winners List of Champ Car drivers who never qualified for a race List of American Championship Car Rookie of the Year Winners List of American Championship car racing point scoring systems Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Championship Auto Racing Teams amp oldid 1174583956, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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