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Detroit Grand Prix (IndyCar)

The Detroit Grand Prix (currently branded as the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear Corporation for sponsorship reasons) is an IndyCar Series race weekend held on a temporary circuit in Detroit, Michigan. The race has been held from 1989 to 2001, 2007 to 2008, and since 2012. Since 2012, the event has been scheduled for the weekend immediately following the Indianapolis 500.

Detroit Grand Prix
LocationDetroit Street Circuit
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
42°19′47.1″N 83°2′24.4″W / 42.329750°N 83.040111°W / 42.329750; -83.040111
Corporate sponsorLear Corporation
Chevrolet
First race1982
Distance164.5 miles (264.737 km)
Laps100
Most wins (driver)Hélio Castroneves, Will Power, & Scott Dixon (3)
Most wins (team)Penske Racing (7)
Most wins (manufacturer)Chassis: Dallara (20)
Engine: Honda (16)
Circuit information
SurfaceAsphalt/Concrete
Length1.645 mi (2.647 km)
Turns9

The origins of the event date back to the Formula One Detroit Grand Prix on the Detroit street circuit. The CART series began headlining the event in 1989, and in 1992, the race moved from downtown Detroit to Belle Isle, a park situated on an island in the Detroit River, which is the longest serving venue of the race. The IndyCar Series took over the race beginning in 2007. The race has been supported by Indy Lights and Formula Atlantic and top-level sports car series such as the Trans-Am Series and the ALMS. From 2023 the race returned to the downtown streets around the Renaissance Center using a circuit partially based on the original Detroit street circuit used by Formula One and CART.

Open wheel racing in Detroit dates back to the 1920s–1950s, when AAA held the Detroit 100 at the Michigan State Fairgrounds Speedway. AAA also held one five-mile (8 km), non-championship race at Grosse Pointe in 1905.

The Raceway on Belle Isle is classified as an FIA Grade Two circuit.[1] The original Detroit Street Circuit was considered at the time an FIA Grade One circuit, while the downtown circuit is also an FIA Grade Two Circuit.

Formula One edit

The race dates back to 1982 when it was a Formula One World Championship event held on the Detroit street circuit encompassing the Renaissance Center. The original circuit was 2.493 miles (4.012 km) with seventeen corners and proved to be even slower than Monaco. The rough, demanding course included a railroad track crossing and mimicked Monaco, with a tunnel on the main straight. While officially the Detroit Grand Prix, it was also referred to as the United States Grand Prix East because there were multiple Grand Prix races in the U.S. at the time. By the time of the 1988 race, the FIA, the governing body of Formula One, had declared the street circuit's temporary pits and garages were not up to the required standard. The race was already the least popular Grand Prix on the calendar and after a very difficult 1988 Grand Prix the drivers became outspoken with their dislike of the event.

For 1989, race organizers planned to move the race to a new temporary circuit on Belle Isle, a city park in the Detroit River.[2][3] Along with the criticism of the downtown circuit, local developers were also planning to begin construction along portions of that course, making it difficult to set up in the coming years.[4] The relocation plan to Belle Isle was immediately met with stiff local opposition, both public and political. Even though the circuit would be temporary, permanent garages and pit facilities would have needed to be constructed, at significant expense, and at the odds of conservation groups. Also against their favor was a budding interest to relocate the United States Grand Prix to Laguna Seca. That track was courting Formula One, having recently completed capital improvements, and having just hosted a highly successful United States motorcycle Grand Prix.[5] Furthermore, an upstart group in Phoenix was also aggressively vying for the race.[6]

In October 1988, the plan to move to Belle Isle was scrapped.[7][8] Formula One left Detroit permanently, and a short time later, it was officially announced that the U.S. Grand Prix was moving to Phoenix.

It was in Detroit in 1983 that Italian driver Michele Alboreto drove his Tyrrell 011 to victory in the US Grand Prix East in what would prove to be the 155th and last ever F1 win by the Cosworth DFV V8 engine.

CART edit

Renaissance Center: 1989 to 1991 edit

 
The Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit.

For 1989, the race in Detroit was replaced by a CART series event.[9] Instead of moving to Belle Isle, CART utilized a slightly modified version of the existing downtown Renaissance Center street circuit. The chicane on the main straight was eliminated – something the F1 drivers had been calling for since the first race in 1982. The CART race was held on this 2.52-mile (4.06 km) layout for three years. As had been the case in the event's Formula One days, competitors and fans continued to pan the course, criticizing it for its bumpiness, poor visibility and overall poor layout.

The 1991 event was perhaps the last straw in what was an embarrassment for the organizers. In addition to a disintegrating track made worse by suffocating heat and humidity, it saw Mario Andretti crash his Lola head-on into a tow truck. The safety crew was attempting to remove Dennis Vitolo's stalled car from a blind corner at St. Antoine and East Jefferson Streets. Seconds later Michael Andretti came onto the scene, and crashed into Vitolo's car attempting to avoid his father's wrecked car. Ultimately, promoters considered the downtown circuit a money-loser, and claimed it was suffering from poor television ratings with its Father's Day date (up against the U.S. Open).[10][11]

Belle Isle: 1992 to 1997 edit

Beginning in 1992, the race was moved to a new temporary course set up on Belle Isle. The move revived a conceptual plan for the Formula One event from four years earlier. One major difference that made Belle Isle viable for CART - and acceptable to locals - was that permanent Formula One style garages and pits were not required by the sanctioning body. The race was also moved up a week, and for 1992, was the first race after the Indianapolis 500 (displacing the traditional Milwaukee). The first layout measured 2.1 miles (3.4 km). Almost immediately, the new course was criticized by drivers for being narrow, slow, and lacking passing zones. It was complemented, however, for its smoothness - a sharp contrast to the rough, manhole-dotted downtown circuit.[12][13] Fans' opinions were mixed, as sightlines were improved over the downtown circuit, but access to the island was difficult, and the racing was not much better.

Course modification: 1998 to 2000 edit

In 1998, the course layout was modified to eliminate the slow "Picnic Way" segment and series of corners. Instead, the course continued straight along Central Avenue to create a long, fairly-wide straightaway leading into a competitive passing zone. The track then measured 2.346 miles (3.776 km). The revised layout was praised by competitors as being an improvement over the original (1992–1997) course. However, pavement transitions from asphalt to concrete were being blamed for an increase in incidents due to slickness.[14]

The 2000 event saw young Brazilian Hélio Castroneves score his first Champ Car victory for Marlboro Team Penske. After his victory lap, he stopped on the front stretch and climbed the catch fencing in an apparent effort to share his joy with the spectators. Helio became known as "Spider-Man" because of this celebration, which has been repeated in his later victories.

Support races for the Detroit Grand Prix included the Motor City 100 for the SCCA Trans-Am Series, and the Neon Challenge celebrity race. Scenes from the film Driven were filmed during the race weekend in 2000.[15]

The event, along with the Michigan 500, provided two CART races in southern Michigan annually.

Demise: 2001 edit

Even though the track was a temporary street course, it became known as The Raceway on Belle Isle. As the years went by, the track was increasingly criticized for its narrowness, poor access, and its overall uncompetitive nature. The once smooth surface was aging in the harsh Detroit winters, and along with it came bumps, cracks and potholes. The circuit gained a reputation of being the "worst" and "least popular" venue on the entire schedule.[16] In 1997, it was noted that race winner Greg Moore started seventh and did not pass a single car competitively out on the track for position all day.[17][18] Participants also disliked the facility because of its lack of paved areas for support activities. Paddock areas were often muddy and unable to accommodate the teams.

After the 2001 race, CART's contract with Belle Isle expired. Attendance had been noticeably slipping.[19] Negotiations to continue the event went over the summer,[20] but eventually stalled. Organizers briefly entertained an idea to return to the old downtown circuit,[21] but those plans were quickly scuttled.[22] The series chose to drop the race from the schedule and the event went on hiatus.

IndyCar Series edit

2007 to 2008 edit

In 2006, Roger Penske spearheaded talks to revive the race for 2007 as part of the ALMS and IndyCar Series schedules. Penske had recently experienced tremendous success as head of the Super Bowl XL Detroit Metro Host Committee. On September 29, 2006, it was announced that the Detroit Indy Grand Prix would return as the tenth race of the ALMS's 12-race season and penultimate race of the IndyCar Series' seventeen-race schedule.

To improve access to the track, a park-and-ride system, similar to what was used at Super Bowl XL, was implemented. Further paddock and track work was completed before the race. The 2007 event attracted a strong crowd, and was considered a success. It was held again in 2008. During this period, the event utilized the original (1992–1997) course layout, with some minor improvements. Some of the barriers were moved back, particularly inside the apexes of some of the turns, to effectively widen some curves and improve sight lines. Some barriers, including the metal guardrail on the pit straight, had been entirely removed.

On December 18, 2008, the scheduled race for 2009 was canceled. The ongoing automotive economic crisis, and its impact on the Detroit-area was the primary reason. Roger Penske did not rule out a return in the future.[23][24]

Doubleheader era edit

For the 2012 season, the race on Belle Isle was revived for second time.[25][26] The event was situated on the weekend immediately after the Indianapolis 500. Starting in 2013, the race was hosted as a unique "doubleheader" weekend. The race weekend would consist of two separate, points-paying races, one each on Saturday and Sunday. The races were treated as separate events, with separate qualifying, full championship points, and the results of the first had no bearing on the lineup for the second (as had been the case with some previous "twin" race formats). Beginning in 2013, the race also returned to the more popular and more competitive "long" course (1998–2001 layout).[27]

On April 6, 2020, IndyCar announced the cancellation of the 2020 edition due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Organizers stated that Michigan's stay-at-home order (which was extended through April 30)[28] would hinder the necessary preparations to hold the race, and that the race could not be reasonably rescheduled due to other events having been booked on Belle Isle already. The race returned in its traditional double header format for 2021.[29] On September 19, 2021, IndyCar announced that the Detroit Grand Prix would be altered from a two race weekend to a single race weekend as part of their 2022 schedule.[30]

Downtown revival: 2023 edit

Mere weeks after the 2022 IndyCar schedule was announced Penske Entertainment Group revealed that moving the Detroit Grand Prix to a single race weekend was done as part of a proposal discussed with the city of Detroit to return the race back to the Renaissance Center utilizing a new downtown circuit beginning in 2023. In November 2021, the City Council of Detroit unanimously approved Penske Entertainment's plan and announced an initial three-year contract to return the Detroit Grand Prix back to the downtown streets for a single race weekend beginning in 2023.[31]

The new downtown circuit is based on lessons learned from the Nashville Street Circuit. It is designed to be less disruptive to city traffic while also being more accessible to spectators and having more points of visibility to the racing than the old Detroit Street Circuit. The new circuit will feature ten corners and is 1.7 miles in length compared to the 2.5 mile circuit used by Formula One and CART and the 2.35 mile Raceway On Belle Isle.[32] It will travel from the start/finish line on Atwater Street and head onto Schwarzer Street, Franklin Street, and Rivard Street in the first series of corners. From Rivard Street drivers will make a sharp left turn onto the circuit's most prominent feature, a 0.7 mile straightaway down East Jefferson Avenue. This straightaway will be the longest straightaway on an IndyCar street circuit, eclipsing the dual straights on the Korean War Veterans Memorial Bridge in Nashville. The circuit will then turn onto Bates Street before heading back onto Atwater Street. The only part of the old Detroit Street Circuit used on the new circuit will be the old circuit's sixteenth and seventeenth corners that were then known as The Ford Corner. On the new circuit this section will be the eighth and ninth corners. Neither of the tunnels or the side streets used on the old Detroit Street Circuit will be used on the new circuit to minimize impact on local businesses and city traffic around downtown Detroit.[33] To increase spectator viewership IndyCar and Penske Entertainment will offer free viewership at multiple points along the circuit.[34] The Detroit City Council stated the entire circuit will be fully resurfaced before the race. Construction and tear down of the circuit will take place 8:00PM and 5:00AM over the course of twenty days respectively, minimizing disruptions to city traffic around the Renaissance Center.[31]

Past winners edit

Grosse Pointe (dirt oval) edit

Season Date Driver Chassis Engine Sanctioning
1905 August 8   Webb Jay White White steam engine AAA

Michigan State Fairgrounds (dirt oval) edit

Season Date Driver Chassis Engine Sanctioning
1928 June 10   Ray Keech Miller (1) Miller (1) AAA
1929 June 9   Cliff Woodbury Miller (2) Miller (2) AAA
1930 June 9   Wilbur Shaw Smith (1) Miller (3) AAA
1931 June 14   Louis Meyer Stevens (1) Miller (4) AAA
1932 June 9   Bob Carey Stevens (2) Miller (5) AAA
September 10   Mauri Rose Stevens (3) Miller (6) AAA
June 11   Bill Cummings Miller (3) Miller (6) AAA
1949 September 11   Tony Bettenhausen Kurtis Kraft (1) Offenhauser (1) AAA
1950 September 10   Henry Banks Moore (1) Offenhauser (2) AAA
1951 September 9   Paul Russo Russo/Nichels (1) Offenhauser (3) AAA
1952 August 30   Bill Vukovich Kuzma (1) Offenhauser (4) AAA
1953 July 4   Rodger Ward Kurtis Kraft (2) Offenhauser (5) AAA
1957 June 23   Jimmy Bryan Kuzma (1) Offenhauser (6) USAC

Renaissance Center edit

CART/Champ Car history
Season Date Driver Team Chassis Engine Race Distance Race Time Average Speed Report
Laps Miles (km)
1989 June 18   Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing Penske PC-18 (1) Chevrolet (1) 62 155 (249.448) 2:02:11 76.112 mph (122.490 km/h) Report
1990 June 17   Michael Andretti Newman/Haas Racing Lola T9000 (1) Chevrolet (2) 62 155 (249.448) 1:49:32 84.902 mph (136.637 km/h) Report
1991 June 16   Emerson Fittipaldi Penske Racing Penske PC-20 (2) Chevrolet (3) 62 156.24 (251.443) 1:57:19 79.455 mph (127.870 km/h) Report

Belle Isle edit

Season Date Driver Team Chassis Engine Race Distance Race Time Average Speed Report
Laps Miles (km)
CART / Champ Car Series history
1992 June 7   Bobby Rahal Rahal/Hogan Racing Lola T9200 (2) Chevrolet (4) 77 161.7 (260.23) 1:58:20 81.989 mph (131.949 km/h) Report
1993 June 13   Danny Sullivan Galles Racing Lola T9300 (3) Chevrolet (5) 77 161.7 (260.23) 1:56:43 83.116 mph (133.762 km/h) Report
1994 June 12   Paul Tracy Penske Racing Penske PC-23 (3) Ilmor (1) 77 161.7 (260.23) 1:52:29 86.245 mph (138.798 km/h) Report
1995 June 11   Robby Gordon Walker Racing Reynard 95I (1) Ford (1) 77 161.7 (260.23) 1:56:11 83.499 mph (134.379 km/h) Report
1996 June 9   Michael Andretti Newman/Haas Racing Lola T9600 (4) Ford (2) 72* 151.2 (243.332) 2:00:44 75.136 mph (120.920 km/h) Report
1997 June 8   Greg Moore Forsythe Racing Reynard 97I (2) Mercedes (1) 77 161.7 (260.23) 1:52:45 86.047 mph (138.479 km/h) Report
1998 June 7   Alex Zanardi Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard 98I (3) Honda (1) 72 168.912 (271.837) 1:41:17 100.052 mph (161.018 km/h) Report
1999 August 8   Dario Franchitti Team Green Reynard 99I (4) Honda (2) 71 166.566 (268.061) 2:02:24 81.643 mph (131.392 km/h) Report
2000 June 18   Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing Reynard (5) Honda (3) 84 197.064 (317.143) 2:01:23 97.401 mph (156.752 km/h) Report
2001 June 17   Hélio Castroneves Penske Racing Reynard (6) Honda (4) 72 168.912 (271.837) 1:53:51 89.008 mph (143.244 km/h) Report
2002

2006
Not held
Indy Racing League / IndyCar Series history
2007 September 2   Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing Dallara (1) Honda (5) 89* 186.544 (300.213) 2:11:51 83.841 mph (134.929 km/h) Report
2008 August 31   Justin Wilson Newman/Haas/Lanigan Racing Dallara (2) Honda (6) 87* 182.352 (293.467) 2:00:11 89.911 mph (144.698 km/h) Report
2009

2011
Not held
2012 June 3   Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara (3) Honda (7) 60* 124.2 (199.88) 1:27:40 85.012 mph (136.814 km/h) Report
2013 June 1   Mike Conway Dale Coyne Racing Dallara (4) Honda (8) 70 164.22 (264.286) 1:48:45 90.753 mph (146.053 km/h) Report
June 2   Simon Pagenaud Schmidt Peterson Hamilton HP Motorsports Dallara (5) Honda (9) 70 164.22 (264.286) 1:56:15 84.906 mph (136.643 km/h)
2014 May 31   Will Power Team Penske Dallara (6) Chevrolet (6) 70 164.22 (264.286) 1:49:30 90.138 mph (145.063 km/h) Report
June 1   Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Dallara (7) Chevrolet (7) 70 164.22 (264.286) 1:45:53 93.211 mph (150.009 km/h)
2015 May 30   Carlos Muñoz Andretti Autosport Dallara (8) Honda (10) 47* 110.45 (177.752) 1:27:46 75.51 mph (121.52 km/h) Report
May 31   Sébastien Bourdais KV Racing Technology Dallara (9) Chevrolet (8) 68* 159.8 (257.173) 2:00:38 79.476 mph (127.904 km/h)
2016 June 4   Sébastien Bourdais KVSH Racing Dallara (10) Chevrolet (9) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:40:52 97.857 mph (157.486 km/h) Report
June 5   Will Power Team Penske Dallara (11) Chevrolet (10) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:42:22 96.414 mph (155.163 km/h)
2017 June 3   Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara (12) Honda (11) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:35:49 103.015 mph (165.787 km/h) Report
June 4   Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara (13) Honda (12) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:33:36 105.442 mph (169.692 km/h)
2018 June 2   Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara (14) Honda (13) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:39:24 99.285 mph (159.784 km/h) Report
June 3   Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Dallara (15) Honda (14) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:33:51 105.176 mph (169.264 km/h)
2019 June 1   Josef Newgarden Team Penske Dallara (16) Chevrolet (11) 43 101.05 (162.624) 1:15:30.59 80.294 mph (129.221 km/h) Report
June 2   Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara (17) Honda (15) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:52:18.9365 87.877 mph (141.424 km/h)
2020 Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic[29]
2021 June 12   Marcus Ericsson Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara (18) Honda (16) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:45:33.1123 93.509 mph (150.488 km/h) Report
June 13   Patricio O'Ward Arrow McLaren SP Dallara (19) Chevrolet (12) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:41:30.8814 97.227 mph (156.472 km/h)
2022 June 5   Will Power Team Penske Dallara (20) Chevrolet (13) 70 164.5 (264.737) 1:32:08.8183 107.111 mph (172.378 km/h) Report
  • 1996, 2007, 2008, & 2015 II: Races shortened due to 2 hour time limit.
  • 2012: Race shortened due to darkness after 2 hour suspension for track repairs.
  • 2015 I: Race shortened due to lightning policy.
  • 2019 I: Race shortened to 75 minute time limit due to lightning policy delaying the start.

Renaissance Center (2023–present) edit

Season Date Driver Team Chassis Engine Race Distance Race Time Average Speed Report
Laps Miles (km)
IndyCar Series history
2023 June 4   Álex Palou Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara (21) Honda (17) 100 164.5 (264.737) 2:01:58.1171 80.922 mph (130.231 km/h) Report

Detroit Sports Car Classic edit

American Le Mans Series edit

Year LMP1 Winning Team LMP2 Winning Team GT1 Winning Team GT2 Winning Team Results
LMP1 Winning Drivers LMP2 Winning Drivers GT1 Winning Drivers GT2 Winning Drivers
2007   #2 Audi Sport North America   #7 Penske Racing   #3 Corvette Racing   #62 Risi Competizione Results
  Emanuele Pirro
  Marco Werner
  Timo Bernhard
  Romain Dumas
  Johnny O'Connell
  Jan Magnussen
  Mika Salo
  Jaime Melo
2008   #37 Intersport Racing   #26 Andretti Green Racing   #4 Corvette Racing   #45 Flying Lizard Motorsports Results
  John Field
  Clint Field
  Richard Berry
  Franck Montagny
  James Rossiter
  Olivier Beretta
  Oliver Gavin
  Jörg Bergmeister
  Wolf Henzler

Rolex Sports Car Series edit

Year DP Winning Team GT Winning Team Results
DP Winning Drivers GT Winning Drivers
2012   #9 Action Express Racing   #88 Autohaus Motorsports Results
  João Barbosa
  J. C. France
  Darren Law
  Paul Edwards
  Jordan Taylor
Year DP Winning Team GT Winning Team GX Winning Team Results
DP Winning Drivers GT Winning Drivers GX Winning Drivers
2013   #10 Wayne Taylor Racing   #57 Stevenson Motorsports   #00 Speedsource Results
  Max Angelelli
  Jordan Taylor
  John Edwards
  Robin Liddell
  Joel Miller
  Tristan Nunez

IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship edit

Year Prototype Prototype Challenge GT Le Mans GT Daytona Report
2014   #10 Wayne Taylor Racing did not participate did not participate   #63 Scuderia Corsa Results
  Jordan Taylor
  Ricky Taylor
  Alessandro Balzan
  Jeff Westphal
2015   #31 Action Express Racing   #8 Starworks Motorsport did not participate   #23 Team Seattle / Alex Job Racing Results
  Dane Cameron
  Eric Curran
  Renger van der Zande
  Mirco Schultis
  Ian James
  Mario Farnbacher
2016   #10 Wayne Taylor Racing   #8 Starworks Motorsport did not participate   #33 Riley Motorsports Results
  Jordan Taylor
  Ricky Taylor
  Renger van der Zande
  Alex Popow
  Jeroen Bleekemolen
  Ben Keating
2017   #10 Wayne Taylor Racing   #38 Performance Tech Motorsports did not participate   #93 Michael Shank Racing Results
  Jordan Taylor
  Ricky Taylor
  James French
  Patricio O'Ward
  Andy Lally
  Katherine Legge
Year Prototype GT Le Mans GT Daytona Report
2018   #31 Whelen Engineering Racing did not participate   #86 Meyer Shank Racing with Curb-Agajanian Results
  Eric Curran
  Felipe Nasr
  Mario Farnbacher
  Katherine Legge
Year Daytona Prototype international GT Le Mans GT Daytona Report
2019   #6 Acura Team Penske did not participate   #14 AIM Vasser Sullivan Results
  Dane Cameron
  Juan Pablo Montoya
  Jack Hawksworth
  Richard Heistand
2020 Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021   #01 Cadillac Chip Ganassi Racing   #4 Corvette Racing   #23 Heart of Racing Team Results
  Kevin Magnussen
  Renger van der Zande
  Tommy Milner
  Nick Tandy
  Roman De Angelis
  Ross Gunn
Year Daytona Prototype international GT Daytona Report
2022   #01 Cadillac Racing   #17 Vasser Sullivan Racing Results
  Sébastien Bourdais
  Renger van der Zande
  Ben Barnicoat
  Kyle Kirkwood

Support race winners edit

Atlantics / Indy Lights edit

Atlantic Championship
Season Date Winning Driver
1983 June 5   Josele Garza
Indy Lights
1989 June 18   Ted Prappas
1990 June 17   Tommy Byrne
1991 June 16   Éric Bachelart
1992 June 7   Adrián Fernández
1993 June 13   Steve Robertson
1994 June 12   Steve Robertson
1995 June 11   Robbie Buhl
1996 June 9   Tony Kanaan
1997 June 8   Tony Kanaan
1998 June 7   Airton Daré
1999 August 8   Derek Higgins
2000 June 18   Jonny Kane
2001

2011
Not held
2012 June 2   Gustavo Yacamán
2013

2020
Not held
2021 June 12   Kyle Kirkwood
June 13   Kyle Kirkwood
2022 June 4   Linus Lundqvist
June 5   Linus Lundqvist

Trans-Am Motor City 100 edit

Year Driver Car
1984 Tom Gloy Mercury Capri
1985 Elliott Forbes-RobinsonA Buick Regal
1986 Wally Dallenbach Jr. Chevrolet Camaro
1987 Scott Pruett Merkur XR4Ti
1988 Hurley Haywood Audi Quattro
1989 Greg Pickett Chevrolet Camaro
1990 Scott Sharp Chevrolet Camaro
1991 Scott Sharp Chevrolet Camaro
1992 Tommy Archer Dodge Daytona
1993 Dorsey Schroeder Ford Mustang
1994 Bill Saunders Ford Mustang
1995 Ron Fellows Chevrolet Camaro
1996 Dorsey Schroeder Ford Mustang
1997 Tommy Kendall Ford Mustang
1998 Paul Gentilozzi Chevrolet Camaro
1999 Brian Simo Ford Mustang
2000 Paul Gentilozzi Jaguar XKR
2001 Paul Gentilozzi Jaguar XKR
2002–
2015
Not held
2016
Race 1
RJ Lopez (TA1)
Kyle Marcelli (TA2)
Dean Martin (TA4)
Chevrolet Corvette
Chevrolet Camaro
Ford Mustang
2016
Race 2
John Baucom (TA1)
Adam Andretti (TA2)
Ernie Francis Jr. (TA4)
Ford Mustang
Dodge Challenger
Ford Mustang
2017 Ernie Francis Jr. (TA1)
Gar Robinson (TA2)
Ford Mustang
Chevrolet Camaro
2018[35]
Race 1
Tony Buffomante (TA2) Ford Mustang
2018[35]
Race 2
Rafa Matos (TA2) Chevrolet Camaro
2019[35]
Race 1
Misha Goikhberg (TA2) Chevrolet Camaro
2019[35]
Race 2
Tony Ave (TA2) Chevrolet Camaro
2020 Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic

^A Winner Wally Dallenbach Jr. was disqualified due to car being underweight.

Stadium Super Trucks edit

Year Date Driver Ref
2014 May 30 E. J. Viso [36]
May 31
June 1
2015 May 29 Robby Gordon [37]
May 30 E. J. Viso [38]
May 31 Burt Jenner [39]
2016 June 3 Matthew Brabham [40]
June 4 Abandoned B [41]
June 5 Matthew Brabham [42]
2017 June 3 Sheldon Creed [43]
June 4
2018 June 3 Gavin Harlien [44]
June 4 Arie Luyendyk Jr. [45]

^B Race suspended after three laps following Matt Mingay's wreck on lap three that resulted in injury.[41]

Lap records edit

The unofficial track record is 1:13.056, set by Juan Pablo Montoya in a Lola B2K/00, during qualifying for the 2000 Tenneco Automotive Grand Prix of Detroit.[46] The official race lap records at the Belle Isle Park Circuit are listed as:

Category Time Driver Vehicle Date
GP Circuit: 3.798 km (1998–2001, 2013–2022)
IndyCar 1:14.2062 Josef Newgarden Dallara DW12 2017 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix
CART 1:15.701[47] Juan Pablo Montoya Reynard 99I 1999 ITT Automotive Detroit Grand Prix
DPi 1:18.877[48] Pipo Derani Cadillac DPi-V.R 2022 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic
Indy Lights 1:21.4559[49] David Malukas Dallara IL-15 2021 Indy Lights Detroit Grand Prix
DP 1:23.138[50] Dane Cameron Corvette Daytona Prototype 2016 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic
LMPC 1:24.977[50] Renger van der Zande Oreca FLM09 2016 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic
LM GTE 1:27.180[51] Tommy Milner Chevrolet Corvette C8.R 2021 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic
GT3 1:28.335[48] Aaron Telitz Lexus RC F GT3 2022 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic
GP Circuit: 3.379 km (1992–1997, 2007–2012)
CART 1:11.461[52] Dario Franchitti Reynard 97I 1997 ITT Automotive Detroit Grand Prix
IndyCar 1:12.0651 Justin Wilson Dallara DW12 2012 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix
LMP2 1:14.993[53] Ryan Briscoe Porsche RS Spyder Evo 2007 Detroit Sports Car Challenge
LMP1 1:17.091[53] Marco Werner Audi R10 TDI 2007 Detroit Sports Car Challenge
Indy Lights 1:17.639[54] Gustavo Yacamán Dallara IPS 2012 Indy Lights Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix
DP 1:21.552[55] João Barbosa Corvette Daytona Prototype 2012 Chevrolet Grand-Am Detroit 200
GT1 (GTS) 1:21.906[53] Jan Magnussen Chevrolet Corvette C6.R 2007 Detroit Sports Car Challenge
GT2 1:25.082[56] Dirk Müller Ferrari F430 GTC 2008 Detroit Sports Car Challenge
Trans-Am 1:26.616[57] Dorsey Schroeder Ford Mustang 1994 Detroit Trans-Am round
Super Touring 1:30.380[58] Neil Crompton Honda Accord 1997 Detroit NATCC round

Race summaries edit

CART PPG Indy Car World Series (Renaissance Center) edit

 
Downtown Renaissance Center Street Circuit (1989-1991).
  • 1989: Emerson Fittipaldi touched wheels with Mario Andretti on lap 2, puncturing a tire and sending him to the back of the field. But Fittipaldi charged from 27th position to second place in the closing laps. Polesitter Michael Andretti led 52 of the first 54 laps, but a radio wire became tangled in the throttle pedal. On lap 55, the throttle pedal stuck sending Andretti into a barrier. Scott Pruett was now leading the race by 17 seconds, but was forced to back off to conserve fuel. Fittipaldi blew by Pruett with four laps to go to take the victory.[59][60]
  • 1990: Michael Andretti started from the pole position and led wire-to-wire, winning the race in dominating fashion. Danny Sullivan was running close behind in second place on lap 46 when during his final pit stop, an impact wrench failed. The wheel was not properly fastened, and on the out-lap, the drive pegs on the wheel broke, putting him out of the race. Bobby Rahal nursing brakes, finished second, over one minute and 48 seconds behind Andretti. Rahal held off Emerson Fittipaldi who finished close behind in third.[61]
  • 1991: Emerson Fittipaldi, expecting the birth of his fifth child, was leading Bobby Rahal in the closing laps when gearbox problems arose. With seven laps to go, Fittipaldi's car kept jumping out of gear. He was mostly forced to hold the gearshift with one hand, and steer with only hand, on the rough, bumpy, demanding circuit. Rahal charged hard, but Fittipaldi held him off for the victory by 0.29 seconds. The race is best-remembered for a bizarre incident involving Mario and Michael Andretti. On lap 48, Dennis Vitolo stalled in turn four with a seized transmission. Safety crew tended to Vitolo's car, hooking up a tow rope. Mario Andretti came around what was a blind corner, locked up his brakes, and rammed hard into the back of the safety truck. The nose of the car was wedged underneath the truck's bumper, and the track was nearly blocked. A couple cars (including Fittipaldi) skirted by the scene, but seconds later, Michael Andretti slid and crashed into the back of Vitolo's car. The track was now completely blocked, and the red flag was put out to clean up the scene.[62][63] This would be the final race held at the Renaissance Center circuit until 2023.

CART PPG Indy Car World Series (Belle Isle) edit

 
Belle Isle "original" course (1992-1997, 2007–2012).
  • 1992: For 1992, the race was moved to a new circuit on Belle Isle.[10][11] Michael Andretti led the early laps, with Paul Tracy (subbing for Rick Mears) and Bobby Rahal close behind. Tracy made a daring pass on lap 38 for the lead going into turn one, nearly touching wheels with Andretti. On lap 58, Tracy was leading Andretti, with Bobby Rahal in third. All three cars were nose-to-tail. Andretti attempted to pass Tracy for the lead, but this time, the two cars touched. Both Tracy and Andretti slid high and scraped the concrete wall, allowing Bobby Rahal to slip by both to take the lead. Tracy later dropped out with gearbox failure, but Andretti stayed with Rahal, despite nursing an ill-handing machine. On the second-to-last lap, Andretti spun out and dropped to fourth while Rahal cruised to victory.[64][65][66]
  • 1993: A controversial race filled with penalties from start to finish. At the green flag, Emerson Fittipaldi jumped the start from the outside of the front row, beating pole-sitter Nigel Mansell to the line by almost two car lengths. Instead of waving off the start, official assessed Fittipaldi a stop-and-go penalty. Later in the race Paul Tracy was penalized for breaking the 80 mph pit road speed limit (clocked at 93 mph), and Nigel Mansell was accused of blatant blocking.[67] Danny Sullivan took the lead on lap 48. In the closing laps, Galles Racing teammates Sullivan and Al Unser Jr. were running 1st-2nd. On lap 69, Unser challenged Sullivan for the lead, but was forced down to the inside, and knocked down three cones. Officials charged Unser with going off-course, and assessed him a stop-and-go penalty. On a restart with four laps to go, rookie Robby Gordon driving for Foyt, tried to pass Sullivan for the lead, but was squeezed down and had to back off.[68][69] Moments later, Gordon spun out with a cut tire. Danny Sullivan went on to win the race, his final win in Indy car competition.[70][71]
  • 1994: Penske teammates Al Unser Jr., Paul Tracy, and Emerson Fittipaldi were running 1st-2nd-3rd on a restart on lap 55. Tracy was on the back bumper of Unser, as Unser was dicing through backmarker traffic. Going into turn 8, Tracy ran into the back of Unser's car, sending him sliding head-on into a tire barrier. Tracy went on to win the race, with Fittipaldi second. Unser rejoined the field and finished 10th.[72][73]
  • 1995: Robby Gordon started from the pole position and led 43 of the 77 laps en route to victory. Gordon led the first eight laps, but slipped down in the standings after suffering tire wear. Gordon switched to the optional harder tire compound, and charged back to the front. He took the lead with 35 laps to go, and held off Jimmy Vasser for the win.[74]
  • 1996: Heavy rain fell in the morning, and continued to fall during the first 25 laps. Christian Fittipaldi led 64 of the first 65 laps, but a late caution came out when Bobby Rahal slid into a tire barrier. On a restart on lap 66, Michael Andretti battled Fittipaldi for the lead coming out of turn four. Fittipaldi locked up the brakes, and slid high in turn five, which allowed Andretti to drive by and take the lead. The race was shortened from 77 to 72 laps due to a two-hour time limit. Andretti became the first and only driver to win at both the downtown Renaissance Center circuit and the Belle Isle circuit.[75][76]
  • 1997: At the white flag, Maurício Gugelmin led Mark Blundell and Greg Moore, with all three cars running nose-to-tail. PacWest Racing teammates Gugelmin and Blundell were running very low on fuel, attempting to stretch their tanks to the finish. Gugelmin ran out of fuel on the Strand Drive backstretch, and seconds later Blundell ran out of fuel as he approached the final turn. Greg Moore slipped by to take the lead and scored the victory.[77][78]

CART FedEx Championship series (Belle Isle) edit

 
Belle Isle "long" course (1998-2001, 2013–2022)
  • 1998: A slightly reconfigured layout was introduced for 1998. Several tight and slow corners were replaced with a longer straightaway, and potentially better passing zones. Alex Zanardi battled Greg Moore during the early stages of the race. Moore pitted first on lap 24, while Zanardi stayed out two additional laps. Zanardi's light fuel load, and lightning-fast in-lap, put him back out on the track ahead of Moore. Zanardi led the final 50 laps to victory, and celebrated by performing donuts on his victory lap.[79][80]
  • 1999: The race was moved to August to avoid a conflict with the NASCAR Michigan 400.[81] In a race that was described as "ugly," several crashes were capped off by a bizarre finish under yellow. On the first lap, Max Papis touched wheels with Patrick Carpentier, and crashed into a tire barrier. On lap 25, Maurício Gugelmin tangled with Cristiano da Matta, and flip upside-down, landing on top of Carpentier's car. Twenty laps later, de Matta suffered a hard crash in turn two, collecting Al Unser Jr. Under caution late in the race, a fuel leak from the pace car caused a confusing delay, requiring officials to bring out a back-up pace car. With some drivers anticipating a restart, Hélio Castroneves ran into the back of Juan Pablo Montoya. The race hit the two-hour time limit, and finished under yellow with Team Kool Green drivers Dario Franchitti first, and Paul Tracy second.[82][83]
  • 2000: Polesitter Juan Pablo Montoya led 59 of the first 60 laps, but dropped out with a broken driveshaft. Hélio Castroneves took the lead on lap 62, and led the final 24 laps en route to his first career CART series victory. On his victory lap, Castroneves stopped his car on the frontstretch, jumped from cockpit, and climbed up the catchfence to celebrate his victory.[84]
  • 2001: Hélio Castroneves started from the pole position and led wire-to-wire to win the Detroit Grand Prix in back-to-back years. Castroneves survived a minor scare when telemetry indicated a pressure leak in his left front tire. After the victory, Castroneves once again jumped from his car and climbed the catchfence in his signature "Spiderman" celebration.[85][86] This would be the final CART series race at Detroit.

IRL / IndyCar Series (Belle Isle) edit

  • 2007: After a six-year absence, open wheel racing returned to Detroit. The Indy cars utilized the original "short" course layout, previously raced on from 1992 to 1997. After the final series of pit stops, a four-car battle at the front ensued. Tony Kanaan was leading, and second place Buddy Rice ran out of fuel. Third place Scott Dixon took evasive action to get by Rice, which crashed out both cars. The pileup collected Dario Franchitti as well. Danica Patrick slipped by the crash and took a career-best second place, while Kanaan went on to win.
  • 2008: Originally scheduled for 90 laps, the race was shortened to 87 laps due to two-hour limit. Late in the race, Justin Wilson was challenging Hélio Castroneves for the lead. Officials ruled that Castroneves intentionally blocked, resulting in a penalty which allowed Wilson to take the lead. Despite a late push by Castroneves, Wilson won the race, his first-career Indy car victory.[87][88] Wilson's win was the 107th and final Championship Car victory for Newman/Haas Racing, and occurred just weeks before the death of co-owner Paul Newman.[89][90][88]
  • 2012: After a three-year hiatus, the Detroit Grand Prix returned to the IndyCar calendar. For 2012, the race was moved to the weekend immediately following the Indianapolis 500. The race was shortened from 90 laps to 60 laps due to a disintegrating track. James Hinchcliffe's car dislodged a chunk of the pavement, and crashed into a tire barrier. Officials discovered other parts of the track that were damaged, and a red flag was put out to make repairs. Rain also began to fall. Scott Dixon won the race from the pole position.
  • 2013 (Race 1): For 2013, the "long" course layout was revived, and the race was now part of a doubleheader weekend. During the first race on Saturday, Mike Conway started second and led 47 laps en route to victory. Conway passed Ryan Hunter-Reay for the lead on lap 44. He then built a 20-second lead before the final round of pit stops. Conway's margin of victory was 12.9707 seconds over Hunter-Reay. Dario Franchitti, who won the pole position, was issued a grid penalty for an unapproved engine change, and started 11th. He improved to sixth place at the finish, while Scott Dixon who had to pit for wing damage suffered due to contact on lap 1, charged from 24th place to 4th.
  • 2013 (Race 2): On Sunday, Mike Conway started on the pole position, attempting to sweep the weekend. However, multiple cautions and different race strategies jumbled the field, and he wound up third. On lap 24, the field was coming off a restart when Tristan Vautier touched wheels with Takuma Sato, sending Sato into the tire barrier in turn 3. On lap 28, the ensuing restart saw Conway leading Scott Dixon into turn one. Seconds later, Sebastien Bourdais tagged the back of Will Power, triggering a ten-car pileup. In the second half, the race came down to Conway, Simon Pagenaud, and James Jakes. On the final sequence of pit stops, Pagenaud emerged as the leader, with Jakes second, and Conway closing in third. Pagenaud drove to victory, by 5.6274 seconds. Jakes held off Conway for second place by 0.4342 seconds.
  • 2014 (Race 1): On Saturday, Will Power held off Graham Rahal during the final ten laps and scored the first Indy car win at Detroit for Chevrolet & GM since 1993. Just across the river from GM's headquarters at the Renaissance Center, Helio Castroneves started on the pole and led 30 laps. Power took the lead from Ryan Briscoe on a restart on lap 60. Rahal ran in second, less than a second behind Power. Rahal was able to keep up with Power over the final ten laps, but was unable to muster a pass for the lead. Tony Kanaan finished third, his 66th-career podium finish.
  • 2014 (Race 2): On Sunday, Helio Castroneves drove to victory, completing a Penske and Chevrolet sweep of the weekend. Castroneves was leading Will Power by over 9 seconds with twenty laps to go, but a late-race caution bunched up the field. With six laps to go, Castroneves led, but another caution came out setting up one last restart. With three laps to go, Castroneves got the jump and won by 1.6836 seconds over Will Power. After the victory, Castroneves climbed the catchfence, repeating his signature celebration from the 2001 race.
  • 2015: (Race 1): On Saturday, heavy rain and lightning in the area caused the race to be shortened from 70 to 47 laps. Carlos Munoz won, his first IndyCar victory.
  • 2015: (Race 2): On Sunday, rain had washed out qualifying for the second race, and the field lined up by points. Several yellows slowed the race in the second half. Sébastien Bourdais was the winner.
  • 2017 (Race 1): On Saturday, Graham Rahal led 55 of 70 laps to win, nearly 25 years to the day that his father Bobby won the race. Rahal held off second place Scott Dixon, who was driving despite an injured ankle from a major crash the week earlier at the Indianapolis 500.
  • 2017 (Race 2): Graham Rahal swept the weekend, winning Sunday's second race, leading 41 of 70 laps. With five laps to go, the first caution of the day came out when James Hinchcliffe stalled on the course, and Spencer Pigot's car was smoking. Officials red flagged the race on lap 67 in order to allow for a green flag finish, and cleaned up the incidents. Rahal held off Josef Newgarden in a two-lap dash to finish.
  • 2021 (Race 1): The new Roger Penske led IndyCar returned to Detroit after the 2020 double header was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The controversial race saw Scott Dixon take a large lead by starting the race on harder primary tires as opposed to the softer alternate tires used by the rest of the field. Dixon's strategy was upended when Arrow McLaren SP driver Felix Rosenqvist crashed at near full speed into a tire barrier, throwing a red flag that halted the race for over an hour. When the race restarted many drivers, including Dixon, broke off on the formation lap to pit for fresh tires, handing Will Power the lead as Power had pitted for his own set of tires right before the red flag. Marcus Ericsson also cycled to the front with Power based on similar strategy and challenged Power for the lead before a crash by Romain Grosjean caused another red flag to be thrown. When the formation lap on the track began Power's crew was unable to get his car to restart due to an overheated ECU, handing the lead to Ericsson who hung on for five more laps to win his first IndyCar race. Rinus VeeKay and Pato O'Ward rounded out the podium.
  • 2021 (Race 2): Josef Newgarden won his first of what would be three consecutive pole positions heading into the summer break and led most of the race despite several restarts by using a strategy that put him on the harder primary tires throughout the opening two thirds of the race. Although Newgarden and Penske executed a three stop strategy perfectly it left the two time series champion to face the unforgiving Belle Isle circuit with used softer compound alternate tires that degraded rapidly in the closing laps. Following a restart where he was unable to manage the tire wear Newgarden was overtaken by Pato O'Ward, who had overtaken five other drivers in a two lap span to challenge Newgarden. The second year McLaren driver then built a gap of over five seconds to the rest of the field to take his first win on a street course. Newgarden held off late charges by Alex Palou and Colton Herta to stay in second place while Palou rounded out the podium.
  • 2022: The final Detroit Grand Prix held on Belle Isle was moved from a double header to a single 70 lap race. Josef Newgarden qualified on pole but it would be his teammate Will Power who would dominate the race, charging through the field from 16th to take the lead early in the race and hanging onto it via virtue of a two stop strategy. Power's only threat on the day was Alexander Rossi, who picked up his first podium of 2022. Scott Dixon finished in third place.

IndyCar Series (Renaissance Center) edit

  • 2023: For 2023 the Detroit Grand Prix returned to the Renaissance Center using a brand new condensed circuit around The Renaissance Center. Alex Palou qualified on pole, his first pole position on a street circuit. Palou would lead the entire race while a fierce battle for the remaining podium spots led to Will Power finishing second and Felix Rosenqvist rounding out the podium.

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  85. ^ Harris, Mike (June 18, 2001). "Castroneves climbs fence, standings with Detroit win (Part 1)". The Indianapolis Star. p. 25. from the original on 2016-08-16. Retrieved June 27, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. 
  86. ^ Harris, Mike (June 18, 2001). "Castroneves climbs fence, standings with Detroit win (Part 2)". The Indianapolis Star. p. 31. from the original on 2016-08-16. Retrieved June 27, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. 
  87. ^ Horsley, Carlie (September 1, 2008). "IndyCar: Maiden win for Wilson". SkySports. from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved June 9, 2012.
  88. ^ a b Abuelsamid, Sam (September 1, 2008). "Detroit Grand Prix 2008: The IndyCars take to the track". Autoblog. from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  89. ^ Householder, Mike (September 1, 2008). "Rookie Justin Wilson wins Detroit Indy Grand Prix". The New York Times. from the original on 2017-08-15. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  90. ^ "Film star Paul Newman dead at 83". Reuters. September 27, 2008. from the original on 2012-09-20. Retrieved June 9, 2012.

External links edit

  • http://www.detroitgp.com
  • http://www.champcarstats.com
Preceded by
Indianapolis 500
IndyCar Series
Detroit Grand Prix
Succeeded by
Grand Prix of Road America

detroit, grand, prix, indycar, formula, event, detroit, grand, prix, detroit, grand, prix, currently, branded, chevrolet, detroit, grand, prix, presented, lear, corporation, sponsorship, reasons, indycar, series, race, weekend, held, temporary, circuit, detroi. For the Formula One event see Detroit Grand Prix The Detroit Grand Prix currently branded as the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear Corporation for sponsorship reasons is an IndyCar Series race weekend held on a temporary circuit in Detroit Michigan The race has been held from 1989 to 2001 2007 to 2008 and since 2012 Since 2012 the event has been scheduled for the weekend immediately following the Indianapolis 500 Detroit Grand PrixLocationDetroit Street CircuitDetroit Michigan U S 42 19 47 1 N 83 2 24 4 W 42 329750 N 83 040111 W 42 329750 83 040111Corporate sponsorLear CorporationChevroletFirst race1982Distance164 5 miles 264 737 km Laps100Most wins driver Helio Castroneves Will Power amp Scott Dixon 3 Most wins team Penske Racing 7 Most wins manufacturer Chassis Dallara 20 Engine Honda 16 Circuit informationSurfaceAsphalt ConcreteLength1 645 mi 2 647 km Turns9The origins of the event date back to the Formula One Detroit Grand Prix on the Detroit street circuit The CART series began headlining the event in 1989 and in 1992 the race moved from downtown Detroit to Belle Isle a park situated on an island in the Detroit River which is the longest serving venue of the race The IndyCar Series took over the race beginning in 2007 The race has been supported by Indy Lights and Formula Atlantic and top level sports car series such as the Trans Am Series and the ALMS From 2023 the race returned to the downtown streets around the Renaissance Center using a circuit partially based on the original Detroit street circuit used by Formula One and CART Open wheel racing in Detroit dates back to the 1920s 1950s when AAA held the Detroit 100 at the Michigan State Fairgrounds Speedway AAA also held one five mile 8 km non championship race at Grosse Pointe in 1905 The Raceway on Belle Isle is classified as an FIA Grade Two circuit 1 The original Detroit Street Circuit was considered at the time an FIA Grade One circuit while the downtown circuit is also an FIA Grade Two Circuit Contents 1 Formula One 2 CART 2 1 Renaissance Center 1989 to 1991 2 2 Belle Isle 1992 to 1997 2 3 Course modification 1998 to 2000 2 4 Demise 2001 3 IndyCar Series 3 1 2007 to 2008 3 2 Doubleheader era 3 3 Downtown revival 2023 4 Past winners 4 1 Grosse Pointe dirt oval 4 2 Michigan State Fairgrounds dirt oval 4 3 Renaissance Center 4 4 Belle Isle 4 5 Renaissance Center 2023 present 5 Detroit Sports Car Classic 5 1 American Le Mans Series 5 2 Rolex Sports Car Series 5 3 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship 6 Support race winners 6 1 Atlantics Indy Lights 6 2 Trans Am Motor City 100 6 3 Stadium Super Trucks 6 4 Lap records 7 Race summaries 7 1 CART PPG Indy Car World Series Renaissance Center 7 2 CART PPG Indy Car World Series Belle Isle 7 3 CART FedEx Championship series Belle Isle 7 4 IRL IndyCar Series Belle Isle 7 5 IndyCar Series Renaissance Center 8 References 9 External linksFormula One editMain article Detroit Grand Prix The race dates back to 1982 when it was a Formula One World Championship event held on the Detroit street circuit encompassing the Renaissance Center The original circuit was 2 493 miles 4 012 km with seventeen corners and proved to be even slower than Monaco The rough demanding course included a railroad track crossing and mimicked Monaco with a tunnel on the main straight While officially the Detroit Grand Prix it was also referred to as the United States Grand Prix East because there were multiple Grand Prix races in the U S at the time By the time of the 1988 race the FIA the governing body of Formula One had declared the street circuit s temporary pits and garages were not up to the required standard The race was already the least popular Grand Prix on the calendar and after a very difficult 1988 Grand Prix the drivers became outspoken with their dislike of the event For 1989 race organizers planned to move the race to a new temporary circuit on Belle Isle a city park in the Detroit River 2 3 Along with the criticism of the downtown circuit local developers were also planning to begin construction along portions of that course making it difficult to set up in the coming years 4 The relocation plan to Belle Isle was immediately met with stiff local opposition both public and political Even though the circuit would be temporary permanent garages and pit facilities would have needed to be constructed at significant expense and at the odds of conservation groups Also against their favor was a budding interest to relocate the United States Grand Prix to Laguna Seca That track was courting Formula One having recently completed capital improvements and having just hosted a highly successful United States motorcycle Grand Prix 5 Furthermore an upstart group in Phoenix was also aggressively vying for the race 6 In October 1988 the plan to move to Belle Isle was scrapped 7 8 Formula One left Detroit permanently and a short time later it was officially announced that the U S Grand Prix was moving to Phoenix It was in Detroit in 1983 that Italian driver Michele Alboreto drove his Tyrrell 011 to victory in the US Grand Prix East in what would prove to be the 155th and last ever F1 win by the Cosworth DFV V8 engine CART editRenaissance Center 1989 to 1991 edit nbsp The Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit For 1989 the race in Detroit was replaced by a CART series event 9 Instead of moving to Belle Isle CART utilized a slightly modified version of the existing downtown Renaissance Center street circuit The chicane on the main straight was eliminated something the F1 drivers had been calling for since the first race in 1982 The CART race was held on this 2 52 mile 4 06 km layout for three years As had been the case in the event s Formula One days competitors and fans continued to pan the course criticizing it for its bumpiness poor visibility and overall poor layout The 1991 event was perhaps the last straw in what was an embarrassment for the organizers In addition to a disintegrating track made worse by suffocating heat and humidity it saw Mario Andretti crash his Lola head on into a tow truck The safety crew was attempting to remove Dennis Vitolo s stalled car from a blind corner at St Antoine and East Jefferson Streets Seconds later Michael Andretti came onto the scene and crashed into Vitolo s car attempting to avoid his father s wrecked car Ultimately promoters considered the downtown circuit a money loser and claimed it was suffering from poor television ratings with its Father s Day date up against the U S Open 10 11 Belle Isle 1992 to 1997 edit Beginning in 1992 the race was moved to a new temporary course set up on Belle Isle The move revived a conceptual plan for the Formula One event from four years earlier One major difference that made Belle Isle viable for CART and acceptable to locals was that permanent Formula One style garages and pits were not required by the sanctioning body The race was also moved up a week and for 1992 was the first race after the Indianapolis 500 displacing the traditional Milwaukee The first layout measured 2 1 miles 3 4 km Almost immediately the new course was criticized by drivers for being narrow slow and lacking passing zones It was complemented however for its smoothness a sharp contrast to the rough manhole dotted downtown circuit 12 13 Fans opinions were mixed as sightlines were improved over the downtown circuit but access to the island was difficult and the racing was not much better Course modification 1998 to 2000 edit In 1998 the course layout was modified to eliminate the slow Picnic Way segment and series of corners Instead the course continued straight along Central Avenue to create a long fairly wide straightaway leading into a competitive passing zone The track then measured 2 346 miles 3 776 km The revised layout was praised by competitors as being an improvement over the original 1992 1997 course However pavement transitions from asphalt to concrete were being blamed for an increase in incidents due to slickness 14 The 2000 event saw young Brazilian Helio Castroneves score his first Champ Car victory for Marlboro Team Penske After his victory lap he stopped on the front stretch and climbed the catch fencing in an apparent effort to share his joy with the spectators Helio became known as Spider Man because of this celebration which has been repeated in his later victories Support races for the Detroit Grand Prix included the Motor City 100 for the SCCA Trans Am Series and the Neon Challenge celebrity race Scenes from the film Driven were filmed during the race weekend in 2000 15 The event along with the Michigan 500 provided two CART races in southern Michigan annually Demise 2001 edit Even though the track was a temporary street course it became known as The Raceway on Belle Isle As the years went by the track was increasingly criticized for its narrowness poor access and its overall uncompetitive nature The once smooth surface was aging in the harsh Detroit winters and along with it came bumps cracks and potholes The circuit gained a reputation of being the worst and least popular venue on the entire schedule 16 In 1997 it was noted that race winner Greg Moore started seventh and did not pass a single car competitively out on the track for position all day 17 18 Participants also disliked the facility because of its lack of paved areas for support activities Paddock areas were often muddy and unable to accommodate the teams After the 2001 race CART s contract with Belle Isle expired Attendance had been noticeably slipping 19 Negotiations to continue the event went over the summer 20 but eventually stalled Organizers briefly entertained an idea to return to the old downtown circuit 21 but those plans were quickly scuttled 22 The series chose to drop the race from the schedule and the event went on hiatus IndyCar Series edit2007 to 2008 edit In 2006 Roger Penske spearheaded talks to revive the race for 2007 as part of the ALMS and IndyCar Series schedules Penske had recently experienced tremendous success as head of the Super Bowl XL Detroit Metro Host Committee On September 29 2006 it was announced that the Detroit Indy Grand Prix would return as the tenth race of the ALMS s 12 race season and penultimate race of the IndyCar Series seventeen race schedule To improve access to the track a park and ride system similar to what was used at Super Bowl XL was implemented Further paddock and track work was completed before the race The 2007 event attracted a strong crowd and was considered a success It was held again in 2008 During this period the event utilized the original 1992 1997 course layout with some minor improvements Some of the barriers were moved back particularly inside the apexes of some of the turns to effectively widen some curves and improve sight lines Some barriers including the metal guardrail on the pit straight had been entirely removed On December 18 2008 the scheduled race for 2009 was canceled The ongoing automotive economic crisis and its impact on the Detroit area was the primary reason Roger Penske did not rule out a return in the future 23 24 Doubleheader era edit For the 2012 season the race on Belle Isle was revived for second time 25 26 The event was situated on the weekend immediately after the Indianapolis 500 Starting in 2013 the race was hosted as a unique doubleheader weekend The race weekend would consist of two separate points paying races one each on Saturday and Sunday The races were treated as separate events with separate qualifying full championship points and the results of the first had no bearing on the lineup for the second as had been the case with some previous twin race formats Beginning in 2013 the race also returned to the more popular and more competitive long course 1998 2001 layout 27 On April 6 2020 IndyCar announced the cancellation of the 2020 edition due to the COVID 19 pandemic Organizers stated that Michigan s stay at home order which was extended through April 30 28 would hinder the necessary preparations to hold the race and that the race could not be reasonably rescheduled due to other events having been booked on Belle Isle already The race returned in its traditional double header format for 2021 29 On September 19 2021 IndyCar announced that the Detroit Grand Prix would be altered from a two race weekend to a single race weekend as part of their 2022 schedule 30 Downtown revival 2023 edit Mere weeks after the 2022 IndyCar schedule was announced Penske Entertainment Group revealed that moving the Detroit Grand Prix to a single race weekend was done as part of a proposal discussed with the city of Detroit to return the race back to the Renaissance Center utilizing a new downtown circuit beginning in 2023 In November 2021 the City Council of Detroit unanimously approved Penske Entertainment s plan and announced an initial three year contract to return the Detroit Grand Prix back to the downtown streets for a single race weekend beginning in 2023 31 The new downtown circuit is based on lessons learned from the Nashville Street Circuit It is designed to be less disruptive to city traffic while also being more accessible to spectators and having more points of visibility to the racing than the old Detroit Street Circuit The new circuit will feature ten corners and is 1 7 miles in length compared to the 2 5 mile circuit used by Formula One and CART and the 2 35 mile Raceway On Belle Isle 32 It will travel from the start finish line on Atwater Street and head onto Schwarzer Street Franklin Street and Rivard Street in the first series of corners From Rivard Street drivers will make a sharp left turn onto the circuit s most prominent feature a 0 7 mile straightaway down East Jefferson Avenue This straightaway will be the longest straightaway on an IndyCar street circuit eclipsing the dual straights on the Korean War Veterans Memorial Bridge in Nashville The circuit will then turn onto Bates Street before heading back onto Atwater Street The only part of the old Detroit Street Circuit used on the new circuit will be the old circuit s sixteenth and seventeenth corners that were then known as The Ford Corner On the new circuit this section will be the eighth and ninth corners Neither of the tunnels or the side streets used on the old Detroit Street Circuit will be used on the new circuit to minimize impact on local businesses and city traffic around downtown Detroit 33 To increase spectator viewership IndyCar and Penske Entertainment will offer free viewership at multiple points along the circuit 34 The Detroit City Council stated the entire circuit will be fully resurfaced before the race Construction and tear down of the circuit will take place 8 00PM and 5 00AM over the course of twenty days respectively minimizing disruptions to city traffic around the Renaissance Center 31 Past winners editGrosse Pointe dirt oval edit Season Date Driver Chassis Engine Sanctioning1905 August 8 nbsp Webb Jay White White steam engine AAAMichigan State Fairgrounds dirt oval edit Season Date Driver Chassis Engine Sanctioning1928 June 10 nbsp Ray Keech Miller 1 Miller 1 AAA1929 June 9 nbsp Cliff Woodbury Miller 2 Miller 2 AAA1930 June 9 nbsp Wilbur Shaw Smith 1 Miller 3 AAA1931 June 14 nbsp Louis Meyer Stevens 1 Miller 4 AAA1932 June 9 nbsp Bob Carey Stevens 2 Miller 5 AAASeptember 10 nbsp Mauri Rose Stevens 3 Miller 6 AAAJune 11 nbsp Bill Cummings Miller 3 Miller 6 AAA1949 September 11 nbsp Tony Bettenhausen Kurtis Kraft 1 Offenhauser 1 AAA1950 September 10 nbsp Henry Banks Moore 1 Offenhauser 2 AAA1951 September 9 nbsp Paul Russo Russo Nichels 1 Offenhauser 3 AAA1952 August 30 nbsp Bill Vukovich Kuzma 1 Offenhauser 4 AAA1953 July 4 nbsp Rodger Ward Kurtis Kraft 2 Offenhauser 5 AAA1957 June 23 nbsp Jimmy Bryan Kuzma 1 Offenhauser 6 USACRenaissance Center edit CART Champ Car historySeason Date Driver Team Chassis Engine Race Distance Race Time Average Speed ReportLaps Miles km 1989 June 18 nbsp Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing Penske PC 18 1 Chevrolet 1 62 155 249 448 2 02 11 76 112 mph 122 490 km h Report1990 June 17 nbsp Michael Andretti Newman Haas Racing Lola T9000 1 Chevrolet 2 62 155 249 448 1 49 32 84 902 mph 136 637 km h Report1991 June 16 nbsp Emerson Fittipaldi Penske Racing Penske PC 20 2 Chevrolet 3 62 156 24 251 443 1 57 19 79 455 mph 127 870 km h ReportBelle Isle edit Season Date Driver Team Chassis Engine Race Distance Race Time Average Speed ReportLaps Miles km CART Champ Car Series history1992 June 7 nbsp Bobby Rahal Rahal Hogan Racing Lola T9200 2 Chevrolet 4 77 161 7 260 23 1 58 20 81 989 mph 131 949 km h Report1993 June 13 nbsp Danny Sullivan Galles Racing Lola T9300 3 Chevrolet 5 77 161 7 260 23 1 56 43 83 116 mph 133 762 km h Report1994 June 12 nbsp Paul Tracy Penske Racing Penske PC 23 3 Ilmor 1 77 161 7 260 23 1 52 29 86 245 mph 138 798 km h Report1995 June 11 nbsp Robby Gordon Walker Racing Reynard 95I 1 Ford 1 77 161 7 260 23 1 56 11 83 499 mph 134 379 km h Report1996 June 9 nbsp Michael Andretti Newman Haas Racing Lola T9600 4 Ford 2 72 151 2 243 332 2 00 44 75 136 mph 120 920 km h Report1997 June 8 nbsp Greg Moore Forsythe Racing Reynard 97I 2 Mercedes 1 77 161 7 260 23 1 52 45 86 047 mph 138 479 km h Report1998 June 7 nbsp Alex Zanardi Chip Ganassi Racing Reynard 98I 3 Honda 1 72 168 912 271 837 1 41 17 100 052 mph 161 018 km h Report1999 August 8 nbsp Dario Franchitti Team Green Reynard 99I 4 Honda 2 71 166 566 268 061 2 02 24 81 643 mph 131 392 km h Report2000 June 18 nbsp Helio Castroneves Penske Racing Reynard 5 Honda 3 84 197 064 317 143 2 01 23 97 401 mph 156 752 km h Report2001 June 17 nbsp Helio Castroneves Penske Racing Reynard 6 Honda 4 72 168 912 271 837 1 53 51 89 008 mph 143 244 km h Report2002 2006 Not heldIndy Racing League IndyCar Series history2007 September 2 nbsp Tony Kanaan Andretti Green Racing Dallara 1 Honda 5 89 186 544 300 213 2 11 51 83 841 mph 134 929 km h Report2008 August 31 nbsp Justin Wilson Newman Haas Lanigan Racing Dallara 2 Honda 6 87 182 352 293 467 2 00 11 89 911 mph 144 698 km h Report2009 2011 Not held2012 June 3 nbsp Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara 3 Honda 7 60 124 2 199 88 1 27 40 85 012 mph 136 814 km h Report2013 June 1 nbsp Mike Conway Dale Coyne Racing Dallara 4 Honda 8 70 164 22 264 286 1 48 45 90 753 mph 146 053 km h ReportJune 2 nbsp Simon Pagenaud Schmidt Peterson Hamilton HP Motorsports Dallara 5 Honda 9 70 164 22 264 286 1 56 15 84 906 mph 136 643 km h 2014 May 31 nbsp Will Power Team Penske Dallara 6 Chevrolet 6 70 164 22 264 286 1 49 30 90 138 mph 145 063 km h ReportJune 1 nbsp Helio Castroneves Team Penske Dallara 7 Chevrolet 7 70 164 22 264 286 1 45 53 93 211 mph 150 009 km h 2015 May 30 nbsp Carlos Munoz Andretti Autosport Dallara 8 Honda 10 47 110 45 177 752 1 27 46 75 51 mph 121 52 km h ReportMay 31 nbsp Sebastien Bourdais KV Racing Technology Dallara 9 Chevrolet 8 68 159 8 257 173 2 00 38 79 476 mph 127 904 km h 2016 June 4 nbsp Sebastien Bourdais KVSH Racing Dallara 10 Chevrolet 9 70 164 5 264 737 1 40 52 97 857 mph 157 486 km h ReportJune 5 nbsp Will Power Team Penske Dallara 11 Chevrolet 10 70 164 5 264 737 1 42 22 96 414 mph 155 163 km h 2017 June 3 nbsp Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara 12 Honda 11 70 164 5 264 737 1 35 49 103 015 mph 165 787 km h ReportJune 4 nbsp Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara 13 Honda 12 70 164 5 264 737 1 33 36 105 442 mph 169 692 km h 2018 June 2 nbsp Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara 14 Honda 13 70 164 5 264 737 1 39 24 99 285 mph 159 784 km h ReportJune 3 nbsp Ryan Hunter Reay Andretti Autosport Dallara 15 Honda 14 70 164 5 264 737 1 33 51 105 176 mph 169 264 km h 2019 June 1 nbsp Josef Newgarden Team Penske Dallara 16 Chevrolet 11 43 101 05 162 624 1 15 30 59 80 294 mph 129 221 km h ReportJune 2 nbsp Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara 17 Honda 15 70 164 5 264 737 1 52 18 9365 87 877 mph 141 424 km h 2020 Canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 29 2021 June 12 nbsp Marcus Ericsson Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara 18 Honda 16 70 164 5 264 737 1 45 33 1123 93 509 mph 150 488 km h ReportJune 13 nbsp Patricio O Ward Arrow McLaren SP Dallara 19 Chevrolet 12 70 164 5 264 737 1 41 30 8814 97 227 mph 156 472 km h 2022 June 5 nbsp Will Power Team Penske Dallara 20 Chevrolet 13 70 164 5 264 737 1 32 08 8183 107 111 mph 172 378 km h Report1996 2007 2008 amp 2015 II Races shortened due to 2 hour time limit 2012 Race shortened due to darkness after 2 hour suspension for track repairs 2015 I Race shortened due to lightning policy 2019 I Race shortened to 75 minute time limit due to lightning policy delaying the start Renaissance Center 2023 present edit Season Date Driver Team Chassis Engine Race Distance Race Time Average Speed ReportLaps Miles km IndyCar Series history2023 June 4 nbsp Alex Palou Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara 21 Honda 17 100 164 5 264 737 2 01 58 1171 80 922 mph 130 231 km h ReportDetroit Sports Car Classic editAmerican Le Mans Series edit Year LMP1 Winning Team LMP2 Winning Team GT1 Winning Team GT2 Winning Team ResultsLMP1 Winning Drivers LMP2 Winning Drivers GT1 Winning Drivers GT2 Winning Drivers2007 nbsp 2 Audi Sport North America nbsp 7 Penske Racing nbsp 3 Corvette Racing nbsp 62 Risi Competizione Results nbsp Emanuele Pirro nbsp Marco Werner nbsp Timo Bernhard nbsp Romain Dumas nbsp Johnny O Connell nbsp Jan Magnussen nbsp Mika Salo nbsp Jaime Melo2008 nbsp 37 Intersport Racing nbsp 26 Andretti Green Racing nbsp 4 Corvette Racing nbsp 45 Flying Lizard Motorsports Results nbsp John Field nbsp Clint Field nbsp Richard Berry nbsp Franck Montagny nbsp James Rossiter nbsp Olivier Beretta nbsp Oliver Gavin nbsp Jorg Bergmeister nbsp Wolf HenzlerRolex Sports Car Series edit Year DP Winning Team GT Winning Team ResultsDP Winning Drivers GT Winning Drivers2012 nbsp 9 Action Express Racing nbsp 88 Autohaus Motorsports Results nbsp Joao Barbosa nbsp J C France nbsp Darren Law nbsp Paul Edwards nbsp Jordan TaylorYear DP Winning Team GT Winning Team GX Winning Team ResultsDP Winning Drivers GT Winning Drivers GX Winning Drivers2013 nbsp 10 Wayne Taylor Racing nbsp 57 Stevenson Motorsports nbsp 00 Speedsource Results nbsp Max Angelelli nbsp Jordan Taylor nbsp John Edwards nbsp Robin Liddell nbsp Joel Miller nbsp Tristan NunezIMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship edit Year Prototype Prototype Challenge GT Le Mans GT Daytona Report2014 nbsp 10 Wayne Taylor Racing did not participate did not participate nbsp 63 Scuderia Corsa Results nbsp Jordan Taylor nbsp Ricky Taylor nbsp Alessandro Balzan nbsp Jeff Westphal2015 nbsp 31 Action Express Racing nbsp 8 Starworks Motorsport did not participate nbsp 23 Team Seattle Alex Job Racing Results nbsp Dane Cameron nbsp Eric Curran nbsp Renger van der Zande nbsp Mirco Schultis nbsp Ian James nbsp Mario Farnbacher2016 nbsp 10 Wayne Taylor Racing nbsp 8 Starworks Motorsport did not participate nbsp 33 Riley Motorsports Results nbsp Jordan Taylor nbsp Ricky Taylor nbsp Renger van der Zande nbsp Alex Popow nbsp Jeroen Bleekemolen nbsp Ben Keating2017 nbsp 10 Wayne Taylor Racing nbsp 38 Performance Tech Motorsports did not participate nbsp 93 Michael Shank Racing Results nbsp Jordan Taylor nbsp Ricky Taylor nbsp James French nbsp Patricio O Ward nbsp Andy Lally nbsp Katherine LeggeYear Prototype GT Le Mans GT Daytona Report2018 nbsp 31 Whelen Engineering Racing did not participate nbsp 86 Meyer Shank Racing with Curb Agajanian Results nbsp Eric Curran nbsp Felipe Nasr nbsp Mario Farnbacher nbsp Katherine LeggeYear Daytona Prototype international GT Le Mans GT Daytona Report2019 nbsp 6 Acura Team Penske did not participate nbsp 14 AIM Vasser Sullivan Results nbsp Dane Cameron nbsp Juan Pablo Montoya nbsp Jack Hawksworth nbsp Richard Heistand2020 Canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic2021 nbsp 01 Cadillac Chip Ganassi Racing nbsp 4 Corvette Racing nbsp 23 Heart of Racing Team Results nbsp Kevin Magnussen nbsp Renger van der Zande nbsp Tommy Milner nbsp Nick Tandy nbsp Roman De Angelis nbsp Ross GunnYear Daytona Prototype international GT Daytona Report2022 nbsp 01 Cadillac Racing nbsp 17 Vasser Sullivan Racing Results nbsp Sebastien Bourdais nbsp Renger van der Zande nbsp Ben Barnicoat nbsp Kyle KirkwoodSupport race winners editAtlantics Indy Lights edit Atlantic ChampionshipSeason Date Winning Driver1983 June 5 nbsp Josele GarzaIndy Lights1989 June 18 nbsp Ted Prappas1990 June 17 nbsp Tommy Byrne1991 June 16 nbsp Eric Bachelart1992 June 7 nbsp Adrian Fernandez1993 June 13 nbsp Steve Robertson1994 June 12 nbsp Steve Robertson1995 June 11 nbsp Robbie Buhl1996 June 9 nbsp Tony Kanaan1997 June 8 nbsp Tony Kanaan1998 June 7 nbsp Airton Dare1999 August 8 nbsp Derek Higgins2000 June 18 nbsp Jonny Kane2001 2011 Not held2012 June 2 nbsp Gustavo Yacaman2013 2020 Not held2021 June 12 nbsp Kyle KirkwoodJune 13 nbsp Kyle Kirkwood2022 June 4 nbsp Linus LundqvistJune 5 nbsp Linus LundqvistTrans Am Motor City 100 edit Year Driver Car1984 Tom Gloy Mercury Capri1985 Elliott Forbes RobinsonA Buick Regal1986 Wally Dallenbach Jr Chevrolet Camaro1987 Scott Pruett Merkur XR4Ti1988 Hurley Haywood Audi Quattro1989 Greg Pickett Chevrolet Camaro1990 Scott Sharp Chevrolet Camaro1991 Scott Sharp Chevrolet Camaro1992 Tommy Archer Dodge Daytona1993 Dorsey Schroeder Ford Mustang1994 Bill Saunders Ford Mustang1995 Ron Fellows Chevrolet Camaro1996 Dorsey Schroeder Ford Mustang1997 Tommy Kendall Ford Mustang1998 Paul Gentilozzi Chevrolet Camaro1999 Brian Simo Ford Mustang2000 Paul Gentilozzi Jaguar XKR2001 Paul Gentilozzi Jaguar XKR2002 2015 Not held2016Race 1 RJ Lopez TA1 Kyle Marcelli TA2 Dean Martin TA4 Chevrolet CorvetteChevrolet CamaroFord Mustang2016Race 2 John Baucom TA1 Adam Andretti TA2 Ernie Francis Jr TA4 Ford MustangDodge ChallengerFord Mustang2017 Ernie Francis Jr TA1 Gar Robinson TA2 Ford MustangChevrolet Camaro2018 35 Race 1 Tony Buffomante TA2 Ford Mustang2018 35 Race 2 Rafa Matos TA2 Chevrolet Camaro2019 35 Race 1 Misha Goikhberg TA2 Chevrolet Camaro2019 35 Race 2 Tony Ave TA2 Chevrolet Camaro2020 Canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic A Winner Wally Dallenbach Jr was disqualified due to car being underweight Stadium Super Trucks edit Year Date Driver Ref2014 May 30 E J Viso 36 May 31June 12015 May 29 Robby Gordon 37 May 30 E J Viso 38 May 31 Burt Jenner 39 2016 June 3 Matthew Brabham 40 June 4 Abandoned B 41 June 5 Matthew Brabham 42 2017 June 3 Sheldon Creed 43 June 42018 June 3 Gavin Harlien 44 June 4 Arie Luyendyk Jr 45 B Race suspended after three laps following Matt Mingay s wreck on lap three that resulted in injury 41 Lap records edit The unofficial track record is 1 13 056 set by Juan Pablo Montoya in a Lola B2K 00 during qualifying for the 2000 Tenneco Automotive Grand Prix of Detroit 46 The official race lap records at the Belle Isle Park Circuit are listed as Category Time Driver Vehicle DateGP Circuit 3 798 km 1998 2001 2013 2022 IndyCar 1 14 2062 Josef Newgarden Dallara DW12 2017 Chevrolet Detroit Grand PrixCART 1 15 701 47 Juan Pablo Montoya Reynard 99I 1999 ITT Automotive Detroit Grand PrixDPi 1 18 877 48 Pipo Derani Cadillac DPi V R 2022 Chevrolet Sports Car ClassicIndy Lights 1 21 4559 49 David Malukas Dallara IL 15 2021 Indy Lights Detroit Grand PrixDP 1 23 138 50 Dane Cameron Corvette Daytona Prototype 2016 Chevrolet Sports Car ClassicLMPC 1 24 977 50 Renger van der Zande Oreca FLM09 2016 Chevrolet Sports Car ClassicLM GTE 1 27 180 51 Tommy Milner Chevrolet Corvette C8 R 2021 Chevrolet Sports Car ClassicGT3 1 28 335 48 Aaron Telitz Lexus RC F GT3 2022 Chevrolet Sports Car ClassicGP Circuit 3 379 km 1992 1997 2007 2012 CART 1 11 461 52 Dario Franchitti Reynard 97I 1997 ITT Automotive Detroit Grand PrixIndyCar 1 12 0651 Justin Wilson Dallara DW12 2012 Chevrolet Detroit Belle Isle Grand PrixLMP2 1 14 993 53 Ryan Briscoe Porsche RS Spyder Evo 2007 Detroit Sports Car ChallengeLMP1 1 17 091 53 Marco Werner Audi R10 TDI 2007 Detroit Sports Car ChallengeIndy Lights 1 17 639 54 Gustavo Yacaman Dallara IPS 2012 Indy Lights Detroit Belle Isle Grand PrixDP 1 21 552 55 Joao Barbosa Corvette Daytona Prototype 2012 Chevrolet Grand Am Detroit 200GT1 GTS 1 21 906 53 Jan Magnussen Chevrolet Corvette C6 R 2007 Detroit Sports Car ChallengeGT2 1 25 082 56 Dirk Muller Ferrari F430 GTC 2008 Detroit Sports Car ChallengeTrans Am 1 26 616 57 Dorsey Schroeder Ford Mustang 1994 Detroit Trans Am roundSuper Touring 1 30 380 58 Neil Crompton Honda Accord 1997 Detroit NATCC roundRace summaries editCART PPG Indy Car World Series Renaissance Center edit nbsp Downtown Renaissance Center Street Circuit 1989 1991 1989 Emerson Fittipaldi touched wheels with Mario Andretti on lap 2 puncturing a tire and sending him to the back of the field But Fittipaldi charged from 27th position to second place in the closing laps Polesitter Michael Andretti led 52 of the first 54 laps but a radio wire became tangled in the throttle pedal On lap 55 the throttle pedal stuck sending Andretti into a barrier Scott Pruett was now leading the race by 17 seconds but was forced to back off to conserve fuel Fittipaldi blew by Pruett with four laps to go to take the victory 59 60 1990 Michael Andretti started from the pole position and led wire to wire winning the race in dominating fashion Danny Sullivan was running close behind in second place on lap 46 when during his final pit stop an impact wrench failed The wheel was not properly fastened and on the out lap the drive pegs on the wheel broke putting him out of the race Bobby Rahal nursing brakes finished second over one minute and 48 seconds behind Andretti Rahal held off Emerson Fittipaldi who finished close behind in third 61 1991 Emerson Fittipaldi expecting the birth of his fifth child was leading Bobby Rahal in the closing laps when gearbox problems arose With seven laps to go Fittipaldi s car kept jumping out of gear He was mostly forced to hold the gearshift with one hand and steer with only hand on the rough bumpy demanding circuit Rahal charged hard but Fittipaldi held him off for the victory by 0 29 seconds The race is best remembered for a bizarre incident involving Mario and Michael Andretti On lap 48 Dennis Vitolo stalled in turn four with a seized transmission Safety crew tended to Vitolo s car hooking up a tow rope Mario Andretti came around what was a blind corner locked up his brakes and rammed hard into the back of the safety truck The nose of the car was wedged underneath the truck s bumper and the track was nearly blocked A couple cars including Fittipaldi skirted by the scene but seconds later Michael Andretti slid and crashed into the back of Vitolo s car The track was now completely blocked and the red flag was put out to clean up the scene 62 63 This would be the final race held at the Renaissance Center circuit until 2023 CART PPG Indy Car World Series Belle Isle edit nbsp Belle Isle original course 1992 1997 2007 2012 1992 For 1992 the race was moved to a new circuit on Belle Isle 10 11 Michael Andretti led the early laps with Paul Tracy subbing for Rick Mears and Bobby Rahal close behind Tracy made a daring pass on lap 38 for the lead going into turn one nearly touching wheels with Andretti On lap 58 Tracy was leading Andretti with Bobby Rahal in third All three cars were nose to tail Andretti attempted to pass Tracy for the lead but this time the two cars touched Both Tracy and Andretti slid high and scraped the concrete wall allowing Bobby Rahal to slip by both to take the lead Tracy later dropped out with gearbox failure but Andretti stayed with Rahal despite nursing an ill handing machine On the second to last lap Andretti spun out and dropped to fourth while Rahal cruised to victory 64 65 66 1993 A controversial race filled with penalties from start to finish At the green flag Emerson Fittipaldi jumped the start from the outside of the front row beating pole sitter Nigel Mansell to the line by almost two car lengths Instead of waving off the start official assessed Fittipaldi a stop and go penalty Later in the race Paul Tracy was penalized for breaking the 80 mph pit road speed limit clocked at 93 mph and Nigel Mansell was accused of blatant blocking 67 Danny Sullivan took the lead on lap 48 In the closing laps Galles Racing teammates Sullivan and Al Unser Jr were running 1st 2nd On lap 69 Unser challenged Sullivan for the lead but was forced down to the inside and knocked down three cones Officials charged Unser with going off course and assessed him a stop and go penalty On a restart with four laps to go rookie Robby Gordon driving for Foyt tried to pass Sullivan for the lead but was squeezed down and had to back off 68 69 Moments later Gordon spun out with a cut tire Danny Sullivan went on to win the race his final win in Indy car competition 70 71 1994 Penske teammates Al Unser Jr Paul Tracy and Emerson Fittipaldi were running 1st 2nd 3rd on a restart on lap 55 Tracy was on the back bumper of Unser as Unser was dicing through backmarker traffic Going into turn 8 Tracy ran into the back of Unser s car sending him sliding head on into a tire barrier Tracy went on to win the race with Fittipaldi second Unser rejoined the field and finished 10th 72 73 1995 Robby Gordon started from the pole position and led 43 of the 77 laps en route to victory Gordon led the first eight laps but slipped down in the standings after suffering tire wear Gordon switched to the optional harder tire compound and charged back to the front He took the lead with 35 laps to go and held off Jimmy Vasser for the win 74 1996 Heavy rain fell in the morning and continued to fall during the first 25 laps Christian Fittipaldi led 64 of the first 65 laps but a late caution came out when Bobby Rahal slid into a tire barrier On a restart on lap 66 Michael Andretti battled Fittipaldi for the lead coming out of turn four Fittipaldi locked up the brakes and slid high in turn five which allowed Andretti to drive by and take the lead The race was shortened from 77 to 72 laps due to a two hour time limit Andretti became the first and only driver to win at both the downtown Renaissance Center circuit and the Belle Isle circuit 75 76 1997 At the white flag Mauricio Gugelmin led Mark Blundell and Greg Moore with all three cars running nose to tail PacWest Racing teammates Gugelmin and Blundell were running very low on fuel attempting to stretch their tanks to the finish Gugelmin ran out of fuel on the Strand Drive backstretch and seconds later Blundell ran out of fuel as he approached the final turn Greg Moore slipped by to take the lead and scored the victory 77 78 CART FedEx Championship series Belle Isle edit nbsp Belle Isle long course 1998 2001 2013 2022 1998 A slightly reconfigured layout was introduced for 1998 Several tight and slow corners were replaced with a longer straightaway and potentially better passing zones Alex Zanardi battled Greg Moore during the early stages of the race Moore pitted first on lap 24 while Zanardi stayed out two additional laps Zanardi s light fuel load and lightning fast in lap put him back out on the track ahead of Moore Zanardi led the final 50 laps to victory and celebrated by performing donuts on his victory lap 79 80 1999 The race was moved to August to avoid a conflict with the NASCAR Michigan 400 81 In a race that was described as ugly several crashes were capped off by a bizarre finish under yellow On the first lap Max Papis touched wheels with Patrick Carpentier and crashed into a tire barrier On lap 25 Mauricio Gugelmin tangled with Cristiano da Matta and flip upside down landing on top of Carpentier s car Twenty laps later de Matta suffered a hard crash in turn two collecting Al Unser Jr Under caution late in the race a fuel leak from the pace car caused a confusing delay requiring officials to bring out a back up pace car With some drivers anticipating a restart Helio Castroneves ran into the back of Juan Pablo Montoya The race hit the two hour time limit and finished under yellow with Team Kool Green drivers Dario Franchitti first and Paul Tracy second 82 83 2000 Polesitter Juan Pablo Montoya led 59 of the first 60 laps but dropped out with a broken driveshaft Helio Castroneves took the lead on lap 62 and led the final 24 laps en route to his first career CART series victory On his victory lap Castroneves stopped his car on the frontstretch jumped from cockpit and climbed up the catchfence to celebrate his victory 84 2001 Helio Castroneves started from the pole position and led wire to wire to win the Detroit Grand Prix in back to back years Castroneves survived a minor scare when telemetry indicated a pressure leak in his left front tire After the victory Castroneves once again jumped from his car and climbed the catchfence in his signature Spiderman celebration 85 86 This would be the final CART series race at Detroit IRL IndyCar Series Belle Isle edit 2007 After a six year absence open wheel racing returned to Detroit The Indy cars utilized the original short course layout previously raced on from 1992 to 1997 After the final series of pit stops a four car battle at the front ensued Tony Kanaan was leading and second place Buddy Rice ran out of fuel Third place Scott Dixon took evasive action to get by Rice which crashed out both cars The pileup collected Dario Franchitti as well Danica Patrick slipped by the crash and took a career best second place while Kanaan went on to win 2008 Originally scheduled for 90 laps the race was shortened to 87 laps due to two hour limit Late in the race Justin Wilson was challenging Helio Castroneves for the lead Officials ruled that Castroneves intentionally blocked resulting in a penalty which allowed Wilson to take the lead Despite a late push by Castroneves Wilson won the race his first career Indy car victory 87 88 Wilson s win was the 107th and final Championship Car victory for Newman Haas Racing and occurred just weeks before the death of co owner Paul Newman 89 90 88 2012 After a three year hiatus the Detroit Grand Prix returned to the IndyCar calendar For 2012 the race was moved to the weekend immediately following the Indianapolis 500 The race was shortened from 90 laps to 60 laps due to a disintegrating track James Hinchcliffe s car dislodged a chunk of the pavement and crashed into a tire barrier Officials discovered other parts of the track that were damaged and a red flag was put out to make repairs Rain also began to fall Scott Dixon won the race from the pole position 2013 Race 1 For 2013 the long course layout was revived and the race was now part of a doubleheader weekend During the first race on Saturday Mike Conway started second and led 47 laps en route to victory Conway passed Ryan Hunter Reay for the lead on lap 44 He then built a 20 second lead before the final round of pit stops Conway s margin of victory was 12 9707 seconds over Hunter Reay Dario Franchitti who won the pole position was issued a grid penalty for an unapproved engine change and started 11th He improved to sixth place at the finish while Scott Dixon who had to pit for wing damage suffered due to contact on lap 1 charged from 24th place to 4th 2013 Race 2 On Sunday Mike Conway started on the pole position attempting to sweep the weekend However multiple cautions and different race strategies jumbled the field and he wound up third On lap 24 the field was coming off a restart when Tristan Vautier touched wheels with Takuma Sato sending Sato into the tire barrier in turn 3 On lap 28 the ensuing restart saw Conway leading Scott Dixon into turn one Seconds later Sebastien Bourdais tagged the back of Will Power triggering a ten car pileup In the second half the race came down to Conway Simon Pagenaud and James Jakes On the final sequence of pit stops Pagenaud emerged as the leader with Jakes second and Conway closing in third Pagenaud drove to victory by 5 6274 seconds Jakes held off Conway for second place by 0 4342 seconds 2014 Race 1 On Saturday Will Power held off Graham Rahal during the final ten laps and scored the first Indy car win at Detroit for Chevrolet amp GM since 1993 Just across the river from GM s headquarters at the Renaissance Center Helio Castroneves started on the pole and led 30 laps Power took the lead from Ryan Briscoe on a restart on lap 60 Rahal ran in second less than a second behind Power Rahal was able to keep up with Power over the final ten laps but was unable to muster a pass for the lead Tony Kanaan finished third his 66th career podium finish 2014 Race 2 On Sunday Helio Castroneves drove to victory completing a Penske and Chevrolet sweep of the weekend Castroneves was leading Will Power by over 9 seconds with twenty laps to go but a late race caution bunched up the field With six laps to go Castroneves led but another caution came out setting up one last restart With three laps to go Castroneves got the jump and won by 1 6836 seconds over Will Power After the victory Castroneves climbed the catchfence repeating his signature celebration from the 2001 race 2015 Race 1 On Saturday heavy rain and lightning in the area caused the race to be shortened from 70 to 47 laps Carlos Munoz won his first IndyCar victory 2015 Race 2 On Sunday rain had washed out qualifying for the second race and the field lined up by points Several yellows slowed the race in the second half Sebastien Bourdais was the winner 2017 Race 1 On Saturday Graham Rahal led 55 of 70 laps to win nearly 25 years to the day that his father Bobby won the race Rahal held off second place Scott Dixon who was driving despite an injured ankle from a major crash the week earlier at the Indianapolis 500 2017 Race 2 Graham Rahal swept the weekend winning Sunday s second race leading 41 of 70 laps With five laps to go the first caution of the day came out when James Hinchcliffe stalled on the course and Spencer Pigot s car was smoking Officials red flagged the race on lap 67 in order to allow for a green flag finish and cleaned up the incidents Rahal held off Josef Newgarden in a two lap dash to finish 2021 Race 1 The new Roger Penske led IndyCar returned to Detroit after the 2020 double header was canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic The controversial race saw Scott Dixon take a large lead by starting the race on harder primary tires as opposed to the softer alternate tires used by the rest of the field Dixon s strategy was upended when Arrow McLaren SP driver Felix Rosenqvist crashed at near full speed into a tire barrier throwing a red flag that halted the race for over an hour When the race restarted many drivers including Dixon broke off on the formation lap to pit for fresh tires handing Will Power the lead as Power had pitted for his own set of tires right before the red flag Marcus Ericsson also cycled to the front with Power based on similar strategy and challenged Power for the lead before a crash by Romain Grosjean caused another red flag to be thrown When the formation lap on the track began Power s crew was unable to get his car to restart due to an overheated ECU handing the lead to Ericsson who hung on for five more laps to win his first IndyCar race Rinus VeeKay and Pato O Ward rounded out the podium 2021 Race 2 Josef Newgarden won his first of what would be three consecutive pole positions heading into the summer break and led most of the race despite several restarts by using a strategy that put him on the harder primary tires throughout the opening two thirds of the race Although Newgarden and Penske executed a three stop strategy perfectly it left the two time series champion to face the unforgiving Belle Isle circuit with used softer compound alternate tires that degraded rapidly in the closing laps Following a restart where he was unable to manage the tire wear Newgarden was overtaken by Pato O Ward who had overtaken five other drivers in a two lap span to challenge Newgarden The second year McLaren driver then built a gap of over five seconds to the rest of the field to take his first win on a street course Newgarden held off late charges by Alex Palou and Colton Herta to stay in second place while Palou rounded out the podium 2022 The final Detroit Grand Prix held on Belle Isle was moved from a double header to a single 70 lap race Josef Newgarden qualified on pole but it would be his teammate Will Power who would dominate the race charging through the field from 16th to take the lead early in the race and hanging onto it via virtue of a two stop strategy Power s only threat on the day was Alexander Rossi who picked up his first podium of 2022 Scott Dixon finished in third place IndyCar Series Renaissance Center edit 2023 For 2023 the Detroit Grand Prix returned to the Renaissance Center using a brand new condensed circuit around The Renaissance Center Alex Palou qualified on pole his first pole position on a street circuit Palou would lead the entire race while a fierce battle for the remaining podium spots led to Will Power finishing second and Felix Rosenqvist rounding out the podium References edit List of FIA licensed circuits Press release Federation Internationale de l Automobile December 14 2018 Retrieved September 24 2019 Sharp Drew June 18 1988 Belle Isle new site for Grand Prix Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 1 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Sharp Drew June 18 1988 Belle Isle new site for Grand Prix Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 15 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Woolford Dave June 18 2001 Detroit Grand Prix notebook Small crowd helps cloud race future The Toledo Blade Retrieved June 29 2001 Carroll Gerry November 18 1988 Formula One at Laguna Only if Indy cars leave The San Francisco Examiner p 52 Retrieved September 13 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Armijo Mark November 30 1988 City Council backs course for road race Arizona Republic p 61 Retrieved September 13 2018 via Newspapers com nbsp Mathews Lori October 14 1988 Grand Prix to remain downtown Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 3 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Mathews Lori October 14 1988 Grand Prix to remain downtown Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 16 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp McGraw Bill November 3 1988 Formula One cars bumped from Prix Detroit Free Press p 1 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Crowe Steve Kleinknecht William September 21 1991 Council vote speeds Grand Prix to Belle Isle Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 1 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Crowe Steve Kleinknecht William September 21 1991 Council vote speeds Grand Prix to Belle Isle Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 6 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Vincent Charlie June 6 1992 One Andretti smells a rat on the island Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 15 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Vincent Charlie June 6 1992 One Andretti smells a rat on the island Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 16 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Chengelis Angelique June 7 1998 Gentilozzi wins Motor City 100 Trans Am Detroit Free Press p 41 Retrieved June 27 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Lawson Terry September 28 2001 Special editions make characteristically eye catching Paul Verhoeven statement The Indianapolis Star p 99 Retrieved June 14 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Cavin Curt May 28 2001 Castroneves grabs a worldly win The Indianapolis Star p 30 Retrieved June 13 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Vincent Charlie June 9 1997 What race Drivers pass nothing but the time of day Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 17 Archived from the original on 2016 08 10 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Vincent Charlie June 9 1997 What race Drivers pass nothing but the time of day Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 23 Archived from the original on 2016 08 10 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Lage Larry June 18 2001 CART notebook USA Today Retrieved June 14 2016 Ballard Steve July 22 2001 CART exec says series may eventually return to Michigan The Indianapolis Star p 34 Retrieved June 13 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Riggs edges out Crawford for truck race pole at Dover The Indianapolis Star June 1 2001 p 39 Retrieved June 13 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Last Grand Prix for Detroit The Indianapolis Star June 13 2001 p 33 Retrieved June 13 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Detroit IndyCar race no go for 2009 indystar com 2008 12 18 Archived from the original on 2013 01 04 Retrieved 2008 12 18 INDYCAR Detroit Cancelled for 2009 Vision Racing Trims Staff speedtv com 2008 12 18 Archived from the original on 2008 12 19 Retrieved 2008 12 18 City Council OKs Detroit Grand Prix request espn com 2011 09 20 Archived from the original on 2011 09 30 Retrieved 2011 09 20 Belle Isle will host 2012 Detroit Grand Prix Archived from the original on 2016 01 17 Retrieved 2018 12 10 Cavin Curt 2012 06 04 IndyCar Series Indianapolis Star indystar com Archived from the original on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2014 06 28 Michigan Gov Gretchen Whitmer extends coronavirus stay at home order through April 30 mlive 2020 04 09 Retrieved 2020 04 11 a b Detroit Grand Prix had no choice but to cancel in 2020 Here s why Detroit Free Press Retrieved 2020 04 11 NTT INDYCAR SERIES ANNOUNCES 17 RACE 2022 SCHEDULE Indycar com Indycar Group Retrieved 20 September 2021 a b Guillen Joe Detroit Grand Prix to return downtown in 2023 under contract approved by City Council Detroit Free Press com Detroit Free Press Retrieved 3 November 2021 Lingemann Jake 30 September 2021 IndyCar Racing Returns To Downtown Detroit Car Buzz Car Buzz Inc Retrieved 30 September 2021 Brown Nathan Detroit City Council approves Detroit Grand Prix s downtown move starting in 2023 IndyStar com Indianapolis Star Retrieved 6 November 2021 Pyrson Mike 29 November 2021 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix Officials Unveil Circuit Map for 2023 Downtown IndyCar Race Autoweek Hearst Autos Retrieved 4 December 2021 a b c d Trans Am America s Road Racing Series Pryson Mike May 31 2014 E J Viso sweeps weekend Stadium Super Trucks races on Belle Isle in Detroit Autoweek Retrieved July 24 2019 Goricki David May 29 2015 Robby Gordon barrels to victory in super truck event The Detroit News Retrieved July 24 2019 EJ Viso Wins Race 2 At The Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix Stadium Super Trucks May 30 2015 Retrieved November 29 2019 Brudenell Mark May 31 2015 Bruce Jenner s son Burt wins truck race in Detroit USA Today Retrieved July 24 2019 Brudenell Mike June 3 2016 Brabham goes from Indy 500 to trucks win on Belle Isle Detroit Free Press Retrieved July 24 2019 a b Aussie driver needs to get his head rebuilt after horror crash ESPN com Associated Press June 6 2016 Retrieved July 24 2019 Goricki David June 5 2016 Matt Brabham grabs second Trucks victory The Detroit News Retrieved July 24 2019 Brudenell Mike June 4 2017 Sheldon Creed sweeps Stadium Super Trucks weekend with win in Race No 2 in Detroit Autoweek Retrieved July 24 2019 Nguyen Justin June 4 2018 SST Harlien and Luyendyk score Detroit victories Overtake Motorsport Retrieved January 15 2019 Robinson Geoff June 3 2018 Bachelor star Arie Luyendyk Jr picks up win at Belle Isle The Detroit News Retrieved January 15 2019 Belle Isle Retrieved 7 August 2022 1999 Detroit Grand Prix Retrieved 7 August 2022 a b 2022 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic Race Unofficial Results 1 Hours 40 Minutes PDF Retrieved 5 June 2022 2021 Indy Lights Detroit Session Facts Retrieved 13 June 2021 a b 2016 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic Race Official Results PDF Retrieved 1 May 2021 2021 Chevrolet Sports Car Classic Race Provisional Results PDF Retrieved 13 June 2021 Belle Isle 1992 1997 Retrieved 14 June 2021 a b c American Le Mans Series Detroit 2007 Retrieved 1 May 2021 2012 Indy Lights Detroit Session Facts Retrieved 1 May 2021 2012 Chevrolet Grand Am Detroit 200 Retrieved 1 May 2021 American Le Mans Series Detroit 2008 Retrieved 1 May 2021 1994 TRANS AM BOX SCORES PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 18 Retrieved 20 March 2023 NATCC 1997 Belle Isle Circuit Round 6 Results Retrieved 7 May 2022 Shaffer Rick June 19 1989 Fittipaldi takes bumpy CART win at Detroit Part 1 The Indianapolis Star p 18 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 6 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Shaffer Rick June 19 1989 Fittipaldi takes bumpy CART win at Detroit Part 2 The Indianapolis Star p 22 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 6 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Shaffer Rick June 18 1990 Michael dominates Detroit Grand Prix The Indianapolis Star p 13 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 6 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Harris Mike June 17 1991 Fittipaldi captures Detroit GP Part 1 The Indianapolis Star p 9 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 6 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Harris Mike June 17 1991 Fittipaldi captures Detroit GP Part 2 The Indianapolis Star p 10 Archived from the original on 2016 08 05 Retrieved June 6 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 8 1992 Bobby wins debut race on island Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 17 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 8 1992 Bobby wins debut race on island Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 20 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 8 1992 Fill in driver Tracy finds confidence on Belle Isle Detroit Free Press p 20 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 7 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 14 1993 Mansell finished 15th leaves press in the dust Detroit Free Press p 22 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Vincent Charlie June 14 1993 Gordon challenge thwarted by Ben Hur squeeze play Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 17 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Vincent Charlie June 14 1993 Gordon challenge thwarted by Ben Hur squeeze play Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 22 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 14 1993 Vindication amid the controversy Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 17 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 14 1993 Vindication amid the controversy Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 22 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 13 1994 Fender bender leaved Unser 10th puts Tracy in the winner s circle Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 19 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 13 1994 Fender bender leaved Unser 10th puts Tracy in the winner s circle Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 24 Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Retrieved June 8 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 12 1995 Gordon unsurpassed in final 35 laps on the island Detroit Free Press p 45 Archived from the original on 2016 08 07 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 10 1996 Andretti stays hot on wet track for Detroit win Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 27 Archived from the original on 2016 08 07 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 10 1996 Andretti stays hot on wet track for Detroit win Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 32 Archived from the original on 2016 08 07 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 9 1997 Moore wins when Blundell Guglemin run out on last lap Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 17 Archived from the original on 2016 08 08 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 9 1997 Moore wins when Blundell Guglemin run out on last lap Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 23 Archived from the original on 2016 08 08 Retrieved June 10 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 8 1998 After smoking the field Zanardi indulges in donut binge Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 26 Retrieved June 14 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve June 8 1998 After smoking the field Zanardi indulges in donut binge Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 33 Retrieved June 14 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Chengelis Angelique September 27 1998 Grand Prix shifts to August in 99 Detroit Free Press p 1 Retrieved June 14 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve August 9 1999 Franchitti maintains pace as Montoya others falter Part 1 Detroit Free Press p 25 Retrieved June 14 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Crowe Steve August 9 1999 Franchitti maintains pace as Montoya others falter Part 2 Detroit Free Press p 29 Retrieved June 14 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Castroneves scores his 1st CART victory The Indianapolis Star June 19 2000 p 32 Archived from the original on 2016 08 16 Retrieved June 27 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Harris Mike June 18 2001 Castroneves climbs fence standings with Detroit win Part 1 The Indianapolis Star p 25 Archived from the original on 2016 08 16 Retrieved June 27 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Harris Mike June 18 2001 Castroneves climbs fence standings with Detroit win Part 2 The Indianapolis Star p 31 Archived from the original on 2016 08 16 Retrieved June 27 2016 via Newspapers com nbsp Horsley Carlie September 1 2008 IndyCar Maiden win for Wilson SkySports Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved June 9 2012 a b Abuelsamid Sam September 1 2008 Detroit Grand Prix 2008 The IndyCars take to the track Autoblog Archived from the original on 2011 06 17 Retrieved July 1 2012 Householder Mike September 1 2008 Rookie Justin Wilson wins Detroit Indy Grand Prix The New York Times Archived from the original on 2017 08 15 Retrieved July 1 2012 Film star Paul Newman dead at 83 Reuters September 27 2008 Archived from the original on 2012 09 20 Retrieved June 9 2012 External links edithttp www detroitgp com http www champcarstats comPreceded byIndianapolis 500 IndyCar SeriesDetroit Grand Prix Succeeded byGrand Prix of Road America Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Detroit Grand Prix IndyCar amp oldid 1171676307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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