Long Beach Grand Prix

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Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach
Venue Streets of Long Beach, California
Corporate sponsor Toyota
First race 1975
First IndyCar race 2009
Distance 1.968 miles
Number of laps 85
Previous names Inaugural Long Beach Grand Prix (1975)
United States Grand Prix West (1976-1983)
Long Beach Grand Prix (1984-1985)

The Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach is an open-wheel race held on a temporary road course in Long Beach, California. It was the premier circuit in the Champ Car from 1996, and was the first event in the World Series each year from 2004. The 2008 race was the last race for Champ Cars as the series merged with the Indy Racing League,[1][2] and is now an event on the Indycar Series calendar.

The Long Beach Grand Prix in April is the single largest event in the city of Long Beach. Attendance for the weekend regularly reaches or exceeds 200,000 people.

The Long Beach Grand Prix is the longest running major "street" race held on the North American continent. It started in 1975 as a Formula 5000 race on the streets of downtown, and became a Formula One event the following year. From 1984 to 2008 it was a CART/Champ Car event. Other popular events during the Grand Prix week include an Indy Lights race, an American Le Mans Series race, an Atlantic and the Toyota Pro/Celebrity Race.

The Long Beach Grand Prix has been announced since 1978 by Bruce Flanders (and his assorted guest announcers) and is frequently a fan favorite.

Contents

[edit] Circuit

Long Beach
Location Long Beach, California, USA
Time zone UTC-8 (UTC-7 DST)
Major Events IRL IndyCar Series
Long Beach Grand Prix
American Le Mans Series
Grand Prix of Long Beach
Surface Asphalt
Circuit Length 1.968 mi (3.167 km)
Turns 11
Lap Record 1:06.886 (Sébastien Bourdais, Newman-Haas Racing, 2006, Champ Car World Series)

The current race circuit is a 1.968-mile (3.167 km) temporary road course carved out of the city streets surrounding the Convention Center of Long Beach, California. It is particularly noted for its last section, which sees a hairpin turn followed by a long, slightly curved front straightaway which runs the length of Shoreline Drive. The circuit is situated on the Long Beach waterfront, and is lined with palm trees (especially along the front straightaway), making for a scenic track.

[edit] Events

Boris Said competes at the 2005 Long Beach Grand Prix.

Although the IRL race is the main event, a number of other races are also held. On April 8, 2006, the Grand-Am Daytona Prototypes took to the streets, replacing the suspended Trans-Am Series. Beginning in 2007, the American Le Mans Series replaced Grand-Am. Other races include the Atlantic Championship and the popular Toyota Pro/Celebrity Race. Additionally, a week of fairs, music, and promotional activities is held. However, the Atlantics did not return after the 2008 event.

[edit] 2008 and the Long Beach/Motegi "split weekend"

During negotiations which led to the merging of the Champ Car World Series and the IRL IndyCar Series, a problem came in the form of a scheduling conflict between the Champ Car race scheduled at Long Beach and the IndyCar race held at Twin Ring Motegi the same weekend. Honda, who owns the Motegi complex and also supplies equipment to the IndyCar Series, could not change their scheduled race date of April 19. Likewise, Long Beach could not change their race weekend (with the Champ Car race scheduled for April 20), such change being a difficult task considering the civil and infrastructural preparations required for a temporary street circuit.

However, all problems were resolved when the two open wheel series agreed to merge in February 2008. Tony George (president of the Indy Racing League), with Kevin Kalkhoven and Gerald Forsythe (the former co-owners of Champ Car) planned an unprecedented "split weekend" of races at Twin Ring Motegi and Long Beach. This compromise allowed all IRL drivers to race in Japan, while ex-Champ Car drivers raced at Long Beach. Both races counted towards the 2008 IndyCar Series Championship. The Long Beach Grand Prix allowed all Champ Car drivers to race with their turbocharged Panoz-Cosworth Champ Cars that would have been used had the merger not taken place. Long Beach/Motegi was the only split weekend of the 2008 IndyCar Series.

[edit] Drifting

Beginning in 2005 the event included a demonstration by participants in the Formula D drifting series, in which participants engage in controlled slides, moving their cars sideways across the track.

[edit] Winners

[edit] Formula One

Previous layout used by F1
Season Date Driver Constructor Report
1976 March 28 Flag of Switzerland Clay Regazzoni Ferrari Report
1977 April 3 Flag of the United States Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford Report
1978 April 2 Flag of Argentina Carlos Reutemann Ferrari Report
1979 April 8 Flag of Canada Gilles Villeneuve Ferrari Report
1980 March 30 Flag of Brazil Nelson Piquet Brabham-Ford Report
1981 March 15 Flag of Australia Alan Jones Williams-Ford Report
1982 April 4 Flag of Austria Niki Lauda McLaren-Ford Report
1983 March 27 Flag of the United Kingdom John Watson McLaren-Ford Report

[edit] Formula 5000/CART/Champ/IndyCar

Season Date Winning Driver Chassis Engine Team Report
Formula 5000 history
1975 September 28 Flag of the United Kingdom Brian Redman Lola Chevrolet Report
CART/Champ Car history
1984 March 31 Flag of the United States Mario Andretti Lola Cosworth Newman/Haas Racing Report
1985 April 14 Flag of the United States Mario Andretti Lola Cosworth Newman/Haas Racing Report
1986 April 13 Flag of the United States Michael Andretti March Cosworth Kraco Racing Report
1987 April 5 Flag of the United States Mario Andretti Lola Chevrolet-Ilmor Newman/Haas Racing Report
1988 April 17 Flag of the United States Al Unser, Jr. March Chevrolet-Ilmor Galles Racing Report
1989 April 16 Flag of the United States Al Unser, Jr. Lola Chevrolet-Ilmor Galles Racing Report
1990 April 22 Flag of the United States Al Unser, Jr. Lola Chevrolet-Ilmor Galles/Kraco Racing Report
1991 April 14 Flag of the United States Al Unser, Jr. Lola Chevrolet-Ilmor Galles/Kraco Racing Report
1992 April 12 Flag of the United States Danny Sullivan Galmer Chevrolet-Ilmor Galles/Kraco Racing Report
1993 April 18 Flag of Canada Paul Tracy Penske Chevrolet-Ilmor Penske Racing Report
1994 April 17 Flag of the United States Al Unser, Jr. Penske Ilmor Penske Racing Report
1995 April 9 Flag of the United States Al Unser, Jr. Penske Mercedes-Benz-Ilmor Penske Racing Report
1996 April 14 Flag of the United States Jimmy Vasser Reynard Honda Chip Ganassi Racing Report
1997 April 13 Flag of Italy Alex Zanardi Reynard Honda Chip Ganassi Racing Report
1998 April 5 Flag of Italy Alex Zanardi Reynard Honda Chip Ganassi Racing Report
1999 April 18 Flag of Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya Reynard Honda Chip Ganassi Racing Report
2000 April 16 Flag of Canada Paul Tracy Reynard Honda Team Green Report
2001 April 8 Flag of Brazil Hélio Castroneves Reynard Honda Penske Racing Report
2002 April 14 Flag of the United States Michael Andretti Reynard Honda Team Green Report
2003 April 13 Flag of Canada Paul Tracy Lola Ford-Cosworth Forsythe Racing Report
2004 April 18 Flag of Canada Paul Tracy Lola Ford-Cosworth Forsythe Racing Report
2005 April 10 Flag of France Sébastien Bourdais Lola Ford-Cosworth Newman/Haas Racing Report
2006 April 9 Flag of France Sébastien Bourdais Lola Ford-Cosworth Newman/Haas Racing Report
2007 April 15 Flag of France Sébastien Bourdais Panoz Cosworth Newman/Haas Racing Report
2008 April 20 Flag of Australia Will Power Panoz Cosworth KV Racing Report
IRL IndyCar Series history
2009 April 19 Flag of the United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Dallara Honda Chip Ganassi Racing Report

[edit] Atlantics/Indy Lights

Season Date Driver
Atlantic Championship history
1989 West April 16 Flag of Japan Hiro Matsushita
1990 West April 21 Flag of the United States Mark Dismore
1991 April 14 Flag of the United States Jimmy Vasser
1992 April 10 Flag of the United States Mark Dismore
1993 April 17 Flag of Canada Claude Bourbonnais
1994 April 17 Flag of the United States Richie Hearn
1995 April 17 Flag of Canada David Empringham
1996 April 13 Flag of the United States Case Montgomery
1997 April 12 Flag of Canada Alex Tagliani
1998 April 4 Flag of the United States Memo Gidley
1999 April 17 Flag of Canada Alex Tagliani
2000 April 15 Flag of the United States Buddy Rice
2001 April 8 Flag of Canada David Rutledge
2002 April 14 Flag of Canada Michael Valiante
2003 April 13 Flag of the United States A. J. Allmendinger
2004 April 18 Flag of the United Kingdom Ryan Dalziel
2005 April 10 Flag of the United Kingdom Katherine Legge
2006 April 9 Flag of Germany Andreas Wirth
2007 April 15 Flag of Brazil Raphael Matos
2008 April 20 Flag of Switzerland Simona de Silvestro
Season Date Driver
Indy Lights history
1989 April 16 Flag of Ireland Tommy Byrne
1990 April 22 Flag of Canada Paul Tracy
1991 April 14 Flag of Belgium Eric Bachelart
1992 April 12 Flag of France Franck Freon
1993 April 18 Flag of the United Kingdom Steve Robertson
1994 April 17 Flag of the United Kingdom Steve Robertson
1995 April 9 Flag of Canada Greg Moore
1996 April 14 Flag of Canada David Empringham
1997 April 13 Flag of Brazil Hélio Castroneves
1998 April 5 Flag of Brazil Cristiano da Matta
1999 April 18 Flag of Austria Philipp Peter
2000 April 16 Flag of New Zealand Scott Dixon
2001 April 8 Flag of the United States Townsend Bell
2002-2008: No races held
2009 April 19 Flag of the United States J. R. Hildebrand

[edit] American Le Mans Series

Year LMP1 LMP2 GT1 GT2
2007 Flag of Italy Rinaldo Capello
Flag of the United Kingdom Allan McNish
Audi R10 TDI
Flag of France Romain Dumas
Flag of Germany Timo Bernhard
Porsche RS Spyder
Flag of the United Kingdom Oliver Gavin
Flag of Monaco Olivier Beretta
Chevrolet Corvette
Flag of Finland Mika Salo
Flag of Brazil Jaime Melo
Ferrari F430
2008 Flag of Germany Marco Werner
Flag of Germany Lucas Luhr
Audi R10 TDI
Flag of the United States Scott Sharp
Flag of Australia David Brabham
Acura ARX-01B
Flag of the United States Johnny O'Connell
Flag of Denmark Jan Magnussen
Chevrolet Corvette
Flag of Germany Dominik Farnbacher
Flag of Germany Dirk Müller
Ferrari F430
2009 Flag of Brazil Gil de Ferran
Flag of France Simon Pagenaud
Acura ARX-02a
Flag of Mexico Adrián Fernández
Flag of Mexico Luis Díaz
Acura ARX-01B
Flag of the United Kingdom Oliver Gavin
Flag of Monaco Olivier Beretta
Chevrolet Corvette
Flag of the United States Patrick Long
Flag of Germany Jörg Bergmeister
Porsche 911
2005 Long Beach Grand Prix, showing turn 10 and the Long Beach skyline.

[edit] Television History

CART Champ Car & IRL IndyCar races

Season Date US TV channel Lap-by-lap Driver Analyst(s) Pit Reporters
1984 March 31 NBC Paul Page Johnny Rutherford Gary Gerould & Bruce Jenner
1985 April 14 NBC Paul Page Bobby Unser Gary Gerould & Bruce Jenner
1986 April 13 NBC Paul Page Unknown Gary Gerould & Bruce Jenner
1987 April 5 NBC Paul Page Jackie Stewart Gary Gerould & Bruce Jenner
1988 April 17 Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown
1989 April 16 Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown
1990 April 22 Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown
1991 April 14 ABC Paul Page Bobby Unser & Sam Posey Jack Arute & Gary Gerould
1992 April 12 ABC Paul Page Bobby Unser & Sam Posey Jack Arute & Gary Gerould
1993 April 18 ABC Paul Page Bobby Unser & Sam Posey Jack Arute & Gary Gerould
1994 April 17 ABC Paul Page Bobby Unser & Sam Posey Jack Arute & Gary Gerould
1995 April 9 ABC Paul Page Bobby Unser & Sam Posey Jack Arute & Gary Gerould
1996 April 14 Unknown Unknown Danny Sullivan Unknown
1997 April 13 Unknown Unknown Danny Sullivan Unknown
1998 April 5 ESPN Bob Varsha Danny Sullivan Gary Gerould & Jon Beekhuis
1999 April 18 ABC Paul Page Parker Johnstone Gary Gerould & Jon Beekhuis
2000 April 16 ESPN Paul Page Parker Johnstone Gary Gerould & Jon Beekhuis
2001 April 8 ESPN Paul Page Parker Johnstone Gary Gerould & Jon Beekhuis
2002 April 14 FOX Bob Varsha Tom Kendall Unknown
2003 April 13 SPEED Bob Varsha Tommy Kendall Unknown
2004 April 18 Spike TV Bob Jenkins Tommy Kendall Derek Daly, Jon Beekhuis, & Chris McClure
2005 April 10 NBC Rick Benjamin Derek Daly Bill Stephens, Jon Beekhuis, Cameron Steele, & Michelle Biesner
2006 April 9 NBC Rick Benjamin Derek Daly Bill Stephens, Jon Beekhuis, Cameron Steele, & Michelle Biesner
2007 April 15 NBC Bill Weber Jon Beekhuis & Wally Dallenbach, Jr. Marty Snider & Dave Burns
2008 April 20 ESPN2 Marty Reid Scott Goodyear Jack Arute, Jamie Little, Vince Welch, & Brienne Pedigo
2009 April 19 Versus Bob Jenkins Jon Beekhuis & Robbie Buhl Jack Arute, Robbie Floyd, & Lindy Thackston

[edit] References

  1. ^ Morales, Robert (February 27, 2008). "Champ Car finale to roar into L.B.". The Long Beach Press-Telegram. http://www.presstelegram.com/news/ci_8387289. Retrieved on 2008-02-27. 
  2. ^ Steven Cole Smith (2007-11-06). "Champ Car schedule "stable" for 2008". www.autoweek.com. http://www.autoweek.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071106/FREE/71106009/1015/FREE. Retrieved on 2007-10-30. 

[edit] External links


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Coordinates: 33°45′59″N 118°11′34″W / 33.76639°N 118.19278°W / 33.76639; -118.19278

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