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American open-wheel car racing

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1994 Indianapolis 500, a National Championship race

Since 1916 there has been a recognized United States national automobile racing National Championship for drivers of professional-level, single-seat open wheel race cars. The championship has been under the auspices of several different sanctioning bodies since 1909. Since 1911, the Indianapolis 500-mile race has been regarded as the marquee event of the National Championship. As of 2011, the top-level American open wheel racing championship is sanctioned by IndyCar.

The open-wheeled, winged, single-seater cars have generally been similar to those in Formula One, though there are important differences. Due to the fame of the Indianapolis 500, the term Indy Car (or IndyCar, Indycar) is a more popular term used to describe the cars that would typically compete in U.S. Championship car racing, popularized during the rising popularity of CART PPG Indy Car World Series racing in the early 1990s.

Sanctioning bodies

AAA (1902–1955)

The national championship was sanctioned by the Contest Board of the American Automobile Association. The AAA first sanctioned automobile motorsports events in 1902 and introduced the first championship for racing cars as early as 1905 but it was canceled after a couple of serious incidents. Barney Oldfield was leading the championship at the point it was canceled. Official records regard 1916 as the first contested season, however, titles were later retroactively awarded back to 1909. Championship racing did not cease in the United States during World War I, however, the Indianapolis 500 itself was voluntarily suspended for 1917–1918. Shortly after Pearl Harbor, all auto racing was suspended. From 1942–1945 no events were contested, primarily due to rationing. Racing resumed in 1946.

AAA ceased racing participation after 1955 following a quick succession of high-profile fatal accidents — Manuel Ayulo during practice at Indianapolis on May 16; Alberto Ascari at Monza on May 26; two-time defending Indianapolis 500 winner Bill Vukovich during the Indy 500 itself on May 30; and the Le Mans disaster on June 11.

Note that through 1922 and again from 1930-1937, it was commonplace for the cars to be two-seaters, as opposed to the aforementioned standard single-seat form. The driver would be accompanied by a riding mechanic (or "mechanician").

USAC (1956–1978)

The national championship was taken over by the United States Auto Club, a new sanctioning body formed by the then-owner of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Tony Hulman. It would continue in a stabilized environment for over two decades. During this time, the Indianapolis 500 continued to grow in popularity, while international participation began creeping into the series. During the 1960s, the cars evolved from front-engine roadsters to rear-engine formula-style racers. The schedule was dominated by ovals, and dirt track eventually were almost completely phased out. Technology and speed climbed at a fast rate.

Hulman died in 1977, and several USAC officials were killed in a plane crash in 1978. By the end of the 1970s, a growing dissent amongst the participants was based on many factors, including poor promotion and revenue. Events outside of Indianapolis were suffering from poor attendance, and few events were even televised.

SCCA/CART & USAC (1979–1981)

Championship Auto Racing Teams was formed by most of the existing team-owners, with some initial assistance from the SCCA. Therefore, there were two national championships run each by USAC and CART. The Indianapolis 500 remained under USAC sanction. The top teams allied to CART, and the CART championship became the de facto national championship. USAC ran a "rump" 1979 season, with few cars and fewer name drivers—the only exception being A. J. Foyt.

  • In 1979, USAC denied several of the upstart CART series entries' to the 1979 Indianapolis 500. The ongoing controversy saw a court injunction during the month, which allowed the CART-affiliated traditional entrants to participate. Due to controversy over rules enforcement during the month, a special auxiliary time trials session was held the day before the race to allow those denied a chance to qualify for the field. Two cars were added to the back of the pack, bringing the total number of starters to 35 (up from the traditional 33).
  • In early 1980 USAC and CART jointly formed the Championship Racing League (CRL) to run the national championship, but IMS management disliked the idea. The CRL was quickly abandoned. USAC remained as sanctioning body for the Indianapolis 500 itself, but the field was composed of CART-based teams. CART exclusively sanctioned the remainder of the season, and the national championship.[1]
  • In 1981–1982, the Indianapolis 500 remained an independent race sanctioned by USAC and composed CART teams. Other independent "one-off" teams entered at Indianapolis as well. Indianapolis was not included as a points-paying round of the CART national championship. In addition, by that time USAC had designated Indianapolis an "invitational" race, offering entries only to invited teams. That moved to prevent the uproar over denied entries which occurred in 1979.
  • One further race in 1981 was run by USAC at Pocono. This race was not supported by many CART teams, and featured a mixed field filled out by converted dirt track cars. USAC ultimately withdrew from sanctioning championship races outside of the Indianapolis 500. USAC ceremoniously created the Gold Crown Championship, an essentially meaningless title as the season consisted of only one paved championship-level round (the Indy 500) after 1981. The situation was such that the season ended with the Indianapolis 500, thus it spread over two calendar years.

CART & USAC (1982–1995)

Stability returned and the national championship was now run by CART full-time. The Indianapolis 500 was sanctioned singly by USAC, but points were paid towards the CART season championship. The Indy 500 field would consist of the CART regulars, and several one-off entries. The season was conducted similarly to the sanctioning of professional golf — three of the four golf majors are sanctioned by separate organizations, but they still count as the most important events on the PGA Tour calendar.

USAC's Gold Crown Championship continued, settling into an unusual June through May schedule calendar (spreading across two calendar years), which provided that the Indianapolis 500 would be the final race of the respective season. However, during that period, the USAC schedule never included more than one race (i.e., Indianapolis).

CART & IRL (1996–2003)

In 1996, Tony Hulman's grandson, Tony George, president of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway created the Indy Racing League (IRL), a separate championship that initially leveraged the fame of the Indianapolis 500, which saw the exclusion of many of CART's top teams from that event. The IRL's results are either listed alongside the existing national championship [2] or treated as an entirely separate entity and not included. [3] [4]

  • In March 1996, CART filed a lawsuit against the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in an effort to protect their license to the IndyCar mark which the Indianapolis Motor Speedway had attempted to terminate. In April, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway filed a countersuit against CART to prevent them from further use of the mark. Eventually a settlement was reached in which CART agreed to give up the use of the IndyCar mark following the 1996 season and the IRL could not use the name before the end of the 2002 season.
  • George initially let the USAC continue to sanction the IRL, however after judging controversies at 1997 Indy 500 and Texas Motor Speedway, the USAC was replaced by the IRL's in-house officiating.
  • CART's existing national championship remained dominant after the split for some time, initially retaining top drivers, teams, sponsors, and fans. In 1998, CART went public and raised $100 million USD in its stock offering. However, in 2000, CART teams began to return to the Indy 500, eventually defecting to the IRL. CART also suffered negative publicity over the cancellation of the Firestone Firehawk 600 in 2001. For 2003, it lost title sponsor FedEx and engine providers Honda and Toyota to the IRL.

IRL & CCWS (2004–2007)

The rights to CART's assets were purchased by a consortium called Open Wheel Racing Series (OWRS) in 2004 and the series was renamed the Champ Car Open Wheel Racing Series, later renaming it to Champ Car World Series (CCWS) LLC. However, the sanctioning body continued to be plagued by financial difficulties, In 2007, CCWS's presenting sponsors Bridgestone and Ford Motor Company withdrew and CCWS lacked the resources to mount the 2008 season.

IRL (2008–2010) & IndyCar (starting 2011)

Prior to the start of the 2008 season, the CCWS Board authorized bankruptcy and Champ Car was absorbed into the IRL, creating one unified series for the national championship for the first time since 1978. The unified series competed under the name Indy Racing League IndyCar Series. All historical record and property of CART/CCWS was assumed by the IRL. In 2011, the sanctioning body dropped the Indy Racing League name, becoming simply IndyCar.

Car names and trademarks

Marlboro Penske PC-23 Indy/Champ car

Race cars participating in national championship events have been referred to by various names. Early nomenclature was to call the machines "Championship Cars," which was later shortened to "Champ Cars." The ambiguous term "Big Cars" was also commonplace in early years. A term that reflected the machines being larger and faster than junior formulae such as sprints and midgets. That term has disappeared from use. In the post WWII era, the term "Speedway Cars" was also used, a loosely descriptive term, distinguishing the machines as those driven at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and other major speedways, as opposed to those driven at local dirt tracks, for instance.

In most years since the USAC era, the term "Indy cars" (after the Indy 500) has been the preferred moniker. Apropos to that, when CART was founded in 1979, its acronym stood for Championship Auto Racing Teams, which reflected the historical use of the term "Championship Car." Soon thereafter, CART started exclusively marketing itself with the two-word "Indy Car" term, advertising itself as the "CART Indy Car World Series."

Through the 1980s, the term "Indy car" was used to describe the machines used to compete in events sanctioned by CART, as well as the machines competing in the Indianapolis 500 (singly sanctioned by USAC). All references to the name "CART" were being increasingly discouraged as the series sought to eliminate possible confusion from casual fans with Kart racing.

In 1992, the CamelCase term "IndyCar" was trademarked by IMS, Inc. It was licensed to CART through 1997. After the inception of the IRL in 1996, the terms of the contract were voided after a lawsuit. As part of the settlement, the term was shelved by a six-year non-use agreement. Following the settlement, and the lack of direct connection to the Indianapolis 500, CART decided to revert back to the former term. It re-branded itself as Champ Car and the machines were referred to as "Champ cars."

Complicating the situation resulting from the open-wheel split, Champ Car races held outside the United States were still permitted to use the Indy moniker (e.g., Toronto Molson Indy and Lexmark Indy 300). Foreign venue promoters took advantage of the marketing power of the Indy 500 name for their events, even though the Champ Car series they were promoting no longer had any ties to that race. The exceptions created confusion, and Champ Car gradually phased out the usage to distance itself further from the IRL.

After the settlement expired in 2003, the IndyCar term was brought back. The top level of the Indy Racing League was re-branded as the "IndyCar Series." The machines in the series were also referred to as "IndyCars." Despite the official acknowledgment, media and fans alike would continue to use the term "IRL" to describe the series, and to a lesser extent, "IRL cars" to describe the machines. Removing the "IRL" term from use proved difficult.

In 2008, when Champ Car merged into the Indy Racing League, the term "Champ Car" was abandoned, and all open wheel racing fell under the "IndyCar" name once again. On January 1, 2011, the name "Indy Racing League" (and "IRL") was officially abandoned, with the sanctioning body re-branded as IndyCar.

Comparison with Formula One

At first, American and European open-wheel racing were not distinct disciplines. Races on both continents were mostly point-to-point races, and large ovals tracks emerged on both continents. But in America, racing took off at horse-race tracks and at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, while in Europe, racing from point to point and around large circuits gained in popularity. Grand Prix racing (which became Formula One) and rally racing then diverged in Europe. Formula One was established after World War II as the World Championship for road racing, and F1 cars became increasingly specialized and high-tech.

In the 1960s, road racing gained popularity in North America, and Formula One-style design ideas changed IndyCars, which until then had all been classic-styled front-engined roadsters. When North America's road racing championship, Can-Am Challenge, collapsed in the 1970s, the IndyCars were ready to fill the void. IndyCar was a combination road- and oval-racing championship from this time until the Split. Compared to F1 cars, IndyCars were partly specialized for oval-racing: they were larger and had other safety features, and were designed to run at the higher speeds necessary for oval racing. Because IndyCars were usually "customer" cars that the teams purchased from constructors, and because of rules to contain costs, they were considerably less expensive than F1 cars, each model of which was designed by the team that used it. After the Split in the 1990s, CART maintained the old formula while the IRL drifted toward the "spec" design that has been the only IndyCar model since 2003 (though this is slated to change in 2012).

As engine formulas have changed, and as engine technology has developed over time, F1 cars and IndyCars have each produced more power than the other at different times. But for the foreseeable future, F1 cars will have considerably more power than the spec IndyCar.

Alex Zanardi, who drove both in F1 and CART, said that the lighter, naturally-aspirated F1 car was more responsive and accelerated off the turns faster, while the turbocharged CART car was more stable and accelerated to top speed faster.

Some consider Formula One more demanding than IndyCar. They point out that champions that retired from F1 have won CART championships, and that drivers that did not excel in F1 have continued their careers and succeeded in IndyCar. In fact, since IndyCar's heyday in the 1990s, the difference between the money and attention spent on IndyCar and on F1 has become more pronounced. Others argue that IndyCars are more demanding because, with only one or a few standard car designs, the drivers are to be judged more on their ability than against their team's ability to design a car. Oval racing, which currently consists of about half the Indycar schedule, also requires skills that road racing does not (and vice versa).

Caution periods are also done differently in Formula One and IndyCars. Largely because of IndyCar's oval-racing heritage, incidents that leave a hazard on or near the track always draw a full-course caution period. Because the entire field of cars gathers behind the leader for each restart, IndyCars that have fallen back in the field can earn a chance to challenge the leaders by making strategic pit stops. IndyCar-style caution periods also force the leader to withstand a possible challenge with every restart. By contrast, caution periods are usually only called in F1 for hazards on the track itself, so F1 drivers are by comparison more likely to be judged by their lap driving ability alone than by their pit strategy or aggression during restarts.

Open wheel cars

  • In general, Indy cars of both CART and IndyCar are slower on street and road courses, being less expensive and technology-centric platforms than their Formula One counterparts. This was even the case during the CART PPG era during the mid to late 1990s. Currently, with the bid to keep costs down around teams, a competitive Indy car team like Newman-Haas Racing operates on approximately US$20 Million per season, while the McLaren-Mercedes F1 team has an annual budget of US$400 million.[1] In particular, the Formula One chassis was required to be built by their respective team/constructor, whereas an Indy car chassis could be purchased. The dominance of a select few manufacturers has essentially turned the IndyCar Series into a spec series. CART/CCWS became a spec series more intentionally for cost savings purposes.

Racing description

  • Indy car racing historically tended to take place on high speed ovals, while Formula One used primarily permanent road courses. Recently, however, Champ Car had no oval tracks for the 2007 season which was its last, while the IRL added street courses to what was originally an all-oval series, and currently IndyCar has a nearly equal balance of ovals and non-ovals.
  • Indy car racing (CART/CCWS/IRL) is generally considered less demanding than Formula One. Excluding Jim Clark and Graham Hill, as neither drove a full season in Indy cars, five F1 drivers have successfully made the switch; three of whom were F1 champions and one of these was previously a three time USAC champion, the predecessor to CART. Twice former F1 champion Emerson Fittipaldi, who had retired from F1, won the CART Championship in 1989, the Indy 500 the same year and again in 1993. Nigel Mansell won the CART Championship in 1993, following his F1 World Championship of 1992; he became the only driver in history to hold both the Formula One and CART championships at the same time because when he won the 1993 CART Championship, he was still 1992 F1 Champion as the 1993 F1 Championship hadn't been decided. The exception is Mario Andretti, who won the USAC Championship, in 1965, '66 and '69 and the Indy 500 that year, the F1 World Champion in 1978 and CART Championship in 1984. Though neither were F1 Champions, Danny Sullivan switched from F1 and won the 1985 Indy 500 and 1988 CART Championship, as did Alex Zanardi who won CART championships back to back, in 1997 and '98. Also indicative of Indy car racing's lower status is that it is considered a stepping stone to F1, as a top six finish in the final driver's standings of CART or IRL will qualify the driver for an FIA Super Licence. As for Indy car drivers, only two have successfully switched to F1; Mario Andretti, as previously mentioned and Jacques Villeneuve who was second in the 1996 F1 Championship and then F1 World Champion in 1997. Juan Pablo Montoya was moderately successful while others such as Michael Andretti, Cristiano da Matta and more recently four times in a row, 2004-2007 Champ Car World Series winner Sébastien Bourdais, were unable to adapt and returned to CART, or as in Bourdais case, currently racing in the Superleague Formula. It should be noted that there have been a greater number of former F1 drivers, like Mark Blundell, JJ Lehto, Christian Fittipaldi, Roberto Guerrero, Christian Danner and former Ferrari driver Stefan Johansson who have switched from F1 to Indy car racing and who have had success elude them, compared to Indy car drivers switching to F1.
  • Indy car racing was dominated by North American drivers until the 1990s, which saw incursions from European and South American drivers. This led to Tony George forming the IRL in order to promote American drivers. Conversely, American drivers have never found great success in Formula One since the 1970s, the last drivers' champion and race winner was Mario Andretti.
  • Due to the lack of American drivers, Formula One has struggled to establish itself in that market, at certain years not having a United States Grand Prix on the calendar (the most recent was from 2000-2007). In a parallel, CART/CCWS/IRL has made little headway outside of the United States and Canada, even though it regularly has a handful of tracks around the world.

Types of circuits

The American National Championship is notable for the wide variety of racetracks it has used compared to other series, such as Formula One and the various forms of Endurance sports car racing. The mainstays of the championship are as follow:

Until 1970 the championship frequently raced on dirt and clay tracks, but all such tracks were removed permanently by the USAC before the 1971 season.

From 1915 to 1931 board tracks were frequently used for championship races, however safety concerns and cost of maintenance, especially with the onset of the Great Depression, and nearly all were demolished in the 1930s.

The Pikes Peak Hillclimb was a round of the championship in the years 1947—1955 and 1965—1969.

In 1909 a point-to-point race from Los Angeles to Phoenix was included in the championship.

Airport runways have also been used to create temporary circuits. The most notable used for open wheel racing was the Cleveland Grand Prix at Burke Lakefront Airport. St. Pete and Edmonton also utilize airport runways for parts of the course, however, they lead back to streets for the rest of the lap.

Non-US races

For the majority of the National Championship, the races have been held inside the United States. First championship event outside of US took place in 1967. American championship cars raced in Monza oval in 1957 and 1958 in a non-championship Race of Two Worlds. Also, in 1966 there was a non-championship USAC race in Japan.

Beginning in the mid-1980s, CART expanded throughout North America, venturing into Mexico (Mexico City) and Canada — Sanair, Toronto and Vancouver — the latter two becoming mainstays. Eventually international expansion reached overseas with Surfers Paradise, Rio, Motegi, as well as Lausitz and Rockingham, among others.

Currently, the IndyCar Series holds races in Canada, Brazil, and Japan.

Vanderbilt Cup

The 1916, 1936 and 1937 Vanderbilt Cup races were included in the National Championship. The 1909–1915 races were retrospectively added to the championship in 1926. CART resurrected the Cup in 1996 as the winner's trophy for the US500 race. When that race was discontinued in 2000, the Cup changed roles and became the championship trophy. As OWRS bought all of CART's assets in 2004 they have kept rights to use the Cup.

Indianapolis 500 and 'The Split'

From its inception in 1911, to creation of the Indy Racing League in 1996, the Indianapolis 500 was a round of the National Championship. The exceptions are the 1981 and 1982 races, which were removed from the CART championship for political reasons by the USAC. However, when the race still attracted all of the regular teams despite its lack of championship status USAC relented and allowed CART to run at Indianapolis.

Winning the Indianapolis 500 has always had at least an equal profile with the winning the National Championship, although direct comparisons are difficult as many of the National Champions also won the Indy 500. 1993 is a good example of a year when the winners of each title received the same amount of attention. That year former Formula One champion Emerson Fittipaldi won the 500 but the current F1 champion Nigel Mansell won the National Championship, becoming the only driver to win both titles consecutively.

The creation of the IRL in 1996 with the Indianapolis 500 as its centerpiece race removed the race from the existing National Championship. This of course was a hugely controversial move in racing circles, with opinions at the time ranging from praise to ridicule—in 2004 the US Sports Illustrated magazine named the IRL's formation as one of the 'Ten Dumbest Moments in Sports'. [citation needed] This assessment was based on the notable decline in the number of television viewers, car entries and estimated grandstand ticket sales (the Speedway does not officially announce sales figures), since the impasse began in 1996.

By late 2007, both entities had fallen far behind NASCAR in popularity, participants, and media coverage. Several top drivers, including Americans A.J. Allmendinger and Sam Hornish Jr and 2007 IRL Champion Dario Franchitti, had switched to or were seriously contemplating a switch to stock cars. Neither the Champ Car World Series nor the Indy Racing League seemed to have an edge over the other in terms of credibility or prestige. Neither series had more than 20 cars outside of Indianapolis (compared with 25-28 as late as 2001), so a merger was the only logical move.

On February 22, 2008, both series announced the acquisition of Champ Car assets by IRL founder and Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner Tony George, effectively rolling the former series into the latter, and reuniting American open wheel racing under IndyCar Series control.

Further details of the 'Split' can be found under IndyCar and Champ Car.

Notable drivers

Notable fatalities in competition

  • Ted Horn, champion in 1946-1947-1948 died after crashing at the DuQuoin dirt track in late 1948.
  • 1951 and 1958 champion Tony Bettenhausen was killed in a crash at Indianapolis in May 1961.

Retrospectively awarded champions

In 1926 the AAA Competitions board retrospectively calculated championship results for major AAA-sanctioned races run in 1905 & between 1909 and 1915 and for 1917 to 1919.

In 1951 racing historian Russ Catlin officially revised AAA records with championship results based on all AAA races from 1902–1915 and 1916–1919. This had the effect of retroactively creating seven newly credited champions and changing the 1909 champion from Bert Dingley to George Robertson and the 1920 champion from Gaston Chevrolet to Tommy Milton.

Although the 1909–1919 races were not considered to be part of a championship at the time, they are included in statistics by most historians.

National champions

Ralph DePalma, National Champion in 1912 and 1914
Jacques Villeneuve, 1995 National Champion
Juan Pablo Montoya, 1999 CART Champion
Cristiano da Matta, 2002 CART Champion
Dan Wheldon, 2005 IRL IndyCar Series champion
Sebastien Bourdais, 4-time Champ Car World Series champion (2004–2007)
Year Retroactively awarded AAA titles
1902 United States Harry Harkness
1903 United States Barney Oldfield
1904 United States George Heath
Year AAA National Track Championship
1905 France Victor Hémery/United States Barney Oldfield
Year Retroactively awarded AAA titles
1906 United States Joe Tracy
1907 United States Eddie Bald
1908 United States Lewis Strang
1909 United States George Robertson/United States Bert Dingley
1910 United States Ray Harroun
1911 United States Ralph Mulford
1912 Italy Ralph DePalma
1913 United States Earl Cooper
1914 Italy Ralph DePalma
1915 United States Earl Cooper
Year AAA National Championship
1916 United Kingdom Dario Resta
Year Retroactively awarded AAA titles due to World War I
1917 United States Earl Cooper
1918 United States Ralph Mulford
1919 United States Howard Wilcox
Year AAA National Championship
1920 Switzerland Gaston Chevrolet
1921 United States Tommy Milton
1922 United States Jimmy Murphy
1923 United States Eddie Hearne
1924 United States Jimmy Murphy
1925 United States Pete DePaolo
1926 United States Harry Hartz
1927 United States Pete DePaolo
1928 United States Louis Meyer
1929 United States Louis Meyer
1930 United States Billy Arnold
1931 United States Louis Schneider
1932 United States Bob Carey
1933 United States Louis Meyer
1934 United States Bill Cummings
1935 United States Kelly Petillo
1936 United States Mauri Rose
1937 United States Wilbur Shaw
1938 United States Floyd Roberts
1939 United States Wilbur Shaw
1940 United States Rex Mays
1941 United States Rex Mays
1942 No automobile racing held due to World War II
1943
1944
1945
1946 United States Ted Horn
1947 United States Ted Horn
1948 United States Ted Horn
1949 United States Johnnie Parsons
1950 United States Henry Banks
1951 United States Tony Bettenhausen
1952 United States Chuck Stevenson
1953 United States Sam Hanks
1954 United States Jimmy Bryan
1955 United States Bob Sweikert
Year USAC National Championship
1956 United States Jimmy Bryan
1957 United States Jimmy Bryan
1958 United States Tony Bettenhausen
1959 United States Rodger Ward
1960 United States A. J. Foyt
1961 United States A. J. Foyt
1962 United States Rodger Ward
1963 United States A. J. Foyt
1964 United States A. J. Foyt
1965 United States Mario Andretti
1966 United States Mario Andretti
1967 United States A. J. Foyt
1968 United States Bobby Unser
1969 United States Mario Andretti
1970 United States Al Unser
1971 United States Joe Leonard
1972 United States Joe Leonard
1973 United States Roger McCluskey
1974 United States Bobby Unser
1975 United States A. J. Foyt
1976 United States Gordon Johncock
1977 United States Tom Sneva
1978 United States Tom Sneva
Year SCCA/CART Series Year USAC Championship
1979 United States Rick Mears 1979 United States A. J. Foyt
Year CART PPG Indy Car World Series Year USAC Gold Crown Championship* **
1980 United States Johnny Rutherford 1980 United States Johnny Rutherford*
1981 United States Rick Mears 1981–82 United States George Snider*
1982 United States Rick Mears
1983 United States Al Unser 1982–83 United States Tom Sneva*
1984 United States Mario Andretti 1983–84 United States Rick Mears*
1985 United States Al Unser 1984–85 United States Danny Sullivan**
1986 United States Bobby Rahal 1985–86 United States Bobby Rahal**
1987 United States Bobby Rahal 1986–87 United States Al Unser**
1988 United States Danny Sullivan 1987–88 United States Rick Mears**
1989 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi 1988–89 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi**
1990 United States Al Unser, Jr. 1989–90 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk**
1991 United States Michael Andretti 1990–91 United States Rick Mears**
1992 United States Bobby Rahal 1991–92 United States Al Unser, Jr.**
1993 United Kingdom Nigel Mansell 1992–93 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi**
1994 United States Al Unser, Jr. 1993–94 United States Al Unser, Jr.**
1995 Canada Jacques Villeneuve 1994–95 Canada Jacques Villeneuve**
1996 United States Jimmy Vasser Year Indy Racing League
1996 United States Scott Sharp & United States Buzz Calkins
Year CART FedEx Championship Series 1996–97 United States Tony Stewart
1997 Italy Alex Zanardi
1998 Italy Alex Zanardi 1998 Sweden Kenny Bräck
1999 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya 1999 United States Greg Ray
2000 Brazil Gil de Ferran 2000 United States Buddy Lazier
2001 Brazil Gil de Ferran 2001 United States Sam Hornish, Jr.
2002 Brazil Cristiano da Matta 2002 United States Sam Hornish, Jr.
Year Champ Car World Series Year IRL IndyCar Series
2003 Canada Paul Tracy 2003 New Zealand Scott Dixon
2004 France Sébastien Bourdais 2004 Brazil Tony Kanaan
2005 France Sébastien Bourdais 2005 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon
2006 France Sébastien Bourdais 2006 United States Sam Hornish, Jr.
2007 France Sébastien Bourdais 2007 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti
Year IndyCar Series
2008 New Zealand Scott Dixon
2009 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti
Year IZOD IndyCar Series
2010 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti
* From 1979-1995, the Indianapolis 500-Mile Race and the American Open Wheel National Championship were sanctioned by separate organizations, USAC and CART, respectively, with the former running a multi-race championship series, the USAC Gold Crown Championship, independent of the latter from 1979-1984.
** From 1984-1995, while winners of the USAC Gold Crown Championship continued to be officially declared, such championship, officially beginning just after the previous year's race, then consisted solely of the "season-ending" race at Indianapolis, thus making such winners indistinguishable from Indianapolis winners in the respective years of such championships' conclusions.

Top championship winners

This list of champions includes winners of all titles awarded in the "National champions" list above (including the "USAC Gold Crown Championship" which, in some years, was awarded to the winner of the Indy 500).

Wins Driver Titles
7 United States A. J. Foyt USAC National Championship (6), USAC Championship (1)
6 United States Rick Mears SCCA/CART Series (1), CART PPG Series (2), USAC Gold Crown Championship (3)
4 United States Mario Andretti USAC National Championship (3), CART PPG Series (1)
United States Bobby Rahal CART PPG Series (3), USAC Gold Crown Championship (1)
United States Al Unser, Jr. CART PPG Series (2), USAC Gold Crown Championship (2)
France Sébastien Bourdais Champ Car World Series (4)
3 United States Ted Horn AAA National Championship (3)
United States Louis Meyer AAA National Championship (3)
United States Earl Cooper AAA National Championship (3)
United States Al Unser CART PPG Series (2), USAC Gold Crown Championship (1)
Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi CART PPG Series (1), USAC Gold Crown Championship (2)
United States Sam Hornish, Jr. Indy Racing League (2), IRL IndyCar Series (1)
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti IRL IndyCar Series (1), IndyCar Series (1), IZOD IndyCar Series (1)
2 United States Wilbur Shaw AAA National Championship (2)
United States Rex Mays AAA National Championship (2)
Italy Ralph DePalma AAA National Championship (2)
United States Tommy Milton AAA National Championship (2)
United Kingdom Jimmy Murphy AAA National Championship (2)
United States Tony Bettenhausen AAA National Championship (1), USAC National Championship (1)
United States Jimmy Bryan AAA National Championship (1), USAC National Championship (1)
United States Joe Leonard USAC National Championship (2)
United States Tom Sneva USAC National Championship (2)
United States Johnny Rutherford CART PPG Series (1), USAC Gold Crown Championship (1)
Canada Jacques Villeneuve CART PPG Series (1), USAC Gold Crown Championship (1)
Italy Alex Zanardi CART FedEx Championship Series (2)
Brazil Gil de Ferran CART FedEx Championship Series (2)
New Zealand Scott Dixon IRL IndyCar Series (1), IndyCar Series (1)

See also

Template:Champ Car Series Nav Box

References

External links