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Pennzoil Copper World Indy 200

 

Location: Phoenix International Raceway
1 Mile Paved Oval
200 Laps/200 Miles
March 18, 2001
Time of race: 1:36:56.7051
Average speed of winner: 125.072
Margin of victory: 1.3786
Lead changes: 8 among 6 leaders
Cautions: 5 for 37 laps
Lap leaders: Ray pole, Hornish 1-67, Ray 68-73, de Ferran 74-76, Castroneves 77-80, Sharp 81, Ray 82-118, Gregoire 119-127, Hornish 128-200

 

IRL Results at Phoenix International Raceway
IRL Race Results 2001
IRL Information
IRL Drver Champions

Summary:

One of the rookie class of 2000 made an unexpected mark in the IRNLS's newly-annointed series opening race at PIR. For the first time, the IRNLS ran at Phoenix as the headlining race of the fabled Copper World Classic, and Davey Hamilton attempted all four races, winning the Supermodified race the day before. Hamilton was driving the IRNLS car of new car owner Sam Schmidt, the former driver who had been paralyzed in a testing crash the previous year.

The later season opening made for some interesting team lineups and changes, besides Schmidt and Hamilton. Jaret Schroeder emerged with the PDM team, while Tristar and Jim Immke joined forces to field a car for Tyce Carlson. Treadway had a car for rookie Filipe Giaffone (cousin to former IRNLS driver Affonso Giaffone); Galles also had a famous relative in a car in the form of rookie Casey Mears (nephew of the great Rick Mears), plus another rooke, Frenchman Didier Andre. Panther had hired Sam Hornish to replace the semi-retired Scott Goodyer, and Jeff Ward turned up with a new team founded by himself and Mitch Davis. But the big news was the two-car entry of Penske Motorsports, for the first time in an IRNLS race. The Penske team planned to use the race as a warm-up for their Indy entry with their regular drivers, Gil de Ferran and Helio Castroneves. And for the first time the famed Ilmor engine shop entered IRNLS competition, building engines for Penske, Kelley, and Schmidt.

For the 2001 season, qualifying bonus points were eliminated to remove the incentive for teams to build special qualifying engines. This didn't stop Greg Ray from dominating qualifying as usual, winning the pole and breaking his own Phoenix lap record for the IRNLS new cars. Hornish qualified a surprising second in his first start with the Panther team. The long-awited Infiniti 35A engine finally made its debut, with Robbie Buhl and Eddie Cheever putting two examples on the grid 8th and 12th respectively; Cheever said that the engine had more but its 30-lb. weight reduction from the old Infiniti engine had upset their handling and they hadn't yet figured out to take advantage. The Galles team made an unexpectedly poor showing with Al Unser, the highest-qualifying of their three cars, only in 23rd position.

The race began with slick track conditions owing to incompatible rubber laid down by the Silver Bullet cars that raced just before the IRNLS event. It nearly began without Ward, who had problems getting his engine started; fortunately, he did get going just in time to join the field on the pace lap. The surprises began when Hornish blew off Ray on the start and took the lead using the outside groove in turn 1. It was a sign of things to come. Stephan Gregoire, who had ran well at Test in the West, pursued Ray with surprising ferocity. Meanwhile, Buhl dropped back with handling problems, which was to be the story of his day. While Ray, Gregoire, defending IRNLS champion Buddy Lazier, Ward, and de Ferran pursued, Hornish quickly drove away to a 4-second lead, slowed only momentarily by a caution for a spin by rookie Brandon Erwin, making his first IRNLS start. The Galles cars continued to sruggle; both Mears and Andre were in and out of the pits with handling problems, as was Shigeaki Hattori. After the green, it took Hornish only ten laps to regain his four-second lead, while Gregoire passed Ray for second on lap 40 and Eliseo Salazar moved up through the field. Hornish's car slowed some on old tires and by lap 50 he was fighting off Gregoire, while Ray ran third followed by B. Lazier, Ward, de Ferran, Salazar, Scott Sharp, Cheever, and Billy Boat (driving for the newly reconstituted team of Greg Beck). The race continued under green and on lap 59 Ray retook second from Gregoire.

Since few drivers had taken advantage of the early caution to top up on fuel, green flag pit stops began on lap 62. Hornish pitted, on lap 69, giving the lead to Ray, who led until he pitted on lap 73. At this point de Ferran took over. The cars with the Ilmor engines, although somewhat down on power, were getting excellent fuel mileage and the Penske team was planning on running the race with only two pit stops. However, de Ferran was having problems with his radio, and distracted, he missed the pit entrance on lap 75. The next lap, with his fuel light on and still struggling to talk to the crew, he missed entering the apron in turn 3 and then tried to dive into the pit entrance directly from the racing groove in turn 4. The abrupt braking surprised Jaret Schroeder who was following closely, and he rear-ended de Ferran and both cars spun into the wall, collecting Mark Dismore. No one was hurt but all three cars were out.

The caution came at a bad time for several faster cars who had just stopped: Hornish, Lazier, and Ward were all caught a lap down to the surprise leader, Helio Castroneves. However, a new rule came into play at this point which would prove to make a difference in the outcome of the race. After the pit stops, with Ray having assumed the lead, several cars including Hornish, Lazier, and Gregoire were in line in front of Ray and hence at the tail end of the lead lap. Under the new restart rule, just before the restart the pace car picked up the leader and all of the cars in line in front of him were waved around, putting Hornish and Lazier back on the lead lap. The green waved on lap 82 with Ray leading Castroneves and all of the others trying to pick their way through traffic.

While Hornish worked his way back towards the front, Ray set off into the lead. Shortly he had built a 4-second lead and the Menard team was looking dominant. But starting around lap 100 (while Al Unser went to the pits with an engine failure), the surprising Gregoire began reeling him in, and Stephan made a daring outside pass in turn 1 on lap 118 to take the lead. There proved to be a good reason: Ray's engine was running lean due to a fuel pressure problem, and three laps later it blew. The race continued under green for a few more laps unitl a yellow was thrown for the oil. That caution was short; so was Gregoire's time up front. As the green flag waved, Gregoire moved up in turn 1 to pass Buhl but suddenly found himself balked by the slower car of Lazier, who couldn't find a gear. Gregoire cut to the inside but his left rear hit Buhl's right front; Gregoire spun into the wall and crashed. Buhl continued but the damage made his car even more ill-handling than it already was. Many teams took advantage of this caution for pit stops, and Hornish emerged with the lead again and a few handling adjustments.

The green finally came back out for a while on lap 139. Hornish was closely pursued by Castroneves at the start but shortly began pulling away, followed by Lazier, Salazar, and Sharp. Immediately Salazar took third from Lazier, and then as he went to work on Castroneves, the Penske driver's engine expired. A few laps later Sarah Fisher had to bail out of her car in turn 1 as it caught fire after an engine failure; fortunately she was not hurt. Hornish almost lost the lead to Salazar in traffic but built up his margin again after lap 150 as he got clear track. On lap 158, Stan Wattles (in the first race of his new deal driving as a teammate to Lazier at Hemelgarn), pinched his car down exiting turn 2, spun, and backed hard into the inside wall, knocking out a large chunk. Wattles was taken off on a backboard as a precaution, but no back or neck injuries were found, and he returned to the track to be interviewed near the end of the race. The rest of the race was anticlimatic as far as the lead went, but a good duel for second shaped up between Salazar, Lazier, and Sharp. Lazier might have been the fastest of the three, but he was handicapped by a gearbox stuck in fourth gear that had his engine on the rev limiter nearly all the way down the straights. Several times Sharp nearly passed Lazier only to get picked in traffic, and both were catching Salazar when the checkered flag flew.

It flew on the yellow Pennzoil car with 21-year-old Sam Hornish at the wheel, the youngest winner of an Indy car race ever, according to IRNLS publicity. It was the second win in a row for the Panther team, following Scott Goodyear's win for them in his farewell at Texas the previous year. Salazar posted his best finish since his win at Las Vegas in 1997. Lazier set an IRNLS record by finishing on the lead lap for the fourth race in a row. Giaffone was the top-finishing rookie, in sixth. Airton Dare was robbed of a lead-lap finish by a late engine failure, while Boat, Ward, Robby McGehee, and Hamilton all put in credible finishes with their new teams. Erwin kept himself out of further trouble after his early spin and made the checkered flag in his first race, in twelth. (from IRL Underground)

Finish
Start
Driver
Car #
Sponsor/Name
Chassis
Engine
Laps
Status
1
2
Sam Hornish, Jr.
4
Pennzoil Panther
Dallara
Oldsmobile
200
1:36:56.710
2
13
Eliseo Salazar
14
Harrah's
Dallara
Oldsmobile
200
1:36:58.089
3
6
Buddy Lazier
91
Tae-Boo/Coors Light
Dallara
Oldsmobile
200
1:36:58.606
4
10
Scott Sharp
8
Delphi Automotive Systems
Dallara
Oldsmobile
200
1:37:01.562
5
7
Billy Boat
98
CURB Records
Dallara
Oldsmobile
200
1:37:13.455
6
9
Felipe Giaffone
21
Hollywood
G-Force
Oldsmobile
199
Flagged
7
3
Jeff Ward
35
Heritage Motorsports
G-Force
Oldsmobile
199
Flagged
8
16
Robby McGehee
10
Olympus/Opalescence
Dallara
Oldsmobile
198
Flagged
9
11
Buzz Calkins
12
Bradley Food Marts
Dallara
Oldsmobile
197
Flagged
10
18
Airton Dar
88
1-800-BAR-NONE
G-Force
Oldsmobile
197
Flagged
11
8
Robbie Buhl
24
Team Purex
G-Force
Nissan
196
Flagged
12
20
Davey Hamilton
99
Sam Schmidt Motorsports
Dallara
Oldsmobile
192
Flagged
13
24
Shigeaki Hattori
55
EPSON
Dallara
Oldsmobile
192
Flagged
14
26
Brandon Erwin
30
WorldBestBuy.com
G-Force
Oldsmobile
185
Flagged
15
19
Tyce Carlson
6
Tri Star Motorsports
Dallara
Oldsmobile
162
Mechanical
16
14
Stan Wattles
92
Hemelgarn Racing
Dallara
Oldsmobile
157
Wrecked
17
21
Sarah Fisher
15
Walker Racing/Kroger
Dallara
Oldsmobile
145
Engine
18
17
Helio Castroneves
68
Penske Auto Center
Dallara
Oldsmobile
142
Engine
19
12
Eddie Cheever
51
Excite@Home
Dallara
Nissan
133
Throttle
20
25
Casey Mears
31
Galles Racing/Sportsline.com
G-Force
Oldsmobile
133
Electrical
21
4
Stephan Gregoire
7
Tokheim/Jack Elrod Co.
Dallara
Oldsmobile
131
Wrecked
22
1
Greg Ray
2
Johns Manville
Dallara
Oldsmobile
121
Engine
23
23
Al Unser, Jr.
3
Galles Racing/Starz
G-Force
Oldsmobile
104
Engine
24
5
Gil de Ferran
66
Penske Auto Center
Dallara
Oldsmobile
76
Wrecked
25
15
Mark Dismore
28
Delphi Automotive Systems
Dallara
Oldsmobile
75
Wrecked
26
22
Jeret Schroeder
9
Summit Packaging
Dallara
Oldsmobile
74
Wrecked
27
27
Didier Andr
32
Galles Racing
G-Force
Oldsmobile
53
Handling