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1985 CART PPG Indy Car World Series

Sports season


Sports season

The 1985 CART PPG Indy Car World Series season was the 7th national championship season of American open wheel racing sanctioned by CART. The season consisted of 15 races. Al Unser Sr. was the national champion, and the rookie of the year was Arie Luyendyk. The 1985 Indianapolis 500 was sanctioned by USAC, but counted towards the CART points championship. Danny Sullivan won the Indy 500, in dramatic fashion, a race that became known as the "Spin and Win."

In September 1984, Rick Mears suffered serious leg injuries in a crash at Sanair. Mears drove only a part-time schedule in 1985, racing at Indianapolis, and subsequently on ovals only. Al Unser Sr. took Mears' full-time seat at Penske Racing as a substitute for the season. Unser had one win, ten top fives, and one other top ten, en route to the championship, a battle that climaxed in dramatic fashion in the final race of the season.

Season summary

Defending series champion Mario Andretti won the season opener, finished second at the Indy 500, and won the next two races, jumping out to the early points lead. A mid-season slump, however, saw him achieve only one top five finish the remainder of the year. He then broke his collarbone in a crash at Michigan, and was forced to sit out one race. The driver of the season became Al Unser Jr., who won the next two races (Meadowlands and Cleveland), and finished the year with nine finishes in the top 4.

At the midpoint of the season, Mario Andretti's points lead had dwindled, while Emerson Fittipaldi, Al Unser Sr., and Al Unser Jr. were all closing in. At the Pocono 500, Rick Mears triumphantly returned to victory lane after his leg injuries. Finishing second and third were Al Jr. and Al Sr., respectively, with Al Sr. now taking the points lead. Unser Jr. ate away at the points lead over the next four races, and the Unsers were neck-and-neck approaching the season finale. Meanwhile, Bobby Rahal was making a championship run of his own, winning 3 out of 4 races, and four poles in a row during a stretch in September–October. He almost won four races in row, but was taken out while leading at Sanair with only 13 laps to go. Rahal closed to within 13 points of the championship lead.

With two races to go, Unser Jr. led Unser Sr. by only 3 points. Father and son finished 1st and 2nd at Phoenix, and the standings were flipped. Al Sr. led Al Jr. by 3 points going into the finale at Miami. Rahal finished a distant 6th at Phoenix, and was mathematically eliminated from the championship.

The season finale at Tamiami Park ended in dramatic fashion. Danny Sullivan and Bobby Rahal finished 1st and 2nd, respectively, but the attention of the day was focused on the two Unsers. Late in the race, Al Unser Jr. was running third, and Al Unser Sr. was running 5th. At the moment, Al Jr. was leading the hypothetical championship standings by 1 point.

In the closing laps, Al Unser Sr. chased down and passed Roberto Moreno for 4th place. He held on to finish fourth, and thus won the championship by 1 point over his son. Unser Sr. afterwards expressed some regret about snatching the championship title from his son, but felt it was his responsibility to his own team and his own sponsors to race to his ability all the way to the end. It was also in the best interests of sportsmanship to all competitors not to give favor to his son. Unser Sr. also knew his days were numbered as a competitive driver on the circuit, while he knew Unser Jr. had many years ahead to have another chance at the title (Al Unser Jr. would indeed win the championship twice - 1990 and 1994).

The 1985 season saw two controversies at two separate races. The Michigan 500 had to be postponed for a week due to tire issues. In September, the race at Sanair came to a bizarre conclusion when the safety car, leading the field on the final lap under caution, suddenly veered into the pits on the final turn. Leader Johnny Rutherford was not informed, and second place Pancho Carter accelerated past him and beat him to the finish line. Officials initially awarded the victory to Carter, and Rutherford protested. After review, Rutherford was eventually restored the victory. (In many motorsport codes, the safety car exits to pit lane on the final lap; in most North American codes, the safety car remains on the circuit towards the finish line.)

Drivers and teams

The following teams and drivers competed in the 1985 Indy Car World Series season. All cars used Goodyear tires.

TeamChassisEngineNo*DriversRoundsPart-time entries
Team PenskeMarch 85CCosworth DFX4 (5)US Danny SullivanAll
5 (1)US Rick Mears2–3, 7, 9, 12
US Al Unser
11All except 3
Doug Shierson RacingLola T900Cosworth DFX30US Al Unser Jr.All
Truesports Co.March 85CCosworth DFX3 (10)USA Bobby RahalAll
8Canada Ludwig Heimrath Jr.10
Newman/Haas RacingLola T900Cosworth DFX1 (3)USA Mario AndrettiAll except 8
Australia Alan Jones8
Patrick RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX20Italy Bruno Giacomelli1, 4–6, 8, 10–11, 13, 15
US Sammy Swindell7, 9
US Don Whittington2-3, 12, 14
40Brazil Emerson FittipaldiAll
60US Rich Vogler2
All American RacersEagle 85GC (All except 4, 11, and 13–14)Cosworth DFX2US Tom SnevaAll
Lola T90097US Tony Bettenhausen Jr.2
Eagle 85GC (All except 3, 6)98US Ed PimmAll except 6
Kraco RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX18US Kevin CoganAll
99US Michael AndrettiAll
Alex Morales MotorsportsMarch 85CCosworth DFX21US Johnny RutherfordAll
Machinists Union RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX55Mexico Josele GarzaAll
59US Pete Halsmer2–6, 12
UK Rupert Keegan10, 13, 15
US Chip Ganassi7
Galles RacingMarch 85CBuick V-6 (1-2)
Cosworth DFX (3-15)6US Pancho Carter2–4, 6–7, 9, 11–12, 14
Brazil Roberto Moreno5, 8, 10, 13, 15
Cosworth DFX7Australia Geoff BrabhamAll
Team CotterMarch 85CCosworth DFX9Colombia Roberto GuerreroAll
Forsythe RacingLola T900Cosworth DFX32/33US Howdy Holmes1-12
NED Jan Lammers13-15
Pace RacingMarch 84C (1-6)Cosworth DFX36Australia Dennis Firestone1-13
UK Jim Crawford14-15
Dick Simon RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX22Brazil Raul Boesel1, 4–6, 8, 10, 13, 15
US Dick Simon2-3, 7, 9, 11–12, 14
23Brazil Raul Boesel2, 7
US Dick Simon5
Leader Card RacingMarch 84C (1, 5)Cosworth DFX24US Rocky Moran1, 4-5
March 84C (7)US Tom Bigelow2–3, 7, 9
March 84CUS Phil Krueger6
March 85CUS Herm Johnson8, 10
March 85CUS Gary Bettenhausen11–12, 14
March 85CUSA Dominic Dobson13, 15
Canadian Tire RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX67UK Jim Crawford11
76Canada Jacques Villeneuve Sr.All except 2, 7, 9, and 12
US Johnny Parsons2
Provimi RacingLola T900Cosworth DFX61The Netherlands Arie LuyendykAll except 9-10
Arciero RacingLola T900 (All other races)Cosworth DFX12US Bill WhittingtonAll except 7, 9, 11, and 14
US Randy Lanier14
Lola T900571–2, 4–6, 8, 10, 13, 15
Dale Coyne RacingLola T800Chevy19US Dale CoyneAll except 1 and 11
Gohr RacingMarch 85CChevy56US Steve ChasseyAll except 1 and 11
Hemelgarn RacingLola T900 (All other races)Cosworth DFX71Ireland Michael Roe1–2, 4-6
US Spike Gehlhausen3, 7
Argentina Enrique Mansilla8, 10-11
US Scott Brayton13-15
Wysard RacingLola T900Cosworth DFX34UK Jim Crawford1–3, 5-6
US Darin Brassfield15
Brayton RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX/Buick V-637US Scott Brayton1–7, 9, 12
Interscope RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX25US Danny Ongais1–2, 6–7, 9, 12, 14-15
AMI RacingMarch 85CCosworth DFX43US John Paul Jr.2, 6
NED Jan Lammers4-5
Circle Bar RacingLola T900Cosworth DFX38US Chet Fillip2–3, 6-7
Menard Cashway LumberMarch 85CCosworth DFX8US Herm Johnson2
Tom Hess RacingLola T800Cosworth DFX27 (29)US Dick Ferguson1
Lola T900Ireland Derek Daly2
US Jeff Wood6
UK Ian Ashley15
Purcell RacingMarch 83CCosworth DFX50US Tom Bigelow2
51US Phil Krueger2
Gilmore RacingMarch 85C (All other races)Cosworth DFX14US A. J. Foyt2, 5–7, 9, 11, 14-15
March 84C41US Mike Nish2, 14
March 85CChevy44US George Snider2
Cosworth DFX84US Chip Ganassi2
Theodore RacingTheodoreCosworth DFX15Brazil Chico Serra4
  • The number in parentheses is the number the car used at the Indianapolis 500, if a different number was used.

Notable team and driver changes

  • Rick Mears was sidelined due to injuries for much of the season. Danny Sullivan left Doug Shierson Racing to join Team Penske.
  • Al Unser Jr. left Galles Racing to replace Sullivan at Doug Shierson Racing. He was replaced at Galles Racing by Geoff Brabham, who previously drove for Kraco Racing.
  • Mayer Motor Racing, which ran 1984 with drivers Tom Sneva and Howdy Holmes, did not run in 1985. Tom Sneva moved to All American Racers, which expanded to a two car team, while Howdy Holmes moved to Forsythe Racing, who had run 1984 without a steady driver.
  • Galles Racing expanded to a two car team. Joining Geoff Brabham, the second car was run by Pancho Carter on the ovals and rookie Roberto Moreno on the road courses.
  • Bignotti-Cotter Racing changed its name to Team Cotter, continuing to field a car for Roberto Guerrero.
  • Bill Whittington, who did not have a ride in 1984, joined Arciero Racing, replacing Pete Halsmer. Halsmer only ran a few races that year.
  • Rookie Arie Luyendyk ran his first full season, driving for Provimi Veal Racing. He replaced Derek Daly, who was left without a full-time ride.
  • Geoff Brabham was replaced at Kraco Racing by Kevin Cogan.
  • Gordon Johncock retired shortly before the 1985 Indianapolis 500. He was replaced at Patrick Racing by rookie Bruno Giacomelli.
  • Johnny Rutherford returned to full-time driving, replacing Al Holbert at Alex Morales Motorsports. Holbert returned to sports cars.
  • Dick Simon scaled back to part-time driving. His ride at Dick Simon Racing was split with Raul Boesel.
  • Stan Fox, who ran full-time in 1984, did not run in 1985. A variety of drivers are ran at Leader Card Racing.
  • Interscope Racing and driver Danny Ongais only ran part-time in 1985.
  • Tom Hess Racing, which drove most of 1984 with Dick Ferguson, also scaled back to part-time.

Schedule

IconLegend
Oval/Speedway
Road course
Street circuit
RdDateNameCircuitLocation123456789101112131415
April 14USA Toyota Grand Prix of Long BeachStreets of Long BeachLong Beach, California
May 26USA Indianapolis 500Indianapolis Motor SpeedwayIndianapolis, Indiana
June 2USA Miller American 200 in Honor of Rex MaysMilwaukee MileWest Allis, Wisconsin
June 16USA Stroh's/G.I. Joe's 200Portland International RacewayPortland, Oregon
June 30USA U.S. Grand Prix at the MeadowlandsMeadowlands Sports ComplexEast Rutherford, New Jersey
July 7USA Budweiser Cleveland Grand PrixBurke Lakefront AirportCleveland, Ohio
July 28**USA Michigan 500Michigan International SpeedwayBrooklyn, Michigan
August 4USA Provimi Veal 200Road AmericaElkhart Lake, Wisconsin
August 18USA Domino's Pizza 500Pocono International RacewayLong Pond, Pennsylvania
September 1USA Escort Radar Warning 200Mid-Ohio Sports Car CourseLexington, Ohio
September 8CAN Molson Indy 300Sanair Super SpeedwaySaint-Pie, Quebec
September 22USA Detroit News 200Michigan International SpeedwayBrooklyn, Michigan
October 6USA Stroh's 300kLaguna Seca RacewayMonterey, California
October 13*USA Dana 150Phoenix International RacewayAvondale, Arizona
November 9USA Beatrice Indy ChallengeTamiami ParkMiami, Florida
  • The Dana 150 was scheduled for March 31, but postponed on March 13 due to track damage sustained over winter testing. On August 6, it was rescheduled for an October 13 date.

** The Michigan 500 was scheduled for July 21, but postponed a week due to tire concerns. NBC did not return to televise the race.

Results

RdEvent namePole positionWinnerWinning teamRace time123456789101112131415
Toyota Grand Prix of Long BeachUS Mario AndrettiUS Mario AndrettiNewman/Haas Racing1:42:50
[Indianapolis 500](1985-indianapolis-500)US Pancho CarterUS Danny SullivanTeam Penske3:16:06
Miller American 200 in Honor of Rex MaysUS Mario AndrettiUS Mario AndrettiNewman/Haas Racing1:36:38
Stroh's/G.I. Joe's 200US Danny SullivanUS Mario AndrettiNewman/Haas Racing1:51:35
U.S. Grand Prix at the MeadowlandsUS Mario AndrettiUS Al Unser Jr.Doug Shierson Racing1:51:55
Budweiser Cleveland Grand PrixUS Bobby RahalUS Al Unser Jr.Doug Shierson Racing1:45:31
[Michigan 500](1985-michigan-500)US Rick MearsBrazil Emerson FittipaldiPatrick Racing3:53:58
Provimi Veal 200US Danny SullivanCAN Jacques Villeneuve Sr.Canadian Tire Racing1:45:12
[Domino's Pizza 500](1985-domino-s-pizza-500)US Rick MearsUS Rick MearsTeam Penske3:17:47
Escort Radar Warning 200US Bobby RahalUS Bobby RahalTruesports1:52:23
Molson Indy 300US Bobby RahalUS Johnny RutherfordAlex Morales Motorsports2:03:54
Detroit News 200US Bobby RahalUS Bobby RahalTruesports1:13:19
Stroh's 300kUS Bobby RahalUS Bobby RahalTruesports1:38:56
Dana 150US Al UnserUS Al UnserTeam Penske1:14:35
Beatrice Indy ChallengeUS Bobby RahalUS Danny SullivanTeam Penske2:04:59
  • Indianapolis was USAC-sanctioned but counted towards the CART title.

Drivers points standings

PosDriverLBH USA[INDY](1985-indianapolis-500) USAMIL USAPOR USAMEA USACLE USAMIS1 USAROA USAPOC USAMOH USASAN CanadaMIS2 USALAG USAPHX USATAM USAPts123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960PosDriverLBH USA[INDY](1985-indianapolis-500) USAMIL USAPOR USAMEA USACLE USAMIS1 USAROA USAPOC USAMOH USASAN CanadaMIS2 USALAG USAPHX USATAM USAPts
US Al Unser544332*732713*122**1***4**151**
US Al Unser Jr.92572*1*11517*2*4323323**150**
US Bobby Rahal272792025**28**644**1*****10****1*****1***6**2*****133**
US Danny Sullivan314**27**182714**13**5258841**126**
US Mario Andretti**1***2***1***1**26**14*1077152111327**114**
Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi21383281568251324826**104**
US Tom Sneva82022461132181575191921**66**
Canada Jacques Villeneuve Sr.7DNQ22232141311251317**54**
US Michael Andretti198192847272131419259525**53**
US Rick Mears213**30****1**2**51**
US Johnny Rutherford10623914154DNS142219212619**51**
Mexico Josele Garza283171227619182611667109**46**
US Ed Pimm1292119DNS5112098314912**45**
US Kevin Cogan231116579725172194172224**44**
Australia Geoff Brabham619121424229151913416101222**41**
US Pancho Carter13**33**5131616122107**37**
Colombia Roberto Guerrero263615DNS1913191818232442128**34**
The Netherlands Arie Luyendyk1771721105Wth6DNS181522257**33**
Italy Bruno Giacomelli181051022616614**32**
UK Jim Crawford416DNS913201516**16**
US Bill Whittington1614DNS26162424517DNQ8**15**
US Scott Brayton1130DNQ61525816222618DNQ**15**
Australia Alan Jones3**14**
US Danny OngaisDNQ1720227146**14**
US Howdy Holmes14101117132291021162118DNS**12**
The Netherlands Jan Lammers161252013**11**
Ireland Michael Roe21DNQ7826**11**
Brazil Roberto Moreno281625165**10**
US Johnny Parsons5**10**
Brazil Raul Boesel2018111112288232023**10**
Argentina Enrique Mansilla91012**8**
US Pete HalsmerDNQ1581911**7**
Australia Dennis Firestone22DNQ2018DNQ21112091714DNS23**6**
US Steve ChasseyDNQDNSDNQ20DNS12261112141511DNQ**6**
UK Rupert Keegan191210**4**
US Dick Simon26131725101719DNQ**3**
US Chet FillipDNQ101817**3**
USA Dominic DobsonDNS1811**2**
US Herm JohnsonDNQ1224**1**
Ireland Derek Daly12**1**
US Randy Lanier24DNQ2222201420131715**0**
US Spike Gehlhausen1418**0**
US John Paul Jr.1517**0**
US Phil KruegerDNQDNQ2115**0**
US Rocky Moran15DNQDNQ**0**
US Gary Bettenhausen22DNS16**0**
US Tom BigelowDNQ182623**0**
UK Ian Ashley18**0**
US A. J. Foyt2823Wth24242320**0**
US Don Whittington24DNQ202024**0**
US Chip Ganassi2222**0**
US Dale CoyneDNQDNSDNQDNQDNS24232728DNS27DNQDNQ**0**
US Sammy Swindell2325**0**
US Rich Vogler23**0**
US Jeff Wood23**0**
US Dick Ferguson25DNQ**0**
Brazil Chico Serra25**0**
26**0**
US Tony Bettenhausen Jr.29**0**
US George Snider32**0**
US Darin BrassfieldDNQ**-**
US Frank ChianelliDNQ**-**
US Gordon JohncockWth**-**
US Jerry KarlDNQ**-**
US Mike NishDNQEX**-**
US Willy T. RibbsWth**-**
US Ken SchraderDNP**-**
ColorResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
Green4th-6th place
Light Blue7th–12th place
Dark BlueFinished
(Outside Top 12)
PurpleDid not finish
RedDid not qualify
(DNQ)
BrownWithdrawn
(Wth)
BlackDisqualified
(DSQ)
WhiteDid not start
(DNS)
BlankDid not
participate
(DNP)
Driver
replacement
(Rpl)
Injured
(Inj)
Race not held
(NH)
Not competing

|- |

**In-line notation**
**Bold**
*Italics*
*

|} |}

Sanair controversy

In the Sanair race (Molson Indy 300), Roberto Guerrero had a strong lead until he lost control and spun. Later in the race Jacques Villeneuve Sr. collided with leader Bobby Rahal in an attempt to challenge for the lead, taking both out. The race finished under a yellow flag, but the safety car entered pit lane on the final lap, and thinking there would be a final restart, Pancho Carter passed Johnny Rutherford after the safety car entered pit lane and before the finish line. CART initially declared Carter the winner, but an appeals panel later overturned the decision and confirmed Rutherford's victory. In many codes of motorsport (typically FIA Code) the safety car enters pit lane as the field is on the final lap, and the cars cross the checkered flag together without the safety car on course. However, this practice is not accepted in North America, where the safety car leads the leaders to the finish line if the caution flag is still in effect.

References

References

  1. Rollow, Cooper. "INDY SURPRISE: JOHNCOCK SAYS HE`S RETIRING". chicagotribune.com.
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