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1996 Indy 200 at Walt Disney World

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United States 1996 Walt Disney World
Race details
1st round of the 1996 Indy Racing League season
DateJanuary 27, 1996
Official nameIndy 200 at Walt Disney World
LocationWalt Disney World Speedway
CoursePermanent racing facility
1.000 mi / 1.609 km
Distance200 laps
200.000 mi / 321.869 km
WeatherDry with temperatures reaching up to 80.1 °F (26.7 °C); wind speeds reaching up to 13 miles per hour (21 km/h)[1]
Pole position
DriverBuddy Lazier (Hemelgarn Racing)
Time19.847
Fastest lap
DriverBuzz Calkins (Bradley Motorsports)
Time20.954 (on lap 188 of 200)
Podium
FirstBuzz Calkins (Bradley Motorsports)
SecondTony Stewart (Team Menard)
ThirdRobbie Buhl (Beck Motorsports/Zunne Group)

The 1996 Indy 200 at Walt Disney World was the first round of the 1996 Indy Racing League,[2] and the inaugural event for the Indy Racing League, who initiated the American open-wheel split that would last for 12 years. The race was held on January 27, 1996, at the 1.000 mi (1.609 km) Walt Disney World Speedway in Bay Lake, Florida. The race was won by a rookie driver, Buzz Calkins, after leading 130 laps. Future Indy Racing League and NASCAR champion Tony Stewart also made his Indy car debut, finishing second after a late-race duel with Calkins.

Report

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Pre-Race

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The first event for the breakaway Indy Racing League took place at Walt Disney World Speedway, a brand new venue inaugurated on November 28, 1995.[3] Testing began immediately with tire sessions held by Firestone and Goodyear, followed by an open test on December 4–8, with 16 drivers testing at some point.[4] 13 of them were included in a tentative entry list published on December 6, highlighted by 1990 Indianapolis 500 winner Arie Luyendyk, IMS track record holder Roberto Guerrero, 1995 Indianapolis 500 pole sitter Scott Brayton and two full-time drivers from that year's IndyCar World Series season, Eddie Cheever and Eliseo Salazar. The veterans were joined by a handful of rookie drivers headlined by former Formula 1 race winner Michele Alboreto and Formula Atlantic champion Richie Hearn.[5] All IndyCar teams refused to get involved in the IRL, and none of the top-16 drivers in the standings from the two previous IndyCar seasons were entered. Five other car-driver combinations entered for the opening round did not feature in testing during the month: Johnny O'Connell, Johnny Parsons and American Indycar drivers Rick DeLorto, Jim Buick and Tony Turco, who were joining fellow AIS competitors Butch Brickell and Bill Tempero.

During the Firestone tire session, Buddy Lazier tested a Hemelgarn Racing car and set the fastest time of the week at 182.621 mph, with Hearn, Buzz Calkins and Salazar posting laps over 181 mph in the following days. John Paul Jr. shook down the Brickell Racing car for a couple dozen laps, and World of Outlaws multi-champion Steve Kinser had a trial with A. J. Foyt Racing during the Goodyear tire session, with a best lap of 168 mph that fell 5 mph short of Foyt's main driver Davey Hamilton. Kinser aimed to reach a deal for an IRL ride alongside Hamilton, but the chance never materialized.[6] Further testing followed from January 9–19, with 18 drivers taking part at some point. Both Hearn and Guerrero were absent from testing, and five new signings being made during the week: Lazier, Paul Jr., Scott Sharp, Robbie Buhl and Lyn St. James. The newly signed Lazier remained comfortably on top of the field with a fastest lap of 185.089 mph, just days after clocking a 184.900 mph lap during a private test at Phoenix International Raceway. Brayton, Cheever, Salazar and Luyendyk also practiced over 181 mph. PDM Racing lacked an engine for his car, which left Paul Jr. unable to test; they eventually gained use of a Buick-powered back-up car from Team Menard to race at Orlando.[7]

On January 13, Butch Brickell broke two vertebrae in a hard crash at Turn 1, and was ruled out for the race,[8][9] although he remained entered on an updated entry list, which reflected the withdrawal of Turco's entry because of sponsorship issues.[10] Parsons had only completed six warm-up laps when a crash wiped his car out of testing, while O'Connell was only able to make his 64-lap debut on an Indy car at the last day of testing. That same day, Tony Stewart drove one of Team Menard's cars, and was announced later that day as their third driver for the season.[11] John Menard wanted to field Jim Crawford in the third car at Orlando, but he was persuaded by Cary Agajanian, USAC's vicepresident for the IRL and Stewart's legal advisor, to give the 24-year old rookie a try. Being the first driver to have conquered the USAC Triple Crown, Stewart logged a best lap of 172 mph in only his second ever Indy car test, despite unknowingly running with a much-lowered turbo boost and a chassis that had been discarded by Cheever and Brayton for handling reasons.[12][13] Stewart had been previously tapped by A. J. Foyt to drive for his team after a successful test at Phoenix in October 1995, but Foyt required him to step down from his handshake agreement to run a part-time NASCAR Busch Series schedule with Ranier-Walsh Racing, and Stewart declined the offer.[14]

Out of the track, animosities between the IRL and the IndyCar World Series (CART) had been fueled by the 25/8 Rule, perceived by CART teams as a measure to lock them out of the Indianapolis 500.[15] Tensions further escalated on December 19, when CART announced the creation of the U. S. 500, an event at Michigan International Speedway that would be held on Memorial Day, in direct opposition to the Indianapolis 500,[16] and on January 11, when A. J. Foyt filed a $5 million suit against CART for anti-competitive practices.[17] On 4 January, Oldsmobile was announced as the first engine supplier of the 4.0 V8 engine formula that the IRL was set to use from 1997.[18] Five days later, Andy Evans bought the remaining share of Dick Simon in Scandia/Simon Racing, which would still compete under that name at Walt Disney World.[19] This ownership change left A. J. Foyt as the only full-time team owner from the 1995 season to compete at Orlando.

Practice and qualifying

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On Wednesday, January 24, Tempero/Giuffre Racing entered David Kudrave in a second car, before rookie orientation began.[20] Also, A. J. Foyt Enterprises entered Mike Groff on Thursday before the start of practice, in a third car that would be run during the season by the Sinden Racing Services rental crew.[21] Richie Hearn led the first day of practice with a 181.827 mph lap, with Buddy Lazier in close pursuit. They would be the only drivers to dip into the 180 mph mark during the weekend, with Roberto Guerrero in third at just 179.292 mph. With three drivers from American Indycar still entered, IRL officials did not clear any of them to keep competing: Bill Tempero, whose best lap was a 152.207 mph, and Rick DeLorto, clearly off the pace at just 107.223 mph after 30 laps, failed to complete their driver's tests, while the car of the attending Jim Buick never appeared on pit road.[22]

On Friday morning practice, Eliseo Salazar clipped the wall at the exit of Turn 3 and lost control of the car, crashing first into the front-straight inside wall, and then right side into the Turn 1 outside wall. In the second impact, a stabilizing rod went through his cockpit, penetrating his right leg. Salazar was rushed by helicopter to Orlando Regional Medical Center, where he underwent surgeries for a fractured femur and thigh injuries, being listed afterwards in stable condition. Lazier led the session with a lap at 181.800 mph, followed by Hearn and Arie Luyendyk.[23]

Lazier, who had not placed higher than 16th in his 55 previous Indy car starts, qualified on pole with a best lap of 181.388 mph. Hearn fell just short of the 181 mph mark, settling for second on his first Indy car qualifying session. Seasoned veterans Guerrero and Luyendyk qualified third and fourth, the latter using a back-up car that would be later renumbered, in front of Scott Sharp and five further rookies. As expected by the nuances of their stock block engine, Team Menard struggled in qualifying, although Tony Stewart surprised by outqualifying his more established teammates, Eddie Cheever and Scott Brayton, despite having only completed 67 laps in winter testing.

John Paul Jr. had the only incident of the session after brushing the wall in Turn 2, completing only one timed lap at 160 mph. Unlike Stewart and Groff, who were running on competitive race cars, other drivers at the bottom of the field mirrored Paul Jr.'s issues that stemmed from the lack of mileage: Johnny O'Connell had only passed his driver test during the morning practice; Johnny Parsons, without any laps at speed during winter testing, barely went over 153 mph, and David Kudrave, with no testing mileage whatsoever, put his car on the grid at just 146.353 mph, a 35 mph, 4.5 second deficit over Lazier's time.[23] On race day, he would be black flagged after just four laps.

On Friday afternoon practice, held after qualifying, Eddie Cheever and Richie Hearn collided and crashed at Turn 1, when Cheever went low and into Hearn's path. Both drivers were unhurt, but their chassis were damaged beyond repair, and had to race with spare cars. They were allowed to start at the back of the field, after taking part in a 15-minute special warm-up session. Della Penna didn't have a competitive spare car, and reached a deal with Pagan Racing to use Roberto Guerrero's back-up unit.[23] The Colombian was now due to start on the front row because of Hearn's demotion, which left Buzz Calkins as the best placed rookie in the 5th spot. Like Lazier, Scott Sharp had a much improved career-best placing in the 2nd row, having never started higher than 13th.

Failed to qualify or withdrew

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Race

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Packed grandstands, with a published gate of 50,742 spectators,[22] witnessed the grand opening of the Indy Racing League on Saturday. The start lacked a proper alignment, as only the first two rows and a few other drivers in the back were loosely side by side when Lazier started to accelerate entering Turn 4, and the majority saw the green flag in single file. Roberto Guerrero was caught off-guard by Lazier's getaway, and Arie Luyendyk passed him for second place entering Turn 1. On Lap 10, Tony Stewart completed his first overtake on Davey Hamilton for sixth, and had worked his way up to third when the first caution came out on Lap 18. Richie Hearn had already gained 12 positions and was running in 7th place when a sway bar adjuster broke on his car, causing him to spin at the exit of Turn 1. Stewart passed Luyendyk at the restart on Lap 24 and grabbed the lead five laps later.

Lazier began to lose pace with a loose right front upright. Just after being passed by Luyendyk for second place on Lap 37, he headed to the pits, where he lost three laps as Hemelgarn's crew tried to sort out the issue.[24] In a later pit stop, his team choose to take parts from Stéphan Grégoire's car, which had been retired from ninth place with gearbox issues in his pit stop. However, handling issues persisted, and Lazier dropped out before the halfway point. Around Lap 30, Buzz Calkins began mounting a charge towards the front, passing Scott Sharp on Lap 32, Guerrero on Lap 35 and Luyendyk on Lap 51. After the first round of pit stops, heavy traffic allowed Calkins to catch up to Stewart by Lap 55, and he took the lead on the 66th lap, just before the second round of pit stops.

While heading to the pits, Luyendyk ran out of fuel, and his car stalled while exiting the pit box, needing a push start. Calkins had a fast second pit stop, two laps after Stewart's, and was able to open a huge gap through traffic and a solid pace: on Lap 84, only Stewart (15.3 seconds behind) and Guerrero (17.2 seconds) were still on the lead lap. By the halfway mark, a cautious Stewart was 21 seconds behind Calkins, before the Menard driver bounced back in order to stay on the lead lap, within 15 seconds of the leader. Luyendyk began to regain ground, steadily climbing up to 7th place on Lap 127. However, his gearbox had been compromised after the pit issues, and the Byrd/Leberle-Treadway driver lost all gears during his third stop, forcing him to retire.

Rookie Stan Wattles was running in fourth place, having stayed largely out of trouble after passing Davey Hamilton on Lap 35. Shortly after a pit stop, on Lap 147, he spun on Turn 2 and hit the inside wall, which was labelled by him as "a rookie mistake".[24] The ensuing caution allowed Stewart to cut back the gap with Calkins. Robbie Buhl had gone longer on his third stint and was able to pit under yellow, going from eighth to third place over Michele Alboreto, Roberto Guerrero, who suffered a brief stall in his pit stop, and Hamilton. Further back, Eddie Cheever had worked his way up to ninth place, his progress having been hampered by the same handling issues that had forced his teammate Scott Brayton to retire from the race. With lapped cars in between, Calkins opened a small gap of 3 seconds over Stewart after the restart.

On Lap 178, Davey Hamilton had a sudden mechanical failure on Turn 2 and crashed out of sixth place. The race restarted on Lap 184, and Cheever, who had passed Johnny O'Connell 20 laps before, took seventh place over Scott Sharp. When Sharp tried to retake the position on Lap 189, both drivers collided, in a crash that resembled the one Cheever and Hearn had the day before, this time with Cheever being on the outside of Turn 1. Calkins made it safely through the scene, but Stewart encountered the recovery vehicles on his path, and had to swerve abruptly to the outside to avoid them. He brushed the wall at low speed and run over some debris, which caused a sliced tire and a bent front wing, but both issues went largely unnoticed and Stewart kept on running. When the race was restarted with six laps to go, Stewart began hounding Calkins for the lead, but he lost some ground shortly after because of the damages to the car. A late charge was not enough to strip the win away from Buzz Calkins, who took the checkered flag by eight tenths of a second.

With his win, Calkins became the first American driver (and the only one to date) to win his first Indy car race, in a feat only equalled in modern Indy car racing by Formula 1 world champions Graham Hill at the 1966 Indianapolis 500 and Nigel Mansell at the 1993 Australian FAI IndyCar Grand Prix, per IndyCar's record book. Calkins had also won his first Indy car oval race, being the second of four drivers to ever achieve this feat along Hill, Scott Dixon and Sébastien Bourdais. This would also be the only win for Calkins in his 6-year Indy car career. As most of the drivers were rookies or had an unheralded career in IndyCar, most of them achieved personal milestones. Tony Stewart settled for second in his first rear-engine open wheel race, and Robbie Buhl also scored his first Indy car podium, improving on his sixth place at the 1993 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach. Mike Groff equalled the sixth place obtained at the 1994 Valvoline 200 at Phoenix, while Lyn St. James scored her only top-10 result in Indy car competition, with an 8th-place finish.

Results

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Box Score

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Pos No. Driver Team Chassis Engine Tyre Laps Time/Retired Grid Laps
Led
Points
1 12 United States Buzz Calkins  R  Bradley Motorsports Reynard 95I Ford Cosworth XB F 200 1:33:30.748 5 130 35
2 20 United States Tony Stewart  R  Team Menard Lola T95/00 Menard Indy V-6 G 200 + 0.886 7 37 33
3 54 United States Robbie Buhl Beck Motorsports/Zunne Group Lola T94/00 Ford Cosworth XB F 198 + 2 laps 13 1 32
4 33 Italy Michele Alboreto  R  Scandia/Simon Racing Lola T95/00 Ford Cosworth XB G 198 + 2 laps 14 0 31
5 21 Colombia Roberto Guerrero Pagan Racing Reynard 94I Ford Cosworth XB G 197 + 3 laps 2 0 30
6 11 United States Mike Groff A. J. Foyt Enterprises Lola T95/00 Ford Cosworth XB G 195 + 5 laps 12 0 29
7 75 United States Johnny O'Connell  R  Cunningham Racing Reynard 95I Ford Cosworth XB F 195 + 5 laps 15 0 28
8 90 United States Lyn St. James Scandia/Simon Racing Lola T94/00 Ford Cosworth XB G 192 + 8 laps 11 0 27
9 18 United States John Paul Jr. PDM/Automatic Sprinkler System Lola T93/00 Menard Indy V-6 G 190 + 10 laps 16 0 26
10 3 United States Eddie Cheever Team Menard Lola T95/00 Menard Indy V-6 G 184 Accident 20 0 25
11 41 United States Scott Sharp A. J. Foyt Enterprises Lola T95/00 Ford Cosworth XB G 184 Accident 4 0 24
12 14 United States Davey Hamilton  R  A. J. Foyt Enterprises Lola T95/00 Ford Cosworth XB G 173 Accident 6 2 23
13 17 United States Stan Wattles  R  Leigh Miller Racing Lola T94/00 Ford Cosworth XB F 144 Accident 8 2 22
14 5 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk Byrd/Leberle-Treadway Racing Reynard 95I Ford Cosworth XB G 132 Gearbox 3 0 21
15 2 United States Scott Brayton Team Menard Lola T95/00 Menard Indy V-6 G 105 Handling 10 0 20
16 9 France Stéphan Grégoire  R  Hemelgarn Racing Reynard 95I Ford Cosworth XB F 69 Gearbox 9 0 19
17 91 United States Buddy Lazier Hemelgarn Racing Reynard 95I Ford Cosworth XB F 61 Brakes 1 28 18
18 16 United States Johnny Parsons Blueprint Racing Lola T93/00 Menard Indy V-6 F 45 Suspension 17 0 17
19 4 United States Richie Hearn  R  Della Penna Motorsports Reynard 95I Ford Cosworth XB G 17 Accident 19 0 16
20 25 United States David Kudrave Tempero/Giuffre Racing Lola T93/00 Buick Indy V-6 G 4 Transmission 18 0 15

Race Statistics

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  • Average Speed: 128.325 mph (206.519 km/h)
  • Lead changes: 6 among 6 drivers

Standings after the race

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Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1 United States Buzz Calkins 35
2 United States Tony Stewart 33
3 United States Robbie Buhl 32
4 Italy Michele Alboreto 31
5 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 30
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for the standings.

Broadcasting

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The first race as part of the Indy Racing League was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Bob Jenkins served as chief announcer. In the booth with Jenkins were Gary Lee as well as Donald Davidson.

Mike King and newcomer Vince Welch were the pit reporters.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth Announcers Pit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Bob Jenkins
Statistician/Commentary: Gary Lee
Historian/Commentary: Donald Davidson

Mike King
Vince Welch
sources:[25]

Television

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The race was carried live flag-to-flag coverage in the United States on ABC Sports.

Paul Page served as host and play-by-play announcer. Bobby Unser and Danny Sullivan served as color commentators.

ABC Television
Booth Announcers Pit/garage reporters

Host/Announcer: Paul Page
Color: Danny Sullivan
Color: Bobby Unser

Jack Arute
Gary Gerould

References

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  1. ^ "1996 Indy 200 at Walt Disney World weather information". Old Farmers' Almanac. Retrieved October 26, 2013.
  2. ^ Siano, Joseph (January 27, 1996). "Camaraderie Is Watchword On Eve of First Indy 200". New York Times. Retrieved July 1, 2009.
  3. ^ "Indianapolis race cars unveil Walt Disney World Speedway". Indy Racing League. November 28, 1995. Archived from the original on February 16, 1997. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  4. ^ "Chief Steward "Pleased" With IRL Test Week At Disney World". Indy Racing League. December 8, 1995. Archived from the original on February 16, 1997. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  5. ^ "Indy 200 At Walt Disney World Tentative Entry List". Motorsport.com. December 6, 1995. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  6. ^ "Kinser, Luyendyk test at Walt Disney World Speedway". Motorsport.com. November 30, 1995. Archived from the original on January 10, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  7. ^ "PDM'S Dynamic Duo Finds Success After Learning From Legends". Motorsport.com. November 10, 1998. Archived from the original on January 10, 2019. Retrieved January 10, 2019.
  8. ^ "Lazier cracks unofficial Disney World mark again". Motorsport.com. January 13, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  9. ^ "Kunzman on Hemelgarn tests: 'Hard to have better'". Motorsport.com. January 14, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  10. ^ "Tentative entry list (Updated)". Motorsport.com. January 16, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  11. ^ "USAC triple champ Stewart named to IRL ride for Team Menard". Motorsport.com. January 19, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  12. ^ "Agajanians an Indy Steering Committee". Los Angeles Times. May 22, 1998. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  13. ^ "Stewart's road nearly winds into Victory Circle". The Indianapolis Star. January 28, 1996. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  14. ^ "Phoenix: Tony Stewart preview". Motorsport.com. April 18, 2006. Retrieved March 30, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ "Indy Racing League announces incentives for 1996 participants". Motorsport.com. July 3, 1995. Archived from the original on December 22, 2017. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  16. ^ "IndyCar Announces US 500 on Memorial Day". IndyCar Racing Magazine. December 19, 1995. Archived from the original on June 25, 1997. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  17. ^ "A. J. Foyt Is Suing CART". The New York Times. January 11, 1996. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  18. ^ "Oldsmobile Aurora V8 to race in 1997 Indianapolis 500". The Free Library. January 4, 1996. Archived from the original on January 8, 2018. Retrieved January 8, 2018.
  19. ^ "WDWS testing begins Tuesday; Evans buys out Scandia/Simon". Motorsport.com. January 9, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  20. ^ "WDW rookie orientation notes - 96-01-24". Motorsport.com. January 24, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  21. ^ "Mike Groff on Twitter: "Jeff Sinden was hired by AJ to run the car at WDW (...)"". January 30, 2020. Archived from the original on January 31, 2020.
  22. ^ a b "Hearn fastest on first official Disney World practice day". Motorsport.com. January 25, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  23. ^ a b c "WDW Trackside Notes - 96-01-26". Indy Racing League. January 26, 1996. Archived from the original on February 16, 1997. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  24. ^ a b "IRL: WDW race notes". Motorsport.com. January 27, 1996. Archived from the original on January 7, 2018. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
  25. ^ "User Comments - the 1996 Indy 200 at Walt Disney World".
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Indy Racing League
1996 season
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