Chip Ganassi Racing

Chip Ganassi Racing, LLC (CGR), also sometimes branded as Chip Ganassi Racing Teams, is an American auto racing organization with teams competing in the NTT IndyCar Series, IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, FIA World Endurance Championship, and Extreme E. They have formerly competed in the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series, Global Rallycross Championship and the Rolex Sports Car Series. It was founded in 1990 by businessman and former racecar driver Chip Ganassi, from the assets of Patrick Racing to compete in the CART IndyCar World Series.

Chip Ganassi Racing
Owner(s)Chip Ganassi
Principal(s)Mike Hull (IndyCar/IMSA)
Dave Berkenfield (Extreme E)[1]
BaseIndianapolis, Indiana
SeriesIndyCar Series
WeatherTech SportsCar Championship
FIA World Endurance Championship
Extreme E
Race driversIndyCar:
8. Sweden Linus Lundqvist (R)
9. New Zealand Scott Dixon
10. Spain Álex Palou
11. New Zealand Marcus Armstrong
TBA. Cayman Islands Kyffin Simpson (R)
WeatherTech SportsCar Championship:
01. France Sébastien Bourdais
New Zealand Scott Dixon
Netherlands Renger van der Zande
02. New Zealand Earl Bamber
United Kingdom Alex Lynn
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook
FIA World Endurance Championship:
2. New Zealand Earl Bamber
United Kingdom Alex Lynn
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook
3. France Sébastien Bourdais
Netherlands Renger van der Zande
United Kingdom Jack Aitken
Extreme E:
99. United States Amanda Sorensen
United States RJ Anderson
SponsorsIndyCar:
8. Huski Chocolate
9. PNC Bank
10. The American Legion, Ridgeline Lubricants, Journie Rewards
11. Ridgeline Lubricants, Niterra, The American Legion, Deloitte, Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center
IMSA:
01. Cadillac
02. Cadillac
WEC:
2. Cadillac
3. Cadillac
Extreme E:
99. GMC Hummer EV
ManufacturerIndyCar: Honda
IMSA: Cadillac
WEC: Cadillac
Extreme E: GMC
Career
DebutCART/CCWS: 1990 Autoworks 200
IndyCar: 2000 Indianapolis 500
NASCAR (Cup Series):
1989 Motorcraft Quality Parts 500 (Atlanta)[lower-alpha 1]
2001 Daytona 500 (Daytona)[lower-alpha 2]
NASCAR (Busch/Nationwide/Xfinity Series): 2004 Kroger 200 Presented by Tom Raper RVs[lower-alpha 3]
Drivers' ChampionshipsTotal: 20
Champ Car: 4
IndyCar: 11
Grand-Am: 5
Indy 500 victories5 (2000, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2022)
Race victoriesTotal: 260
CART/CCWS: 40
Indycar: 92
NASCAR Cup Series: 27[lower-alpha 4]
NASCAR Xfinity Series: 22[lower-alpha 5]
ARCA Racing Series: 5
Rolex: 41
IMSA: 24[lower-alpha 6]
WEC: 6
Global RallyCross Championship: 2
Extreme E: 1

After winning four consecutive CART championships from 1996 to 1999 with drivers Jimmy Vasser, Alex Zanardi and Juan Pablo Montoya, in 2000 Ganassi became the first CART organization to return to the Indianapolis 500 after the open-wheel "Split" between CART and the Indy Racing League in 1996. A dominant victory with Montoya would foresee the team's permanent switch to the IRL (now IndyCar Series), where further championships would be won with Scott Dixon, Dario Franchitti and Álex Palou, including another four straight from 2008 to 2011. In 2023, the team fielded the Nos. 8, 9, 10, and 11 Dallara-Hondas for Marcus Ericsson, Scott Dixon, Alex Palou, Marcus Armstrong, and Takuma Sato full-time.

In 2001, Ganassi bought a majority stake in Felix Sabates' Team SABCO NASCAR team, which had operated since 1989, marking his entry into that championship as Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates and inheriting that organizations history, while also partnering to compete in the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series. In 2009, Ganassi partnered with Dale Earnhardt, Inc. owner Teresa Earnhardt to merge their NASCAR operations into Ganassi's shop and run under the banner of Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates. The NASCAR team dropped the Earnhardt name in 2014, and Ganassi revealed that Teresa was never truly involved with the team.[2] Rob Kauffman, chairman of the Race Team Alliance, purchased a stake in the team in 2015.[3] Sabates retired from his ownership role after the 2020 season. In 2021, Ganassi accepted an unsolicited offer from former CGR Xfinity Series driver Justin Marks to sell the entire NASCAR operation to Marks' Trackhouse Racing Team, with the deal finalized after that season.[4] The NASCAR program fielded full-time entries for notable drivers including Kyle Petty, Joe Nemechek, Sterling Marlin, Jimmy Spencer, Casey Mears, Juan Pablo Montoya, Jamie McMurray, Kyle Larson, Kurt Busch and Ross Chastain

Together, they have won 15 Open Wheel titles (4 in CART, 11 in IndyCar), 5 Grand-Am sports car championships, and wins in the Indianapolis 500 (Five times), Daytona 500, Brickyard 400, 24 Hours of Daytona, 12 Hours of Sebring and a 24 Hours of Le Mans class win, and over 200 wins across all categories.[5]

American open-wheel racing history

Current

Drivers (chronological)

CART history

Jimmy Vasser's Reynard 96I in a Honda Collection Hall.
Eddie Cheever at Laguna Seca in 1991.

In 1989, Chip Ganassi, who had driven in the IndyCar World Series but had his career cut short due to a career-ending crash at Michigan in 1984, joined Pat Patrick as co-owner for Emerson Fittipaldi's Marlboro IndyCar team. Patrick had announced he was going to retire at the end of the year, and the team would go completely to Ganassi. The team won the Indy 500 and the IndyCar Championship.

By season's end, Patrick had second thoughts. Instead of retracting the sale of the team to Ganassi, he went ahead with the deal as planned and instead restarted his team by taking over the upstart Alfa Romeo IndyCar effort for 1990. Fittipaldi took the Marlboro sponsorship to Team Penske, an arrangement that was also pre-planned. (Penske had supplied Patrick with a fleet of Penske chassis for 1989 as part of the deal).

Ganassi officially took over the remaining assets of the team (including the 1989 Penske chassis) and renamed it Chip Ganassi Racing. He signed former Formula One driver Eddie Cheever and raced full-time in the IndyCar World series with Target as the primary sponsor.

In 1992, Ganassi expanded to a two-car effort for the Indy 500, adding Arie Luyendyk for the Indy-only entry. Later Ganassi debuted rookie Robby Gordon in selected events. For 1993, Luyendyk replaced Cheever full-time. Luyendyk won the pole position for the Indy 500 and finished second to Fittipaldi, Ganassi's former driver in his partnership with Patrick. For 1994, Michael Andretti joined the team, immediately after returning from his failed transition to Formula One in 1993. He scored Ganassi's first IndyCar victory at Surfers Paradise.

Target continued to sponsor Ganassi's operation through the decade, and by the mid part of the decade, the team had risen to the top of the series. Perhaps the most impressive was Juan Pablo Montoya winning the championship in his rookie season in 1999. They won four consecutive series championships, with Jimmy Vasser (1996),[8] Alex Zanardi (19971998),[8] and Montoya in 1999, becoming the first car owner to win four consecutive CART championships.[8] In 2000, Ganassi became the first CART team to break ranks and return to race in the Indianapolis 500, part of the rival Indy Racing League. The team saw instant success as Montoya dominated the race.[8] Montoya also became the first driver to win the Indianapolis 500 and the Michigan 500 in the same year since Rick Mears in 1991. However, he was unable to duplicate his championship success of 1999. Vasser's performance steadily dwindled, as his lone victory at Houston was his first in nearly two years.

The team ran from 1992 to 2002 before moving into the Indy Racing League full-time. They had run one IRL entry for former motocross racer Jeff Ward in 2002, in which Ward won one race at Texas in one of the closest finishes in IRL history.

IndyCar Series history

Ganassi's No. 9 car preparing for practice

Chip Ganassi Racing initially entered the Indy Racing League (IRL) with Juan Pablo Montoya and Jimmy Vasser in the 2000 Indianapolis 500 won by rookie Montoya. In 2001, they returned to Indy with Vasser, Bruno Junqueira, Nicolas Minassian, and NASCAR's Tony Stewart, who would also compete in that evening's Coca-Cola 600. But in neither year did they run the entire IndyCar Series season.

For 2002, Ganassi made the jump to the IndyCar Series full-time with Jeff Ward driving one car, with the addition of Ganassi's two CART Championship drivers Kenny Bräck and Bruno Junqueira at Indianapolis. None of those three would drive for Ganassi in 2003; the replacements were Scott Dixon – a midseason addition to Ganassi's Champ Car team in 2002 – and Tomas Scheckter.[9] Dixon won three races and the series championship while Scheckter struggled and was released from his contract. Tony Renna was due to replace him, but was killed in a testing crash at Indianapolis.[10] Englishman Darren Manning wound up in the seat for 2004. The team's performance suffered the next two seasons and when Manning was fired, a bevy of drivers ran in Ganassi's cars, among them former Formula One test drivers Ryan Briscoe and Giorgio Pantano, and Jaques Lazier. For 2006, Ganassi scaled back to two cars, with Dixon returning along with 2005 Indianapolis 500 Champion Dan Wheldon, whom Ganassi signed away from Andretti Green Racing in the offseason.[9][11] The team also changed to Honda engines (due to series engine supplier standardization from 2006 to 2011 seasons), along with all other IndyCar teams, and Dallara chassis for 2006.

The 2007 IndyCar Series season showed promise for Ganassi, as Dixon took 4 wins at Watkins Glen, Nashville, Mid Ohio, and Sonoma[9] and Wheldon took 2 additional wins at Homestead and Kansas.[11] The 2008 IndyCar season was even stronger for the team with eventual champion Dixon taking wins at Homestead, Indianapolis, Texas, Nashville, Edmonton, and Kentucky,[9] and teammate Wheldon finishing 4th overall after winning at Kansas again and at Iowa.[11] Shortly before the conclusion of the season it was announced that Wheldon would not return as Dixon's teammate in 2009, a role taken by 2007 IndyCar Champion and Indy 500 winner Dario Franchitti of Scotland. Franchitti teamed with Dixon for the non-championship race at Surfers' Paradise at the end of 2008.[12]

The Target Chip Ganassi[13] car driven by Franchitti won the 94th running of the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday May 30, 2010.[14]

For 2011, Ganassi expanded, to add an additional 2-car team for Graham Rahal and Charlie Kimball housed in the race shop of NHRA drag racer Kenny Bernstein.[15]

Ganassi announced that in 2012, all 4 cars would be powered by Honda engines after the series decided to have multiple engine manufacturers (Honda, Chevrolet, and Lotus) for the first time since 2005.[16]

The Ganassi cars driven by Franchitti and Dixon came in first and second in the 2012 Indianapolis 500 on Sunday, May 27, 2012. It was Franchitti's third Indianapolis 500 win and his second win with Ganassi. Rahal left Ganassi following the season for his father's team, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. In 2013, the team was dominant for the second half of the year, with Kimball's first win at Mid-Ohio, and Dixon adding four wins to overtake Hélio Castroneves for his third IndyCar title. The team also ran a fourth car, the No. 8, at Indianapolis for Briscoe, sponsored by NTT DATA. Despite the title, Ganassi was dealt a major blow when Franchitti was medically forced into retirement following a crash at Race 2 in Houston. Alex Tagliani replaced Franchitti at Auto Club.

In 2014, Ganassi switched to Chevrolet engines. In a twist, Ganassi would hire 2013 Indy 500 winner Tony Kanaan to drive the No. 10 Target car, while Briscoe and NTT Data signed on for a full season in the No. 8 car. The team once again struggled during the first half of the season, but hit its stride during the second half, with Dixon winning at Mid-Ohio and Sonoma, while Kanaan won the season finale at Auto Club.[17] For 2015, the team would sign Indy Lights champion Sage Karam to share the No. 8 with Sebastián Saavedra. Dixon would claim his fourth title in a tiebreaker with Juan Pablo Montoya on the strength of three wins at Long Beach, Texas, and Sonoma. Kanaan would not win that year but had two runner-up finishes at Texas and Fontana. Both Karam and Saavedra would struggle in the No. 8, save for a lone podium by Karam at Iowa. For 2016, Ganassi would replace Karam and Saavedra with former Formula 1 driver Max Chilton. 2016 would be a down year for the team, with Dixon winning twice at Phoenix and Watkins Glen, while Kanaan had only two podiums while Chilton and Kimball struggled.

Beginning in the 2017 season, Ganassi changed engine suppliers back to Honda, retaining their four drivers. Also, 2017 marked the end of Target sponsorship in Indycar, as a new chairman elected to change the retail giant's sporting sponsorships.

For 2018, Ganassi would downsize to two cars, with Kimball and Chilton taking their sponsorship over to Carlin due to the team's cost-efficiency. Scott Dixon remains in the No. 9 with sponsorship from PNC Bank. In addition, Ganassi signed the 2017 Indycar Rookie of the Year Ed Jones to drive the No. 10 car in 2018, with sponsorship from NTT Data, replacing Tony Kanaan. Dixon would win his fifth IndyCar title on the strength of wins at Detroit, Texas, and Toronto. Jones would only have two podiums and was released at season's end in favor of Formula E driver Felix Rosenqvist.

For the 2019 season, Dixon would again find victory at Detroit as well as Mid-Ohio, but an inconsistent season would leave him a distant fourth in points. Rosenqvist would have a consistent season, fending off Colton Herta for Rookie of the Year honors. The 2020 season saw the return of its No. 8 entry, driven by former Alfa Romeo Racing driver Marcus Ericsson.

Scott Dixon started the delayed 2020 season very strong, winning the first three races at Texas, Indianapolis, and Road America. Dixon also went on to win at Gateway en route to his 6th Indycar championship. In the No. 10, Rosenqvist would score his first win at Road America.

For 2021, Felix Rosenqvist left the team to join Arrow McLaren SP with Alex Palou taking his seat. The team also expanded to 4 cars for the first time since 2017 with 7 time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson driving the road and street courses in the No. 48 car. For the ovals, they have former driver Tony Kanaan. The team scored the most wins by any team in the IndyCar series. Dixon would take only one win on the season and was not able his title. His teammates Palou and Ericsson had breakout years. Ericsson took wins at Detroit and the inaugural round at Nashville while Palou would take wins at Barber, Road America, and Portland to win his first IndyCar championship. Palou would become the third Ganassi driver to win the IndyCar Series championship since the team joined the IndyCar Series and the first one other than Dixon since 2011.

IndyCar champions

Year Champion Wins Chassis Engine Tyres
1996 United States Jimmy Vasser 4 Reynard 96I Honda HRH V8t Firestone
1997 Italy Alex Zanardi 5 Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone
1998 Italy Alex Zanardi (2) 7 Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone
1999 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) 7 Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone
2003 New Zealand Scott Dixon 3 G-Force GF09 Toyota Indy V8 Firestone
2008 New Zealand Scott Dixon (2) 6 Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R Firestone
2009 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 5 Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R Firestone
2010 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (2) 3 Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R Firestone
2011 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (3) 4 Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R Firestone
2013 New Zealand Scott Dixon (3) 4 Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Firestone
2015 New Zealand Scott Dixon (4) 3 Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone
2018 New Zealand Scott Dixon (5) 3 Dallara DW12 Honda HI18TT V6t Firestone
2020 New Zealand Scott Dixon (6) 4 Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Firestone
2021 Spain Álex Palou 3 Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone
2023 Spain Álex Palou (2) 5 Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone

Indianapolis 500 victories

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres
2000 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) G-Force GF05 Oldsmobile Aurora V8 Firestone
2008 New Zealand Scott Dixon Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R Firestone
2010 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R Firestone
2012 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (2) Dallara DW12 Honda HI12TT V6t Firestone
2022 Sweden Marcus Ericsson Dallara DW12 Honda HI22TT V6t Firestone

Firestone Indy Lights Series

On December 20, 2006, Chip Ganassi Racing announced that it would field an Indy Lights team for the first time in 2007, with drivers Chris Festa and Pablo Pérez. Perez was severely injured in a crash in the opening race of the Indy Lights season and was not replaced. Festa finished 10th in points without winning a race in a season dominated by Alex Lloyd who was signed by Chip Ganassi Racing at the end of the season. The team partnered with Integra Motorsports in 2007 and 2008 fielding a variety of development drivers, notably New Zealanders Marc Williams, and Jonny Reid.

Complete CART FedEx Championship Series results

(key) (results in bold indicate pole position; results in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Chassis Engine Drivers No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Pts Pos Pos
1990 PHX LBH INDY MIL DET POR CLE MEA TOR MCH DEN VAN MDO ROA NAZ LAG
Penske PC-18
Lola T90/00
Chevrolet 265A V8t United States Eddie Cheever (R) 15 7 13 11 3 19 16 21 3 4 20 14 4 9 6 10 10th 80
25 8
1991 SFR LBH PHX INDY MIL DET POR CLE MEA TOR MCH DEN VAN MDO ROA NAZ LAG
Lola T91/00 Chevrolet 265A V8t United States Eddie Cheever 8 15 3 8 31 7 12 9 8 5 17 7 4 12 8 7 6 6 9th 91
1992 SFR PHX LBH INDY DET POR MIL NHA TOR MCH CLE ROA VAN MDO NAZ LAG
Lola T91/00
Lola T92/00
Ford XB V8t Netherlands Arie Luyendyk 6 15 14 41st 0
United States Robby Gordon (R) 17 13 21 8 8 18 17 20th 10
Chevrolet 265A V8t Belgium Didier Theys 13 40th 0
Ford XB V8t United States Eddie Cheever 9 8 2 22 4 11 4 5 16 9 20 11 23 16 12 9 4 10th 80
1993 SFR PHX LBH INDY MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH NHA ROA VAN MDO NAZ LAG
Lola T93/00 Ford XB V8t Netherlands Arie Luyendyk 10 5 6 11 2 22 17 10 10 22 3 25 9 25 5 8 3 8th 90
1994 SFR PHX LBH INDY MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH MDO NHA VAN ROA NAZ LAG
Reynard 94i Ford XB V8t United States Michael Andretti 8 1* 20 6 6 4 5 31 18 1* 22 5 5 3 17 9 28 4th 118
Brazil Maurício Gugelmin 88 6 15 7 11 15 8 30 8 20 15 25 14 5 19 10 22 16th 39
1995 MIA SFR PHX LBH NAZ INDY MIL DET POR ROA TOR CLE MCH MDO NHA VAN LAG
Reynard 95i Ford XB V8t United States Bryan Herta 4 10 15 20 26 23 13 24 27 26 14 27 2 15 5 19 16 25 20th 30
United States Mike Groff 4T Wth N/A 0
United States Jimmy Vasser 12 8 24 23 23 24 22 9 2 2 3 17 3 7 9 6 27 8 8th 92
1996 MIA RIO SFR LBH NAZ 500 MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH MDO ROA VAN LAG
Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Italy Alex Zanardi (R) 4 24 4* 21 24 13 17* 13 11 1* 2 2* 21 1* 3 26 1* 3rd 132
United States Jimmy Vasser 12 1 8 1* 1 7 1 10 12 13 10 8 9 2 6 7 4 1st 154
1997 MIA SFR LBH NAZ RIO GAT MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH MDO ROA VAN LAG FON
Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t United States Jimmy Vasser 1 3 12 9 5 9 5 3 4 19 13 7 24 5 8 2* 1* 2 3rd 144
Italy Alex Zanardi 4 7 4 1* 11 4 4 13 26 11 1 2 1* 1* 1 4 3 DNS 1st 195
Netherlands Arie Luyendyk 24 34th 0
1998 MIA MOT LBH NAZ RIO GAT MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH MDO ROA VAN LAG HOU SFR FON
Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Italy Alex Zanardi 1 3 23 1 2 2* 1 8 1* 1* 1* 1 3* 12 2 4 2 2 1* 3 1st 285
United States Jimmy Vasser 12 16 7 8 1 6 4 1* 6 8 7 3 2 27 9 26 5 4 24 1* 2nd 169
1999 MIA MOT LBH NAZ RIO GAT MIL POR CLE ROA TOR MCH DET MDO CHI VAN LAG HOU SRF FON
Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) 4 10 13 1 1* 1* 11 10* 2 1* 13* 22 2 17* 1 1* 1* 8 25 16 4 1st 212
United States Jimmy Vasser 12 4 12 10 11 27 10 4 12 23 23 8 9 5 4 3 3 18 20 18 5 9th 104
2000 MIA LBH RIO MOT NAZ MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH CHI MDO ROA VAN LAG GAT HOU SRF FON
Lola B2K/00 Toyota RV8E V8t Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya 1 23 19 22 7* 4* 1* 18* 17 6 24 1 12* 24 16 17 6 1 2 24 10 9th 126
United States Jimmy Vasser 12 4 3 2 21 7 13 7 24 8 9 21 8 21 5 6 8 7 1 3 22 6th 131
2001 MTY LBH TEX NAZ MOT MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH CHI MDO ROA VAN LAU ROC HOU LAG SRF FON
Lola B01/00 Toyota RV8F V8t Brazil Bruno Junqueira (R) 4 22 9 C1 7 24 4 19 23 23 13 9 17 13 1 12 11 25 23 7 21 4 16th 68
France Nicolas Minassian (R) 12 11 8 C1 18 15 19 17 27th 7
United States Memo Gidley 25 2* 17 14 5 11 20 10 14 18 3 2 10 14 17th 65
2002 MTY LBH MOT MIL LAG POR CHI TOR CLE VAN MDO ROA MTL DEN ROC MIA SFR FON MXC
Lola B02/00 Toyota RV8F V8t Brazil Bruno Junqueira 4 11 17 1 10 4 2 2 14 13 9 4 3 13 1* 5 5 14 9 3 2nd 164
Sweden Kenny Bräck 12 18 5 17 8 3 15 18 2 4 18 6 14 18 7 8* 13 4 12 1 6th 114
New Zealand Scott Dixon 44 6 6 7 6 5 15 16 5 17 10 2 12 18 15 6 7 13th 85

Complete IndyCar Series results

(key)

Year Chassis Engine Drivers No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Pts Pos Pos
2000 WDW PHX LSV INDY TXS PPIR ATL KTY TXS
G-Force GF05 Oldsmobile Aurora V8 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya 9 1* 25th 54
United States Jimmy Vasser 10 7 32nd 26
2001 PHX HMS ATL INDY TXS PPIR RIR KAN NSH KTY GAT CHI TXS
G-Force GF05B Oldsmobile Aurora V8 United States Tony Stewart 33 6 39th 28
United States Jimmy Vasser 44 4 36th 32
France Nicolas Minassian 49 29 47th 1
Brazil Bruno Junqueira 50 5 37th 30
2002 HMS PHX FON NAZ INDY TXS PPIR RIR KAN NSH MCH KTY GAT CHI TXS
G-Force GF05C Chevrolet Indy V8 United States Jeff Ward 9 4 18 10 19 9 1 20 8 12 11 25 16 13 21 25 11th 268
Sweden Kenny Bräck 22 11 42nd 19
Brazil Bruno Junqueira 33 31 51st 1
2003 HMS PHX MOT INDY TXS PPIR RIR KAN NSH MCH GAT KTY NAZ CHI FON TXS
G-Force GF09 Toyota Indy V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 1 20 15 17 6 1* 1* 6 2 5 15 2 16 2 2 2 1st 507
South Africa Tomas Scheckter 10 8 15 16 4* 18* 8 18 9 10 3 4 10 19 5* 5* 15 7th 356
2004 HMS PHX MOT INDY TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MCH KTY PPIR NAZ CHI FON TXS
G-Force GF09B Toyota Indy V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 1 18 2 5 8 14 8 12 8 DNS 7 13 20 9 7 8 6 10th 355
United Kingdom Darren Manning 10 6 5 4 25 8 20 11 4 19 13 10 4 6 15 DNS 11th 323
2005 HMS PHX STP MOT INDY TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MCH KTY PPIR SNM CHI WGL FON
Panoz GF09C
Dallara IR-05
Toyota Indy V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 16 12 6 21 24 11 22 18 6 13 19 23 16 7 19 1* 10 13th 321
United Kingdom Darren Manning 10 6 8 9 8 29 17 15 7 20 20 21st 186
United States Jaques Lazier 17 15 DNS 16 17 24th 67
Italy Giorgio Pantano 14 4 26th 48
Australia Ryan Briscoe 33 20 19 14* 12 10 12 21 21 8 DNS 10 13 20 19 22 19th 232
2006 HMS STP MOT INDY WGL TXS RIR KAN NSH MIL MCH KTY SNM CHI
Dallara IR-05
Panoz GF09C
Honda HI6R V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 5 2 9 6 1 2 11 4 1 10 16 2 4* 2 4th 460
United Kingdom Dan Wheldon 10 1 16 2 4* 15* 3* 9 2 2* 8 3 4* 6 1* 2nd 475
2007 HMS STP MOT KAN INDY MIL TXS IOW RIR WGL NSH MDO MCH KTY SNM DET CHI
Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 2 2 4 4 2 4 12 10 2 1* 1* 1 10 2 1 8 2 2nd 624
United Kingdom Dan Wheldon 10 1* 9 2* 1* 22 3 15 11 3 7 8 10 12 17 7 3 13 4th 466
2008 HMS STP MOT LBH KAN INDY MIL TXS IOW RIR WGL NSH MDO EDM KTY SNM DET CHI SRF1
Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 1 22 3* 3* 1* 2* 1 4 3 11 1 3 1 1* 12 5 2 2 1st 646
United Kingdom Dan Wheldon 10 3 12 4 1 12 4 4 1 4 24 2 17 7 5 4 20 6 4th 492
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 16 N/A 0
2009 STP LBH KAN INDY MIL TXS IOW RIR WGL TOR EDM KTY MDO SNM CHI MOT HMS
Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 16 15 1* 6* 1 3 5 1* 3 4 3 7* 1* 13 2 1* 3 2nd 605
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 10 4 1* 18 7 3 5 1 2 15 1* 5 6 3 1* 4 2 1 1st 616
2010 SAO STP ALA LBH KAN INDY TXS IOW WGL TOR EDM MDO SNM CHI KTY MOT HMS
Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 6 18 2 4 1* 5 4 6 8 20 1 5 2 8 7 6 1 3rd 547
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 10 7* 5 3 12 2 1* 5 18* 3 2 3 1 3 1 5 2 8* 1st 602
2011 STP ALA LBH SAO INDY TXS MIL IOW TOR EDM MDO NHM SNM BAL MOT KTY LSV
Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 16 2 18 12 5* 2 2 7 3 2 23 1* 3 5 5 1* 3 C2 3rd 518
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 10 1* 3 3 4 12 1* 7 1* 5* 1 3 2 20* 4 4 8 2* C2 1st 573
United States Graham Rahal 38 17 18 13 2 3 9 30 2 15 13 25 24 26 8 10 12 12 C2 9th 320
United States Charlie Kimball 83 22 10 24 16 13 30 23 14 22 21 19 11 9 26 21 23 13 C2 19th 233
2012 STP ALA LBH SAO INDY DET TEX MIL IOW TOR EDM MDO SNM BAL FON
Dallara DW12 Honda HI12TT V6t New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 2* 2* 23 17 2 1* 18* 11 4 25 10 1 13 4 3 3rd 435
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 10 13 10 15 5 2 14 19 25 17 6 17 3 13 2 7th 363
50 1
United States Graham Rahal 38 12 4 24 16 13 19 2 9 9 23 4 11 5 11 6 10th 333
United States Charlie Kimball 83 9 25 18 8 8 8 23 17 11 2 19 21 18 10 19th 260
Italy Giorgio Pantano 14 31st 16
2013 STP ALA LBH SAO INDY DET TXS MIL IOW POC TOR MDO SNM BAL HOU FON
Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Australia Ryan Briscoe 8 12 26th 22
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 5 2 11 18 14 4 4 23 6 16 1 1 1* 7 15* 19 1* 2 5 1st 577
United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 10 25 25 4 7 23 6 5 6 8 20 3 3 4 3 3 21 15 15 10th 418
Canada Alex Tagliani 14 24th 16
United States Charlie Kimball 83 12 4 21 10 9 14 7 17 17 12 2 21 6 1* 20 6 11 8 10 9th 427
2014 STP LBH ALA IMS INDY DET TXS HOU POC IOW TOR MDO MIL SNM FON
Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Australia Ryan Briscoe 8 10 17 11 6 18 15 10 9 12 8 4 9 12 11 8 6 17 7 11th 461
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 4 12 3 15 29 11 4 5 19 18 5 4 5 7 1* 4 1 2 3rd 604
Brazil Tony Kanaan 10 6 18 9 10 26 3 9 6 13 10 11* 3* 3 2 21 3 13 1 7th 544
United States Charlie Kimball 83 20 23 10 5 31 9 3 10 18 4 17 10 7 4 7 16 21 12 14th 402
2015 STP NOL LBH ALA IMS INDY DET TXS TOR FON MIL IOW MDO POC SNM
Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t United States Sage Karam 8 19 18 18 32 16 12 12 5 19 3 22 14 20th 197
Colombia Sebastián Saavedra 10 17 16 13 25th 96
17 23
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 15 11 1* 3 10 4* 5 20 1* 8 6 7 18 4 9 1* 1st 556
Brazil Tony Kanaan 10 3 6 5 13 7 26 20 13 2 6 2 6 21 5 19 4 8th 431
United States Charlie Kimball 83 21 14 15 12 5 3 22 11 7 20 8 12 22 23 12 3 12th 372
2016 STP PHX LBH ALA IMS INDY DET ROA IOW TOR MDO POC TXS WGL SNM
Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t United Kingdom Max Chilton 8 17 7 14 21 14 15 21 22 20 19 18 16 13 15 10 16 19th 267
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 7 1* 2 10 7 8 19 5 22 3 8* 22 6 19 1* 17 6th 477
Brazil Tony Kanaan 10 9 4 6 8 25 4 9 7 2 7 4 12 9 3 12 13 7th 461
United States Charlie Kimball 42 5 9th 433
83 10 12 11 9 5 8 16 6 10 11 8 15 6 6 9
2017 STP LBH ALA PHX IMS INDY DET TEX ROA IOW TOR MDO POC GAT WGL SNM
Dallara DW12 Honda HI17TT V6t United Kingdom Max Chilton 8 16 14 12 20 7 4* 11 15 8 9 14 7 15 18 17 8 12 11th 396
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 3 4* 2 5 2 32 2 6 9 1* 8 10 9 6* 2 2 4 3rd 621
Brazil Tony Kanaan 10 12 15 7 6 20 5 15 10 2 21 9 19 16 5 16 20 16 10th 403
United States Charlie Kimball 83 18 21 15 8 21 25 21 8 21 6 15 12 13 16 7 7 11 17th 327
2018 STP PHX LBH ALA IMS INDY DET TXS ROA IOW TOR MDO POC GAT POR SNM
Dallara DW12 Honda HI18TT V6t New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 6 4 11 6 2 3 1* 4 1* 3 12 1* 5 3 3* 5 2 1st 678
United Arab Emirates Ed Jones 10 8 20 3 20 22 31 6 3 9 9 13 12 15 12 8 24 10 13th 343
2019 STP COA ALA LBH IMS INDY DET TXS ROA TOR IOW MDO POC GAT POR LAG
Dallara DW12 Honda HI19TT V6t New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 2 13 2 3 2* 17 22 1* 17 5 2 2 1* 2 20 16 3 4th 578
Sweden Felix Rosenqvist (R) 10 4 23 10 10 8 28 4 16 12 6 5 14 2 22 11 2 5 6th 425
2020 TXS IMS ROA IOW INDY GAT MDO IMS STP
Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Sweden Marcus Ericsson 8 19 6 10 4 9 9 32 5 23 15 5 10 15 7 12th 291
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 1* 1 1 12 2 5 2* 1 5 10 10 9 8 3 1st 537
Sweden Felix Rosenqvist 10 20 15 18 1 14 15 12 8 7 6 22 5 11 18 11th 306
2021 ALA STP TXS IMS INDY DET ROA MDO NSH IMS GAT POR LAG LBH
Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Sweden Marcus Ericsson 8 8 7 19 12 10 11 1 9 6 2 1 9 9 7 6 28 6th 435
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 3 5 1* 4* 9 17 8 7 4 4 2 17 19 3 13 3 4th 481
Spain Álex Palou 10 1* 17 4 7 3 2 15 3 1 3 7 27 20 1 2 4 1st 549
United States Jimmie Johnson (R) 48 19 22 24 24 21 22 22 26 19 20 17 17 26th 108
Brazil Tony Kanaan 11 15 10 13 28th 96
2022 STP TXS LBH ALA IMS INDY DET ROA MDO TOR IOW IMS NSH GAT POR LAG
Dallara DW12 Honda HI22TT V6t Brazil Tony Kanaan 1 3 26th 78
Sweden Marcus Ericsson 8 9 3 22 12 4 1 7 2 6 5 8 6 11 14 7 11 9 6th 506
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 8 5 6 5 10 21* 3 9 5 1* 5 4 8 1 8 3 12 3rd 521
Spain Álex Palou 10 2 7 3 2 18 9 6 27 2 6 6 13 10 3* 9 12 1* 5th 510
United States Jimmie Johnson 48 23 6 20 24 22 28 22 24 16 21 11 5 22 18 14 24 16 21st 214
2023 STP TXS LBH ALA IMS INDY DET ROA MDO TOR IOW NSH IMS GAT POR LAG
Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Sweden Marcus Ericsson 8 1 8 3 10 8 2 9 6 27 11 4 9 7 10 10 7 15 6th 438
New Zealand Scott Dixon 9 3 5 27 7 6 6 4 4 2 4 6 6 5 1 1* 3 1 2nd 578
Spain Álex Palou 10 8 3 5 5 1* 4 1* 1 1 2 8 3 3 7 7 1* 3* 1st 656
New Zealand Marcus Armstrong (R) 11 11 8 11 15 8 24 9 7 13 24 19 8 20th 214
Japan Takuma Sato 28 7 9 25 26 29th 70

* Season still in progress

  1. ^ Non-points-paying, exhibition race.
  2. ^ The final race at Las Vegas was canceled due to Dan Wheldon's death.

IndyCar wins

IndyCar wins
#SeasonDateSanctionTrack / RaceNo.Winning DriverChassisEngineTireGridLaps Led
1 1994 March 20 CART Gold Coast Indy 300 (S) 8 United States Michael Andretti Reynard 94i Ford XB V8t Goodyear 2 55
2 July 17 CART Exhibition Place, Toronto (S) 8 United States Michael Andretti (2) Reynard 94i Ford XB V8t Goodyear 6 71
3 1996 March 3 CART Grand Prix of Miami (O) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone 3 32
4 March 31 CART Gold Coast Indy 300 (S) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (2) Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone Pole 60
5 April 14 CART Grand Prix of Long Beach (S) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (3) Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone 3 4
6 May 26 CART U.S. 500 (O) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (4) Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone Pole 35
7 June 23 CART Grand Prix of Portland (R) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (R) Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone Pole 95
8 August 11 CART Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (R) (2) Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone Pole 79
9 September 8 CART Laguna Seca Raceway (R) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (R) (3) Reynard 96i Honda HRH V8t Firestone Pole 41
10 1997 April 13 CART Grand Prix of Long Beach (S) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (4) Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone 2 41
11 July 13 CART Grand Prix of Cleveland (S) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (5) Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone Pole 30
12 July 27 CART Michigan 500 (O) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (6) Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone 7 104
13 August 10 CART Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (7) Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone 2 56
14 August 17 CART Road America (R) 4 Italy Alex Zanardi (8) Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone 3 15
15 September 7 CART Laguna Seca Raceway (R) 1 United States Jimmy Vasser (5) Reynard 97i Honda HRR V8t Firestone 6 58
16 1998 April 5 CART Grand Prix of Long Beach (S) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (9) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 11 2
17 April 27 CART Nazareth Speedway (O) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (6) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 5 41
18 May 23 CART Gateway International Raceway (O) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (10) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 11 61
19 May 31 CART Milwaukee Mile (O) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (7) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 5 77
20 June 7 CART Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix (S) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (11) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 2 50
21 June 21 CART Grand Prix of Portland (R) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (12) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 5 47
22 July 12 CART Grand Prix of Cleveland (S) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (13) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 3 68
23 July 19 CART Exhibition Place, Toronto (S) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (14) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 2 3
24 October 18 CART Surfers Paradise (S) 1 Italy Alex Zanardi (15) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 2 49
25 November 1 CART Fontana 500 (O) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (8) Reynard 98i Honda HRK V8t Firestone 2 63
26 1999 April 18 CART Grand Prix of Long Beach (S) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone 5 40
27 May 2 CART Nazareth Speedway (O) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (2) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone Pole 210
28 May 15 CART Rio 200 (O) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (3) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone 3 93
29 June 27 CART Grand Prix of Cleveland (S) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (4) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone Pole 76
30 August 15 CART Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (5) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone 8 28
31 August 22 CART Chicago Motor Speedway (O) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (6) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone 10 132
32 September 5 CART Streets of Vancouver (S) 4 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (7) Reynard 99i Honda HRS V8t Firestone Pole 73
33 2000 May 28 IRL Indianapolis 500 (O) 9 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (R) (8) G-Force GF05 Oldsmobile Aurora V8 Firestone 2 167
34 2000 June 5 CART Milwaukee Mile (O) 1 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (9) Lola B2K/00 Toyota RV8E V8t Firestone Pole 179
35 July 23 CART Michigan 500 (O) 1 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (10) Lola B2K/00 Toyota RV8E V8t Firestone 7 39
36 September 17 CART Gateway Motorsports Park (O) 1 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya (11) Lola B2K/00 Toyota RV8E V8t Firestone Pole 83
37 October 1 CART Grand Prix of Houston (S) 12 United States Jimmy Vasser (9) Lola B2K/00 Toyota RV8E V8t Firestone 3 31
38 2001 August 19 CART Road America (R) 4 Brazil Bruno Junqueira (R) Lola B01/00 Toyota RV8F V8t Firestone 10 11
39 2002 April 27 CART Twin Ring Motegi (O) 4 Brazil Bruno Junqueira (2) Lola B02/00 Toyota RV8F V8t Bridgestone Pole 54
40 2002 June 8 IRL Texas Motor Speedway (O) 9 United States Jeff Ward G-Force GF05C Chevrolet Indy V8 Firestone 7 1
41 2002 September 2 CART Grand Prix of Denver (S) 4 Brazil Bruno Junqueira (3) Lola B02/00 Toyota RV8F V8t Bridgestone Pole 100
42 November 17 CART Gran Premio de México (R) 12 Sweden Kenny Bräck Lola B02/00 Toyota RV8F V8t Bridgestone 6 12
43 2003 March 2 IndyCar Homestead–Miami Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon G-Force GF09 Toyota Indy V8 Firestone 12 53
44 June 15 IndyCar Pikes Peak International Raceway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (2) G-Force GF09 Toyota Indy V8 Firestone 6 89
45 June 28 IndyCar Richmond International Raceway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (3) G-Force GF09 Toyota Indy V8 Firestone Pole 206
46 2005 September 25 IndyCar Watkins Glen International (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (4) Panoz G-Force GF09C Toyota Indy V8 Firestone 4 25
47 2006 March 26 IndyCar Homestead–Miami Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon Dallara IR-05 Honda HI6R V8 Firestone 6 8
48 June 4 IndyCar Watkins Glen International (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (5) Panoz G-Force GF09C Honda HI6R V8 Firestone 4 9
49 July 15 IndyCar Nashville Superspeedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (6) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI6R V8 Firestone 3 69
50 September 10 IndyCar Chicagoland Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (2) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI6R V8 Firestone 3 166
51 2007 March 24 IndyCar Homestead–Miami Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (3) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 Firestone Pole 179
52 April 29 IndyCar Kansas Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (4) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 Firestone 4 177
53 July 8 IndyCar Watkins Glen International (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (7) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 Firestone 2 23
54 July 15 IndyCar Nashville Superspeedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (8) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 Firestone Pole 105
55 July 22 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (9) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 Firestone 6 29
56 August 26 IndyCar Sonoma Raceway (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (10) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI7R V8 Firestone 5 15
57 2008 March 29 IndyCar Homestead–Miami Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (11) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone Pole 68
58 April 27 IndyCar Kansas Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (5) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone 2 49
59 May 25 IndyCar Indianapolis 500 (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (12) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone Pole 115
60 June 7 IndyCar Texas Motor Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (13) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone Pole 58
61 June 22 IndyCar Iowa Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (6) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone 3 61
62 July 12 IndyCar Nashville Superspeedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (14) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone 5 53
63 July 26 IndyCar Edmonton Indy (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (15) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone 4 30
64 August 9 IndyCar Kentucky Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (16) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI8R V8 Firestone Pole 151
65 2009 April 19 IndyCar Grand Prix of Long Beach (S) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone 2 51
66 April 26 IndyCar Kansas Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (17) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone 4 134
67 May 31 IndyCar Milwaukee Mile (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (18) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone 4 27
68 June 21 IndyCar Iowa Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (2) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone 4 68
69 June 27 IndyCar Richmond International Raceway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (19) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone 2 161
70 July 12 IndyCar Exhibition Place, Toronto (S) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (3) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone Pole 45
71 August 9 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (20) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone 3 51
72 August 23 IndyCar Sonoma Raceway (R) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (4) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone Pole 75
73 September 18 IndyCar Twin Ring Motegi (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (21) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone Pole 139
74 October 10 IndyCar Homestead–Miami Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (5) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI9R V8 Firestone Pole 25
75 2010 May 1 IndyCar Kansas Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (22) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 Firestone 2 167
76 May 30 IndyCar Indianapolis 500 (O) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (6) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 Firestone 3 155
77 July 25 IndyCar Edmonton Indy (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (23) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 Firestone 3 2
78 August 8 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (7) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 Firestone 2 29
79 August 28 IndyCar Chicagoland Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (8) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 Firestone 2 28
80 October 2 IndyCar Homestead–Miami Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (24) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI10R V8 Firestone 2 47
81 2011 March 27 IndyCar Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (S) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (9) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 Firestone 2 94
82 June 11 IndyCar Texas Motor Speedway (O) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (10) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 Firestone 2 110
83 June 19 IndyCar Milwaukee Mile (O) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (11) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 Firestone Pole 161
84 July 10 IndyCar Exhibition Place, Toronto (S) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (12) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 Firestone 3 30
85 August 7 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (25) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 Firestone Pole 50
86 September 18 IndyCar Twin Ring Motegi (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (26) Dallara IR-05 Honda HI11R V8 Firestone Pole 62
87 2012 May 27 IndyCar Indianapolis 500 (O) 50 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (13) Dallara DW12 Honda HI12TT V6t Firestone 16 23
88 June 3 IndyCar Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (27) Dallara DW12 Honda HI12TT V6t Firestone Pole 60
89 August 5 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (28) Dallara DW12 Honda HI12TT V6t Firestone 4 26
90 2013 July 7 IndyCar Pocono Raceway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (29) Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Firestone 17 38
91 July 13 IndyCar Exhibition Place Race 1 (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (30) Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Firestone 5 14
92 July 14 IndyCar Exhibition Place, Toronto Race 2 (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (31) Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Firestone Pole 81
93 August 4 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 83 United States Charlie Kimball Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Firestone 5 46
94 October 5 IndyCar Grand Prix of Houston Race 1 (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (32) Dallara DW12 Honda HI13TT V6t Firestone 3 44
95 2014 August 3 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (33) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 22 45
96 August 24 IndyCar Sonoma Raceway (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (34) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 3 3
97 August 30 IndyCar Auto Club Speedway 500 (O) 10 Brazil Tony Kanaan Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 7 64
98 2015 April 19 IndyCar Grand Prix of Long Beach (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (35) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 3 44
99 June 6 IndyCar Texas Motor Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (36) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 7 97
100 August 30 IndyCar Sonoma Raceway (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (37) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 9 34
101 2016 April 2 IndyCar Phoenix International Raceway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (38) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone 6 155
102 September 4 IndyCar Watkins Glen International (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (39) Dallara DW12 Chevrolet IndyCar V6t Firestone Pole 50
103 2017 June 25 IndyCar Road America (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (40) Dallara DW12 Honda HI17TT V6t Firestone 5 24
104 2018 June 2 IndyCar Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix Race 1 (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (41) Dallara DW12 Honda HI18TT V6t Firestone 2 39
105 June 9 IndyCar Texas Motor Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (42) Dallara DW12 Honda HI18TT V6t Firestone 7 119
106 July 15 IndyCar Exhibition Place, Toronto (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (43) Dallara DW12 Honda HI18TT V6t Firestone 2 49
107 2019 June 2 IndyCar Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix Race 2 (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (44) Dallara DW12 Honda HI19TT V6t Firestone 6 44
108 July 29 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (45) Dallara DW12 Honda HI19TT V6t Firestone 8 38
109 2020 June 6 IndyCar Texas Motor Speedway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (46) Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Firestone 2 157
110 July 4 IndyCar Grand Prix of Indianapolis (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (47) Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Firestone 7 26
111 July 11 IndyCar Road America Race 1 (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (48) Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Firestone 9 16
112 July 12 IndyCar Road America Race 2 (R) 10 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Firestone 7 8
113 August 29 IndyCar World Wide Technology Raceway Race 1 (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (49) Dallara DW12 Honda HI20TT V6t Firestone 3 28
114 2021 April 18 IndyCar Barber Motorsports Park (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone 3 56
115 May 1 IndyCar Texas Motor Speedway Race 1 (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (50) Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone 3 206
116 June 12 IndyCar Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix Race 1 (S) 8 Sweden Marcus Ericsson Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone 15 5
117 June 20 IndyCar Road America (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (2) Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone 5 5
118 August 8 IndyCar Nashville Street Circuit (S) 8 Sweden Marcus Ericsson (2) Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone 18 37
119 September 12 IndyCar Grand Prix of Portland (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (3) Dallara DW12 Honda HI21TT V6t Firestone Pole 29
120 2022 May 29 IndyCar Indianapolis Motor Speedway (O) 8 Sweden Marcus Ericsson (3) Dallara DW12 Honda HI22TT V6t Firestone 5 13
121 July 17 IndyCar Exhibition Place, Toronto (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (51) Dallara DW12 Honda HI22TT V6t Firestone 2 40
122 August 7 IndyCar Nashville Street Circuit (S) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (52) Dallara DW12 Honda HI22TT V6t Firestone 14 15
123 September 11 IndyCar WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (4) Dallara DW12 Honda HI22TT V6t Firestone 11 67
124 2023 March 5 IndyCar Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (S) 8 Sweden Marcus Ericsson (4) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 4 4
125 May 13 IndyCar Grand Prix of Indianapolis (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (5) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 3 52
126 June 4 IndyCar Detroit Grand Prix (S) 10 Spain Álex Palou (6) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone Pole 74
127 June 18 IndyCar Road America (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (7) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 3 10
128 July 2 IndyCar Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (8) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 4 48
129 August 12 IndyCar Grand Prix of Indianapolis (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (53) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 15 34
130 August 27 IndyCar World Wide Technology Raceway (O) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (54) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 16 123
131 September 3 IndyCar Grand Prix of Portland (R) 10 Spain Álex Palou (9) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 5 69
132 September 10 IndyCar WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca (R) 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (55) Dallara DW12 Honda HI23TT V6t Firestone 11 20

NASCAR

Sports car entries

2011 Daytona Prototype at Road America
Lexus-Riley prototype driven by Chip Ganassi Racing driver Scott Pruett
Ford GT GTE-Pro, which competed in the FIA World Endurance Championship from 2016 until the end of the 2018–19 season and the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship from the 2016 season until the end of the 2019 season.
2023 V-Series.R LMDh at Daytona International Speedway.

Grand-Am

Initially, CGR fielded the 01 Lexus-Riley car driven by Scott Pruett and Max Papis. Their second team car, the 02, was driven by Jimmy Morales and Luis Diaz. CGR won the 2006 24 Hours of Daytona with Ganassi IRL drivers Dan Wheldon and Scott Dixon along with NASCAR driver Casey Mears. In 2007, Ganassi won the race again, this time with Pruett, former Formula 1 driver Juan Pablo Montoya, and Salvador Duran,[18] making him the first owner to win it in back to back years since Al Holbert in 1986–87. In 2008 Chip Ganassi Racing won a third Daytona 24 in a row. Also in 2008, Chip Ganassi Racing won their 3rd Grand-Am Championship, with drivers Scott Pruett, and Memo Rojas. It was Pruett's 8th Road Racing Championship. Also participating was Memo Rojas, the first Mexican to win a major Road Racing title in North America. For the 2010 Grand-Am season the team switched from Lexus-Riley to BMW-Riley. Rojas and Pruett won 9 out of 12 races and eventually won the Grand-Am championship.

2011 Rolex 24 victory

Ganassi's Grand-Am Series team started 2011 in the best possible fashion, earning a one-two finish in the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona endurance race.[19] Ganassi's two cars ran towards the front of the field for the majority of the race,[20] and driver Scott Pruett, having started third,[21] defeated Scott Dixon by a margin of victory of over two seconds in a one-lap sprint to the finish after a late caution period.[19][20]

The victory made Ganassi the first racing team owner to win the four of the most important races in North American auto racing, the Daytona 500, Indianapolis 500, Brickyard 400, and 24 Hours of Daytona, within the same 12-month span.[19] It was Pruett's fourth win in the event; for co-driver Memo Rojas, his second victory, while co-drivers Joey Hand and Graham Rahal won for the first time, the latter thirty years after his father, Bobby Rahal, won the event.[20]

IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship

CGR would field a Riley-Ford Daytona Prototype in the inaugural season of the merged United SportsCar Championship for Scott Pruett and Memo Rojas, winning three races. In 2015, Rojas was replaced by ex-BMW works driver Joey Hand, and the team fielded an "all-star car" at Daytona consisting of the teams IndyCar and NASCAR drivers.

For 2016, the team would move to the GTLM class with the brand new Ford GT, and thus the Daytona Prototype programme officially disbanded. Long time Ganassi driver Pruett would no longer have a place on the team, as Hand would partner with Dirk Müller (another ex-BMW works driver), while Ryan Briscoe and Richard Westbrook were hired to drive the second GT. For Daytona, the team would bring out the Riley DPs one last time, the IndyCar/NASCAR "all-star car" being joined by a team of Alexander Wurz, Brendon Hartley, Andy Priaulx, and Lance Stroll, in the last Rolex 24 of the DP era.

IMSA Race Results

[22]

Year Chassis Engine Team No. Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
2016 Riley
Mk XXVI

Daytona Prototype
Ford
3.5 L
EcoBoost

V6
DAY SEB LGB LGA DET WTK MOS LMR ELK VIR COTA PETIT
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
Racing
01 Canada Lance Stroll 5
Austria Alexander Wurz 5
New Zealand Brendon Hartley 5
United Kingdom Andy Priaulx 5
02 New Zealand Scott Dixon 7
Brazil Tony Kanaan 7
United States Jamie McMurray 7
United States Kyle Larson 7
DAY SEB LGB LGA DET WTK MOS LMR ELK VIR COTA PETIT
Ford GT 66 United States Joey Hand 7 8 9 1 2 5 5 9 2 6 2
Germany Dirk Müller 7 8 9 1 2 5 5 9 2 6 2
France Sébastien Bourdais 7 8 1 2
67 Australia Ryan Briscoe 9 5 2 3 1 1 3 2 4 9 7
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 9 5 2 3 1 1 3 2 4 9 7
Germany Stefan Mücke 9
New Zealand Scott Dixon 5 3 7
2017 DAY SEB LGB COTA DET WTK MOS LMR ELK VIR LGA PETIT
66 United States Joey Hand 1 2 8 5 4 5 7 1 5 6 7
Germany Dirk Müller 1 2 8 5 4 5 7 1 5 6 7
France Sébastien Bourdais 1 2 7
67 Australia Ryan Briscoe 10 4 2 6 2 3 5 3 2 5 8
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 10 4 2 6 2 3 5 3 2 5 8
New Zealand Scott Dixon 10 4 8
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
Team
UK
68 France Olivier Pla 7 5
Germany Stefan Mücke 7 5
United States Billy Johnson 7 5
69 United Kingdom Andy Priaulx 5
United Kingdom Harry Tincknell 5
Brazil Tony Kanaan 5
2018 DAY SEB LGB MOH DET WTK MOS LMR ELK VIR LGA PETIT
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
Racing
66 United States Joey Hand 2 9 3 4 1 5 1 7 4 7 7
Germany Dirk Müller 2 9 3 4 1 5 1 7 4 7 7
France Sébastien Bourdais 2 9 7
67 Australia Ryan Briscoe 1 4 2 5 6 1 6 1 7 6 5
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 1 4 2 5 6 1 6 1 7 6 5
New Zealand Scott Dixon 1 4 5
2019 DAY SEB LGB MOH DET WTK MOS LMR ELK VIR LGA PETIT
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
Racing
66 United States Joey Hand 7 2 4 6 3 2 6 1 8
Germany Dirk Müller 7 2 4 7 4 6 3 2 6 1 8
France Sébastien Bourdais 7 2 4 7 8
67 Australia Ryan Briscoe 4 6 6 5 3 5 1 1 5 6 2
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 4 6 6 5 3 5 1 1 5 6 2
New Zealand Scott Dixon 4 6 2
2021 Cadillac DPi-V.R Cadillac 5.5 L V8 DAY SEB MOH BEL WGL1 WGL2 LIM ELK LGA LBH VIR PETIT
Cadillac
Chip
Ganassi
Racing
01 Denmark Kevin Magnussen 5 5 5 1 6 2 3 2 2
Netherlands Renger van der Zande 5 5 5 1 6 2 3 2 2 5
Australia Scott Dixon 5 5 5
Australia Earl Bamber 5

WeatherTech SportsCar Championship wins

#SeasonDateClassesTrack / RaceNo.Winning DriverChassisEngine
1 2014 March 15 Prototype Sebring 01 United Kingdom Marino Franchitti / United States Scott Pruett / Mexico Memo Rojas Ford EcoBoost Riley DP Ford Ecoboost 3.5 L V6 Turbo
2 April 12 Prototype Long Beach 01 United States Scott Pruett / Mexico Memo Rojas Ford EcoBoost Riley DP Ford Ecoboost 3.5 L V6 Turbo
3 September 20 Prototype Austin 01 United States Scott Pruett / Mexico Memo Rojas Ford EcoBoost Riley DP Ford Ecoboost 3.5 L V6 Turbo
4 2015 January 24–25 Prototype Daytona 02 New Zealand Dixon / Brazil Kanaan / United States Larson / United States McMurray Ford EcoBoost Riley DP Ford Ecoboost 3.5 L V6 Turbo
5 September 19 Prototype Austin 01 United States Joey Hand / United States Scott Pruett Ford EcoBoost Riley DP Ford Ecoboost 3.5 L V6 Turbo
6 2021 June 12 Daytona Prototype International The Raceway On Belle Isle 01 Denmark Kevin Magnussen / Netherlands Renger van der Zande Cadillac DPi-V.R Cadillac 5.5 L V8

FIA World Endurance Championship

On 12 June 2015, at Le Mans, it was announced that Ford would return to the 2016 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2016 with a factory-supported, four-car effort operating as Ford Chip Ganassi Racing and thus marked Ford's return to international automobile road racing as a full-factory entrant since 2004 Formula One season but under Jaguar Racing F1 Team banner after eleven-year absence.[23] The cars would be campaigned by Chip Ganassi Racing in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, and by Multimatic Motorsports Europe (joint-venture) in the FIA World Endurance Championship under the Ford Chip Ganassi Team UK banner.[24]

With the Chip Ganassi teams racing their GT, Ford had podium wins in the FIA GT manufacturer's category both years that it competed in.

Notable Team Chip Ganassi UK/US Accomplishments


FIA World Endurance Cup for GT Manufacturers
2016 3rd Place: Ford
2017 2nd Place: Ford

FIA Endurance Trophy for LMGTE Pro Teams
2016 2nd Place: Car #67
2016 4th Place: Car #66
2017 2nd Place: Car #67
2017 7th Place: Car #66

World Endurance Cup for GT Drivers
2016: S. Mücke & O. Pla ranked 4th
2016: A. Priaulx, H. Tincknell ranked 5th
2016: B. Johnson ranked 9th
2016: M. Franchitti 13th
2017: A. Priaulx, H. Tincknell ranked 3rd
2017: S. Mücke & O. Pla ranked 8th
2017: L. Derani ranked 10th
2017: B. Johnson ranked 12th

Pole Positions
2016 6 Hours of Fuji: #66 Car (Mücke, Pla)
2016 6 Hours of Shanghai: #67 Car (Priaulx, Tincknell)
2017 6 Hours of Silverstone: #67 Car (Priaulx, Tincknell, Derani)
2018 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps: #67 Car (Priaulx, Tincknell, Kanaan)

Fastest Laps
2016 Le Mans 24 Hours: Scott Dixon in #69 at 3:51.514
2016 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas: Olivier Pla at in #66 2:05.244
2016 6 Hours of Fuji: Harry Tincknell in #67 at 1:38.575
2017 6 Hours of Silverstone: Andy Priaulx in #67 at 1:57.416
2017 6 Hours of Shanghai: Olivier Pla in #66 at 2:02.154

FIA World Endurance Championship Race Results


Year Chassis Engine Team No. Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
2016 Ford
GT
Ford
3.5 L
EcoBoost
V6
United Kingdom
SIL
Belgium
SPA
France
LMS
Germany
NÜR
Mexico
MEX
United States
COA
Japan
FUJ
China
SHA
Bahrain
BHR
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
UK
66 France Olivier Pla 5 6 4 4 7 7 2 2 6
Germany Stefan Mücke 5 6 4 4 7 7 2 2 6
United States Billy Johnson 5 6 4
67 United Kingdom Andy Priaulx 4 2 9 7 5 4 1 1 4
United Kingdom Harry Tincknell 4 2 9 7 5 4 1 1 4
United Kingdom Marino Franchitti 4 2 9 7 5 4
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
USA
68 United States Joey Hand 1
Germany Dirk Müller 1
France Sébastien Bourdais 1
69 Australia Ryan Briscoe 3
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 3
New Zealand Scott Dixon 3
2017 United Kingdom
SIL
Belgium
SPA
France
LMS
Germany
NÜR
Mexico
MEX
United States
COA
Japan
FUJ
China
SHA
Bahrain
BHR
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
UK
66 France Olivier Pla 4 3 10 6 7 8 4 4 5
Germany Stefan Mücke 4 3 10 6 7 8 4 4 5
United States Billy Johnson 4 3 10
67 United Kingdom Andy Priaulx 1 4 2 5 4 7 8 1 3
United Kingdom Harry Tincknell 1 4 2 5 4 7 8 1 3
Brazil Luis Felipe Derani 1 4 2
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
USA
68 United States Joey Hand 6
Germany Dirk Müller 6
Brazil Tony Kanaan 6
69 Australia Ryan Briscoe 7
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 7
New Zealand Scott Dixon 7
2018-19 Belgium
SPA
France
LMS
United Kingdom
SIL
Japan
FUJ
China
SHA
United States
SEB
Belgium
SPA
France
LMS
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
UK
66 France Olivier Pla 1 6 6 8 7 11 10 6
Germany Stefan Mücke 1 6 6 8 7 11 10 6
United States Billy Johnson 1 6 11 6
67 United Kingdom Andy Priaulx 8 12 2 3 10 3 5 4
United Kingdom Harry Tincknell 8 12 2 3 10 3 5 4
United States Jonathan Bomarito 3 4
Brazil Tony Kanaan 8 12
Ford
Chip
Ganassi
USA
68 United States Joey Hand 3 17
Germany Dirk Müller 3 17
France Sébastien Bourdais 3 17
69 Australia Ryan Briscoe 14 5
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 14 5
New Zealand Scott Dixon 14 5
2023 Cadillac
V-Series.R
Cadillac
LMC55R
5.5 L
V8
United States
SEB
Portugal
POR
Belgium
SPA
France
LMS
Italy
MZA
Japan
FUJ
Bahrain
BHR
Cadillac
Racing
2 United Kingdom Alex Lynn 4
United Kingdom Richard Westbrook 4
New Zealand Earl Bamber 4

Global RallyCross Championship

Ganassi expressed plans to start a team in the AMA Supercross Championship, but in late 2014, Ganassi attended the Global RallyCross Championship's season-ending race in Las Vegas, and as a result, expressed interest in fielding a GRC team.[25] On March 18, 2015, Ganassi announced the creation of a team that began competing in the GRC in 2015. The team is based in the NASCAR shop in Concord, North Carolina, and is led by former Ford World Rally Team engineer Carl Goodman. The team hired former JR Motorsports NASCAR driver Steve Arpin and 13-time X Games medalist Brian Deegan to run the No. 00 and 38 M-Sport Ford Fiestas, respectively.[26] Arpin contested the full season, while Deegan competed in seven of the season's twelve races.[27]

In 2016 Arpin and Deegan were back full-time. Arpin earned the team's first win at Daytona.

In 2017, Ganassi announced he would shut down the Global RallyCross program to focus on other series. The team's assets were acquired by Loenbro Motorsports.[28]

Supercar

Year Entrant Car No. Driver 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 GRC Points
2015 Chip Ganassi Racing Ford Fiesta ST 00 Canada Steve Arpin FTA
7
DAY1
5
DAY2
3
MCAS
5
DET1
7
DET2
11
DC
4
LA1
5
LA2
5
BAR1
8
BAR2
4
LV
4
6th 357
38 United States Brian Deegan FTA
DAY1
DAY2
MCAS
10
DET1
4
DET2
5
DC
LA1
6
LA2
2
BAR1
6
BAR2
9
LV
5
10th 229
360 United States Jeff Ward FTA
DAY1
6
DAY2
4
MCAS
DET1
DET2
DC
9
LA1
LA2
BAR1
BAR2
LV
NC -
2016 Chip Ganassi Racing Ford Fiesta ST 00 Canada Steve Arpin PHO1
4
PHO2
5
DAL
2
DAY1
1
DAY2
6
MCAS1
3
MCAS2 DC
6
AC
5
SEA
5
LA1
3
LA2
10
4th 461
38 United States Brian Deegan PHO1
3
PHO2
6
DAL
7
DAY1
2
DAY2
5
MCAS1
2
MCAS2 DC
4
AC
3
SEA
7
LA1
4
LA2
1
3rd 473

Race cancelled.

Extreme E

In May 2020, CGR joined the Extreme E electric racing series for its inaugural season in 2021.[29] A month later, the team signed Sara Price to race one of two entries, making her the first confirmed Extreme E racer and the first female driver in team history.[30] Lucas Oil Off Road Racing Series champion Kyle LeDuc joined CGR in July.[31] In December, Sycamore Entertainment signed a multiyear sponsorship deal with CGR, where the team entered the 2021 season as Segi TV Chip Ganassi Racing.[32] In January 2021, GMC announced a multiyear sponsorship deal with CGR which sees the team rebranded as GMC Hummer EV Chip Ganassi Racing and the team's Spark ODYSSEY 21 body styled as the Hummer EV for the 2022 season onwards.[33][34] CGR's Extreme E team picked up their first series victory on July 7, 2022, with Price becoming the first woman in the organization's history to drive a race-winning car.

Racing overview

Year Name Car Tyres No. Drivers Rounds Pts. Pos.
2021 United States Segi TV Chip Ganassi Racing Spark Odyssey 21 C 99. United States Kyle LeDuc
United States Sara Price
(1–5)
(1–5)
74 8th
2022 United States Chip Ganassi Racing /
GMC Hummer EV Chip Ganassi Racing
Spark Odyssey 21 C 99. United States RJ Anderson
United States Kyle LeDuc
United States Sara Price
(5)
(1–4)
(1–5)
63 4th
2023 United States GMC Hummer EV Chip Ganassi Racing Spark Odyssey 21 C 99. United States RJ Anderson
United States Amanda Sorensen
(1-6)
(1-6)
80* 4th*

* Season still in progress

Racing summary

Year Series Races Wins Pod. B/Qual. S/S Pts. Pos.
2021 Extreme E 5 0 0 0 1 74 8th
2022 Extreme E 5 1 1 0 0 63 4th
2023 Extreme E 6 0 2 1 1 80* 4th*

* Season still in progress

Complete Extreme E results

(Races in bold indicate best qualifiers; races in italics indicate fastest super sector; H indicate Heat race win)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pts. Pos.
2021 Segi TV Chip Ganassi Racing DES
Saudi Arabia
8
OCE
Senegal
7
ARC
Greenland
9
ISL
Italy
4
JUR
United Kingdom
8
74 8th
2022 Chip Ganassi Racing /
GMC Hummer EV Chip Ganassi Racing
DES
Saudi Arabia
4
ISL1
Italy
1
ISL2
Italy
7
COP
Chile
4
ENE
Uruguay
6
63 4th
2023 GMC Hummer EV Chip Ganassi Racing DES1
Saudi Arabia
5H
DES2
Saudi Arabia
5
HYD1
United Kingdom
4
HYD2
United Kingdom
3HH
ISL1
Italy
3H
ISL2
Italy
4
TBC1
Italy
TBC2
Italy
COP1
Chile
COP2
Chile
80* 4th*

* Season still in progress

Footnotes

  1. Running as SABCO Racing.
  2. Running as Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates.
  3. Previously ran in the series as SABCO Racing.
  4. 7 wins for SABCO Racing, 15 for Chip Ganassi Racing and 5 for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing.
  5. 1 win for SABCO Racing, 1 for HScott Motorsports with Chip Ganassi and 20 for Chip Ganassi Racing.
  6. Prototype: 5, GTLM: 13, DPi: 5, GTP: 1
  7. Renna never drove a race for the team, because he died during a tire test in Indianapolis Motor Speedway on October 22, 2003. He was replaced by Darren Manning.
  8. Hired by the team as an injury replacement.

References

  1. "Chip Ganassi Racing team embarks on Extreme e Odyssey". 27 November 2020.
  2. "Chip Ganassi explains why 'Earnhardt' is no longer part of team name". Motorsportstalk | NBC Sports. 21 February 2014.
  3. "Ganassi confirms Rob Kauffman has bought stake of NASCAR team". 30 July 2015.
  4. "Felix Sabates to retire from NASCAR ownership - Sportsnet.ca".
  5. Pruett, Marshall (January 28, 2018). "Ganassi hits 200 win milestone with GTLM victory". Racer.com. Racer Media and Marketing, Inc. Archived from the original on January 30, 2018. Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  6. Wood, Ida (September 19, 2023). "What you should know about IndyCar's new driver and his case for a seat". Formula Scout. Retrieved September 19, 2023. Simpson [...] confirming that he is set to race under a Cayman Islands licence next year.
  7. http://www.indycar.com/Series/IndyCar-Series/Ed-Jones
  8. "Target Chip Ganassi Racing". IZOD IndyCar Series. Archived from the original on November 27, 2010. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  9. "Scott Dixon Driver History". IZOD IndyCar Series. Archived from the original on December 10, 2010. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  10. Indy Racing Public Relations (December 13, 2003). "Renna Accident Review Complete". RacingWest. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  11. "Dan Wheldon Driver History". IZOD IndyCar Series. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  12. "Dario Franchitti Driver History". IZOD IndyCar Series. Archived from the original on February 8, 2011. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  13. Target Ganassi Racing Sponsors Archived April 14, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  14. "Franchitti Savors Sweet Second Indianapolis 500 Victory". Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 30, 2010. Retrieved June 27, 2013.
  15. Lewandowski, Dave (December 16, 2010). "Ganassi expands with Rahal, Kimball". IZOD IndyCar Series. Archived from the original on January 19, 2011. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  16. "Motor Sports". Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  17. Associated Press (October 4, 2013). "IndyCar: Ganassi Signs Kanaan, Announces Switch To Chevy". Fox Sports. Retrieved October 4, 2013.
  18. "Rolex 24 at Daytona final results". Associated Press. January 28, 2007. Retrieved May 6, 2007.
  19. Long, Mark (January 30, 2011). "Ganassi sweeps top 2 spots in Rolex 24 at Daytona". Associated Press. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  20. Dagys, John (January 30, 2011). "ROLEX 24: Ganassi Goes Big With Rolex 1–2". Speed Channel. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  21. "2011 Rolex 24 At Daytona qualifying results". Daytona International Speedway. January 27, 2011. Retrieved January 30, 2011.
  22. "IMSA Historical Results". Archived from the original on 23 July 2018. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  23. "Ford GT returns to Le Mans 2016". Ford GT returns to Le Mans 2016. Retrieved 2016-03-16.
  24. "Multimatic Playing Major Role in Ford GT Program - Sportscar365". sportscar365.com. Retrieved 2016-03-16.
  25. Fryer, Jenna (March 18, 2015). "Chip Ganassi Expands Into Global Rally Cross With 2-Car Team". ABC News. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  26. James, Brant (March 18, 2015). "Chip Ganassi Racing launches Global Rallycross team". USA Today. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  27. McFadin, Daniel (March 18, 2015). "Chip Ganassi Racing enters world of Global Rallycross". NBC Sports. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
  28. DiZinno, Tony (February 14, 2017). "Red Bull GRC: Loenbro Motorsports launches own Supercar program". NBC Sports. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  29. Ryan, Nate (May 7, 2020). "Chip Ganassi Racing goes to the Extreme E in new electric SUV series". NBC Sports. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  30. "Sara Price joins Chip Ganassi Racing for Extreme E". Racer. June 11, 2020. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  31. "Chip Ganassi Racing First to Complete Extreme E Driver Lineup by Signing American Kyle LeDuc". Chip Ganassi Racing. July 14, 2020. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
  32. "Sycamore Entertainment and SEGI TV Sign Primary Sponsorship Deal With Chip Ganassi Racing For New Extreme E Racing Series". GlobeNewswire News Room (Press release). 2020-12-22.
  33. "GMC HUMMER EV teams up for Extreme E". www.extreme-e.com. 2021-01-26.
  34. Szymkowski, Sean (2021-01-26). "GMC Hummer EV is going racing in electric off-road series, Extreme E". CNET.
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