1985 CART PPG Indy Car World Series

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 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."

1985 CART season
PPG Indy Car World Series
Season
Races15
Start dateApril 14
End dateNovember 10
Awards
Drivers' champion Al Unser
Constructors' Cup March 85C/84C
Manufacturers' Cup Cosworth DFX
Nations' Cup United States
Rookie of the Year Arie Luyendyk
Indianapolis 500 winner Danny Sullivan

In the fall of 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 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.

Defending series champion Mario Andretti won the season opener, finished 2nd at Indy, and won the next two races, jumping out to the early points lead. A mid-season slump, however, saw him have 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, 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 of 5 races, and closing within 13 points of the points lead.

With two races to go, Unser Jr. led Unser by 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 Unsers. Late in the race, Al Unser Jr. was running third, and Al Unser was running 5th. At the moment, Al Jr. was leading the hypothetical title race by one point. Unser caught and passed Roberto Moreno for 4th place in the closing laps, and thus won the championship by 1 point over his son. Unser 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, and it was also in the best interests of sportsmanship to all competitors not to give favor to his son. Unser 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 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 pace 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.

Drivers and teams

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

Team Chassis Engine No* Drivers Rounds
Team Penske March 85C Cosworth DFX 4 (5) Danny Sullivan All
5 (1) Rick Mears 2–3, 7, 9, 12
Al Unser
11 All except 3
Doug Shierson Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX 30 Al Unser Jr. All
Truesports Co. March 85C Cosworth DFX 3 (10) Bobby Rahal All
8 Ludwig Heimrath Jr. 10
Newman/Haas Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX 1 (3) Mario Andretti All except 8
Alan Jones 8
Patrick Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 20 Bruno Giacomelli 1, 4–6, 8, 10–11, 13, 15
Sammy Swindell 7, 9
Don Whittington 2-3, 12, 14
40 Emerson Fittipaldi All
60 Rich Vogler 2
All American Racers Eagle 85GC (All except 4, 11, and 13-14)

Lola T900 (4, 11, 13-14)

Cosworth DFX 2 Tom Sneva All
Lola T900 97 Tony Bettenhausen Jr. 2
Eagle 85GC (All except 3, 6)

Lola T900 (3)

98 Ed Pimm All except 6
Kraco Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 18 Kevin Cogan All
99 Michael Andretti All
Alex Morales Motorsports March 85C Cosworth DFX 21 Johnny Rutherford All
Machinists Union Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 55 Josele Garza All
59 Pete Halsmer 2–6, 12
Rupert Keegan 10, 13, 15
Chip Ganassi 7
Galles Racing March 85C Buick V-6 (1-2)
Cosworth DFX (3-15)
6 Pancho Carter 2–4, 6–7, 9, 11–12, 14
Roberto Moreno 5, 8, 10, 13, 15
Cosworth DFX 7 Geoff Brabham All
Team Cotter March 85C Cosworth DFX 9 Roberto Guerrero All
Forsythe Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX 32/33 Howdy Holmes 1-12
Jan Lammers 13-15
Pace Racing March 84C (1-6)

Lola T900 (7-15)

Cosworth DFX 36 Dennis Firestone 1-13
Jim Crawford 14-15
Dick Simon Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 22 Raul Boesel 1, 4–6, 8, 10, 13, 15
Dick Simon 2-3, 7, 9, 11–12, 14
23 Raul Boesel 2, 7
Dick Simon 5
Leader Card Racing March 84C (1, 5)

March 85C (4)

Cosworth DFX 24 Rocky Moran 1, 4-5
March 84C (7)

March 85C (2-3, 9)

Tom Bigelow 2–3, 7, 9
March 84C Phil Krueger 6
March 85C Herm Johnson 8, 10
March 85C Gary Bettenhausen 11–12, 14
March 85C Dominic Dobson 13, 15
Canadian Tire Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 67 Jim Crawford 11
76 Jacques Villeneuve Sr. All except 2, 7, 9, and 12
Johnny Parsons 2
Provimi Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX 61 Arie Luyendyk All except 9-10
Arciero Racing Lola T900 (All other races)

March 85C (12, 15)

Cosworth DFX 12 Bill Whittington All except 7, 9, 11, and 14
Randy Lanier 14
Lola T900 57 1–2, 4–6, 8, 10, 13, 15
Dale Coyne Racing Lola T800 Chevy 19 Dale Coyne All except 1 and 11
Gohr Racing March 85C Chevy 56 Steve Chassey All except 1 and 11
Hemelgarn Racing Lola T900 (All other races)

March 85C (11)

Cosworth DFX 71 Michael Roe 1–2, 4-6
Spike Gehlhausen 3, 7
Enrique Mansilla 8, 10-11
Scott Brayton 13-15
Part-time entries
Wysard Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX 34 Jim Crawford 1–3, 5-6
Darin Brassfield 15
Brayton Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX/Buick V-6 37 Scott Brayton 1–7, 9, 12
Interscope Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 25 Danny Ongais 1–2, 6–7, 9, 12, 14-15
AMI Racing March 85C Cosworth DFX 43 John Paul Jr. 2, 6
Jan Lammers 4-5
Circle Bar Racing Lola T900 Cosworth DFX 38 Chet Fillip 2–3, 6-7
Menard Cashway Lumber March 85C Cosworth DFX 8 Herm Johnson 2
Tom Hess Racing Lola T800 Cosworth DFX 27 (29) Dick Ferguson 1
Lola T900 Derek Daly 2
Jeff Wood 6
Ian Ashley 15
Purcell Racing March 83C Cosworth DFX 50 Tom Bigelow 2
51 Phil Krueger 2
Gilmore Racing March 85C (All other races)

Lola T900 (11)

Cosworth DFX 14 A. J. Foyt 2, 5–7, 9, 11, 14-15
March 84C 41 Mike Nish 2, 14
March 85C Chevy 44 George Snider 2
Cosworth DFX 84 Chip Ganassi 2
Theodore Racing Theodore Cosworth DFX 15 Chico Serra 4
  • - The number in parenthesis is the number the car used at the Indianapolis 500, if a different number was used.

Notable team and driver changes

Season summary

Schedule

Rd Date Name Circuit Location
- March 31 Dana Jimmy Bryan 150  O  Phoenix International Raceway Avondale, Arizona
1 April 14 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach  S  Streets of Long Beach Long Beach, California
2 May 26 Indianapolis 500  O  Indianapolis Motor Speedway Indianapolis, Indiana
3 June 2 Miller American 200 in Honor of Rex Mays  O  Milwaukee Mile West Allis, Wisconsin
4 June 16 Stroh's/G.I. Joe's 200  R  Portland International Raceway Portland, Oregon
5 June 30 U.S. Grand Prix at the Meadowlands  S  Meadowlands Sports Complex East Rutherford, New Jersey
6 July 7 Budweiser Cleveland Grand Prix  S  Burke Lakefront Airport Cleveland, Ohio
7 July 28* Michigan 500  O  Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Michigan
8 August 4 Provimi Veal 200  R  Road America Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin
9 August 18 Domino's Pizza 500  O  Pocono International Raceway Long Pond, Pennsylvania
10 September 1 Escort Radar Warning 200  R  Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course Lexington, Ohio
11 September 8 Molson Indy  O  Sanair Super Speedway Saint-Pie, Quebec
12 September 22 Detroit News 200  O  Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Michigan
13 October 6 Stroh's 300k  R  Laguna Seca Raceway Monterey, California
14 October 13 Dana 150  O  Phoenix International Raceway Avondale, Arizona
15 November 9 Beatrice Indy Challenge  S  Tamiami Park Miami, Florida

 O  Oval/Speedway
 R  Dedicated road course
 S  Temporary street circuit
NC Non-championship event

The March 31st Dana Jimmy Bryan 150 was cancelled due to the general deterioration of the track. Note

*The Michigan 500 was scheduled for July 21, but postponed a week due to tire concerns.

Race results

Rd Event Name Pole Position Winner Winning Team Race time
1 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach Mario Andretti Mario Andretti Newman/Haas Racing 1:42:50
2 Indianapolis 500 Pancho Carter Danny Sullivan Team Penske 3:16:06
3 Miller American 200 in Honor of Rex Mays Mario Andretti Mario Andretti Newman/Haas Racing 1:36:38
4 Stroh's/G.I. Joe's 200 Danny Sullivan Mario Andretti Newman/Haas Racing 1:51:35
5 U.S. Grand Prix at the Meadowlands Mario Andretti Al Unser Jr. Doug Shierson Racing 1:51:55
6 Budweiser Cleveland Grand Prix Bobby Rahal Al Unser Jr. Doug Shierson Racing 1:45:31
7 Michigan 500 Rick Mears Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing 3:53:58
8 Provimi Veal 200 Danny Sullivan Jacques Villeneuve Sr. Canadian Tire Racing 1:45:12
9 Domino's Pizza 500 Rick Mears Rick Mears Team Penske 3:17:47
10 Escort Radar Warning 200 Bobby Rahal Bobby Rahal Truesports 1:52:23
11 Molson Indy Bobby Rahal Johnny Rutherford Alex Morales Motorsports 2:03:54
12 Detroit News 200 Bobby Rahal Bobby Rahal Truesports 1:13:19
13 Stroh's 300k Bobby Rahal Bobby Rahal Truesports 1:38:56
14 Dana 150 Al Unser Al Unser Team Penske 1:14:35
15 Beatrice Indy Challenge Bobby Rahal Danny Sullivan Team Penske 2:04:59
  • Indianapolis was USAC-sanctioned but counted towards the CART title.

Drivers points standings

Pos Driver LBH INDY MIL POR MEA CLE MIC1 ROA POC MDO SAN MIC2 LAG PHX MIA Pts
1 Al Unser 5 4 4 3 3 2* 7 3 27 13* 12 2 1* 4 151
2 Al Unser Jr. 9 25 7 2* 1* 1 15 17* 2* 4 3 23 3 2 3 150
3 Bobby Rahal 27 27 9 20 25 28 6 4 4 1* 10 1* 1* 6 2* 133
4 Danny Sullivan 3 1 4 27 18 27 14 13 5 2 5 8 8 4 1 126
5 Mario Andretti 1* 2* 1* 1 26 14* 10 7 7 15 21 11 3 27 114
6 Emerson Fittipaldi 2 13 8 3 2 8 1 5 6 8 25 13 24 8 26 104
7 Tom Sneva 8 20 2 24 6 11 3 21 8 15 7 5 19 19 21 66
8 Jacques Villeneuve Sr. 7 DNQ 22 23 21 4 1 3 11 25 13 17 54
9 Michael Andretti 19 8 19 28 4 7 27 2 13 14 19 25 9 5 25 53
10 Rick Mears 21 3 30 1 2 51
11 Johnny Rutherford 10 6 23 9 14 15 4 DNS 14 22 1 9 21 26 19 51
12 Josele Garza 28 31 7 12 27 6 19 18 26 11 6 6 7 10 9 46
13 Ed Pimm 12 9 21 19 DNS 5 11 20 9 8 3 14 9 12 45
14 Kevin Cogan 23 11 16 5 7 9 7 25 17 21 9 4 17 22 24 44
15 Geoff Brabham 6 19 12 14 24 2 29 15 19 13 4 16 10 12 22 41
16 Pancho Carter 13 33 5 13 16 16 12 2 10 7 37
17 Roberto Guerrero 26 3 6 15 DNS 19 13 19 18 18 23 24 4 21 28 34
18 Arie Luyendyk  RY  17 7 17 21 10 5 Wth 6 DNS 18 15 22 25 7 33
19 Bruno Giacomelli  R  18 10 5 10 22 6 16 6 14 32
20 Jim Crawford 4 16 DNS 9 13 20 15 16 16
21 Bill Whittington 16 14 DNS 26 16 24 24 5 17 DNQ 8 15
22 Scott Brayton 11 30 DNQ 6 15 25 8 16 22 26 18 DNQ 15
23 Alan Jones 3 14
24 Danny Ongais DNQ 17 20 22 7 14 6 14
25 Howdy Holmes 14 10 11 17 13 22 9 10 21 16 21 18 DNS 12
26 Jan Lammers 16 12 5 20 13 11
27 Michael Roe  R  21 DNQ 7 8 26 11
28 Roberto Moreno  R  28 16 25 16 5 10
29 Johnny Parsons 5 10
30 Raul Boesel  R  20 18 11 11 12 28 8 23 20 23 10
31 Enrique Mansilla 9 10 12 8
32 Pete Halsmer DNQ 15 8 19 11 7
33 Dennis Firestone 22 DNQ 20 18 DNQ 21 11 20 9 17 14 DNS 23 6
34 Steve Chassey DNQ DNS DNQ 20 DNS 12 26 11 12 14 15 11 DNQ 6
35 Rupert Keegan  R  19 12 10 4
36 Dick Simon 26 13 17 25 10 17 19 DNQ 3
37 Chet Fillip DNQ 10 18 17 3
38 Dominic Dobson DNS 18 11 2
39 Herm Johnson DNQ 12 24 1
40 Derek Daly 12 1
41 Randy Lanier 24 DNQ 22 22 20 14 20 13 17 15 0
42 Spike Gehlhausen 14 18 0
43 John Paul Jr. 15 17 0
44 Phil Krueger DNQ DNQ 21 15 0
45 Rocky Moran  R  15 DNQ DNQ 0
46 Gary Bettenhausen 22 DNS 16 0
47 Tom Bigelow DNQ 18 26 23 0
48 Ian Ashley 18 0
49 A. J. Foyt 28 23 24 24 23 20 0
50 Don Whittington 24 DNQ 20 24 0
51 Chip Ganassi 22 22 0
52 Dale Coyne DNQ DNS DNQ DNQ DNS 24 23 27 28 DNS 27 DNQ DNQ 0
53 Sammy Swindell 23 25 0
54 Rich Vogler 23 0
55 Jeff Wood 23 0
56 Dick Ferguson 25 DNQ 0
57 Chico Serra 25 0
58 Ludwig Heimrath Jr.  R  26 0
59 Tony Bettenhausen Jr. 29 0
60 George Snider 32 0
Darin Brassfield  R  DNQ -
Frank Chianelli  R  DNQ -
Tom Gloy DNS -
Gordon Johncock Wth -
Jerry Karl DNQ -
Mike Nish  R  DNQ EX -
Willy T. Ribbs  R  Wth -
Ken Schrader DNP -
Pos Driver LBH INDY MIL POR MEA CLE MIC1 ROA POC MDO SAN MIC2 LAG PHX MIA Pts
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th-6th place
Light Blue 7th–12th place
Dark Blue Finished
(Outside Top 12)
Purple Did not finish
(Ret)
Red Did not qualify
(DNQ)
Brown Withdrew
(WD)
Black Disqualified
(DSQ)
White Did not start
(DNS)
Blank Did not
participate
(DNP)
Driver
replacement
(Rpl)
Injured
(Inj)
Race not held
(NH)
Not competing
In-line notation
Bold Pole position bonus point
Italics Ran fastest race lap
* Led most race laps bonus point
 RY  Rookie of the Year
 R  Rookie

Sanair controversy

In the Sanair race (Molson Indy Montreal), 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 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 safety car situation exists.

See also

References

  1. Tribune, Cooper Rollow, Chicago. "INDY SURPRISE: JOHNCOCK SAYS HE`S RETIRING". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 2018-09-28.
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