Welcome to A.J. Foyt Racing

Home Foyts Drivers News Teams Schedule & Results Media Shop Online

A.J. Foyt Racing News:

 - Press Releases
 - A.J. Race Recaps
 - Race Notes/Quotes
 - Features

  Photos   -  Videos   -  Wallpaper

 

 

Notes/Quotes News Archive:

 - Japan
 - Kentucky
 - Chicagoland
 - Infineon
 - Mid-Ohio
 - Edmonton
 - Toronto
 - Watkins Glen
 - Iowa
 - Texas
 - Indy 500
 - Kansas
 - Long Beach
 - Alabama
 - St. Petersburg
 - Brazil

 - 2009 Race News
 - 2008 Race News
 - 2007 Race News


 

 
 

Race Notes/Quotes:


Chicagoland Speedway
Peak Antifreeze Indy 300

 


ChicagoLand Speedway

Location: Joliet, IL
Shape: Tri-Oval
Distance: 1.5 miles
Banking, Turns: 18 degrees
Front Straight: 2,400 feet
Banking, Front Straight: 11 degrees
Back Straight: 1,700 feet
Banking, Back Straight: 5 degrees

ChicagoLand Speedway
Chicagoland Speedway


Race Report: Peak Antifreeze Indy 300


JOLIET, IL Aug 28—Nobody does high-speed, wheel-to-wheel racing better than the drivers of the IZOD IndyCar Series and they proved it again Saturday night at Chicagoland Speedway.


In a wild and crazy night of three abreast, pedal-to-the-metal racing, Vitor Meira and the ABC Supply crew’s night was wilder and crazier than most. Before all was said and done, the crew replaced two front nose assemblies, Meira went a lap down and got it back, led twice, posted his first top-10 finish in two months and jumped three positions in the point standings! And drove the last half of the race with an injured right wrist!


“It was a very interesting race,” said Meira afterwards. “We knew it would be, but it was really crazy! Getting two front wings, getting lapped, and then my team did a good job getting the lap back. This was very tough. I thought after the second wing replacement our race was gone but we didn't give up, never gave up, never.


“We needed this after four tough races,” he added. “I'm glad we did it here in Chicago close to ABC Supply headquarters. They support us so well! I guess I’ll have to visit them before every race—they gave me good luck.”


Starting 24th in the 29-car field, Meira had begun moving up when on lap 5, Raphael Matos and Tomas Scheckter crashed in turn 2. In the ensuing melee, Meira sustained damage to his front wing and flat-spotted his right front tire. The crew replaced it in less than 16 seconds. Restarting last, a bad decision to have Meira pit to top off saw him lose half a lap to the field on the restart on lap 13.


Meira kept pace and was inching his way to the front when the pit stop cycles began on lap 55 of the 200-lap race. By lap 62, he was in the lead and on lap 63 he was in the pits getting tires and fuel in 8.1 seconds. On lap 74, he was lapped by Ryan Briscoe and Marco Andretti but he ran with them until the yellow came out on lap 78 for Ana Beatriz’s brush with the turn 4 wall.


Meira stayed out to get his lap back while the rest of the field pitted. Lucky for the ABC Supply crew he did because two cars made contact resulting in Takuma Sato spinning backwards into the ABC Supply’s pitbox.

On that restart on lap 85, the cars were checking up ahead of Meira and the chain reaction saw him go to the outside to avoid hitting Hideki Mutoh only to be hit by Alex Tagliani who bounced Meira into Mutoh. Meira was back in the pits for yet another nose assembly. Because he came in when the pits were closed, he was required to pit again which he did on lap 88. He restarted in 19th and on lap 97, he ran his fastest lap of the race with an injured right wrist, sustained in the crash with Tagliani.


“I’d feel it but then I was so busy out there, I’d forget about it,” Meira said. “It hurts a little now though.” Meira went to the infield care center to get checked out. The IndyCar medical staff did not believe he broke any bones but they arranged for him to get it x-rayed in Miami on Monday.


By lap 130 he was 15th and the pit stop cycles began on lap 136. Meira led for four more laps before pitting at the end of lap 142. The crew serviced him in just 7.4 seconds and he rejoined the field in 13th position.


The final caution came out on lap 170 for Alex Lloyd’s spin off turn four onto the frontstretch grass. As teams came in for their final stop, the ABC Supply crew fitted the No. 14 with tires and fuel in 7.3 seconds. Several cars took fuel only and slipped ahead of Meira who came out in 15th. But the fresh rubber helped him advance to the front and for the final 23 laps, he was in the thick of the three-wide, nose-to-tail battles of the top 14 cars.


When the checkered flag flew, Meira nosed ahead of Graham Rahal at the line to finish ninth, his best finish since Iowa Speedway in June. He jumped from 15th to 12th in the point standings.


“It was a crazy night,” said Larry Foyt. “We talked about it. I told Vitor before the race I think we’re both going to be glad when this one’s over. We knew it would be crazy but there was some great racing. We had some crazy stuff happen as well. We went a lap down early but it turned out to be a blessing because we stayed out to get our lap back. If we hadn’t, we probably would have been pitting in our pitbox. There was a crash [between E.J. Viso and Takumo Sato] and Sato’s car slid backwards through our pitbox. There’s no telling how many of our guys would have been injured or what could have happened. Just funny how those things happen and it was a blessing that we weren’t there.”


Dario Franchitti won the Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 by four hundredths of a second over Dan Wheldon. Rounding out the top 10 were: Marco Andretti, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Tony Kanaan, Helio Castroneves, Justin Wilson, Scott Dixon, Meira and Rahal.


The Series heads to Kentucky Speedway this weekend for yet another Saturday night of racing. The race will be televised live on Versus with coverage starting at 8 p.m. ET.
 


Foyt Team Changes Engine After Qualifying


JOLIET, IL Aug 27—Vitor Meira qualified 24th for the Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 at Chicagoland Speedway Saturday night. Team owner A.J. Foyt was not pleased with the car’s performance and requested a different engine for the race.


The engine change came about after a disappointing qualifying run which saw Meira average 213.1 mph in his two-lap run around the 1.5 mile banked speedway.


“We’re changing engines,” said Meira. “I’m not saying that is the problem but it is one problem we can eliminate from what could be happening. The ABC Supply car was very good, Jeff [Britton, chief engineer] and A.J. picked the right gears, right amount of downforce, the right balance. I felt the car being neutral and free and everybody did what they were supposed to do, it just didn’t go as fast as we expected or what it should have. A.J.’s in full agreement with that.


“Qualifying is not a big deal here, because there is so much room to pass. The race car is very good and we’ll prove that.”


The ABC Supply team installed a different engine for the final practice and gave the qualifying engine to Honda. If Honda finds there are no issues with the engine then Foyt’s team pays a fee to Honda and must run the engine at a later race. If there is a problem with the engine, the team will not be charged.

Although the entire field of 29 cars is separated by one second, Ryan Briscoe won the pole by three-quarters of a mile an hour over Dario Franchitti who sits outside front row. Franchitti’s teammate, Scott Dixon, qualified 15th after being second quickest in the morning practice prompting Dixon’s team to also change engines for the race.


The race will be televised Saturday night starting at 7 pm ET on Versus.
 


NOTES & QUOTES: Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 at Chicagoland Speedway


• Vitor Meira on the key to Chicagoland: “The key is having a balanced car in traffic and you’ve got to keep it flat -- like you do at all 1.5 mile tracks. You have plenty of grip at all of those places, so all you need is a well-balanced car in traffic. If you have that, you’ll have a good race.


• Meira on what makes Chicagoland unique: “The uniqueness of Chicagoland is that the race is more bunched up; we run closer together than we do at Homestead or Kansas. At Chicagoland, it’s a very thick and big act—always. It’s sort of like Texas but even more so because the Chicagoland track is wider. It has more room—the third lane is always there—so you have room to pass. It makes for a good race for the drivers and the fans.”


• Meira on returning to ovals: “I’m glad to be back on the ovals—I never thought I would say that but here we are! We’re going to a track that the team, Jeff Britton [chief engineer] and I are all in sync. I am excited about that! It’s important to close out the year on a good consistent note—not only this race but all of the ones coming up. That will make for a good off-season.” The final four races of the season will be on 1.5-mile ovals: Chicagoland Speedway, Kentucky Speedway, Twin Ring Motegi in Japan and Homestead-Miami Speedway.


• Meira will visit ABC Supply HQ: Vitor Meira will be stopping in at ABC Supply headquarters on Thursday before Saturday night’s race at Chicagoland Speedway. The company headquarters is two hours from the track and provides Meira an opportunity to say hello. With Milwaukee gone from the IndyCar schedule, Chicagoland Speedway is now the home track to the wholesale distributor of roofing and exterior supplies which is headquartered in Beloit, WI on the Illinois northern border.

• ABC Supply roofing customer C & M Roofing and Construction in Bolingbrook, IL won the ‘Your Name Here’ contest for the Peak Antifreeze Indy 300. The company name will be atop the sidepods of the No. 14 ABC Supply Dallara/Honda. Mike Lata will receive selected merchandise, race tickets, hospitality and garage passes, plus a Meet and Greet with Vitor Meira and A.J. Foyt. The “Your Name Here” promotion selected winners by random drawing from a pool of entries sent in by ABC Supply customers earlier this year.


• Chicagoland performance: The team’s best finish in 11 starts was fifth in 2001 with Donnie Beechler and second best finish was seventh in 2008 with Darren Manning. In five starts, Meira’s best finish was fifth in 2004 and second best finish was seventh in 2005.


• The Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 will be shown live at 7:00 p.m. ET Saturday night on Versus.


• For more information on the Foyt Racing program, please check our web site: www.ajfoytracing.com.
 

 
Home | Contact Us | Privacy | Terms of Use | About Us
Copyright 2001-2011 Foyt Enterprises. All rights reserved