2005 IndyCar Series explained

The 2005 IRL IndyCar Series began on Sunday, March 6 and ended on Sunday, October 16. The season, which consisted of 17 races, was the 10th season of the IRL IndyCar Series since it split from CART in 1995.

Dan Wheldon was the dominant driver in the series in 2005, winning six races, including the 89th running of the Indianapolis 500, setting the record for most victories in an IRL season. However, the big story of the season was that of Rahal Letterman Racing's Danica Patrick, the fourth woman to compete in the Indy 500 and the first to lead a lap. She would eventually wind up in fourth. Danica's presence was a boost to the IRL's television ratings. The Indy 500's ratings were up 40% from the year before and subsequent races also saw a boost in ratings. Dan Wheldon was also became the first IndyCar driver to won the Indianapolis 500 and IndyCar Series overall driver's title respectively in the same season since Jacques Villeneuve in 1995 PPG IndyCar World Series season and also first ever in the Indy Racing League era.

The season was the first ever to introduce road courses and street circuits when the series held races at the Streets of St. Petersburg, Infineon Raceway and Watkins Glen International, where the series was previously known to have held events exclusively on oval tracks. Wheldon also became the series' first road/street course winner when he won in St. Petersburg.

The season was also the last for Chevrolet in the series, who confirmed in August that they would not return to the IRL (Chevrolet returned in 2012). At the start of the season, only Panther Racing's Tomas Scheckter and Tomáš Enge raced Chevrolet powered cars (although A. J. Foyt IV also started racing for Chevy beginning with the AMBER Alert Portal Indy 300 at Kentucky). The manufacturer situation within the IRL was the hot issue during the second half of the season and continued into the off-season. Toyota announced that they would leave the series shortly after the 2005 season ended, leaving Honda as the only remaining manufacturer in the IRL. Honda extended their engine supply contract through 2009 despite expressly saying that they did not wish to be the IRL's only supplier. The IRL announced that they extended their chassis supply contract with Panoz and Dallara through 2006.

Rule changes for 2005

Confirmed entries

TeamChassisEngineNoDriversRounds
A. J. Foyt EnterprisesDallara
Panoz
Toyota
Chevrolet
14 A. J. Foyt IV1–13, 15, 17
Jeff Bucknum (R)14, 16
41 Larry Foyt (R)5
48 Felipe Giaffone5
Aguri-Fernández Racing
Delphi Fernández Racing
PanozHonda5 Adrián Fernández5
8 Scott SharpAll
55 Kosuke MatsuuraAll
Andretti Green RacingDallaraHonda7 Bryan HertaAll
11 Tony KanaanAll
26 Dan WheldonAll
27 Dario FranchittiAll
Cheever RacingDallaraToyota51 Alex BarronAll
83 Patrick CarpentierAll
CURB/Agajanian/Beck MotorsportsDallaraChevrolet98 Arie Luyendyk Jr.5
Dreyer & Reinbold RacingDallaraHonda24 Roger YasukawaAll
44 Jeff Bucknum (R)4–5
Thiago Medeiros (R)17
Hemelgarn RacingDallaraToyota91 Paul Dana (R)1–2, 4
Jimmy Kite5–13, 15, 17
Marlboro Team PenskeDallaraToyota3 Hélio CastronevesAll
6 Sam Hornish Jr.All
Newman/Haas RacingPanozHonda36 Bruno Junqueira5
37 Sébastien Bourdais5
Panther RacingDallaraChevrolet2 Tomáš Enge (R)1–9, 12–17
nowrap Buddy Lazier10
nowrap Townsend Bell11
4nowrap Tomas ScheckterAll
95 Buddy Lazier5, 9, 11–12, 15
Playa del RacingPanozToyota21 Jaques Lazier5
Rahal Letterman RacingPanozHonda15 Buddy Rice1–4, 6–17
nowrap Kenny Bräck5
16nowrap Danica Patrick (R)All
17nowrap Vítor MeiraAll
Roth RacingDallaraChevrolet25 Marty Roth (R)5
Sam Schmidt MotorsportsPanozChevrolet70 Richie Hearn5
Target Chip Ganassi RacingDallaraToyota9 Scott Dixon4
Panoz1–3, 5–17
10 Darren Manning1–10
Jaques Lazier11–13, 15, 17
Giorgio Pantano14, 16
33 Ryan Briscoe (R)1–15
Vision RacingDallaraToyota20 Ed CarpenterAll
22 Jeff Ward5

Race summaries

Toyota Indy 300

On March 6, at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Dan Wheldon led 158 of 200 laps to get the victory. Tomas Scheckter sat on the pole.

Top Ten Results

  1. 26- Dan Wheldon
  2. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  3. 11- Tony Kanaan
  4. 17- Vítor Meira
  5. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  6. 10- Darren Manning
  7. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  8. 51- Alex Barron
  9. 14- A. J. Foyt IV
  10. 91- Paul Dana

XM Satellite Radio Indy 200

On March 19, at Phoenix International Raceway, Sam Hornish Jr. won his first race of the season. Bryan Herta sat on the pole. This would be the last time IndyCar would compete at Phoenix until the race was revived in 2016.

Top Ten Results

  1. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  2. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  3. 11- Tony Kanaan
  4. 27- Dario Franchitti
  5. 8- Scott Sharp
  6. 26- Dan Wheldon
  7. 7- Bryan Herta
  8. 10- Darren Manning
  9. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  10. 55- Kosuke Matsuura

Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg

On April 3, the Honda Grand Prix on the Streets of St. Petersburg (Florida) marked the first non-oval event for the IndyCar Series. Dan Wheldon won his second race of the year. Bryan Herta sat on the pole. Andretti Green Racing drivers swept the top 4 finishing positions.

Top Ten Results

  1. 26- Dan Wheldon
  2. 11- Tony Kanaan
  3. 27- Dario Franchitti
  4. 7- Bryan Herta
  5. 17- Vítor Meira
  6. 9- Scott Dixon
  7. 15- Buddy Rice
  8. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  9. 10- Darren Manning
  10. 51- Alex Barron

Indy Japan 300

On April 30, at Twin Ring Motegi in Motegi, Tochigi, Japan, Dan Wheldon won his third race of the season. Sam Hornish Jr. sat on the pole.

Top Ten Results

  1. 26- Dan Wheldon
  2. 8- Scott Sharp
  3. 15- Buddy Rice
  4. 16- Danica Patrick
  5. 7- Bryan Herta
  6. 11- Tony Kanaan
  7. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  8. 10- Darren Manning
  9. 55- Kosuke Matsuura
  10. 4- Tomas Scheckter

89th Indianapolis 500

On May 29, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Dan Wheldon won his first Indy 500 and his fourth race of the season. However, the focus of the race was on Danica Patrick who led 19 laps, the first time a woman has ever led a lap at Indy. Tony Kanaan sat on the pole.

Top Ten Results

  1. 26- Dan Wheldon
  2. 17- Vítor Meira
  3. 7- Bryan Herta
  4. 16- Danica Patrick
  5. 95- Buddy Lazier
  6. 27- Dario Franchitti
  7. 8- Scott Sharp
  8. 11- Tony Kanaan
  9. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  10. 33- Ryan Briscoe

Bombardier Learjet 500

On June 11, at Texas Motor Speedway, Tomas Scheckter won his first race of the season, sitting on the pole and leading for 119 of 200 laps.

Top Ten Results

  1. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  2. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  3. 11- Tony Kanaan
  4. 8- Scott Sharp
  5. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  6. 26- Dan Wheldon
  7. 55- Kosuke Matsuura
  8. 27- Dario Franchitti
  9. 17- Vítor Meira
  10. 7- Bryan Herta

SunTrust Indy Challenge

On June 25, at Richmond International Raceway, Hélio Castroneves won his first race of the season. Sam Hornish Jr. sat on the pole.

Top Ten Results

  1. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  2. 27- Dario Franchitti
  3. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  4. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  5. 26- Dan Wheldon
  6. 51- Alex Barron
  7. 2- Tomáš Enge
  8. 7- Bryan Herta
  9. 55- Kosuke Matsuura
  10. 16- Danica Patrick

Argent Mortgage Indy 300

On July 3, at Kansas Speedway, Tony Kanaan won by a fraction of a second over Dan Wheldon and Vítor Meira. Danica Patrick won her first career IndyCar Series pole.

Top Ten Results

  1. 11- Tony Kanaan
  2. 26- Dan Wheldon
  3. 17- Vítor Meira
  4. 27- Dario Franchitti
  5. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  6. 8- Scott Sharp
  7. 10- Darren Manning
  8. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  9. 16- Danica Patrick
  10. 15- Buddy Rice

Firestone Indy 200

On July 16 at Nashville Superspeedway, Dario Franchitti won, leading 74 of 200 laps. Tomas Scheckter sat on the pole. Tomas Enge fractured his back in a lap 27 crash in turn 1 and would miss the next 2 races.

Top Ten Results

  1. 27- Dario Franchitti
  2. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  3. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  4. 8- Scott Sharp
  5. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  6. 9- Scott Dixon
  7. 16- Danica Patrick
  8. 33- Ryan Briscoe
  9. 95- Buddy Lazier
  10. 20- Ed Carpenter

ABC Supply Company A. J. Foyt 225

On July 24 at The Milwaukee Mile, Sam Hornish Jr. won from the pole, leading 123 of 225 laps.

Top Ten Results

  1. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  2. 27- Dario Franchitti
  3. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  4. 11- Tony Kanaan
  5. 26- Dan Wheldon
  6. 7- Bryan Herta
  7. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  8. 51- Alex Barron
  9. 17- Vítor Meira
  10. 8- Scott Sharp

Firestone Indy 400

On July 31 at Michigan International Speedway, Bryan Herta won from the pole, leading 159 of 200 laps.

Top Ten Results

  1. 7- Bryan Herta
  2. 26- Dan Wheldon
  3. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  4. 11- Tony Kanaan
  5. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  6. 15- Buddy Lazier
  7. 8- Scott Sharp
  8. 27- Dario Franchitti
  9. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  10. 33- Ryan Briscoe

AMBER Alert Portal Indy 300

On August 14 at Kentucky Speedway, Scott Sharp won for the first time since 2003 at Twin Ring Motegi, holding off Vítor Meira for the last laps to win. Danica Patrick sat on the pole for the second time in the season after rain washed out qualifying and the starting grid was determined by the fastest times in practice. Tomas Enge returned from injury to finish 11th.

Top Ten Results

  1. 8- Scott Sharp
  2. 17- Vítor Meira
  3. 26- Dan Wheldon
  4. 51- Alex Barron
  5. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  6. 95- Buddy Lazier
  7. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  8. 55- Kosuke Matsuura
  9. 14- A. J. Foyt IV
  10. 91- Jimmy Kite

Honda Indy 225

On August 21 at Pikes Peak International Raceway, Penske Racing teammates Hélio Castroneves and Sam Hornish Jr. started 1–2. Dan Wheldon won his fifth race of the season, tying Sam Hornish Jr.'s record for most victories in a season. This was the final IRL race at PPIR as the track was sold to International Speedway Corporation for intent to be shut down as ISC looked for a new Denver-area circuit, but plans failed and the track was sold for testing but cannot be used for competition per ISC regulation.

Top Ten Results

  1. 26- Dan Wheldon
  2. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  3. 11- Tony Kanaan
  4. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  5. 17- Vítor Meira
  6. 2- Tomáš Enge
  7. 27- Dario Franchitti
  8. 16- Danica Patrick
  9. 8- Scott Sharp
  10. 83- Patrick Carpentier

Argent Mortgage Indy Grand Prix

On August 28 at the circuit's inaugural race at Infineon Raceway, Tony Kanaan won the race, taking the lead on lap 52 from points leader Dan Wheldon, who was hampered by fuel problems all day and finished out of the race in 18th. Ryan Briscoe sat on the pole, but caused a three-car accident on lap 20 that also eliminated Hélio Castroneves and Danica Patrick from the race.

Top Ten Results

  1. 11- Tony Kanaan
  2. 15- Buddy Rice
  3. 51- Alex Barron
  4. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  5. 2- Tomáš Enge
  6. 55- Kosuke Matsuura
  7. 9- Scott Dixon
  8. 27- Dario Franchitti
  9. 17- Vítor Meira
  10. 14- Jeff Bucknum

Peak Antifreeze Indy 300

On September 11 at Chicagoland Speedway, Dan Wheldon won his sixth race, breaking the all-time record for most wins in an IRL season. Ryan Briscoe originally won the pole but was disqualified for a technical infraction and sent to the back of the grid. The pole winner after this became Danica Patrick for her third (and final) IndyCar pole. Briscoe's weekend got significantly worse as he was involved in a fiery crash with Alex Barron on lap 20. Briscoe was taken by helicopter to a Chicago-area hospital with head and back pain, but was alert. He suffered a concussion, two broken collarbones, a bruised lung and contusions to his arms and legs. The accident resulted in a 16-minute red flag.

Top Ten Results

  1. 26- Dan Wheldon
  2. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  3. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  4. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  5. 11- Tony Kanaan
  6. 16- Danica Patrick
  7. 17- Vítor Meira
  8. 8- Scott Sharp
  9. 83- Patrick Carpentier
  10. 95- Buddy Lazier

Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix

On September 25 at Watkins Glen International, Scott Dixon won his first race since his 2003 IndyCar Series Championship season. Hélio Castroneves sat on the pole. This was the first major open-wheel race at Watkins Glen since 1981 and Dixon's first road course victory. As of 2022, this was the final IndyCar Series victory for the Toyota engine to date.

Top Ten Results

  1. 9- Scott Dixon
  2. 11- Tony Kanaan
  3. 27- Dario Franchitti
  4. 10- Giorgio Pantano
  5. 26- Dan Wheldon
  6. 55- Kosuke Matsuura
  7. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  8. 7- Bryan Herta
  9. 8- Scott Sharp
  10. 83- Patrick Carpentier

Toyota Indy 400

On October 16 at California Speedway, Dario Franchitti won his second race of the year over Tony Kanaan by 0.111 s. Chevrolet powered cars finished 7th and 8th in their final IRL race while Toyota powered cars had a best finish of 5th in theirs. IndyCar would not return to this track until 2012.

Top Ten Results

  1. 27- Dario Franchitti
  2. 11- Tony Kanaan
  3. 17- Vítor Meira
  4. 8- Scott Sharp
  5. 6- Sam Hornish Jr.
  6. 26- Dan Wheldon
  7. 4- Tomas Scheckter
  8. 2- Tomáš Enge
  9. 3- Hélio Castroneves
  10. 9- Scott Dixon

Season summary

Schedule

RndDateRace NameTrackCity
1March 6Toyota Indy 300 Homestead-Miami SpeedwayHomestead, Florida
2March 19XM Satellite Radio Indy 200 Phoenix International RacewayPhoenix, Arizona
3April 3Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg Streets of St. PetersburgSt. Petersburg, Florida
4April 30Indy Japan 300 Twin Ring MotegiMotegi, Japan
5May 2989th Indianapolis 500 Indianapolis Motor SpeedwaySpeedway, Indiana
6June 11Bombardier Learjet 500 Texas Motor SpeedwayFort Worth, Texas
7June 25SunTrust Indy Challenge Richmond International RacewayRichmond, Virginia
8July 3Argent Mortgage Indy 300 Kansas SpeedwayKansas City, Kansas
9July 16Firestone Indy 200 Nashville SuperspeedwayLebanon, Tennessee
10July 24ABC Supply Company A. J. Foyt 225 The Milwaukee MileWest Allis, Wisconsin
11July 31Firestone Indy 400 Michigan International SpeedwayBrooklyn, Michigan
12August 14AMBER Alert Portal Indy 300 Kentucky SpeedwaySparta, Kentucky
13August 21Honda Indy 225 Pikes Peak International RacewayFountain, Colorado
14August 28Argent Mortgage Indy Grand Prix Infineon RacewaySonoma, California
15September 11Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 Chicagoland SpeedwayJoliet, Illinois
16September 25Watkins Glen Indy Grand Prix Watkins Glen InternationalWatkins Glen, New York
17October 16Toyota Indy 400 California SpeedwayFontana, California
Source:[1]
Oval/Speedway
Road/Street course
BOLD indicates Superspeedways.

Race results

RndRacePole positionFastest lapMost Laps LedWinner
1Homestead–Miami Tomas Scheckter Buddy Rice Dan Wheldon Dan Wheldon
2Phoenix Bryan Herta Dario Franchitti Dan Wheldon Sam Hornish Jr.
3St. Petersburg Bryan Herta Dario Franchitti Ryan Briscoe Dan Wheldon
4Twin Ring Motegi Sam Hornish Jr. Dan Wheldon Dario Franchitti Dan Wheldon
5Indianapolis Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Sam Hornish Jr. Dan Wheldon
6Texas Tomas Scheckter Tomáš Enge Tomas Scheckter Tomas Scheckter
7Richmond Sam Hornish Jr. Kosuke Matsuura Hélio Castroneves Hélio Castroneves
8Kansas Danica Patrick Ryan Briscoe Dan Wheldon Tony Kanaan
9Nashville Tomas Scheckter Scott Sharp Tony Kanaan Dario Franchitti
10Milwaukee Sam Hornish Jr. Tomas Scheckter Sam Hornish Jr. Sam Hornish Jr.
11Michigan Bryan Herta Townsend Bell Bryan Herta Bryan Herta
12Kentucky Danica Patrick Danica Patrick Dan Wheldon Scott Sharp
13Pikes Peak Hélio Castroneves Dario Franchitti Sam Hornish Jr. Dan Wheldon
14Sonoma Ryan Briscoe Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan Tony Kanaan
15Chicagoland Danica Patrick Dario Franchitti Dan Wheldon Dan Wheldon
16Watkins Glen Hélio Castroneves Scott Dixon Scott Dixon Scott Dixon
17California Dario Franchitti Dan Wheldon Tomas Scheckter Dario Franchitti

Final driver standings

See also: List of American Championship car racing point scoring systems.

PosDriverHMSPHXSTPMOTINDYTXSRCHKANNSHMILMCHKTYPPIRSNMCHIWGLFONPts
1 Dan Wheldon1*6*111652*21523*1181*56628
2 Tony Kanaan33268319119*442031*522548
3 Sam Hornish Jr.2115723*2181221*572*17375512
4 Dario Franchitti224317*682412818781231498
5 Scott Sharp1351827417641071912894444
6 Hélio Castroneves522011951*85162154212129440
7 Vítor Meira41151529203169142597183422
8 Bryan Herta147453108152261*19121314811397
9 Tomas Scheckter11171710201*4517332114164207*390
10 Patrick Carpentier7981321163143791210491015376
11 Alex Barron81310191314613158114183211714329
121515124413109719201682061618325
13 Scott Dixon1612621241122186131923167191*10321
14 Kosuke Matsuura1210139177920141116813623619320
15 Buddy Rice192273Wth21111018172214112131912295
16212016DNS191971123116520138261
17 Roger Yasukawa1718111818151622111518171511151516246
18 Ed Carpenter1816191611201217101223221915171420244
19201914*12101221218Wth1013201922232
20 A. J. Foyt IV9142114281814161221129211121231
21 Darren Manning689829171572020186
22 Jimmy Kite3222131913141310171813163
23 Buddy Lazier59186610140
24 Jaques Lazier161715Wth161781
252222101163
26 Giorgio Pantano14448
27102120Wth44
28 Sébastien Bourdais1218
29 Adrián Fernández1416
30 Townsend Bell1515
31 Felipe Giaffone1515
32nowrapWth12
33 Richie Hearn2510
34 Kenny Bräck2610
35 Jeff Ward2710
36 Bruno Junqueira3010
373110
383310
Arie Luyendyk Jr.DNQ0
Scott MayerWth0
PosDriverHMSPHXSTPMOTINDYTXSRIRKANNSHMILMISKTYPIKSNMCHIWGLFONPts
ColorResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
Green4th & 5th place
Light Blue6th–10th place
Dark BlueFinished
(Outside Top 10)
PurpleDid not finish
(Ret)
RedDid not qualify
(DNQ)
BrownWithdrawn
(Wth)
BlackDisqualified
(DSQ)
WhiteDid not start
(DNS)
BlankDid not
participate
(DNP)
Not competing
In-line notation
BoldPole position
ItalicsRan fastest race lap
*|Led most race laps
(3 points)|-style="text-align:center; background:#f2f2f2"|DNS|Any driver who qualifies
but does not start (DNS),
earns all the points
had they taken part.|-|style="text-align:center" colspan="2"| Rookie of the Year|-|style="text-align:center" colspan="2"| Rookie|}|}|}
  • Ties in points broken by number of wins, followed by number of 2nds, 3rds, etc., and then by number of pole positions, followed by number of times qualified 2nd, etc.

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Oreowicz, John. Phillips. David. Cleary. Matt. Davidson. Donald. Donald Davidson (historian). Bignotti Mendez. Mary. Autocourse: Indianapolis 500 & Indy Racing League IndyCar Series Official Yearbook 2004. 2005 IRL IndyCar Series Schedule. 2005. Hazleton Publishing. London, England. 176. 1-903135-46-X. Internet Archive. registration.