1996 True Value 200

United States 1996 New Hampshire
Race details
1st round of the 1996–1997 Indy Racing League season
Date August 18, 1996
Official name True Value 200
Location New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Course Permanent racing facility
1.058 mi / 1.703 km
Distance 200 laps
211.6 mi / 340.5 km
Weather Temperatures reaching up to 82.9 °F (28.3 °C); wind speeds up to 8.9 miles per hour (14.3 km/h)[1]
Pole position
Driver Richie Hearn (Della Penna Motorsports)
Time 21.719
Fastest lap
Driver Tony Stewart (Team Menard)
Time 22.884 (on lap 179 of 200)
Podium
First Scott Sharp (A. J. Foyt Enterprises)
Second Buzz Calkins (Bradley Motorsports)
Third Michele Alboreto (Team Scandia)

The 1996 True Value 200 was the first round of the 1996–1997 Indy Racing League.[2] The race was held on August 18, 1996, at the 1.058-mile (1.703 km) New Hampshire International Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire. This race was dominated, but not won, by Tony Stewart, who passed Arie Luyendyk on lap 15 and led 165 laps until he suffered an engine computer failure, with 18 laps to go and a nearly three-lap lead. 1996 Indy Racing League co-champion Scott Sharp went on to win the race.

Report

Pre-Race

Due to the Indy Racing League's initial decision to end every season at the Indianapolis 500, New Hampshire would held the 1996-1997 season opener in August 18, a date that had been counter-scheduled by CART with the 1996 Texaco/Havoline 200, which would be held on the same day. Pre-season testing started at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the new oval track that would be inaugurated by the IRL in September. 20 drivers took part in a 3-day test in June 26–28,[3][4][5] with 12 regular drivers being joined by Mark Dismore, who had driven with Team Menard at Indianapolis, joining them in a permanent basis after Scott Brayton's death. Richie Hearn set a first unofficial track record with a 222.359 mph lap, and nine drivers went over 210 mph.[5]

In that test, the Brickell Racing car prepared by PDM Racing continued its role as a 'mule' for USAC drivers test. A short-lived run by Joe Gosek[3] was followed by Andy Michner, who passed a refresher test, and by Dave Blaney, by then the reigning World of Outlaws sprint car champion, who fell five laps short of passing USAC's driver test after his engine blew.[5] Doug Kalitta and Jack Hewitt were also scheduled to take their driver test, although they never took a lap. New Zealand's Rob Wilson, who didn't qualify for the Indy 500, also passed a refresher test with Foyt.[4] On the last day of testing, three Indy 500 entrants took some laps, with Brad Murphey driving for Hemelgarn Racing, Billy Roe driving for Team Blueprint Racing, and Randy Tolsma driving for McCormack Motorsports, an outfit who was embarking in an effort on its own after running the Zunne Group Racing operation in the Indy 500.[5]

Additionally, Goodyear held private tests at New Hampshire on July 8–10, with A. J. Foyt Enterprises (Scott Sharp and Davey Hamilton), Pagan Racing (Roberto Guerrero), Della Penna Motorsports (Richie Hearn) and Team Scandia (Eliseo Salazar), on which Hearn suffered a hard crash during the first day, although he was uninjured.[6] During that month, Jonathan Byrd's Racing announced the end of their partnership with Treadway Racing to become partners with Cunningham Racing. Mike Groff, who had driven for Foyt and Walker Racing during the year, was selected as their driver, replacing Johnny O'Connell, who would remain on New Hampshire's entry list before being 'scratched'. Also, McCormack Motorsports announced the signing of a recovered Stan Wattles, who didn't had a drive after Leigh Miller Racing's assets were bought by Beck Motorsports in the spring.[7]

On August 5, the entry list for New Hampshire was released, with the absence of Johnny Parsons in Blueprint's No. 16, as well as some driver changes. After being released by Team Menard, Eddie Cheever bought the car he had been using to form his own team, and Stéphan Grégoire left Hemelgarn Racing to drive in Team Scandia, subbing for Michel Jourdain Jr. in that race. Scandia also fielded a fourth car for Marco Greco, who had hired the services of the Arizona Motorsports rental crew headed by Jeff Sinden. McCormack Motorsports announced a second entry for Randy Tolsma that would be eventually scratched, Tempero–Giuffre Racing entered sportscar gentleman Jon Field, and ABF Motorsports entered supermodified driver Mike Ordway.[8] A few days later, it was confirmed that the Indy Racing League would be visiting Pikes Peak International Raceway, another new oval, with a date set for July 27, 1997.[9]

Practice and qualifying

An IRL open test at NHIS planned for July 23–25 was cancelled.[6] Therefore, IRL officials scheduled two days of testing on August 14–15, prior to the start of practice. The first day was reserved for USAC's driver tests. After Tyce Carlson, assigned for the second PDM Racing's car, passed a refresher test, the car was used by NASCAR Whelen Modified drivers Tim Connolly, who passed his test, and Ted Christopher, who run out of time in his attempt after completing three fases. Five other drivers (Divina Galica, Reggie Ruggiero, Ed Flemke Jr., Tom Cravenho and Tony Turco) were left waiting for their opportunity.[10]

Tempero–Giuffre assigned their second car to sportscar and occasional Indy Lights driver Juan Carlos Carbonell, who had been partnering Jon Field in selected IMSA rounds, but the team had to withdraw both of them, as Carbonell did not complete his test and Field crashed in Turn 1 before being approved. ABF Motorsports had switched Ordway for USAC Silver Crown talent Dave Steele, but he also crashed in Turn 4 before completing his test.[10] During the second day, Hemelgarn Racing confirmed that Brad Murphey would be driving the No. 9 car previously used by Stéphan Grégoire, and Tempero–Giuffre announced the return of David Kudrave, while Project Indy, initially absent in the first entry list, returned to competition with Johnny Unser, their regular driver.[11]

Richie Hearn dominated on Friday, leading a rain affected morning practice with a 175.335 mph lap, followed by Arie Luyendyk and Tony Stewart,[12] and the afternoon practice at 172.297 mph, in front of Mark Dismore and Stewart.[13] In that session, Johnny Unser lost control of his car, crashed in Turn 2 and travelled all the way down the back straight without steering until he crashed in Turn 3 again.[14] The car was lost for the weekend, and Project Indy withdrew from the event.[15] On Saturday morning, Michele Alboreto jumped to the front with a 173.364 mph lap, beating Stewart and Buddy Lazier.[16] Also, ABF Motorsports returned to the track, with Joe Gosek at the wheel of the No. 96, and Brad Murphey crashed in Turn 2, leaving himself out of qualifying.[15]

After a few runs had been completed in qualifying, Buddy Lazier set the pace with a 172.664 mph lap. That mark was surpassed by Michele Alboreto, who registered a 175.125 mph. The Italian veteran was close to obtain the pole position after Tony Stewart, Mark Dismore and Arie Luyendyk fell short, but Richie Hearn got to set the two fastest laps of the day, securing his first Indy car pole position at 175.367 mph, two miles short of André Ribeiro's 177.436 mph track record. Luyendyk and Lazier completed the second row, while Dismore qualified in a career-best fifth place, in front of Eliseo Salazar and Stewart. Further behind, John Paul Jr. soldiered his 1993 Lola to an 11th place, between IRL co-champions Buzz Calkins and Scott Sharp. His teammate Tyce Carlson only got to do a single lap after missing his qualifying turn, but it was good enough for 16th place, in front of favourites Davey Hamilton and Roberto Guerrero, the only driver in the field with a top 10 finish at New Hampshire (fourth in 1993).[17]

Failed to qualify or withdrew

Race

In front of 24.000 espectators, Richie Hearn kept the lead when the green flag waved, while Arie Luyendyk passed Michele Alboreto for second place. The first caution came out immediately, as Jim Guthrie had lost control of his car accelerating off Turn 4 due to a leak, and Robbie Buhl had found the Turn 1 wall after being loose.[18] The race was restarted on Lap 7, and Luyendyk took advantage to overtake Hearn in Turn 3, taking the lead. Everything, however, would be highlighted by Tony Stewart's dominating performance.

Having started in seventh place, Stewart had already overtaken Eliseo Salazar and a slow starting Mark Dismore at the start, and got in front of Buddy Lazier during the restart. He soon catched the leading trio on Lap 11 and, helped by traffic, Stewart grabbed the lead on Lap 14.[18] Amid concerns that Menard's limited fuel mileage would cost him an additional pit stop, he started to pull away at a fast rate, lapping at least a full second per lap faster than anyone else: by Lap 25, he had a 10-second lead, increased to 22 seconds by Lap 30. Meanwhile, Scott Sharp had climbed to the top 10, and was running in eighth place. Behind him, Hearn faded to fifth place, and Lazier overtook Alboreto on Lap 29 for third place.[19] Both would be lapped by Stewart five laps later.

Before the leader could catch Luyendyk, a second caution came out when Joe Gosek, running in 17th place, spun and crashed in Turn 4.[18] Luyendyk, Lazier, Alboreto, Sharp, Davey Hamilton, Buzz Calkins and Mike Groff elected not to pit to regain their lap,[20] although Hamilton and Calkins would not keep the pace in green flag conditions. Stewart came out of his stop in second place, behind Luyendyk, but 10 seconds away from Lazier. Mark Dismore, who pitted just behind Stewart, spun exiting his pit box and was left backwards, having to make a 180º burnout. In doing so, he ran over an air hose, for what he was granted a Stop & Go penalty, and retired a few laps later after damaging his clutch in the process.[18]

Despite restarting with a 3-second gap on Lap 41, Luyendyk's lead lasted two further laps, as Stewart continued to obliterate the field. Sharp passed Alboreto for fourth place at the restart, and Buddy Lazier passed Luyendyk for second on Lap 64, but the Indy 500 winner had Stewart already in his mirrors three laps later, and was instructed to not let him pass. On Lap 68, Stewart dived into the inside of Lazier in Turn 3 and both drivers touched, the slight contact sending Lazier into the wall.[18] Lazier, who was still competing with the back injuries that he had suffered at Phoenix, was uninjured but very angered, being heard using profanities on ABC's broadcast.[21] Stewart only suffered cosmetical damages on his front wing.

The race restarted on Lap 77, and Stewart officially run in a lap of his own from Lap 81 after passing Richie Hearn, the only top 10 driver who had not pitted. Around the halfway mark, Team Menard started worrying about a loss of telemetry and a misfiring engine, both issues being resolved a few laps later.[18] On Lap 102, he lapped fifth-placed Michele Alboreto, who would lose his spot to Mike Groff 13 laps later. With clouds loooming on the track, Sharp got close to Luyendyk, forcing the Treadway driver to up his pace and catch Hearn before Sharp himself caught both of them. Hearn had a pending pit stop, and he decided to take it on Lap 123, but a caution came out for rain just seconds before, and Hearn had to drive by the closed pits, losing second place to Luyendyk. A lap later, a heavy rain shower forced a 45-minute red flag period.[18]

At the restart on Lap 127, Hearn was passed on track by Scott Sharp. Stewart kept on with his domination, lapping Hearn on Lap 144 and Sharp on Lap 149 for a second time. On Lap 152, Luyendyk started developing problems with his right front wheel and lost direction, having to retire from the race. Hearn would also had to do an unscheduled pit stop on Lap 161 to remove a piece of debris from his radiator and fell to sixth, ten laps before retiring due to an overheated engine believed to have developed in the previous stoppage.[18]

Lapping consistently into the 165 mph range, and taking half a second off Sharp per lap in average, Stewart was comfortably heading to an undisputed victory, and was seconds away from gaining a third lap on the field. The only concern by Team Menard was knowing when to pit for the last time without running out of fuel. With 18 laps to go, Stewart's car sustained an electrical failure coming out of turn 2.[22] He pitted afterwards, but the car shut down in the pits, and every attempt to revive it was futile, forcing Stewart to retire and to hand the lead to Sharp. With all his rivals having dropped out, the Foyt driver had a 20 seconds lead over Mike Groff, but his team was nursing the car, as they feared being too short on fuel to make it to the finish without an additional pit stop.

Although allowing both Michele Alboreto and Buzz Calkins to unlap themselves, Sharp maintained the gap and went on to get his first Indy car win, which was also the first for the Lola chassis and Goodyear tires in the IRL,[18] the first for A. J. Foyt's team since his last as a driver at the 1981 Pocono 500, and the second by a Foyt's hired driver after Jim McElreath's victory at the 1970 Ontario 500. Buzz Calkins passed Michele Alboreto with nine laps to go and held off a late charge to finish second, as Groff had to pit for a splash with 6 laps to go, falling to fourth place. Also, Davey Hamilton –fifth– and Marco Greco –seventh– got their first top-10 finish. Further behind, Eliseo Salazar lost several laps with fuel issues, and Eddie Cheever's first race as an driver-owner, having run as high as seventh, was soon ruined by brakes and engine problems.

PosNo.DriverTeamLapsTime/RetiredGridLaps LedPoints
1 1 United States Scott Sharp A. J. Foyt Enterprises 200 1:36:57.912 12 18 35
2 12 United States Buzz Calkins R Bradley Motorsports 200 + 20.480 10 0 33
3 33 Italy Michele Alboreto R Team Scandia 200 + 20.732 2 0 32
4 10 United States Mike Groff Byrd–Cunningham Racing 199 + 1 lap 9 0 31
5 14 United States Davey Hamilton R A. J. Foyt Enterprises 196 + 4 laps 17 0 30
6 21 Colombia Roberto Guerrero Pagan Racing 196 + 4 laps 18 0 29
7 40 Brazil Marco Greco Team Scandia/Arizona Motorsports 196 + 4 laps 15 0 28
8 22 France Stéphan Grégoire R    Team Scandia 192 + 8 laps 14 0 27
9 7 Chile Eliseo Salazar Team Scandia 190 + 10 laps 6 0 26
10 18 United States John Paul Jr. PDM Racing 190 + 10 laps 11 0 25
11 28 United States Tyce Carlson R PDM Racing/BRG 187 + 13 laps 16 0 24
12 2 United States Tony Stewart R Team Menard 182 Electrical 7 165 23
13 5 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk Treadway Racing 170 + 30 laps 3 11 22
14 4 United States Richie Hearn R Della Penna Motorsports 166 Engine 1 6 21
15 51 United States Eddie Cheever Team Cheever 166 + 34 laps 8 0 20
16 30 United States Stan Wattles R McCormack Motorsports 163 Fuel pressure 20 0 19
17 15 United States Dave Kudrave Tempero–Giuffre Racing 118 Clutch 22 0 18
18 9 United States Brad Murphey R Hemelgarn Racing 79 Handling 23 0 17
19 91 United States Buddy Lazier Hemelgarn Racing 66 Accident 4 0 16
20 3 United States Mark Dismore Team Menard 43 Clutch 5 0 15
21 96 United States Joe Gosek R ABF Motorsports 30 Accident 21 0 14
22 54 United States Robbie Buhl Beck Motorsports 0 Accident 13 0 13
23 27 United States Jim Guthrie R Team Blueprint Racing 0 Accident 19 0 12

Race Statistics

  • Lead changes: 5 among 4 drivers

Standings after the race

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