Chicagoland Speedway
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Chicagoland Speedway | |
Race Track | |
Chicagoland Speedway Satellite Image.
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Country | United States |
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State | Illinois |
County | Will |
Township | Joliet |
City | Joliet |
Address | 500 Speedway Blvd., Joliet, Illinois, 60433 |
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Length | 1.500 mi (2.414 km), D-Shaped Oval |
Front Stretch | 11° |
- Back Stretch | 5° |
- Turns | 18° |
Major Events | NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series, Indy Racing League, ARCA RE/MAX |
Race Type | Stock Car, IndyCar |
Material | Asphalt |
Opened | July, 2001 |
- Broke Ground | September, 1999 |
- Closed | N/A |
Owner | Raceway Associates, LLC (a Hulman & Co. and ISC joint venture, managed by ISC) |
Seats | 75,000 |
Construction Cost | $130 million |
Website: http://www.route66raceway.com/ | |
Chicagoland Speedway is a speedway in Joliet, Illinois, USA, southwest of Chicago. The speedway is actually located several miles south of Joliet proper, just off Illinois Route 53 between Joliet and Wilmington, Illinois. It currently has a capacity of 75,000 people. Since its inaugural season in 2001, the Chicagoland Speedway has become an unexpected and significant draw for major NASCAR and IRL events, often selling out major races months in advance.
The speedway itself is known to be one of NASCAR's infamous "cookie cutter" speedways, due to the fact that it resembles many other 1.5 mile downforce racetracks that resemble a D-shape in the NASCAR racing series. Although it may have the stigma of being a "cookie cutter" D-shaped oval, Chicagoland is unique in that it is one continuous curve, as the backstretch has a noticeable bend to it.
Chicagoland hosts the September finale of the IndyCar Series, the Peak Antifreeze Indy 300, as well as NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (LifeLock.com 400) and Nationwide Series (Dollar General 300) races once a year in July.
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[edit] History
From 1999 through 2000, the Chicagoland Speedway was built adjacent to the older Route 66 Raceway. In 2001, Chicagoland hosted their inaugural events, with NASCAR's Busch (Now Nationwide Series) and Winston Cup (Which then became NEXTEL Cup Series and now Sprint Cup Series), ARCA RE/MAX Series, and IRL IndyCar Series races making up the initial schedule. These series continue to run at Chicagoland Speedway annually through 2007.
On September 11, 2005, Ryan Briscoe was involved in an enormous crash at Chicagoland Speedway, breaking both clavicles among other injuries. He was released from the hospital on September 19 and following some initial treatment in the USA, moved to the specialist Formula Medicine facility in Viareggio, Italy, for the bulk of his rehabilitation. It took 8 weeks for Briscoe to recover from the injuries he sustained in the crash. His official web site announced his return to the USA on November 14, 2005. Following the incident Ryan was nicknamed "Briscoe Inferno"
On September 25, 2007, speedway officials announced the installation of lights for the 2008 season. With this new addition to the 1.5-mile, D-shaped oval, Chicagoland Speedway will become only the tenth Sprint Cup facility (five each with Speedway Motorsports and ISC tracks) able to hold night racing. The NASCAR race weekend at Chicagoland Speedway in 2008 will feature two night races - the Nationwide Series race on Friday, July 11, followed by the Sprint Cup Series race on Saturday, July 12.
[edit] Current races
- NASCAR Sprint Cup Series - LifeLock.com 400
- NASCAR Nationwide Series - Dollar General 300
- Indy Racing League - Peak Antifreeze Indy 300
[edit] Records
Type | Distance (miles / km) |
Date | Driver | Time | Average Speed (mph / km/h) |
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Qualifying (1 lap) |
1.500 / 2.414 | September 6, 2003 | Richie Hearn | 0:00:24.521 | 223.159 / 359.140 |
Race (1 lap) |
1.500 / 2.414 | September 8, 2002 | Buddy Rice | 0:00:24.422 | 224.064 / 360.596 |
Race (200 laps) |
300.000 / 482.803 | September 10, 2006 | Dan Wheldon | 1:33:37.266 | 194.828 / 313.545 |
Closest Finish
- September 8, 2002 - 0.0024 seconds - Sam Hornish Jr. over Al Unser Jr. (IRL Record)
Type | Distance (miles) |
Date | Driver | Time | Average Speed (mph) |
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Qualifying (Fastest Lap of 2) |
1.5 | July 8, 2005 | Jimmie Johnson | 0:00:28.701 | 188.147 |
Race Record (Avg. Speed) |
400 | July 14, 2002 | Kevin Harvick | 2:55:37 | 136.832 |
Type | Distance (miles) |
Date | Driver | Time | Average Speed (mph) |
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Qualifying (Fastest Lap of 2) |
1.5 | July 8, 2005 | Ryan Newman | 0:00:28.964 | 186.438 |
Race Record (Avg. Speed) |
300 | July 14, 2007 | Kevin Harvick | 135.611 |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Chicagoland Speedway Official Site
- Chicagoland Speedway Page on NASCAR.com
- 2008 Chicagoland Speedway
- High Resolution image from Google Maps
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