Scott Goodyear

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Scott Goodyear
Nationality Flag of Canada Canada
Date of Birth December 20, 1959 (1959-12-20) (age 48)
Place of Birth Toronto, Ontario
Retired 2001
Indy Racing League IndyCar Series
Years active 1997-2001
Teams Treadway Racing
Panther Racing
Team Cheever
Starts 39
Wins 3
Poles 1
Best finish 2nd in 2000
CART Championship Car
Years active 1987, 1989-1996
Teams Gohr Motorsports
Hemelgarn Racing
Shierson Racing
Walker Racing
King Motorsports
Tasman Motorsports
Starts 97
Wins 2
Poles 2
Best finish 5th in 1992
Previous series
1986 North American Formula Atlantic East Series
Championship titles
1986 North American Formula Atlantic East Series
Awards
2002 Canadian Motorsports Hall of Fame inductee

Scott Goodyear (b. December 20, 1959 in Toronto, Ontario) is a former race car driver from Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. Goodyear ran the IRL and Champ Car series during his career from 1987, winning the Michigan 500 in 1992 and 1994. He is also notable for almost winning the Indianapolis 500 on three different occasions.

Goodyear qualified for twelve straight Indianapolis 500 races from 1990 to 2001. After starting last (33rd) in the 1992 race he finished 2nd to Al Unser, Jr. by 0.043 seconds. He could have won the 1995 race, but after leading forty-two laps, Goodyear mistakenly passed the pace car on a late restart and was penalized to fourteenth place after ignoring the black flags. Goodyear finished second again in 1997 after being passed by Arie Luyendyk on the backstraight at lap 194. He might have won if not for a controversial restart on the last lap, when the green and white flag waved despite the on-track lights still signaling yellow. Goodyear, who had expected the race to finish under caution, was weaving his car to keep his tires warm at the time of the restart. Meanwhile, eventual winner Luyendyk had already begun accelerating away from the field.

He drove in a couple of CART races for Walker Racing in 1996 before a practice accident at the Emerson Fittipaldi Speedway in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil sidelined him for most of the season. In 1997 he moved to the Indy Racing League with Treadway Racing and in 1998 moved to Panther Racing, where he stayed for three seasons, just losing out for the series title in 2000 to Buddy Lazier. He retired from racing following a crash with Sarah Fisher in the 2001 Indianapolis 500 and became a commentator for ABC and ESPN's coverage of the IRL with Paul Page, Todd Harris, of "World's Strongest Man" and extreme sports fame, and currently with Marty Reid.

Scott Goodyear was inducteed into the Canadian Motorsport Hall of Fame in 2002.

[edit] IndyCar career results

Year Team Wins Points Championship Finish
1997 Treadway Racing 0 226 5th
1998 Panther Racing 0 244 7th
1999 Panther Racing 2 217 9th
2000 Panther Racing 1 272 2nd
2001 Cheever Racing 0 1 47th

3 wins, 0 championships

[edit] Indy 500 results

Year Chassis Engine Start Finish
1990 Lola Judd 21st 10th
1991 Lola Judd 12th 27th
1992 Lola Chevrolet 33rd 2nd
1993 Lola Ford-Cosworth 4th 7th
1994 Lola Ford-Cosworth 33rd 30th
1995 Reynard Honda 3rd 14th
1997 G-Force Oldsmobile 5th 2nd
1998 G-Force Oldsmobile 10th 24th
1999 G-Force Oldsmobile 9th 27th
2000 G-Force Oldsmobile 13th 9th
2001 Dallara Infiniti 16th 32nd
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Michael Angus
North American Formula Atlantic
Atlantic Division Champion

1986
Succeeded by
Calvin Fish

[edit] See also

List of Canadians in Champ Car

Languages