Indy Regency Racing
Indy Regency Racing was a racing team owned by Sal Incandela who had worked with several Formula One and CART teams.
The team made its debut in 1991 fielding a car in the Indy Lights series for David Kudrave.[1] In 1993 the team made its move to the CART Championship Car series by fielding a car for the 1993 Indianapolis 500 for F1 veteran Olivier Grouillard. However, the car failed to make the field for the "500" but Grouillard participated in 11 races that season for the team. In 1994 the team signed 1990 Indy 500 champion Arie Luyendyk who had been let go by Chip Ganassi Racing. Luyendyk got the team into its first Indy 500 with 8th on the grid but was knocked out by an engine failure 11 laps from the finish. Luyendyk also finished 17th in points in 1994 with a runner up finish at the Michigan International Speedway. However, that would the team's last season in top level racing for several years as the team returned to running only in Indy Lights for 1995.
The team returned to the Indy 500 in 2000 with an entry for Johnny Unser who started 30th and finished 22nd in the team's first Indy Racing League race. They returned the following year with inexperienced rookie Cory Witherill who made an improbably successful bump day run to get the Regency machine into its 3rd Indy 500. Witherill brought the car home in 19th position. In 2002 Regency fielded a car for Hideki Noda in the last 3 races of the season with little success.[2] The team participated in Toyota Atlantic in 2002 after Indy Lights' demise[3] and apparently shut down shortly thereafter.
Drivers
CART
- Franck Fréon (1994)
- Olivier Grouillard (1993)
- Arie Luyendyk (1994)
IRL
- Hideki Noda (2002)
- Johnny Unser (2000)
- Cory Witherill (2001)
References
- ↑ Indy Regency Racing profile, Indy Lights (cached November 23, 2001)
- ↑ Kelly, Paul & Mittman, Dick. McGehee Making Comeback In Hometown; MK To Produce Falcon Chassis, IndyCar.com, August 15, 2002
- ↑ Indy Regency Racing Announces Plans to Compete in Toyota Atlantic for 2002, Toyota Atlantic Press Release, December 3, 2001