Patrick Racing
Patrick Racing was an American open-wheel racing team founded in 1970 by U.E. "Pat" Patrick, a Kentucky-born oil executive who transitioned from sponsorship to full team ownership after initially backing driver Walt Michner's efforts in the late 1960s.[1][2] The team competed across major series including the United States Auto Club (USAC), Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART), Champ Car, and the Indy Racing League (IRL), amassing 45 victories and establishing itself as a powerhouse in IndyCar racing through innovative engineering, such as developing the Wildcat chassis and alternative fuel engines.[2][1] Under Patrick's leadership, the team secured two national championships: the 1976 USAC title with driver Gordon Johncock and the 1989 CART championship with Emerson Fittipaldi.[2] Its most celebrated accomplishments came at the Indianapolis 500, where it triumphed three times— in 1973 and 1982 with Johncock, and in 1989 with Fittipaldi—contributing to the team's enduring legacy in the sport.[1][2] Notable drivers who raced for Patrick Racing included Johnny Rutherford, alongside Johncock and Fittipaldi, with the team fielding entries at the Indy 500 consistently from 1970 to 1995 and making a final appearance in 2004.[1] Beyond on-track success, Pat Patrick played a pivotal role in shaping modern open-wheel racing as a co-founder of CART in 1979 alongside Roger Penske, serving as its first president, and later co-founding the Indy Lights developmental series in 1986.[2] His contributions earned him inductions into the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame in 2016 and the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2018, before his death on January 5, 2021, at age 91.[1][2]Background
Founding and early involvement
U.E. "Pat" Patrick, born in Kentucky and an oil businessman from Jackson, Michigan, entered the world of motorsports in 1967 by sponsoring a car entered by fellow oilman Walt Michner for the Indianapolis 500.[2] This initial involvement marked Patrick's transition from business to racing, leveraging his Patrick Petroleum company to support open-wheel efforts in the USAC National Championship.[3] In 1970, Patrick formed Patrick Racing through a partnership with his Patrick Petroleum associate LeRoy Scott, acquiring a stake in Michner's team to establish the new operation.[4] The team initially operated as a co-ownership arrangement with Michner's existing setup, focusing on building a presence in USAC events while based out of facilities in Indianapolis to support proximity to the sport's epicenter.[5] Patrick Racing made its first full-season commitment to the USAC National Championship in 1973, having debuted at the Indianapolis 500 in 1970.[6][7] Early operations secured key sponsorship from STP, which provided crucial financial backing and branding for the team's expanded racing program during this formative period.[6] By the mid-1970s, the team had transitioned to fully independent operations.[2]Ownership and key personnel
U.E. "Pat" Patrick founded Patrick Racing in 1970 as a wildcat oilman entering IndyCar racing, serving as the team's primary owner and leader until his death on January 5, 2021, at age 91 in Phoenix, Arizona.[2][1] Key personnel included chief mechanic George Bignotti, who managed the team from 1973 to 1980 and contributed to its early successes through meticulous preparation of Eagle chassis.[8][2] Bignotti's expertise extended to chassis involvement, including partial design responsibilities for Patrick Racing's entries.[6] In 1980, Jim McGee succeeded Bignotti as chief mechanic and team manager, remaining for 25 years and overseeing operational stability during periods of transition.[2][9] Patrick Racing pursued in-house chassis development starting in 1975 with the Wildcat series, constructing its own cars after initially using customer Eagles, which allowed greater customization for IndyCar competition.[2] Subsequent Wildcat models, such as the Mk 2 in 1976, featured designs by engineer Bob Riley, incorporating innovations like full-width noses and front radiators to enhance aerodynamics.[10] Ownership underwent significant changes in the early 1990s when Patrick sold the team's assets after the 1991 season to driver Bobby Rahal and businessman Carl Hogan, who rebranded it as Rahal-Hogan Racing (later Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing).[4] Patrick reformed the operation in 1994 through a partnership with Firestone for tire testing, resuming full racing in 1995 until the team's closure in 2004 following a shift to the Indy Racing League in 2002.[2] As an extension of his team operations, Patrick co-founded Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) in 1979 alongside Roger Penske, serving as its first president to promote sanctioning body independence from USAC.[2][11] He also co-founded the Indy Lights series in 1986 to develop young talent for open-wheel racing.[2][5] Following the team's closure in 2004, Patrick's legacy endured through his induction into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2018, recognizing his contributions to three Indianapolis 500 victories as an owner and two IndyCar championships.[12][13]History
1970s era
Patrick Racing entered full-time competition in the USAC National Championship Trail starting in 1973, fielding Eagle-Offenhauser chassis under the STP sponsorship banner.[6] The team hired engineer George Bignotti to lead its technical efforts and signed drivers Swede Savage and Gordon Johncock, marking a significant expansion from prior part-time entries.[6] This commitment positioned the team for immediate competitiveness on the USAC circuit, with Savage and Johncock combining for strong showings in the season's early races.[8] The 1973 Indianapolis 500 encapsulated both triumph and tragedy for Patrick Racing. Savage, driving the STP-sponsored #40 Eagle, led laps 43 through 54 before crashing violently on lap 59 exiting turn four, his car veering into the inside wall, flipping, and erupting in flames that resulted in severe third-degree burns.[14] Johncock, in the #20 STP entry, had led briefly earlier in the race (laps 40-42) and assumed the lead for good on lap 73 after the incident and Al Unser's engine failure, ultimately winning the rain-shortened race on lap 133 after three days of delays from May 28 to 30.[14] Savage succumbed to complications from contaminated plasma on July 2, 1973, casting a somber shadow over Johncock's victory, which he described as bittersweet amid the team's muted celebrations.[15] Additionally, mechanic Armando Teran from the third Patrick STP car was fatally struck by a fire truck rushing to Savage's aid.[15] In 1975, Patrick Racing shifted to in-house chassis development, introducing the Wildcat Mk 1 designed by Bob Riley with input from George Bignotti.[16] Fabricated at a dedicated plant in Indianapolis's Northwest Industrial Park, the Wildcat featured a Drake-Goossen-Sparks (DGS) evolution of the Offenhauser engine and debuted with testing by Johncock at Ontario Motor Speedway in January, achieving speeds up to 189.5 mph.[16] Johncock piloted the #20 Sinmast-liveried Wildcat to victories at Trenton in September 1975 and August 1976, while teammate Wally Dallenbach drove the #40 entry; the chassis proved durable, remaining in use through 1983 across various teams.[16] This innovation underscored Patrick Racing's growing technical independence in USAC competition.[6] The team's momentum culminated in the 1976 USAC National Championship, secured by Johncock in a Wildcat-DGS at Phoenix International Raceway in the season finale, edging out Johnny Rutherford by a narrow margin.[8] Johncock's title, the first for Patrick Racing, highlighted consistent performances across the 13-race schedule, with the team finishing first and third in the standings via Johncock and Dallenbach.[17] Sponsorship evolved during this period, with STP serving as the primary backer through 1974 before withdrawing to focus on stock car racing, leading to Sinmast's entry as the lead sponsor for the 1975-1976 Wildcats.[16]1980s peak
Patrick Racing's transition to the newly formed Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) series in 1979 marked a pivotal shift, as team owner U.E. "Pat" Patrick co-founded the organization alongside Roger Penske to challenge the United States Auto Club's dominance.[18] Abandoning the Offenhauser engines of the USAC era, the team adopted Cosworth-powered chassis like the Wildcat and Penske PC6, enabling competitive performances from the outset.[6] Throughout the decade, Patrick Racing achieved consistent top finishes in CART, including multiple podiums and pole positions, establishing itself as a frontrunner in the ground-effect era of open-wheel racing.[19] A highlight came in 1982 at the Indianapolis 500, where veteran driver Gordon Johncock secured victory for the team in the Wildcat PR8B-Cosworth, the last American-designed chassis to win the race.[20] Johncock's dramatic duel with Rick Mears culminated in a photo-finish margin of just 0.16 seconds after a strategic pit stop under caution, underscoring the team's tactical prowess.[21] Earlier, in 1981, Mario Andretti delivered a near-miss at the same event, initially awarded the win after Bobby Unser's one-lap penalty for passing under yellow, only for an appeals board to reinstate Unser after 138 days, dropping Andretti to second.[22] The decade peaked in 1989 with Emerson Fittipaldi clinching both the Indianapolis 500 and the CART championship driving a customer Penske PC-18-Chevrolet, the first such dual triumph for a driver since the series' inception.[23] Fittipaldi's five wins that season, backed by a Marlboro-sponsored entry co-owned with Chip Ganassi since 1988, propelled Patrick Racing to its second national title.[24] Following this success, a complex 1989–1990 deal saw Fittipaldi's contract effectively swapped to Penske Racing, while Ganassi assumed full control of the team and Rahal later acquired assets through a partnership with Carl Hogan.[4]1990s transitions and challenges
Following the sale of its primary assets to Chip Ganassi at the end of 1989, which allowed Ganassi to establish his independent team for the 1990 season, U.E. "Pat" Patrick re-entered the sport with a second stint focused on an exclusive partnership with Alfa Romeo engines.[4][25] In 1990, the team fielded March chassis powered by Alfa Romeo V12 engines, with Roberto Guerrero as the lead driver and Al Unser Sr. substituting for select ovals like Indianapolis and Michigan; the season yielded a best finish of fifth at Michigan, but the cars suffered from insufficient power and reliability, leaving Guerrero 16th in the CART points standings.[26] For 1991, Danny Sullivan replaced Guerrero as the primary driver in Lola T91/00 chassis, backed by Miller Brewing sponsorship, but the Alfa engines continued to underperform due to torque deficiencies and frequent failures—such as 13 engines breaking in 14 days during Indianapolis preparations—resulting in a strongest result of fourth at Surfers Paradise and no podiums overall.[26][27] Compounding these technical woes were legal disputes, including a mid-1990 conflict with chassis supplier March Engineering that delayed delivery of Lola replacements and halted operations briefly during the Meadowlands Grand Prix.[28][29] Alfa Romeo's withdrawal of factory support at season's end, citing the program's lack of competitiveness and absence of a viable development path, left Patrick unable to secure alternative engines like Ilmor-Chevrolets due to prior contractual conflicts.[26] Facing financial strain, Patrick sold the remaining team operations in late 1991 to Bobby Rahal and Carl Hogan, who rebranded it as Rahal-Hogan Racing and gained Chevrolet engine supply, enabling Rahal's 1992 CART championship.[4][30] Patrick stepped away from full-time competition until 1994, when he reformed the team as Firestone's official test outfit to prepare the tire maker's return to CART after a 20-year hiatus, conducting extensive evaluations at tracks like Indianapolis.[25][31] This third stint marked a revival in 1995, with the team entering CART as Firestone's factory-supported entry using Lola T95/00 chassis and Ford-Cosworth engines, fielded by Scott Pruett as lead driver and supported by Marlboro sponsorship.[32] Pruett secured the team's sole victory of the era at the Marlboro 500 at Michigan International Speedway, edging Al Unser Jr. by 0.56 seconds in a dramatic last-lap pass, though the season otherwise produced inconsistent results amid adapting to the tire war's demands.[33][34] The late 1990s brought mounting challenges as the 1996 CART-IRL split fractured open-wheel racing, diluting fan interest, television audiences, and sponsorship revenue for CART-sanctioned teams like Patrick Racing.[35] Patrick's outfit remained aligned with CART—later rebranded as Champ Car in 2003—facing intensified competition from dominant Reynard and Lola chassis suppliers, escalating costs, and a shrinking manufacturer presence that strained smaller operations.[25] By 1998, persistent financial pressures and the series' declining prestige prompted Patrick to scale back, foreshadowing the team's eventual pivot away from Champ Car.[4]2000s final years and closure
In the 2000 CART FedEx Championship Series, Patrick Racing fielded entries for Adrián Fernández and Roberto Moreno, who delivered the team's strongest performance in years by finishing second and third in the final points standings, respectively, with 158 and 147 points. Fernández secured two victories during the season—at the Rio 200 and the Australia 200—marking Patrick Racing's final wins in CART competition.[37] The team benefited from sponsorship support including Visteon and Tecate/Quaker State, alongside event-specific branding like Miller Lite for races such as the Mid-Ohio Grand Prix.[39] Following a transitional period in the early 2000s, Patrick Racing exited CART after the 2003 season, during which Oriol Servià drove the No. 20 Visteon-sponsored Lola-Ford to a seventh-place championship finish.[40][41] The team then entered the Indy Racing League (IRL) in 2004 with a multi-driver lineup in a Chevrolet-powered Dallara, including Al Unser Jr. for the first three races, followed by rookie Jeff Simmons, Jaques Lazier for seven events, and Tomáš Enge for the final two.[42][43] Unser Jr., a two-time Indianapolis 500 winner, retired from driving on June 30, 2004, citing a loss of passion for racing, though he remained with the team as an advisor.[44] Without secured sponsorship for 2005, Patrick Racing ceased operations after the 2004 season, leading to the sale of its assets.[3] The closure ended a storied tenure in American open-wheel racing that spanned over three decades, with the team's legacy enduring through its three Indianapolis 500 victories and contributions to the sport's development, including co-founding CART in 1978. Founder U.E. "Pat" Patrick, who had overseen the operation from its 1970s inception, passed away on January 5, 2021, at age 91 in Phoenix, Arizona, after a long illness.[45][40]Achievements
Series championships
Patrick Racing secured its first national championship in the 1976 USAC National Championship Trail season, with driver Gordon Johncock clinching the title in a fiercely contested points battle against Johnny Rutherford. The season consisted of 13 races primarily on oval tracks, where Johncock demonstrated remarkable consistency, leading 11 of them and accumulating 4,240 points—just 20 ahead of Rutherford's 4,220—to secure the crown in the finale at Phoenix International Raceway. Key victories came at Michigan International Speedway on July 18 and Trenton Speedway on August 15, both in the innovative Wildcat Mk 1 and Mk 2 chassis designed by Bob Riley for Patrick Racing, powered by DGS turbocharged engines that provided a competitive edge in the era's evolving turbo technology.[17][46][10] In 1989, Patrick Racing, now co-owned by Chip Ganassi, achieved its second series title in the CART/PPG IndyCar World Series through Emerson Fittipaldi's dominant performance, marking the team's transition to the more commercially vibrant sanctioning body. Fittipaldi amassed 196 points to finish first, 10 ahead of Rick Mears and well clear of third-place Bobby Rahal, with five wins—including the Indianapolis 500—and eight podium finishes across 15 races, finishing in the top five in every completed start. Driving the Penske PC-18 Chevrolet, Fittipaldi's season highlighted the team's engineering prowess under chief engineer Morris Nunn, culminating in a championship-clinching run at the Nissan Grand Prix of Laguna Seca.[47][48] The 1976 USAC title reflected the traditional, oval-heavy structure of the pre-split era, with 13 events focused on American drivers and stock-block or turbo engines under conservative rules that prioritized reliability amid USAC's governance challenges. By contrast, the 1989 CART championship showcased a more diverse, 15-race calendar incorporating road and street courses, advanced ground-effects aerodynamics, and Chevrolet's dominant V8 power, fostering international talent like Fittipaldi and elevating the series' global appeal following the 1979 USAC-CART schism. These eras underscored Patrick Racing's adaptability, from USAC's insular competition to CART's expansive, high-stakes environment.[49][35][46]Indianapolis 500 successes
Patrick Racing achieved three victories at the Indianapolis 500, establishing the team as one of the most successful in the race's history. The team's first win came in 1973, a year marked by tragedy and interruption. Driving the No. 20 Eagle-Offenhauser for Patrick Racing, Gordon Johncock started 11th and was leading when rain halted the race after 133 laps, following his teammate Swede Savage's catastrophic crash on lap 66 that erupted into flames in the fourth turn and injured several spectators.[50][51] Savage succumbed to his injuries a month later, compounding the somber atmosphere. The race spanned three days due to weather delays, with Johncock securing the victory at an average speed of 159.036 mph over 332.5 miles.[52] This win highlighted the team's resilience amid adversity, with Johncock later reflecting on the emotional weight of the triumph.[53] The 1982 Indianapolis 500 marked Patrick Racing's second triumph, showcasing intense competition and innovative engineering. Johncock, now in the team's self-built No. 20 Wildcat-Cosworth—the last American-designed chassis to win the race—started from 5th and methodically advanced through the field.[20] A.J. Foyt, a four-time Indy winner, pressured Johncock during mid-race battles, running as high as second and engaging in close-quarters racing that tested both drivers' skills.[21] The drama peaked in the final laps as Rick Mears closed a significant gap in his Penske-Cosworth, trailing by just 0.16 seconds at the checkered flag in one of the closest finishes in Indy 500 history. Johncock's strategic pit stops and the Wildcat's reliability under fuel conservation allowed him to hold off the charge, averaging 162.642 mph over the full distance.[54] This victory, Johncock's second at Indy, underscored Patrick Racing's engineering prowess with the Wildcat platform.[52] In 1989, Emerson Fittipaldi delivered Patrick Racing's third and final Indy 500 win, navigating a race fraught with strategy and controversy. Piloting the No. 20 Penske PC-18-Chevrolet—a customer chassis acquired through a Marlboro sponsorship deal—Fittipaldi qualified third and dominated early, leading 121 laps with superior speed from the Ilmor-Chevrolet V8 engine.[55][56] Al Unser Jr., conserving fuel to stretch his stint, capitalized on a late caution to close the gap and challenge for the lead on lap 196. As Unser attempted an inside pass entering turn one, the two cars made contact, sending Unser spinning but allowing Fittipaldi to maintain control and secure the win by 3.263 seconds over Raul Boesel.[57][58] The incident sparked debate over aggressive defending and fuel mileage tactics, with Unser protesting the move but officials upholding the result. Fittipaldi's average speed of 167.581 mph capped a season that also saw him claim the CART championship.[52] Over its tenure from 1970 to 1995, with a final entry in 2004, Patrick Racing made 26 starts in the Indianapolis 500, securing three victories, multiple pole positions—including Gordon Johncock's 1976 effort—and numerous top-five finishes that demonstrated consistent competitiveness at the Brickyard.[1] These successes, often blending owner U.E. "Pat" Patrick's vision with technical innovation, cemented the team's legacy in one of motorsport's marquee events.[2]Drivers
Prominent CART and Champ Car drivers
Johnny Rutherford was an early prominent driver for Patrick Racing, competing in 1970 and 1971 under the Michner-Patrick banner and returning for a part-time stint in 1983 during the CART era. In his initial years, he achieved competitive results including a 5th-place finish at the 1970 Indianapolis 500 and multiple top-10s in USAC events, helping establish the team's presence. During 1983, Rutherford made several starts but recorded no wins, contributing to the squad's consistency post its championship peaks. Gordon Johncock was a cornerstone driver for Patrick Racing during its early CART years, competing in multiple seasons from the mid-1970s onward and securing the team's first Indianapolis 500 victory in 1973 aboard a Wildcat-Offenhauser chassis. He followed this with the 1976 USAC National Championship, clinching the title in the season finale at Phoenix International Raceway while driving for Patrick, marking the team's inaugural series crown. Johncock added a second Indy 500 win in 1982 and notched the team's inaugural CART victory at the 1979 Phoenix season-opener, contributing to 18 total wins across 149 starts with the team in USAC and CART competition.[11][8][17][59] Mario Andretti joined Patrick Racing for select stints in the early 1980s, driving the team's Wildcat chassis in 1981 and 1982, where he demonstrated strong pace at the Indianapolis 500 but encountered near-misses, including a controversial black-flag incident in 1981 that cost him a likely victory. His efforts helped elevate the team's competitiveness during the transition to CART, though he achieved no wins in these appearances.[60] Emerson Fittipaldi raced for Patrick Racing from 1988 to 1990, forming a potent partnership that culminated in the 1989 CART PPG IndyCar World Series championship, where he secured five victories including the Indianapolis 500 in a Penske PC-18-Chevrolet acquired through a Marlboro sponsorship deal. This title, the team's second overall, was complicated by a pre-arranged "trade" agreement influenced by sponsor Philip Morris, leading Fittipaldi to depart for Team Penske after 1989 while Patrick retained key assets; he finished third at Indy in 1990 before leaving. Fittipaldi's tenure earned him over $2 million in prize money in 1989 alone, the first such milestone in Indy car history.[61][62][63][55][64] Scott Pruett drove for Patrick Racing throughout the 1990s and into the early 2000s, delivering consistent results including a breakthrough victory at the 1995 Marlboro 500 at Michigan International Speedway—the team's first CART win in over five years—en route to three additional podiums and a seventh-place points finish that season. His multi-year stint added reliability to the team during a period of transition, with ten total CART wins across the squad from 1995 to 2001.[65][4] Adrián Fernández competed for Patrick Racing from the mid-1990s to the early 2000s in CART and Champ Car, achieving a podium at the 1995 Marlboro 500 and later securing two victories in 2000—at Rio de Janeiro and Surfers Paradise—while finishing as runner-up in the FedEx Championship Series standings with consistent top finishes in 17 of 20 races. His performance marked the team's strongest points result since 1989, highlighting Patrick's enduring competitiveness before the Champ Car split.[66][67][68]Prominent IRL drivers
Following the split between CART/Champ Car and the Indy Racing League, Patrick Racing transitioned to the IRL in 2004, motivated by financial instability in Champ Car after the series' bankruptcy proceedings and the loss of major sponsor Visteon.[69][70] The move was seen as a bid for greater competitiveness and cost efficiency in a more stable environment, with team owner Pat Patrick announcing the entry just weeks before the Indianapolis 500.[71] Al Unser Jr. served as the team's primary driver for the 2004 season, entering the No. 20 Chevrolet-powered Dallara in three races, including the Indianapolis 500 where he qualified 17th and finished 17th after a late-race incident.[72] His best result was an 11th-place finish at Texas Motor Speedway, but mechanical issues and crashes limited Unser to 44 championship points in his three starts.[73] Unser, a two-time Indianapolis 500 winner and two-time CART champion, announced his retirement from open-wheel racing on June 30, 2004, citing personal challenges including a history of substance abuse and legal issues, effectively ending his tenure with Patrick Racing mid-season.[74][75] The team supplemented its lineup with part-time drivers for the remaining events. Jaques Lazier competed in seven races, achieving a best finish of 12th at Nazareth Speedway and accumulating 104 points to place 22nd in the driver standings.[73][76] Jeff Simmons made a single start at Michigan International Speedway, finishing 20th after leading briefly early in the race.[77] Czech driver Tomáš Enge replaced Lazier for the final two races at California Speedway and Texas, posting 14th at Fontana before retiring due to an accident at Texas, contributing minimally to the team's points total.[43][78] Despite the shift to the IRL, Patrick Racing struggled with reliability and funding, finishing with no podiums or wins and ranking near the bottom of the entrant standings.[79] Lacking sponsorship for the 2005 season amid these poor results, the team ceased operations, with its assets sold off and marking the end of Patrick Racing's long history in open-wheel competition.[40]Racing results
CART and Champ Car season summaries
Patrick Racing entered the Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) series in 1979, competing through its rebranding as the Champ Car World Series until the 2003 season, amassing 573 starts, 27 wins, and 20 pole positions overall. The team initially fielded one or two cars, expanding to multiple entries by the late 1990s, with performance peaking in the 1980s before facing challenges from technical experiments and the 1996 CART-Indy Racing League split. Key seasons highlighted dominance in 1989 and competitive runner-up efforts in 2000, while chassis evolved from custom Wildcats to supplier models like Penske, Reynard, and Lola, paired with engines from Cosworth, Chevrolet, Alfa Romeo, Ford, and Toyota.[80] The team's early CART years established a solid foundation, with 30 starts and 2 wins in 1979 using Penske chassis and Cosworth engines, finishing a best of 1st at key ovals. Performance fluctuated in the early 1980s, including 2 wins and a championship-contending effort in 1982 (22 starts, best 1st), but improved steadily with Chevrolet power from 1987, yielding 2 wins in 1987 and a dominant 1989 season of 15 starts, 5 wins, 4 poles, and the drivers' and owners' titles. The 1980s averaged around 25-30 entries annually, with best finishes often in the top 3 and points positions in the top 10, reflecting the team's growing technical prowess under owner Pat Patrick.[80][11]| Year | Entries | Wins | Poles | Best Finish | Points Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1979 | 30 | 2 | 1 | 1st | 3rd (Johncock) |
| 1982 | 22 | 2 | 1 | 1st | Top 5 |
| 1986 | 34 | 2 | 2 | 1st | 3rd |
| 1989 | 15 | 5 | 4 | 1st | 1st (owners' title) |
| 1995 | 17 | 1 | 0 | 1st | 4th |
| 1997 | 34 | 1 | 3 | 1st | 2nd |
| 2000 | 40 | 3 | 1 | 1st | 2nd |
IRL season summaries
In 2004, Patrick Racing made its sole full-season entry into the Indy Racing League (IRL) IndyCar Series, fielding the #20 Dallara IR-03 chassis powered by a Chevrolet engine. The team employed four drivers across the 16-race schedule: Al Unser Jr., Jaques Lazier, Tomáš Enge, and Jeff Simmons, with limited entries reflecting operational constraints. Collectively, the team attempted 13 races, achieving mid-pack results at best and finishing 13th in the team standings with 191 points.[79][42] Al Unser Jr. handled the early portion, starting the season opener at Homestead-Miami Speedway and competing in the next two events, including the Indianapolis 500 where he finished 17th after starting 17th. His strongest performance came with an 11th-place finish at Texas Motor Speedway. Jaques Lazier assumed primary duties thereafter, entering seven races and accumulating 104 points for 22nd in the driver championship, highlighted by consistent but unremarkable mid-field runs such as 12th at Nashville Superspeedway. Enge raced twice, scoring 31 points with a best of 17th at Michigan International Speedway, while Simmons made one start at Pikes Peak International Raceway, finishing 20th. No driver secured a top-10 result beyond Unser's Texas effort, underscoring the team's struggles.[83][84][79] This IRL campaign contrasted sharply with Patrick Racing's more successful CART/Champ Car history, where the team had notched victories and contended for titles through the 1990s and early 2000s. The shift to the IRL's oval-exclusive format and spec-series regulations posed adaptation challenges, including difficulties optimizing the Chevrolet engine against dominant Honda and Toyota units, as well as adjusting chassis setups for high-speed ovals without road course experience. These issues contributed to unreliable reliability and pace, limiting the team to survival rather than contention.[42] Financial and operational pressures ultimately proved insurmountable, exacerbated by the absence of substantial sponsorship and lingering costs from the CART split. With dismal on-track returns failing to attract funding, Patrick Racing ceased operations at season's end, marking the conclusion of its storied tenure in American open-wheel racing.[4]Complete list of race wins
Patrick Racing amassed 45 victories in IndyCar competition, with 19 achieved under USAC sanctioning during the 1970s and 26 under CART sanctioning from the 1980s through the 2000s, including three Indianapolis 500 triumphs. The team's success spanned multiple eras, with notable patterns including Gordon Johncock's 18 USAC wins in the 1970s and Emerson Fittipaldi's 11 CART wins from 1985 to 1989, culminating in a dominant 1989 season where Fittipaldi claimed five victories en route to the driver's and owner's championships.[2][11][85] The following table lists selected verified race wins for Patrick Racing, with details on season, date, track and race, winning driver, chassis, engine, tire, grid position, and laps led where available from historical records. For a complete list, refer to specialized databases.[86][87][88][80]| Season | Date | Track/Race | Winning Driver | Chassis | Engine | Tire | Grid Position | Laps Led |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1973 | May 28 | Indianapolis 500 | Gordon Johncock | Eagle | Offenhauser | Goodyear | 11 | 64 |
| 1977 | July 17 | Michigan International Speedway (USAC Michigan 250) | Danny Ongais | Wildcat | Ford | Goodyear | 20 | 99 |
| 1982 | May 30 | Indianapolis 500 | Gordon Johncock | Wildcat | Cosworth | Goodyear | 5 | 57 |
| 1982 | September 19 | Road America 200 | Hector Rebaque | March | Cosworth | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1985 | August 25 | Michigan 500 | Emerson Fittipaldi | March | Cosworth | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1986 | October 5 | Road America 200 | Emerson Fittipaldi | March | Cosworth | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1987 | July 5 | Budweiser Grand Prix of Cleveland | Emerson Fittipaldi | March | Chevrolet | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1987 | July 19 | Molson Indy Toronto | Emerson Fittipaldi | March | Chevrolet | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1988 | July 31 | Budweiser Grand Prix of Mid-Ohio | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1988 | September 11 | Briggs & Stratton IndyCar 200 (Road America) | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1989 | April 16 | Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach | Emerson Fittipaldi | Penske | Chevrolet | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1989 | May 28 | Indianapolis 500 | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | 2 | 158 |
| 1989 | June 18 | Detroit Grand Prix | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | 1 | 51 |
| 1989 | June 25 | Budweiser/G.I. Joe's 200 (Portland) | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | 1 | 98 |
| 1989 | July 2 | Budweiser Grand Prix of Cleveland | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | 1 | 85 |
| 1989 | September 24 | Bosch Spark Plug Grand Prix (Nazareth) | Emerson Fittipaldi | Lola | Chevrolet | Goodyear | 1 | 71 |
| 1995 | September 10 | Michigan 500 | Scott Pruett | Lola | Ford | Goodyear | N/A | N/A |
| 1997 | August 10 | Molson Indy Vancouver | Scott Pruett | Reynard | Mercedes | Firestone | N/A | N/A |