IndyCar iRacing Challenge

INDYCAR iRacing Challenge
2020
Tournament information
SportIndyCar
Dates28 March 2020–2 May 2020
AdministratorIndyCar
Host(s)iRacing
Final positions
ChampionNew Zealand Scott McLaughlin
2021 →

The IndyCar iRacing Challenge (stylized as INDYCAR iRacing Challenge) was a series of esports events held as a temporary replacement of the suspended 2020 IndyCar Series due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The series was run on the platform of iRacing.[1] The virtual races were broadcast on various IndyCar social media channels. Additionally, all races, but the first one, were broadcast live on NBCSN.[2][3]

The races featured full time and part time drivers currently on the Indycar grid. They also featured guest drivers from other racing series' like Formula One and NASCAR.[4][5]

Teams and Drivers

Team No. Driver(s) Round(s)
A. J. Foyt Enterprises 4 France Sébastien Bourdais All
14 Brazil Tony Kanaan All
41 Canada Dalton Kellett All
Andretti Autosport 26 United States Zach Veach All
27 United States Alexander Rossi All
28 United States Kyle Kirkwood 1-2
United States Ryan Hunter-Reay 3-6
29 Canada James Hinchcliffe All
39 United States Scott Speed 6
Andretti Herta Autosport w/ Marco Andretti & Curb-Agajanian 98 1-2
United States Marco Andretti 3-4, 6
Australia Chaz Mostert 5
Andretti Harding Steinbrenner Autosport 88 United States Colton Herta All
Arrow McLaren SP
04 United Kingdom Lando Norris 5-6
5 Mexico Patricio O'Ward All
6 Canada Robert Wickens 4
7 United States Oliver Askew All
Carlin 31 United States Conor Daly 6
Brazil Felipe Nasr 3-5
59 1-2
United Kingdom Max Chilton 3-6
Chip Ganassi Racing 8 Sweden Marcus Ericsson All
9 New Zealand Scott Dixon 2-6
10 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist All
Dale Coyne Racing with Team Goh 55 Spain Álex Palou All
Dale Coyne Racing with Vasser-Sullivan 18 United States Santino Ferrucci All
Dale Coyne Racing with Byrd & Belardi 33 Australia James Davison 3, 6
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 24 United States Sage Karam All
Ed Carpenter Racing 20 United States Ed Carpenter 6
United States Conor Daly 1-5
21 Netherlands Rinus VeeKay 4-6
United States Ed Carpenter 2-3
50 4-5
IndyCar Provisional 3 United States Dale Earnhardt Jr. 3
48 United States Jimmie Johnson 1-2
51 United States Kyle Busch 4
Juncos Racing 11 United States Kyle Kaiser 1-5
25 United Kingdom Stefan Wilson 6
Meyer Shank Racing 60 United Kingdom Jack Harvey 2-6
Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 15 United States Graham Rahal All
30 Japan Takuma Sato 4-6
Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing with Citrone/Buhl Autosport 45 United States Spencer Pigot 5
Team Penske 1 United States Josef Newgarden All
12 Australia Will Power All
22 France Simon Pagenaud All
2 New Zealand Scott McLaughlin 1-5
40 6
3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves 4
911 6
Top Gun Racing 99 United States RC Enerson 6

Schedule

Rd. Date Race name Track Location
1 March 28 American Red Cross Grand Prix  R  Watkins Glen International Watkins Glen, New York
2 April 4 Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama Presented by AmFirst  R  Barber Motorsports Park Birmingham, Alabama
3 April 11 Chevrolet 275  O  Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Michigan
4 April 18 Firestone 175  O  Twin Ring Motegi Motegi, Japan
5 April 25 AutoNation IndyCar Challenge  R  Circuit of the Americas Austin, Texas
6 May 2 First Responder 175  O  Indianapolis Motor Speedway Speedway, Indiana
Source:[6]
O Short oval/Superspeedway
R Road/street course

Results

Rd. Race Pole position Fastest lap Most laps led Race Winner
Driver Team
1 Watkins Glen United States Sage Karam Australia Will Power United States Sage Karam United States Sage Karam Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
2 Barber United States Sage Karam Sweden Felix Rosenqvist United States Sage Karam New Zealand Scott McLaughlin Team Penske
3 Michigan Sweden Marcus Ericsson United States Dale Earnhardt Jr. United States Sage Karam France Simon Pagenaud Team Penske
4 Motegi Canada Robert Wickens United States Sage Karam Australia Will Power France Simon Pagenaud Team Penske
5 COTA United Kingdom Lando Norris United Kingdom Lando Norris United Kingdom Lando Norris United Kingdom Lando Norris Arrow McLaren SP
6 Indianapolis New Zealand Scott McLaughlin United Kingdom Stefan Wilson Australia Will Power New Zealand Scott McLaughlin Team Penske
Source:[7][8][9][10][11][12]

Driver Standings

Pos Driver WGI ALA MIS MOT COTA INDY Pts
1 New Zealand Scott McLaughlin 4 1L 2 24 4 1L 213
2 Australia Will Power 3L 2 4L 3L* 6L 14L* 195
3 France Simon Pagenaud 6 5 1L 1L 14 25L 182
4 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist 2 6L 21 14 3 9 152
5 United States Santino Ferrucci 8 10 23 9 5 3 138
6 United States Sage Karam 1L* 23L* 14L* 7L 33 27L 120
7 United States Graham Rahal 14 14 5 10 17 13L 113
8 United States Conor Daly 10 23 13 11 29 2 108
9 Sweden Marcus Ericsson 18 25 19L 4L 8 11L 107
10 Mexico Patricio O'Ward 13 24 25 26 2L 5 104
11 Spain Álex Palou 20 4 10L 22 9L 26L 100
12 New Zealand Scott Dixon 16 30 2 11L 10 99
13 United States Oliver Askew 5 15 31 21L 28 4L 98
14 United States Josef Newgarden 7 9 24 15L 10 22 98
15 United States Zach Veach 19 19 11L 8L 26 8 96
16 United Kingdom Jack Harvey 28 6 6L 16 18 88
17 United States Alexander Rossi 17 22 7L 28 15 12 86
18 Canada Dalton Kellett 11 11 16 19 18 31 80
19 France Sébastien Bourdais 23 13 20 20 24 6L 79
20 United States Colton Herta 22 7 28 18 13 32 73
21 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay 8L 16 31 7 70
22 Canada Robert Wickens 8 26 5L 32 DNQ 66
23 United Kingdom Lando Norris 1L* 21 64
24 United States Scott Speed 21 3 15 61
25 United States Ed Carpenter 18 9 17 22 28 60
26 Brazil Felipe Nasr 15 29 17L 31 12 DNQ 57
27 United States Kyle Kaiser 12 21 12 27 27 DNQ 55
28 Brazil Tony Kanaan 24 26 18 30 23 33 40
29 Netherlands Rinus Veekay 23 7 24 39
30 United States Dale Earnhardt Jr. 3 35
31 United States Kyle Kirkwood 9 20 32
32 United States Jimmie Johnson 16 12 32
33 Canada James Hinchcliffe DNS 17 22 DNS 19 30 28
34 Japan Takuma Sato 12 30 30 28
35 Australia James Davison 15 19 27
36 United Kingdom Max Chilton 27 32 21 23 26
37F United States Marco Andretti 29 25 17 23
38 Brazil Hélio Castroneves 29 16 19
39 United States Kyle Busch 13 DNQ 17
40 Australia Chaz Mostert 20 10
United States RC Enerson 20 10
42 United States Spencer Pigot 25 DNQ 5
42 United Kingdom Stefan Wilson 29 5
Pos Driver WGI ALA MIS MOT COTA INDY Pts
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd-place finish
Bronze 3rd-place finish
Green Top 5 finish
Light Blue Top 10 finish
Dark Blue Other flagged position
Purple Did not finish
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Brown Withdrew (Wth)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did Not Start (DNS)
Race abandoned (C)
Blank Did not participate
In-line notation
Bold Pole position
(1 point; except Indy)
Italics Ran fastest race lap
L Led race lap
(1 point)
* Led most race laps
(2 points)

Indianapolis race controversy

The final race of the series, the First Responder 175, saw a driving standards controversy. With nine laps to go in the race, Simon Pagenaud had been leading, only for him to run into the wall. Pagenaud pitted following the crash and while on the pits, told over the radio "We take out Lando [Norris], let's do it", in reference to an earlier incident they had during the race. With two laps to go, Pagenaud, who was slowing down, promptly collided with Norris, who was leading at the time of the incident. Heading into the finish line, Santino Ferrucci took a hard left into then-leader Oliver Askew, who flipped; Scott McLaughlin crossed the finish line, from the pole.[13]

Both Pagenaud and Ferrucci received criticism for their poor conduct during the race. Norris alleged that Pagenaud did so in order to prevent a non-IndyCar Series regular from winning the race;[14] McLaren CEO Zak Brown tweeted that what Pagenaud did was not something expected from a former Indy 500 champion. Pagenaud insisted that he only intended to impede Norris, while his spotter Ben Bretzman denied instructing Pagenaud to crash into Norris.[15] Ferrucci, in denying that his collision was deliberate, claimed that his collision at the end of the last lap was an attempt at a NASCAR-style side drafting, although during the stream he quipped that his clash was "worth it" and he did it "for the fans".[16] Although iRacing's sporting code explicitly prohibited deliberate behavior, iRacing did not penalize both drivers, as it was deemed as a private league organized by INDYCAR themselves, rather than iRacing;[13] INDYCAR themselves did not issue penalties for both Pagenaud or Ferrucci. Motorsport journalist Marshall Pruett later confirmed that an unnamed party involved in the incidents had also received death threats.[17]

References

  1. ^ "IndyCar iRacing Challenge announced". Racer. 20 March 2020.
  2. ^ "IndyCar lands NBC Sports to broadcast second iRacing Challenge event on Saturday at Barber". Indystar. 1 April 2020.
  3. ^ "2020 - INDYCAR IRACING CHALLENGE". Indycar. 2 May 2020.
  4. ^ "McLaren's Norris to race in IndyCar iRacing at COTA". Racer. 22 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Dale Earnhardt Jr. to Race the No. 3 in IndyCar iRacing Challenge". Racer. 8 April 2020.
  6. ^ "2020 - INDYCAR IRACING CHALLENGE". Indycar. 2 May 2020.
  7. ^ "OFFICIAL BOX SCORE - INDYCAR iRacing Challenge - American Red Cross Grand Prix at Watkins Glen International" (PDF). Indycar. 28 March 2020.
  8. ^ "OFFICIAL BOX SCORE - INDYCAR iRacing Challenge - Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama presented by AmFirst" (PDF). Indycar. 4 April 2020.
  9. ^ "OFFICIAL BOX SCORE - INDYCAR iRacing Challenge - Chevrolet 275 at Michigan International Speedway" (PDF). Indycar. 11 April 2020.
  10. ^ "OFFICIAL BOX SCORE - INDYCAR iRacing Challenge - Firestone 175 at Twin Ring Motegi" (PDF). Indycar. 18 April 2020.
  11. ^ "OFFICIAL BOX SCORE - INDYCAR iRacing Challenge - AutoNation INDYCAR Challenge at Circuit of The Americas" (PDF). Indycar. 25 April 2020.
  12. ^ "OFFICIAL BOX SCORE - INDYCAR iRacing Challenge - First Responder 175 presented by GMR" (PDF). Indycar. 2 May 2020.
  13. ^ a b Weaver, Matt (2020-05-02). "Last-Lap Chaos Ends with Scott McLaughlin Winning IndyCar iRacing Finale". Autoweek. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
  14. ^ "Simon Pagenaud under fire for wiping out Lando Norris at Indy". Eurosport. 2020-05-03. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
  15. ^ Weaver, Matt (2020-05-03). "McLaren's Lando Norris, Zak Brown Condemn Simon Pagenaud for Poor iRacing Sportsmanship". Autoweek. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
  16. ^ Kalaf, Samer (2022-05-12). "The Anger Over a Virtual IndyCar Crash Exposed the Fragile Facade of Competition". Slate.com. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
  17. ^ Pruett, Marshall [@marshallpruett] (May 5, 2020). "I've been told at least one of the drivers involved in Saturday's iRacing drama at IMS have received threats against their lives via social media direct message. Come on, man" (Tweet) – via Twitter.