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The 2001 FedEx Championship Series season was the twenty-third in the Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) era of American open-wheel car racing. It consisted of 20 of the 22 originally scheduled races, beginning in Monterrey, Mexico on March 11 and concluding in Fontana, California on November 4. What would have been the third race in the season, the Firestone Firehawk 600 in Fort Worth, Texas, was canceled after qualifying due to safety concerns. The FedEx Championship Series Drivers' Champion was Gil de Ferran, while the Rookie of the Year was Scott Dixon.

2001 CART season
FedEx Championship Series
Season
Races20 (22 planned)
Start dateMarch 11
End dateNovember 4
Awards
Drivers' championBrazil Gil de Ferran
Constructors' CupUnited Kingdom Reynard
Manufacturers' CupJapan Honda
Nations' CupBrazil Brazil
Rookie of the YearNew Zealand Scott Dixon
← 2000
2002 →
Bryan Herta's #77 Forsythe Reynard at Rockingham Motor Speedway in 2001

Off the track, the 2001 season was an unmitigated disaster for CART under the leadership of Joseph Heitzler. It included two race cancellations; a disastrous European tour that coincided with the September 11 attacks and witnessed a severe accident to former series champion Alex Zanardi in which he lost both of his legs; infighting amongst engine manufacturers that saw litigation and the announced future departure of Honda and Toyota; the loss of the series' television contract; the departure of longtime tracks Michigan International Speedway and Nazareth Speedway; the loss of Firestone as the series' tire supplier and its replacement by parent company Bridgestone; and the defection of Team Penske to the rival Indy Racing League (IRL) at the conclusion of the season.

Team Penske and Team Motorola joined Chip Ganassi Racing in having concurrent IRL teams to run in the 2001 Indianapolis 500, with Penske's Helio Castroneves winning the race. In an unusual move, CART "sanctioned" the participation of teams in the race; this was an attempt to allow Penske's primary sponsor, Marlboro, to appear on cars in the 500, as they were prohibited from being in more than one racing series by the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement. This legal maneuver was not successful, and Penske's cars ran without advertising. DaimlerChrysler shut down their CART program as an engine manufacturer via Mercedes-Benz brand as the company decided to move to NASCAR Winston Cup Series via the Dodge brand in the same year.

Drivers and constructors

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The following teams and drivers competed in the 2001 CART Championship Series season. All cars ran on Firestone Tires.[1][2]

Team Chassis Engine No Drivers Races Primary Sponsors
United States  Team Penske Reynard 01i Honda HR-1 1 Brazil  Gil de Ferran All Marlboro 19
Penske Racing 2
3 Brazil  Hélio Castroneves All
United States  Chip Ganassi Racing Lola B01/00 Toyota RV8E 4 Brazil  Bruno Junqueira  R  All Target
12 France  Nicolas Minassian  R  1–7
United States  Memo Gidley 8–21
United States  Walker Motorsport Reynard 01i Toyota RV8E 5 Japan  Toranosuke Takagi  R  All Pioneer 20
Walker Racing 1
United States  Newman-Haas Racing Lola B01/00 Toyota RV8E 6 Brazil  Cristiano da Matta All Texaco-Havoline
11 Brazil  Christian Fittipaldi All Kmart
United States  Team Rahal Lola B01/00 Ford-Cosworth XF 7 Italy  Max Papis All Miller Lite 17
Miller Genuine Draft 4
8 Sweden  Kenny Bräck All Shell
United States  Bettenhausen Racing Lola B01/00 Ford-Cosworth XF 16 Mexico  Michel Jourdain Jr. All Herdez
United States  PacWest Racing Reynard 01i Toyota RV8E 17 Brazil  Maurício Gugelmin All Nextel
18 New Zealand  Scott Dixon  R  All Powerware 19
Nextel 2
United States  Patrick Racing Reynard 01i Toyota RV8E 19 United States  Townsend Bell 16–17 Visteon
20 Brazil  Roberto Moreno All
40 United States  Jimmy Vasser All OXXO 1
Patrick Racing 4
Visteon 15
United States  Dale Coyne Racing Lola B2K/00 Ford-Cosworth XF 19 Germany  Michael Krumm 1–2 The Dark Dog
21 Brazil  Luiz Garcia Jr. 1–2 Embratel
United States  Sigma Autosport Lola B01/00 Ford-Cosworth XF 22 Spain  Oriol Servià All Sigma Autosport
United States  Arciero-Blair Racing Lola B2K/00 Ilmor 25 Brazil  Max Wilson  R  1–4 winnerB2B.com 9
Driving 101 10
Ford-Cosworth XF 6–10, 13–19
United States  Alex Barron 20–21
United States  Team Green Reynard 01i Honda HR-1 26 Canada  Paul Tracy All KOOL 19
Team Green 2
27 United Kingdom  Dario Franchitti All
United States  Forsythe Racing Reynard 01i Ford-Cosworth XF 32 Canada  Patrick Carpentier All Player's 19
Racing Since 1961 2
33 Canada  Alex Tagliani All
77 United States  Bryan Herta All Indeck
United States  Team Motorola Reynard 01i Honda HR-1
39 United States  Michael Andretti All Motorola
Mexico  Fernández Racing Reynard 01i Honda HR-1 51 Mexico  Adrián Fernández All Tecate
52 Japan  Shinji Nakano All Avex
United States  Mo Nunn Racing Reynard 01i Honda HR-1 55 Brazil  Tony Kanaan All Hollywood Cigarettes 19
No Limits 2
66 Italy  Alex Zanardi 1–16 Pioneer 19
Mo Nunn Racing 1
United States  Casey Mears  R  18–21
R Eligible for Rookie of the Year

Season summary

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Schedule

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Rnd Race Name Circuit City/Location Date
1 Mexico  Tecate/Telmex Grand Prix of Monterrey Presented by Herdez  R  Fundidora Park Monterrey, Mexico March 11
Brazil  Rio 200 (Cancelled)  O  Autódromo de Jacarepaguá Rio de Janeiro, Brazil March 25
2 United States  Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach  R  Streets of Long Beach Long Beach, California April 8
United States  Firestone Firehawk 600 Presented by Pioneer (Cancelled)  O  Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas April 29
3 United States  Lehigh Valley Grand Prix Presented by Toyota  O  Nazareth Speedway Nazareth, Pennsylvania May 6
4 Japan  Firestone Firehawk 500  O  Twin Ring Motegi Motegi, Japan May 19
NC* United States  85th Indianapolis 500  O  Indianapolis Motor Speedway Speedway, Indiana May 27
5 United States  Miller Lite 225  O  Milwaukee Mile West Allis, Wisconsin June 3
6 United States  Tenneco Automotive Grand Prix of Detroit  R  The Raceway on Belle Isle Park Detroit, Michigan June 17
7 United States  Freightliner/G. I. Joe's 200 Presented by Texaco  R  Portland International Raceway Portland, Oregon June 24
8 United States  Marconi Grand Prix of Cleveland Presented by Firstar  R  Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport Cleveland, Ohio July 1
9 Canada  Molson Indy Toronto  R  Exhibition Place Toronto, Ontario July 15
10 United States  Harrah's 500 Presented by Toyota  O  Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Michigan July 22
11 United States  Target Grand Prix of Chicago Presented by Energizer  O  Chicago Motor Speedway Cicero, Illinois July 29
12 United States  Miller Lite 200  R  Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course Lexington, Ohio August 12
13 United States  Motorola 220  R  Road America Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin August 19
14 Canada  Molson Indy Vancouver  R  Concord Pacific Place Vancouver, British Columbia September 2
15 Germany  The American Memorial  O  EuroSpeedway Lausitz Klettwitz, Germany September 15
16 United Kingdom  Rockingham 500  O  Rockingham Motor Speedway Corby, United Kingdom September 22
17 United States  Texaco/Havoline Grand Prix of Houston  R  George R. Brown Convention Center Houston, Texas October 7
18 United States  Honda Grand Prix of Monterey Featuring the Shell 300  R  Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca Monterey, California October 14
19 Australia  Honda Indy 300  R  Surfers Paradise Street Circuit Surfers Paradise, Australia October 28
20 United States  Marlboro 500 Presented by Toyota  O  California Speedway Fontana, California November 4

 O  Oval/Speedway
 R  Road/Street course

  • The original calendar called for 22 races on five continents, by far the most ambitious calendar CART had ever attempted. With the race at Texas being canceled and the Rio 200 being dropped, the 2001 season ultimately had the same number of races as the previous year.
  • For the first time, CART would race in the United Kingdom and Germany and also return to Mexico for the first time in almost twenty years.
  • The original calendar released on August 5, 2000, had the first round of the season at Jacarepaguá in Brazil, but disagreements with the track owners several months later led to the event being dropped.
  • The events at Homestead-Miami and Gateway were dropped after negotiations with the owners of the track; rival series Indy Racing League secured the contracts instead, and both tracks were featured in the 2001 Indy Racing League season.
  • The removal of Gateway from the calendar meant that Memorial Day weekend would be empty, allowing several teams and drivers the opportunity to compete at the Indianapolis 500.
  • The 2001 season was the final time Michigan Speedway appeared on the calendar.
  • The Indianapolis 500 was an Indy Racing League event that was also sanctioned by CART but awarded no points towards the CART Championship.

Race results

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Rnd Race Name Pole position Fastest lap Lead most laps Winning driver Winning team Report
1 Mexico  Monterrey Sweden  Kenny Bräck United Kingdom  Dario Franchitti Brazil  Cristiano da Matta Brazil  Cristiano da Matta Newman-Haas Racing Report
2 United States  Long Beach Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Report
3 United States  Texas Sweden  Kenny Bräck Race cancelled Report
4 United States  Nazareth Brazil  Bruno Junqueira  R  Brazil  Tony Kanaan Sweden  Kenny Bräck New Zealand  Scott Dixon  R  PacWest Racing Report
5 Japan  Motegi Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Italy  Alex Zanardi Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Sweden  Kenny Bräck Team Rahal Report
NC United States  Indy United States  Scott Sharp United States  Sam Hornish Jr. Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Report
6 United States  Milwaukee Sweden  Kenny Bräck United Kingdom  Dario Franchitti Sweden  Kenny Bräck Sweden  Kenny Bräck Team Rahal Report
7 United States  Belle Isle Brazil  Hélio Castroneves United States  Michael Andretti Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Report
8 United States  Portland Italy  Max Papis Italy  Max Papis Italy  Max Papis Italy  Max Papis Team Rahal Report
9 United States  Cleveland Brazil  Maurício Gugelmin Brazil  Roberto Moreno United States  Memo Gidley United Kingdom  Dario Franchitti Team Green Report
10 Canada  Toronto Brazil  Gil de Ferran Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Gil de Ferran United States  Michael Andretti Team Motorola Report
11 United States  Michigan Sweden  Kenny Bräck Canada  Patrick Carpentier Italy  Max Papis Canada  Patrick Carpentier Forsythe Racing Report
12 United States  Chicago Brazil  Tony Kanaan Sweden  Kenny Bräck Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Sweden  Kenny Bräck Team Rahal Report
13 United States  Mid-Ohio Brazil  Gil de Ferran Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Report
14 United States  Road America Sweden  Kenny Bräck Brazil  Bruno Junqueira  R  Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Bruno Junqueira  R  Chip Ganassi Racing Report
15 Canada  Vancouver Canada  Alex Tagliani Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Canada  Alex Tagliani Brazil  Roberto Moreno Patrick Racing Report
16 Germany  EuroSpeedway Brazil  Gil de Ferran Brazil  Tony Kanaan Sweden  Kenny Bräck Sweden  Kenny Bräck Team Rahal Report
17 United Kingdom  Rockingham Sweden  Kenny Bräck Canada  Patrick Carpentier Brazil  Gil de Ferran Brazil  Gil de Ferran Team Penske Report
18 United States  Houston Brazil  Gil de Ferran United States  Jimmy Vasser Brazil  Gil de Ferran Brazil  Gil de Ferran Team Penske Report
19 United States  Laguna Seca Brazil  Gil de Ferran Brazil  Hélio Castroneves Brazil  Gil de Ferran Italy  Max Papis Team Rahal Report
20 Australia  Surfers Paradise Brazil  Roberto Moreno United States  Jimmy Vasser Brazil  Roberto Moreno Brazil  Cristiano da Matta Newman-Haas Racing Report
21 United States  Fontana Canada  Alex Tagliani Italy  Max Papis Italy  Max Papis Brazil  Cristiano da Matta Newman-Haas Racing Report

Final driver standings

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Pos Driver MTY Mexico  LBH United States  TXS United States  NAZ United States  MOT Japan  MIL United States  DET United States  POR United States  CLE United States  TOR Canada  MIC United States  CHI United States  MDO United States  ROA United States  VAN Canada  LAU Germany  ROC United Kingdom  HOU United States  LAG United States  SUR Australia  FON United States  Pts
1 Brazil  Gil de Ferran 2 3 C 23 13 7 6 13 4 14* 24 3 2 5 2 8 1* 1* 3* 4 6 199
2 Sweden  Kenny Bräck1 5 25 C 2* 1 1* 9 11 6 20 17 1 20 14 8 1* 2 7 25 5 26 163
3 United States  Michael Andretti 4 28 C 6 23 2 4 8 15 1 19 24 26 2 3 4 5 21 14 2 7 147
4 Brazil  Hélio Castroneves 8 1* C 11 2* 26 1* 17 12 19 8 7* 1* 7* 18 12 4 5 6 20 22 141
5 Brazil  Cristiano da Matta 1* 2 C 10 25 25 7 10 7 15 4 19 10 6 20 26 3 6 20 1 1 140
6 Italy  Max Papis 12 17 C 24 6 8 11 1* 18 8 16* 13 24 16 22 2 11 9 1 9 2* 107
7 United Kingdom  Dario Franchitti 9 6 C 8 17 9 2 6 1 24 2 15 16 19 9 25 9 2 19 23 23 105
8 New Zealand  Scott Dixon  RY  13 19 C 1 9 3 22 7 20 5 10 4 12 4 13 9 22 18 4 15 17 98
9 Brazil  Tony Kanaan 7 7 C 16 3 6 DNS 24 16 10 21 8 5 12 4 7 8 12 8 17 5 93
10 Canada  Patrick Carpentier 25 23 C 25 19 17 8 5 26 21 1 2 3 9 16 3 16 10 26 11 10 91
11 Canada  Alex Tagliani 21 18 C 22 22 12 21 12 9 2 6 6 7 8 23* 21 14 19 15 3 3 80
12 United States  Jimmy Vasser 6 5 C 4 5 21 18 16 5 26 23 14 23 21 19 15 7 11 5 6 12 77
13 Brazil  Roberto Moreno 27 11 C 12 10 15 3 2 8 11 12 20 6 11 1 23 13 22 22 22* 19 76
14 Canada  Paul Tracy 3 4 C 3 18 24 14 21 24 6 7 12 4 26 26 10 6 24 18 14 24 73
15 Brazil  Christian Fittipaldi 20 24 C 5 4 18 5 3 11 12 18 25 8 18 11 19 24 8 9 8 13 70
16 Brazil  Bruno Junqueira  R  22 9 C 7 24 4 19 23 23 13 9 17 13 1 12 11 25 23 7 21 4 68
17 United States  Memo Gidley 25 2* 17 14 5 11 20 10 14 18 3 2 10 14 65
18 Mexico  Adrián Fernández 19 16 C 19 16 5 12 19 21 3 25 10 22 3 21 24 23 14 10 19 18 45
19 Spain  Oriol Servià 14 14 C 9 14 14 16 9 17 23 11 18 9 10 5 5 10 26 17 25 11 42
20 Mexico  Michel Jourdain Jr. 17 13 C 13 11 13 25 15 25 16 3 23 17 17 6 17 19 25 23 7 16 30
21 Japan  Toranosuke Takagi  R  10 20 C 14 20 DSQ 20 18 14 222 13 11 21 22 7 6 26 4 13 16 15 29
22 United States  Bryan Herta 16 10 C 21 21 22 15 14 3 18 5 21 25 24 17 27 15 13 12 18 25 28
23 Italy  Alex Zanardi 24 26 C 20 7 11 24 26 13 4 20 9 19 13 24 203 24
24 Brazil  Maurício Gugelmin 15 22 Wth 12 10 10 20 10 7 15 22 14 23 15 16 20 20 16 24 20 17
25 Brazil  Max Wilson  R  28 21 C 17 23 23 4 19 25 Wth 15 25 25 18 21 16 24 12
26 Japan  Shinji Nakano 18 12 C 15 8 16 13 22 22 9 22 16 18 15 14 22 17 15 21 12 21 11
27 France  Nicolas Minassian  R  11 8 C 18 15 19 17 7
28 United States  Casey Mears  R  17 11 26 8 7
29 United States  Alex Barron 13 9 4
30 United States  Townsend Bell  R  13 12 1
31 Germany  Michael Krumm  R  23 15 0
32 Brazil  Luiz Garcia Jr. 26 27 0
Pos Driver MTY Mexico  LBH United States  TXS United States  NAZ United States  MOT Japan  MIL United States  DET United States  POR United States  CLE United States  TOR Canada  MIC United States  CHI United States  MDO United States  ROA United States  VAN Canada  LAU Germany  ROC United Kingdom  HOU United States  LAG United States  SUR Australia  FON United States  Pts
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th–6th place
Light Blue 7th–12th place
Dark Blue Finished
(Outside Top 12)
Purple Did not finish
Red Did not qualify
(DNQ)
Brown Withdrawn
(Wth)
Black Disqualified
(DSQ)
White Did not start
(DNS)
Blank Did not
participate
(DNP)
Not competing
In-line notation
Bold Pole position
Italics Ran fastest race lap
* Led most race laps
 RY  Rookie of the Year
 R  Rookie
  1. ^ Kenny Bräck also awarded 1 point for his pole position in Fort Worth. The race was canceled after qualifying due to excessively high speeds.
  2. ^ Toranosuke Takagi was penalized 2 points for rough driving in Toronto.
  3. ^ Alex Zanardi's car was impacted from the side by Alex Tagliani's car at EuroSpeedway Lausitz. He lost both of his lower legs in the impact. This signaled the end of his open-wheel racing career.

Nations' Cup

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  • Top result per race counts towards Nations' Cup.
Pos Country MTY Mexico  LBH United States  NAZ United States  MOT Japan  MIL United States  DET United States  POR United States  CLE United States  TOR Canada  MIC United States  CHI United States  MDO United States  ROA United States  VAN Canada  LAU Germany  ROC United Kingdom  HOU United States  LAG United States  SUR Australia  FON United States  Pts
1 Brazil  Brazil 1 1 5 2 4 1 2 4 7 5 3 1 1 1 7 1 1 3 1 1 341
2 United States  United States 4 5 4 5 2 4 8 2 1 4 5 11 2 3 4 5 3 2 2 7 240
3 Canada  Canada 3 4 3 18 12 8 5 9 2 1 2 3 8 16 3 6 10 15 3 3 187
4 Sweden  Sweden 5 25 2 1 1 9 11 6 20 17 1 20 14 8 1 2 7 25 5 26 163
5 Italy  Italy 12 17 20 6 8 11 1 18 4 16 9 19 13 22 2 11 9 1 9 2 118
6 United Kingdom  United Kingdom 9 6 8 17 9 2 6 1 24 2 15 16 19 9 25 9 2 19 23 23 105
7 New Zealand  New Zealand 13 19 1 9 3 22 7 20 5 10 4 12 4 13 9 22 18 4 15 17 98
8 Mexico  Mexico 17 13 9 11 5 12 15 21 3 3 10 17 3 6 17 19 14 10 7 16 75
9 Japan  Japan 10 12 14 8 16 13 18 14 9 13 11 18 15 7 6 17 4 13 12 15 42
10 Spain  Spain 14 14 9 14 14 16 9 17 23 11 18 9 10 5 5 10 26 17 25 11 42
11 France  France 11 8 18 15 19 17 7
12 Germany  Germany 23 15 0
Pos Country MTY Mexico  LBH United States  NAZ United States  MOT Japan  MIL United States  DET United States  POR United States  CLE United States  TOR Canada  MIC United States  CHI United States  MDO United States  ROA United States  VAN Canada  LAU Germany  ROC United Kingdom  HOU United States  LAG United States  SUR Australia  FON United States  Pts

Chassis Constructors' Cup

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Pos Chassis Pts
1 United Kingdom  Reynard 01i 378
2 United Kingdom  Lola B1/00 & B2K/00 335
Pos Chassis Pts

Engine Manufacturers' Cup

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Pos Engine Pts
1 Japan  Honda 342
2 Japan  Toyota 309
3 United States  United Kingdom  Ford-Cosworth 297
4 United States  Ilmor 0
Pos Engine Pts

References

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  1. ^ "Honda Championship Auto Racing Highlights". April 2002.
  2. ^ "2002 Toyota RV8F CART engine".

See also

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