Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg


The Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg is an IndyCar Series race held in St. Petersburg, Florida. Since 2009, the race has served as the season opener, with the exception of 2010, when it was the second race of the season. The race is held annually in the spring, currently in March.
The race takes place on a temporary course, utilizing downtown streets, and one runway of Albert Whitted Airport. The event dates back to 1985, with IndyCars first competing in 2003.

History

The SCCA Trans-Am Series held a race on a St. Petersburg downtown waterfront circuit from 1985 to 1990. Can-Am also competed in 1985. Local residents and businesses complained about noise, and the event was eventually put on hiatus. Driver Jim Fitzgerald was killed in a crash during the 1987 race. Racing in the Tampa Bay Area was then moved across town for a couple years. An IMSA race at the Florida State Fairgrounds was held in 1989 and 1990.
From 1996 to 1997, the St. Petersburg race was revived on a different course around Tropicana Field. Along with the Trans-Am Series, support races included U.S. FF2000, World Challenge, Pro SRF and Barber Dodge. The event subsequently went again on hiatus for several years.
In 2003, the event was revived again for the Champ Car World Series. A new, modified version of the original 1985 waterfront circuit was created.
For 2004, the event was cancelled due to a dispute between the promoters, furthermore, the bankruptcy and liquidation of the CART series into the new Champ Car World Series saw a shakeup of the calendar. When the race returned in 2005, it switched to the IndyCar Series, marking the first non-oval event for the Indy Racing League. In 2007, the race weekend was expanded to include an American Le Mans Series event.
Andretti Green Promotions would later take over promotion of the event. Starting in 2014, Firestone took over as title sponsor.

Past winners

Road to Indy presented by Cooper Tire

[Atlantic Championship]

American Le Mans Series

Overall winner in bold.
SeasonLMP1 Winning TeamLMP2 Winning TeamGT1 Winning TeamGT2 Winning TeamReport
SeasonLMP1 Winning DriversLMP2 Winning DriversGT1 Winning DriversGT2 Winning DriversReport
2007 #1 Audi Sport North America #6 Penske Racing #4 Corvette Racing #62 Risi Competizionereport
2007 Rinaldo Capello
Allan McNish
Sascha Maassen
Ryan Briscoe
Oliver Gavin
Olivier Beretta
Mika Salo
Jaime Melo
report
2008 #2 Audi Sport North America #7 Penske Racing #4 Corvette Racing #71 Tafel Racingreport
2008 Marco Werner
Lucas Luhr
Timo Bernhard
Romain Dumas
Olivier Beretta
Oliver Gavin
Dominik Farnbacher
Dirk Müller
report
2009 #9 Patrón Highcroft Racing #15 Lowe's Fernández RacingNo entry #45 Flying Lizard Motorsportsreport
2009 David Brabham
Scott Sharp
Adrian Fernández
Luis Díaz
No entry Patrick Long
Jörg Bergmeister
report

Stadium Super Trucks

YearDateDriverRef
2014March 29 Robby Gordon
2014March 30 P. J. Jones
2015March 28 Sheldon Creed
2015March 29 Burt Jenner
2016March 12 Sheldon Creed
2016March 13 Keegan Kincaid
2017March 11 Robby Gordon
2017March 12 Matthew Brabham

SCCA Trans-Am

Can-Am

The Streets of St. Petersburg course is a street circuit connecting existing roads with one of the two runways of Albert Whitted Airport in St. Petersburg, Florida. It also dips into the parking lot at Al Lang Stadium. St. Petersburg is classified as an FIA Grade Two circuit.

First bayfront course

The original 1985 Trans-Am course utilized a similar layout to the course used today. For the first year the track actually ran out to the pier, made a 180 degree turn and returned. At the end of Bayshore Drive, rather than diverting off to the airport runways, the course circled around 5th Avenue Southeast around Bayfront Arena, and the start/finish line was located just south of the paddock. In addition, the old course traveled further up Beach Drive Northeast, all the way to 5th Avenue Northeast. 5th Ave. NE was a very narrow segment. The course came south down Bayshore Drive Northeast, and passed by The Pier.

Tropicana Field course

The second course at Tropicana Field was located about a mile west of the waterfront location. The circuit used the roads around the perimeter of the parking lot of the stadium.

Second Bayfront course

When the course was reconfigured, the northbound segment turned at Central Avenue instead, and did not go as far as The Pier. The pits and main straight were moved to the airport, and a purpose-built paddock area was paved next to the runway. The Albert Whitted Park was reconfigured/relocated, and the entire course layout was repaved.
The pits and paddock areas, as well as link from Dan Wheldon Way to the airport runway were constructed specifically for the circuit in 2003, and are considered permanent features of the otherwise temporary circuit.
After the crash at the 2011 Izod IndyCar World Championship that killed Snell Isle resident Dan Wheldon, who won the 2005 race and two Indianapolis 500 titles, the straight following Turn 10 was renamed "Dan Wheldon Way" in his memory. The sign and commemorative plaque was unveiled by St. Petersburg mayor Bill Foster on March 6, 2012. A permanent Dan Wheldon Memorial is located next to the Dali Museum on the opposite side of Turn 10, where race winners have their names placed on the memorial.

Works cited

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