Rahal Letterman Racing

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Rahal Letterman Racing (RLR) is an auto racing team that currently races in the IndyCar Series. It is co-owned by 1986 Indianapolis 500 winner Bobby Rahal and television talk show host and comedian David Letterman and is based in Hilliard, Ohio.

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[edit] CART IndyCar World Series (1992 - 2003)

The team formed in 1992 after Rahal and partner Carl Hogan acquired the assets to the former Patrick Racing team in late 1991. At the time, it was known as Rahal-Hogan Racing. The team won the IndyCar World Series title on their first try, with owner-driver Bobby Rahal, with Rahal driving the "tried-and-true" Lola-Chevrolet IndyCar.

In 1993, Rahal-Hogan absorbed the Truesports racing team, which Rahal had been a part of from 1982-1988. The team moved its headquarters from Indianapolis to Hilliard, into the old Truesports facilty. Along with the acquisition, they attempted to take over the two-year old Truesports all-American chassis program. Rahal began the season with an updated version of the TrueSports chassis, with the intention of introducing a brand-new Rahal-Hogan (R/H) chassis later in the year. A second place finish at Long Beach offered some promise. The success was short-lived however, as the chassis proved uncompetetive on superspeedways. The team was dealt a massive blow when Rahal failed to qualify at Indianapolis. The following week they switched to the more conventional Lola, while team driver Mike Groff attempted to salvage a season out of the R/H. Eventually the team abandoned the chassis project.

In 1994, Rahal-Hogan introduced the Honda engine to the IndyCar World Series, but split with the manufacturer after Rahal finished a disappointing 10th place in the standings. At Indianapolis, the engine proved uncompetitive, and Rahal risked missing the race for the second year in a row. He borrowed two Penske-Ilmor machines, and finished third in the race. In 1996, the team changed its name to Team Rahal. Over the next few years, the team would employ Bryan Herta, Max Papis, Kenny Bräck and Michel Jourdain, Jr., getting closest to another title in 2001, when Bräck finished 2nd in points. Bobby Rahal retired from driving at the end of 1998.

[edit] IRL IndyCar Series (2004 - Present)

The team changed its name again to Rahal Letterman Racing in May 2004.

For the 2005 season, RLR's three drivers were Buddy Rice, who won the 2004 Indianapolis 500 while driving for the team, Vitor Meira, who finished second in the 2005 Indianapolis 500, and Danica Patrick, who finished fourth in the 2005 Indianapolis 500, and had the highest finish of any female driver (3 previous) in the history of the Indianapolis 500.

Also in the 2005 Indianapolis 500, former team member Kenny Bräck, who was replaced by Rice when he suffered a serious injury in 2003, replaced Rice when he was injured in pre-race practice. Rice was able to recover in time to race in the next IndyCar race.

The Rahal-Letterman team had high hopes for 2006. Meira had left the team after the 2005 season to join Panther Racing. He was replaced by Paul Dana who brought an Ethanol sponsorship. [1]

The team placed three cars in the top nine for the Toyota Indy 300 during March 25, 2006, qualifying (Patrick third, Rice sixth, Dana ninth), and expected good things to come the next day for the race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Unfortunately, tragedy took place during final practice Sunday morning. Vision Racing's Ed Carpenter crashed in turn two and the car slid down the 20-degree banking. Dana, who seemed to not receive the signal from the spotter, ran into the gearbox section of Carpenter's car, sending Dana's car flying on the backstretch. Dana died in the hospital later that afternoon, and the entire team, including Patrick and Rice, withdrew immediately.

Patrick and Rice raced together at St. Petersburg, Florida with the third car vacant out of respect, but effective the Bridgestone Indy Japan 300 at Motegi, Japan, Jeff Simmons was added as the team's third driver. In mid 2006 the team switched from Panoz to Dallara chassis.

Prior to the 2006 Monterey Sports Car Championships, Rahal Letterman Racing announced that the team will be fielding a Porsche 997 GT3-RSR in the American Le Mans Series in 2007.

For the 2007 IndyCar Series, RLR fielded two cars, one for Simmons and one for IndyCar veteran Scott Sharp. They were unable to find sponsorship to field a third car for 2004 Indianapolis 500 Champion Buddy Rice, who moved to Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. However, with Simmons struggling, RLR released him and picked up former Champ Car driver Ryan Hunter-Reay. Hunter-Reay impressed many with a 7th place finish at the Honda 200. Consistent finishes gave Ryan and the team the Bombardier Learjet Rookie of the Year award despite making only 7 starts.

[edit] Other racing

Rahal Letterman fielded a Porsche 911 GT3 in the American Le Mans Series in 2007. In 2008 they will field the BMW's works-backed M3, based on the new V8-powered E92 coupe chassis. They will continue to compete in the GT2 class. [2]

[edit] Champ Car Drivers

Year Driver(s)
1992 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal
1993 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal Flag of the United States Mike Groff
1994 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal Flag of the United States Mike Groff
1995 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal Flag of Brazil Raul Boesel
1996 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal Flag of the United States Bryan Herta
1997 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal Flag of the United States Bryan Herta
1998 Flag of the United States Bobby Rahal Flag of the United States Bryan Herta
1999 Flag of the United States Bryan Herta Flag of Italy Max Papis
2000 Flag of Italy Max Papis Flag of Sweden Kenny Bräck
2001 Flag of Italy Max Papis Flag of Sweden Kenny Bräck
2002 Flag of the United States Jimmy Vasser Flag of Mexico Michel Jourdain, Jr.
2003 Flag of Mexico Michel Jourdain, Jr.

[edit] IndyCar Drivers

Year Driver(s)
2003 Flag of Sweden Kenny Bräck
Flag of the United States Jimmy Vasser (Indy 500 only)
2004 Flag of the United States Buddy Rice
Flag of Brazil Vitor Meira
Flag of the United States Roger Yasukawa (Motegi & Indy 500 only)
2005 Flag of the United States Buddy Rice (sat out Indy 500 due to injury)
Flag of Brazil Vitor Meira
Flag of the United States Danica Patrick
Flag of Sweden Kenny Bräck (Indy 500 only; replaced injured Rice)
2006 Flag of the United States Buddy Rice
Flag of the United States Danica Patrick
Flag of the United States Paul Dana (died, see below)
Flag of the United States Jeff Simmons
2007 Flag of the United States Scott Sharp
Flag of the United States Jeff Simmons (released July 17)
Flag of the United States Ryan Hunter-Reay (signed July 17)
2008 Flag of the United States Ryan Hunter-Reay
Flag of the United Kingdom Alex Lloyd (Indy 500 only)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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