Hogan Racing

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hogan Racing was a racing team owned by Carl G. Hogan, owner of Hogan Trucking.

Sports cars

Hogan Racing began in the early 1970s racing in the

St. Louis, Missouri in 1973.[1] The team began racing full-time in the Formula 5000 Can-Am series in 1974 with David Hobbs with its own car for the series. The car was later driven by Al Holbert. However, as the 1980s dawned Hogan drifted away from the sport, only to return at the end of the decade when Hogan began working with Chip Ganassi.[1]

CART Champ Car

Partnerships with Rahal and Penske

The team joined the world of open-wheel racing in December 1991 as Hogan and

Lola
chassis for the next race while Groff soldiered on with the RH01 until August.

In 1994, the team was the first to sign on with new engine manufacturer Honda. The team again struggled at Indianapolis and Rahal borrowed cars from Team Penske to get himself and Groff into the field. Rahal finished 3rd and Groff crashed 28 laps into the race.

In 1996, Rahal and Hogan split and Hogan formed Hogan Racing and Rahal led

Team Rahal. For 1996 Hogan partnered with Penske Racing to field Emerson Fittipaldi's entry. Fittipaldi was injured in a crash at the Michigan International Speedway and retired from the sport and Jan Magnussen replaced him for the rest of the season.[1]
Fittipaldi finished 19th in points and Magnussen 24th in their partial seasons.

Independent team

For 1997 Hogan went off on his own and signed rookie

Gateway International Raceway and won the pole the following week at the Milwaukee Mile as the highlights of a season where he finished 15th in points. Hogan signed Castroneves under the condition that Castroneves' management team led by Emerson Fittipaldi would generate $3 Million USD in sponsorship for the team. However, the sponsorship did not materialize and Castroneves and Hogan began to be forced to pay for operations out-of-pocket. Due to the mounting losses and little prospects for sponsorship, Hogan decided to shut the team down at the end of the season.[3]

Carl Hogan died in January 2001 at the age of 71[1]

Drivers

Racing results

Complete CART FedEx Championship Series results

(key) (results in bold indicate pole position) (results in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Chassis Engine Tyres Drivers No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Pts Pos Pts
1996
MIA RIO SFR LBH NAZ 500 MIL
DET
POR CLE TOR MCH MDO ROA VAN LAG
Penske PC-25 Mercedes-Benz IC108C V8t G Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi 9 13 11 25 20 4 10 4 25 20 22 14 25 19th 29
Denmark Jan Magnussen 26 22 8 24th 5
1997
MIA SFR LBH NAZ RIO GAT MIL DET POR CLE TOR MCH MDO ROA VAN LAG FON
Reynard 97i Mercedes-Benz IC108D V8t F United Kingdom Dario Franchitti 9 25 9 12 13 27 17 16 13 26 11 26 19 11 25 13 13 22nd 10
United States Robby Gordon 8 26th 5
1998
MIA MOT LBH NAZ RIO GAT MIL DET POR CLE TOR
MCH
MDO ROA VAN LAG HOU SFR FON
Reynard 98i Mercedes-Benz IC108E V8t F Finland JJ Lehto 9 14 29 18 16 10 9 19 26 25 28 24 20 15 18 8 28 10 5 21 20th 25
1999 MIA MOT LBH NAZ RIO GAT MIL POR CLE ROA TOR
MCH
DET MDO CHI VAN LAG HOU SRF FON
Lola
B99/00
Mercedes-Benz IC108E V8t F Brazil Hélio Castroneves 9 17 9 19 21 25 2 26 26 26 16 27 25 7 7 5 8 26 26 21 20 15th 48
Brazil Luiz Garcia Jr. 21 24 DNS 16 15 DNS 34th 0

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Pruett, Marshall. Hogan's Heroes Archived 2012-03-14 at the Wayback Machine, Speed, October 17, 2008, Retrieved 2011-01-17
  2. ^ CHAMPCAR/CART: Hogan signs JJ Lehto[permanent dead link], CART PR via Motorsport.com, December 5, 1997, Retrieved 2011-01-17
  3. ^ McGee, Ryan. One turbulent ride for Castroneves, ESPN, March 24, 2009, Retrieved 2011-01-17