2002 Infiniti Pro Series

2002 Infiniti Pro Series season
IRL Infiniti Pro Series
Season
Races 7
Start date July 7
End date September 14
Awards
Drivers' champion A. J. Foyt IV
Teams' champion A. J. Foyt Enterprises

The 2002 IRL Infiniti Pro Series was the first season of the series, which served as the first official developmental series to the Indy Racing League. The Infiniti Pro Series is considered a direct continuation of the original CART-owned Indy Lights series, which ran for 16 years between 1986 and 2001. While the formation of the Pro Series was independent, CART announced shortly after that Indy Lights would fold after the 2001 season. The Pro Series would later adopt the Indy Lights name in 2008 when IndyCar bought the intellectual property from CART, before being renamed into Indy NXT in 2023.

The Infiniti Pro Series was first announced on September 1, 2001, with the aim to streamline the path into IRL competition and provide a training ground for aspiring drivers, especially as competitors from the USAC ranks were having a harder time transitioning directly into the IRL in previous years. The season started in the summer of 2002, with a reduced all-oval seven race schedule over two months towards an extended calendar in 2003.

The series had a target budget of $800.000 per season and car, with a spec Dallara IL-02 chassis and an engine package provided by Infiniti. British builder TWR (Tom Walkinshaw Racing) developed a 3.5 L version of the V8 engine used in the Infiniti Q45, which produced 420 horsepower (310 kW).

A. J. Foyt IV, the youngest driver in the field, was the inaugural champion in a car owned by his legendary grandfather A. J. Foyt. As of 2023, Foyt IV still holds the record as the youngest Indy NXT champion of all time dating back to 1986, at 18 years and three months of age. Foyt IV won four of the seven races, including the inaugural event at Kansas, and was crowned at the final race in Texas against the American-born Dutch driver Arie Luyendyk Jr. The son of two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Arie Luyendyk had four second-place finishes, but no wins, finishing behind Cory Witherill at Nashville, Ryan Hampton at Gateway and Aaron Fike at Chicagoland.

Former IRL drivers Cory Witherill, Ronnie Johncox and Dave Steele took part in the championship, as well as full-time IRL teams A. J. Foyt Enterprises, Kelley Racing, Hemelgarn Racing and Sam Schmidt Motorsports, although Kelley withdrew from the championship after actor-turned-driver Jason Priestley was seriously injured in a warm-up crash at Kentucky Speedway. The series had 12 cars at its first round, and the field was up to 16 drivers for the events at Michigan and Kentucky. Eight drivers took part in every round, with three others contesting all but one event.

Team and driver chart

Team No. Drivers Rounds
Sinden Racing Service 2 Ed Carpenter All
Brian Stewart Racing 3 Marty Roth 1–4, 6–7
Luyendyk Racing 5 Arie Luyendyk Jr. All
Kelley Racing 7 Jason Priestley 1–4
REV 1 Racing 8 Ronnie Johncox All
Sam Schmidt Motorsports 9 Jeff Tillman 3
Tom Wood 4, 6–7
Curtis Francois 5
99 G. J. Mennen All
Roquin Motorsports 11 Rolando Quintanilla 2–7
Beardsley Motorsports 12 Matt Beardsley 2–5, 7
A. J. Foyt Enterprises 14 A. J. Foyt IV All
Automatic Fire Sprinklers 27 Gary Peterson All
Ryan Hampton / CGF Racing 34 Ryan Hampton 3–7
Bowes Seal Fast Racing 37 Mike Koss 1–4, 6–7
Matthew Halliday 5
38 1
43 Dave Steele 3
Tony Turco 4–6
Hemelgarn 91/Johnson Motorsports 91 Aaron Fike All
92 Cory Witherill All

Schedule

The initial schedule for the Infiniti Pro Series was announced on February 2, 2002. Competition started halfway through the Indy Racing League season, which the Infiniti Pro Series accompanied at all of its final seven events, with all events being held on ovals. Kansas, Gateway and Texas had all been featured in the last season of Indy Lights competition, which had last visited Michigan in 2000, while Nashville, Kentucky and Chicagoland held an open-wheel feeder series race for the first time.

Rd. Date Race name Track Location
1 July 7 Kansas 100 Kansas Speedway Kansas City, Kansas
2 July 20 Nashville 100 Nashville Superspeedway Lebanon, Tennessee
3 July 28 Michigan 100 Michigan International Speedway Brooklyn, Michigan
4 August 11 Kentucky 100 Kentucky Speedway Sparta, Kentucky
5 August 25 St. Louis 100 Gateway International Raceway Madison, Illinois
6 September 8 Chicago 100 Chicagoland Speedway Joliet, Illinois
7 September 14 BG Products 100 Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas

Race results

Round Race Pole position Fastest lap Most laps led Race Winner
Driver Team
1 Kansas Speedway A. J. Foyt IV Arie Luyendyk Jr. A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt Enterprises
2 Nashville Superspeedway Ronnie Johncox Aaron Fike Cory Witherill Cory Witherill Hemelgarn 91/Johnson Motorsports
3 Michigan International Speedway Arie Luyendyk Jr. Jason Priestley A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt Enterprises
4 Kentucky Speedway A. J. Foyt IV Cory Witherill A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt Enterprises
5 Gateway International Raceway Ryan Hampton Ryan Hampton Ryan Hampton Ryan Hampton Conti-Genoa-Frost Racing
6 Chicagoland Speedway A. J. Foyt IV Gary Peterson Arie Luyendyk Jr. Aaron Fike Hemelgarn 91/Johnson Motorsports
7 Texas Motor Speedway A. J. Foyt IV Tom Wood A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt IV A. J. Foyt Enterprises

Championship standings

Drivers' Championship

Scoring system
Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th   16th 
Points 50 40 35 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 19 18 17 16 15 14
  • The driver who leads the most laps in a race is awarded two additional points.
Pos Driver KAN NSH MIS KEN GAT CHI TXS Points
1 A. J. Foyt IV  R  1* 4 1* 1* 9 6 1* 290
2 Arie Luyendyk Jr.  R  10 2 2 6 2 2* 7 236
3 Ed Carpenter  R  5 5 3 2 3 7 5 226
4 Cory Witherill 3 1* 15 3 11 13 2 213
5 Aaron Fike  R  11 3 4 14 14 1 12 186
6 Ronnie Johncox 9 12 5 4 8 5 8 180
7 Gary Peterson 7 DNS 10 8 10 8 4 163
8 G. J. Mennen  R  8 8 9 15 4 9 9 161
9 Ryan Hampton  R  7 12 1* 14 3 147
10 Marty Roth 6 9 11 13 4 10 138
11 Rolando Quintanilla 11 6 7 6 10 14 137
12 Mike Koss  R  4 10 16 11 11 11 123
13 Matt Beardsley  R  7 14 5 12 13 107
14 Jason Priestley  R  2 6 13 DNS 99
15 Tom Wood  R  10 3 6 83
16 Tony Turco  R  9 13 12 57
17 Matthew Halliday 12 7 44
18 Curtis Francois  R  5 30
19 Dave Steele 8 24
20 Jeff Tillman  R  12 18
Pos Driver KAN NSH MIS KEN GAT CHI TXS Points
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th & 5th place
Light Blue 6th–10th place
Dark Blue Finished
(Outside Top 10)
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
(2 points)
  • Ties in points broken by number of wins, or best finishes.