2000_Michigan_500

2000 Michigan 500

2000 Michigan 500

Motor car race


The 2000 Michigan 500 was the eleventh round of the twenty-round 2000 CART season. It happened at the Michigan International Speedway.

Quick Facts Race details, Date ...

Qualifying

The Canadian driver Paul Tracy, from Team Green, set the pole, followed by Michael Andretti and Christian Fittipaldi.

More information Qualifying - 22 July 2000, Pos. ...
  •  R  Eligible for Rookie of the Year

Race

Eventual winner Juan Pablo Montoya led the race at the end of the first lap through to lap 16, where he was overtaken by eventual runner up Michael Andretti. Across the 250 laps, the race saw nine different leaders, with 52 lead changes. There were five cautions over the course of the race, taking 38 laps in total.[5] Thirteen cars did not finish the race, and only seven cars completed the full 500-mile distance. The race culminated in a battle between Montoya and Andretti, with seven lead changes in the final twenty laps. Montoya set the race's fastest lap on lap 232 of 250. Andretti led lap 249, but was passed by Montoya on the final lap.[6] Montoya's margin of victory was just 0.040s.[5] Montoya's victory was Toyota's second in ChampCar, and he became the first driver since Rick Mears in 1991 to win both the Indianapolis 500 and Michigan 500 in the same year.

More information Rank, Driver ...

Championship Battle

Michael Andretti became the new leader of the championship with 100 points. The previous leader, Roberto Moreno was in 2nd with 90 points. Race winner Juan Pablo Montoya moved up to 5th in the Championship standings with 74 points.[6]

Broadcasting

The Michigan 500 was broadcast by ABC. Paul Page was the lead announcer and was joined by Parker Johnstone as color commentator.[7]

The race had a lead-in audience from the 2000 Open Championship as Tiger Woods won his first Open Championship. In the United States, the race had a 2.5 overnight rating.[8] The race had a final rating of 2.0 with 2.058 million households watching. It was the most-watched CART race of 2000.[9]

Qualifying for the race was broadcast tape-delayed on ESPN2 on the morning of Sunday, July 23. The qualifying broadcast had a rating of 0.1 and watched by 45,000 households.[9]

Standings after the race

More information Rank, +/– ...
  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for the drivers' standings.

References

  1. "Paul Tracy Career History". paultracy.com. Paul Tracy. Retrieved 2009-12-21. Pole position at Michigan Speedway came at a track-record speed of 234.949 miles per hour (30.645 seconds) and was his first pole since 1997 at Milwaukee, as well as his first career pole on a superspeedway.
  2. Harms, Philip (2000-08-05). "2000 Championship Results: Brooklyn, MI 500 Mile Race - July 23, 2000" (PDF). motorsport.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 8, 2011. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  3. "2000 Michigan 500 | Motor Sport Magazine Database". Motor Sport Magazine. 2017-06-12. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  4. "CART // Michigan // Results // Qualifying // Classification". CART.com. Archived from the original on 18 September 2000. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  5. 2000 Michigan 500 Telecast: ABC-TV, July 23, 2000
  6. "CART Does Very Well at Michigan". Speedvision.com. 2000-07-24. Archived from the original on 2001-04-14. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  7. "Who Watched What July 22-23". Speedvision.com. 2000-07-27. Archived from the original on 2001-08-25. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  8. "2000 Michigan 500 Presented by Toyota". USA Today Sports Media Group. September 15, 2001. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
  9. "ChampCar/CART: Points standing after Michigan". Motorsport.com. July 24, 2000. Retrieved June 3, 2018.[permanent dead link]
Previous race:
2000 Molson Indy Toronto
CART Indycar World Series
2000 season
Next race:
2000 TARGET Grand Prix
Previous race:
1999 U.S. 500 Presented by Toyota
Marlboro 500 Next race:
2001 Harrah's 500

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