Harman Patil (Editor)

2010 Indy Lights season

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Races
  
13

End date
  
October 2

Rookie of the Year
  
Jean-Karl Vernay

Start date
  
March 28

Drivers' champion
  
Jean-Karl Vernay

Teams' champion
  
Sam Schmidt Motorsports

The 2010 Indy Racing League Firestone Indy Lights season was the 25th Indy Lights season. It was contested over thirteen races beginning on March 28 on the streets of St. Petersburg, Florida, and ended on October 2 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Contents

Jean-Karl Vernay became the first European to win the championship title since Alex Lloyd in 2007, after taking five victories and ten top-five placings at the wheel of his Sam Schmidt Motorsports car. His championship title, guaranteed by just starting the final race at Homestead, also garnered him with the Rookie of the Year award, having moved into the series from Europe and the Formula 3 Euro Series. Another driver with ten top-fives, James Hinchcliffe finished second in the title race for Team Moore Racing, a race winner at Long Beach, Edmonton and Chicagoland Speedway.

Third place was fought between AFS Racing/Andretti Autosport team-mates Martin Plowman and Charlie Kimball, with Plowman coming out on top by six points; Plowman won a race at Mid-Ohio, while Kimball finished four races in second place including three in succession early in the season. Other drivers to take wins were Wade Cunningham – winning the Firestone Freedom 100 for the third time – and Sebastian Saavedra at Iowa Speedway, while two drivers visited victory lane for the first time; Pippa Mann at Kentucky Speedway and Brandon Wagner at Homestead in their second seasons in the formula.

Team and driver chart

  • All drivers competed in Firestone Firehawk–shod, Dallara chassis.
  • Firestone Indy Lights Barber Open Test

  • Friday February 26, 2010
  • Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL
  • Testing weather: 52 °F (11 °C), Sunny
  • Testing Summary:
  • Indianapolis Open Test – Indy Lights

  • Friday May 14, 2010
  • Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Speedway, IN
  • Testing weather:
  • Testing Summary:
  • Round 1: Streets of St. Petersburg

  • Sunday March 28, 2010 – 12:58 p.m. EDT
  • Streets of St. Petersburg – St. Petersburg, Florida; Temporary street circuit, 1.800 miles (2.897 km)
  • Distance: 45 laps / 81.000 miles (130.357 km); reduced to 35 laps / 63.000 miles (101.389 km) due to rain.
  • Race weather: 71 °F (22 °C), overcast at start with rain falling later.
  • Pole position winner: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 1:06.3496 sec, 97.664 mph (157.175 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 31
  • Race report: On turn one of the first lap, Philip Major divebombed the field, making contact with polesitter James Hinchcliffe, taking both out of the race. Later that lap, Adrián Campos Jr. who had made contact with Pippa Mann during the start nosed into the wall in turn 8. Mann retired from the race, after spinning under caution. On the lap four restart Jean-Karl Vernay passed Sebastian Saavedra for the lead and was later spun by Charlie Kimball in turn four, bringing out another caution. The race was red flagged on lap six during that caution period due to moisture, allowing the teams to pit and change to full wet tires. The race went back to green on lap nine. On the restart, leader Vernay pulled out to a 9-second lead over Junior Strous who had climbed to second. However, on lap 17 Strous spun in turn 1, handing Vernay a 17-second lead over new second-place Jan Heylen. On lap 25 Saavedra hit the wall bringing out the caution and erasing Vernay's 20 second lead over Heylen. However, on the resultant restart with 8 minutes remaining (the race had become a timed race due to the rain), Vernay was able to pull away and win by 11 seconds over Heylen. Jonathan Summerton spun in the final corner of the last lap and fell from fourth to eighth.
  • Round 2: Barber Motorsports Park

  • Sunday April 11, 2010 – 1:13 p.m. EDT / 12:13 p.m. CDT
  • Barber Motorsports Park – Birmingham, Alabama; Permanent road course, 2.300 miles (3.701 km)
  • Distance: 40 laps / 92.000 miles (148.060 km)
  • Race weather: 76 °F (24 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 1:14.8726 sec, 110.588 mph (177.974 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 39
  • Race report: At the start, Charlie Kimball moved into the lead ahead of Jean-Karl Vernay but was deemed to have jumped the start. On lap two, Kimball conceded the lead to Vernay and the Sam Schmidt Motorsports driver would not relinquish the lead en route to his second consecutive victory. Kimball finished second ahead of Sebastian Saavedra, Martin Plowman and James Hinchcliffe. Two drivers did not finish the race: Rodrigo Barbosa suffered a mechanical failure, while Carmen Jordá retired after a spin.
  • Round 3: Streets of Long Beach

  • Sunday April 18, 2010 – 1:40 p.m. EDT / 10:40 a.m. PDT
  • Streets of Long Beach – Long Beach, California; Temporary street circuit, 1.968 miles (3.167 km)
  • Distance: 45 laps / 88.560 miles (142.524 km)
  • Race weather: 64 °F (18 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 1:14.6261 sec, 94.937 mph (152.786 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 45
  • Race report: Starting from his second pole of the season, James Hinchcliffe led the field through Turn 1 on the opening lap as Charlie Kimball overhauled Jean-Karl Vernay for second place. The three drivers then held their respective positions for the duration of the race, as the other drivers battled behind. Sebastian Saavedra and Martin Plowman rounded out the top five placings. Dan Clarke and Junior Strous both ran into early trouble, with Clarke suffering a mechanical problem and Strous running into the barriers on Lap 9. Clarke returned to the race six laps down, and wound up thirteenth at the end of the race. Stefan Wilson suffered an electrical problem, Rodrigo Barbosa was parked after causing two of the race's four full course cautions with spins and Adrián Campos Jr. crashed heavily at Turn 1 on Lap 34, causing the third caution. Almost immediately after the race returned to green after the Campos crash, the yellow flags flew again after Gustavo Yacamán and Niall Quinn were both involved in incidents at the track's Fountain section; Yacamán having been punted from behind by Quinn's team-mate Tõnis Kasemets, while Quinn spun by himself. On the penultimate lap, Sam Schmidt Motorsports' Philip Major ran into his team-mate James Winslow, forcing the British driver into the barrier and was eventually scored in twelfth position.
  • Round 4: Firestone Freedom 100

  • Friday May 28, 2010 – 12:30 p.m. EDT / 11:30 a.m. CDT
  • Indianapolis Motor Speedway – Speedway, Indiana; Permanent racing facility, 2.500 miles (4.023 km)
  • Distance: 40 laps / 100.000 miles (160.934 km)
  • Race weather: 79 °F (26 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #11 Pippa Mann, 1:35.7505 sec, 187.989 mph (302.539 km/h) (2-lap)
  • Most laps led: #77 Wade Cunningham, 38
  • Race report: Pippa Mann led the field to the green flag, but was immediately overtaken by Wade Cunningham, with Charlie Kimball, series returnee Jeff Simmons and Martin Plowman all getting ahead of Mann by the end of the first lap. Mann's race ended at Turn 1 of lap three, being an innocent victim in an accident with Simmons, producing the race's only caution period. Championship leader Jean-Karl Vernay hit trouble early in the race, making a lengthy pit-stop on lap one, returning to the field several laps down. When the race returned to green on lap nine, Cunningham led from Kimball, Plowman, Dan Clarke and Philip Major. Kimball took the lead on lap ten before Cunningham repassed him on lap eleven. James Hinchcliffe progressed through the field, and ran as high as second place for the middle portion of the race, before Kimball reasserted himself in the position. He once again took the lead from Cunningham before the New Zealander took the lead for good on lap 34. Cunningham held his rivals off for the remaining laps, as he took his third Freedom 100 victory by 0.4368 seconds from Kimball, with Hinchcliffe, Clarke and Plowman rounding out the top five positions. Along with Simmons and Mann, Arie Luyendyk Jr. retired from the race due to mechanical gremlins. With Vernay finishing down the field, his championship lead over Kimball was trimmed to just five points.
  • Round 5: AvoidTheStork.com 100

  • Saturday June 19, 2010 – 9:40 p.m. EDT / 8:40 p.m. CDT
  • Iowa Speedway – Newton, Iowa; Permanent racing facility, 0.894 miles (1.439 km)
  • Distance: 115 laps / 102.810 miles (165.457 km)
  • Race weather: 77 °F (25 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #29 Sebastian Saavedra, 40.0594 sec, 160.681 mph (258.591 km/h) (2-lap)
  • Most laps led: #29 Sebastian Saavedra, 115
  • Race report:
  • Round 6: Corning 100

  • Sunday July 4, 2010 – 1:30 p.m. EDT
  • Watkins Glen International – Watkins Glen, New York; Permanent racing facility, 3.370 miles (5.423 km)
  • Distance: 30 laps / 101.100 miles (162.705 km)
  • Race weather: 85 °F (29 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 1:37.3593 sec, 124.610 mph (200.540 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 18
  • Race report: Charlie Kimball suffered problems even before the start of the race, stalling his car at Turn 7. His stall forced the start to be waved off a lap. When the race did eventually get under way, James Hinchcliffe led Stefan Wilson into Turn 1. Wilson would be demoted to fourth by the end of the lap, as both championship leader Jean-Karl Vernay and Sebastian Saavedra found a way past the British driver. The first of two cautions flew on lap two as Dan Clarke was tipped into a spin by Pippa Mann and both cars found the wall at Turn 9. After the restart, Wilson was demoted yet further, as debutant Anders Krohn found a way by. Krohn would fall to tenth position by the race's conclusion. Wilson's engine blew at the beginning of lap fourteen, causing the second and final caution due to fluid leaking out of his Bryan Herta Autosport car all the way along the front straight. Vernay found a way past Hinchcliffe on lap nineteen, using the Canadian's slipstream to full effect, passing him into the Inner Loop. Vernay held the lead to the end, as he won his third race of the season to extend his championship lead. Hinchcliffe finished in close proximity to Vernay in second, with Saavedra, Martin Plowman and James Winslow – returning to the series, and starting last out of the 14-car grid – rounded out the top five placings.
  • Round 7: Toronto 100

  • Sunday July 18, 2010 – 10:25 a.m. EDT
  • Streets of Toronto – Toronto, Ontario; Temporary street circuit, 1.755 miles (2.824 km)
  • Distance: 50 laps / 87.750 miles (141.220 km)
  • Race weather: 72 °F (22 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 1:05.2989 sec, 96.755 mph (155.712 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 50
  • Race report: Jean-Karl Vernay dominated en route to his fourth victory of the season, leading every lap of the race from pole position. After fending off sufficient pressure from James Hinchcliffe, Vernay extended his lead despite two full course cautions for incidents at Turn 8. Hinchcliffe was due to finish second behind Vernay but made a mistake into Turn 3 and allowed Dan Clarke and Gustavo Yacamán to fill the remaining podium slots. Charlie Kimball also looked for the pass into Turn 5, but ended up colliding with Hinchcliffe sending him into the wall and a tenth-place classification. Kimball finished fourth ahead of a recovering Stefan Wilson, who set the fastest lap after earlier going down the escape road due to an error. Other retirees from the race were Sebastian Saavedra who lost fourth gear, and Carmen Jordá who spun at Turn 8.
  • Round 8: Edmonton 100

  • Sunday July 25, 2010 – 2:57 p.m. EDT / 12:57 p.m. MDT
  • Edmonton City Centre Airport – Edmonton, Alberta; Temporary airport course, 1.973 miles (3.175 km)
  • Distance: 50 laps / 98.650 miles (158.762 km)
  • Race weather: 69 °F (21 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 1:06.2160 sec, 107.267 mph (172.630 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #2 James Hinchcliffe, 50
  • Race report: James Hinchcliffe led from start to finish, as he cut Jean-Karl Vernay's championship lead by thirteen to 55, in a race which lacked overtaking moves. The top five qualifiers – Hinchcliffe, Vernay, Martin Plowman, Charlie Kimball and Dan Clarke – claimed the top five placings, with only Carmen Jordá failing to finish out of the 13-car grid.
  • Round 9: Mid-Ohio 100

  • Sunday August 8, 2010 – 12:30 p.m. EDT
  • Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course – Lexington, Ohio; Permanent racing facility, 2.258 miles (3.634 km)
  • Distance: 40 laps / 90.320 miles (145.356 km)
  • Race weather: 83 °F (28 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #27 Martin Plowman, 1:12.8624 sec, 111.564 mph (179.545 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #27 Martin Plowman, 40
  • Race report: Martin Plowman became an Indy Lights victor after leading from start-to-finish to tie James Hinchcliffe for second in the championship. Plowman held off the challenge of Hinchcliffe during the race, with the Canadian driver running wide midway through the race. British drivers claimed a 1-2 as Dan Clarke finished second ahead of Plowman's team-mate Charlie Kimball and the Bryan Herta Autosport cars of Stefan Wilson and Sebastian Saavedra. Championship leader Jean-Karl Vernay struggled all weekend and finished in eighth, just behind Hinchcliffe.
  • Round 10: Carneros 100

  • Sunday August 22, 2010 – 2:45 p.m. EDT / 11:45 a.m. PDT
  • Infineon Raceway – Sonoma, California; Permanent racing facility, 2.303 miles (3.706 km)
  • Distance: 40 laps / 92.120 miles (148.253 km)
  • Race weather: 67 °F (19 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 1:23.5582 sec, 99.222 mph (159.682 km/h)
  • Most laps led: #7 Jean-Karl Vernay, 40
  • Race report:
  • Round 11: Chicagoland 100

  • Saturday August 28, 2010 – 5:15 p.m. EDT / 4:15 p.m. CDT
  • Chicagoland Speedway – Joliet, Illinois; Permanent racing facility, 1.520 miles (2.446 km)
  • Distance: 67 laps / 101.840 miles (163.896 km)
  • Race weather: 93 °F (34 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #27 Martin Plowman, 57.7510 sec, 189.503 mph (304.976 km/h) (2-lap)
  • Most laps led: #11 Pippa Mann, 35
  • Race report:
  • Round 12: Drive Smart Buckle-Up Kentucky 100

  • Saturday September 4, 2010 – 5:30 p.m. EDT
  • Kentucky Speedway – Sparta, Kentucky; Permanent racing facility, 1.480 miles (2.382 km)
  • Distance: 67 laps / 99.160 miles (159.583 km)
  • Race weather: 76 °F (24 °C), scattered clouds
  • Pole position winner: #11 Pippa Mann, 55.9447 sec, 190.474 mph (306.538 km/h) (2-lap)
  • Most laps led: #11 Pippa Mann, 67
  • Race report: Pippa Mann led from start to finish to join Ana Beatriz as female winners in Indy Lights, as she pulled away from her rivals to a winning margin of nearly seven seconds. Jean-Karl Vernay had a chance to wrap up the title with a round to spare, but with James Hinchcliffe finishing ahead of him, his 48-point championship lead meant that Vernay will only need to start the final race on October 2 to become champion. Adrián Campos Jr. equalled his best finish to place fourth, a car length behind Vernay while Gustavo Yacamán finished fifth after starting on the back row. Daniel Herrington returned to the series as a raceday replacement at Bryan Herta Autosport for Sebastian Saavedra who parted company with the team but only made it as far as lap two, when he was involved in a three-car crash with team-mate Stefan Wilson and Philip Major, which brought out the only caution of the race, before the race was halted for 15 minutes to sweep the circuit of debris. All three drivers were unhurt in the incident.
  • Round 13: Fuzzy's Ultra Premium Vodka 100

  • Saturday October 2, 2010 – 3:45 p.m. EDT
  • Homestead-Miami Speedway – Homestead, Florida; Permanent racing facility, 1.485 miles (2.390 km)
  • Distance: 67 laps / 99.495 miles (160.122 km)
  • Race weather: 88 °F (31 °C), clear skies
  • Pole position winner: #11 Pippa Mann, 57.2999 sec, 186.597 mph (300.299 km/h) (2-lap)
  • Most laps led: #32 Brandon Wagner, 66
  • Race report:
  • Driver standings

  • Ties in points broken by number of wins, or best finishes.
  • References

    2010 Indy Lights season Wikipedia