1987 CART PPG Indy Car World Series

1987 CART season

Bobby Rahal
PPG Indy Car World Series
Season
Races 16
Start date April 4
End date November 1
Awards
Drivers' champion United States Bobby Rahal
Constructors' Cup United Kingdom March
Manufacturers' Cup United Kingdom Cosworth
Nations' Cup United States United States
Rookie of the Year Italy Fabrizio Barbazza
Indianapolis 500 winner United States Al Unser
Chronology
Previous season Next season
1986 1988

The 1987 CART PPG Indy Car World Series season was the 9th national championship season of American open wheel racing sanctioned by CART. The season consisted of 16 races, and one non-points exhibition event. Bobby Rahal was the national champion, winning his second-consecutive title. The rookie of the year was Fabrizio Barbazza. The 1987 Indianapolis 500 was sanctioned by USAC, but counted towards the CART points championship. Al Unser, Sr. won the Indy 500, his record-tying fourth victory at Indy.

Defending series champion and defending Indy 500 winner Bobby Rahal and his Truesports team made a highly publicized switch from the March chassis to the up-and-coming Lola chassis.[1] Truesports, however, stayed with the proven Cosworth engine. For 1987, the Ilmor Chevrolet Indy V-8 expanded its participation, fielding cars with Penske Racing, Newman/Haas and Patrick. Mario Andretti scored the engine's first Indy car victory in the season opener at Long Beach. Also joining the series full-time was the Judd AV V-8 (badged initially as the Brabham-Honda), and later in the season Porsche made their Indy car debut. Penske resumed their in-house chassis program, but after dismal results with the PC-16, the cars were parked during practice at Indy in favor of the March.

Roberto Guerrero won the second race of the season (Phoenix), starting from last position on the grid. Mario Andretti dominated the Indianapolis 500, leading 171 of the first 177 laps, but dropped out with engine failure with only 23 laps to go. Guerrero took the lead, but stalled during his final pit stop. Al Unser, Sr. led the final 18 laps to win, one of the biggest upsets in Indy 500 history. Though Guerrero faltered at Indy, he would be a factor through most of the season. After winning at Mid-Ohio in September, however, he was sidelined with head injuries due to a testing crash. He was third in points at the time.

For the second year in a row, the championship battle came down to Bobby Rahal and Michael Andretti. Rahal took the points lead after back-to-back wins at Portland and the Meadowlands. Andretti won the Michigan 500, and drew within 9 points of Rahal. At Mid-Ohio, Rahal was dominating until he tangled with a backmarker. Andretti had a chance to make up ground in the points, but blew his engine two laps later.

Michael Andretti rebounded, winning in dominating fashion at Nazareth. But Rahal charged to finish second, and with two races left, held a 25-point lead. In the next-to-last race of the season at Laguna Seca, Andretti dropped out with alternator trouble, and Rahal mathematically clinched the championship. It was Rahal's second-consecutive CART title, and Michael Andretti finished runner-up in points for the second year in a row.

Teams and drivers

The following teams and drivers competed in the 1987 Indy Car World Series season. All cars used Goodyear tires.[2]

Team Chassis Engine No. Driver(s) Rounds Notes
A. J. Foyt Enterprises Lola T8700 Cosworth 14 United States A. J. Foyt 3-4, 9-10, 13, 15
March 86C 41 United States Stan Fox 3
United States Davy Jones (R) 9, 13, 15
44 3
Chevy V6 84 United States George Snider 3
Alex Morales Racing March 87C Cosworth 21 United States Johnny Rutherford All
American Racing March 86C Buick 2 United Kingdom Jim Crawford 3 1
United States Gordon Johncock
Arciero Racing March 87C Cosworth 12 Italy Fabrizio Barbazza (R) 1-13, 15 2
Canada Ludwig Heimrath (R) 14-15
March 85C
New Zealand Graham McRae 15
Bettenhausen Motorsports March 86C Cosworth 16 United States Tony Bettenhausen, Jr. 1-5, 7-12
Centerline Wheels March Pontiac 59 United States Sammy Swindell 3
Curb March 87C/ March 86C Cosworth 33 United States Tom Sneva 1-9 3
United States John Andretti (R) 10-15
98 United States Ed Pimm 3, 9
Dale Coyne Racing March 86C Chevy/ Cosworth 19 United States Dale Coyne 1-2, 4-15 4
Dick Simon Racing Lola T8700 Cosworth 22 United States Dick Simon 1-10, 13
United States Wally Dallenbach, Jr. (R) 11
Canada Ludwig Heimrath (R) 12
United States John Richards (R) 14
United States Jeff Wood (R) 15
23 Canada Ludwig Heimrath (R) 1-10
United States Jeff Wood (R) 11-14
Italy Fulvio Ballabio (R) 15
Lola T8600/ T8700 27 United States John Richards (R) 5-8 5
Lola T8600 United Kingdom Ian Ashley 15
Doug Shierson Racing March 87C Cosworth 30 United States Al Unser, Jr. All
Galles Racing March 87C/ Lola T8700 Judd/ Cosworth 11 United States Jeff MacPherson All 6
March 87C Judd 15 Australia Geoff Brabham All
Gohr Racing March 86C Cosworth 56 United States Rocky Moran 1
United States Gary Bettenhausen 2-4, 9-10
March 87C/ March 86C Canada Scott Goodyear (R) 6-8, 11-12, 14-15 7
Granatelli Racing March 87C Cosworth 4 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 1-12
United States Al Unser 13
Brazil Raúl Boesel 14-15
Hemelgarn Racing March 87C Cosworth 71 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk All
Buick 81 United States Rich Vogler 3
Cosworth 91 United States Scott Brayton 3, 5-6, 9-10
March 86C Buick United States Johnny Parsons 3
Interscope Racing PC-16/ March 87C Chevy A/ Cosworth 25 United States Danny Ongais 3, 9, 13, 15 8
Intersport March 86C Cosworth 17 Germany Dominic Dobson 3
JP Racing March 86C Cosworth 35 United States Spike Gehlhausen 3
Kraco Racing March 87C Cosworth 18 United States Michael Andretti All
Leader Cards Racing March 87C Cosworth 24 United States Randy Lewis All
Los Angeles Drywall March 85C Cosworth 19 United States Dick Ferguson 3
27 9
Machinists Union Racing March 87C Cosworth 29 United States Pancho Carter 3, 9-15
March 86C 44 United States Chip Robinson 1, 6, 13
United States Tom Sneva 15
March 87C 55 Mexico Josele Garza All
March 86C 59 United States Mike Nish 1-2
March 86C/ March 87C United States Rick Miaskiewicz 5, 7-8, 12 9
Newman Teamworks Lola T8600 Cosworth 51 Belgium Didier Theys (R) 1, 11
United States Davy Jones (R) 12
Newman/Haas Racing Lola T8700 Chevy A 5 United States Mario Andretti All
NFW Racing March 86C Cosworth 36 New Zealand Graham McRae 11-12
Pace Racing March 87C Buick 77 Republic of Ireland Derek Daly 3
Patrick Racing March 87C Chevy A 7 United States Kevin Cogan 1-4, 6-15
20 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi All
Penske Racing PC-16/ March 87C Chevy A 3 United States Danny Sullivan All 10
8 United States Rick Mears All 11
March 86C Cosworth 6 United States Al Unser 9-10
PC-16 Chevy A 9 15
March 86C Cosworth 25 3
Porsche Porsche Porsche 6 United States Al Unser 14
United States Al Holbert 15
Raynor Lola T8700 Cosworth 10 United States Dennis Firestone 1-3
Lola T8600 United States Phil Krueger 3
Lola T8700 Republic of Ireland Derek Daly 4-15
Truesports Lola T8700 Cosworth 1 United States Bobby Rahal All
2 Belgium Didier Theys (R) 15
United Oil March 87C Cosworth 87 United States Steve Chassey 3
Walther March 86C Cosworth 76 United States Rocky Moran 3
WENS March 86C Cosworth 97 United States Rick Miaskiewicz 3
Notes

(R)Rookie

1.^ Crawford was injured on Pole Day, and replaced by Johncock.[3]
2.^ All three drivers listed as entries at Miami.[4]
3.^ Curb used March 86C Chassis at round 3 only.
4.^ Coyne used a Cosworth engine at round 7 only.
5.^ Richards used a Lola T8700 at round 6 only.
6.^ MacPherson used a Lola T8600 at rounds 11 and 12 only, and used Cosworth at rounds 10, 13-15 only.
7.^ Goodyear used a March 86C at round 7 only.
8.^ Ongais practiced at round 3 with a PC-16/Chevy A combo, but did not attempt to qualify due to injury.
9.^ Miaskiewicz used a March 87C at round 7 only.
10.^ Sullivan used a PC-16 at rounds 1-2, 4-5 only.
11.^ Mears used a PC-16 at rounds 1-2, 4-7 only.

Schedule

Rd Date Race Name Circuit TV Network City/Location
1 April 5 Grand Prix of Long Beach Street Circuit NBC Long Beach, California
2 April 12 Dana 200 Phoenix International Raceway ABC Phoenix, Arizona
3 May 24 Indianapolis 500 Indianapolis Motor Speedway ABC Speedway, Indiana
4 May 31 Dana-Rex Mays 200 Milwaukee Mile ESPN West Allis, Wisconsin
5 June 14 Budweiser/G.I.Joe's 200 Portland International Raceway ESPN Portland, Oregon
6 June 28 Meadowlands Grand Prix Street Circuit NBC East Rutherford, New Jersey
7 July 5 Cleveland Grand Prix Burke Lakefront Airport ABC Cleveland, Ohio
8 July 19 Molson Indy Toronto Exhibition Place NBC Toronto, Ontario, Canada
9 August 2 Marlboro 500 Michigan International Speedway ABC Brooklyn, Michigan
10 August 16 Quaker State 500 Pocono International Raceway NBC Long Pond, Pennsylvania
11 August 30 Living Well-Provimi 200 Road America ESPN Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin
12 September 6 Escort Radar Warning 200 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course ESPN Lexington, Ohio
13 September 20 Bosch Spark Plug Grand Prix Nazareth Speedway ABC Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania
14 October 11 Champion Spark Plug 300k Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca ESPN Monterey, California
NC October 31 Marlboro Challenge Tamiami Park ESPN Miami, Florida
15 November 1 Nissan Indy Challenge Tamiami Park ABC Miami, Florida
  Oval/Speedway
  Road Course/Street Circuit
  Non-championship race

Race summaries

Long Beach

Mario Andretti started on the pole position and dominated the Long Beach Grand Prix, his third win in four years at the circuit. It marked the first-ever victory in Indy car competition for the Ilmor Chevrolet Indy V-8 engine. Emerson Fittipaldi was a close second until he dropped out with turbocharger failure.

Phoenix

Roberto Guerrero qualified third, but failed post-qualifying inspection for being 2.5 pounds underweight. He was forced to start last on the grid. Guerrero quickly charged through the field, and was in the top five by lap 46. He dueled with Bobby Rahal for the lead on lap 62, and dominated the second half. Even a stop-and-go penalty for hitting a tire in the pits did not slow Guerrero's run.

Guerrero won by 8 seconds over Rahal, becoming only the fourth driver in modern Indy car history to win a race from the last starting position.

Indianapolis 500

Mario Andretti dominated the entire month of May at Indy. He ran the fastest practice laps, won the pole position, the pit stop contest, and led 170 of the first 177 laps. With only 23 laps to go, Andretti suddenly slowed with a broken valve spring which led to fueling and engine failure. Al Unser, Sr., who had entered the month without a ride took the lead with 18 laps to go, and recorded one of the biggest upsets in Indy history.

Roberto Guerrero, the winner at Phoenix, stalled in the pits while leading due to a failing clutch, and came home second.[5]

Milwaukee

While leading the race on lap 149, Mario Andretti broke a rear wing, sending the car hard into the outside and inside walls. He was taken to the hospital with relatively minor injuries. Mario's son Michael Andretti took the lead after the accident, locked in a duel with Roberto Guerrero.

On lap 177, Guerrero suddenly blew his engine, leaving Michael Andretti in the lead. A late-race caution allowed Bobby Rahal to close the gap, but Michael held on for the victory. Rahal finished second.

Portland

Bobby Rahal won his first race of the season, passing Michael Andretti for the lead on lap 70 of 104. Rahal built up a 22-second lead late in the race, but slowed to conserve fuel over the final 10 laps. Andretti closed to within 6 seconds, but managed only second place.

Meadowlands

Bobby Rahal made it back-to-back victories, winning for the second time of the season at the Meadowlands. Rahal also took over the points lead.

Cleveland

Emerson Fittipaldi and Bobby Rahal pitted for the final time on lap 53, both hoping to stretch their fuel to the finish. Fittipaldi pulled out to an 18-second lead, and despite the fuel light flashing over the final five laps, held on to win his first race of the season.

Rahal finished a strong second, and increased his lead in the points standings.

Toronto

Emerson Fittipaldi looked to win his second race in a row, but a final lap mishap almost cost him the race. With Danny Sullivan running second on the final lap, Fittipaldi led by about 4 seconds at the white flag. Down the Lake Shore Drive backstretch on the final lap, however, Fittipaldi became mired in traffic. Through the hairpin, the track was essentially blocked by three backmarkers, which allowed Sullivan to dramatically close the gap. With two turns to go, Sullivan dove below Fittipaldi for the lead, but the two cars touched wheels. Fittipaldi's car stayed straight, but Sullivan spun out.

Fittipaldi went on to win, while Sullivan limped across the finish line to hold on to second. Bobby Rahal came home third and padded his championship lead.

Michigan 500

With 8 laps to go, Michael Andretti led Indy 500 winner Al Unser, Sr. and Bobby Rahal. Andretti needed to make his final pit stop, but a faulty clutch nearly cost him dearly. Andretti's car sputtered and nearly stalled as he pulled away, and he lost several seconds.

Back on the track, Michael maintained a 9-second lead to the finish, with Unser finishing second. Third place Rahal maintained a 9-point advantage over Michael in the points championship.

Pocono 500

Mario Andretti started from the pole and led 22 laps, but gets too low in turn one on lap 89, and crashed hard into the outside wall. He suffers a separated shoulder, his second injury of the season. The rough apron of turn one was stained by lime, which caused Andretti's car to lose traction.[6]

Rick Mears, who had not won a race in two years, led Geoff Brabham late in the race, but was low on fuel. Mears' car sputtered on the final lap, but he crossed the line under power to take the victory. It was the first 500-mile race victory for the Ilmor Chevy Indy V-8 engine. Brabham, meanwhile, scored a career-best second place, and the best finish yet for the new Brabham-Honda engine. Roberto Guerrero, who led with 17 laps to go, dropped to third when he was forced to pit for fuel five laps from the end.

Points leader Bobby Rahal came home 5th, and maintained a championship lead of 14 points over Michael Andretti.

Road America

After four months of disappointments and injuries, Mario Andretti finally found the winner's circle for the first time since the season opener. Despite recovering from a separated shoulder, Andretti won the pole and dominated the race wire-to-wire, leading all 50 laps. Geoff Brabham scored his second runner-up finish in a row.

The top two drivers in the points standings, Bobby Rahal and Michael Andretti, both finished out of the points.

Mid-Ohio

Bobby Rahal was leading by half a lap and looking for his third consecutive victory at Mid-Ohio. With about 12 laps to go, however, Rahal tangled with the lapped car of Rick Miaskiewicz, forcing him to pit with a punctured tire.

Roberto Guerrero blew by the limping car of Rahal to take the lead on lap 74, and Michael Andretti swept into second. Andretti had a golden opportunity to make up ground in the championship hunt, but a few laps later, blew his engine. Rahal climbed back up to second, while Guerrero won his second race of the season.

Four days later, Guerrero would be injured during a tire test at Indianapolis. He was struck in the head by a tire, leaving him in a coma, and sidelined for the remainder of the season.

Nazareth

CART made its debut at the newly reconstructed Pennsylvania International Raceway in Nazareth. Hometown driver Michael Andretti led 150 laps, looking to make up as much ground as possible in the championship hunt against Bobby Rahal.

Al Unser, Sr. drove substitution for the injured Roberto Guerrero, charging to as high as second place late in the race. With seven laps to go, Unser touched wheels with Jeff MacPherson, and smacked the outside wall coming out of turn 4. Rahal, who had lost a lap after nearly stalling in the pits, moved up to second at the checkered flag. With two races remaining, Rahal held a 25-point lead.

Laguna Seca

With the championship down to two drivers, Bobby Rahal and Michael Andretti, Rahal needed to finish the final two races to hold on to his second-consecutive CART title. Rahal had won the Laguna Seca event three years in a row, going for four.

When Michael Andretti dropped out on lap 36 with alternator trouble, Rahal clinched the championship title, regardless of his finish at the final race in Miami. Later in the race, Mario Andretti dropped out, enabling Rahal to take the lead and win at Laguna Seca for a record fourth year in a row. Rahal celebrated in victory lane both the race win and the CART championship title.

Also making news at Laguna Seca was the debut of the Porsche Indy car team led by Al Holbert. A week after substituting for Roberto Guerrero, Al Unser Sr. was back on the track in another car, this time behind the wheel of the new Porsche. The effort started out on a sour note, however. The car was slow and dropped out after only seven laps with a broken water pump. It would be Unser's lone race with the team, and the only event the chassis would race. The following year the Porsche team would switch to March chassis.

Tamiami Park

With the championship title already decided, Michael Andretti dominated en route to victory, but still finished second in the points standings.

Rahal, who had won the exhibition Marlboro Challenge a day earlier, finished 7th.

Season Summary

Race results

Rd Name Pole Position Fastest Lap Winning driver Winning team Report
1 Grand Prix of Long Beach United States Mario Andretti 1:05.886 United States Mario Andretti Newman/Haas Racing Report
2 Dana 200 United States Mario Andretti 21.832 Colombia Roberto Guerrero Vince Granatelli Racing Report
3 Indianapolis 500 United States Mario Andretti 2:47.139 United States Al Unser Penske Racing Report
4 Dana-Rex Mays 200 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 23.544 United States Michael Andretti Kraco Racing Report
5 Budweiser/G.I.Joe's 200 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 59.207 United States Bobby Rahal Truesports Report
6 Meadowlands Grand Prix United States Mario Andretti 1:01.097 United States Bobby Rahal Truesports Report
7 Cleveland Grand Prix Colombia Roberto Guerrero 1:05.509 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing Report
8 Molson Indy Toronto United States Bobby Rahal Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Patrick Racing Report
9 Marlboro 500 United States Michael Andretti 33.406 United States Michael Andretti Kraco Racing Report
10 Quaker State 500 United States Mario Andretti 44.795 United States Rick Mears Penske Racing Report
11 Road America 200 United States Mario Andretti 1:52.687 United States Mario Andretti Newman/Haas Racing Report
12 Escort Radar Warning 200 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 1:15.585 Colombia Roberto Guerrero Vince Granatelli Racing Report
13 Bosch Spark Plug Grand Prix United States Michael Andretti 21.926 United States Michael Andretti Kraco Racing Report
14 Laguna Seca 300k United States Mario Andretti 52.926 United States Bobby Rahal Truesports Report
NC Marlboro Challenge Brazil Raul Boesel United States Bobby Rahal Truesports
15 Miami Indy Challenge United States Mario Andretti 1:54.630 United States Michael Andretti Kraco Racing Report

Driver Standings

[7]

Pos Driver
LB

PIR1

IND

MIL

POR

MEA

CLE

TOR

MIC

POC

ROA

MDO

NAZ

LAG

MIA
Pts
1 United States Bobby Rahal 23 2 26 2 1* 1* 2 3 3 5 23 2* 5 1 7 188
2 United States Michael Andretti 4 4 29 1 2 5 6 5 1* 8 16 13 1* 22 1* 158
3 United States Al Unser, Jr. 2 14 4 5 20 8 3 20 18 23 3 23 6 4 2 107
4 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 12 1* 2 16* 19 19 5* 4 14 3 7 1 106
5 United States Rick Mears 9 20 23 21 3 18 7 10 21 1* 9 4 3 3 5 102
6 United States Mario Andretti 1* 5 9* 17 10 2 10 15 19 19 1* 17 19 17* 4 100
7 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk 14 3 18 4 16 6 19 7 5 4 4 11 4 6 11 98
8 Australia Geoff Brabham 16 8 24 12 9 4 22 DNS 8 2 2 7 12 5 3 90
9 United States Danny Sullivan 22 11 13 11 11 20 4 2 4 17 5 3 22 2 12 87
10 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi 19 18 16 7 14 3 1 1* 7 18 18 6 21 20 10 78
11 Mexico Josele Garza 5 6 17 22 6 24 16 17 12 11 11 8 8 8 18 46
12 Italy Fabrizio Barbazza 17 12 3 14 4 16 24 11 6 14 8 24 13 42
13 United States Al Unser 1 2 15 10 24 DNQ 39
14 United States Tom Sneva 3 17 14 13 21 7 8 6 30 9 37
15 Republic of Ireland Derek Daly 15 3 15 9 11 16 24 10 26 9 16 14 22 27
16 United States Kevin Cogan 18 21 31 18 12 21 13 27 9 19 5 5 18 21 25
17 United States John Andretti 6 10 11 7 8 24
18 United States Johnny Rutherford 23 9 11 9 7 11 9 21 28 26 24 12 20 15 16 23
19 United States Jeff MacPherson 10 13 8 8 13 21 17 22 23 20 25 21 9 9 24 21
20 United States Dick Simon 20 10 6 20 18 14 23 23 9 21 18 15
21 United States Randy Lewis 8 19 32 19 8 23 12 9 15 16 13 22 DNQ 19 19 15
22 United States Scott Brayton 12 5 10 22 25 14
23 United States A.J. Foyt 19 6 26 7 7 25 14
24 United States Gary Bettenhausen 16 5 15 13 13 10
25 United States Pancho Carter 27 20 6 14 14 17 12 14 9
26 United States Chip Robinson 6 25 15 8
27 Brazil Raul Boesel 16 6 8
28 Canada Scott Goodyear 22 15 8 20 18 11 15 7
29 United States Tony Bettenhausen, Jr. 11 15 10 DNQ 13 20 DNQ 11 22 15 25 7
30 Belgium Didier Theys 7 22 17 6
31 Australia Dennis Firestone 21 7 DNQ 6
32 United States Stan Fox 7 6
33 United States Jeff Wood 10 15 DNQ 10 23 6
34 Canada Ludwig Heimrath 15 22 30 10 12 17 18 19 25 12 15 23 DNQ 5
35 United States Davy Jones 28 10 19 14 13 3
36 United States Rick Miaskiewicz DNQ 22 14 12 16 1
37 United States Wally Dallenbach, Jr. 12 1
38 United States John Richards 26 13 14 13 0
39 United States Rocky Moran 13 DNQ 0
40 United States Dale Coyne DNS DNQ DNQ 17 15 25 18 DNS 24 17 20 DNQ 21 DNQ 0
41 United States Ed Pimm 21 16 0
42 United States Danny Ongais Inj 17 DNQ 27 0
43 United Kingdom Ian Ashley 20 0
43 United States Rich Vogler 20 0
45 New Zealand Graham McRae 21 DNQ DNQ 0
46 United States Gordon Johncock 22 0
47 United States Steve Chassey 25 0
48 Italy Fulvio Ballabio 26 0
49 United States Dick Ferguson DNQ 29 0
50 United States George Snider 33 0
United States Mike Nish DNQ DNQ -
United States Tom Bigelow DNQ -
Germany Dominic Dobson DNQ -
United States Spike Gehlhausen DNQ -
United States Phil Krueger DNQ DNQ -
United States Johnny Parsons DNQ -
United States Sammy Swindell DNQ -
United States Al Holbert DNQ -
United Kingdom Jim Crawford Inj -
Pos Driver LB PIR1 IND MIL POR MEA CLE TOR MIC POC ROA MDO NAZ LAG MIA Pts
Color Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green 4th & 5th place
(Top 5)
Light Blue 6th–10th place
(Top 10)
Dark Blue Finished
(Outside Top 10)
Purple Did not finish
(Ret)
Red Did not qualify
(DNQ)
Brown Withdrew
(WD)
Black Disqualified
(DSQ)
White Did not start
(DNS)
Blank Did not
participate
(DNP)
Driver
replacement
(Rpl)
Injured
(Inj)
Race not held
(NH)
Not competing
In-line notation
Bold Pole position
Italics Ran fastest race lap
* Led most race laps
Rookie of the Year
Rookie

References

  1. Miller, Robin (December 7, 1986). "Financial crunch will continue to plague Indy-car racing teams". The Indianapolis Star. p. 104. Retrieved October 18, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  2. Åberg, Andreas. "PPG Indy Car World Series 1987". Driver Database. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  3. Cash, Phil (1987-05-11). "Johncock attempting Indy comeback". The Milwaukee Sentinel. Retrieved 2012-10-03.
  4. "1987 Nissan Indy Challenge". ChampCarStats. Archived from the original on 2013-07-02. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  5. "Official Box Score: 71st Indianapolis 500-Mile Race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway". Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  6. Andrettis Glad This Race Day Is History Pocono Quaker State 500
  7. "1987 PPG Indy Car World Series". Champ Car Stats. Retrieved 2013-06-20.

See also

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