St. Petersburg Times Online: Sports
TampaBay.com
Place an Ad Calendars Classified Forums Sports Weather
tampabay.com

printer version

Motorsports

Owner Fittipaldi unveils CART car

Compiled from Times wires
© St. Petersburg Times
published February 11, 2003

INDIANAPOLIS -- Emerson Fittipaldi won races and championships as a driver. Now he will try to do the same as a team owner.

Fittipaldi announced Monday he formed a partnership with James Dingman and will campaign a car in the 2003 CART Champ Car World Series for rookie Tiago Monteiro of Portugal. The Fittipaldi-Dingman Racing entry raises the number entered in the series to 19 heading into the opening race Feb. 23 in St. Petersburg.

Fittipaldi, from Brazil, won two championships in Formula One and one in CART, as well as two Indianapolis 500s before a neck injury ended his driving career in 1996 at age 50.

Monteiro comes to CART from the European F3000 championship, where he ran as a teammate to fellow rookie Sebastien Bourdais of France, who will drive this season for Newman/Haas Racing.

FOREIGN ENTRY: NASCAR chairman Bill France Jr. said he expects an announcement "probably by the end of the week" about the involvement of a new manufacturer in one of its three top series.

Chevrolet, Pontiac, Ford and Dodge race in the sanctioning body's top stock car series, but Toyota, already competing in NASCAR's Dash Series, said it is working on a truck engine.

NASCAR's rules prohibit foreign cars, but it is expected that the Japanese company, which builds cars in the United States, will make its entry into the truck series official before Sunday's Daytona 500.

F1 CHANGES: Formula One is promoting changes intended to make competition more affordable and ensure the stability of the series. The International Automobile Federation sent a five-page letter to F1's 10 team chiefs last week touting proposed long-life engines and cost-cutting measures designed to retain independent teams.

Under the changes, teams will be limited to one engine per car, per weekend next year. The engines must last two races in 2005 and six in 2006. Teams currently can go through several engines in a racing weekend. The deadline for approval is Oct. 31.

OBITUARY: Les Griebling, founder and designer of the course used for the annual CART Grand Prix of Mid-Ohio, died Thursday in Bradenton. Mr. Griebling opened the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in 1962 as a driver's training school.

Back to Sports
Back to Top

© 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111
Contact the Times | Privacy Policy
Standard of Accuracy | Terms, Conditions & Copyright
 

From the Times sports desk

Motorsports
  • Green has a lot of go
  • Owner Fittipaldi unveils CART car
  • Engine woes don't faze Stewart

  • Baseball
  • Mania kicks off as Godzilla hits shore
  • Padres closer may need 2nd surgery

  • NHL
  • Pens deal pricey All-Star

  • In brief
  • Sorenstam may play in PGA

  • College basketball
  • Texas finally solves Sooners
  • Arizona reascends in poll

  • NBA
  • Jordan's farewell almost perfect

  • Tennis
  • Ex-stars to play matches in Tampa

  • Preps
  • Who says wrestling is a boys sport
  • Tampa Prep, Berkeley waiting on opponents
  • King girls could have what it takes
  • Texas coach closes in on record for victories

  • Outdoors
  • Daily fishing report

  • Rays
  • Colome expected this week

  • Bucs
  • Bucs, fans thrill to retrospective
  • Gary Shelton: The feel-good hit of the season

  • Lightning
  • Lightning laments points it lost late


  • From the wire

    From the state sports wire
  • Jacksonville's Spicer placed on IR after leg surgery
  • FIU-Western Kentucky game postponed because of Jeanne
  • Brown anxious to face old team for first time
  • Dolphins' desperate defense readies for Roethlisberger
  • Former Sarasota lineman sheds tough-guy image with Michigan
  • Rothstein rejoins Heat as assistant
  • No. 16 Florida has history on its side against Kentucky
  • FSU and Clemson QBs both off to slow starts