Buddy Lazier
{{Infobox racing driver
| name = Robert Buddy Lazier
| image =
| pixels =
| caption = Buddy Lazier in his team's garage prior to the 2008 Indy 500
| nationality = American |
| date of birth = 10/31/1967
| place of birth = Vail, Colorado
| date of death =
| retired =
| related to = Bob Lazier (father)
Jaques Lazier (brother)
| current series = IRL IndyCar Series
| first year = 1996
| current team = Hemelgarn Racing
| car number = 91
| former teams = Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
Panther Racing
Sam Schmidt Motorsports
| starts = 100
| wins = 8
| poles = 2
| fastest laps =
| best finish = 1st
| year = 2000
| prev series = CART
| prev series years = 1989-1995
| titles = Indy Racing League Champion
| title years = 2000
| awards = Scott Brayton Trophy
| award years = 2003
|}
Robert Buddy Lazier (born October 31, 1967 in Vail, Colorado) is an American open-wheel racecar driver. He won the 1996 Indianapolis 500 and has finished in the Top Ten in that race six times. Both his father Bob Lazier and brother Jaques Lazier are veterans of the Indy 500 as well.
Career
1989-2005
Lazier first appeared in CART beginning in 1989 driving for Gary Trout Motorsports and also participated in The Indy 500 as a rookie. In preparation for the founding of the Indy Racing League in 1996, he signed with Ron Hemelgarn's Hemelgarn Racing whom he drove in the Indianapolis 500 for in 1991.
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Buddy was one of the drivers in the first IRL race and won the 1996 Indianapolis 500, the first sanctioned by the IRL despite suffering a major back injury earlier in the season. Following the fame and money of the Indy win, a strong partnership between Buddy, Hemelgarn, and sponsor Delta Faucet formed. This partnership resulted in a model season for the team in 2000 with Buddy winning 2 races on his way to the series championship followed by a second place effort in 2001. Following the influx of former CART Teams and the new engine suppliers in 2002, Lazier and Hemelgarn had extreme difficulty competing at the level that they had before and they lost their sponsor following the 2003 season. Buddy only completed in the Indy 500 in 2004 for Hemelgarn and was signed to drive the 2005 Indy 500 for the Byrd Brothers and Panther Racing, placing fifth in the race, ahead of Panther's 2 regular drivers Tomáš Enge and Tomas Scheckter in a race that many believe may have resurrected his career.
In 2005, Buddy acquired a four-race deal with Panther Racing to drive the #95 Pennzoil/American Sentry Guard Dallara/Chevrolet. However, he received an extra race in Enge's #2 Rockstar Energy Drink Dallara/Chevrolet at Milwaukee on July 24. Enge was injured during a crash at the Nashville Superspeedway during the Firestone Indy 200 a week earlier. He logged four top-tens in the No. 95 and an 18th-place finish in Enge's No. 2 car. With Panther's contraction to a single car in 2006, Lazier was forced to search for another team, which he found in Robbie Buhl's Dreyer & Reinbold Racing.
2006-2008
In 2006, Lazier raced in seven events for Dreyer & Reinbold with a best finish of 12th in the Indy 500. He was replaced by Aussie Ryan Briscoe for the Watkins Glen International race and Briscoe finished third. He was replaced again by Briscoe after the Kansas Speedway race on July 2, finishing a disappointing 15th after starting seventh. Lazier returned for the Michigan International Speedway race in August, but Sarah Fisher finished the season for the team in the two remaining races that Briscoe was not contracted for in the IndyCar Series.
Lazier did not have a contract as a regular driver for the 2007 IndyCar Series season. However, Lazier teamed up with Sam Schmidt Motorsports to race in the 2007 Indianapolis 500. Without a permanent ride, Lazier drove in a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race with Billy Ballew Motorsports at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on September 22 of that year and finished 24th.
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2008 began similar to 2007 without a full-time ride in any series. Lazier and Hemelgarn Racing reunited in a late effort to qualify for the 2008 Indianapolis 500. Lazier qualified on the third day of qualifying but was bumped from the field. He struggled to find speed early in Sunday's bump day session, but with less than half an hour remaining in the session the team completed major changes and made a qualifying attempt with no practice laps on the new setup. The attempt was not fast enough, so the team adjusted wing settings to remove drag from the car and went out for another attempt, again with no practice. This attempt was fast enough to bump Roger Yasukawa and put Lazier 32nd on the grid and earn them a $50,000 bonus for being the last driver to make a successful qualifying attempt.
Motorsports Career Results
American Open Wheel
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)
Champ Car
IndyCar
Years | Teams | Races | Poles | Wins | Podiums (Non-win) |
Top 10s (Non-podium) |
Indianapolis 500 Wins |
Championships |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
13 | 4 | 100 | 2 | 8 | 10 | 27 | 1 (1996) | 1 (2000) |
Indy 500 results
Year | Chassis | Engine | Start | Finish | Team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | March | Cosworth | Practice Crash | Lazier | |
1990 | Lola | Cosworth | Did Not Qualify | Hemelgarn | |
1991 | Lola | Buick | 23rd | 33rd | Hemelgarn |
1992 | Lola | Buick | 24th | 14th | Leader Cards |
1993 | Lola | Buick | Failed to Qualify | Leader Cards | |
1994 | Lola | Ilmor | Failed to Qualify | Leader Cards | |
1995 | Lola | Menard-Buick | 23rd | 27th | Menard |
1996 | Reynard | Ford-Cosworth | 5th | 1st | Hemelgarn |
1997 | Dallara | Oldsmobile | 10th | 4th | Hemelgarn |
1998 | Dallara | Oldsmobile | 11th | 2nd | Hemelgarn |
1999 | Dallara | Oldsmobile | 22nd | 7th | Hemelgarn |
2000 | Dallara | Oldsmobile | 16th | 2nd | Hemelgarn |
2001 | Dallara | Oldsmobile | 10th | 18th | Hemelgarn |
2002 | Dallara | Chevrolet | 20th | 15th | Hemelgarn |
2003 | Dallara | Chevrolet | 21st | 21st | Hemelgarn |
2004 | Dallara | Chevrolet | 28th | 23rd | Hemelgarn |
2005 | Dallara | Chevrolet | 9th | 5th | Panther |
2006 | Dallara | Honda | 25th | 12th | Dreyer & Reinbold |
2007 | Dallara | Honda | 22nd | 19th | Schmidt |
2008 | Dallara | Honda | 32nd | 17th | Hemelgarn |
External links
Sporting positions | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Jacques Villeneuve |
Indianapolis 500 Winner 1996 |
Succeeded by Arie Luyendyk |
Preceded by Greg Ray |
Indy Racing Northern Lights Series Champion 2000 |
Succeeded by Sam Hornish, Jr. |
Awards | ||
Preceded by Arie Luyendyk |
Scott Brayton Award 2003 |
Succeeded by Helio Castroneves |
Indianapolis 500 Winners | |||
---|---|---|---|
Four-time winners | |||
Three-time winners |
Meyer • Shaw • Rose • Rutherford • B. Unser | ||
Two-time winners |
Milton • Vukovich • Ward • Johncock • Fittipaldi • Luyendyk • Unser, Jr. • Castroneves | ||
One win |
Harroun • Dawson • Goux • Thomas • DePalma • Resta • Wilcox • Chevrolet • Murphy • Corum • Boyer • DePaolo • Lockhart • Souders • Keech • Arnold • Schneider • Frame • Cummings • Petillo • Roberts • Davis • Robson • Holland • Parsons • Wallard • Ruttman • Sweikert • Flaherty • Hanks • Bryan • Rathmann • Jones • Clark • Hill • Andretti • Donohue • Sneva • Sullivan • Rahal • Villeneuve • Lazier • Cheever • Brack • Montoya • de Ferran • Rice • Wheldon • Hornish |