Purdue Grand Prix

{{short description|Go-kart race at Purdue University}}

{{More citations needed|date=May 2022}}

{{Infobox motor race

| Race title = Purdue Grand Prix

| Logo = PurdueGrandPrixLogo.gif

| Track map = GrandPrixTrack.jpg

| Venue = Grand Prix Track, Northwest Sports Complex, Purdue University

| Location = West Lafayette, IN

| Coordinates = {{coord|40|26|15.7|N|86|56|38.5|W}}

| Sponsor = Purdue Grand Prix Foundation

| First race = May 17, 1958

| First series race =

| Last race =April 26, 2025

| Distance = 50 miles

| Laps = 160

| Duration = 1:10:31.054 (Aidan Fox, 2024){{cite web | url=https://speedhive.mylaps.com/sessions/8802552 | title=RACE Purdue Grand Prix Race 67, 2024 Purdue Grand Prix Race 67, Purdue Grand Prix Foundation, United States - Official Event Results, MYLAPS Speedhive }}

| Previous names =

| Most wins driver = Jimmy Simpson (4)

| Most wins team =

| Most wins manufacturer =

| Surface = Asphalt

| Length mi = 0.2698

| Turns = 5

| Record time = 24.953 seconds

| Record driver = Jacob Peddycord

| Record car = Yamaha KT100

| Record year = 2023

| Record class = 38.924 mph{{cite web | url=https://speedhive.mylaps.com/Sessions/7194869 | title= 2023 Purdue Grand Prix Race 66 - Practice 5 - Results }}

}}

The Purdue Grand Prix is a go-kart race that has been held annually by Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, since May 17, 1958. It is known as "the Greatest Spectacle in College Racing." It hosts approximately 3,500 live spectators per year, with many more watching televised or streamed broadcasts.{{Cite web |date=2022-04-23 |title=Purdue Grand Prix: 'Greatest spectacle in college racing' returns with historical traditions |url=https://ourcommunitynow.com/news-local/purdue-grand-prix-greatest-spectacle-in-college-racing-returns-with-historical-traditions |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=Our Community Now |language=en}} The primary function of the event is to raise money for Purdue student scholarships under the aegis of the Purdue Grand Prix Foundation and its motto: 'Students Helping Students.' Though the race is traditionally held on a Saturday, associated festivities, parties, parades, and other events, both sanctioned and unsanctioned, begin the weekend before and are held throughout the week. Grand Prix is also a large event for alumni who often return to campus for the weekend.

Details

Student organizations, resident hall clubs, co-op houses, and Greek organizations build and race go-karts on a purpose-built course located northwest of the main campus at the block of Cherry Lane, McCormick Road, and US Highway 52. Each kart is required to use a Yamaha KT100 engine and costs approximately $5,000. The event is open to all members of the Purdue student body, including students at other Purdue University System campuses. Students from Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis{{Efn|In 2022 the boards of trustees of both IU and Purdue announced that IUPUI will be split between the institutions by the fall 2024 semester. The School of Engineering and Technology, as well as the Department of Computer Science within the School of Science, will form 'Purdue University in Indianapolis,' a fully integrated extension of the West Lafayette campus. The athletic program and all other academic programs will fall under the new Indiana University Indianapolis.|group=list}} have won the race on several occasions, possibly due to the motorsports engineering major offered at that campus.

Qualifications are held, weather permitting, on a single day one week before race day. The karts are divided into groups of four and are allowed seven minutes on the track. Each kart's fastest lap is recorded as its qualifying time. The top 27 times are placed in the starting field from fastest to slowest. The remaining six positions are determined by three 15-lap sprint races held prior to the main Grand Prix race. The top two finishers from each sprint race comprise the rest of the 33-kart starting grid. The race is traditionally held on a Saturday; however, due to inclement weather, the race may be postponed to Sunday.

Every five years alumni races are held where former students who participated in the Grand Prix return to race. Karts built prior to 1986 take part in a 15-lap Classic race. Newer karts race in a 35-lap Modern race.

History

The first race was held on May 17, 1958, at the North Intramural Field and adjacent parking lot as a way for engineering students to exercise their skills. It was organized by David Ross and Dan Tubergan. Each cart was built from scratch and was powered by a lawnmower engine. Originally managed by the Purdue Auto Club, the Grand Prix Foundation took over administration of Grand Prix when it was founded in 1965. A purpose-built 3/8-mile track was built near Ross–Ade Stadium in 1968 for $25,000; it was first used in the 1969 Grand Prix.

The 2007 Grand Prix was the 50th-anniversary celebration. David Wolf, a Purdue graduate and astronaut, was the grand marshal for that year's pre-race parade.

The 2008 Grand Prix was the final race held on the "old" track north of Ross–Ade Stadium. This track was demolished due to the Mackey Arena expansion project. The new track, which has been used since 2009, is located at the Northwest Sports Complex. It cost roughly $1 million to build and is modeled after the World Kart Championship Track in Japan.

In 2010 the first Electric Vehicle Grand Prix was held at the Purdue Grand Prix track, following a similar format to its gasoline-powered counterpart. The annual race is usually held at the infield of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway; some years an additional race is held at the Grand Prix Track in West Lafayette. Purdue teams and teams from visiting universities are often allowed to test at Purdue's track on the days in which the gas karts are not practicing. While the EV Grand Prix does not attract as many karts as the Purdue Grand Prix, it has a much more widespread reach, attracting teams from three continents and across the United States.

Breakfast Club

Breakfast Club is a tradition where students and alumni dress in costumes to fill local bars and nightclubs early in the morning.{{Cite web |last=HustleFish |date=2019-04-12 |title=What is Breakfast Club? |url=https://granitestudentliving.com/banana-blog/what-is-breakfast-club/ |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=granitestudentliving.com |language=en-US}} It is best described as a cross between a pep rally, a Halloween party, and a bar crawl. It was started by members of the Theta Chi fraternity in the mid-1980s who wanted to see how early in the morning an establishment could be legally open for drinking.{{Cite web |last=Writer |first=Jason GulleyStaff |date=2002-04-19 |title=First home of Breakfast Club ends morning tradition |url=https://www.purdueexponent.org/features/article_4c57457e-8bff-56f7-a63e-79a36f58fbba.html |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=Purdue Exponent |language=en}} Breakfast Club is also seen the morning of home athletic events, and plays a significant role during the football season. Many participants are dedicated; getting up at 5:00 a.m. on Saturdays and lining up at the bars on Chauncey Hill and the levee by 6:00 a.m. on game days.{{Cite web |date=2022-08-22 |title=Purdue Football Game Checklist |url=https://www.homeofpurdue.com/blog/post/things-to-do-before-during-and-after-a-purdue-game/ |access-date=2023-07-18 |website=www.homeofpurdue.com |language=en-us}}{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4jsn3_VEvBsC&pg=PA292 |title=The College Buzz Book |date=March 23, 2006 |publisher=Vault Inc. |isbn=9781581313994 |page=292 |access-date=23 March 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200818180458/https://books.google.com/books?id=4jsn3_VEvBsC&pg=PA292 |archive-date=August 18, 2020 |url-status=live}}

Winners

class="wikitable"

!Year!!Champion(s)

!Team

1958James Moneyhun

Fred Bartlett
Gregory Boman
Ronald Moffett
Kenneth Shull

|Gable Courts

1959Dick Clayton
John Alexander
Robert Elsperman
John Jeffers
Tom Ross

|Sigma Chi

1960John Mullaly

|Chauncey House

1961Tom Ellis

|Phi Delta Theta

1962Jon Mickley
Bert Rosendahl
Bob Whiting
Jerry Williams
Tom Williams

|H-1 SE Resident Hall

1963Edward McDonald

|Sigma Phi Epsilon

1964Robert Booty

|Alpha Sigma Phi

1965Jim Feutsel

|Flying Vegetables

1966George Taylor

|The Photon

1967Al Brittingham

|Kappa Delta Rho

1968Al Brittingham

|Kappa Delta Rho

1969Gary Van der Heide

|Sigma Chi

1970James Fry

|Acacia

1971George Kozak

|Wiley

1972Mike Goodson

|Alpha Eta Rho

1973Charles Workman, Jr.

|Sigma Phi Epsilon

1974Wayne Gerhart

|Alpha Tau Omega

1975Mike Brennan

|Kappa Sigma

1976Chuck Sprague

|Tarkington

1977Dave Jones

|Beta Theta Pi

1978

|Robert Keagy

|Sigma Chi

1979

|Dave Fleek

|Phi Sigma Kappa

1980

|Brian Grant

|Tarkington

1981

|David Fuhrman

|FuBaR

1982

|John Brenan

|Alpha Chi Rho

1983

|John Shumaker

|Alpha Sigma Phi

1984

|Curtis Chariton

|

1985

|Doug Wright

|Pi Kappa Alpha

1986

|Bob Pitzer

|Cary/Meredith

1987

|Dave Skelton

|Pi Kappa Phi

1988

|Steve Daughtery

|Tarkington/Windsor

1989

|Tom Smith

|FarmHouse Racing

1990

|Doug Hodgdon

|Alpha Sigma Phi

1991

|Doug Hodgdon

|Alpha Sigma Phi

1992

|Brian Berrisford

|

1993

|Ian Smith

|

1994

|Ian Smith

|

1995

|Ian Smith

|

1996

|Dustin Smith

|

1997

|Joe Troyer

|Delta Theta Sigma

1998

|Kyle Smith

|

1999

|Tom Gray

|Theta Chi

2000

|James Weida

|

2001

|Tom Gray

|Theta Chi

2002

|Timothy O'Brien

|Wiley

2003

|Timothy O'Brien

|Wiley Hall Excalibur Club Racing No. 2

2004

|Clayton Smith

|Team Smith

2005

|Timothy O'Brien

|

2006

|Clayton Smith

|Team Smith

2007

|Liz Lehmann

|PMA

2008

|Jon Laski

|IUPUI Motorsports No. 1

2009

|Travis Iles

|Sigma Chi

2010

|Justin Penix

|IUPUI Motorsports No. 1

2011

|Justin Penix

|IUPUI Motorsports No. 1

2012

|Blake Deister

|IUPUI MKP Racing

2013

|Jimmy Simpson

|Electric Vehicle Club

2014

|Jimmy Simpson

|Delts Racing (Delta Tau Delta fraternity)

2015

|Jimmy Simpson

|Delts Racing

2016

|Jimmy Simpson

|Delts Racing

2017

|Kyle Tilley

|Cary Club Racing No. 1

2018

|Jared Thomas

|IUPUI Motorsports No. 2

2019

|Brenden Johnson

|IUPUI Motorsports No. 4https://www.jconline.com/story/news/2019/04/13/iupuis-brenden-johnson-wins-62nd-purdue-grand-prix/3435231002/

2020

| colspan="2" |Cancelled due to COVID-19

2021

|Jacob Peddycord

|Harrison Hall Cavalier Club Racing

2022

|Alexander Kardashian

|Jimmy Simpson Racing

2023

|Michael Cruz

|Cruz Control Racing

2024

|Aidan Fox

|Kappa Sigma

2025

|Raif Shah

|Kappa Sigma

Trivia

  • Ian Smith and Jimmy Simpson are the only drivers to win the Grand Prix in three consecutive years. Smith, Simpson, and Timothy O'Brien are the only drivers to win the race three times. Simpson is the only driver to win the race 4 times.
  • Five members of the Smith family (Tom Smith, Ian Smith, Dustin Smith, Kyle Smith, and Clayton Smith) have combined to win eight Grand Prix races.
  • Liz Lehmann, the 2007 champion, is the first and only female driver to win as of 2023. The 2007 race was her third try. She finished 4th in 2006 and 3rd in 2008.
  • Many IUPUI students have participated in the Purdue Grand Prix. The first entrant was John Steger in 1976.
  • Phi Sigma Rho was the first sorority to participate, starting in the 1990s.

This Year

This year the race was held on April 26, 2025 at the Purdue Grand Prix Track on Cheery Lane. More information can be found on the Purdue Grand Prix Foundation [https://www.purduegrandprix.org/ website].

See also

Notes

{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}

References

{{Reflist}}