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Simon Pagenaud


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Simon Pagenaud
Pagenaud during the Indycar Long Beach Grand Prix 2021
French
Simon Pierre Michel Pagenaud (1984-05-18) 18 May 1984Montmorillon, France
193 races run over 13 years
28th
1st (2016)
2011 Indy Grand Prix of Alabama (Barber)
2023 Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America (Elkhart Lake)
2013 Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix, Race 2 (Belle Isle)
2020 Iowa IndyCar 250s, Race 1 (Iowa)
Wins
Podiums
Poles

15 38 13 | 15 | 38 | 13 | | 15 | 38 | 13 | | | 14 races run over 1 year | | | | | 2007 | | | | | Team Australia | | | | | 8th (2007) | | | | | 2007 Vegas Grand Prix (Las Vegas) | | | | | 2007 Gran Premio Tecate (Mexico City) | | | | | Wins Podiums Poles

0 0 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | 0 | 0 | 0 | | | | | | | | 2008–2011 | | | | | Team Oreca-Matmut, Pescarolo Sport, Peugeot Sport | | | | | 2nd (2011) | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | FIA Platinum | | | | | United SportsCar ChampionshipIntercontinental Le Mans CupLe Mans SeriesAmerican Le Mans SeriesChamp CarAtlantic ChampionshipFormula Renault 3.5 SeriesFormula Renault 2000 EurocupFrench Formula Renault | | | | | IndyCar SeriesAmerican Le Mans Series (LMP1)Atlantic Championship | | | | | IndyCar Rookie of the Year | | | | | | | | |

Simon Pierre Michel Pagenaud (.mw-parser-output .IPA-label-small{font-size:85%}.mw-parser-output .references .IPA-label-small,.mw-parser-output .infobox .IPA-label-small,.mw-parser-output .navbox .IPA-label-small{font-size:100%}French pronunciation: [pa.ʒe.no]; born 18 May 1984) is a French former professional racing driver, who last drove the No. 60 Honda for Meyer Shank Racing in the NTT IndyCar Series. After a successful career in sports car racing that saw him taking the top class championship title in the 2010 American Le Mans Series, he moved to the Indycar Series where he became the 2016 IndyCar champion and the 2019 Indianapolis 500 winner, becoming the first driver born in France to win the Indianapolis 500 since Gaston Chevrolet in 1920 and the first polesitter to have won the race since Helio Castroneves in 2009.

Pagenaud won both the 2022 24 Hours of Daytona and 2023 24 Hours of Daytona with Meyer Shank Racing.

Born in Montmorillon, Pagenaud first worked at the age of fourteen in the family's supermarket, eventually managing the video game department. After he attended business school, he returned to the supermarket. His family established a driving school that provided the funds for Pagenaud to begin his racing career.

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This section needs expansion. You can help by adding missing information. (August 2025)

Pagenaud competed in 2002 and 2003 in French Formula Renault, and in 2002 and 2004 competed in Formula Renault Eurocup. He then moved up to the Formula Renault 3.5 Series in 2005 where he finished sixteenth. In 2006, he went to the United States and won the Champ Car Atlantic with Team Australia in his rookie season by just a few points over Graham Rahal.

With his Atlantic championship, Pagenaud won US$2 million to apply towards a ride in Champ Car in 2007. On 13 February 2007, Pagenaud and Team Australia confirmed that he would be staying with the team, moving up to the Champ Car program. Pagenaud finished eighth in the points standings in what was a very consistent debut season, with three consecutive fourth-place finishes in the Canadian rounds of the championship.

After the demise of the Champ Car World Series, Pagenaud in 2008 moved to the American Le Mans Series co-driving the De Ferran Motorsports Acura ARX-01b LMP2 with former CART champion Gil de Ferran. He finished 14th in the driver's standings.

In 2009, Pagenaud and de Ferran Motorsports took huge steps forward, with the duo taking second place overall in the American Le Mans Series LMP1 class, only 17 points behind drivers David Brabham and Scott Sharp of champions Highcroft Racing. The duo of Pagenaud and de Ferran drove the ARX-01 to three wins over a total of ten races and three pole positions, turning the fastest lap of the ALMS weekend six times.

Also during 2009, Pagenaud drove in the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans in LMP1 for the privateer Pescarolo Sport team in the Peugeot FAP 908. The team did not finish the race, completing 210 laps. The race was won by David Brabham, driving in the factory Peugeot Sport Total No. 9 FAP 908 along with former Formula One drivers Alexander Wurz and Marc Gené.

For the 2010 ALMS season, Pagenaud moved over to the Patrón Highcroft racing team, replacing Sharp to co-drive with Brabham in the ARX-01c in LMP1 after Sharp vacated the seat to jump to the ALMS GT2 class with his own Ferrari team. Through four rounds in the 2010 ALMS series, the team of Pagenaud and Brabham lead the LMP1 class with three wins and 91 points.

Pagenaud also earned a seat driving for the Peugeot factory team in 2010 in the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans on the renown Circuit de la Sarthe in the Peugeot FAP 908 No. 3 with Pedro Lamy and Sébastien Bourdais.

While the No. 3 Peugeot started from pole, it retired early before nightfall after a mere 38 laps when a suspension mount sheared from the car's tub. The same fate eventually befell the No. 1 Peugeot car of Anthony Davidson/Gene/Wurz while in second place with mere hours left to go in the race, as Audi reclaimed the 24 Hours of Le Mans title it had retained for five years before Peugeot's 2009 win.

During the race, Pagenaud found himself competing against his Highcroft Racing team which traveled to Le Mans for the first time in its history. With Brabham driving the Acura in LMP2 alongside Marino Franchitti and Marco Werner, Highcroft maintained second through most of the race until a cooling issue sidelined the car for much of the race's final four hours.

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Pagenaud won the inaugural Grand Prix of Indianapolis on 10 May. This was the first time his father watched him race at the venue.

Pagenaud during practice at the 2015 GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma

Pagenaud moved from Schmidt Peterson Motorsports to Team Penske in 2015. Pagenaud nearly won the 2015 Indianapolis 500, leading with less than thirty laps to go and engaging most of the race in a three-way battle between Scott Dixon and Tony Kanaan. Pagenaud ended up being overtaken by the field and went on to finish tenth, while teammate Juan Pablo Montoya won the race. Pagenaud did not win a race in 2015 but renewed his deal with TEAM Penske in 2016.

Pagenaud got off to the best start of his IndyCar career with five consecutive podiums, including three wins in a row. As the season progressed, Pagenaud and his teammate Will Power became the primary contenders for the championship. With a strong run at the end of the season, Pagenaud took his first IndyCar Series championship victory, giving Team Penske another championship victory in its fiftieth year of racing. He finished the season with five race victories and a total of eight podiums.

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This section needs expansion. You can help by adding missing information. (July 2019)

President Donald Trump congratulating Pagenaud for his Indy 500 win at a ceremony at the White House in 2019.

Pagenaud would go winless throughout 2018. Pagenaud won the Grand Prix of Indianapolis and he would also win the 2019 Indianapolis 500 from pole position, the first Frenchman to do so in 99 years. Pagenaud took the championship lead from Team Penske teammate Josef Newgarden, however Newgarden would retake the championship lead one race later in Detroit. Pagenaud would take pole and the win at the 2019 Honda Indy Toronto and took pole at the 2019 Iowa 300, though the win would go to Newgarden. Pagenaud eventually finished the 2019 season in second position.

During the 2020 iRacing virtual Indy 500 event, Pagenaud was accused of deliberately crashing into lead driver Lando Norris, which led to him being accused of bad sportsmanship.

Pagenaud finished second in the first race of the 2020 season at Texas Motor Speedway. Pagenaud finished third at the IndyGP after starting in twentieth.

Due to a fuel pump issue, Pagenaud's Iowa IndyCar 250 at Iowa Speedway race 1 entry failed to make qualifying and started the race at the back of the grid in 23rd. By lap 178, Pagenaud took the lead and held on to win the 250 lap race. This would prove to be his final win in the IndyCar Series.

Pagenaud would enter 2021 as a contract year. 2021 was a difficult year for Pagenaud and Team Penske in general, as the team only recorded three wins of the season with Pagenaud scoring none of them. Pagenaud's best results of the season were two third-place finishes, one at St. Petersburg and the other at the 2021 Indianapolis 500.

Outside of those finishes, Pagenaud would frequently be beset by poor luck and on-track confrontations with his teammates. He would finish eighth in the drivers' standings for the second year in a row. By the end of the season the racing press reported Pagenaud did not intend to re-sign with Team Penske.

After a difficult 2021 campaign, Pagenaud left the Penske team & joined Meyer Shank Racing alongside former Penske teammate, Hélio Castroneves. Despite an encouraging start to the 2022 season which included a second-place finish at the Indy GP, the No. 60 team gradually lost competitiveness as the season continued, culminating in a fifteenth-place points finish for Pagenaud.

In 2023, Pagenaud returned to the 24 Hours of Le Mans, taking part in the LMP2 class for Cool Racing. It would be the first time Pagenaud competed in the race since 2011, where he finished second overall driving for the Peugeot Sport factory team.

During practice for the 2023 Honda Indy 200 at Mid Ohio, Pagenaud suffered a crash in which his car flipped over several times and he ended up in the gravel. Pagenaud credited IndyCar's aeroscreen for saving his life in the crash. Because of injuries he sustained, Pagenaud was forced to sit out the rest of the season. He was replaced in the No. 60 car by Conor Daly for the Honda Indy 200 and the Iowa doubleheader, Tom Blomqvist for the Honda Indy Toronto, the BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland, and the Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey, and 2022 Indy Lights champion Linus Lundqvist for the Music City Grand Prix, the Gallagher Grand Prix, and the Bommarito Automotive Group 500. Both Blomqvist and Lundqvist made their IndyCar debuts filling in for Pagenaud.

Pagenaud was ultimately dropped from Meyer Shank Racing and replaced by Felix Rosenqvist for the 2024 season. Pagenaud did not return to IndyCar as his injuries from the crash at Mid-Ohio were still lingering and thus prevented him from looking for another seat.

In 2025, it was announced that Pagenaud had joined the Cadillac Formula One Team as a simulator driver.

  • Season still in progress.

(key)

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest race lap)

1 The Las Vegas Indy 300 was abandoned after Dan Wheldon died from injuries sustained in a 15-car crash on lap 11.

YearChassisEngineStartFinishTeam
2012DallaraHonda2316Schmidt–Hamilton HP Motorsports
2013DallaraHonda218Schmidt Peterson Hamilton HP Motorsports
2014DallaraHonda512Schmidt Peterson Hamilton Motorsports
2015DallaraChevrolet310Team Penske
2016DallaraChevrolet819Team Penske
2017DallaraChevrolet2314Team Penske
2018DallaraChevrolet26Team Penske
2019DallaraChevrolet11Team Penske
2020DallaraChevrolet2522Team Penske
2021DallaraChevrolet263Team Penske
2022DallaraHonda168Meyer Shank Racing
2023DallaraHonda2225Meyer Shank Racing
YearTeamCo-driversCarClassLaps.mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}Pos.Classpos.
Team Oreca-MatmutMarcel Fässler Olivier PanisCourage-Oreca LC70-JuddLMP1147DNFDNF
Pescarolo SportJean-Christophe Boullion Benoît TréluyerPeugeot 908 HDi FAPLMP1210DNFDNF
Team Peugeot TotalSébastien Bourdais Pedro LamyPeugeot 908 HDi FAPLMP138DNFDNF
Team Peugeot TotalSébastien Bourdais Pedro LamyPeugeot 908LMP13552nd2nd
Cool RacingReshad de Gerus Vladislav LomkoOreca 07-GibsonLMP2158DNFDNF

1 Driver competed for the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup, no points awarded for the American Le Mans Series.

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

  • Season still in progress.

1 Driver competed for the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup, no points awarded for the Le Mans Series.

1 Driver did not run for the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup.

  • Not Eligible for points
  • Official website
  • IndyCar Driver Page
  • Simon Pagenaud career summary at DriverDB.com
  • Simon Pagenaud driver statistics at Racing-Reference
  • IndyCar 36: Simon Pagenaud – IndyCar documentary
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