The 2014 Indy Lights season was a season of
open wheelmotor racing. It was the 29th season of the
Indy Lights series and the 13th sanctioned by
IndyCar, acting as the primary support series for the
IndyCar Series. It began March 30, 2014 in
St. Petersburg.[1] The 2014 season was the first promoted by Andersen Promotions, who also promotes the other steps on the
Mazda Road to Indy.
It was the final season for the Dallara IPS/Infiniti V8 chassis and engine package that debuted in 2002. A new chassis, to be built by Dallara, will be introduced for 2015[2] along with an
AER turbocharged 4-cylinder engine. 2014 was also the first season with
Cooper Tire as the sole tire supplier, replacing
Firestone who had supplied tires to the series for its entire previous existence.[3]
Early on, the season appeared to be a two-horse race between Chaves and
Andretti Autosport's
Zach Veach. However, a late-season charge by Harvey put him within striking distance of the championship. Harvey did not capture his first win until the tenth race of the season. However, Chaves managed a second-place finish in the final race of the season behind Harvey in first. Chaves and Harvey tied on points and on the first tie-breaker number of wins with four each. Chaves captured the championship by having five second-place finishes to Harvey's one.[4] Despite a season of low car-counts where only eight drivers competed in all 14 races, six different drivers captured victories. In addition to Chaves, Harvey, and Veach, other winners included
Matthew Brabham and
Luiz Razia who each captured their first and only wins of the season on the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course and Belardi's
Alexandre Baron – a race-winner in Toronto – who was in the championship hunt until reported visa issues forced him to leave the series.[5]
Andersen Promotions announced the 2014 Indy Lights schedule on October 24, 2013.[1] The season consisted of 14 races held over 10 race weekends, consisting of three street circuits, three ovals, and four permanent road courses. All race weekends on permanent road courses were double-race weekends. The series returned to
Sonoma Raceway for the first time since 2010. It also raced on the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course for the first time since 2007 in support of the new
Grand Prix of Indianapolis, although the track was in a different configuration than the one raced in 2007. The series did not return to
Iowa Speedway,
Auto Club Speedway, or
Houston despite IndyCar returning to those tracks in 2014 and did not race at the
Baltimore Grand Prix as that race was cancelled for 2014.