Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1994 Indianapolis 500

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
78th running of the Indianapolis 500

78th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning bodyUSAC
Season1994 CART season
DateMay 29, 1994
WinnerUnited StatesAl Unser Jr.
Winning teamPenske Racing
Average speed160.872 mph (258.898 km/h)
Pole positionUnited StatesAl Unser Jr.
Pole speed228.011 mph (366.948 km/h)
Fastest qualifierUnited StatesAl Unser Jr.
Rookie of the YearCanadaJacques Villeneuve
Most laps ledBrazilEmerson Fittipaldi (145)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthemFlorence Henderson
"Back Home Again in Indiana"Jim Nabors
Starting commandMary F. Hulman
Pace carFord Mustang Cobra
Pace car driverParnelli Jones
StarterDuane Sweeney[1]
Estimated attendance400,000[2]
TV in the United States
NetworkABC
AnnouncersHost/Lap-by-lap:Paul Page
Color Analyst:Sam Posey
Color Analyst/Turn 2:Bobby Unser
Color Analyst/Turn 4:Danny Sullivan
Nielsen ratings9.1 / 31
Chronology
PreviousNext
19931995

The78th Indianapolis 500 was held at theIndianapolis Motor Speedway inSpeedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 29, 1994. The race was sanctioned byUnited States Auto Club (USAC), and was included as race number 4 of 16 of the1994 PPG IndyCar World Series. For the second year in a row, weather was not a factor during the month. Only one practice day was lost to rain, and pole day was only partially halted due to scattered showers. Warm, sunny skies greeted race day.Al Unser Jr. won the race from the pole position, his second of two Indy 500 victories (1992, 1994).

Much to the surprise of competitors, media, and fans,Marlboro Team Penske arrived at the Speedway with a brand new, secretly-built[3] 209 in3 (3.42 L)displacementIlmorMercedes-Benzpushrod engine, which was capable of nearly 1,000 horsepower (750 kW).[4] Despite reliability issues with the engine[4] and handling difficulties with the chassis,[5][6] the three-car Penske team (Al Unser Jr.,Emerson Fittipaldi andPaul Tracy) dominated most of the month, and practically the entire race. It marked the second of two Indy 500 victories (as of 2024) by a car powered by aMercedes-Benz engine.

While Al Unser Jr. won the pole position, two-time former winner (1989,1993) Emerson Fittipaldi dominated most of the race, leading 145 (of 200) laps. At one point, he had lapped the entire field. Fittipaldi was seeking his third Indy win and also attempting to become the first back-to-back winner at Indy sinceAl Unser Sr. in 1970–1971. On lap 185, Fittipaldi was leading the race, and was looking to put teammate Al Unser Jr. (who was running second) a lap down. Fittipaldi tagged the wall in turn 4, handing the lead to Unser with 15 laps to go. Unser was able to stretch his fuel and cruise to victory over rookieJacques Villeneuve. Al Unser Jr. joined his father Al Sr. and uncleBobby as winners of multiple 500s at Indianapolis.

The race marked the final Indy 500 forMario Andretti (who retired at the end of the 1994 season) and Emerson Fittipaldi (who failed to qualify for the1995 race and retired two months after the1996 race, which was boycotted byCART). In addition, Indy veterans Al Unser Sr. andJohnny Rutherford both retired in the days leading up to the race.John Andretti, who had leftCART and moved to theNASCARWinston Cup Series, became the first driver to race in both the Indy 500 andCoca-Cola 600 in the same day, an effort that has become known as "Double Duty". This was also the second and final Indy 500 forNigel Mansell, who was knocked out of the race in a bizarre crash withDennis Vitolo.

Background

[edit]

Nigel Mansell went on to win the1993 CART championship, with 1993 Indy 500 winner Emerson Fittipaldi finishing second in points. Mansell returned to team up again with Mario Andretti atNewman Haas. Andretti embarked on a yearlongArrivederci Mario tour, announcing he would retire at the conclusion of the 1994 CART season. The 1994 race would be his 29th and final start at Indy. Fittipaldi remained at Penske Racing, which expanded to a three-car effort for 1994, including Al Unser Jr. and Paul Tracy. Unser parted ways withGalles after a six-year stint, and was replaced there with rookieAdrián Fernández.

After a dismalseason in Formula One,Michael Andretti returned to Indy car racing for 1994, signing withGanassi. Andretti won theseason openingAustralian Grand Prix atSurfers Paradise. It was the first Indy car win for Ganassi, as well as the first win for theReynard chassis (in its Indy car debut).Rahal-Hogan Racing, with driversBobby Rahal andMike Groff, debuted the first Honda Indy car engine, the iron block Honda HRX Indy V-8.

Chevrolet dropped its support of the Ilmor engine program at Indy after 1993. For 1994, the 265C, the 265 C+, and 265D V-8 powerplants were badged the "Ilmor Indy V8".

After Michael Andretti won the season opener, Marlboro Team Penske won the next two races before Indy. Emerson Fittipaldi and Al Unser Jr. finished 1–2 atPhoenix, then Al Unser Jr. won atLong Beach.

Jim Nabors returned to sing the traditional "Back Home Again in Indiana" just months after receiving aliver transplant. Nabors had suffered a near-fatal case of Hepatitis B, which caused liver failure. Initially it was not expected that he would be able to attend the race in person.

Six days before opening day, the worldwide motorsports community was shaken by thedeath ofAyrton Senna atSan Marino. Indy drivers Emerson Fittipaldi,Raul Boesel, andMaurício Gugelmin, were among those in attendance at the funeral, all three serving aspall-bearers.

Mercedes-Benz 500I

[edit]
1994 Penske PC-23 Mercedes-Benz 500I

The most notable off-season activity involved Penske Racing and Ilmor. In the summer and fall of 1993,[5] Penske and Ilmor engaged in a new engine project. Under complete secrecy,[5] a 209 in3 (3.42 L) purpose-built, V-8pushrod engine was developed.[4]Mercedes eventually came on board with the project and badged the engine theMercedes-Benz 500I. The engine was designed to exploit a perceived loophole that had existed in USAC's rulebook since 1991.[5] WhileCART sanctioned the rest of the IndyCar season, the Indianapolis 500 alone was conducted byUSAC under slightly different technical regulations.

In an effort to appeal to mainstream car companies and smaller independent engine builders (both primarily based in the U.S.), USAC permitted traditional, "stock block"pushrod engines (generally defined as production-based,non-overhead cam units fitted with two valves per cylinder actuated bypushrod androcker arm). Stock blocks saw some limited use at Indy in the early 1980s but by1985 had become mainstream with theBuick V-6. Attempting to create an equivalency formula with the more conventional, 32-valve,dual overhead cam V-8 engines (commonly referred to as the "quadcams"), USAC allowed the stock blocks increased displacement, as well as increasedturbocharger boost of 55inHG instead of 45 (1860 hPa instead of 1520). This rule made theBuick V-6 (and its successor theMenard V-6) attractive to the smaller, "Indy-only" teams, that could not acquire or afford theDOHC V-8 powerplants such as theChevy-Ilmor or theFord-Cosworth XB.[5]CART also allowed the "stock block" engines. However, they did not permit them to use the increased turbo boost, rendering them uncompetitive. Thus theBuick V-6 was rarely used in CART races.

Initially, stockblocks at Indy were required to have somefactory production-based parts. For instance, the aforementionedBuick was based on theBuick V-6 passenger car engine. However, in 1991 USAC quietly lifted this requirement allowing purpose-built pushrod engines to be designed for racing from the ground up. USAC allowed these pushrod engines an increased displacement of 209.3 cubic inches (3.430 L) instead of 161.7 cubic inches (2.650 L),[4] and the same increased turbocharger boost of 55inHG allowed by the V-6 stock blocks.[4]PrivateerGreenfield Racing built one of the first pushrod engines to these new specifications. However, that engine never got up to speed during practice, and never made a qualifying attempt.

Team Penske andIlmor tested and further developed their pushrod engine in complete secrecy during the fall of 1993 and into the spring of 1994. The team went so far as plowing several feet of snow off ofNazareth Speedway (a track which was owned byRoger Penske at the time) for a private test. The team was in such desperate need of on-track reliability testing, they conducted the session despite frigid temperatures, tall snow banks on the sides of the track, and the engine sounds in the earshot of rivalMario andMichael Andretti's homes.[7]

Before Mercedes-Benz joined the effort, the engine was initially called the "Ilmor 265-E" which followed Ilmor's standard naming convention for their previousDOHC racing engines. This was ostensibly to maintain in-house secrecy of the pushrod project from those working within Penske and at Ilmor who were not involved. Some plans and specification sheets send to parts manufacturers were even labeled "Pontiac" - an attempt to divert suspicion by third-party parts manufacturers by attributing and implying the orders were forPenske South Racing, theirNASCAR unit. During testing, driverEmerson Fittipaldi, so impressed by its raw power, nicknamed the engine the "Beast", a moniker which became synonymous with the engine.[7][8] The 500I was mated with the race-winning Penske chassis, thePC-23. It was introduced to the public in April, just days before opening day at Indy. Rumors quickly began to circulate that the engine, more refined than theBuick V-6 and having two more cylinders, was capable of over 1,000 hp (750 kW), which was a 150-200 hp advantage over its competition.[5]

Track improvements

[edit]

During the off-season, thepit area was repaved. The individual pit boxes were changed to concrete, while the entrance and exit lanes were widened and repaved in asphalt.

A new scoring pylon was erected on the main stretch, replacing the landmark originally built in 1959.[9][10]

Race schedule

[edit]
Race schedule – April/May 1994
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
24
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
 
29
ROP
30
ROP
1
ROP
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
Mini-Marathon
7
Practice
8
Practice
9
Practice
10
Practice
11
Practice
12
Practice
13
Practice
14
Time Trials
15
Time Trials
16
Practice
17
Practice
18
Practice
19
Practice
20
Practice
21
Time Trials
22
Bump Day
23
 
24
 
25
 
26
Carb Day
27
 
28
Parade
29
Indy 500
30
Memorial Day
31
 
    
ColorNotes
GreenPractice
Dark BlueTime trials
SilverRace day
RedRained out*
BlankNo track activity

*Includes days where track
activity was significantly
limited due to rain

ROP — denotes Rookie
Orientation Program

Practice – Week 1

[edit]
The new Pylon, which stood from 1994 to 2014.

Saturday May 7 – Opening Day

[edit]

Rain washed out opening day, the first time since 1975.[6]

Sunday May 8

[edit]

Dick Simon Racing cars ofLyn St. James, Raul Boesel,Hiro Matsushita, Dennis Vitolo,Hideshi Matsuda andTero Palmroth were the first cars out on the track, creating a "Flying V" formation.

Paul Tracy took the first laps in the Penske PC-23/Mercedes 500I at 12:34 p.m. Al Unser Jr., however, was testing atMichigan International Speedway, reportedly "working on reliability." Tracy's fastest lap was 220.103 mph.

Bobby Rahal took the first laps at Indy in the Honda, with a fast lap of 219.791 mph.Scott Brayton, in the Menard Buick posted the fastest lap of the day at 227.658 mph.[6]

Monday May 9

[edit]

At 4:45 p.m., Mike Groff's Honda engine failed, which caused the car to spin and crash into the wall in the southchute. He was not seriously injured.

DefendingIndy Lights championBryan Herta, who had started the month withTasman Motorsports, was withdrawn from that entry, and signed withFoyt.

Emerson Fittipaldi (after 'shake down' laps on Sunday) turned in his first fast laps driving the Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I, completed a lap of 226.512 mph. Al Unser Jr. took to the track for the first time in the Mercedes as well. Michael Andretti led the speed chart in the new Reynard, at 227.038 mph.[6]

Tuesday May 10

[edit]

Raul Boesel broke the 230 mph barrier at 5:55 p.m., the first driver to do so since 1992. His lap of 230.403 was the fastest thus far for the month. The Penske-Mercedes was close behind, turning in their best laps of the month. Paul Tracy was second-fastest for the day at 229.961 mph, and Fittipaldi was third at 229.264 mph.[6]

During the afternoon practice, anannular eclipse crossed over the state of Indiana, including the Speedway. Track temperatures cooled, and generally faster laps were observed during the phenomenon.

Wednesday May 11

[edit]

A windy day kept speed down. Al Unser Jr. in a Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I, led the chart at 226.478 mph.[6]

Thursday May 12

[edit]

Emerson Fittipaldi drove his Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I to a lap of 230.438 mph, with a trap speed of 244 mph down the backstretch. Paul Tracy was second-quick at 228.444 mph (244 mph trap speed).[6]

Friday May 13

[edit]

At 3:37 p.m., Paul Tracy spun his Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I in turn 3, hit the outside wall, then crashed into the inside guardrail. He suffered a concussion, and was forced to sit out the first day of time trials.[11]

Emerson Fittipaldi was quickest of the day at 230.138 mph,[6] making him a favorite for the pole position.

Time Trials – Weekend 1

[edit]

Pole day – Saturday May 14

[edit]

A mix of sun and rain showers stretched the qualifying line throughout the afternoon. A short shower delayed the start of qualifying until 12:15 p.m. Rookie Hideshi Matsuda became the first driver in the field, posting a 4-lap average of 222.545 mph.

At 12:50 p.m., Raul Boesel took the provisional pole position with a run of 227.618 mph. Later, Jacques Villeneuve qualified as the fastest rookie, with a speed of 226.259 mph.

At 1:18 p.m., Al Unser Jr. became the first Penske driver to take the track, attempting to qualify one of the three Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I machines. His first lap of 225.722 mph was disappointingly slow, but his speed over the last three laps climbed dramatically. His final four-lap average of 228.011 mph took over the provisional pole position.

Bobby Rahal (220.178 mph) and Mike Groff (218.808 mph) completed slow runs in their Honda-powered machines, and were the slowest two cars of the day.

A second rain shower closed the track from about 2–5 p.m. When qualifying resumed, there was not enough time to complete the entire qualifying line. Among the runs were Lyn St. James (224.154 mph) tentatively putting her 5th fastest, and Al Unser Sr. who waved off after a lap of 214 mph.

The 6 o'clock gun sounded with several drivers still in line, including Mario Andretti and Emerson Fittipaldi. Pole qualifying would be extended into the following day.[6]

Second day – Sunday May 15

[edit]

The pole qualifying line resumed where it left off from the previous day, with Mario Andretti first out. Emerson Fittipaldi was the final car eligible for the pole position, and took his run at 1:18 p.m. His speed of 227.303 mph was not enough to bump his teammate Al Unser Jr. off the pole, but qualified him in third position. The front row was rounded out by Raul Boesel, while Lyn St. James held on to qualify for the outside of the second row, the highest starting position for a female driver to-date.

Official Pole Day qualifiers
Pos.No.DriverTeamChassisEngineSpeed
131United StatesAl Unser Jr. W Team PenskePenskeMercedes-Benz 500I228.011
25BrazilRaul BoeselDick Simon RacingLolaFord XB227.618
32BrazilEmerson Fittipaldi W Team PenskePenskeMercedes-Benz 500I227.303
412CanadaJacques Villeneuve R Forsythe/Green RacingReynardFord XB226.259
58United StatesMichael AndrettiChip Ganassi RacingReynardFord XB226.205
690United StatesLyn St. JamesDick Simon RacingLolaFord XB224.154
71United KingdomNigel MansellNewman/Haas RacingLolaFord XB224.041
828NetherlandsArie Luyendyk W Indy Regency RacingLolaIlmor223.673
96United StatesMario Andretti W Newman/Haas RacingLolaFord XB223.503
1033United StatesJohn AndrettiA. J. Foyt EnterprisesLolaFord XB223.263
1127United StatesEddie CheeverTeam MenardLolaMenard223.163
1217United StatesDominic DobsonPacWest RacingLolaFord XB222.970
1391United StatesStan FoxHemelgarn RacingReynardFord XB222.867
1499JapanHideshi Matsuda R Dick Simon RacingLolaFord XB222.545
1579United StatesDennis Vitolo R Dick Simon RacingLolaFord XB222.439
1618United StatesJimmy VasserHayhoe RacingReynardFord XB222.262
1771United StatesScott Sharp R PacWest RacingLolaFord XB222.091
1822JapanHiro MatsushitaDick Simon RacingLolaFord XB221.382
199United StatesRobby GordonWalker RacingLolaFord XB221.293
2021ColombiaRoberto GuerreroPagan RacingLolaBuick221.278
2119United StatesBrian Till R Payton/Coyne RacingLolaFord XB221.107
2214United StatesBryan Herta R A. J. Foyt EnterprisesLolaFord XB220.992
2388BrazilMaurício GugelminChip Ganassi RacingReynardFord XB220.460
244United StatesBobby Rahal W Rahal-Hogan RacingLolaHonda220.178
2510United StatesMike GroffRahal-Hogan RacingLolaHonda218.808

After his crash Friday, Paul Tracy returned to the track Sunday. Since he sat out time trials on Saturday and missed his spot in line, he was ineligible for the pole position. He qualified as a second-day qualifier, and would line up his Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I 25th on race day. After two wave-offs on Saturday, Scott Brayton finally put his Menard-powered Lola in the field as the fastest qualifier for the second round.[6]

Second Day qualifiers
Pos.No.DriverTeamChassisEngineSpeed
2659United StatesScott BraytonTeam MenardLolaMenard223.652
2711ItalyTeo FabiJim Hall/VDS RacingReynardIlmor223.394
283CanadaPaul TracyTeam PenskePenskeMercedes-Benz 500I222.710
297MexicoAdrian Fernandez R Galles RacingReynardIlmor222.657
3016SwedenStefan JohanssonBettenhausen RacingPenskeIlmor221.518

Practice – Week 2

[edit]

Monday May 16

[edit]

A leisurely day of practice saw only 18 cars take laps. Emerson Fittipaldi, working on race set-ups, ran the best lap at 226.421 mph.Robby Gordon spent time shaking down back-up cars for his teammatesWilly T. Ribbs andMark Smith.[6]

Tuesday May 17

[edit]

Four-time Indy 500 winner Al Unser Sr. officially announced his retirement from driving at a press conference. His son, pole winner Al Unser Jr. was sick, and rested away from the track.

Off the track, Rahal-Hogan Racing announced they had entered into a deal with Team Penske to lease two back-up cars. Driving the new Honda HRX Indy V-8s, Bobby Rahal and Mike Groff were the two slowest cars in the field, and risked being bumped. If Rahal were to not qualify, it would mark the second year in a row. Through a sponsorship connection,Roger Penske offered Rahal and Groff the use of two 1993PC-22/Ilmor V-8 machines (2.65L). Rahal received an Ilmor D engine, while Groff received an Ilmor C+ engine. They were not the Mercedes-Benz 209I power plants, however they were competitive enough to comfortably make the field if needed. Paul Tracy shook down the cars before handing them over to the Rahal team.

Mark Smith (219.947 mph) was the fastest of the non-qualified drivers, and veteranRoberto Moreno took over Al Unser, Sr.'s car, starting a refresher test.[6]

Wednesday May 18

[edit]

Mark Smith (220.324 mph) was again the fastest of the non-qualified drivers. Mike Groff (221.560 mph), driving the 1993 Penske/Ilmor, was already practicing faster than his qualifying speed in the Honda.[6]

Thursday May 19

[edit]

A busy day of practice saw 36 cars complete 1,511 laps.John Paul Jr. (222.058 mph) was the fastest non-qualified car.[6]

Friday May 20

[edit]

The final full day of practice saw 32 cars complete 1,154 laps. John Paul Jr. (221.691 mph) was yet again the fastest non-qualified car.[6]

Time Trials – Weekend 2

[edit]

Third day – Saturday May 21

[edit]

John Paul Jr. was the first car out for the afternoon, and safely put his car into the field. Later,Scott Goodyear completed a run at 220.737 mph. With temperatures in the 80s, the track sat dormant for most of the afternoon. That led to a ceremonial final lap for three time Indianapolis 500 champion Johnny Rutherford, driving the exact same carA. J. Foyt had driven the previous year in his ceremonial final lap.[12]

At 5:37 p.m., Mark Smith (220.683 mph) filled the field to 33 cars.Davy Jones (the teammate to Scott Goodyear atKing Racing) made the field in car #40T at 223.817 mph. Mike Groff and Bobby Rahal, the two slowest cars in the field, saw their Honda-powered machines bumped from the field, and re-qualified in the borrowed Penske-Ilmor cars.[13][14] Both drivers improved their speeds significantly, with Rahal now the seventh-fastest car overall in the field. Both Rahal and Groff were safely in the field, and would avoid missing the race as the team had done in 1993.

The day ended with Scott Goodyear (220.737 mph), driving car #40 for King Racing, on the bubble.[6]Gary Bettenhausen, after lapping in the 223 mph range, crashed during a practice run, damaging the rear end of the car. The team would be forced to make quick repairs overnight in order to be ready to attempt to qualify on Bump Day.

Third Day qualifiers
Pos.No.DriverTeamChassisEngineSpeed
2850United StatesBobby Rahal W Rahal-Hogan RacingPenskeIlmor224.094
2940TUnited StatesDavy JonesKing RacingLolaFord XB223.817
3089BrazilMaurício GugelminChip Ganassi RacingReynardFord XB223.104
3145United StatesJohn Paul Jr.ProFormance MotorsportsLolaIlmor222.500
3252TUnited StatesMike GroffRahal-Hogan RacingPenskeIlmor221.355
3340CanadaScott Goodyear*King RacingLolaFord XB220.737
Not yet qualified
15United StatesMark Smith R Walker RacingLolaFord XB220.683
44FinlandTero PalmrothArizona MotorsportLolaFord XBWaved off
23United StatesBuddy LazierLeader Card RacingLolaIlmorWaved off

*on the bubble

Bump day – Sunday May 22

[edit]

Another hot day (89 degrees) saw the cars stay off the track for most of the afternoon.Marco Greco made the first qualifying attempt at 5:35 p.m. Greco bumped Scott Goodyear (car #40) from the field. The move putBryan Herta (220.992 mph), driving forA. J. Foyt, on the bubble. Herta had practiced in his back-up car at over 223 mph, but the team decided not to withdraw the primary car prematurely. Greco ran out of fuel on his cool down lap and stalled in the warm-up lane in turn four. However, with the clock ticking, officials elected not to waste time towing him back to the pits. Since the car was mostly out of harm's way, he was instructed to sit safely in the machine until after the session was over.

With twenty minutes left in the day,Geoff Brabham was the next driver to make an attempt. His first lap was fast enough to bump Herta, but the second and third laps dropped off, and theMenard team waved off the run.Mark Smith, bumped out at the end of the day on Saturday, was the next car out. With only 15 minutes to go, he was trying to break the "Curse of the Smiths" at the Speedway. On his first lap, however, he wrecked in turn one.

Track crews were able to make a quick clean up, and the track re-opened at 5:52 p.m. Herta was still clinging to the bubble spot, andGary Bettenhausen was now waiting at the front of the qualifying line. The car ofDidier Theys was pulled out of qualifying line, moving Herta (waiting in his backup car) up to second in line. After wrecking his car in practice on Saturday morning, Bettenhausen made it out with 8 minutes remaining for a last-ditch effort to bump his way into the field. He managed two laps at only 218 mph, and waved off.

With less than three minutes left until the 6 o'clock gun, A. J. Foyt pulled Bryan Herta's back-up car out of the qualifying line. That movedWilly T. Ribbs (in aWalker Racing back-up machine) to the front of the line for a long-shot attempt to make the field. Ribbs had not driven any laps in the car, and rolled from the pits with less than two minutes to go. After a lap of 216 mph, then dropping to 212 mph, he waved off and time trials came to a close.

After second-guessing their strategy overnight, the Foyt team ultimately made the right decision and did not withdraw Bryan Herta's car from the field. The hot conditions Sunday worked in their favor, and Herta held on as the 33rd-fastest qualifier. Not since A. J. Foyt was the 32nd-fastest car in the field in1973 had the Foyt team been so close to being bumped and missing the race entirely.

Carburetion Day

[edit]

The final practice session was held Thursday May 26. All 33 qualified cars turned laps, withMario Andretti (223.708 mph) the fastest of the day. No incidents were reported. The field notably completed only 624 laps combined for the two-hour session, with Adrian Fernandez (24 laps) running the most number of laps.

King Racing announced that it was swapping drivers for its two cars.Davy Jones was removed from the #40T entry, and full-time driverScott Goodyear was placed in the car.[15] Jones was put in the #40 car, and was now the first alternate. The move required Goodyear to start the race from the 33rd starting position. The car had qualified for the 29th position (middle of row 10).[16]

Pit Stop Contest

[edit]

The elimination rounds for the 18th annualMiller Genuine DraftPit Stop Contest were held on Thursday May 26. The top three race qualifiers and their respective pit crews were automatically eligible:Al Unser Jr.,Raul Boesel, andEmerson Fittipaldi. However, Fittipaldi's crew declined the invitation.Jacques Villeneuve (who qualified 4th) took that empty spot. Two additional quarterfinal spots would be filled by preliminaries scheduled for May 18–19, for a total of five participants.

On Wednesday May 18, theGalles Racing team made their preliminary run.Adrián Fernández, however, failed to post a time. On Thursday May 19, four additional teams made their preliminary attempts. The results were as follows:Bryan Herta (12.990 seconds),John Paul Jr. (13.420 seconds),Nigel Mansell (stalled engine),John Andretti (stalled engine). Herta and Paul advanced to the quarterfinal bracket.[17]

John Paul Jr. defeatedBryan Herta to reach the semifinals. Paul then faced race pole-sitterAl Unser Jr. in the semifinals. Unser posted a time of 14.636 seconds, but was penalized 10 seconds for running over the air hose, and an additional 5 seconds for a loose wheel. Paul's crew had a clean stop, and advanced to the final round. RookieJacques Villeneuve won the other semifinal match overRaul Boesel. In the final round match, Jacques Villeneuve, led by chief mechanic Kyle Moyer, defeated John Paul Jr., led by chief mechanic Randy Bain.[18][15] Villeneuve became the first rookie driver to win the event sinceMichael Andretti in1984.

QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
         
45John Paul Jr.
(Pro Formance Racing)
15.670
31Al Unser Jr.
(Team Penske)
29.636
45John Paul Jr.
(Pro Formance Racing)
14.517
14Bryan Herta
(A. J. Foyt Enterprises)
21.754
12Jacques Villeneuve
(Forsythe-Green Racing)
12.867
45John Paul Jr.
(Pro Formance Racing)
13.590
12Jacques Villeneuve
(Forsythe-Green Racing)
13.629
5Raul Boesel
(Dick Simon Racing)
15.393

Starting grid

[edit]
RowInsideMiddleOutside
131United StatesAl Unser Jr. W 
Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I
228.011 mph (366.948 km/h)
5BrazilRaul Boesel
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
227.618 mph (366.316 km/h)
2BrazilEmerson Fittipaldi W 
Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I
227.303 mph (365.809 km/h)
212CanadaJacques Villeneuve R 
Reynard 94I/Ford Cosworth XB
226.259 mph (364.129 km/h)
8United StatesMichael Andretti
Reynard 94I/Ford Cosworth XB
226.205 mph (364.042 km/h)
90United StatesLyn St. James
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
224.154 mph (360.741 km/h)
31United KingdomNigel Mansell
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
224.041 mph (360.559 km/h)
28NetherlandsArie Luyendyk W 
Lola T9400/Ilmor D
223.673 mph (359.967 km/h)
6United StatesMario Andretti W 
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
223.503 mph (359.693 km/h)
433United StatesJohn Andretti
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
223.263 mph (359.307 km/h)
27United StatesEddie Cheever Jr.
Lola T9300/Menard V-6
223.163 mph (359.146 km/h)
17United StatesDominic Dobson
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
222.970 mph (358.835 km/h)
591United StatesStan Fox
Reynard 94I/Ford Cosworth XB
222.867 mph (358.670 km/h)
99JapanHideshi Matsuda R 
Lola T9300/Ford Cosworth XB
222.545 mph (358.151 km/h)
79United StatesDennis Vitolo R 
Lola T9300/Ford Cosworth XB
222.439 mph (357.981 km/h)
618United StatesJimmy Vasser
Reynard 94I/Ford Cosworth XB
222.262 mph (357.696 km/h)
71United StatesScott Sharp R 
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
222.091 mph (357.421 km/h)
22JapanHiro Matsushita
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
221.382 mph (356.280 km/h)
79United StatesRobby Gordon
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
221.293 mph (356.137 km/h)
21ColombiaRoberto Guerrero
Lola T9200/Buick V-6
221.278 mph (356.112 km/h)
19United StatesBrian Till R 
Lola T9300/Ford Cosworth XB
221.107 mph (355.837 km/h)
814United StatesBryan Herta R 
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
220.992 mph (355.652 km/h)
59United StatesScott Brayton
Lola T9300/Menard V-6
223.652 mph (359.933 km/h)
11ItalyTeo Fabi
Reynard 94I/Ilmor D
223.394 mph (359.518 km/h)
93CanadaPaul Tracy
Penske PC-23/Mercedes Benz 500I
222.710 mph (358.417 km/h)
7MexicoAdrian Fernandez R 
Reynard 94I/Ilmor D
222.657 mph (358.332 km/h)
16SwedenStefan Johansson
Penske PC-22/Ilmor D
221.518 mph (356.499 km/h)
104United StatesBobby Rahal W 
Penske PC-22/Ilmor D
224.094 mph (360.644 km/h)
88BrazilMauricio Gugelmin R 
Reynard 94I/Ford Cosworth XB
223.104 mph (359.051 km/h)
45United StatesJohn Paul Jr.
Lola T9300/Ilmor C
222.500 mph (358.079 km/h)
1110United StatesMike Groff
Penske PC-22/Ilmor C+
221.355 mph (356.236 km/h)
25BrazilMarco Greco R 
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
221.216 mph (356.013 km/h)
40CanadaScott Goodyear
Lola T9400/Ford Cosworth XB
223.817 mph (360.199 km/h)

† Scott Goodyear and Davy Jones were teammates for King Racing. Goodyear was the full-time primary driver, and Jones (who had incidentally left Foyt before start of the month) the second team driver. At the close of qualifying, Jones had qualified 29th (the overall 9th-fastest car in the field), but Goodyear was bumped. As a gesture to the team and sponsor requests, Goodyear took Jones' place behind the wheel on race day. The driver switch required the car to be moved to the rear of the field. The move mirrored a nearly identical situation for Goodyear in the1992 race.

Alternates

[edit]

Failed to qualify

[edit]
DriverCar #ChassisEngineEntrantReason
United StatesJeff Andretti94Lola T9200Buick V-6Hemelgarn Racing
CanadaRoss Bentley R 39Lola T9300Ford-Cosworth XBDale Coyne Racing
United StatesGary Bettenhausen61Penske PC-22Ilmor CBettenhausen RacingWaved off, too slow
AustraliaGeoff Brabham59Lola T9300Menard V-6Team MenardWaved off, too slow
United StatesPancho Carter30Lola T9300Ilmor CMcCormack Motorsports
United KingdomJim Crawford74Lola T9100Buick V-6Riley & Scott
SwedenFredrik Ekblom R 35Lola T9300Ilmor CMcCormack MotorsportsPassed rookie orientation
United StatesMichael Greenfield R 42Lola T9300Greenfield V-8Greenfield RacingDid not finish rookie orientation
FranceStéphan Grégoire30Lola T9300Ilmor CMcCormack Motorsports
United StatesDavy Jones40Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBKing RacingReplaced byScott Goodyear
14Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBA. J. Foyt EnterprisesReplaced byBryan Herta
United StatesBuddy Lazier23Lola T9300Ilmor CLeader Card
94Lola T9200Buick V-6Hemelgarn Racing
BrazilRoberto Moreno44Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBArizona Motor-Sport
FinlandTero Palmroth44Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBArizona Motor-Sport
79Lola T9300Ford-Cosworth XBDick Simon Racing
United StatesJohnny Parsons42Lola T9300Greenfield V-8Greenfield Racing
United StatesWilly T. Ribbs9Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBWalker RacingDrove #24 instead
24Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBWalker RacingWaved off, too slow
United StatesJohnny Rutherford W 14Lola T9300Ford-Cosworth XBA. J. Foyt EnterprisesRetired
United StatesMark Smith R 15Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBWalker RacingBumped, crashed trying to re-bump back into field
United StatesAl Unser Sr. W 44Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XBArizona Motor-SportRetired

 R  = Indianapolis 500 rookie
 W  = Former Indianapolis 500 winner

Race summary

[edit]

Pre race

[edit]

Hours before the start, Al Unser Sr. took a ceremonial final lap of the track in an IndyCar, the same car he won the1987 Indianapolis 500 with.[19]General Chuck Yeager lead the flyover in a P-51 Mustang.

Start

[edit]
Emerson Fittipaldi dominated the 1994 Indianapolis 500 until his crash on lap 185

Clear blue skies dawned on race day, with temperatures in the mid-70s. The command to start engines was made on-time at 10:52 a.m. EST, and the field pulled away for the pace laps. Pole-sitter Al Unser Jr. led fellow front-row starters Emerson Fittipaldi and Raul Boesel.

As the field came around for the start, Penske teammates Unser and Fittipaldi, driving the Mercedes-powered entries, took off out of turn four. They weaved down the frontstretch single-file, blocking, and leaving behind Boesel and the rest of the field behind. USAC officials decided not to wave off the start, and Unser led into turn one. It quickly became evident to competitors and media that the Penske-Mercedes machines were the class of the field, as many had predicted.

On lap 6, Dennis Vitolo spun coming out of turn four, but made no contact. Vitolo was able to continue, but the incident brought out the first caution of the day.

First half

[edit]

On lap 20,Roberto Guerrero crashed in turn two, bringing out the second caution of the race. On lap 23, the leader made their first scheduled pit stops. Mario Andrettidropped out early from his final "500" with ignition problems. Leader Al Unser Jr. stalled exiting the pits (a concern going into the race for the Mercedes) and Emerson Fittipaldi took over the lead for the first time.

The yellow came back out again when Mike Groff andDominic Dobson touched wheels and crashed in Turn 1. In the melee, Adrian Fernandez hit a piece of debris and damaged his rear suspension. Lyn St. James clipped the rear wheel of Scott Goodyear, and both cars limped back to the pits. Fernandez and Goodyear would drop out, and after a lengthy pit stop for repairs, St. James was able to get back out on the track. On the ensuing restart, Michael Andretti suffered a puncture, and was forced to pit for new tires. He stalled the car leaving the pits, and subsequently went a lap down.Eddie Cheever and Nigel Mansell were both given black flags for passing Raul Boesel prior to the restart, forcing both to serve as stop-and-go penalty in the pits.

By lap 85, Fittipaldi had stretched his lead to 24.6 seconds over second-place Unser. Rookie Jacques Villeneuve was a lap down, running as high as third.

On Lap 92 Hideshi Matsuda crashed in Turn 2. Under the yellow, John Paul Jr. then spun and crashed in turn 3. As the field was circulating through turn three warm-up lane behind the pace car, Dennis Vitolo was barreling down the backstretch trying to catch up with the field. He misjudged the speed of the field, and approached the line of cars too fast. He ran into the back of John Andretti's car, touched wheels with him, and spun forward in a clockwise rotation.[20] The back of the car then rammed the back of Nigel Mansell's car, and climbed up it sideways. Al Unser Jr., among others, narrowly escaped the incident. Vitolo was found on top of Mansell, and the cars were sideways in the infield grass. Hot coolant and oil began to leak from Vitolo's car, and dripped into Mansell's cockpit. Mansell scurried out of the car and was tackled to the ground by corner workers in an effort to put out any fire. Mansell later stormed out of the infield medical care center, angrily refusing treatment. Vitolo admitted blame for the incident.

At the halfway point, Unser (23) and Fittipaldi (75) combined to lead 98 of the first 100 laps. The third Penske entry driven by Paul Tracy, however, began smoking during the lap 92 yellow and dropped out with turbocharger failure.

Second half

[edit]
Al Unser Jr. leads Raul Boesel during the race

Early contenders Raul Boesel (overheating) and Scott Brayton (spark plug) both dropped out in the second half. Fittipaldi continued to dominate, pulling away at will. On Lap 121 he set the fastest lap of the race at 40.783 seconds, equaling 220.68 mph (355.15 km/h).

During a round of pit stops by Fittipaldi and Unser, rookie Jacques Villeneuve led five laps (125–129) before pitting himself. On lap 133, Fittipaldi was forced to return to the pits to remove a plastic bag from his radiator inlet.

A long stretch of green flag racing followed. Fittipaldi quickly caught Unser and extended his lead. By lap 157, they were the only two cars on the lead lap.

Finish

[edit]

With less than 25 laps to go, Fittipaldi led Unser by almost 40 seconds. Third place Villeneuve was over a lap down. Fittipaldi was in need of one more splash-and-go pit stop for fuel before the race was over. Unser's crew, however, believed that they could make it to the finish without another pit stop, especially if there were to be a late yellow. With 20 laps to go, Fittipaldi put Unser a lap down, and was now a lap ahead of the entire field.

Fittipaldi's crew scheduled a "timed" splash-and-go, fuel-only pit stop for lap 194. Jockeying for position, Unser managed to un-lap himself on lap 183. Two laps later, Unser was just ahead of Fittipaldi as they approached turn four. Fittipaldi admitted a driver error as he drove over the inside rumble strips causing the rear tires to lose grip. Fittipaldi's car slidloose, and the right rear wheel tagged the outside wall exiting turn four. After leading 145 laps, Fittipaldi's crashed car slid to a stop down the mainstretch. The crash handed Unser the lead of the race with less than 16 laps to go. Rookie Jacques Villeneuve was now in second place, running at the tail end of the lead lap.

Arie Luyendyk blew an engine during the caution for Fittipaldi's crash. Unser was leading, but lost use of his two-way radio, and the team was increasingly concerned about his fuel mileage. The green came out with ten laps to go. Unser held a comfortable lead over Villeneuve, who was mired deep in traffic.

On Lap 196,Stan Fox, who was running in the top ten, crashed in turn one. The caution came out for clean-up, and erased any doubts about Unser's fuel mileage. Unser ended up winning the race under yellow. Unser won his second Indy 500, and the Penske-Mercedes 500I pushrod engine won in its first and only race. The win came on his father's 55th birthday, twenty-three years to the day after Unser Sr. won his second Indy 500. Villeneuve held on to finish second and won therookie of the year award.

Michael Andretti finished third on the track, but officials ruled that he passed cars illegally under caution on lap 190. Officials were about to put out the black flag and issue Andretti a stop-and-go penalty, but the subsequent caution that came out forStan Fox's crash prevented them for being able to do so. Since the race ended up finishing under yellow, USAC instead issued Andretti a 1-lap penalty for the infraction. He dropped from 3rd to 6th in the final standings.[21] The ruling elevatedBobby Rahal to third place. Rahal had charged from the 28th starting position to finish third in the borrowed 1993 Penske-Ilmor machine.

John Andretti finished 10th, then flew toCharlotte Motor Speedway to compete in the Coca-Cola 600. He was the first driver to do "Double Duty", competing in both races on the same day.

Box score

[edit]
FinishStartNoNameQualChassisEngineLapsStatusEntrantPoints
1131United StatesAl Unser Jr. W 228.011Penske PC-23IlmorMercedes-Benz 500I200160.872 mphTeam Penske21
2412CanadaJacques Villeneuve R 226.259Reynard 94IFord-Cosworth XB200+8.600 secondsForsythe/Green Racing16
3284United StatesBobby Rahal W 224.094Penske PC-22Ilmor D199RunningRahal/Hogan Racing14
41618United StatesJimmy Vasser222.262Reynard 94IFord-Cosworth XB199RunningHayhoe Racing12
5199United StatesRobby Gordon221.293Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB199RunningWalker Racing10
658United StatesMichael Andretti226.205Reynard 94IFord-Cosworth XB198RunningChip Ganassi Racing8
72411ItalyTeo Fabi223.394Reynard 94IIlmor D198RunningJim Hall Racing6
81127United StatesEddie Cheever223.163Lola T9300Menard V-6197RunningTeam Menard5
92214United StatesBryan Herta R 220.992Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB197RunningA. J. Foyt Enterprises4
101033United StatesJohn Andretti223.263Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB196RunningA. J. Foyt Enterprises3
112988BrazilMaurício Gugelmin R 223.104Reynard 94IFord-Cosworth XB196RunningChip Ganassi Racing2
122119United StatesBrian Till R 221.107Lola T9300Ford-Cosworth XB194RunningDale Coyne Racing1
131391United StatesStan Fox222.867Reynard 94IFord-Cosworth XB193Crash T1Hemelgarn Racing
141822JapanHiro Matsushita221.382Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB193RunningDick Simon Racing
152716SwedenStefan Johansson221.518Penske PC-22Ilmor D192RunningBettenhausen Racing
161771United StatesScott Sharp R 222.091Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB186RunningPacWest Racing
1732BrazilEmerson Fittipaldi W 227.303Penske PC-23IlmorMercedes-Benz 500I184Crash T4Team Penske1
18828NetherlandsArie Luyendyk W 223.673Lola T9400Ilmor D179EngineIndy Regency Racing
19690United StatesLyn St. James224.154Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB170RunningDick Simon Racing
202359United StatesScott Brayton223.652Lola T9300Menard V-6116EngineTeam Menard
2125BrazilRaul Boesel227.618Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB100Water PumpDick Simon Racing
2271United KingdomNigel Mansell224.041Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB92Accident T3Newman/Haas Racing
23253CanadaPaul Tracy222.710Penske PC-23IlmorMercedes-Benz 500I92TurboTeam Penske
241499JapanHideshi Matsuda R 222.545Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB90Accident T1Beck Motorsports
253045United StatesJohn Paul Jr.222.500Lola T9300Ilmor C89Accident T3ProFormance Racing
261579United StatesDennis Vitolo R 222.439Lola T9300Ford-Cosworth XB89Accident T3Dick Simon Racing
273225BrazilMarco Greco R 221.216Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB53ElectricalDick Simon Racing
28267MexicoAdrian Fernández R 222.657Reynard 94IIlmor D30SuspensionGalles Racing
291217United StatesDominic Dobson222.970Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB29Accident T1PacWest Racing
303340CanadaScott Goodyear223.817Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB29SuspensionKing Racing
313110United StatesMike Groff221.355Penske PC-22Ilmor C+28Accident T1Rahal/Hogan Racing
3296United StatesMario Andretti W 223.503Lola T9400Ford-Cosworth XB23Fuel SystemNewman/Haas Racing
332021ColombiaRoberto Guerrero221.278Lola T9200Buick V-620Accident T1Pagan Racing

 W  Former Indianapolis 500 winner

 R  Indianapolis 500 Rookie

All cars utilizedGoodyear tires.

Race statistics

[edit]
Lap Leaders
LapsLeader
1–23Al Unser Jr.
24–61Emerson Fittipaldi
62–63Jacques Villeneuve
64–124Emerson Fittipaldi
125–129Jacques Villeneuve
130–133Emerson Fittipaldi
134–138Al Unser Jr.
139–164Emerson Fittipaldi
165–168Al Unser Jr.
169–184Emerson Fittipaldi
185–200Al Unser Jr.
Total laps led
DriverLaps
Emerson Fittipaldi145
Al Unser Jr.48
Jacques Villeneuve7
Cautions: 7 for 43 laps
LapsReason
7–9Dennis Vitolo spin in turn 4
21–27Roberto Guerrero crash in turn 2
30–40Dominic Dobson,Mike Groff crash in turn 1
92–100Hideshi Matsuda crash in turn 1
John Paul Jr. crash in turn 3
Dennis Vitolo,Nigel Mansell crash in turn 3 warm up lane
137–139Debris
185–190Emerson Fittipaldi crash in turn 4
197–200Stan Fox crash in turn 1

Post race

[edit]

Almost immediately after the race, both USAC and CART separately evaluated the situation that stemmed from the Mercedes-Benz 500I. USAC was initially willing to allow the pushrod engines in 1995, but were concerned about the potential for escalating costs. CART, as it had previously, refused to allow the engine increased boost at the events they sanctioned, effectively rendering it uncompetitive at those races.

Two weeks after the race, USAC announced that for 1995, the 209 cid purpose-built pushrod engines would be allowed 52inHG of "boost" (down from 55 inHG).[22] The traditional "stock block" production-based engines (e.g., Buick & Menard) would still be allowed 55 inHG. Meanwhile, the overhead cam 2.65L V-8 engines would stay at 45 inches. Other engine manufacturers, includingCosworth and Menard were considering 209 pushrod engines (Ilmor Engineering had already taken 30 customer orders for 500i engines for the 1995 race), and it became possible that to be competitive on the CART circuit, teams might require two separate engines for the season—a 2.65LOHC for the CART-sanctioned events, and a pushrod engine for Indianapolis singly—a daunting task which was expected to escalate costs.

During the summer of 1994,Tony George announced his plans to start theIndy Racing League in 1996,[23] with an emphasis on cost-saving measures. On August 11, 1994, USAC changed its decision, and scaled back the boost for the purpose-built pushrod engines further to 48 inches; and outlawing it outright for1996.[24] The move was considered by Roger Penske as "politically motivated", and ultimately set back the Penske Team going into 1995. Observers negatively compared the radical rules change to way USAC handled theGranatelliTurbine in the late 1960s.

After the rules change, the 209-cid Mercedes-Benz 500I never raced again, but boasted a perfect 100%pole position andrace winning record atIndianapolis, its only start in professional competition.

Despite reverting to the Ilmor D powerplant for the remainder of the 1994 CART season, Marlboro Team Penske continued to dominate. The three Penske drivers won 12 (of 16) races, including five 1-2-3 finishes. Penske swept the top three in the final championship points standings, with Al Unser Jr. winning the championship, Fittipaldi second, and Tracy third.

The 1994 Indy 500 would prove to be the final victory for a Penske-manufactured chassis at the Speedway. The following year, the 1995-spec Penske chassis, thePC-24, proved to be noncompetitive in time trials (despite a promising test in mid-April 1995). The team failed to qualify with it or theLola and Reynard chassis that were borrowed from other teams as alternates. By the time the team returned to the race in2001, in-house chassis manufacturing had ended in favor of using customer chassis.

Only 69 days after the race, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway ushered in a new era, hosting theInaugural running of theBrickyard 400.

Broadcasting

[edit]

Radio

[edit]

The race was carried live on theIMS Radio Network.Bob Jenkins served as chief announcer for the fifth year. Johnny Rutherford, who retired as a driver during the month, returned to serve as "driver expert". HistorianDonald Davidson celebrated his 30th year on the broadcast.

The on-air crew returned intact for 1994, which marked the fourth consecutive year the crew has remained nearly exactly the same (1991–1994). This was the last year for pit reporters Brian Hammons and Chris McClure. This was also Gary Lee's last year in Turn 2.

The broadcast was carried on hundreds of affiliates in all 50 states of the U.S., as well asAFN andWorld Harvest Radio International, reaching all continents including Antarctica. The broadcast was heard in the UK onAutosport Racing Line.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer:Bob Jenkins
Driver expert:Johnny Rutherford
Statistician: Howdy Bell
Historian:Donald Davidson

Turn 1:Jerry Baker
Turn 2: Gary Lee
Turn 3: Larry Henry
Turn 4:Bob Lamey

Bob Forbes (north pits)
Brian Hammons (north-center pits)
Sally Larvick (south-center pits)
Chris McClure (south pits)
Chuck Marlowe (garages/hospital)

Television

[edit]

The race was carried live flag-to-flag coverage in the United States onABC Sports.Paul Page served as host and play-by-play announcer. Newcomer and former Indy winnerDanny Sullivan joinedBobby Unser andSam Posey as color commentators. Sullivan, who tentatively retired from IndyCar racing in 1994, began dabbling in NASCAR as well as broadcasting. Sullivan took the turn four reporting location, while Bobby Unser reported from turn two. Posey remained in the booth with Page.

With the addition of Sullivan, the same crew from 1990 to 1993 returned. This was the first 500 broadcast to feature a "Score bug". A transparent digit was located on the upper right corner of the screen which counted down the number of laps remaining in the race. Newon-board camera angles debuted, including a rear-wing mount on Michael Andretti's car, as well as a forward-facing camera mounted in front of the left rear wheel on Robby Gordon's car, which captured a spectacular duel with Raul Boesel. Bobby Rahal's car also featured a new nose-cam, the first such at the 500.

ABCTelevision
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reporters

Host/Announcer:Paul Page
Color:Sam Posey
Color/Turn 2:Bobby Unser
Color/Turn 4:Danny Sullivan

Jack Arute
Gary Gerould
Dr. Jerry Punch

Post-raceCARTPPGIndyCar World Series Standings

[edit]
Rk.##DriverPointsDiff.
131United StatesAl Unser Jr.580
22BrazilEmerson Fittipaldi38−20
38United StatesMichael Andretti37−21
41United KingdomNigel Mansell35−23
518United StatesJimmy Vasser34−24
69United StatesRobby Gordon30−28
716SwedenStefan Johansson25−33
86United StatesMario Andretti24−34
95BrazilRaul Boesel17−41
1012CanadaJacques Villeneuve R 16−42
1011ItalyTeo Fabi16−42
1088BrazilMaurício Gugelmin16−42

1993–94 USAC Gold Crown Championship

[edit]
1993–94 USAC Championship Car season
USAC Gold Crown Championship
Season
Races1
Awards
National championUnited StatesAl Unser Jr.

The1993–94 USAC Gold Crown Championship season consisted of one sanctioned race. The schedule was based on a split-calendar, beginning in June 1993 and running through May 1994. Starting in 1981,USAC scaled back their participation in top-levelIndy car racing, and ultimately ceased sanctioning races outside of theIndianapolis 500 following their1983–84 season. Subsequently, theGold Crown Championship would consist of only one event annually; the winner of the Indianapolis 500 would be thede facto Gold Crown champion, as it was their lone points-paying event. The preeminentnational championship season was instead sanctioned byCART, and the Indy 500 paid championship points separately (on a different scale) toward theCART championship as well.

Al Unser Jr., by virtue of winning the 1994 Indianapolis 500, also won the 1993–94 USAC Championship.[25]

Final points standings (Top five)

[edit]
Further information:List of American Championship car racing points scoring systems § USAC Gold Crown Championship 1981–1995
PosDriverINDY
United States
Pts
1United StatesAl Unser Jr.11000
2CanadaJacques Villeneuve2800
3United StatesBobby Rahal3700
4BrazilJimmy Vasser4600
5United StatesRobby Gordon5500

Notes

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to1994 Indianapolis 500.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Fox, Jack C. (1994).The Illustrated History of the Indianapolis 500 1911-1994 (4th ed.). Carl Hungness Publishing. p. 22.ISBN 0-915088-05-3.
  2. ^O'Neill, John R.; Williams, Janet E. (May 30, 1994)."Fans provide off-the-track distractions".The Indianapolis Star. p. 9. RetrievedJune 2, 2017 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  3. ^Gurss, Jade (2014).Beast. Octane Press.ISBN 978-1-937747-33-6.
  4. ^abcdeSiano, Joseph (April 18, 1994)."AUTO RACING; Penske's Engine Has Opponents Singing Brickyard Blues".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 20, 2010.
  5. ^abcdefSiano, Joseph (May 22, 1994)."AUTO RACING; Penske Drives Through Loophole And Into Indianapolis Front Row".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 20, 2010.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmnop"1994 Indianapolis 500 Daily Trackside Report for the Media". Indy 500 Publications. 1994.
  7. ^ab"Excerpt: Beast - The Top Secret Ilmor-Penske Engine that Shocked the Racing World at the Indy 500".Racer. May 8, 2014. RetrievedDecember 2, 2024.
  8. ^Wilson, Phillip B. (May 9, 2019)."Harding Steinbrenner trio recall 'Beast' of a win in 1994 Indy 500". IndyCar.com. RetrievedDecember 2, 2024.
  9. ^"New Speedway Tower".The Indianapolis News. April 24, 1959. p. 16. RetrievedApril 6, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  10. ^"Speedway begins pit renovation".The Indianapolis Star. August 25, 1993. p. 21. RetrievedApril 5, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  11. ^"Penske Car Crashes at Indy".The New York Times. May 14, 1994.
  12. ^"INDIANAPOLIS 500 / DAILY REPORT : Rutherford Takes His Last Lap in Foyt's Old Car".Los Angeles Times. May 22, 1994.
  13. ^Miller, Robin (May 22, 1994)."Some teams add by subtracting (Part 1)".The Indianapolis Star. p. 20. RetrievedMarch 18, 2019 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  14. ^Miller, Robin (May 22, 1994)."Some teams add by subtracting (Part 2)".The Indianapolis Star. p. 22. RetrievedMarch 18, 2019 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  15. ^abCavin, Curt (May 27, 1994)."Goodyear back in Bernstein car; Jones becomes alternate".The Indianapolis Star. p. 52. RetrievedAugust 24, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  16. ^Miller, Robin (May 27, 1994)."Mario's speed is up as his days wind down".The Indianapolis Star. p. 48. RetrievedAugust 27, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  17. ^Cavin, Curt (May 26, 1994)."Fernandez takes his team on Indy roller coaster ride".The Indianapolis Star. p. 35. RetrievedAugust 27, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  18. ^Denny, Dick (May 27, 1994)."Gary B. protege in 500".Indianapolis News. p. 76. RetrievedAugust 27, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  19. ^"With a new engine, al Unser Jr. Won the 1994 Indy 500".
  20. ^"1994 Indy The Nigel Mansell, Dennis Vitolo Incident".YouTube.Archived from the original on December 14, 2021.
  21. ^Bansch, John (May 30, 1994)."Another Andretti, another hard-luck story".The Indianapolis Star. p. 5. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  22. ^"Auto Racing".The Washington Post. June 14, 1994. Archived fromthe original on November 3, 2012. RetrievedDecember 29, 2009.
  23. ^"Indy Racing League press release". Motorsport.com. July 8, 1994. Archived fromthe original on June 8, 2011. RetrievedDecember 29, 2009.
  24. ^"Indy Racing League announces engine specs". Motorsport.com. August 11, 1994. Archived fromthe original on June 8, 2011. RetrievedDecember 29, 2009.
  25. ^Mullinix, Donna S. (January 15, 1995)."Assistance League plans theater benefit".The Indianapolis Star. p. 160. RetrievedOctober 22, 2023 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon

Works cited

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]


1993 Indianapolis 500
Emerson Fittipaldi
1994 Indianapolis 500
Al Unser Jr.
1995 Indianapolis 500
Jacques Villeneuve
Races by year
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
Track
Statistics
Drivers
Sanctioning bodies
Ownership
Officials
Broadcasting
Radio
Television
Other
Related events
Month of May
Summer NASCAR Weekend
Other
Golf at IMS
Related area
Lore
Related programs
Related articles
Indy 500
Wide World of Sports coverage
Same-daytape delay coverage
Live coverage (ABC Sports)
Live coverage (ESPN on ABC)
Seasons
IndyCar Series
CART /Champ Car
USAC
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1994_Indianapolis_500&oldid=1314848782"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp