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| Indianapolis Motor Speedway | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indianapolis 500 | |||||
| Sanctioning body | Indy Racing League | ||||
| Season | 2002 IRL season | ||||
| Date | May 26, 2002 | ||||
| Winner | |||||
| Winning team | Penske Racing | ||||
| Average speed | 166.499 mph (268 km/h) | ||||
| Pole position | |||||
| Pole speed | 231.342 mph (372 km/h) | ||||
| Fastest qualifier | |||||
| Rookie of the Year | |||||
| Most laps led | |||||
| Pre-race ceremonies | |||||
| National anthem | Josephine Holmon (West Pointcadet) | ||||
| "Back Home Again in Indiana" | Jim Nabors | ||||
| Starting command | Mari Hulman George | ||||
| Pace car | Chevrolet Corvette | ||||
| Pace car driver | James Caviezel | ||||
| Starter | Bryan Howard | ||||
| Estimated attendance | 400,000 | ||||
| TV in the United States | |||||
| Network | ABC | ||||
| Announcers | Paul Page,Scott Goodyear | ||||
| Nielsen ratings | 4.8 / 15 | ||||
| Chronology | |||||
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The86th Indianapolis 500-mile (800 km) race was held at theIndianapolis Motor Speedway inSpeedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 26, 2002. It was part of the2002 Indy Racing League season. RookieTomas Scheckter led 85 laps, and appeared on his way to a possible victory, which would have marked the third consecutive Indy win for a first-year driver. However, Scheckter crashed on the front stretch while leading with only 27 laps to go.Hélio Castroneves (who also won the2001 running) became the fifth driver in Indy 500 history to win back-to-back races. It was the second of his four Indy 500 victories. Castroneves became the first repeat winner sinceAl Unser Sr. (1970–1971). There would not be another repeat winner untilJosef Newgarden in2023–2024.
The 2002 race is largely considered one of the most controversial races in Indy history.[1][2][3][4][5][6] On the 199th lap, second placePaul Tracy was alongside leaderHélio Castroneves, going for the lead in the third turn. At the same time, a crash occurred on another part of the track, bringing out the caution flag.Indy Racing League officials ruled that the yellow came out before Tracy completed the pass, and Castroneves was declared the victor. After an officialprotest was filed,[7][8] and after anappeals hearing,[7][9] Castroneves' victory was upheld on July 2, 2002.
About 7.46 inches of rain fell during the month of May,[10] considerably interrupting the on-track activities. The second day of time trials was completely washed out, while Bump Day was cut short due to rain. Likewise, six of the ten practice days were either delayed by moisture or halted due to rain showers. Uncomfortably cold temperatures also were observed during most of the month. Private testing and rookie orientation in April was also hampered several times due to rain and cold temperatures. Race day, however, was sunny, warm, and clear.
During the off-season, severalCART teams again committed to entries in theIRL-sanctioned Indy 500 for 2002.Penske Racing (whom had defected to the IRL for the entire 2002 season),Chip Ganassi Racing, andTeam Green all announced they would return from2001.Rahal Letterman Racing also announced they would join the CART teams andcross party lines to race at Indy. Due to theTobacco Master Settlement Agreement,Team Green announced that they would not have primary sponsorKOOL, but their cars would carry the colors of associate sponsor7-Eleven.
Robby Gordon announced on March 28 that he would attempt "double duty" for 2002 by racing in the Indy 500 andCoca-Cola 600 on the same day.Tony Stewart, who attempted the feat in 1999 and 2001, announced he would not do so for 2002.John Andretti, who did so in 1994, also announced he would not attempt the double.
During the spring, the asphalt pavement at theIndianapolis Motor Speedway underwent adiamond grinding in an effort to smooth out several bumps.[11] In April, the newSAFER barrier was retrofitted to the retaining walls in the turns at the Speedway. It marked the first installation of the revolutionary-new energy-absorbing technology at an American superspeedway.[12]
For the 2002 race, all pit crew members that work over the wall must wear approved helmets. This requirement was in response to a succession of accidents and injuries (particularly head injuries) involving pit crew members in series sanctioned by members ofACCUS (NASCAR, IMSA, SCCA, NHRA, CART, IRL). Many pit crews in the series had already been utilizing optional helmets since about1999, after Steve Fried, the crew chief forRobby McGehee was critically injured in a pit accident. The accident put Freid in acoma for several weeks.
Prior to 2002, it was only required that the crew member operating the fuel rig was to wear a helmet. It was to protect from fire in case of a fuel spill, and protect him in case he lost his balance. His position between the front and rear axles was deemed particularly precarious. The tire changers did not wear helmets, despite the fact that they were more exposed and vulnerable to injury from other cars entering and exiting the pit lane.
The standardized font car numbers (black numerals on a white box) used from 1999 to 2001 were scrapped. Teams were permitted to utilize any color/font for car numbers decals, provided they were sufficiently visible. Car number decal placement locations were also adjusted. The required car number locations were to be one on the nose, and one on each of the rear wing vertical panels (right & left).
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On opening day,Robby McGehee became the first driver to crash into the newly installedSAFER barrier.[13][14]Scott Sharp andHélio Castroneves led the speed chart.[13]
During the first week of practice, rain delayed the start of track activity on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Several hours of practice time were lost, with over 2 inches (51 mm) of rain falling in those four days.[13]
Crashes involvingP. J. Jones,Mark Dismore,Max Papis, andAlex Barron occurred during the first week. During practice on the morning of pole day,Paul Tracy suffered a major accident in turn 2, demolishing his lone car. Without a backup car, the team was forced to make repairs.[13]
The top of the speed chart changed widely over each day, with no driver atop the leaderboard more than twice all month. Speeds flirted with the 230 mph (370 km/h) barrier for the first time since 1996.Bruno Junqueira finally cracked 230 mph (370 km/h) around 3:30 p.m. on Friday May 10.[13]
Three days of time trials were scheduled for 2002. On pole day May 11,Bruno Junqueira was the first car to make a qualifying attempt. He finished at 231.342 mph (372.309 km/h), the fastest pole speed since 1996. His speed held up all afternoon, and he secured his first Indy 500 pole position. He was also the first driver sinceEmerson Fittipaldi in 1990 to win the pole after qualifying as the coveted "first in the field."[13] The front row was rounded out byIRL-regularRobbie Buhl, andRaul Boesel in theTeam Menard car.
Defending championHélio Castroneves managed only 13th starting position, while veteranMichael Andretti was the second slowest of the day at 226.780 mph (364.967 km/h).
The second day of time trials, scheduled for May 12, was rained out. All remaining time trials were shifted to bump day, May 19.
During the second week of practice, three additional days were delayed or halted by rain.Paul Tracy returned to the track late in the week, in preparation to qualify on the second weekend.
On bump day, nine spots remained open in the field.[13] Rain delayed the start by over an hour, but several cars lined up to make attempts. The field filled to 33 cars just before 2 p.m., withBilly Roe on the bubble.[13] With light rain threatening,George Mack bumped Roe out of the field at 2:35 p.m. In doing so, he became the secondAfrican American driver (followingWilly T. Ribbs) to qualify for the Indy 500.
With some cars practicing and preparing to enter the qualifying line,Team Green withdrew the slow time previously put in byMichael Andretti. The move momentarily reinstatedRoe to the field. Andretti's speed greatly improved from the previous weekend, and he safely bumped his way back into the field.[13] WithBilly Boat on the bubble, rain stopped qualifying at 3:40 p.m., and it was eventually ended at 4:51 p.m.[13]Jimmy Kite andDonnie Beechler were left waiting in the qualifying line.
On Thursday May 23, the final practice session was held. Indy rookieTony Kanaan led the speed chart at 225.752 mph (363.313 km/h). All 33 starters took laps without incident.[13]
The 26th annualCoorsPit Stop Challenge was held Thursday May 23. Twelve teams competed in a single-elimination bracket. Six crew earned berths based on their pit stop performances at Indy Racing League events since the previous year's Indy 500:Panther Racing (Sam Hornish Jr.),Cheever Racing (Eddie Cheever),Hemelgarn Racing (Buddy Lazier),Chip Ganassi Racing (Jeff Ward),Kelley Racing (Al Unser Jr. andScott Sharp). Three crews earned spots based onIRL points standings going into the Indianapolis 500:Team Penske (Helio Castroneves andGil de Ferran), andMo Nunn Racing (Felipe Giaffone). The final three spots were filled by at-large participants. The race pole position winner received an automatic berth; however, if that driver had already qualified for the contest, or declined the invitation, the berth went to the fastest race qualifier not already in the contest. The final two spots were to be filled by a last-chance pit stop "time trials" session scheduled for Wednesday May 8.
Due to inclement weather, the last-chance pit stop "time trials" session was postponed to Wednesday May 15.Chip Ganassi Racing (Kenny Bräck) andTeam Rahal (Jimmy Vasser) advanced from the "time trials". PolesitterBruno Junqueira (Ganassi) took the final spot.Felipe Giaffone later withdrew, and he was replaced withRobbie Buhl fromDreyer & Reinbold Racing.
Four teams received byes for the first round. During the first round matches,Kenny Bräck lost toBuddy Lazier after receiving a penalty for a loose rear wheel.Eddie Cheever was also issued a penalty for equipment outside of the pit box. During the quarterfinals,Sam Hornish Jr. was penalized and eliminated after he lost a right rear wheel. The finals pitted Penske versus Ganassi, with the crew ofHélio Castroneves defeatingJeff Ward. It was the first victory in the event for Castroneves, and the seventh overall for Penske.
| First Round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||||||||||
| 9 | Jeff Ward (Chip Ganassi Racing) | 9.6177 | |||||||||||||||||
| 24 | Robbie Buhl (Dreyer & Reinbold) | 15.989 | |||||||||||||||||
| 9 | Jeff Ward (Chip Ganassi Racing) | 10.5428 | |||||||||||||||||
| 33 | Bruno Junqueira (Chip Ganassi Racing) | 10.9029 | |||||||||||||||||
| 9 | Jeff Ward (Chip Ganassi Racing) | 9.8690 | |||||||||||||||||
| 19 | Jimmy Vasser (Team Rahal) | 11.1017 | |||||||||||||||||
| 19 | Jimmy Vasser (Team Rahal) | 10.2903 | |||||||||||||||||
| 4 | Sam Hornish Jr. (Panther Racing) | 15.2026 | |||||||||||||||||
| 19 | Jimmy Vasser (Team Rahal) | 10.1999 | |||||||||||||||||
| 8 | Scott Sharp (Kelley Racing) | 10.4079 | |||||||||||||||||
| 3 | Hélio Castroneves (Team Penske) | 8.5555 | |||||||||||||||||
| 9 | Jeff Ward (Chip Ganassi Racing) | 10.3433 | |||||||||||||||||
| 3 | Hélio Castroneves (Team Penske) | 8.9366 | |||||||||||||||||
| 91 | Buddy Lazier (Hemelgarn Racing) | 11.9955 | |||||||||||||||||
| 91 | Buddy Lazier (Hemelgarn Racing) | 10.8687 | |||||||||||||||||
| 22 | Kenny Bräck (Chip Ganassi Racing) | 15.0684 | |||||||||||||||||
| 3 | Hélio Castroneves (Team Penske) | 8.7355 | |||||||||||||||||
| 6 | Gil de Ferran (Team Penske) | 9.7465 | |||||||||||||||||
| 6 | Gil de Ferran (Team Penske) | 9.6356 | |||||||||||||||||
| 7 | Al Unser Jr. (Kelley Racing) | 11.6030 | |||||||||||||||||
| 6 | Gil de Ferran (Team Penske) | 9.5320 | |||||||||||||||||
| 51 | Eddie Cheever (Cheever Racing) | 13.8425 | |||||||||||||||||
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After a month plagued by constant rain, race day saw clear blue skies and temperatures in the mid 70s (°F).Mari Hulman George gave the command to start engines at 10:52 a.m.EST, and all cars pulled away behind the50th Anniversary Chevrolet Corvette pace car.[13]
At the start, polesitterBruno Junqueira took the lead and led the first 32 laps. A record-setting pace early on saw 29 laps completed before the first yellow.Greg Ray brought out the first caution with a crash in turn 1[15]Junqueira and the rest of the leaders pitted, but he stalled exiting the pits, giving the lead over to rookieTomas Scheckter.
A sequence of pit stops around the 65th lap shuffled the leaderboard. Indy rookieTony Kanaan took over the lead on lap 70. On lap 78,Sam Hornish Jr. brushed the wall exiting turn four, damaging his suspension. He drove the car to the pits for repairs. About a lap later, on lap 79, the caution came out for debris.Paul Tracy later claimed responsibility, stating that he threw a harmless headrest cushion out on the track, hoping to draw a yellow, since he was in danger of being lapped.[16][17]
While the leaders pitted, fifth placeRobby Gordon suffered a large fire and explosion in his pit stall. The explosion blew the top off the pit-side fuel tank. Gordon was uninjured, and the car was able to continue.[13] With his pit-side tank now mostly depleted, and damage sustained to the tank itself, Gordon's crew was relocated. They moved to the vacated pit stall of Greg Ray, who had already dropped out of the race.
On lap 90, withKanaan still leading,Jimmy Vasser andBruno Junqueira both slowed with mechanical problems. An oil leak on the track went unnoticed, and leader Kanaan spun in the oil, crashing into turn 3.Rick Treadway also became involved in the incident.[15]
Scheckter resumed the lead after Kanaan dropped out. Meanwhile,Sam Hornish Jr. returned to the track, albeit several laps down.[15]
With as many as 13 cars on the lead lap, a very long stretch of green flag racing commenced. Two sequences of green-flag pit stops shuffled the lead amongGil de Ferran,Scott Sharp,Felipe Giaffone, andAlex Barron. However,Scheckter still found himself back into the lead by lap 166. With 30 laps to go, Scheckter held an 8.3-second lead overPaul Tracy.[15]
On lap 173, after leading 85 laps during the race, leaderTomas Scheckter slid high in turn four and crashed against the wall down the frontstretch.[13] Under the yellow, the leaders pitted. Exiting the pits,Gil de Ferran lost a wheel that was not secured, and fell out of contention. Gambling on fuel,Hélio Castroneves stayed out and took over the lead.[18]Alex Barron was second. On lap 179, officials recognized thatPaul Tracy was inadvertently ahead of Felipe Giaffone, which required an extra lap under caution to sort out the running order.[9] Giaffone was moved to third, and Tracy back to fourth. The caution was extended yet another lap because of a piece of debris on the track.
On lap 181, the green flag came back out withCastroneves leading, andFelipe Giaffone jumping into second.[13][19] The lapped car ofDario Franchitti slipped by to get in front of the field. Franchitti's car was painted nearly identical to Tracy's,[20] and caused some confusion/misidentification by announcers. With ten laps to go,Castroneves still ledGiaffone, withPaul Tracy charging into third.[19]Castroneves was starting to run low on fuel, and his pace started to slow.Giaffone closed within a half-second.[13]
With less than 3 laps to go,Giaffone dove belowCastroneves, attempting to take the lead.[13] The lapped car ofFranchitti pulled alongside Castroneves, effectively blocking Giaffone.Castroneves held off the challenge, and third placePaul Tracy managed to move past Giaffone for second.[13] Giaffone later complained that Franchitti was unfairly blocking to help his teammate Tracy.[21] With 2 laps to go,Castroneves led Tracy by only 0.22 seconds at the start/finish line.[13] Down the backstretch, Tracy started to move to the outside, in an attempt to make a pass for the lead. While they were approaching turn 3, a crash occurred on a different part of the track.
The lapped car of rookieLaurent Redon got loose in turn 1, allowingBuddy Lazier (running in 8th place) to dive below him in turn 2. Redon came down on Lazier, the two cars touched, and both crashed hard into the outside wall exiting turn 2.[13] At the same time the crash occurred in turn 2,Tracy andCastroneves were almost side-by-side in turn three. A yellow flag came out for the crash, and Tracy completed the pass.Castroneves backed off the throttle,[9] which allowedGiaffone to pass him, as well as the lapped car ofSam Hornish Jr. Many believed at the time that Castroneves had run out of fuel, or was nearly out of fuel, and thought that was the reason he suddenly had slowed down.[9][21]Castroneves claims that he saw the yellow light illuminate on his dashboard, and thinking at first it was thefuel light, and he reacted by letting off.[6]
Believing he had just taken the lead with one lap to go, Tracy proclaimed on histwo-way radio "Yeah baby!".[21][22] Barry Green soon responded "there's a problem."[22] Officials in race control, led byBrian Barnhart, stated that Castroneves was the leader.[9]
On the final lap, Tracy, Giaffone, and the lapped car of Hornish, had broken away,[21] and crossed the finish line approximately 19 seconds before the rest of the field.[23] The Corvettepace car, was in turn 4,[5] and was not able to enter the track and pack up the field.[9] At a slowed pace, and running low on fuel,[9][18] Castroneves, with the lapped car ofDario Franchitti immediately behind him (in a car painted nearly identical to Tracy's)[21] took the checkered flag as the winner. Tracy and Giaffone completed an additional lap, and were scored by the computer unofficially as second (82.8341 seconds behind) and third (85.6007 second behind) respectively. Their completion of lap 200 was ignored by the scoring system, and their completion of lap 201 was scored for their finish.[24] Castroneves then drove to the frontstretch, jumped out of his car, and climbed thecatch fence just as he did a year earlier in 2001.[13]
Despite the concern for fuel, and after running 42 laps since his last pit stop,[13][18] Castroneves completed his victory lap, and had 1 gallon of fuel remaining in the tank.[9]
W Former Indianapolis 500 winner
R Indianapolis 500 Rookie
All entrants utilizedFirestone tires.
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In the immediate aftermath of the race, confusion reigned among the competitors, broadcasters, and fans.Brian Barnhart, in Race Control, made the initial call at the moment, stating "yellow, yellow, yellow, three is your leader" ("three" being Castroneves car number) over the director's radio channel, and such was repeated by his assistant Mel Harder over the teams' race control radio channel.[9] Harder was in charge of activating the yellow lights around the track, and the in-cardashboard yellow light system.[9]
On the television broadcast, commentatorPaul Page erroneously stated thatCastroneves was the leader because the scoring "reverted back to the previous lap."[21] Such rules are used if electronic transponder-based scoring with multiple timing loops was not used, as in the past, but since the advent of transponder-based scoring, the rule has generally been instead of the last completed lap, but the last timing loop the car crossed at the point of caution. Page also, on at least one occasion, misidentifiedDario Franchitti's car as that ofTracy's (the two cars had identical liveries).[21] ABC waited over 14 minutes before they showed a replay of the pass or the crash.[25] However, ABC did air split-screen footage clearly showing the crash occurred before the pass.[25] The footage, however, did not show conclusive evidence of when the yellow light came on. However, TV analystScott Goodyear was convinced that Helio won the race, referencing hisloss of the 500 in 1995 where he figured out that post-race appeals were rarely accepted.
On thelive radio broadcastMike King announced that "race control said the pass would not count."[26]Donald Davidson echoed the same erroneous information that the scoring reverted to the previous lap (though it was last completed loop prior to caution), and added that the cars did notrace back to the yellow, as was the policy inNASCAR at the time (the rule was changed in September 2003, when the practice was banned and scoring reverts to the last scoring loop crossed before the caution was called, except in the final lap or a caution that ends a race because of weather or darkness, when it reverts to video replays).[26] A similar controversy took place at the2019 INDYCAR Portland road course event at the start when a massive crash at the opening chicane caused 11 laps of caution as officials could not determine positions based on video evidence. Officials decided for the 2020 season that scoring reverts to the last loop crossed when a caution occurs.[27]
In the pits, Barry Green immediately challenged the decision. He told Tracy over the two-way radio that there was "a problem,"[22] and later chimed sarcastically that "they (presumablyIRL officials) are not going to let one ofus (one of theCART teams) win."[22] He contended that Tracy said he had completed the pass before the yellow caution light came on. Tracy said "I feel that I was ahead of him when it went yellow. I passed him, and I saw green. We're going to protest this thing because I was ahead of him when the yellow came out."[13]
Meanwhile,Castroneves stated the yellow had come out before the pass was made. "The only reason he passed me, it's because the yellow came on, and I lifted off. I cannot feel sorry for Paul Tracy."[6][13] Other drivers had different opinion.Eddie Cheever called the finish "confusing."[13]Dario Franchitti, Tracy's teammate, said that "Paul (Tracy) had passed (Castroneves) on the outside before the yellow came out."[3][13]Mario Andretti, however, spoke withTracy after the race, and said that Tracy was "more concerned with keeping an eye on Castroneves' car" than watching the yellow lights.[3]
Official results were posted five hours after the race, withCastroneves declared the winner and Paul Tracy second. As the cars did not cross the finish line in order, the standings were amended so that Tracy's finishing time was scored as a fraction of a second behind that of Castroneves.Team Green immediately filed a protest,[7] and the hearing was scheduled for May 27 at 10:00 a.m. During the two-hour hearing,Brian Barnhart andIndy Racing League officials denied the protest and presented their conclusions. Officials determined thatCastroneves was indisputably the leader under the following relevant times:
In rejecting the protest, Barnhart stated that "Team Green did not present anything that was conclusive enough in any way, shape or form to change our mind."[8]
Team Green submitted a written appeal of the protest decision on June 3.[7] A closed-door appeals hearing was scheduled for June 17.[28] Speedway PresidentTony George presided over the hearing, with Indianapolis attorney Dave Mittingly assisting. BothTeam Green andPenske Racing presented evidence, and several persons involved provided testimony. Among those who gave testimony wereTracy,Castroneves,Sam Hornish Jr.,Dario Franchitti,Brian Barnhart (race control), Doug Boles (spotter in turn three for Hornish Jr.), and Jeff Horton (IRL Director of Engineering).[9]
The basis ofTeam Green's argument was that Tracy was the leader when the yellow lights around the track came on, and that those lights should control.[9] While they acknowledged that Castroneves was leading at the time Barnhart called for the yellow,[9] they argued it was irrelevant unless the yellow lights were on. They also did not dispute that it was possible that the dashboard yellow lights on Castroneves' car came on while Castroneves was still leading. They cited the inconsistencies of the dashboard system from car to car, and claimed the dashboard lights had not come on in Tracy's car until after he had made the pass.[9]
Penske Racing's primary defense concentrated on their interpretations of the IRL rulebook. They stated that at the commencement of a yellow caution period, the positioning of the cars is a judgement call made quickly by the officials.[9] They also stated that the ruling of a car passing another car under a caution period is specifically listed as not protestable or appealable under the existing rules.[9]
On July 2, 2002, Tony George issued an 18-page decision on the appeal.[9] He upheld the victory of Hélio Castroneves, and denied Team Green's appeal. In his decision, George stated that "Clearly Helio (Castroneves) was in front when the call (for the yellow) was made" and that several of the caution signals, including trackside and dashboard lights, a radio announcement and a flag closing the pits, were displayed before Tracy's pass. George also accepted Penske's arguments that, even if Tracy was ahead before the caution, the decision to call Castroneves the leader was an unappealable judgment call.
After the decision was rendered, the reaction among fans, media, and competitors was split largely along party lines.CART supporters generally sided withTeam Green andPaul Tracy denouncing the decision, whileIRL supporters generally accepted the final result.[5] Many Tracy supporters felt the decision was politically motivated,[1][2][5] suggesting thatTony George favoredPenske Racing (a full-timeIRL team) and punished the part-time, rival CART-based effort of Team Green.[5] The controversy was divisive, and worked to reopen wounds from the 1996open wheel split.Robin Miller openly criticized the decision, and considered Tracy "the unofficial 2002 Indy winner."[29] The day after the race, he presented video footage onRPM 2Night, which he claimed showed evidence the pass was completed under green. Shirts and hats were sold at CART events declaring Tracy the "Real IRL 500 winner", which Tracy would be seen publicly wearing at times.
With Tracy officially relegated to second finishing position, he ultimately failed to break a 91-year-old record that dated back to the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911. Tracy had started 29th, and had he won the race, would have set the record for the lowest starting position by the race winner. It also would have been a post-WWII record for lowest starting position for a winner in anyIndy car race. The all-time record was set byRay Harroun in1911 (and subsequently tied byLouis Meyer in1936) by winning the Indianapolis 500 from the 28th starting position. Tracy also missed out on matching the record of fewest laps led by an Indy 500 champion, as he would have led only the final two laps of the race (the previous fewest was in 1912 with only 2 laps led);Dan Wheldon would take the record in 2011 with only one lap led.
Starting with the nextIndyCar Series telecast,ABC/ESPN experimented with a new on-screen graphic displaying a yellow banner or yellow symbol the instant a caution period commenced. The system was tied to official race control, and was utilized to avoid confusion about yellow-light conditions, similar to the graphic that had been deployed by Fox, FX, NBC, and TNT for their NASCAR telecasts beginning in 2001.
A few weeks after the decision, Barry Green announced he was selling his share of Team Green toMichael Andretti, and would be taking a sabbatical from the sport. He reportedly had spent over$100,000 onlegal expenses.[5] Paul Tracy finished out a mediocre CART season with Green, and left the team at season's end. He won one race, and was voted the 2002 CART Most Popular Driver. During his acceptance speech, he thankedTony George for helping him win the award, and added that the dispute strengthened his fanbase. "Since that whole disaster, I've become a fan favorite. I guess this is like myBorg-Warner Trophy."[30]
With CART facing financial trouble at season's end, Michael Andretti took the team, then called Andretti Green, next Andretti Autosport, and currentlyAndretti Global, full-time to theIndyCar Series for2003. Andretti Autosport has since scored five Indianapolis 500 wins --2005,2007,2014,2016, and2017. Andretti also is a partner inBryan Herta Autosport in the 2016 race that team won.
Tracy, angered by the loss, refused to return to the IRL and the Indy 500 in subsequent seasons. On September 23, 2003, when asked if he were interested in driving in the IRL in 2004, he responded "I'm not driving one of those crapwagons."[31] The quote took on a life of its own, and was adopted as a politicalslogan andbattle cry for IRL detractors for years to come. Under the profile section Tracy's official web site (PaulTracy.com) career highlights include "2002 Indy 500 Runner Up (yeah right)."[32] Tracy continued in the Champ Car series, finally winning a season title in2003, although it came after most of the top teams had already defected to the IRL. He eventually left the series, and had a short stint in theNASCARBusch Series. In the wake of the2008 open wheel unification, Tony George himself reportedly offered Tracy a ride withVision Racing. Tracy initially declined, musing that "I'm not going to drive forhamburgers andhot dogs."[33] In July 2008, Tracy finally crossed lines and signed withVision Racing to drive in theEdmonton Indy.[34] He then made a highly publicized return at the2009 Indianapolis 500, and was previously withNBC Sports as one of the network's INDYCAR broadcasters until he left at the end of the 2021 season.[5]
INDYCAR played off the controversy when Tracy won at the Speedway in 2016 at theSportscar Vintage Racing AssociationBrickyard Vintage Racing Invitational Pro-Am, a race featuring amateur drivers paired with Indianapolis Motor Speedway racers, with the headline "Tracy finally gets to drink milk" upon his first career win at the Speedway.[35]
The race was carried live on theIndy Racing Radio Network. The network celebrated its 50th anniversary covering the Indianapolis 500.Mike King served as chief announcer.Johnny Rutherford served as "driver expert" for the 13th and final time.
The 2002 race saw all four turn reporters return to their assigned posts from the previous year. Kim Morris andAdam Alexander returned as pit reporters, but Mike Lewis departed and newcomer Jim Murphy took his place.
Guests in the booth included Kurt Ritter (Chevrolet), John F. Fielder (BorgWarner), and pace car driverJim Caviezel.
| Indy Racing Radio Network | ||
|---|---|---|
| Booth Announcers | Turn Reporters | Pit/garage reporters |
Chief Announcer:Mike King | Turn 1:Jerry Baker | Kim Morris (north pits) Adam Alexander (center pits) Jim Murphy (south pits) |
| Chuck Marlowe (garages) Howdy Bell (hospital) | ||
The race was carried live flag-to-flag coverage in the United States onABC Sports. ABC and ESPN had reorganized their broadcasting duties, and eliminated coverage of theCART series. Therefore,Paul Page, who had worked CART races since 1999, was moved back full-time to the IRL and Indy 500. Page was named announcer, whileBob Jenkins was shifted to the "host" position. Recently retired driverScott Goodyear joined the booth as analyst.
Gone from the broadcast wereAl Michaels andLeslie Gudel, but returning wasGary Gerould.
| ABCTelevision | |
|---|---|
| Booth Announcers | Pit/garage reporters |
| Jack Arute Vince Welch Dr. Jerry Punch Gary Gerould | |
| 2001 Indianapolis 500 Hélio Castroneves | 2002 Indianapolis 500 Hélio Castroneves | 2003 Indianapolis 500 Gil de Ferran |