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2010 Indianapolis 500

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
94th running of the Indianapolis 500

94th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning bodyIndy Racing League
Season2010 IndyCar season
DateMay 30, 2010
WinnerUnited KingdomDario Franchitti
Winning teamTarget Chip Ganassi Racing
Average speed161.623 mph (260.107 km/h)
Pole positionBrazilHélio Castroneves
Pole speed227.970 mph (366.882 km/h)
Fastest qualifierBrazilHélio Castroneves
Rookie of the YearSwitzerlandSimona de Silvestro[1]
Most laps ledUnited KingdomDario Franchitti (155)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthemJewel[2]
"Back Home Again in Indiana"Jim Nabors
Starting commandMari Hulman George
Pace carChevrolet Camaro SS[3]
Pace car driverRobin Roberts[4]
StarterPaul Blevin
Honorary starterJack Nicholson[5]
Estimated attendance300,000 + (est.)
TV in the United States
NetworkABC
AnnouncersMarty Reid
Scott Goodyear
Eddie Cheever, Jr.[6]
Nielsen ratings3.6,[7] 4.0 overnight[8] / 10
Chronology
PreviousNext
20092011

The94th Indianapolis 500 was held at theIndianapolis Motor Speedway inSpeedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 30, 2010. It was the 15th Indy 500 sanctioned by theIndy Racing League, and was the premier event of the2010 IZOD IndyCar Series season. The race was won byDario Franchitti, ahead ofDan Wheldon andMarco Andretti.Tony Kanaan, who had started in the final position, ran as high as second during the race before finishing eleventh.

The race came down to fuel mileage strategy. A caution on laps 161–165 left at least 35 laps for the final fuel stint for most of the leaders. Four drivers (Mike Conway,Justin Wilson,Helio Castroneves, andGraham Rahal) did not pit during that yellow flag, gambling on another caution, and possibly making it to the finish without another pit stop. Their strategies failed to pay off, and each of the four had to pit for fuel.Dario Franchitti, himself desperately conserving fuel, cycled to the front on lap 192. A terrible crash involvingMike Conway,Ryan Hunter-Reay, and others, occurred in the north shortchute as the leaders were taking the white flag. Conway's car launched into the catchfence, and he suffered a broken leg and a compression fracture, but he would later recover.[9][10] Franchitti took the checkered flag, withDan Wheldon finishing second for the second year in a row.

The race was the second of the three-year-longCentennial era, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the opening of thetrack (1909) and the 100th anniversary of theinaugural race in 1911. It was the 53rd time the race had been held on a May 30. This year marked the first race with four female drivers (repeated in2011), andSimona de Silvestro was awardedRookie of the Year. The race is also remembered for a dramatic Bump Day where rookieSebastian Saavedra made the race while laying in a hospital bed, while veteran driverPaul Tracy missed the field after a last-minute qualifying gamble gone awry.

Event news

[edit]
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the race track where the race was held.
  • Qualifying for the event reverted to a two-day schedule similar to the system used from1998 to2000. Time trials was permanently reduced from two weekends down to one weekend. Prior to 1998, and again from 2001 to 2008, time trials were held over two weekends.[11]
  • Thepole position was decided under the new "Fast Nine Shootout", loosely based on the qualifying format used during IndyCar Series road course events. On the first day of time trials (Saturday), from11:00 a.m. to4:00 p.m., the first round of qualifying filled positions 1–24. Bumping began as soon as the field was filled to 24 cars. During the final 90 minutes, the top nine cars advanced to a special "shootout" session. The Fast Nine cars erased their earlier times, and were permitted to make up to three attempts each (time permitting) during the special session to determine starting positions 1–9 including the pole position. Cash prizes for the front row were increased from previous years: pole position ($175,000), second place ($75,000), and third place ($50,000).
  • The second day of time trials (Sunday) filled positions 24–33. Once the field was filled to 33 cars, bumping began. The slowest overall car in the field, regardless of the day it qualified, was on the "bubble" and could be bumped out. Fast Nine Shootout participants, however, were locked-in and could not be bumped.
  • Prior to the start of the race,Michael Andretti droveMark Wahlberg in a custom-built, two-seat Indy car billed as the "Izod Fastest Seat in Sports". The1969 Indianapolis 500 winnerMario Andretti coached the two by radio from the IZOD Performance Pit. Andretti and Wahlberg followed four parade cars and led the official pace car and the 33-car starting field on three parade laps. Once the parade cars exited the circuit, the two-seat race car sped around the track at nearly 200 mph (320 km/h) to catch the field from behind as the field took the green flag. This marked the first time in modern history that a driver and passenger joined the field of the Indianapolis 500.[12] It was the first two-man race car on the track since the days of theriding mechanic ended after1937.
  • Five women attempted the Indy 500; four qualified for the event.[13]

Rule changes

[edit]
  • For the first time, the Honda overtake assist system ("Push-to-pass") was utilized. Each car was permitted 15 presses (18 seconds in duration) with a 10-second recharge time.[14]
  • Championship points towards the IndyCar Series championship were awarded to all qualifiers, based on their qualifying position. The pole winner received 15 points, second place 13, third place 12, on down to 3 points for 25th–33rd place.[15][16] Previously, only the pole position winner received championship bonus point(s).

Schedule

[edit]

The 2010 schedule was a two-week condensed schedule, but featured only one fewer day of on-track activity compared to 2009.[17]

Race schedule — May 2010
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
      1
Kansas
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
 
7
 
8
Mini-Marathon
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
 
14
 
15
ROP/Practice
16
ROP/Practice
17
Practice
18
Practice
19
Practice
20
Practice
21
Practice
22
Pole Day
23
Bump Day
24
 
25
 
26
Comm. Day
27
 
28
Carb Day
29
Parade
30
Indy 500
31
Memorial Day
     
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

Comm. Day — denotes 500 Festival Community Day

Entry list

[edit]

Practice

[edit]

Saturday May 15

[edit]
  • Weather: Partly cloudy, 66 °F (19 °C), intermittent rain showers
  • Practice summary: Opening day practice featured veteran practice from noon to2 p.m., and rookie orientation from 2 to6 p.m.Hélio Castroneves became the first car out on the track for the month, and set the fastest speed of the day at 226.603 mph (364.682 km/h). Seven rookies participated in rookie orientation, and five veterans took part in refresher tests.Jay Howard (215.039 mph (346.072 km/h)) was the fastest rookie of the day.[18]
May 15, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamBest
Speed
13TBrazilHélio CastronevesTeam Penske226.603 mph (365 km/h)
210TUnited KingdomDario FranchittiChip Ganassi Racing226.535 mph (365 km/h)
39TNew ZealandScott DixonChip Ganassi Racing226.237 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Sunday May 16

[edit]
  • Weather: Cloudy, 60 °F (16 °C), intermittent rain showers
  • Practice summary: The second day of practice featured rookie orientation from11 a.m. to3 p.m., and veteran practice from 3 to6 p.m. Six rookies passed their four-phase rookie tests. During veteran practice, two incidents were reported.Ryan Hunter-Reay spun in the warm up lane in turn one, but did not make contact. At4:25 p.m.Dan Wheldon lost control in turn four and hit the outside wall at the exit of turn four. he was uninjured.Hélio Castroneves led the speed chart for the second day in a row.[19]
May 16, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamBest
Speed
13BrazilHélio CastronevesTeam Penske227.046 mph (365 km/h)
29New ZealandScott DixonChip Ganassi Racing226.202 mph (364 km/h)
310United KingdomDario FranchittiChip Ganassi Racing226.044 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Monday May 17

[edit]
  • Weather: Rain, 54 °F (12 °C)
  • Practice summary: Practice was cancelled due to rain.[20]

Tuesday May 18

[edit]
  • Weather: Cloudy, 57 °F (14 °C), intermittent rain showers
  • Practice summary: Five different teams comprised the top five positions on the speed chart. Late in the dayE. J. Viso crashed in turn one, and was transported to the hospital with back pain.
May 18, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamBest
Speed
19New ZealandScott DixonChip Ganassi Racing226.549 mph (365 km/h)
232BrazilMario MoraesKV Racing Technology225.913 mph (364 km/h)
326United StatesMarco AndrettiAndretti Autosport225.751 mph (363 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Wednesday May 19

[edit]
  • Weather: Cloudy, 63 °F (17 °C)
  • Practice summary: Thirty-four drivers took practice laps, with many working on race set-ups. The field completed 2,282 laps with no major incidents reported.[21]
May 19, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamBest
Speed
19New ZealandScott DixonChip Ganassi Racing226.971 mph (365 km/h)
26AustraliaRyan BriscoeTeam Penske226.633 mph (365 km/h)
377CanadaAlex TaglianiFAZZT Race Team226.002 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Thursday May 20

[edit]
  • Weather: Partly cloudy, 68 °F (20 °C)
  • Practice summary: A total of 44 cars are currently at the Speedway, and 44 have passed technical inspection. Thirty-seven drivers have been on the track to date and turned 1,445 laps today and 7,289 laps this month. Alex Lloyd turned 81 laps today, more than any other driver. There were two cautions for a total of two hours, 35 minutes.[22]
May 20, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamBest
Speed
111BrazilTony KanaanAndretti Autosport226.775 mph (365 km/h)
215CanadaPaul TracyKV Racing Technology226.322 mph (364 km/h)
306JapanHideki MutohNewman/Haas Racing226.230 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Friday May 21 – Fast Friday

[edit]
Danica Patrick's car on Fast Friday.
  • Weather: Cloudy, 70 °F (21 °C)
  • Practice summary: All 36 drivers today were separated by .7745 of a second. Fifteen drivers turned laps of 225 mph (362 km/h) or faster today.[23]
May 21, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamBest
Speed
13BrazilHélio CastronevesTeam Penske226.558 mph (365 km/h)
212AustraliaWill PowerTeam Penske226.429 mph (364 km/h)
377CanadaAlex TaglianiFAZZT Race Team226.153 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Qualifying

[edit]

Saturday May 22 – Pole Day

[edit]
Scott Dixon qualifies during the "shootout" segment. Dixon qualified for the sixth starting position.
  • Weather: Partly cloudy, 77 °F (25 °C)
  • Pole Day summary: Pole Day 2010 opened up withA. J. Foyt IV and many others through the early part of the day.Andretti Autosport struggled through the most part of the day withMarco Andretti finishing in the middle part of the qualifiers andDanica Patrick who finished 23rd of all 24 drivers qualified.John Andretti failed to qualify, whileTony Kanaan crashed during his qualifying run splitting his engine in two. The new system was put into place that year with 24 drivers qualified, while still vulnerable to being bumped. The top nine drivers, in this caseHélio Castroneves,Will Power,Dario Franchitti,Ryan Briscoe,Alex Tagliani,Scott Dixon,Graham Rahal,Ed Carpenter,Hideki Mutoh, were all involved in a shootout for the pole position. The drivers' times were wiped out and each made one or more four-lap qualification attempts. The shootout lasted from4:30 pm to6:00 pm allowing the drivers to make as many qualification attempts as they wanted in the time available. Unlike the main portion of qualifying, during the shootout segment drivers did not have to withdraw previous qualification times to make another attempt; the fastest time for each driver during the shootout segment was used to order the drivers.Hélio Castroneves not only won the first session of qualifying, but also the shootout and the 2010 Indianapolis 500 pole position.
Pole Day – Saturday, May 22, 2010
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamQualifying
Speed
Points
"Shootout" competitors (positions 1–9)
13BrazilHélio CastronevesTeam Penske227.970 mph (367 km/h)15
212AustraliaWill PowerTeam Penske227.578 mph (366 km/h)13
310United KingdomDario FranchittiChip Ganassi Racing226.990 mph (365 km/h)12
46AustraliaRyan BriscoeTeam Penske226.554 mph (365 km/h)11
577CanadaAlex TaglianiFAZZT Race Team226.390 mph (364 km/h)10
69New ZealandScott DixonChip Ganassi Racing226.233 mph (364 km/h)9
730United StatesGraham RahalRahal Letterman Racing225.519 mph (363 km/h)8
820United StatesEd CarpenterPanther Racing224.507 mph (361 km/h)7
906JapanHideki MutohNewman/Haas Racing223.487 mph (360 km/h)6
Positions 10–24
1099United StatesTownsend BellSam Schmidt Motorsports225.097 mph (362 km/h)4
1122United KingdomJustin WilsonDreyer & Reinbold Racing225.050 mph (362 km/h)4
122BrazilRaphael MatosDe Ferran Dragon Racing225.028 mph (362 km/h)4
1332BrazilMario MoraesKV Racing Technology224.888 mph (362 km/h)4
1421United StatesDavey HamiltonDe Ferran Dragon Racing224.852 mph (362 km/h)4
1524United KingdomMike ConwayDreyer & Reinbold Racing224.583 mph (361 km/h)4
1626United StatesMarco AndrettiAndretti Autosport224.575 mph (361 km/h)4
1737United StatesRyan Hunter-ReayAndretti Autosport224.547 mph (361 km/h)4
184United KingdomDan WheldonPanther Racing224.464 mph (361 km/h)4
198VenezuelaE. J. VisoKV Racing Technology224.380 mph (361 km/h)4
2023South AfricaTomas ScheckterDreyer & Reinbold Racing224.261 mph (361 km/h)4
2125BrazilAna Beatriz R Dreyer & Reinbold Racing224.243 mph (361 km/h)4
2278SwitzerlandSimona de Silvestro R HVM Racing224.228 mph (361 km/h)4
237United StatesDanica PatrickAndretti Autosport224.217 mph (361 km/h)4
2436BelgiumBertrand Baguette R Conquest Racing224.189 mph (361 km/h)4
OFFICIAL REPORT[permanent dead link]

Sunday May 23 – Bump Day

[edit]
  • Weather: Sunny, 87 °F (31 °C)
  • Bump Day summary: With 24 drivers qualified the previous day, the field started the day with nine spots open. In the morning practice session,Tony Kanaan suffered his second crash in two days. He suffered a nearly identical crash as Saturday in turn one, this time wrecking his back up car. Kanaan was uninjured, and the team was forced to repair the backup car, or Kanaan could possibly miss the race.

Time trials opened at 12:00 p.m., with several cars ready in the qualifying line. In the first hour, early runs filled the field to 33 cars. Several drivers put in safe speeds, includingJohn Andretti,Sarah Fisher,Vítor Meira,Alex Lloyd andBruno Junqueira. Junqueira was the fastest of the day, and his speed of 225.662 mph ranked 7th-fastest overall in the field.[24]A. J. Foyt IV parted ways with hisgrandfather's team andJaques Lazier was drafted as his replacement. As of 1 p.m., the Bump Day qualifiers were as follows:

Pos.DriverSpeedNotes
25Bruno Junqueira225.662 mph
26Alex Lloyd224.783 mph
27John Andretti224.518 mph
28Sarah Fisher224.434 mph
29Vítor Meira224.388 mph
30Paul Tracy223.892 mph
31Jay Howard223.824 mph
32Mario Romancini223.805 mph
33Sebastián Saavedra223.634 mphOn the "Bubble"
Non-qualifiers
34Takuma Sato221.622 mphBumped
Milka DunoNo SpeedWave off
Tony KanaanNo SpeedNo Attempt
Jaques LazierNo SpeedNo Attempt

At about 1:10 p.m., a break in the qualifying line occurred, and the track was opened up for general practice. The temperature was rising into the low 90s °F, and the track temperature was measured at about 118 °F. Most drivers stayed off of the track during the hottest period of the afternoon, awaiting better conditions. At 4:50 p.m., during a practice run,Sebastián Saavedra wrecked his already-qualified car. Saavedra was sent to thehospital, and if he were to be bumped, he would not be able to re-qualify.[25]

At 5:23 p.m.,Tony Kanaan took to the track in his repaired back-up car. Kanaan bumped his way into the field with a speed of 224.072 mph.[26][27] Kanaan bumpedSebastián Saavedra ofBryan Herta Autosport from the field. Saavedra experienced trouble of his own, as he wrecked his car during a practice run about at 4:50 p.m. Sunday afternoon. Saavedra was sent to thehospital, and would be unable to re-qualify. As of 5:30 p.m.,Romancini was now on the bubble. As of approximately 5:30 p.m., the Bump Day qualifiers were as follows:

Pos.DriverSpeedNotes
25Bruno Junqueira225.662 mph
26Alex Lloyd224.783 mph
27John Andretti224.518 mph
28Sarah Fisher224.434 mph
29Vítor Meira224.388 mph
30Tony Kanaan224.072 mph
31Paul Tracy223.892 mph
32Jay Howard223.824 mph
33Mario Romancini223.805 mphOn the "Bubble"
Non-qualifiers
34Sebastián Saavedra223.634 mphBumped
35Jaques Lazier223.360 mphToo slow
36Takuma Sato221.622 mphBumped
Milka DunoNo SpeedWave off

At 5:33 p.m.Mario Romancini's team withdrew his speed, which momentarily re-instatedSebastián Saavedra to 33rd position. Romancini's new speed of 224.641 mph was an improvement, and he was safe in the 27th position. Saavedra was bumped from the lineup once again. With 22 minutes remaining,Jay Howard was now on the bubble.Milka Duno was the next car out, but after two slow laps, she was waved off (her second wave off).Takuma Sato was the next car out. Sato's speed of 224.178 mph bumped Howard from the field.Paul Tracy was now on the bubble. At 5:45 p.m. (fifteen minutes left in the day), the Bump Day qualifiers were as follows:

Pos.DriverSpeedNotes
25Bruno Junqueira225.662 mph
26Alex Lloyd224.783 mph
27Mario Romancini224.641 mph2nd attempt
28John Andretti224.518 mph
29Sarah Fisher224.434 mph
30Vítor Meira224.388 mph
31Takuma Sato224.178 mph2nd attempt
32Tony Kanaan224.072 mph
33Paul Tracy223.892 mphOn the "Bubble"
Non-qualifiers
34Jay Howard223.824 mphBumped
35Sebastián Saavedra223.634 mphBumped
36Jaques Lazier223.360 mphToo slow
Milka DunoNo SpeedWave off

Jay Howard attempted to bump his way back into the field, but his speed of 223.610 mph was too slow. Since Howard had made his second attempt without formally withdrawing his original speed, he reverted to his 223.824 mph speed from the first attempt. For the moment, he was still 34th-fastest.Paul Tracy still clung to the 33rd position. Some confusion arose with online timing and scoring and on theVersus television broadcast as to who was on the bubble, and what speed Howard was being credited with. However, officials on pit lane had the situation under control. In a surprising move, Tracy's team withdrew his speed at 5:50 p.m. Tracy hoped to put in a safer speed, and at the same time, run out the clock to prevent Howard from getting another chance to qualify.

Tracy's withdraw tentatively re-instatedJay Howard (223.824 mph) to the 33rd position. Tracy, however, got very loose in the hot conditions, and his speed ended up being slower. He waved off after only two laps, and hurriedly got back into the qualifying line. After quick wave-offs byJaques Lazier andMilka Duno, time was running out. Sensing they were finally safe, Tony Kanaan's crew pulled their car out of line. Howard was now at the front of the qualifying line with Tracy second in line. With three minutes left in the session, the last row of the field consisted of the following drivers:

Pos.DriverSpeedNotes
31Takuma Sato224.178 mph
32Tony Kanaan224.072 mph
33Jay Howard223.824 mphOn the "Bubble"
Non-qualifiers
34Sebastián Saavedra223.634 mphBumped
Paul TracyNo SpeedWithdrew
Jaques LazierNo SpeedWave off
Milka DunoNo SpeedWave off

With less than two minutes to go,Jay Howard's team formally withdrew his speed and he pulled away for his third and final attempt. Howard was trying to use up time and keep Tracy off the track, but at the same time, was now tasked with bumping his way back into the lineup. The move re-instatedSebastián Saavedra's car to 33rd position. Howard's effort, however, was too slow.[28] The 6 o'clock gun fired with Tracy still waiting in line.Sebastián Saavedra shockingly made the field while he was lying in a hospital bed.[29][30] For the shoestring budgetBryan Herta Autosport team, the day (which coincidentally wasBryan Herta's 40th birthday), was remembered as the "Bump Day Miracle".

Milka Duno made three attempts during the afternoon, and none were run to completion.Jaques Lazier, who was a last-minute replacement at the Foyt team, failed to reach the necessary speed in his three attempts. On his last attempt, Lazier's car was so loose, he nearly crashed in turn three on his warm-up lap. Howard and Tracy, however, were the heartbreak stories of the day.[31][32] After qualifying closed,Andretti Autosport decided to replaceTony Kanaan's qualified back-up car with the primary machine. The decision forced Kanaan to move to the 33rd position, but since he had qualified 32nd, it was a drop of only one spot on the grid.

Bump Day – Sunday, May 23, 2010
RankCar
No.
DriverTeamQualifying
Speed
Points
2533BrazilBruno JunqueiraFAZZT Race Team225.662 mph (363 km/h)3
2619United KingdomAlex LloydDale Coyne Racing224.783 mph (362 km/h)3
2734BrazilMario Romancini R Conquest Racing224.641 mph (362 km/h)3
2843United StatesJohn AndrettiAndretti Autosport224.518 mph (361 km/h)3
2967United StatesSarah FisherSarah Fisher Racing224.434 mph (361 km/h)3
3014BrazilVítor MeiraA. J. Foyt Enterprises224.388 mph (361 km/h)3
315JapanTakuma Sato R KV Racing Technology224.178 mph (361 km/h)3
3211BrazilTony KanaanAndretti Autosport224.072 mph (361 km/h)3
3329ColombiaSebastián Saavedra R Bryan Herta Autosport223.634 mph (360 km/h)3
OFFICIAL REPORT

Carb Day

[edit]

Indianapolis 500 Final Practice – Friday May 28

[edit]
Scott Dixon at Carb Day at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2010
  • Weather: Sunny, 82 °F (28 °C)
  • Practice summary: An hour-long practice from11:00 am to12:00 pm. This practice was the final one until the running of the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday. All 33 cars that qualified ran in this practice session.

Pit Stop Challenge

[edit]

The 33rd annualPit Stop Challenge was held on Friday May 28.Hélio Castroneves (Team Penske) defeatedHideki Mutoh (Newman/Haas Racing) in the final round.

First RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
            
7Danica Patrick
(Andretti Autosport)
8.855
12Will Power
(Team Penske)
9.517
9Scott Dixon
(Chip Ganassi Racing)
9.462
12Will Power
(Team Penske)
7.968
7Danica Patrick
(Andretti Autosport)
3Hélio Castroneves
(Team Penske)
3Hélio Castroneves
(Team Penske)
8.558
11Tony Kanaan
(Andretti Autosport)
9.296
37Ryan Hunter-Reay
(Andretti Autosport)
DNF
11Tony Kanaan
(Andretti Autosport)
11.833
3Hélio Castroneves
(Team Penske)
8.001
06Hideki Mutoh
(Newman/Haas)
9.547
6Ryan Briscoe
(Team Penske)
9.628
06Hideki Mutoh
(Newman/Haas)
8.858
06Hideki Mutoh
(Newman/Haas)
8.875
4Dan Wheldon
(Panther Racing)
9.622
06Hideki Mutoh
(Newman/Haas)
8.296
22Justin Wilson
(Dreyer & Reinbold)
9.255
22Justin Wilson
(Dreyer & Reinbold)
8.097
26Marco Andretti
(Andretti Autosport)
9.210
22Justin Wilson
(Dreyer & Reinbold)
8.408
10Dario Franchitti
(Chip Ganassi Racing)
8.801

Starting grid

[edit]
RowInsideMiddleOutside
13BrazilHélio Castroneves W 12AustraliaWill Power10United KingdomDario Franchitti W 
26AustraliaRyan Briscoe77CanadaAlex Tagliani9New ZealandScott Dixon W 
330United StatesGraham Rahal20United StatesEd Carpenter06JapanHideki Mutoh
499United StatesTownsend Bell22United KingdomJustin Wilson2BrazilRaphael Matos
532BrazilMario Moraes21United StatesDavey Hamilton24United KingdomMike Conway
626United StatesMarco Andretti37United StatesRyan Hunter-Reay4United KingdomDan Wheldon W 
78VenezuelaE. J. Viso23South AfricaTomas Scheckter25BrazilAna Beatriz R 
878SwitzerlandSimona de Silvestro R 7United StatesDanica Patrick36BelgiumBertrand Baguette R 
933BrazilBruno Junqueira19United KingdomAlex Lloyd34BrazilMario Romancini R 
1043United StatesJohn Andretti67United StatesSarah Fisher14BrazilVítor Meira
115JapanTakuma Sato R 29ColombiaSebastián Saavedra R 11BrazilTony Kanaan*
  •  W  = Former Indianapolis 500 winner
  •  R  = Indianapolis 500 rookie
  • (*) Tony Kanaan moved to the last starting position due to changes to the car

Failed to qualify

No.DriverTeamReason
15CanadaPaul TracyKV Racing TechnologyWithdrew speed. Too slow to bump back into the field.
18VenezuelaMilka DunoDale Coyne RacingThree qualifying attempts. None run to completion.
41United StatesA. J. Foyt IV
United StatesJaques Lazier
A. J. Foyt EnterprisesA. J. Foyt IV quit the team as a result of an argument with his grandfather regarding the car's setup.
Immediately after, Jaques Lazier desperately attempted to re-qualify the car on bump-day, but was too slow.
66United KingdomJay Howard R Sarah Fisher RacingWithdrew speed. Too slow to bump back into the field.

Race summary

[edit]
  • Race Weather: Sunny and clear, 87 °F (31 °C)
  • Race Start Time:1:00 pmEDT

Start

[edit]

After the traditional starting command byMari Hulman George, the pace car, driven byRobin Roberts, led the cars through the pace laps, followed by a special two-seater car driven byMichael Andretti and carryingMark Wahlberg. Once the pace car came off the field, the two-seater sped around to join the back of the field, and honorary starterJack Nicholson waved thegreen flag to start the race. (Nicholson refused to leave the flagstand and waved the green flag on the first two restarts, on laps 5 and 12.)[33][34][35]

On the first lap,Davey Hamilton spun on turn two, bringing out theyellow flag. Hamilton blamedTomas Scheckter, who had narrowly passed Hamilton on the outside, forcing Hamilton to correct. "Tomas Scheckter's an idiot... You know, he does it every year. I mean, it's not a surprise with him, and he gets away with it," said Hamilton.[33][34] In just the half-lap of green-flag racing, however,Dario Franchitti had taken the lead, whileTony Kanaan had moved from the 33rd, final starting position to 25th.[33][36]

The race returned to green-flag racing on lap 5, but a spin byBruno Junqueira brought out another caution for laps 8–11. By this time, Kanaan had moved up to 17th.[33][34]

First half

[edit]

Franchitti held the lead for a long period of green-flag racing, untilWill Power passed him for the lead on lap 31. However, on a pit stop, Power left before the fuel hose had been completely detached, leaving a coil dangling from his car. This would lead to a pit drive-through penalty for Power, dropping Power to 25th, as well as a caution period for debris as part of the coil fell onto the track. While Power would repeatedly work his way towards the front of the field, additional pit problems later in the race would lead to only an 8th-place finish.[33][34][37][38]

Franchitti would maintain his lead beyond the halfway point of the race. Meanwhile,John Andretti spun into the wall on lap 65, and on the ensuing round of yellow-flag pit stops, bothScott Dixon andRaphael Matos lost wheels while pulling out and had to return to their pits. Kanaan improved eight spots, from 12th to 4th, on the same round of pit stops. Matos's race did not last much longer, as he spun into the wall on lap 73.[33][34]

Second half

[edit]

Vítor Meira hit the turn two wall in lap 106, bringing out the race's next caution.Ed Carpenter, who had been running well, had to come into the pits before they were officially open to avoid running out of fuel, but the rules then required him to come in again once the pits were open, costing him several spots.[33] While most drivers came into the pits on the yellow, Tomas Scheckter stayed out, briefly taking the lead, but Franchitti quickly took it back after the race returned to green-flag status.[34]

A long stretch of green-flag racing followed. Kanaan passedHélio Castroneves and Scheckter to take the second spot, but Franchitti pulled away and had a lead of 9.7 seconds over Kanaan by lap 142.[33] A series of green-flag pits on laps 143–147 resulted inMarco Andretti andRyan Briscoe briefly taking the lead, in turn, before they had to pit and Franchitti re-emerged as the leader, withAndretti Autosport teammates Andretti and Kanaan in second and third, respectively.[33][34] On the same round of pits, Castroneves stalled his car leaving the pits, dropping him from third to sixteenth. ContinuingPenske Racing's problems, Briscoe crashed into the turn four wall on lap 148.[37] Most drivers stayed out during this caution, but Castroneves pitted, hoping that there would be enough additional laps under caution to extend his fuel mileage and allow him to finish the race without pitting again. Kanaan passed Andretti under the following green flag to retake the second position.[33]

Finish

[edit]

A spin by rookieSebastián Saavedra on lap 161 brought out another caution, and most drivers came into the pits, butMike Conway,Justin Wilson, Castroneves, andGraham Rahal all stayed out, taking the top four spots, respectively. In the end, none of the four had enough fuel to complete the race and all had to pit before the end of the race under a green flag, giving Franchitti the lead again on lap 192, with Kanaan again in second.[33][34] Kanaan's hopes for a "worst-to-first" race came to an end on lap 196 when he had to come in for additional fuel.[33]

Franchitti slowed in the final laps to conserve fuel, but he was still able to stay ahead of second-placeDan Wheldon, who was also trying to save fuel. A dramatic crash occurred in the final lap asRyan Hunter-Reay ran out of fuel and slowed, andMike Conway hit Hunter-Reay's car, flipping Conway's car and sending it airborne and into the protective fence, shattering the car. Conway's teammateAna Beatriz spun into the inside wall while avoiding the crash ahead of her. This brought out a final caution, and Franchitti led the field to thecheckered flag, winning his second Indianapolis 500.[33]

Conway was airlifted to nearby Methodist Hospital with a broken lower left leg.[39] Of the crash, Hunter-Reay said, "I'm sorry Mike is hurt... It was totally uncalled for. We weren't going to make it anyway. When you run out of fuel in these cars, it's like hitting the brakes. In hindsight, we should have stopped for fuel." It was the only multi-car crash of the race.[40] Two spectators were treated for minor injuries from the crash.[41] ESPNSportsCenter and ESPN'SNASCAR Now program reported on May 31, 2010, Conway also suffered compression to his lower back and suffered a bad fracture to one of his vertebrae in his neck.

Dario Franchitti heads through the pits towards Victory Lane after winning.

After skulling the traditional bottle of milk for the winner, Franchitti stated "this tastes just as good the second time", referring to his victory in the2007 race.[42] Franchitti led for 155 of the race's 200 laps. He survived the final 36 laps without taking a pit stop.[43]

Post-race summary

[edit]

Franchitti's team's owner,Chip Ganassi had already won theDaytona 500 withJamie McMurray. When McMurray won theBrickyard 400 at Indianapolis, Ganassi became the first owner to win the Daytona 500, Indy 500, and Brickyard 400 in the same season.[43] TheHarley J. Earl Trophy had been brought to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway—the first time it had ever been away from Daytona—and it stood side by side with theBorg-Warner Trophy.[33]

Dan Wheldon finished second. In a post-race interview, he suggested that it was a mistake to be as conservative as he was on fuel: "I could see [Franchitti] at the end... unfortunately, I should have kept going 'cause I had fuel in the car when it came into the pits."[33] However, Franchitti also had additional fuel, with 1.6 gallons remaining in his tank at the end of the race, even after taking a cool-down lap.[41] It was the second consecutive second-place finish for Wheldon at the Indianapolis 500, and, along with Vítor Meira's finish in 2008, the third forPanther Racing.[44]

Marco Andretti was initially reported to have finished sixth,[33] but a post-race review revealed that three drivers had passed him during the final caution period, and he was restored to third place in the official race results, giving him his third top-three finish in five starts at the Indianapolis 500. The same review also revealed thatSimona de Silvestro passedMario Romancini after the caution came out, making Romancini, not de Silvestro, the highest finishing rookie, at 13th.[45] Marco Andretti was one of the three Andretti Autosport drivers (out of the team's five entries) to finish in the top eleven, even though none of the Andretti drivers had qualified higher than sixteenth. As late as lap 191, four of the Andretti drivers had been in the top nine.[36] Also among the Andretti drivers wasDanica Patrick; starting twenty-third and finishing sixth, she scored the highest placement of the four female drivers in the race.[46]

Hélio Castroneves, who started from the pole and was considered a pre-race favorite, finished ninth after his problematic pit stop, and his late-race fuel strategy failed to pan out.[47] Castroneves praised Franchitti and took responsibility for his own finish, saying "I have to say, Dario was dominant. But this was the first time I feel like I let my guys down. We didn't have the best car, but we were better than ninth, certainly."[37]

Tony Kanaan, who had started in last place and had run as high as second, finished eleventh after he had to pit for a final splash of fuel, but still garnered much applause from nearby fans as he exited his car after the race.[36] Kanaan praised former teammate Franchitti: "The best car and the best driver today won the race."[33]

Box score

[edit]
RankNo.DriverTeamChassisEngineLapsStatusGridPoints
110United KingdomDario Franchitti W Chip Ganassi RacingDallaraHonda2003:05:37.0131352
24United KingdomDan Wheldon W Panther RacingDallaraHonda200+0.15361840
326United StatesMarco AndrettiAndretti AutosportDallaraHonda200+23.52511635
419United KingdomAlex LloydDale Coyne RacingDallaraHonda200+20.9876*2632
59New ZealandScott Dixon W Chip Ganassi RacingDallaraHonda200+21.4922*630
67United StatesDanica PatrickAndretti AutosportDallaraHonda200+21.7560*2328
722United KingdomJustin WilsonDreyer & Reinbold RacingDallaraHonda200+25.97611126
812AustraliaWill PowerTeam PenskeDallaraHonda200+30.2474224
93BrazilHélio Castroneves W Team PenskeDallaraHonda200+33.0137122
1077CanadaAlex TaglianiFAZZT Race TeamDallaraHonda200+34.2482520
1111BrazilTony KanaanAndretti AutosportDallaraHonda200+59.59573319
1230United StatesGraham RahalRahal Letterman RacingDallaraHonda200+59.9739718
1334BrazilMario Romancini R Conquest RacingDallaraHonda200+1:05.02192717
1478SwitzerlandSimona de Silvestro R HVM RacingDallaraHonda200+1:01.6745*2216
1523South AfricaTomas ScheckterDreyer & Reinbold RacingDallaraHonda199-1 lap2015
1699United StatesTownsend BellSam Schmidt MotorsportsDallaraHonda199-1 lap1014
1720United StatesEd CarpenterPanther RacingDallaraHonda199-1 lap813
1837United StatesRyan Hunter-ReayAndretti AutosportDallaraHonda198Contact1712
1924United KingdomMike ConwayDreyer & Reinbold RacingDallaraHonda198Contact1512
205JapanTakuma Sato R KV Racing TechnologyDallaraHonda198-2 laps3112
2125BrazilAna Beatriz R Dreyer & Reinbold RacingDallaraHonda196Contact2112
2236BelgiumBertrand Baguette R Conquest RacingDallaraHonda183-17 laps2412
2329ColombiaSebastián Saavedra R Bryan Herta AutosportDallaraHonda159Contact3212
246AustraliaRyan BriscoeTeam PenskeDallaraHonda147Contact412
258VenezuelaE. J. VisoKV Racing TechnologyDallaraHonda139Contact1910
2667United StatesSarah FisherSarah Fisher RacingDallaraHonda125Contact2910
2714BrazilVítor MeiraA. J. Foyt EnterprisesDallaraHonda105Contact3010
2806JapanHideki MutohNewman/Haas RacingDallaraHonda76Handling910
292BrazilRaphael MatosDe Ferran Dragon RacingDallaraHonda72Contact1210
3043United StatesJohn AndrettiAndretti AutosportDallaraHonda62Contact2810
3132BrazilMario MoraesKV Racing TechnologyDallaraHonda17Contact1310
3233BrazilBruno JunqueiraFAZZT Race TeamDallaraHonda7Contact2510
3321United StatesDavey HamiltonDe Ferran Dragon RacingDallaraHonda0Contact1410

 W  Former Indianapolis 500 winner

 R  Indianapolis 500 Rookie

All entrants utilizedFirestone tires.

(*) Lloyd, Dixon, Patrick, and de Silvestro's finishing positions were adjusted downward after the race, for passing under yellow.[48]

Race statistics

[edit]
Lap Leaders
LapsLeader
1–30Dario Franchitti
31–35Will Power
36Dario Franchitti
37–38Ryan Briscoe
39–108Dario Franchitti
109–113Tomas Scheckter
114–142Dario Franchitti
143Marco Andretti
144–146Ryan Briscoe
147–162Dario Franchitti
163–177Mike Conway
178–188Justin Wilson
189–191Hélio Castroneves
192–200Dario Franchitti
Total laps led
DriverLaps
Dario Franchitti155
Mike Conway15
Justin Wilson11
Tomas Scheckter5
Ryan Briscoe5
Will Power5
Hélio Castroneves3
Marco Andretti1
Cautions: 9 for 44 laps
LapsReason
1–4Davey Hamilton crash in turn 2
8–11Bruno Junqueira crash in turn 2
39–42Debris
65–70John Andretti crash in turn 2
73–78Raphael Matos crash in turn 1
106–111Vítor Meira crash on backstretch
148–155Ryan Briscoe crash in turn 4
161–165Sebastián Saavedra crash in turn 1
200Mike Conway,Ryan Hunter-Reay crash in northchute

Broadcasting

[edit]

Television

[edit]

The race was televised inhigh definition in theUnited States onABC, the 46th consecutive year on that network.Marty Reid served as anchor. The telecast utilized theSide-by-Side format for commercial breaks.

"Fast Friday" Practice, Time trials, and Carb Day were shown live in high definition onVersus.Bob Jenkins served as anchor, along withRobbie Buhl andJon Beekhuis as analysts.Jack Arute, Robbie Floyd, andLindy Thackston covered the pits.

The race was carried live onTSN and onRDS in Canada,[49] and onESPN Latin America. InBrazil, the race was carried live onBand TV/BandSports.

ABCTelevision
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reporters

Host:Brent Musburger
Announcer:Marty Reid
Color:Scott Goodyear
Color:Eddie Cheever

Vince Welch
Brienne Pedigo
Jamie Little
Rick DeBruhl

Radio

[edit]

The race was broadcast on radio by theIMS Radio Network.Mike King served as anchor. For the second time,Paul Page andBob Jenkins joined the booth to offer commentary and observations. For the first time, the turn one reporting location was eliminated.Jerry Baker instead joined the booth as analyst. The turn one vantage point was eliminated due to the fact that the booth announcers had a clear view of that part of the track, and it allowed better continuity.

The driver expert wasIndy Lights competitorJames Hinchcliffe, who joined the crew for the first time. For the fourth year in a row,Davey Hamilton was part of the crew serving as live in-car reporter. However, he was involved in a crash at the start of the race, and was unable to give any reports. He instead visited the booth during the race.

Chris Denari, the television voice of theIndiana Fever, covered aFever game against theShock Saturday night before the race inTulsa, Oklahoma. He then drove ten hours overnight back to Indianapolis to make it to the race on time.

For 2010, a special change was made for the famous out-cue"Stay tuned for the greatest spectacle in racing." Rather than just have the chief announcer recite the line, numerous drivers from the starting field were recorded introducing themselves and reciting the cue. Each commercial break attempted to feature a different driver.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer:Mike King
Driver expert:James Hinchcliffe
Analyst:Jerry Baker
Analyst:Paul Page
Historian:Donald Davidson
Live in-car reports:Davey Hamilton
Commentary:Bob Jenkins

Turn 1: not used
Turn 2: Jake Query
Turn 3: Mark Jaynes
Turn 4: Chris Denari

Nick Yeoman (north pits)
Dave Argabright (center pits)
Kevin Lee (south pits)
Dave Wilson (garages)

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to2010 Indianapolis 500.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Powell, Eric (May 31, 2010)."Franchitti Earns $2.75 Million For Indy 500; De Silvestro Chase Rookie Of The Year".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. RetrievedJune 1, 2010.Simona de Silvestro earned the prestigious Indianapolis 500 Chase Rookie of the Year Award, which includes a $25,000 bonus plus the Chase Rookie of the Year Trophy. De Silvestro finished 14th in the No. 78 Team Stargate Worlds HVM Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone.
  2. ^Cavin, Curt (May 2, 2010)."Bull-riding links bring Jewel for anthem".The Indianapolis Star. Michael G. Kane;Gannett Company.Archived from the original on May 4, 2010. RetrievedMay 3, 2010.
  3. ^Powell, Eric (December 18, 2009)."Chevrolet Camaro SS To Pace 2010 Indianapolis 500 Mile Race".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Archived fromthe original on February 27, 2012. RetrievedDecember 21, 2009.
  4. ^Kelly, Paul (March 25, 2010)."'Good Morning America' Anchor Robin Roberts To Drive Pace Car At 2010 Indianapolis 500".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Archived fromthe original on March 7, 2012. RetrievedMarch 25, 2010.
  5. ^Cavin, Curt (May 26, 2010)."Jack Nicholson will flag start of Indianapolis 500".The Indianapolis Star. Michael G. Kane;Gannett Company.Archived from the original on June 1, 2010. RetrievedMay 26, 2010.
  6. ^Lewandowski, Dave (March 6, 2010)."VERSUS' passion at forefront of telecasts".IndyCar Series.Indy Racing League. Archived fromthe original on May 26, 2010. RetrievedMay 12, 2010.
  7. ^"Indianapolis 500 On ABC Earns Lowest Rating, Viewership Ever".SportsBusiness Daily. Street & Smith's Sports Group. June 2, 2010. RetrievedSeptember 28, 2010.
  8. ^"Indy 500 Overnights Drop on ABC".Sports Media Watch.Blogspot. June 1, 2010. RetrievedSeptember 28, 2010.
  9. ^Beer, Matt (May 30, 2010)."Conway breaks leg in huge crash".autosport.com.Haymarket Publications. RetrievedJune 2, 2010.
  10. ^Beer, Matt (June 1, 2010)."Conway sidelined for three months".autosport.com.Haymarket Publications. RetrievedJune 2, 2010.
  11. ^Beer, Matt (December 15, 2009)."Indy cuts qualifying to two days".autosport.com.Haymarket Publications.Archived from the original on December 17, 2009. RetrievedDecember 15, 2009.
  12. ^"Wahlberg, Andrettis Team Up For IZOD Fastest Seat In Sports At Indy".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 26, 2010.Archived from the original on May 28, 2010. RetrievedMay 26, 2010.
  13. ^Clarke, Liz (May 24, 2010)."Four women, including Danica Patrick, set to contend in 2010 Indianapolis 500".The Washington Post. RetrievedJune 6, 2010.
  14. ^"2010 Indianapolis 500 Daily Trackside Reports"(PDF).Pages 172. IZOD IndyCar Series. RetrievedJune 1, 2020.
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  18. ^"Daily Trackside Report – Saturday, May 15".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 15, 2010.Archived from the original on May 19, 2010. RetrievedMay 16, 2010.
  19. ^"Daily Trackside Report – Sunday, May 16".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 16, 2010.Archived from the original on May 27, 2010. RetrievedMay 16, 2010.
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  21. ^"Daily Trackside Report – Wednesday, May 19".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 19, 2010. RetrievedMay 20, 2010.
  22. ^"Daily Trackside Report – Thursday, May 20".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 20, 2010. RetrievedMay 22, 2010.
  23. ^"Daily Trackside Report – Friday, May 21".Indy500.com.Indianapolis Motor Speedway. May 21, 2010. RetrievedMay 22, 2010.
  24. ^Wilson, Phillip B. (May 24, 2010)."Junquiera succeeds, Lazier fails at dicey bump-day task".The Indianapolis Star. p. B3. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  25. ^"Painful moment".The Indianapolis Star. May 24, 2010. p. B4. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  26. ^Kravitz, Bob (May 24, 2010)."Kanann's struggles make 32nd feel great (Part 1)".The Indianapolis Star. p. B1. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  27. ^Kravitz, Bob (May 24, 2010)."Kanann's struggles make 32nd feel great (Part 2)".The Indianapolis Star. p. B4. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  28. ^Ballard, Steve (May 24, 2010)."Fisher has up-and-down day".The Indianapolis Star. p. B3. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  29. ^Cavin, Curt (May 24, 2010)."After times withdrawn, drivers can't find speed (Part 1)".The Indianapolis Star. p. B1. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  30. ^Cavin, Curt (May 24, 2010)."After times withdrawn, drivers can't find speed (Part 2)".The Indianapolis Star. p. B4. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  31. ^"Self-Bumped".The Indianapolis Star. May 24, 2010. p. B1. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  32. ^"Chronology".The Indianapolis Star. May 24, 2010. p. B4. RetrievedAugust 5, 2025 – viaNewspapers.com.Open access icon
  33. ^abcdefghijklmnopqIndianapolis 500 (TV production). Presenters:Marty Reid,Eddie Cheever, andScott Goodyear.ABC. May 30, 2010.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  34. ^abcdefghDorsey, Patrick (May 31, 2010). "Race Breakdown".The Indianapolis Star. p. R4.
  35. ^Martin, Bruce (May 31, 2010)."Franchitti joins legends with his second Indianapolis 500 victory".SI Mobile. Archived fromthe original on July 14, 2012. RetrievedMay 31, 2010.
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  44. ^Wilson, Phillip B. (May 31, 2010). "Wheldon delivers another 2nd for Panther".The Indianapolis Star. p. R13.
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  46. ^Alesia, Mark (May 31, 2010). "Patrick bounces back to finish 6th".The Indianapolis Star. p. R2.
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