Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

2001 Indianapolis 500

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
85th running of the Indianapolis 500

85th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning bodyIndy Racing League
Season2001 IRL season
DateMay 27, 2001
WinnerBrazilHélio Castroneves
Winning teamPenske Racing
Average speed141.574 mph (228 km/h)
Pole positionUnited StatesScott Sharp
Pole speed226.037 mph (364 km/h)
Fastest qualifierUnited StatesScott Sharp
Rookie of the YearBrazilHélio Castroneves
Most laps ledBrazilHélio Castroneves (52)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthemSteven Tyler
"Back Home Again in Indiana"Jim Nabors
Starting commandMari Hulman George
Pace carOldsmobile Bravada
Pace car driverElaine Irwin Mellencamp
StarterBryan Howard
Estimated attendance400,000
TV in the United States
NetworkABC
AnnouncersBob Jenkins,Larry Rice,Jason Priestley
Nielsen ratings5.8 / 17
Chronology
PreviousNext
20002002

The85th Indianapolis 500 was held at theIndianapolis Motor Speedway inSpeedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 27, 2001. Race rookieHélio Castroneves, a three-year veteran of theCART series, led the final 52 laps and won his first of four Indy 500 victories.Team Penske swept 1st-2nd withGil de Ferran finishing as the runner-up. Winning car ownerRoger Penske scored his record-extending eleventh victory at the Indianapolis 500, and notched his first-ever 1-2 finish in the race. It was a redemption from the team's previous attempt at Indy (1995) in which both of his cars failed to qualify.Team Penske did not compete at Indianapolis from 1996 to 2000 due to the ongoingopen wheel "Split".

The race was sanctioned by theIndy Racing League, and was part of the2001 Indy Racing Northern Lights Series season. The 2001 race was notable in that several topCART teams returned to Indy for the first time since1995.IRL-based teams excelled in time trials, taking the front row, and the top four starting positions overall. However, the CART-based teams swept the top six finishing positions on race day. Former IRL championTony Stewart (who was competing full-time in NASCAR), returned to Indy after missing the 2000 race. Stewart raced "Double Duty", becoming the first driver in history to complete all 1,100 miles. He finished 6th at Indy, and 3rd at theCoca-Cola 600.

The race experienced two rain delays, one lengthy yellow flag around the midway point, and one brief red flag period later in the day. The race, however, was run to its full 500-mile distance.

This race marked the final IndyCar start for the previous year's championship runner-up, and two-time Indy 500 runner-upScott Goodyear. Goodyear suffered an injury in a crash, and retired from racing. He would move to color commentary duties forESPN the following season.

Race background

[edit]

In the seventh year of the ongoingIRL/CART split,Team Penske andTeam Green purchased IRL-type machines, and returned to race at Indianapolis.Ganassi, who had returned (and won) in2000, entered as well. For the first time during the open wheel split, the CART series did not schedule any races for the weekend of the Indy 500, nor for the weekend of pole qualifying, allowing their teams the opportunity to participate at Indianapolis without interference.[1]

Because of his move toFormula One for the2001 season, reigning Indianapolis 500 championJuan Pablo Montoya did not return to defend his title. Montoya would not race in the Indy 500 again until 2014. After one year of retirement, two-time Indy 500 winnerArie Luyendyk returned to the cockpit.

After an experimental two-week schedule was used for the Indy 500 from 1998 to 2000, the Speedway reverted to a more traditional three-week schedule for practice, time trials, and the race. Rookie orientation was held April 13–14. Time trials were set at three days, however, instead of the original four. The week-long open test held in April from 1998 to 2000 was also eliminated, essentially replaced by the reinstatement of the second week of May practice.

Due to theMSA, tobacco brand sponsorship became an issue during the month of May.Team Penske driversHélio Castroneves andGil de Ferran were sponsored byMarlboro full-time in theCART series. The MSA, however, allowed brand sponsorship in only one sport per season. To skirt the regulations, CART sanctioned the participation of its teams in the race.[1][2] The Penske cars practiced and qualified with Marlboro logos during the first week of activity. By mid-month, however, they were required to remove the logos when thestate attorney general's office objected to their use.[3] Rather than repaint the liveries, or add generic logos (such as the familiar Marlboro "barcode" insignia), the sidepods were simply left blank; the familiar white/red Marlboro paint scheme was maintained.

Rule changes

[edit]

During yellow flag caution periods, the "wave around" rule would now be employed. When the field is one lap away from going back to green flag conditions, all lapped cars behind the pace car that happen to be ahead of the actual race leader would bewaved around the pace car, get their lap back, and be permitted to catch up to the tail end of the line of cars. This would continue until the race leader became the first car behind the pace car. Following the precedent set in2000, the pace car would then drop off the track in turn one, and the race leader would pace the field back to the green flag and the ensuring restart.

The new restart rules were an attempt to ensure the leaders would get back to green flag racing without interference from lapped cars. It also created a strategy for lapped cars to earn one lap back (ostensibly by not pitting under a caution flag while all of the leader do), since Indy car racing had never allowed "racing back to the caution", nor did they want to implement a hard rule like the "Lucky Dog" inNASCAR.

Race schedule

[edit]
Race schedule — April 2001
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
8
 
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
ROP
14
ROP
Race schedule — May 2001
  1
 
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
Mini-Marathon
6
Practice
7
Practice
8
Practice
9
Practice
10
Practice
11
Practice
12
Pole Day
13
Time Trials
14
 
15
 
16
Practice
17
Practice
18
Practice
19
Practice
20
Bump Day
21
 
22
 
23
 
24
Carb Day
25
 
26
Parade
27
Indy 500
28
Memorial Day
29
 
30
 
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 and Time Trials

[edit]

IRL regularGreg Ray led the practice speeds for four of the first six days.Casey Mears,Eliseo Salazar, andStan Wattles suffered crashes during the week. On Fast Friday, Indy 500 rookieHélio Castroneves brushed the wall in turn one, but continued. The car suffered minor damage. Later that evening, Castroneves joked around with track workers, and helped them repaint the retaining wall which he had hit.

Pole Day - Saturday May 12

[edit]

During the morning practice session,Tony Stewart turned the fastest practice lap of the month at 226.996 mph. However, the session was later halted whenEliseo Salazar blew an engine and crashed in turn one.

IRL regularScott Sharp won the pole position with a four-lap average of 226.037 mph.Greg Ray, who had been among the fastest cars all week, waved off during his first attempt qualified, then returned later in the day to qualify second.Robby Gordon, driving an Indy-only entry forA.J. Foyt Racing, rounded out the front row. The highest of theCART regulars wasGil de Ferran, who qualified 5th. Former Indy 500 winnersArie Luyendyk,Buddy Lazier,Al Unser Jr., andEddie Cheever also made the field. At the end of the day, the field was filled to 27 cars.[4]

Second Day - Sunday May 13

[edit]

On the second day of qualifying, veteransMichael Andretti,Eddie Cheever, andBuzz Calkins withdrew their slow times from Saturday and re-qualified with better speeds. RookieBruno Junqueira was the fastest of the afternoon. At the end of the first weekend of qualifying, the field was filled to 32 cars in the field.[4]

Bump Day - Sunday May 20

[edit]

On Bump Day,Billy Boat was the first car to complete a qualifying attempt, and the field was subsequently filled to 33 cars. Six cars were bumped during the afternoon, and Boat dropped to the bubble spot as of 5:07 p.m. Over the final 53 minutes Boat survived twelve attempts to be bumped from the field. Eight cars waved off, and four were too slow. With ten seconds left before the 6 o'clock gun,Memo Gidley was the final driver to make a qualifying attempt. He failed to bump his way into the field by only 0.242 seconds.

Carb Day

[edit]

The final practice was scheduled for Thursday May 24. All 33 cars plus the first alternate took laps. No serious incidents were reported.Jeret Schroeder required a tow-in due to his car being stuck in gear.Hélio Castroneves's car was seen on pit lane with its engine cover removed, but the crew reported they were simply draining excess motor oil. Scott Sharp (223.678 mph) was the fastest of the day.

Pit Stop Challenge

[edit]

The 25th annualCoorsPit Stop Challenge was held Thursday May 24. Twelve teams competed in a single-elimination bracket. Seven teams earned berths based on pit stop performance at Indy Racing League events since the previous year's Indianapolis 500. Three spots would be filled by the three highest race qualifiers not already in the contest. The last two spots would be filled by a last-chance qualifying session on May 9.

On Wednesday May 9, the last chance competition trials were held. The results were as follows: Michael Andretti (10.38 seconds),Hélio Castroneves (12.44 seconds),Buddy Lazier (19.22 seconds),Jeff Ward (no time),Didier André (no time),Gil de Ferran (no time). Pole position winnerScott Sharp, outside front row starterRobby Gordon, andGil de Ferran each earned spots based on race qualifying results. Gordon, however, withdrew from the contest and he was replaced byBuddy Lazier.

The bracket was determined by a blind draw. Four teams received byes for the first round. During the semifinal match betweenGil de Ferran and race polesitterScott Sharp, de Ferran stalled his engine and never left the pit box. The finals pitted Kelley Racing versus Galles Racing, with the crew ofScott Sharp defeatingAl Unser Jr. It was the first and only win in the event for Kelley Racing. After three previous wins in the pit stop contest, it marked Al Unser Jr.'s first defeat in the championship round.

First RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
            
3Al Unser Jr.
(Galles Racing)
10.13
28Mark Dismore
(Kelley Racing)
10.24
28Mark Dismore
(Kelley Racing)
10.14
39Michael Andretti
(Andretti Green)
10.66
3Al Unser Jr.
(Galles Racing)
9.47
68Hélio Castroneves
(Team Penske)
9.74
68Hélio Castroneves
(Team Penske)
9.46
12Buzz Calkins
(Bradley Motorsports)
27.18
68Hélio Castroneves
(Team Penske)
9.61
4Sam Hornish Jr.
(Panther Racing)
10.42
8Scott Sharp
(Kelley Racing)
9.20
3Al Unser Jr.
(Galles Racing)
12.67
8Scott Sharp
(Kelley Racing)
9.53
14Eliseo Salazar
(Foyt Racing)
10.65
8Scott Sharp
(Kelley Racing)
10.32
91Buddy Lazier
(Hemelgarn Racing)
11.91
8Scott Sharp
(Kelley Racing)
9.31
66Gil de Ferran
(Team Penske)
no time
66Gil de Ferran
(Team Penske)
9.88
2Greg Ray
(Team Menard)
11.00
66Gil de Ferran
(Team Penske)
11.10
5Arie Luyendyk
(Treadway Racing)
11.63

Starting grid

[edit]
RowInsideMiddleOutside
1United States8 -Scott SharpUnited States2 -Greg RayUnited States41 -Robby Gordon
2United States28 -Mark DismoreBrazil66 -Gil de FerranNetherlands5 -Arie Luyendyk W 
3United States33 -Tony StewartUnited States35 -Jeff WardUnited States24 -Robbie Buhl
4United States91 -Buddy Lazier W Brazil68 -Hélio Castroneves R United States44 -Jimmy Vasser
5United States4 -Sam Hornish Jr.United States10 -Robby McGeheeUnited States15 -Sarah Fisher
6Canada52 -Scott GoodyearUnited States77 -Jaques LazierUnited States6 -Jon Herb R 
7United States3 -Al Unser Jr. W Brazil50 -Bruno Junqueira R United States39 -Michael Andretti
8France49 -Nicolas Minassian R United States9 -Jeret SchroederUnited States12 -Buzz Calkins
9United States51 -Eddie Cheever W United States99 -Davey HamiltonUnited States84 -Donnie Beechler
10Chile14 -Eliseo SalazarFrance36 -Stéphan GrégoireBrazil88 -Airton Daré
11United States16 -Cory Witherill R United States98 -Billy BoatBrazil21 -Felipe Giaffone R 

Alternates

[edit]

Failed to qualify

[edit]

Race recap

[edit]

Start

[edit]

Race morning was overcast with rain in the forecast. Cool temperatures caused problems at the start, as pole sitterScott Sharp crashed in the first turn on the first lap.Greg Ray andRobby Gordon barely avoided the crash, and slipped by the lead the field around for the first several laps.

On the 6th lap, the green came out, but less than 2 laps later, another crash occurred.Sarah Fisher spun in turn two, and collectedScott Goodyear. Both cars were heavily damaged, and Goodyear suffered a broken back. Goodyear would retire from IndyCar racing after the race due to the injury.

After a lengthy yellow, the green came out on lap 17. During the restart, however, cold tires caused yet another crash, asSam Hornish Jr. spun in turn four. Hornish did not hit anything, butAl Unser Jr. moved high to avoid the crash, and brushed along the outside wall on the main stretch, ending his race.

First half and first rain delay

[edit]

The race finally got going on lap 22, withRobby Gordon andGreg Ray dominating the early going. A long stretch of green flag racing saw the leaders cycle through two green flag pit stops.On lap 107,Jon Herb crashed in turn 1. During the yellow, rain began to fall around the track, and the caution was extended until lap 119.Michael Andretti led when the rain fell, but pitted soon after.Gil de Ferran inherited the lead,Team Penske teammateHélio Castroneves second.

Second half and second rain delay

[edit]

On lap 134,Cory Witherill spun exiting turn four. The leaders all headed to the pits.Castroneves andde Ferran were both penalized for exiting out of the pits incorrectly, givingTony Stewart the lead for the first time of the day.Stewart led until rain fell again on lap 149. After Stewart pitted,Hélio Castroneves retook the lead. Rain began falling harder on lap 155, and the red flag was displayed. After about 10 minutes, the sun came out, and the track quickly dried. After a 17-minute red flag, the cars were refired.

Finish

[edit]

Hélio Castroneves ledRobbie Buhl on the restart. Buhl attempted to take the lead on lap 159, but was blocked. Trailing by less than a half-second on lap 166, Buhl suddenly spun exiting turn 2, and tapped the inside wall.

The green came back out on lap 171, withCastroneves still leading, andde Ferran back to second. Castroneves held off his teammate by 0.4838 seconds, and won his first Indy 500. The finish markedRoger Penske's 11th Indy 500 triumph, and his first 1-2 finish. It was the second rookie winner in a row (followingJuan Pablo Montoya in2000).

On the victory lap, Castroneves stopped at the finish line, climbed from his car, and proceeded to engage in his customary celebration of climbing thecatch fence, much to the delight of the fans. Several crew members fromTeam Penske joined him on the fence.

In a public relations setback for the IRL, the top six finishers were all visiting drivers from either the rival CART series or the NASCAR Cup series. The first regular IRL series driver to finish wasEliseo Salazar in seventh place, running a lap down.

Scott Sharp's crash on the first lap meant for the second year in a row, the pole sitter finished 33rd and last. In the previous year's race, the same fate had befallenGreg Ray.

The 1-2 result forTeam Penske provided a stunning comeback for the most successful team in Indianapolis 500 history after their failure to qualify for the1995 race, the last Indy 500 entered by Team Penske due to the Indy 500 becoming an IRL race from1996 onward. "I think we redeemed ourselves for the lousy thing we did in 1995 ... this is the best day of my life coming back like this" saidRoger Penske in pit lane immediately after Castroneves took the checkered flag.[5]

Tony Stewart does Double Duty

[edit]

Tony Stewart attempted theIndy/Charlotte "Double Duty" for the second time in his racing career. Criticized by members of the media as being overweight and unfit for the grueling task, Stewart undertook a month-long fitness and dietary program with a personal trainer. Stewart, still driving the #20The Home Depot-sponsored Pontiac forJoe Gibbs Racing in theNASCARWinston Cup Series, signed withChip Ganassi Racing, part of a four driver effort at Indy.

Stewart qualified in 7th at Indy and 12th at Charlotte. Due to thenew television package on Fox, the start of theCoca-Cola 600 was moved up. A strict schedule was put into place, and regardless if the race was not over at Indy, Stewart was allegedly required to get out of the car at 4:00 p.m. to fly to Charlotte on time. During a 17-minute red flag, he had to visit first aid for a cramping leg. Relief driverRichie Hearn almost took over, but Stewart got back in the car.

The race was eventually resumed, and Stewart continued. The race was completed, and he finished 6th, on the lead lap. Immediately he flew toLowe's Motor Speedway, and made the start of the race on time. He was moved to the back of the pack during the pace lap for missing the drivers' meeting. On the second lap, Stewart spun while running last, in an incident he claimed was unrelated to fatigue. As the race wore on, he steadily climbed the standings, and finished 3rd on the lead lap. He became the first and still only driver ever to complete all 1,100 miles (1,800 km). Feeling that he proved his critics wrong, Stewart called them "idiots".

Box score

[edit]
FinishStartNoNameQualChassisEngineLapsStatusEntrant
11168BrazilHélio Castroneves R 224.142DallaraOldsmobile200141.574 mphTeam Penske
2566BrazilGil de Ferran224.406DallaraOldsmobile200+1.7373Team Penske
32139United StatesMichael Andretti223.441DallaraOldsmobile200+5.7691Team Green
41244United StatesJimmy Vasser223.455G-ForceOldsmobile200+13.9541Chip Ganassi Racing
52050BrazilBruno Junqueira R 224.209G-ForceOldsmobile200+27.2885Chip Ganassi Racing
6733United StatesTony Stewart224.248G-ForceOldsmobile200+37.5787Chip Ganassi Racing
72814ChileEliseo Salazar223.740DallaraOldsmobile199-1 LapA. J. Foyt Enterprises
83088BrazilAirton Daré222.236G-ForceOldsmobile199-1 LapTeamXtreme
93298United StatesBilly Boat221.528DallaraOldsmobile199-1 LapCURB/Agajanian/Beck Motorsports
103321BrazilFelipe Giaffone R 221.879G-ForceOldsmobile199-1 LapTreadway Racing
111410United StatesRobby McGehee222.607DallaraOldsmobile199-1 LapCahill Racing
122412United StatesBuzz Calkins222.467DallaraOldsmobile198-2 LapsBradley Motorsports
1365NetherlandsArie Luyendyk W 224.257G-ForceOldsmobile198-2 LapsTreadway Racing
14134United StatesSam Hornish Jr.223.333DallaraOldsmobile196-4 LapsPanther Racing
15924United StatesRobbie Buhl224.213G-ForceInfiniti196-4 LapsDreyer & Reinbold Racing
16428United StatesMark Dismore224.964DallaraOldsmobile195-5 LapsKelley Racing
1722United StatesGreg Ray225.194DallaraOldsmobile192-8 LapsTeam Menard
181091United StatesBuddy Lazier W 224.190DallaraOldsmobile192-8 LapsHemelgarn Racing
193116United StatesCory Witherill R 221.621G-ForceOldsmobile187-13 LapsIndy Regency Racing
20239United StatesJeret Schroeder222.785DallaraOldsmobile187-13 LapsPDM Racing
21341United StatesRobby Gordon224.994DallaraOldsmobile184-16 LapsA. J. Foyt Enterprises
221777United StatesJaques Lazier222.145G-ForceOldsmobile183-17 LapsJonathan Byrd/TeamXtreme
232699United StatesDavey Hamilton221.696DallaraOldsmobile182EngineSam Schmidt Motorsports
24835United StatesJeff Ward224.222G-ForceOldsmobile168RunningHeritage Motorsports
252784United StatesDonnie Beechler224.449DallaraOldsmobile160RunningA. J. Foyt Enterprises
262551United StatesEddie Cheever W 222.152DallaraInfiniti108ElectricalTeam Cheever
27186United StatesJon Herb R 222.015DallaraOldsmobile104AccidentTri-Star Racing
282936FranceStéphan Grégoire222.888G-ForceOldsmobile86Oil LeakHeritage Motorsports
292249FranceNicolas Minassian R 223.006G-ForceOldsmobile74GearboxChip Ganassi Racing
30193United StatesAl Unser Jr. W 221.615G-ForceOldsmobile16AccidentGalles Racing
311515United StatesSarah Fisher222.548DallaraOldsmobile7AccidentWalker Racing
321652CanadaScott Goodyear222.529DallaraInfiniti7AccidentTeam Cheever
3318United StatesScott Sharp226.037DallaraOldsmobile0AccidentKelley Racing

 W  Former Indianapolis 500 winner

 R  Indianapolis 500 Rookie

All entrants utilizedFirestone tires.

Race statistics

[edit]
Lap Leaders
LapsLeader
1–22Robby Gordon
23–45Greg Ray
46Tony Stewart
47Arie Luyendyk
48–52Michael Andretti
53–74Mark Dismore
75–80Greg Ray
81–84Michael Andretti
85–91Mark Dismore
92–102Greg Ray
103–109Michael Andretti
110–136Gil de Ferran
137–148Tony Stewart
149–200Hélio Castroneves
Total laps led
DriverLaps
Hélio Castroneves52
Greg Ray40
Mark Dismore29
Gil de Ferran27
Robby Gordon22
Michael Andretti16
Tony Stewart13
Arie Luyendyk1
Cautions: 8 for 56 laps
LapsReason
1–5Scott Sharp crash in turn 1
8–16Fisher,Goodyear crash in turn 2
18–21Hornish spin;Unser crash in turn 4
90–95Oil
107–118John Herb crash in turn 1, then extended by rain
134–138Cory Witherill spin in turn 4
148–157Oil; rain (red flag)
166–170Robbie Buhl crash in turn 2

National anthem controversy

[edit]
Steven Tyler

For the pre-race ceremonies, the Speedway invitedSteven Tyler ofAerosmith to perform "The Star-Spangled Banner".[6][7] At the time, Aerosmith was kicking off theirJust Push Play Tour, and earlier in the year had performed in the halftime show ofSuper Bowl XXXV. In the days leading up to the race, the band struck a deal withHeritage Motorsports to sponsorJeff Ward's car during the race.[6][7] The performance was widely regarded by observers as one of the worst and most controversial renditions of theU.S. national anthem ever.[6][8][9]

The national anthem performer at the Indianapolis 500 is normally backed-up by thePurdue All-American Marching Band; however, the band was only allowed to play the opening chorus.[10] Tyler began the song with aharmonica solo, then tossed the instrument into the crowd. He finished the songa cappella. Tyler tookartistic license to the extreme, and altered the last line of the song from"...the home of the brave" to"...the home of the Indianapolis 500."[6][8][10][11] The crowd, television and radio commentators, along with militaryMedal of Honor recipients in attendance due to theMemorial Day holiday, had a largely negative response to the performance.[6][10][11] Tyler apologized and stated he meant no disrespect. Said Tyler, "I'm very proud to be an American, and live in the home of the brave."[6][8][11]

Speedway presidentTony George released a statement the following Tuesday citing "While we are certainly sorry that some were offended, it was neither our intention nor that of Mr. Tyler to be disrespectful. All of us have the utmost respect for the sacrifice our veterans have made for us."[12]

The harmonica Tyler threw into the crowd was reported to be retrieved by Purdue band member David Hornthal. On the February 20, 2012 episode ofPawn Stars, a harmonica purported to be the one Tyler threw into the crowd was presented, but did not sell.[13]

Broadcasting

[edit]

Radio

[edit]

The race was carried live on theIndy Racing Radio Network.Mike King served as chief announcer.Johnny Rutherford served as "driver expert" along with newcomerJohnny Parsons.

Several minor changes were made to the crew.Bob Lamey, Ken Double, andLarry Rice all departed. Kevin Lee joined the crew, taking the turn two position, which was now atop the Southeast Vista grandstand (it was previously on the roof of the VIP Suites). Chris Denari moved from the pits to turn four, where he remains as of today with the exception of 2014 when he was in Miami calling an Indiana Pacers playoff game. Howdy Bell took the limited assignment of hospital reporter and interviews during the pre-race coverage. The job of on-air "statistician" was eliminated permanently. NewcomersAdam Alexander and Kim Morris served as pit reporters along with Mike Lewis, who had debuted just one year earlier.

Starting in 2001, the flagship station for the network was changed back to its original home,1070 WIBC-AM (nowWFNI). Booth interviews were kept to a minimum in 2001. King interviewed Dr. Robert Hubbard, the 2001 co-recipient of theLouis Schwitzer Award for development of theHANS device.

Indy Racing Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer:Mike King
Driver expert:Johnny Rutherford
Driver expert:Johnny Parsons
Historian:Donald Davidson
Commentary:Chris Economaki

Turn 1:Jerry Baker
Turn 2: Kevin Lee
Turn 3: Mark Jaynes
Turn 4: Chris Denari

Adam Alexander (north pits)
Mike Lewis (center pits)
Kim Morris (south pits)
Chuck Marlowe (garages)
Howdy Bell (hospital)

Television

[edit]

The race was carried live flag-to-flag coverage in the United States onABC Sports.Al Michaels returned as host, withBob Jenkins as announcer. AnalystArie Luyendyk left television and returned to the cockpit.Tom Sneva left television as well. The new booth crew for 2001 included analystsLarry Rice andJason Priestley.

Gary Gerould was not part of the 2001 broadcast. Instead he was taking part in theCART telecasts for the season. Vince Welch took his place as pit reporter, Welch's first time on television at Indy.

ABCTelevision
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reportersPre-race analysts

Host:Al Michaels
Announcer:Bob Jenkins
Color:Larry Rice
Color:Jason Priestley

Jack Arute
Vince Welch
Dr. Jerry Punch
Leslie Gudel
Arie Luyendyk
Jason Priestley

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to2001 Indianapolis 500.
  1. ^ab"CART 2001 schedule announcement". Motorsport.com. August 4, 2000. Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2009. RetrievedAugust 5, 2008.
  2. ^"Team Penske interview". Motorsport.com. May 11, 2001. Archived fromthe original on June 6, 2011. RetrievedAugust 5, 2008.
  3. ^"2001 Indianapolis 500 Live daily Report"(PDF). Indy500.com. 2001. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on June 25, 2008. RetrievedAugust 5, 2008.
  4. ^ab"Daily Trackside Report Archive". November 10, 2015.
  5. ^"- YouTube".YouTube.
  6. ^abcdef"Aerosmith, the Car Racing Fans". RockThisWay. 2001. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  7. ^ab"2001 Indianapolis 500 Daily Trackside Report"(PDF). indy500.com. 2001. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on June 25, 2008. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  8. ^abc"The Star-Mangled Banner". wnew.com. April 22, 2008. Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2009. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  9. ^"Oh say, can you sing". North County Times. June 1, 2007. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  10. ^abc"Purdue Band connection to Indy 500 creeps towards 90". Purdue.edu. May 3, 2008. Archived fromthe original on May 17, 2008. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  11. ^abc"Steven Tyler's Indy Song Stirs Some".Washington Post. May 28, 2001. Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2009. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  12. ^"Indy Chief Apologizes for Anthem". L.A. Times. May 31, 2001. RetrievedJune 13, 2008.
  13. ^[1] Pawn Stars - Season 5, Episode 25 Pawnocchio]

Works cited

[edit]


2000 Indianapolis 500
Juan Pablo Montoya
2001 Indianapolis 500
Hélio Castroneves
2002 Indianapolis 500
Hélio Castroneves
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
Leadership
Title sponsors
Major events
Seasons
Indianapolis 500s
Champions
Tracks
Ovals
Road courses
Street circuits
Former
Cancelled
Road to Indy
Media Broadcasting
Lists
Ownership
Related topics
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=2001_Indianapolis_500&oldid=1304079320"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp