Thursday, January 21, 2021

All-Time One-Time Starter Grid: IndyCar

We are onto round two of this All-Time One-Time Starter Grid exercise and this time we will tackle IndyCar. 

IndyCar has a diverse history, one where the beginning does not look anything like what IndyCar is today. It dates back prior to the Indianapolis 500 even. It has raced on one-mile dirt tracks and had a point-to-point race from Los Angeles to Phoenix. It has been on dirt, brick, wooden boards, concrete, asphalt and almost every other surface in-between. It has been through four different sanctioning bodies and two bitter splits. It has run doubleheaders, triple-headers, quadruple-headers and even quintuple-headers. 

Drivers from all around the world have raced in North America's top form of open-wheel racing. Some of the best from every generation of automobile racing having competed at least once in IndyCar, from the best grand prix racers pre-World War II to Japanese-based champions. With IndyCar's long history, there are probably plenty of great drivers you didn't realize made at least one start and some of those are likely included in this ceremonial field of 33. 

Row 11

33. Jean Alesi
Claim to Fame: Veteran of 201 Formula One starts and remembered for a famous victory in the 1995 Canadian Grand Prix, on his 31st birthday nonetheless. Alesi would later race in the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters for five seasons and he won five races.
Only Start: May 27, 2012, Indianapolis 500
Result: 33rd
What happened: Alesi was one of two Lotus-powered cars entered for the 2012 Indianapolis 500. With the shortage in DW12 chassis and engines, only 33 cars showed up and Alesi's ride with Fan Force United was locked into the field before even turning a practice lap. On Bump Day, Alesi ran a four-lap average at 210.094 mph, over four miles per hour slower than Simona de Silvestro in 32nd and over 16 mph slower than Ryan Briscoe's pole speed. Both de Silvestro and Alesi were black-flagged at the end of lap ten, but Alesi ran one lap more. His ignorance earned him a two-lap penalty, dropping him to 33rd in his one and only IndyCar start. 
Odds of a second start: Highly unlikely as Alesi is 56 years old and he has not competed since that 2012 Indianapolis 500.

32. Louie Unser
Claim to Fame: The second of four Unser brothers, twin to Jerry and older than Bobby and Al. 
Only Start: September 5, 1955, Pikes Peak International Hill Climb
Result: 3rd
What happened: It should come as no surprise that Unser's only start was at the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb, the event his family dominated. Louie competed against his brothers Jerry and Bobby that day, as well as their uncle Louis, who won Pikes Peak nine times. Jerry and Bobby also made their debut on this day, but Louie came out on top in the family battle, finishing third in a Jaguar with his twin Jerry in fourth in an Offenhauser and Bobby in fifth in an Oldsmobile. Uncle Louis was 11th in an Offenhauser.
Odds of a second start: Zero. Louie Unser passed away in 2004. Unser did run at Pikes Peak in two years when it was a non-championship race. He was sixth and fourth in those two races.

31. Alfred Moss
Claim to Fame: Father of Sir Stirling Moss, Alfred Moss competed in trials and hill climbs during the 1920s. His main profession was denist.
Only Start: May 30, 1924, Indianapolis 500
Result: 16th
What happened: Moss was one of two European drivers to make the 1924 Indianapolis and he was 20th on the grid out of 22 starters. Moss kept the car in the race, but his Fronty-Ford was flagged off track after completing 177 laps, one of four competitors flagged off track.
Odds of a second start: Moss passed away at the age of 75 years old in 1972, nearly 48 years after his one and only IndyCar start. While Moss started in only one IndyCar race, he competed in two. Moss ran 49 laps in relief of Herbert Jones in the 1925 Indianapolis 500. In fact, Moss ran the most laps in the #29 Miller as Jones only completed 20 laps. 

Row 10

30. Jason Bright
Claim to Fame: Veteran of 575 Australia Supercars starts, Bright won 20 races and he won the 1998 Bathurst 1000 with Steven Richards. In 19 full seasons, he was in the top five of the championship five times and the top ten of the championship nine times. 
Only Start: October 15, 2000, Honda Indy 300 at Surfers Paradise
Result: 18th
What happened: Bright had spent 2000 driving in Indy Lights, where he ended up sixth in the championship with a victory at Portland and four other podium finishes. With CART heading to Surfers Paradise, it only made sense for the Australian to get a chance in his home race. Della Penna Motorsports fielded an entry for him. He qualified 24th out of 25 cars but made up some spots before being caught a restart accident with Roberto Moreno and Max Papis. His race was over after 44 laps. 
Odds of a second start: Unlikely. Bright turns 48 years old on March 7, but he has been out of full-time racing since 2018 and he hasn't raced an open-wheel car since his one start at Surfers Paradise.

29. Lucas Luhr
Claim to Fame: Three-time American Le Mans Series LMP1 champion. Three-time ALMS GT class champion. One-time ALMS LMP2 class champion. Two-time Le Mans class winner. Five-time 12 Hours of Sebring class winner. Two-time winner of the 24 Hours Nürburgring. 2011 FIA GT1 World Champion.
Only Start: August 25, 2013, GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma at Infineon Raceway
Result: 22nd
What happened: Luhr drove a surprise one-off in a partnership between Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing and RW Motorsports. It was his first open-wheel race in 15 years. He was slowest in the first two practice session but jumped up to 23rd in the third practice. He was 13th in his qualifying group in round one and started 25th. In the race, Luhr remained at the rear of the field only for an engine fire to end his race after 81 of 85 laps.
Odds of a second start: Unlikely. Luhr made his one start at Sonoma and a discussion of a second start never really came up. He did not compete in any series in 2020 after spending the previous two years running in the ADAC GT Masters and the Veranstaltergemeinschaft Langstreckenpokal Nürburgring... or VLN for short.

28. Erwin "Cannonball" Baker
Claim to Fame: Automotive pioneer remembered for coast to coast expeditions and inspiring the Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash that was held five times during the 1970s. Baker also won one of the seven races held during the first motorsports event at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, a four-lap, ten-mile amateur motorcycle race. 
Only Start: May 30, 1922, Indianapolis 500
Result: 11th
What happened: Baker qualified 16th in his #3 Frontenac, which the Chevrolet Brothers owned. He was able to complete all 200 laps but finished just outside the money in 11th. 
Odds of a second start: Baker has been dead for 62 years. 

Row 9

27. Chuck Parsons
Claim to Fame: Co-winner of the 1969 24 Hours of Daytona with Mark Donohue driving with Team Penske. Prior to that Parsons was the 1966 United States Road Racing Champion.
Only Start: November 26, 1967, Rex Mays 300 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 15th
What happened: Parsons isn't the only driver to have his only start come in the 1967 season finale, one of the best races in IndyCar history. Parsons was dropped into the #90 Leader Card Racers Watson-Ford in place of Jim McElreath. He qualified 17th out of 30 starters, but his engine expired just after halfway, leaving him with a 15th-place classification.
Odds of a second start: Parsons passed away on January 3, 1999 at 74 years old, just a month shy of his 75th birthday.

26. Dave MacDonald
Claim to Fame: Sports car ace of the early 1960s, MacDonald famously won the 1963 Los Angeles Times Grand Prix at Riverside and the 1963 Monterey Pacific Grand Prix at Laguna Seca. He also finished tenth in the 1964 Daytona 500 completing 196 laps and finishing ahead of the likes of Tiny Lund, Buck Baker, Jo Schlesser, Dan Gurney, Bobby Isaac, Cale Yarborough and Ralph Earnhardt. Unfortunately, MacDonald is most remembered for what happened in his only IndyCar start. 
Only Start: May 30, 1964, Indianapolis 500
Result: 29th
What happened: MacDonald signed to drive Mickey Thompson's Sears Allstate Special for the 1964 Indianapolis 500, a car that would prove difficult to drive. Its handling instability forced Formula One veteran Masten Gregory to walk away from the program. Despite the car's unpredictability, MacDonald qualified 14th. He was up to tenth when his car spun exiting turn four and slammed into the inside retaining wall, bursting into flames. Eddie Sachs could not avoid MacDonald's car, which slid back into the racetrack, and the two collided. The accident brought out the red flag, the first time an accident brought the Indianapolis 500 to a halt. Sachs was killed in the accident while MacDonald was transported to Methodist Hospital only to succumb to his injuries two hours later.
Odds of a second start: I think everything above answers this one. 

25. Cory Kruseman
Claim to Fame: Two-time Chili Bowl winner, two-time Indiana Sprint Week champion, 2006 USAC/CRA Sprint Car champion
Only Start: September 15, 2002, Chevy 500 at Texas Motor Speedway
Result: 26th
What happened: Kruseman's debut came in the 2002 season finale driving for PDM Racing. Still new to an IndyCar, he ended up 26th out of 28 cars in qualifying and his only start would last 74 laps before a gearbox issue ended his day. 
Odds of a second start: Kruseman turned 50 years old in 2020, but he has been out of top level USAC competition for much of the last decade. Kruseman almost made two starts in IndyCar. His entry was declined for the penultimate round at Chicagoland and he was almost denied entry for Texas because then-chief steward Brian Barnhart did not want an inexperienced driver factoring into the championship battle between Sam Hornish, Jr. and Hélio Castroneves. This was despite Kruseman having completed a rookie test at Las Vegas during the preseason. 

Row 8

24. Louis Chiron
Claim to Fame: Five-time French Grand Prix winner, still third all-time behind only Michale Schumacher and Alain Prost. Chiron was also the winner of the 1928 Italian Grand Prix, 1929 German Grand Prix, 1930 Belgian Grand Prix and the 1933 Spa 24 Hours. He was third in the 1950 Monaco Grand Prix, the first time the famed race was a round of the Formula One World Championship. He is the oldest driver to start a Formula One race at 55 years and 292 days old.
Only Start: May 30, 1929, Indianapolis 500
Result: 7th
What happened: Driving a Delage, Chiron spent the entire month in Indianapolis, and he was a first-day qualifier, ending up 14th, though his qualifying speed was only 26th quickest. Driving a consistent race, Chiron completed all 500 miles and finished seventh. 
Odds of a second start: Chiron lived 21 years after his final Formula One attempt at the 1958 Monaco Grand Prix. He died in his hometown of Monte Carlo at 79 years old.

23. Gonzalo Rodríguez
Claim to Fame: Rodríguez had finished third in the International Formula 3000 championship in 1998 and 1999 with victories at Spa-Francorchamps, the Nürburgring and Monaco. The drivers he finished behind in those two seasons were Juan Pablo Montoya, Nick Heidfeld and Jason Watt. 
Only Start: August 8, 1999, Tenneco Automotive Grand Prix of Detroit at Belle Isle
Result: 12th
What happened: Off his International Formula 3000 success, Rodríguez started turning his attention to CART when Formula One opportunities were not opening up. Team Penske was going through a down spell after a lost year with the Penske PC-27 chassis in 1998. The team had only one driver in Al Unser, Jr. at the start of the 1999 season. Unser, Jr. broke his legs in the season opener at Homestead and Tarso Marques stepped in for two races. Alex Barron and Rodríguez each sampled a second car during the season. Rodríguez joined the team for Belle Isle, qualifying down in 16th, but four positions ahead of Unser, Jr. In a caution-filled race, Rodríguez kept his nose clean and brought it home on the lead lap with a point scored in 12th.
Odds of a second start: Rodríguez's IndyCar career tragically ended during qualifying of his second IndyCar race when he was fatally injured in an accident in the corkscrew on September 11, 1999.

22. João Paulo de Oliveira
Claim to Fame: De Olivieria has made a career for himself in Japan. He won the 2010 Formula Nippon championship and won ten races in that series. In Super GT, he won the 2020 GT3000 championship and he has nine victories in the GT500 class. He also won the 2005 Japanese Formula 3 Championship ahead of Kazuki Nakajima and Hideki Mutoh. He was fourth in the 2005 Macau Grand Prix behind Lucas di Grassi, Robert Kubica and Sebastian Vettel and ahead of Nakajima, Loïc Duval and Romain Grosjean.
Only Start: September 18, 2011, Indy Japan: The Final at Twin Ring Motegi
Result: 26th
What happened: After the Tōhoku earthquake damaged the Twin Ring Motegi oval, the race was moved to the 2.983-mile road course and this changed opened the door for de Oliveira, the defending Formula Nippon champion to make a start with Conquest Racing. He had won at Motegi in Formula Nippon the year prior and a month and a half prior to the IndyCar race. His experience paid off, making it to the second round of qualifying and ending up 12th on the grid. However, a fuel pump failed after 19 laps and led him to a last place finish. He would go on to win the following year at Motegi in Formula Nippon and four of his ten victories in that series came from pole position at this track. 
Odds of a second start: If IndyCar ever returns to Japan and runs a road course then the odds shoot up, but they are still low for de Oliveira. He only turns 40 years old this July and if Jimmie Johnson can make his debut at 45 years old, then de Oliveira can make a comeback ten years after his debut. 

Row 7

21. Scott McLaughlin
Claim to Fame: Three-time Australia Supercars champion with 56 victories, tied for fourth all-time including a victory in the 2019 Bathurst 1000.
Only Start: October 25, 2020, Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg
Result: 22nd
What happened: McLaughlin's Supercars success put him on a course for a move to America within the Team Penske organization. After long thought to be a NASCAR hopeful, McLaughlin turned into an IndyCar prospect late in 2019. After a few successful tests, it was announced he would make a few IndyCar starts in 2020. However, the pandemic kept McLaughlin in Australia for most of the year. With the Supercars season concluding at Bathurst, this allowed him an opportunity to make his debut at the St. Petersburg season finale. Though his testing pace was encouraging, McLaughlin experienced some growing pains in his first race weekend. He only qualified 21st and contact with Rinus VeeKay took him out of the race after 46 laps.
Odds of a second start: Almost guaranteed. McLaughlin plans on attempting a full IndyCar season in 2021 and he will likely fall off this list whenever the 2021 season begins. However, he still qualifies for this list as of January 2021 and he should be included. Twenty-first could be too low, but he isn't going to be qualified for all that long and soon someone else will slip into this grid. 

20. Masten Gregory
Claim to Fame: Gregory started 38 Formula One grand prix, finishing third on debut in the 1957 Monaco Grand Prix. He would pick up two more podium finishes, third in the 1959 Dutch Grand Prix and second in Portugal later that season. He would later win the 1965 24 Hours of Le Mans with Jochen Rindt and prior to that had a class victory at Le Mans in 1961. 
Only Start: May 31, 1965, Indianapolis 500
Result: 23rd
What happened: One year after a difficult month of May, Gregory returned for the 1965 race with a British Racing Partnership chassis. Driving for his stepfather George Bryant, Gregory had George Salih as his chief mechanic. Salih oversaw Lee Wallard's 1951 race winning entry. Gregory was a final day qualifier and made the field in 31st, just ahead of rookie Al Unser. Gregory worked his way up to fifth in the first quarter of the race, but a gearbox failure ended his day after 59 laps. 
Odds of a second start: Gregory passed away 35 years ago in Tuscany. While Gregory made only one start, he had plenty of chances at a second appearance. He competed in the Race of Two Worlds in 1958 driving a Jaguar at Monza. In 1963, he failed to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 and Milwaukee driving for Mickey Thompson. 

He returned to Indianapolis in the three years after his one and only start, failing to qualify in all of them. He also may have been an entrant for the 1967 season finale at Riverside.

19. Lucien Bianchi
Claim to Fame: Bianchi won the 1968 24 Hours of Le Mans, sharing a Ford GT40 with Pedro Rodríguez. Prior to that, he had two class victories at Le Mans, and he was third in the 1968 Monaco Grand Prix. His grandnephew Jules Bianchi would compete in Formula One with Marussia, where he finished ninth in the 2014 Monaco Grand Prix, the only points for Jules Bianchi and Marussia. 
Only Start: April 23, 1967, Trenton 150 at Trenton International Speedway
Result: 17th
What happened: Like many European drivers, Bianchi tested the IndyCar waters in hopes of running the Indianapolis 500. Trenton was one of the early stops on the schedule that drivers would use to get accustomed to oval racing. Bianchi qualified ninth ahead of the likes of Joe Leonard, Roger McCluskey and Bobby Unser. Overheating issues would end his race after 57 of 150 laps. 
Odds of a second start: Bianchi lost his life testing an Alfa Romeo T33 at Le Mans on March 30, 1969. 

However, similar to Gregory, Bianchi had two other chances to make a start in 1967. At Phoenix, Bianchi was going to make his debut, but Mario Andretti, who was Bianchi's co-driver at Le Mans in 1966 and 1967, wrecked his car in practice. With Andretti down a car, he took Bianchi's #27 Vollstedt-Ford only for Andretti to wreck that after qualifying, preventing Andretti from starting the race. 

Bianchi was also entered at Indianapolis with Jim Robbins, but his four-lap average of 162.484 mph was bumped, and he was the first alternate. Five drivers made their Indianapolis 500 debut that year: Denny Hulme, Art Pollard, Jochen Rindt, LeeRoy Yarbrough and Wally Dallenbach. 

Row 6

18. Clay Regazzoni
Claim to Fame: Regazzoni's ten-year Formula One career saw him pick up five victories and 28 podium finishes in 132 starts. He famously scored his first grand prix victory in his fifth career start at Monza driving for Ferrari. He also was responsible for Williams F1's first grand prix victory at the 1979 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. He won the 1970 European Formula Two championship ahead of Derek Bell and Emerson Fittipaldi. 
Only Start: May 30, 1977, Indianapolis 500
Result: 30th
What happened: Regazzoni was a late replacement at Theodore Racing for Indianapolis. With a rainy qualifying session in Monaco, Regazzoni was unable to qualify for the grand prix in his Shadow-Ford. The Swiss driver jumped on a plane in hopes of making it to Indianapolis in time for a qualifying run on the third qualifying day. He did not make it in time, but he was able to make a run on Bump Day and ended up 29th on the grid. His race lasted only 30 laps before a fuel cell issue took him out. 
Odds of a second start: Regazzoni's career ended when an accident in the 1980 United States Grand Prix West at Long Beach paralyzed him from the waist down. Twenty-six years later, Regazzoni was killed in an automobile accident in Italy.

17. Curtis Turner
Claim to Fame: A NASCAR trailblazer, Turner won 17 NASCAR Cup Series races in 184 starts. His most notable victory was the 1956 Southern 500 and he won 38 of 79 starts in the NASCAR Convertible Division. He was banned from NASCAR for four years after attempting to establish a drivers' union.
Only Start: April 21, 1963, Trenton 100 at Trenton International Speedway
Result: 12th
What happened: During his ban from NASCAR, Turner dabbled in IndyCar, but he only started one race, the 1963 season opener driving for Harlan Fike in the #51 Kuzma-Offenhauser. In a 22-car field, Turner qualified 18th. He took the checkered flag, but he was six laps down in 12th. 
Odds of a second start: There were three other IndyCar races Turner entered but did not make the field. He failed to qualify for Springfield in 1962 and Chuck Hulse took his car at Langhorne two weeks later. A practice accident ahead of the 1963 Indianapolis 500 ended his hopes of making that race. 

Turner was reinstated to NASCAR in 1965 and won in his seventh race back at Rockingham, the very first Cup race at Rockingham. He made his final Cup start on September 15, 1968 at Orange Speedway in Hillsborough, North Carolina. On October 3, 1970, Turner perished in an airplane accident outside of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. Turner was going to make a return to the NASCAR Cup Series at Charlotte that weekend. 

16. Kurt Busch
Claim to Fame: Busch won the 2004 NASCAR Cup Series championship, and he has 32 Cup victories, five Grand National Series victories and four Truck victories. He won the 2010 Coca-Cola 600 and the 2017 Daytona 500.
Only Start: May 25, 2014, Indianapolis 500
Result: 6th
What happened: Busch had been toying with "The Double" the year prior, but he delayed it a year to give it a proper run in an Andretti Autosport entry. Busch was respectable all month, though he did have a practice accident. He qualified 12th and spent much of the race in the middle of the field. He was only in top ten for two of the first 100 laps and he didn't really enter the top ten until lap 149 when the first caution came out for Charlie Kimball's accident. As a few top cars were caught in accidents in the closing laps, Busch climbed up the order. He ended up sixth, the top rookie finisher, but he spent zero laps in the top five. He took Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year honors. His Coca-Cola 600 ended after 271 of 400 laps in 40th position. 
Odds of a second start: Very possible. Busch has expressed interest in a return to the Indianapolis 500 someday. He turns 43 years old in August. I think he could not only make a return to Indianapolis, but I think he would be game to try a few other tracks, maybe not Jimmie Johnson-level participation, but maybe he wants to give Texas a go or take a crack at Road America. 

Row 5

15. Doug Wolfgang
Claim to Fame: Wolfgang ranks fifth all-time in World of Outlaws sprint car victories at 140. He has five victories in the Knoxville Nationals.
Only Start: August 14, 1982, Tony Bettenhausen 100 at the Illinois State Fairgrounds
Result: 14th
What happened: Wolfgang's only start came during the first split, the USAC-CART Split. While CART was already the clear top of the American open-wheel pyramid, USAC continued sanctioning Gold Crown races with the likes of Springfield and DuQuoin hosting races that counted toward the championship along with the USAC-sanctioned Indianapolis 500. Wolfgang started on row eight in this one with Ken Schrader, who would go on to have six "IndyCar" starts to his name, all in a post-split USAC. Wolfgang ran 78 laps before retiring due to a steering issue. Other notable names in this race were race winner Bobby Olivero, Joe Saldana, Sheldon Kinser, Larry Rice and Rich Vogler.
Odds of a second start: Wolfgang retired from competition in 1997.

14. Richard Seaman
Claim to Fame: One of Great Britain's best pre-war Grand Prix drivers, Seaman famously won the 1938 German Grand Prix driving for Mercedes-Benz.
Only Start: July 5, 1937, George Vanderbilt Cup at Westbury, New York
Result: 2nd
What happened: The Vanderbilt Cup races of the 1930s were trans-Atlantic all-star races with America's best facing the best grand prix racers from Europe. The second edition held in 1937 saw the mighty Mercedes and Auto Union teams come over from Germany. Seaman started fourth and battled with Bernd Rosemeyer, Rex Mays, Rudolf Caracciola Tazio Nuvolari and Nino Farina at the front of the field. Nuvolari lost an engine after 16 laps and Caracciola lost a supercharger the lap after that. Seaman settled into second and took the lead when Rosemeyer made a pit stop just prior to halfway. Rosemeyer was able to chase down Seaman before the Briton driver made his pit stop. Seaman was closing on Rosemeyer approaching the finish but ran out of fuel and needed to make an unscheduled pit stop on the final lap. Seaman was able to resume the race and finish second, 51 seconds behind Rosemeyer.
Odds of a second start: Seaman lost his life after an accident in the 1939 Belgian Grand Prix while leading. He was only 26 years old. 

13. Luigi Villoresi
Claim to Fame: Villoresi's career spanned both sides of World War II with notable victories in the 1948 British Grand Prix, the 1949 Dutch Grand Prix and the 1951 Mille Miglia. Villoresi had eight podium finishes in 31 Formula One starts, but he never won a grand prix. He did win six non-championship races, including the 1951 Pau Grand Prix. He still ranks eighth all-time in most podium finishes without victory. 
Only Start: May 30, 1946, Indianapolis 500
Result: 7th
What happened: Prior to the war, Maserati had found great success at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Wilbur Shaw won back-to-back races in a Maserati 8CTF in 1939 and 1940. In 1941, Mauri Rose and Shaw put two Maseratis on the front row. With the Indianapolis 500 scheduled for a return in 1946, Maserati fielded a factory effort for Villoresi and Duke Nalon, while three pre-war 8CTFs were entered in the race. Villoresi qualified 28th, but Maserati again rose to the occasion. He ended up seventh, the final driver to complete all 500 miles while Ted Horn and Emil Andres put Maseratis third and fourth in the final results. 
Odds of a second start: Villoresi retired after the 1957, but he still competed in rally racing and won the 1958 Acropolis Rally in Greece. Villoresi lived until the age of 88, passing away on August 24, 1997. 

Row 4

12. Raymond Sommer
Claim to Fame: Sommer won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1932 and 1933 with Luigi Chinetti and Tazio Nuvolari respectively. He won the 1936 French Grand Prix with Jean-Pierre Wimille, and the 1936 Spa 24 Hours. He was one of the first three drivers for Scuderia Ferrari to start a Formula One race in the 1950 Monaco Grand Prix along with the aforementioned Villoresi, and Alberto Ascari. Sommer was fourth in that race, his only Formula One points. 
Only Start: October 12, 1936, George Vanderbilt Cup at Westbury, New York
Result: 4th
What happened: The 1936 Vanderbilt Cup race featured Bill Cummings, Wilbur Shaw, Ted Horn, Rex Mays, Mauri Rose, Floyd Davis, Jimmy Snyder, Tazio Nuvolari, Nino Farina, Jean-Pierre Wimille and Sommer. Sommer started 19th in an Alfa Romeo, which was the strongest car in the field. Nuvolari led all 75 laps from eighth on the grid in an Alfa Romeo. Pole-sitter Antonio Brivio was third while Sommer made up 15 positions to make it three Alfa Romeos in the top four.
Odds of a second start: Sommer lost his life on September 10, 1950 after his car flipped in a race at Circuit de Cadours in France. 

11. Jean-Pierre Wimille
Claim to Fame: Wimille won his only two starts in the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1937 and 1939. Along with his 1936 French Grand Prix victory with Sommer, after World War II, he won the Swiss Grand Prix and the Belgian Grand Prix in 1947 and the French Grand Prix and Italian Grand Prix in 1948. 
Only Start: October 12, 1936, George Vanderbilt Cup at Westbury, New York
Result: 2nd
What happened: In a Bugatti, Wimille worked his way to the front of the field from 14th on the grid. Brivio's misfortune of a loose engine cover gifted the Frenchman second place. While Nuvolari dropped a cylinder, the Italian's gap was too great for Wimille to overcome and Nuvolari won by over eight minutes. 
Odds of a second start: Wimille died on January 3, 1949 after having an accident in practice ahead of the Buenos Aires Grand Prix.

10. Charles Burman
Claim to Fame: Burman won the seventh race in what we consider IndyCar racing driving for the Cleveland-based Peerless Motor Company. Outside of that, Burman does not have an extensive biography.
Only Start: August 14, 1905, Glenville Race at the Glenville Driving Track in Cleveland, Ohio
Result: 1st
What happened: Burman is one of three drivers to win his only IndyCar start. It was a five-lap, five-mile race with three other competitors. Webb Jay led the first two laps, Herbert Lytle led the third lap, and Burman led the final two.
Odds of a second start: No, and there is so little on Burman, I do not have exact date of death. He did run a non-championship race six days prior to his victory in Cleveland in Grosse Point, Michigan where he finished second. 

Row 3

9. Frank Lescault
Claim to Fame: Like Burman, Lescault won one of the earliest IndyCar races, the 28th IndyCar race in history. Also, like Burman, Lescault does not have deep biography.
Only Start: September 29, 1909, Riverhead Class B at the Riverhead Road Race Circuit in Riverhead, New York
Result: 1st
What happened: This was an eight-lap race around the 22.75-mile Riverhead road course. This was one of five races happening simultaneously, with each class broken up by cost of the vehicles. Class B was for cars between $3,001 and $4,000. Class A was for cars that cost $4,001 and up. Classes C, D and E were for cars under $3,000. Class A's race was scheduled for ten laps, while Class C, Class D and Class E went for six, five and four laps respectively. Lescault was one of three drivers in Class B and he completed the 182 miles in just under three hours, leading all the laps. Hughie Hughes was second, completing only six laps. William Murphy failed to start the race. 
Odds of a second start: Lescault passed away on January 29, 1949.

8. André Lotterer
Claim to Fame: Three-time 24 Hours of Le Mans winner. Two-time Super GT GT500 champion. 2011 Formula Nippon champion. Twenty-four Formula Nippon/Super Formula victories. 2012 World Endurance Drivers' Champion. Ten FIA World Endurance Championship victories. Six Formula E podium finishes.  
Only Start: November 17, 2002, México Gran Premio Telmex/Gigante Presented by Banamex/Visa at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez
Result: 12th
What happened: Dale Coyne Racing spent most of 2002 on the sidelines after only contesting the first two rounds in 2001. Coyne fielded Darren Manning at the Rockingham and picked up a ninth-place finish. Eleven days before the Mexico City season finale, Lotterer was announced in an entry for Coyne. The 20-year-old German had been a Jaguar F1 test driver and this ride came about because the German channel DSF was broadcasting this race. It should not be forgotten CART was trying to revive its Lausitz race after it fell off the calendar during the 2002 season. Lotterer qualified 18th, ahead of fellow debutant Luis Díaz. In a small field, Lotterer benefitted when the likes of Paul Tracy and Michael Andretti were caught in separate accidents and Christian Fittipaldi fell out due to an engine failure. Lotterer was able to beat Michel Jourdain, Jr. and Shiji Nakano on the road to finish 12th, picking up a point on debut. 
Odds of a second start: Possible. Lotterer is currently in Formula E with Porsche, but with Porsche's Formula E involvement in question beyond this season, Lotterer could get a second crack at IndyCar. Could we see Dale Coyne Racing need some help and Lotterer bring the funding to fill in for a race or two? Maybe. I think it is probably not going to happen. Lotterer is 39 years old. 

7. Phil Hill
Claim to Fame: First American driver to win the World Drivers' Championship, accomplishing it in 1961 driving for Scuderia Ferrari. Hill won the 1960 and 1961 Italian Grand Prix and he also won the 1961 Belgian Grand Prix. Hill won the 24 Hours of Le Mans three times, the 12 Hours of Sebring three times overall with another class victory and he won the 1964 Daytona 2000km with Pedro Rodríguez. 
Only Start: September 4, 1950, Pikes Peak International Hill Climb
Result: 21st
What happened: Long before his exploits in Europe, Hill was an aspiring race car driver and even became a Jaguar trainee in 1949. In 1950, he made a one-off appearance at Pikes Peak in an Allard-Cadillac, but he only ended up 21st out of 23 finishers. 
Odds of a second start: Hill passed away in 2008 at the age of 81. He did compete in the 1958 Race of Two Worlds, competing in the first race before a magneto failure ended his day. He would drive in relief for Luigi Musso for the final 41 laps in race two and in the final race, he substituted for Mike Hawthorn in the final 36 laps.

Row 2

6. Nelson Piquet
Claim to Fame: Three-time World Drivers' Champion, Piquet won 23 grand prix driving for Brabham, Williams and Benetton. He made 204 starts and finished on the podium 60 times. 
Only Start: May 30, 1993, Indianapolis 500
Result: 32nd
What happened: Piquet did not have the best of times at 16th and Georgetown. His first appearance was in 1992 and he had shown good pace in practice with Team Menard, but an accident in the first week of practice caused serious injuries to his leg and ended any hope of making the field. He returned with Team Menard in 1993. He ended up 13th on the first qualifying day, but his Menard engine couldn't even make it 100 miles on race day, and Piquet was the second car out of the race. 
Odds of a second start: Piquet last competed in the 2006 Mil Milhas and won the race with his son Nelson Piquet, Jr., Hélio Castroneves and Christophe Bouchut. He has not run an open-wheel car since a 1997 South American Formula Three race. He turns 69 years old in August. I think it is safe to say Piquet's one IndyCar start will be his only IndyCar start.

5. Alberto Ascari
Claim to Fame: Two-time World Drivers' Champion. Ascari was the first driver to win multiple World Drivers' Championships and he was the first to win the title in successive seasons. He won 13 of 32 grand prix starts. His six victories in eight races in 1952 remains the highest winning percentage in a Formula One season. Ascari and Jim Clark remain the only drivers to score 100% of the possible championship points in a season and he still holds the record for most consecutive fastest laps and most consecutive laps led.
Only Start: May 30, 1952, Indianapolis 500
Result: 31st
What happened: From 1950-1960, the Indianapolis 500 counted toward the World Drivers' Championship and was a round on the Formula One calendar. Despite this, only one full-time championship competitor went to Indianapolis and that was Ascari. Due to the scheduling, Ascari skipped the Swiss Grand Prix held on May 18 as Ferrari sent a four-car effort to Indianapolis. Nino Farina would withdraw and win the Swiss Grand Prix. Johnny Parsons and Johnny Mauro each failed to qualify. Ascari put the car 19th on the grid and was up to ninth when a wheel failure took him out after completing 100 miles. It remains Ferrari's only start in the Indianapolis 500. Skipping the Swiss Grand Prix did not hurt Ascari's championship chances. He won the final six races of the season, five of which from pole position, to take the championship.
Odds of a second start: Ascari lost his life in a testing accident at Monza on May 26, 1955. He was entered for the 1953 Indianapolis 500 but did not appear. 

4. John Surtees
Claim to Fame: The only man to win the world championship on two wheels and four. Surtees won seven world championships on motorcycles between the 350cc and 500cc classes. He won 38 of 51 grand prix motorcycle starts and he still ranks 15th all-time in victories. He has six victories in the Isle of Man TT. On four wheels, Surtees was runner-up in his second grand prix, the 1960 British Grand Prix. He won six races in 111 starts and he was the 1964 World Drivers' Champion while employed with Ferrari. 
Only Start: November 26, 1967, Rex Mays 300 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 20th
What happened: Surtees along with Jim Clark made cameo appearances for the 1967 season finale with Clark qualifying second in a year-old car next to Dan Gurney and Surtees starting behind Clark on row two next to Bobby Unser. Surtees mixed it up with Mario Andretti and Roger McCluskey in the top five before a magneto failure ended his race after 31 laps. 
Odds of a second start: Surtees passed away in 2017, but he wasn't supposed to make the one IndyCar start he made. Jackie Stewart was originally going to drive John Mecom's Bowes Seal Fast Lola-Ford.

Row 1

3. Rudolf Caracciola
Claim to Fame: Caracciola was a three-time European Grand Prix champion with 11 victories over a seven-year career. He stood on the podium in 18 of 26 starts. He was victorious in the 1931 Mille Miglia and he was a three-time European Hillclimbing champion. On January 27, 1938, Caracciola set a world speed record of 268.9 mph on public roads, a record that would not be broken until 2017. His record six German Grand Prix victories still stands as of the start of 2021. 
Only Start: July 5, 1937, George Vanderbilt Cup at Westbury, New York
Result: 24th
What happened: Caracciola won pole position for this race and found himself in an early tussle with Bernd Rosemeyer for the lead. Rosemeyer led the first two laps before Caracciola came back and led the next eight. Rosemeyer regained the lead on lap 11 and Caracciola would not get a chance to counter, as he lost his turbocharger six laps after losing the lead. 
Odds of a second start: Caracciola died after a liver failure on September 28, 1959. He did attempt to make the 1946 Indianapolis 500, but a practice accident ended his hopes of making that race. After passing away, Caracciola's trophy collection was donated to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Hall of Fame. 

2. Alan Jones
Claim to Fame: Jones won the 1980 World Drivers' Championship driving for Williams, the first World Drivers' Championship for the team and it was also Williams' first Constructors' championship. Jones won 12 of 116 Formula One starts and he stood on the podium 24 times. He was also the 1978 Can-Am champion and he won the 1993 Bathurst 12 Hour with Garry Waldon. 
Only Start: August 4, 1985, Provimi Veal 200 at Road America
Result: 3rd
What happened: Carl Haas put together a Formula One team with plans to debut in the 1985 season. With Beatrice Foods signed as a sponsor, Haas was able to get Jones out of retirement to be the team's only driver. The car was not ready for the start of the season and it spent of much of 1985 in development. Newman-Haas driver Mario Andretti was injured at Michigan with a broken collarbone and fractured hip. With the Formula One car still not ready for race, world champion Jones substituted for world champion Andretti at Road America. Jones started 12th and moved up the order, while race leaders Danny Sullivan, Roberto Moreno and Al Unser, Jr. all dropped out of the race. Uncle Jacques Villeneuve took the victory with Michael Andretti scoring his then-best finish of second and Jones was third ahead of Bobby Rahal, Emerson Fittipaldi, rookie Arie Luyendyk and Al Unser. 
Odds of a second start: Jones is 74 years old. It is not happening, but eight years prior to Jones' one IndyCar start, he entered two IndyCar races, both with Theodore Racing. The first was at Ontario and Steve Krisiloff replaced him. He was also entered for the Indianapolis 500, but Theodore Racing owner Teddy Yip decided to put the aforementioned Clay Regazzoni in the car. 

1. Bernd Rosemeyer
Claim to Fame: The 1936 European Grand Prix champion, Rosemeyer and Auto Union challenged the might of German counterparts Caracciola and Mercedes-Benz. While competing with Caracciola for the land speed record, Rosemeyer perished in an accident attempting to break the record Caracciola had only set moments earlier that day.  
Only Start: July 5, 1937, George Vanderbilt Cup at Westbury, New York
Result: 1st
What happened: Rosemeyer was the only Auto Union in the race and he qualified second, in-between the Mercedes of Caracciola and Rex Mays in an Alfa Romeo. The Germans Rosemeyer and Caracciola went back-and-forth over the first ten laps before Rosemeyer took control of the top spot on lap 11. He led until his pit stop on lap 39 and erased the gap to Seaman's Mercedes before the Briton made his pit stop. Rosemeyer led the final 44 laps, but Seaman was gaining time in the closing stages only for him to run out of fuel before the start of the final lap. This allowed Rosemeyer to take a comfortable victory. As of the start of 2021, it is still the only victory for a German driver in IndyCar history.
Odds of a second start: Obviously, no.

In summation...

This field combines for eight World Drivers' championships...

63 Formula One victories...

952 Formula One starts...

Six drivers who won the 24 Hours of Le Mans overall for a combined 12 overall victories

Two 24 Hours of Daytona overall winners.

One 12 Hours of Sebring overall winner...

A Daytona 500 winner...

A Southern 500 winner...

A Coca-Cola 600 winner...

Two Bathurst 1000 winners...

A Bathurst 12 Hour winner...

A 24 Hours Nürburgring winner...

A Chili Bowl winner...

A Knoxville National winner...

A seven-time grand prix motorcycle champion...

A six-time Isle of Man TT winner...

A World Endurance Drivers' Champion...

And all 33 of these drivers combine for 33 IndyCar starts.


Wednesday, January 20, 2021

All-Time One-Time Starter Grid: NASCAR

Over this offseason, I was thinking about fun exercises to occupy time and one thing that came to me was this:

What is the best grid of drivers you can make of drivers who only started one race in a series? 

Motorsports is littered with kooky one-off appearances, whether it is a sports car driver attempting IndyCar, a Formula One driver running a NASCAR race or a motorcycle racer taking a crack at four-wheel racing. These are once-in-a-lifetime occurrences. And it can be quite interesting. 

Over this week, there will be three editions of the All-Time One-Time Starter Grid, one for the NASCAR Cup Series, one for IndyCar and one for Formula One. 

We will start with NASCAR, which has had 2,949 drivers start a Cup race. Of those 2,949 drivers, 1,036 only made one start. That is 35.13% of all the drivers to start a Cup race. For sanity purposes, this was only going to be a 40-driver field from the start, but with over 1,000 drivers to choose from, there is a chance one or two or 30 suitable options were missed. But here is one 40-driver option. 

Row 20

40. Adam Petty
Claim to Fame: The fourth generation of the Petty family, Adam Petty won a race in ARCA at Charlotte Motor Speedway and was the youngest winner in ARCA history at the time. He also won an ASA race at I-70 Speedway. Petty had transitioned to the NASCAR Busch Series at 18 years old and made 43 starts with three top five finishes and four top ten finishes.
Only Start: April 2, 2000, DirecTV 500 at Texas Motor Speedway
Result: 40th
What happened: With plans to move to the NASCAR Cup Series full-time in 2001, Petty was set to run seven races in 2000 with Texas being his first race of the season. Other planned starts were the Coca-Cola 600, the Bristol night race in August, the autumn Martinsville race and Homestead. He qualified 33rd for Texas in a race that featured 48 entrants with Robby Gordon, Dave Marcus, Wally Dallenbach, Jr., Todd Bodine and Petty's father Kyle failing to qualify. Adam Petty completed 215 laps before an engine failure ended his race and left him with a 40th-place finish. His father Kyle would enter the race 14 laps later, substituting for an injured Elliott Sadler in the #21 Wood Brothers Ford, bringing that car home to a 39th-place result. 
Odds of a second start: Petty lost his life just over a month later in a practice accident for the NASCAR Busch Series race at Loudon. He was 19 years old. 

39. Smokey Yunick
Claim to Fame: Yunick was an engineering genius, known for pushing the rulebook and NASCAR's patience. His most famous victory as a car owner was the 1961 Daytona 500 with driver Marvin Panch. Other drivers to have piloted a Yunick-owned Cup car include Tim Flock, Paul Goldsmith, Junior Johnson, Herb Thomas, Curtis Turner, Fireball Roberts, Buck Baker, A.J. Foyt, Bobby Isaac, Johnny Rutherford, Bobby Allison, Mario Andretti, Charlie Glotzbach, Joe Leonard, Swede Savage and Bobby Unser.
Only Start: November 30, 1952, 200-lapper at Palm Beach Speedway
Result: 18th
What happened: Yunick's only start was driving for Herb Thomas, the 1951 and 1953 Cup champion, the first multi-time Cup champion. However, it was a short day for Yunick in the #9 Hudson, as an ignition failure ended his race after seven laps, a whopping 3.5 miles. Thomas led all 200 laps and won by two laps over Fonty Flock.
Odds of a second start: Yunick's final race as a Cup owner was in 1969 at Atlanta. He passed away after battling Leukemia on May 9, 2001, just over two weeks before his 78th birthday. 

Row 19

38. Yvon Duhamel
Claim to Fame: Duhamel was a Kawasaki factory rider in the 1970s and he was the 1970 World Championship Snowmobile Derby winner, an event Gilles Villeneuve and Uncle Jacques Villeneuve also won in their careers. He was the first man to run a qualifying lap above 150 mph for the Daytona 200. His son Miguel Duhamel was the 1995 AMA Superbike champion and Miguel was a five-time Daytona 200 winner, tied with Scott Russell for the all-time record.
Only Start: April 8, 1973, Gwyn Staley 400 at North Wilkesboro Speedway
Result: 10th
What happened: Entered in Junie Donlavey's #90 Ford, Duhamel started 15th and completely 381 laps, 19 laps off race winner Richard Petty, but he finished tenth, two laps off Donnie Allison in ninth, who was not running at the end of the race due to a blown engine. 
Odds of a second start: Duhamel is 81 years old, but he was still competing on motorcycles into his 50s, so never say never, but I will say it is unlikely. 

37. Buzzie Reutimann
Claim to Fame: Reutimann was a successful dirt modified racer on the East Coast with a victory in the 1972 Eastern States 200 as well as two victories at Syracuse's Super DIRT Week. He is also the father of David Reutimann, who won two NASCAR Cup races.
Only Start: November 11, 1962, 200-lapper at Golden Gate Speedway in Tampa, Florida
Result: 10th
What happened: He picked up a tenth-place finish, completing 192 of 200 laps in a 1960 Chevrolet while majority of the field were driving 1962-model cars. Richard Petty won, leading 158 of 200 laps. Reutimann was three laps ahead of Buck Baker and six laps ahead of Rex White, two Cup champions.
Odds of a second start: Reutimann is still racing at 79 years old and he finished 21st in the Reutimann Memorial Feature at Volusia Speedway in November, ahead of his son David. The race featured Justin Allgaier, Justin Haley, David Stremme and Kenny Wallace. Crazier things have happened, but with Bristol now being a dirt race in March, Reutimann might fit in for a second start nearly 60 years after his first! 

Row 18

36. Brent Kaeding
Claim to Fame: Winner of the 1985 Turkey Night Grand Prix, Kaeding is one of the best sprint car racers from the West Coast, with 11 King of the West championship and he won nine World of Outlaws races. His sons Tim and Bud also competed in racing with Bud notably winning the USAC Silver Crown championship three times in four seasons from 2006 to 2009.
Only Start: November 4, 1990, Checker 500 at Phoenix International Raceway
Result: 29th
What happened: In the #69 Los Gatos Ferrari Chevrolet, Kaeding started 38th in the 43-car field and completed 304 laps, eight laps off race winner Dale Earnhardt, taking the checkered flag in 29th ahead of the likes of Dale Jarrett, Ricky Rudd, Harry Gant, Rusty Wallace, Dick Trickle, Kyle Petty, Bobby Hillin, Jr., and Michael Waltrip. 
Odds of a second start: Kaeding was competing into the middle of last decade. There is the aforementioned Bristol dirt race, but I doubt we see a comeback. 

35. Sam Posey
Claim to Fame: Posey is known for his work as a commentator on the Indianapolis 500 and his crafty monologues hyping a Formula One grand prix or 24-hour endurance race. Prior to his television work, Posey was a Swiss army knife, competing in Trans Am, making ten starts at the 24 Hours of Le Mans and winning the 1975 12 Hours of Sebring. He started two United States Grand Prix. He was also fifth place in the 1972 Indianapolis 500, his only start in the famed race and he was the top rookie finisher from seventh on the grid, but lost Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year to Mike Hiss, who finished seventh. 
Only Start: January 18, 1970, Motor Trend 500 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 28th
What happened: Prior to his Formula One and Indianapolis 500 exploits, Posey qualified ninth for the 1970 season opener driving for Cotton Owens, but a fiery engine failure ended his race after 82 of 193 laps. A.J. Foyt took the victory ahead of Roger McCluskey and LeeRoy Yarbrough.
Odds of a second start: Posey put his driving career behind him long ago and he has been living with Parkinson's disease for over 25 years. 

Row 17

34. Sarel van der Merwe
Claim to Fame: Van der Merwe was an 11-time South African Rally Drivers champion, but he is known for his sport car prowess, winning the 1984 24 Hours of Daytona with fellow South Africans Tony Martin and Graham Duxbury. He also won Hendrick Motorsports only sports car race with Doc Bundy in a Corvette GTP at Road America in 1986. 
Only Start: August 12, 1990, Budweiser at the Glen at Watkins Glen International
Result: 24th
What happened: Darrell Waltrip was knocked out of competition due to a leg injury and van der Merwe was drafted in for the road course race at Watkins Glen. He qualified 20th and became the first African driver to compete in NASCAR, but he finished 24th after contact with Hut Stricklin, who was running in the top five, ended both their races.
Odds of a second start: He was 43 years old when he made his debut. He is now 74 years old and I think he will not add another start 31 years after this first, though there will be seven road course races in the 2021 Cup season. 

33. Jerry Titus
Claim to Fame: Titus was the 1967 Trans-Am champion driving a Ford Mustang, competing against the likes of Dan Gurney, Mark Donohue, Peter Revson and even David Pearson. He also was third overall in the 1969 24 Hours of Daytona. 
Only Start: January 21, 1968, Motor Trend 500 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 39th
What happened: In a 1966 Ford, Titus lost a gasket after five laps and he was one of six drivers to retire in the first five laps.
Odds of a second start: Titus suffered an accident in practice for the 1970 Trans-Am race at Road America and he would succumb to injuries from that accident nearly three weeks later.

Row 16

32. Billy Foster
Claim to Fame: Foster made 28 IndyCar starts, which saw him score two podium finishes, surprisingly both were at Atlanta. He was third in Johnny Rutherford's first career victory with Mario Andretti second in 1965. The following year he was second to Andretti. He was third in the 1966 USAC Stock Car Division championship. 
Only Start: January 23, 1966, Motor Trend 500 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 18th
What happened: Foster qualified 12th driving for Rudy Hoerr in a 1964 Dodge and completed 181 of 195 laps. He ended up seventh ahead of Ned Jarrett, Norm Nelson, Ron Hornaday, Sr., Jerry Grant and Bobby Allison. This was also Mario Andretti's first NASCAR Cup start and Andretti was 16th, completing 154 laps before retiring due to an accident. 
Odds of a second start: Foster lost his life in an accident ahead of practice for the 1967 Motor Trend 500. His accident would lead to increased development of window nets.

31. Klaus Graf
Claim to Fame: Graf was the 2005 Trans-Am champion with four victories from nine races and he also won the 2012 and 2013 LMP1 championship in the American Le Mans Series with Lucas Luhr. He has three starts in the 24 Hours of Le Mans and he had four podium finishes in Porsche Supercup. 
Only Start: June 27, 2004, Dodge/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway
Result: 17th
What happened: Driving for BAM Racing, Graf started 38th despite ending up over 6.7 seconds off pole-sitter Jeff Gordon. He was 13th and eighth in the two Saturday practice sessions and he finished on the lead lap in 17th ahead of Dale Jarrett, Matt Kenseth, Sterling Marlin, his teammate Ken Schrader, Rusty Wallace, Kasey Kahne, Bobby Labonte, Robby Gordon, Ricky Rudd, eventually 2004 champion Kurt Busch and two-time Cup champion Terry Labonte.
Odds of a second start: Graf attempted to make four other Cup starts. 

Later in 2004, he was entered for Watkins Glen, but qualifying was rained out because it is NASCAR, and he was one of four drivers not to make the race. Other notable failed qualifiers were Scott Pruett and Boris Said. He also attempted to make the Martinsville race in October but missed out on making the race by one position. He would attempt to make both road course races again in 2007, but was one of nine drivers to miss the Sonoma race, which included Ward Burton, Paul Menard and both Red Bull Racing drivers, Brian Vickers and A.J. Allmendinger. At Watkins Glen, qualifying was again rained out because it is NASCAR and the likes of him, Allmendinger, Said and Marcos Ambrose all missed out on racing. Said would at least get to substitute for Bill Elliott at Wood Brothers Racing. 

As for a second start, it's probably not going to happen now, but we have seen some odd one-off entries on road courses, so if he can find the money anything is possible.

Row 15

30. Jorge Goeters
Claim to Fame: Goeters won pole position for his NASCAR Busch Series debut at the inaugural Mexico City race. Unfortunately, a poor pit stop after leading the first 24 laps and an engine failure cost him the finish to match his satisfying start to the weekend. He would finish ninth at Watkins Glen later that season and he would finish seventh at Mexico City in 2007. In the NASCAR Mexico Series, he has seven victories and he was the 2012 series champion. He also ran in Indy Lights in 1998. He made a Champ Car start at Monterrey in 2005, finishing 18th after a gearbox failure. 
Only Start: August 14, 2005, Sirius Satellite Radio at the Glen at Watkins Glen International
Result: 35th
What happened: One day after his ninth-place finish in the Busch Series, Goeters made his Cup debut at Watkins Glen, sliding into the field despite qualifying being rained out, because it is NASCAR. He led lap 57, but finished 35th, one-lap down after a spin in the chicane. 
Odds of a second start: Goeters is now 50 years old and he did compete in the NASCAR Mexico Series in 2019. Like I mentioned before, there will be seven road course races in Cup in 2021. It is possible. Surprisingly, Goeters' only had one Cup start considering his Busch Series performances. 

29. Andrew Ranger
Claim to Fame: Ranger won three NASCAR Pinty's Series championships. He has 28 victories, 73 top five finishes and 110 top ten finishes in 134 starts in the series. Prior to that, he made 27 starts in Champ Car with a runner-up finish in his second career start at Monterrey, coincidentally, Goeters' first career start. Ranger had 16 top ten finishes in 27 Champ Car starts. He has won four of his seven ARCA starts and he has never finished worse than fifth in an ARCA race. 
Only Start: August 15, 2011, Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at the Glen at Watkins Glen International
Result: 35th
What happened: Ranger qualified 35th driving for FAS Lane Racing and he made it 75 laps before a transmission failure took him out of the race.
Odds of a second start: I am surprised it hasn't happened yet. Even more surprising, he hasn't run a race in NASCAR's second division since 2013. Don't rule it out. 

Row 14

28. Scott Sharp
Claim to Fame: The co-champion in the 1996 Indy Racing League season and nine-time IndyCar race winner, Sharp was also a two-time Trans-Am champion, the 2009 American Le Mans Series LMP1 champion and has two overall victories in the 24 Hours of Daytona, one in the 12 Hours of Sebring and one in Petit Le Mans. 
Only Start: August 9, 1992, Budweiser at the Glen at Watkins Glen International
Result: 19th
What happened: Driving for Jimmy Means Racing, he started 22nd and finished 19th in a 51-lap, rain-shortened race at Watkins Glen, because... once again, it's NASCAR.
Odds of a second start: Sharp will turn 53 on Valentine's Day. His last IMSA start was in 2018. It's possible, but unlikely.

27. Kaz Grala
Claim to Fame: Grala has made 33 Truck starts, 32 Grand National Series starts, and he was seventh in the 2017 Truck Series championship with a victory at Daytona. He has four top five finishes in NASCAR's second series with all of those coming at Daytona and Road America. 
Only Start: August 16, 2020, Go Bowling 235 at the Daytona International Speedway Road Course
Result: 7th
What happened: Grala was a last-minute substitute for Austin Dillon for the Daytona road course race and he had to start at the rear of the field. He ended up leading three laps through pit cycle in the final stage and that strategy positioned Grala for a top ten results, coming home in seventh. 
Odds of a second start: It is likely going to happen and Grala will be entered in the Daytona 500 driving for Kaulig Racing. He will have to qualify for the race, as he will be an open entry. Grala is only 22 years old, even if Daytona doesn't work out, he will likely get a crack at one or two road courses this year in Cup or the Grand National Series. A full-time Cup ride could be in his future.

Row 13

26. Tom Cherry
Claim to Fame: Cherry won the Little 500 four times, the first multi-time winner of the event. He also won two of seven races in NASCAR's Speedway Division in 1952 
Only Start: February 15, 1953, Daytona Beach & Road Course
Result: 9th
What happened: Cherry's only start saw him finish a lap down in ninth. He retired from driving after 1956 and sanctioned sprint car races in the Midwest, including the Little 500 at one point.
Odds of a second start: Cherry passed away in 1990. 

25. Jan Opperman
Claim to Fame: A winner of the Knoxville Nationals, Opperman was one of the most respected sprint car drivers in the 1970s. His dirt success led to pavement opportunities, most notably he made two Indianapolis 500 starts and eight IndyCar starts. His best finish was sixth at Ontario in the California 500 behind the likes of Bobby Unser, Johnny Rutherford, Wally Dallenbach and Tom Bigelow.
Only Start: August 4, 1974, Purolator 500 at Pocono International Raceway
Result: 8th
What happened: Opperman's only Cup start was Pocono's first NASCAR Cup race. He was teammates with Benny Parsons driving for L.G. DeWitt and he finished eighth from a 14th starting spot, four laps off race winner Richard Petty, in a race that was shortened to 192 laps due to rain.
Odds of a second start: Two serious accidents shortened Opperman's career and he died in 1997 at the age of 58. 

Row 12

24. Tom Bigelow
Claim to Fame: Bigelow ranks second all-time in USAC National Sprint car victories with 52 and he was the 1978 champion. He was also the 1984 USAC National Midget champion. Besides his dirt success, Bigelow made 110 IndyCar starts and scored a sixth-place finish on debut in 1968 at DuQuoin. Though he never won a race he had 13 top five finishes, including runner-up finishes at Texas World, Milwaukee and DuQuoin. He made nine Indianapolis 500 starts, with his best finish being sixth in 1977. His final IndyCar start was at Pocono in 1985 but he attempted to make the Indianapolis 500 through 1989. 
Only Start: November 2, 1986, Atlanta Journal 500 at Atlanta International Raceway
Result: 40th
What happened: Two days after his 46th birthday, Bigelow took the green flag in the #99 Chevrolet for Ralph Ball. His race lasted 58 laps due to an engine failure. 
Odds of a second start: If the Bristol dirt race had come 30 years earlier, I bet Bigelow would have taken a shot at it. However, at 81 years old, I am not so sure. Though, if Buzzie Reutimann is still competing, anything is possible. 

23. Duane Carter
Claim to Fame: An 11-time starter of the Indianapolis 500, Carter's best result was third in a relief drive for Sam Hanks. He was the 1950 AAA Midwestern sprint car champion and in the middle of his career stepped away from driving for the USAC Competition Director from 1956 to 1958 before returning to driving in 1959. 
Only Start: June 25, 1950, 200-lapper at Dayton Speedway
Result: 7th
What happened: Carter's only Cup start was in the first Cup race on a completely paved track. Carter was seventh ahead of Lee Petty in eighth and the 1950 champion Bill Rexford was tenth. Carter's prize for the result? $125, which adjusted for inflation would be $1,349.74 in 2021.
Odds of a second start: Carter passed away in 1993 at the age of 79. 

Row 11

22. Timothy Peters
Claim to Fame: Peters has 11 victories in the NASCAR Truck Series and from 2011 to 2016 he finished in the top five of the championship in five of six seasons with his best championship position being second in 2012. Three of those victories occurred at Talladega with two victories at Iowa and victories at Martinsville, Daytona, Indianapolis Raceway Park, Bristol, Las Vegas and Phoenix.
Only Start: April 29, 2018, Geico 500 at Talladega Superspeedway
Result: 23rd
What happened: Peters was entered in a part-time program with Ricky Benton Racing. He fell a lap down on track early on and he would be the best finishing lapped car in 23rd, but he avoided the accidents and finished ahead Martin Truex, Jr., Jamie McMurray, William Byron, Clint Bowyer, Brad Keselowski, A.J. Allmendinger, Erik Jones and Kyle Larson, who were all caught in accidents.
Odds of a second start: Peters is only 40, so I wouldn't rule it out. The only problem is he has been part-time in the Truck series since 2017, though he did win at Talladega in 2018. Last year, his only Truck start came when Stewart Friesen had a scheduling conflict. It is still possible, and I think he would deserve it. It would not surprise me if he gets it. 

21. Billy Johnson
Claim to Fame: 2016 IMSA Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge GS class champion and Johnson has the most victories in that series history with 23. He was a Ford GT driver from 2016 to 2019 and he won the 2018 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps in the GTE-Pro class with Stefan Mücke and Olivier Pla. 
Only Start: June 25, 2017, Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway
Result: 22nd
What happened: With Aric Almirola out due to a fractured vertebra, Ford tossed Johnson a bone for all his good work in its sports car division and guided him into the #43 Ford for Richard Petty Motorsports. With five starts in NASCAR's second division under his belt, where his best result was eighth, Johnson had not been in a stock car in four years prior to this outing and he qualified 26th. He worked his way into the top ten and spun Daniel Suárez in the process. Later in the race, he and Matt Kenseth would tangle. Johnson completed all 110 laps, but he was 22nd with only one car behind him on the lead lap. He did finish ahead of Kasey Kahne, Erik Jones, Kyle Larson, Boris Said, A.J. Allmendinger and Martin Truex, Jr., though most of those drivers ran into mechanical problems or had an accident.
Odds of a second start: It could happen, especially with the number of road courses, but unfortunately road course ringers don't get the same opportunities they once did. Back in the day, a team 26th or 30th in the championship would take out its regular driver for a hope of a top ten result with a road course ringer. With the current playoff format where one victory guarantees a spot, a team can't do it because there is the stipulation a driver runs every race, unless granted a waiver, which is normally for a medical reason. The teams that do rotate drivers aren't that competitive options even for a road course ringer (see Rick Ware Racing). 

Row 10

20. Andy Pilgrim
Claim to Fame: 2005 Speed World Challenge champion driving for Cadillac and Pilgrim was a Corvette factory driver from 2000 to 2003. He won the 2004 24 Hours of Daytona overall with Christian Fittipaldi, Terry Borcheller and Forest Barber. In six Le Mans starts, he was on his class podium five times with four runner-up finishes and his worst class finish was fourth. 
Only Start: June 26, 2011, Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway
Result: 26th
What happened: At 54 years old, Pilgrim made his debut from last on the grid driving for Whitney Motorsports, but he finished on the lead lap in 26th, which was tied for the team's best finish that season with Bill Elliott's 26th at Talladega a few months earlier. Pilgrim did finish ahead of fellow road course ringers Boris Said, Brian Simo and Andy Lally.
Odds of a second start: Pilgrim is now 64 years old. He competed in some vintage racing in 2020. It is possible, but I get a hunch the probability is low. 

19. Nelson Piquet, Jr.
Claim to Fame: Where to begin? 2004 British Formula Three champion. Swept the inaugural A1GP weekend at Brands Hatch. 2006 GP2 Series vice-champion. Started 28 Formula One races with his best result being second in the 2008 German Grand Prix. Intentionally spun in the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix, leading to a scandal that defanged Renault's Formula One operation. 2014-15 Formula E champion. Two victories in the NASCAR Truck Series, winner at Bristol in the NASCAR East Series. Winner in his third start in NASCAR's second division at Road America. 
Only Start: August 10, 2014, Cheez-It 355 at the Glen at Watkins Glen International
Result: 26th
What happened: Just a little over a month before the first Formula E race, Piquet, Jr. stepped in the #77 Ford for Randy Humphrey Racing and qualified 32nd. He really wasn't a factor in this race and stayed in the middle of the pack, but he finished 26th and on the lead lap, directly ahead of Clint Bowyer and Jimmie Johnson while Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch had mechanical issues. Piquet, Jr. gets to say he finished ahead of four Cup champions in his only Cup start.
Odds of a second start: Piquet, Jr. is only 35 years old. I am surprised he didn't stick in NASCAR. He did two full seasons in the Truck Series and was tenth and seventh in those seasons. He was 12th in his one full season in the Grand National Series. I am not saying he was going to spend ten years in Cup, but I think he could have put together a few competitive seasons and won a road course race or two with the right organization. 

Anyway, I think there is a shot Piquet, Jr. makes another Cup start. He's young. He flamed out of Formula E after being the inaugural champion. He has spent the last three years running Stock Car Brasil. It could happen. 

Row 9

18. Pat Flaherty
Claim to Fame: The 1956 Indianapolis 500 winner, Flaherty won that race from pole position, leading 127 of 200 laps. He would also win at Milwaukee later that week.
Only Start: August 12, 1951, Motor City 250 at Michigan State Fairgrounds
Result: 59th
What happened: Flaherty drove the #188 Oldsmobile for 13 laps and finished 59th out of 59 starters for what was the second-longest race of the 1951 season behind only the Southern 500.
Odds of a second start: Flaherty passed away in 2002 at the age of 76. 

17. Patrick Long
Claim to Fame: Three-time American Le Mans Series GT2/GT champion. 2017 Pirelli World Challenge champion. Two class victories in the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Three class victories in the 12 Hours of Sebring. Three class victories in Petit Le Mans. One class victory in the 24 Hours of Daytona. 
Only Start: August 12, 2012, Finger Lakes 355 at the Glen at Watkins Glen International
Result: 42nd
What happened: Long had been dabbling in stock car races on road courses at the end of the 2000s, famously having a NASCAR West Series victory taken from him for spinning Joey Logano at Sonoma. He would win at Miller Motorsports Park and Portland in the West Series. His only Cup start came for Inception Motorsports and he started 43rd because of a blown engine and a practice accident. Due to all the damage leading up to race day, this was a start-and-park effort, and Long's race ended after two laps. The good news is Brian Vickers blew an engine on the first lap, so Long was spared a last-place finish. 
Odds of a second start: When Long was running West Series road course races, I thought he was going to lead the next wave of road course ringers. Surprising, he has not raced a stock car since 2012. He turns 40 this July. I would love to see Long get an actual shot on a road course in a Cup car. With the how Cup racing has changed and the death of the road course ringer because of the championship format, it is more likely he gets a shot in NASCAR's second division, but even that would be a great opportunity. 

Row 8

16. Ken Miles
Claim to Fame: Winner of the 1966 24 Hours of Daytona and 1966 12 Hours of Sebring with Lloyd Ruby, runner-up in the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans with Denny Hulme behind Bruce McLaren and Chris Amon driving for the Ford GT program, a car Miles played an extensive role in developing. He was also the 1961 USAC Road Racing champion.
Only Start: November 3, 1963, Golden State 400 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 11th
What happened: Prior to the Ford GT program, Miles, a reputable West Coast-based driver, was recruited to start the 1963 season finale driving for Holman-Moody. His weekend started on the wrong foot, with a practice accident, but the team was able to repair the car ahead of the race. He qualified tenth and ended up nine laps off race winner Darel Dieringer, but he was three laps ahead of David Pearson and his teammate Fred Lorenzen retired after 25 laps due a transmission failure. Miles did finish ahead of Bob Bondurant, Paul Goldsmith, Ned Jarrett, Richard Petty and Rex White. 
Odds of a second start: Miles lost his life in a testing accident at Riverside on August 17, 1966.  

15. Lloyd Ruby
Claim to Fame: Winner of the 1966 24 Hours of Daytona and 1966 12 Hours of Sebring with Ken Miles in the Ford GT, Ruby made 18 Indianapolis 500 starts with seven top ten finishes and his best result was third. Ruby is also known as one of the best drivers never to win the Indianapolis 500, as mechanical problems cost him shots at victory in 1966 and 1968 and a botched pit stop ended his hopes in 1969. He did win seven IndyCar races in 176 starts. 
Only Start: January 22, 1967, Motor Trend 500 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 22nd
What happened: Ruby was drafted in for the 1967 season finale to drive the #26 Ford for Junior Johnson. He qualified eighth but lost his engine after 96 of 185 laps. Only 12 of 44 starters were running at the finish of this race with Parnelli Jones winning by two laps over Paul Goldsmith, Norm Nelson and Don White. 
Odds of a second start: Considering Ruby's contemporaries A.J. Foyt, Mario Andretti, Parnelli Jones and Dan Gurney regularly dabbled in NASCAR, it is surprising this was his only start. He was entered for the 1971 season finale at Texas World Speedway but withdrew. Ruby passed away in 2009 at the age of 81.

Row 7

14. Kevin Swindell
Claim to Fame: Four-time winner of the Chili Bowl, the first driver to win the race in four consecutive years. Two ARCA race victories at Chicagoland and DuQuoin.
Only Start: September 22, 2013, Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Result: 38th
What happened: After having spent a few years as a Ford development driver and running in NASCAR's second division, where he notably finished eighth at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Swindell fell into a seat at Swan Racing. He started 33rd and 39 laps into his debut, he was caught in an accident when teammates Jamie McMurray and Juan Pablo Montoya got together. The team was able to get the car repaired and he ran 244 laps, but he finished 38th, 56 laps down.
Odds of a second start: Swindell suffered broken L-1 and T-7 vertebrae in his back when competing on one of the preliminary nights for the 2015 Knoxville Nationals. He was partially paralyzed from the waist down. He has been running a race shop that has operated cars for the likes of his father Sammy Swindell and Christopher Bell and he has been able to compete in simulator racing. We have seen more and more physically impaired people compete in motorsports over the last 20 years, from Alex Zanardi to Michael Johnson in IMSA's Michelin Pilot Challenge Series. Swindell is only 31 years old. I think he is set on his front office role, but he is young enough to make NASCAR history. Anything is possible and this is certainly something to be rooting for.

13. Rolf Stommelen
Claim to Fame: Four-time winner of the 24 Hours of Daytona, three-time class winner at the 24 Hours of Le Mans and runner-up overall in 1979 with co-drivers Paul Newman and Dick Barbour, 1967 Targa Florio winner, 54 Formula One starts with his best finish being third in the 1970 Austrian Grand Prix
Only Start: August 22, 1971, Talladega 500 at Alabama International Motor Speedway
Result: 39th
What happened: One week after finishing seventh in the Austrian Grand Prix, Stommelen made his NASCAR debut after Bill France invited him to compete at Talladega. The German joined Holman-Moody for the race and the car he drove was Mario Andretti's 1967 Daytona 500 winner, with the Ford Galaxie body replaced with the body of a Mercury Cyclone. Due to his travel from Europe, Stommelen only made three laps of practice before qualifying sixth in a field of 50 cars. He ran at the front before having to pit due to a steering issue and the car was retired after only 53 of 188 laps due to a frame issue.
Odds of a second start: Stommelen lost his life in an accident during an IMSA race at Riverside on April 24, 1963.

Row 6

12. Frank Gardner
Claim to Fame: Three-time British Saloon Car champion, 1971 European Formula 5000 champions, class winner in the 1962 24 Hours of Le Mans, started seven Formula One grand prix. Gardner still ranks ninth all-time in British Touring Car victories with 35 victories in 93 starts, a winning percentage of 37.63%.
Only Start: October 27, 1968, American 500 at North Carolina Motor Speedway
Result: 44th
What happened: After winning back-to-back British Saloon Car Championships driving for Ford, got an opportunity to run a NASCAR race with Holman-Moody. He qualified 21st but lost an engine after two laps while teammate David Pearson would go on to finished second to Richard Petty.
Odds of a second start: Gardner passed away in 2009 at the age of 77. 

11. Marvin Burke
Claim to Fame: Winner of the 1951 250-lap NASCAR Cup race at Oakland Stadium. Burke also attempted to qualify for the 1950 Indianapolis 500, but did not make the field.
Only Start: October 14, 1951, 250-lapper at Oakland Stadium in Oakland, California
Result: 1st
What happened: Burke is the only driver in NASCAR Cup Series history with a perfect record. One start, one victory. From fourth on the grid, he led 156 of 250 laps at Oakland and won the race by three laps over Robert Caswell. It was also the first victory for car #18 in the Cup Series. This was a time when NASCAR included races from all across the country on schedule and this race was one of three races that counted toward the Grand National Series championship held on October 14, 1951. Tim Flock won a race held at Shippenville, Pennsylvania and Frank Mundy won at Martinsville. 
Odds of a second start: Burke passed away in 1994 and he will likely remain the only driver to have a winning percentage of 100% in NASCAR history for quite some time. 

Row 5

10. Larry Phillips
Claim to Fame: Five-time NASCAR Weekly Series national champion. From 1989 to 2001, he won 220 of 289 NASCAR-sanctioned starts
Only Start: November 21, 1976, Los Angeles Times 500 at Ontario Motor Speedway
Result: 13th
What happened: Phillips' only Cup start was in a Winston West Series car, back in the day of combination events when the Cup Series went west. Forty cars started the race and 41 cars failed to qualify. Phillips put the #55 Haddick's Towing Ford on the outside of row 12. In a race that saw 14 cars drop out due to engine failures, including the likes of Richard Petty, Bobby and Donnie Allison and Darrell Waltrip, Phillips kept the car running and finished 13th, the top West Series finisher in the field, 12 laps off the overall winner David Pearson.
Odds of a second start:  Phillips raced until 2001 when lung cancer forced him to step away from competition. He died three years later at the age of 62.

9. Jan Magnussen
Claim to Fame: Four-time champion in IMSA competition, four-time 24 Hours of Le Mans class winner, 46 victories between Grand-Am, the American Le Mans and the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, 24 Formula One grand prix starts. 
Only Start: June 20, 2010, Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway
Result: 12th
What happened: Driving for Phoenix Racing, Magnussen ended up qualifying 32nd, but climbed his way through the order as the race went on, running a clean race. He made up four spots in the final five laps to finish 12th ahead of A.J. Allmendinger, Mark Martin and Jamie McMurray.
Odds of a second start: Less likely than it was five years. Though he is still only 47 years old. I don't think he will get the same type of opportunity as he did a decade ago, but he would be more than capable of running on any of the seven road courses on the Cup schedule.

Row 4

8. Geoff Brabham
Claim to Fame: Four-time IMSA GTP champion. 1981 Can-Am champion. 1993 24 Hours of Le Mans winner. Two-time 12 Hours of Sebring winner. 1997 Bathurst 1000 winner. Ten-time Indianapolis 500 starter. Started 89 IndyCar races with six runner-up finishes, the second-most runner-up finishes for a driver without a victory in IndyCar history.
Only Start: August 6, 1994, Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Result: 38th
What happened: For a race that saw Dick Trickle, Davy Jones, Gary Bettenhausen, Robert Pressley, Ron Hornaday, Jr., Hershel McGriff, Norm Benning, James Hylton, Stan Fox, Charlie Glotzbach, P.J. Jones, Butch Gilliland and 30 other drivers fail to qualify, Brabham's lone Cup Series start was the inaugural Brickyard 400 driving a one-off entry for Michael Kranefuss. He qualified 18th ahead of such names as Terry Labonte, Darrell Waltrip, John Andretti, Ward Burton, Kyle Petty, Jeff Burton, A.J. Foyt and Harry Gant. He would fall two laps down in the race before an accident with 33 laps to go. He spun exiting turn one and collected Jimmy Hensley. 
Odds of a second start: Brabham has been out of competition for 20 years, having last run in what is now known as the Supercars series. Perhaps his son Matthew gets a shot at NASCAR. Matthew Brabham is one of the best Road to Indy drivers not to get a substantial IndyCar opportunity. I bet Matthew Brabham, would be quite suited for a stock car race on a road course.

7. Danny Sullivan
Claim to Fame: 1985 Indianapolis 500 winner. 1988 CART champion. 17 IndyCar victories. Started 15 Formula One grand prix with his best finish being fifth in the 1983 Monaco Grand Prix. 
Only Start: August 6, 1994, Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Result: 33rd
What happened: Just like Brabham, Sullivan's only NASCAR start was the inaugural Brickyard 400. Unlike Brabham, Sullivan had planned to start a handful of NASCAR races in 1994. A ride for the Daytona 500 failed to materialize and he failed to qualify at Rockingham and Atlanta at the beginning of the year. At Indianapolis, however, Sullivan made the field, qualifying 26th. He was able to take the checkered flag, but in a rather lackluster run, eight laps down. 
Odds of a second start: Sullivan's career ended in 1995 and he has since been busy in the business world while also being the guest steward for many Formula One races over the last decade.

Row 3

6. Peter Gregg
Claim to Fame: Four-time winner of the 24 Hours of Daytona. 1973 12 Hours of Sebring winner. 41 IMSA victories. Six-time IMSA champion. Two-time Trans-Am champion. Gregg had won 152 of 340 races he started in his career. 
Only Start: May 27, 1973, World 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Result: 37th
What happened: Gregg ended up starting the final race for Cotton Owens as a car owner in NASCAR. Owens had won 38 races in 24 seasons as a car owner and won the 1966 championship with David Pearson. Gregg qualified seventh on debut, next to eventual champion Benny Parsons. Gregg's race only lasted 34 laps when he had a spun off of turn two and had heavy contact with the inside barrier before sliding back across the back straightaway and hit the outside barrier. 
Odds of a second start: Gregg committed suicide on December 15, 1980. He was 40 years old. 

5. Sam Ard
Claim to Fame: Two-time NASCAR Grand National Series champion and winner of 22 races in the series. 
Only Start: September 23, 1984, Goody's 500 at Martinsville Speedway
Result: 31st
What happened: Ard was on his way to winning his second consecutive Grand National Series championship when he stepped into the #02 Chevrolet for Emanuel Zervakis at the Martinsville Cup race. He qualified 27th out of 30 cars and a steering issue on the first lap ended his race immediately. 
Odds of a second start: Sadly, one month after his start at Martinsville, Ard had a career-ending accident at Rockingham in the penultimate round of the Grand National Series season. He had led the first 14 laps before spinning due to oil from an engine failure of another car. He had already locked up the 1984 championship prior to the Rockingham race. Ard's later life saw him battle Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. He died in 2017 at the age of 78. 

Row 2

4. Joe Leonard
Claim to Fame: Three-time AMA Grand National champion. Two-time Daytona 200 winner. Two-time USAC national champion. Six IndyCar race victories. Nine-time Indianapolis 500 starter and 1968 Indianapolis 500 pole-sitter. 
Only Start: July 4, 1969, Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway
Result: 31st
What happened: After driving for Smokey Yunick in the Indianapolis 500 that May and finishing sixth, Leonard stepped into Yunick's #13 Ford for the July race at Daytona. He qualified next to Buddy Barker on the sixth row, but he was the tenth car out of the race after a crash on lap 47.
Odds of a second start: Leonard passed away in 2017 at the age of 84.

3. Bobby Rahal
Claim to Fame: Three-time CART champion. 1986 Indianapolis 500 winner. 24 IndyCar victories. 1981 24 Hours of Daytona winner. 1987 12 Hours of Sebring winner. Started two Formula One grand prix. Two-time Indianapolis 500 winning car owner. 
Only Start: November 18, 1984, Winston Western 500 at Riverside International Raceway
Result: 40th
What happened: One week after finishing third in the CART championship, Rahal drove for the Wood Brothers in its famed #21 Ford for the NASCAR season finale at Riverside. Rahal had won at Riverside the year before in IndyCar. He qualified 20th, a position ahead of teammate Kyle Petty. The first eight laps of Rahal's NASCAR career were run under caution due to a light rain shower. The race went green on lap nine, but he would only complete 44 laps before a transmission failure ended his day. Attrition had been low in the first third of the race and this meant Rahal was only the second car out of the race.
Odds of a second start: I think that time has passed as Rahal has been out of racing for over 20 years, but he has been enjoying success as a car owner in IndyCar and sports car racing.

Row 1

2. Al Unser, Jr.
Claim to Fame: 1982 Can-Am champion. Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner. Two-time CART champion. Two-time IROC champion. 34 IndyCar victories, ninth all-time. 1983 Pikes Peak International Hill Climb winner. Two-time 24 Hours of Daytona winner. Six-time winner of the Grand Prix of Long Beach.
Only Start: February 14, 1993, Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway
Result: 36th
What happened: A year after winning his first Indianapolis 500, Unser, Jr. got an opportunity to run the Daytona 500 with help from sponsor Valvoline, driving the #46 Valvoline Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports. After getting caught up in an accident in his 125-mile qualifying race, Unser, Jr. was the final car to make the field on qualifying time, starting 40th out of 41 cars. Despite his starting position, Unser, Jr. found his way to the front and was running with the leaders. Approaching the final 100 miles of the race, Kyle Petty was taken out after contact with Bobby Hillin, Jr. Attempting to avoid the accident, Unser, Jr. got into Dale Earnhardt, and Unser, Jr's race was over after 157 laps. 
Odds of a second start: Unser, Jr. has been out of racing for over a decade. At one point, he might have been a respectable stock car driver when taking into account this race and his IROC success, which included a victory at Daytona in 1997 from last on the grid.

1. Jim Clark
Claim to Fame: Two-time World Drivers' champion, scoring 100% of the possible points in each of those seasons. 25 Formula One grand prix victories and 33 pole positions in 72 starts. Most grand slams in Formula One history. Still holds the single season record for highest percentage of laps led in a season at 71.47%. 1965 Indianapolis 500 winner. 1964 Indianapolis 500 pole-sitter. Three-time Tasman Series champion. 1964 British Saloon Car champion. Third overall in the 1960 24 Hours of Le Mans.
Only Start: October 29, 1967, American 500 at North Carolina Motor Speedway
Result: 30th
What happened: On October 22, 1967, Clark won the Mexican Grand Prix, his 24th Formula One victory, tying Juan Manuel Fangio's record. As Mexico was the final round of the 1967 Formula One season, Clark, Jochen Rindt and Jackie Stewart headed to the Bahamas for a postseason vacation. While on the islands, Clark received a telegram from Bill France and an invitation to compete at Rockingham. Clark accepted and Holman-Moody entered Clark in the #66 Ford. Rindt followed to act as a potential relief driver in the 500-mile race.

In an unusual qualifying format, Clark spun on his first qualifying attempt on the third qualifying day, which was held on Friday. The accident caused significant damage to the car. It was repaired in time for qualifying on Saturday and Clark was the fastest qualifier that day, giving him 25th on the grid. Clark would move up to 24th after Ludovico Scarfiotti's qualifying time was disallowed for his car being too low. Scarfiotti, the 1963 24 Hours of Le Mans winner and 1966 Italian Grand Prix winner, would not attempt another NASCAR race.

Rindt had run just under two-dozen practice laps as he prepared for a potential relief appearance, but Clark's strong run shelved any plans to switch drivers mid-race. Clark had worked his way up to 13th, only two laps down, when he lost his engine on lap 146. Clark ended up 30th as his teammate Bobby Allison took the victory. A.J. Foyt was fourth, two laps down. 

Odds of a second start: Clark lost his life just over six months later in a Formula Two race at Hockenheim. It was his penultimate race in the United States. He would run the 1967 IndyCar season finale at Riverside one month later, starting second next to Dan Gurney in a year-old car before retiring after 25 laps. He would win one more grand prix, the South African Grand Prix held on New Year's Day 1968.

In Summation...

This field combines for two World Drivers' Championship...

Six Indianapolis 500 victories...

Nine 24 Hours of Daytona overall winners for a combined 17 overall victories...

Seven 12 Hours of Sebring overall winners for a combined eight overall victories...

One 24 Hours of Le Mans overall winners and another combined ten Le Mans class victories...

11 drivers started a combined 221 Formula One races...

A world champion on snowmobiles...

A national champion on two-wheels...

A two-time Daytona 200 winner...

A Knoxville Nationals winner...

A Little 500 winner...

A Chili Bowl winner...

A Turkey Night Grand Prix winner...

Two British Saloon Car champions....

A Formula E champion....

Nine different nationalities are represented...

And all 40 of these drivers combined for 40 NASCAR Cup Series starts.