The seventh round of the 2026 NTT IndyCar Series season is the 110th Indianapolis 500. For the first time in 16 years, the defending race winner is starting on pole position. Past winners take up the first two spots on the grid. However, the next seven spots over the first three rows feature drivers who have never won this race. Three of them have yet to win any IndyCar race. There are nine past winners in this race and 24 drivers hoping to become the 77th different winner of this famed event.
Coverage
Time: Fox's pre-race coverage begins at 10:00 a.m. ET on Sunday May 24.
TV Channel: Fox
TV Channel: Fox
Announcers: Will Buxton, Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe will be in the booth. Kevin Lee, Georgia Henneberry and Jamie Little will work pit lane. Chris Myers, Danica Patrick and Tony Stewart will participate in pre-race and post-race coverage.
Indianapolis 500 Weekend Schedule
Carb Day:
Practice - 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. ET (2 hours).
Indianapolis 500 Weekend Schedule
Carb Day:
Practice - 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. ET (2 hours).
Pit Stop Competition - 2:30 p.m. ET
Sunday:
Race - 12:45 p.m. ET (200 laps).
Sunday:
Race - 12:45 p.m. ET (200 laps).
Palou Pondering More History
Everything goes through Álex Palou, and the man who has won three consecutive IndyCar championships and won last year's Indianapolis 500 will lead the field to the green flag on Sunday from pole position.
It is the first time the defending race winner has started on pole position since Hélio Castroneves did it in 2010 after Castroneves scored his third "500" victory in 2009.
For Palou, this is his second pole position for the Indianapolis 500. He started first in 2023 as well. This makes the Catalan driver the 19th person to win multiple Indianapolis 500 pole positions.
Every time Palou takes to the racetrack, he is likely on the verge of making history. This time is no different. He is seeking to become the 22nd pole-sitter to win the Indianapolis 500. It has not been done since 2019 when Simon Pagenaud took victory. Of the 18 other drivers with multiple Indianapolis 500 pole positions, eight also won the race from pole position.
Another victory would be the 23rd of Palou's career and it would put him in a tie for 20th all-time with Tommy Milton, the first driver to win multiple Indianapolis 500s. A Palou victory would make him the seventh driver to win the "500" in consecutive years, and it would be the first time in the race's history that consecutive winners have happened in succession after Josef Newgarden won in 2023 and 2024.
Beyond the victory, Palou is 62 laps led away from 2,000 laps led in his career. He would be the 25th driver to reach that milestone. If he retains the championship lead after this race it will be the 58th race Palou has held the championship lead after. That would move him into fourth all-time surpassing Will Power. Palou is only six races behind Scott Dixon for third all-time in most times leading the championship.
Like last year, Palou enters the Indianapolis 500 on a good run of form. He has four consecutive top five finishes, three of which were podium results. Through the first six races of 2026, Palou has won half the races. The only blemish is being caught in an accident early in the Phoenix race in March. Four of the last eight Indianapolis 500 winners had won a race prior to Indianapolis. Six of the eight had at least a top five finish. The exceptions are Takuma Sato, whose best finish in 2020 prior to Indianapolis was eighth, and Hélio Castroneves, who was a part-time entrant in 2021 with Meyer Shank Racing and Indianapolis was Castroneves' first start of that season.
At Indianapolis, Palou has three consecutive top five finishes and five consecutive top ten finishes. Palou could become the ninth driver to have at least four consecutive top five finishes in the Indianapolis 500. Ted Horn holds the record with nine consecutive top five finishes from 1936 through 1948, as for three years the race was not held due to World War II. Rodger Ward had a six-year streak from 1959 through 1964. Harry Hartz had five top five finishes in his first five Indianapolis 500 starts from 1922 to 1926.
Five drivers have had exactly four-year streaks of top five finishes including Bill Holland (1947-50), Jim Rathmann (1957-60), Al Unser (1982-85), Roberto Guerrero (1984-87) and Al Unser, Jr. (1989-92).
Palou has never finished worse than ninth when driving for Chip Ganassi Racing in this event. Palou could also make a little history for his car owner. Chip Ganassi turns 68 years old on race day. Ganassi has never won the Indianapolis 500 when it has fallen on his birthday. The best finish for a Ganassi car in an Indianapolis 500 that has fallen on Ganassi's birthday was third with Charlie Kimball in 2015. Scott Dixon was fourth in that race as well.
A Sleeper Starting Second
There was some excitement as Alexander Rossi qualified second to Álex Palou as it was Rossi's best qualifying effort ever for the Indianapolis 500. Rossi's only other front row start was in his sophomore year in 2017 when he rolled off from third starting position. This will be the sixth time Rossi has started in one of the first three rows of the Indianapolis 500. This is also Ed Carpenter Racing's return to the front row after a two-year absent. Celebrations were quickly sullied.
During the Monday practice session, Rossi spun exiting turn two and hit the barrier. Patricio O'Ward and Romain Grosjean were also collected in this accident. Rossi walked away from the accident, but he required outpatient surgery for an injury to a finger on his left hand and for an injury to his right ankle. Ed Carpenter Racing will be forced to switch to a backup car for Rossi and the #20 team. O'Ward will also be switching to a backup car while Grosjean's team repaired its primary entry.
The accident was a setback for what was setting up to be a promising challenge for Indianapolis 500 victory for Rossi and ECR. The good news is Rossi's backup car is the car he ran in last year's "500." Rossi's race started from 12th on the grid in that car, and he led 14 laps before a fire in the pit lane ended his race after 73 laps. He was classified in 28th.
In ten Indianapolis 500 starts, Rossi has seen the checkered flag eight times. In seven of those races, he has finished in the top seven. The only time he did not finish in the top seven was in 2021, when Rossi was trapped a lap down after requiring emergency service to pit for fuel. Rossi could not get back on the lead lap and finished 29th, losing another lap in the process. He has six top five finishes in this event.
Rossi enters this weekend having led 107 laps in his Indianapolis 500 career. That is tied with Sam Hornish, Jr. for 64th all-time. Among active drivers, Rossi ranks ninth.
Though we are celebrating the ten-year anniversary of Rossi's memorable victory in the 100th Indianapolis 500, he enters this race approaching four years since his most recent victory. It has been 60 starts since he stood on the top step of the podium. After winning seven times in his first 60 starts, Rossi has only won once in his last 110 starts.
It has been much longer since Rossi has won on an oval. His most recent oval victory wast he 2018 Pocono race. There have been 40 oval races since Rossi's most recent victory. Thirteen different drivers have won an oval race since Rossi.
Ed Carpenter Racing has won one of the three most recent oval races as Christian Rasmussen had a phenomenal drive to win at Milwaukee last August. It was the team's first oval victory since Josef Newgarden won at Iowa in 2016. ECR has had a top ten finisher in five consecutive Indianapolis 500s, but it has not had a top five finisher since Ed Carpenter was fifth in 2021.
The good news for Rossi is when he wins, he starts at the front. He has started in the top three for seven of his eight career victories. The lone expiation is his Indianapolis 500 victory where he started 11th.
Chasing a First Indianapolis Victory
Recent years have been favorable to new winners. Three of the last four Indianapolis 500s have seen a first-time winner with the only exception in there being Josef Newgarden, who won in consecutive years. When do these first Indianapolis 500 victories occur?
For Marcus Ericsson, his Indianapolis 500 victory came in his fourth season in IndyCar. The year before, Ericsson scored the first two victories of his career. The 2022 Indianapolis 500 was the 52nd start of his career, but only his fourth in the "500."
Josef Newgarden had a longer wait for his first Indianapolis victory. It was his 12th start in the "500" and the 187th start of his career. He had won 26 times in his career up to that point. Only Will Power had won more races before his first "500" victory than Newgarden. Newgarden was also already a two-time champion.
As for Álex Palou, he had 15 career victories in his first 85 starts entering last year's Indianapolis 500, his sixth time starting the Memorial Day classic. He also had three championship to his name.
Covering all 76 drivers to win the Indianapolis 500, on average their first victory in the event took 4.815 starts to happen. If you adjust the numbers to only take into consideration the winners since World War II, that number increases to 5.52 starts. If you want to go hyper-recent and only look at the years since reunification, the ten first-time Indianapolis 500 winners during that span took 7.5 starts for that victory.
Considering careers beyond the "500," on average a driver had 5.263 victories in their career at the time of their first career Indianapolis 500 victories. If you adjust those numbers based on the time periods above, and the 50 Indianapolis 500 winners since World War II had on average 6.72 victories at the time of their first "500" win. For the ten first-timers since reunification, the average number of career victories when they won Indianapolis for the first time shoots up to 12.8. Only three of first-time winners since 2008 had fewer than a dozen victories.
Among the drivers seeking their first Indianapolis 500 victory in this race, 12 are making at least their fifth Indianapolis 500 start. None of these drivers have won more than nine races in their careers.
Patricio O'Ward leads all drivers with most victories without an Indianapolis 500 in this year's race. O'Ward's nine victories would be level with Ralph DePalma and Gil de Ferran, who each won nine times before they won their first Indianapolis 500. This will be O'Ward's seventh start in Indianapolis. DePalma and de Ferran each won in their fourth Indianapolis start.
Scott McLaughlin has seven career victories, but he has yet to win at Indianapolis in what will be his sixth career start. Rodger Ward, Gordon Johncock and Juan Pablo Montoya each had seventh career victories prior to their first Indianapolis victory. Ward and Johncock each won Indianapolis for the first time in their ninth starts. Montoya won his first "500" on debut as he had run a full season in CART before running Indianapolis as a one-off.
Felix Rosenqvist is starting fourth, the inside of row two, and Rosenqvist's only victory came nearly six years ago Road America. Eight drivers had only one career victory to their name when they won at Indianapolis for the first time. The most recent was Takuma Sato, whose 2017 Indianapolis 500 victory came just over four years after his first career victory at Long Beach. Rosenqvist will be making his eighth Indianapolis 500 start this weekend. Sato's first Indianapolis 500 victory also came in his eighth start.
Rinus VeeKay and Christian Rasmussen have also each only won once in their IndyCar careers and are looking for their first "500" victory. This will be VeeKay's seventh "500" and Rasmussen's third.
Christian Lundgaard picked up his second career victory in the most recent race, the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. It snapped a 46-race winless streak for Lundgaard. Marcus Ericsson is the most recent driver to have only two career victories prior to a first Indianapolis 500 victory. Other notable names that had only two career victories prior to their first "500" win was Bill Vukovich, Jim Rathmann, Parnelli Jones, Mark Donohue and Jacques Villeneuve.
However, this will be Lundgaard's 76th career start. That is more than all the other drivers who had only two career victories at the time of their first Indianapolis victory.
Chasing a First Victory Period
There are those who have not won the Indianapolis 500 and then there are those who have not won an IndyCar race ever. Fifteen of the 33 starters have never won an IndyCar race, and each of the first three rows of the grid feature a winless driver. Row four is home to two.
These drivers do not have to fret. Though they have yet to taste glory anywhere that does not mean it is beyond their reach in IndyCar's greatest race. Eighteen drivers have had the Indianapolis 500 be their first career victory. However, nine of those drivers won over an 18-race stretch from 1913 to 1932. In the last 60 years, there have only been five drivers to win the Indianapolis 500 with zero victories to their name.
While that might sound defeating, a few drivers should be feeling confident that they could make their own little bit of history.
David Malukas is starting on the front row, and his first six races with Team Penske have been rather exceptional. Maukas is the top Penske driver in the championship in third on 185 points, 52 points behind Álex Palou in the championship lead. Malukas is coming off a runner-up finish in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, and he has been the top Penske finisher in three of the last four races. Starting third, this is the sixth consecutive race where Malukas is the top Penske starter, and it is his fourth consecutive top five start.
This will mark Malukas' 68th career start. He was runner-up in last year's race after post-race penalties were applied, and he has five podium finishes, four of which have come on ovals.
In the middle of row two is Santino Ferrucci, who has already made Indianapolis 500 history with seven top ten finishes from his first seven starts, a record start to an Indianapolis 500 career. Three of those results have been in the top five. This is the third time in four years Ferrucci is starting on row two. While his results are incredible, he has only led 16 laps in his Indianapolis 500 career, 11 of which were in 2023 when he finished third. The only other time he has led multiple laps was when he led two in 2021.
Ferrucci will be making his 100th start in the Indianapolis 500. Only three drivers have taken 100 starts or more to pick up their first career victory. Two of Ferrucci's three career podium finishes came last year when he was second at Detroit and third at Road America. Nine of his 11 career top five finishes have come on ovals. Ferrucci's best finish this season was eighth at Barber Motorsports Park.
Seventh starting position is the home to Kyffin Simpson, who in 40 starts has yet to win the race, and he has only stood on the podium once in his career. Simpson was third last year at Toronto, one of three top five finishes in his IndyCar career. His best oval result was fourth in last year's Nashville season finale.
This season, Simpson's best finish is tenth, which occurred at Phoenix and Long Beach. His career average finish is 16.9.
Then there is Conor Daly. Driving for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing, Daly picked up his best starting position for the Indianapolis 500 when he qualified eighth. Running as a one-off driver this year, Daly has a streak of four consecutive top ten finishes in the "500," and he hs finished eighth in two of the last three years.
Daly has made 132 starts and has yet to win in IndyCar. The record for most starts before a first victory is Michel Jourdain, Jr.'s 129 before he won the 2003 CART race at Milwaukee. Daly has two podium finishes, a second at Belle Isle in 2016 and a third at Milwaukee in 2024. Both those races were the first races of doubleheader weekends. Daly's last race was the 2025 Nashville season finale where he finished fifth, the sixth top five finish of his career.
The only other winless driver starting in the top half of the grid is Marcus Armstrong, and Armstrong is starting 16th. Last season, Armstrong was eighth in the championship with 11 top ten finishes. He was third at Iowa, his second career podium finish. He was third at Detroit in 2024. He has finished 11th or better in five of six races in 2026. This weekend will be the 53rd start of Armstrong's career.
If there is any reason for encouragement for the winless drivers it is that of the five drivers in the last 60 years to have their first career victory come in the Indianapolis 500, three of them won in a year ending with the number six.
Graham Hill won on his IndyCar debut in the 1966 Indianapolis 500. Buddy Lazier won the first Indianapolis 500 during the Indy Racing League-era in 1996. Alexander Rossi won on his Indianapolis 500 debut, his sixth career start, in 2016.
Making Up for Last Year
While Álex Palou will look back on last year's race with some fondness, most will not share such joy. A few drivers will look back at 2025 and wish things had gone a little differently.
Marcus Ericsson was second on the road after leading with 15 laps to go in last year's race. Ericsson's car would ultimately be disqualified and relegated to 31st in the final results after an illegal modified Energy Management System cover was found on the car in post-race inspection. Either way, it completed a hat-trick of rough results for the Swede.
In 2023, Ericsson was second, but he was leading at the start of the final lap before Josef Newgarden passed him in the one-lap dash for victory, preventing Ericsson from becoming a consecutive winner of the race. In 2024, after hours of waiting out the rain-delay, Ericsson was caught in an opening corner accident and classified in 33rd. It capped off a month where Ericsson had to start on the last row after a having suffered an accident in practice. Tack on a 31st classification in 2025 and Ericsson has now finished outside the top thirty in three of his seven Indianapolis 500 starts.
With two consecutive results outside the top thirty at Indianapolis, Ericsson could become only the second driver in Indianapolis 500 history with three consecutive finishes outside the top thirty. Paul Bost had finishes of 31st, 37th and 40th in his three Indianapolis 500 starts from 1931 to 1933.
Also pinged with the same infraction for the illegally modified EMS cover was Kyle Kirkwood in last year's race, and like his Andretti Global teammate Ericsson, Kirkwood was knocked back from sixth to 32nd in the final results. It would have been Kirkwood's best finish at Indianapolis after starting 23rd.
Kirkwood enters this year's race riding a good wave of momentum. He has six consecutive top ten finishes to open this season and he is the only driver to finish in the top ten of every race this season. However, he is coming off his worst finish in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis where he was ninth. A lengthy pit stop due to an issue with the wheel nut on the front right tire cost him valuable positions, and he lost ground in the championship to Álex Palou.
Josef Newgarden had extra work to do in last year's race. After his car was found with an illegally modified attenuator before Sunday qualifying, Newgarden was moved to 32nd on the grid. In the race, Newgarden moved forward and was in a position to crack the top five, keeping his hopes of a third consecutive Indianapolis 500 victory alive. However, the fuel pump failed on his car with about 65 laps remaining.
Newgarden went winless into the final race of the 2025 season, where he took victory at Nashville. At Phoenix in March, Newgarden won again thanks to fresh tires on a late pit stop that allowed him to make his way through the field. He has not won multiple times within the first seven races of the season since 2023, the first year he won the Indianapolis 500. For this year's race, Newgarden will start 23rd. It is the sixth time in the last seven Indianapolis 500s Newgarden has started outside the first four rows.
The 109th Indianapolis 500 was in Ryan Hunter-Reay's hand as he took the lead though pit strategy, but he stretched his fuel far enough that he could make it on one fewer stop. However, Hunter-Reay ran out of fuel as he entered pit lane for his final stop, and his car would not restart to allow him to return to the race. His 48 laps led were the second-most of the race behind Takuma Sato's 51.
It was the fourth consecutive Indianapolis 500 start where Hunter-Reay has finished outside the top ten, and he has not finished in the top five in his last six "500" starts. Last year was the fifth time he has led more than 25 laps in the Indianapolis 500, and he now ranks 27th all-time in laps led with 219.
Then there is Scott McLaughlin. McLaughlin's fifth Indianapolis 500 start didn't even last a lap. He spun on the front straightaway while behind the pace car. Laps started to be counted though the track surface was still damp after a light shower passed over the track as the cars were about to leave the grid. If it weren't for the three disqualifications for post-race inspection violations to Ericsson, Kirkwood and Callum Ilott, for an illegal front wing end plate, McLaughlin would have been classified in 33rd. Instead, he was generously given 30th. In five Indianapolis 500 starts, McLaughlin's lone top ten finish remains a sixth in 2024, and his average finish is 19.8.
It has been 24 races since McLaughlin's most recent victory. While he was second from pole position at St. Petersburg to open this season, the New Zealander has not finished in the top five in the last five races. He has not gone six consecutive races without a top five finish since Long Beach to Road America in 2022.
Only twice has a driver won the Indianapolis 500 the year after finishing 30th or worse. Louis Meyer was 33rd in 1932 and then won in 1933. Mario Andretti was 33rd in 1968 and then won in 1969.
The Rookie Scrap
Four rookies are in the field and thanks to a post-qualifying inspection infraction none of them start better than 27th. In Indianapolis 500s with at least four rookies, this is the first time none of the rookies have started better than 27th.
The leading rookie on the grid will be Mick Schumacher in 27th. Schumacher was also the top starting rookie in the only other oval race this season at Phoenix where he started fourth. Unfortunately for Schumacher, he has yet to be the top rookie finisher this season. His best result was 17th at Long Beach, and that is one of only two times he has not been the worst rookie finisher. The other was when he was 18th at Phoenix. He was on his way to a top ten finish in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis before being penalized for spinning Santino Ferrucci in turn nine. Schumacher ranks last in the championship on 54 points.
Starting in the middle of row nine will be Dennis Hauger. Hauger is currently the top rookie in the championship, 15th through six races on 100 points. He is only seven points behind Will Power and six points ahead Rinus VeeKay. Hauger has two top ten finishes, a tenth at St. Petersburg and an eighth in the most recent race, the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. He was 15th at Phoenix after an early spin and he led during a pit cycle. Hauger finished in the top five of all four of his oval starts last year in Indy Lights, and he had three podium finishes on ovals.
To Hauger's outside will be Jacob Abel, the only rookie who is a one-off entrant. Abel failed to qualify for last year's Indianapolis 500. This year, Abel is running for his family's team Abel Motorsports. This is Abel Motorsports' second Indianapolis 500 start. The team ran R.C. Enerson in 2023, who started 28th but his race only lasted 75 laps before a mechanical issue, classifying Enerson in 32nd. Abel had only one top fifteen finish last season. That was 11th in the second Iowa race.
Caio Collet was the fastest rookie qualifier as he made the Fast 12, and Collet was set to start tenth until unapproved hardware was found on the car for the cover of the Energy Management System. Jack Harvey's car was also found with the same offense. Both these drivers were moved to the rear of the grid, and Collet will start 32nd. Collet's best finish this season was 12th at Arlington. He has not finished in the top fifteen of the other five races. In two Indy Lights seasons, Collet never won an oval race, and in eight starts his best finish was third with four top five finishes.
Three of the last four Indianapolis 500 Rookies of the Year have not been the best finishing rookie. Each of those three drivers did not make it to the end of the race. Five consecutive Indianapolis 500 Rookies of the Year have not finished in the top ten. This is the longest stretch without an Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year finishing in the top ten since the honor was first awarded in 1952.
The Weather Report
Showers appear to be persistently in the picture for the entire weekend.
Chance of precipitation sits at 31% for Friday with temperatures settling into the low-60s. Showers increase in probability around noon, the middle of the Carb Day practice. Winds will be between ten to 15 mph from the East Northeast.
Temperatures will creep up a few degrees on Saturday with a high around 66º F with the chance of precipitation inching up to 34%. Winds will die down and be between five and ten mph but shift to be from the West Northwest.
Sunday has a 33% chance of precipitation with temperatures climbing to a high around 74º F and winds dying down. There is a chance rain could hold off developing until later in the afternoon.
Carb Night Classic - Thursday Edition
In anticipation of the precipitation, the Road to Indy races from Indianapolis Raceway Park have been moved up to Thursday night, tonight, instead of taking place on Friday night.
USF Pro 2000 has 20 cars entered for the Freedom 90.
Jack Jeffers and Frankie Mossman are tied on 87 points in the championship lead. Jeffers won on the IMS road course two weeks ago, his second victory of the season. Mossman has finished on the podium in three of four races this season.
Leonardo Escorpioni had finishes of 12th and 16th on the IMS road course, and he is 29 points off the championship lead. Michael Costello is two points further back with Brady Golan in fifth on 54 points. Jacob Douglas won the first race on the IMS road course and he is tied for sixth in the championship with G3 Argyros. Andrés Cárdenas has 50 points with Christian Cameron on 45 points and Mac Clark rounds out the top ten on 44 points. Clark was second in the first IMS road course race.
Testing was held on Wednesday, and Cameron was fastest at 19.6723 seconds. Indy Lights driver Tymek Kucharczyk will be competing in the Freedom 90 to get oval experience, and he will be teammates with Cameron with TJ Speed Motorsports. Kucharczyk was second at 19.7327 with Thomas Schrage rounding out the top three for TJ Speed Motorsports at 19.7705 seconds.
The Freedom 90 will close out tonight's proceedings at 7:30 p.m. ET. The race will be 90 laps or 50 minutes.
Sebastián Garzón leads the U.S. F2000 championship with three victories and five podium finishes from five races. Garzón has scored 141 points and he has a 47-point lead over Brad Majman, who won the third race of the IMS road course triple-header. Eddie Beswick has 77 points in third with Evan Cooley up to fourth on 68 points after a trio of top five finishes on the IMS road course.
João Vergara has scored 65 points, two more than Ayrton Cahan. Liam Loiacono has scored 56 points. Anthony Martella won the Freedom 75 last year, and he won the first race from the IMS road course nearly two weeks ago. Martella has 54 points. The IMS road course marked the debut for Oliver Wheldon, who qualified on pole position. Broken suspension ended Wheldon's first race, but he finished third and second in the next two races, and he is ninth in the championship on 51 points despite missing the opening round. Welsey Gundler rounds out the op ten on 49 points.
Thomas Nordquist was the fastest in U.S. F2000's test on Wednesday at 20.8380 seconds ahead of his DEForce Racing teammate Garzón at 20.8890 seconds. Wheldon was third fastest at 20.9713 seconds with Majman in fourth at 21.0726 seconds and Ryan Giannetta in with at 21.0906 seconds. Beswick was sixth quickest at 21.0918 seconds.
The Freedom 75 will be held at 6:30 p.m. ET and run for 75 laps or 45 minutes.
Fast Facts
This will be the eighth IndyCar race to take place on May 24 and the first since Juan Pablo Montoya won the 99th Indianapolis 500 in 2015.
Only one IndyCar race held on May 24 was not the Indianapolis 500. Paul Tracy won the 1997 Gateway CART race on this day.
This year's race is on the 45th anniversary of Bobby Unser's third Indianapolis 500 victory, the 39th anniversary of Al Unser's fourth Indianapolis 500 victory, and the 34th anniversary of Al Unser, Jr.'s first Indianapolis 500 victory, the closest Indianapolis 500 victory ever at 0.043 seconds over Scott Goodyear.
The other May 24 Indianapolis 500s were Eddie Cheever's victory in 1998 and Hélio Castroneves' third victory in 2009.
This will be the 179th 500-mile race in IndyCar history.
The United States has produced the most 500-mile race winners with 67. Brazil and the United Kingdom has each produced seven 500-mile race winners. Canada has had four, Italy and France have each had three winners. Sweden has two winners. The Netherlands, Mexico, Colombia, New Zealand, Australia, Japan and Spain have each produced one winner.
Eleven of the last 15 Indianapolis 500s have been completed in under three hours. Only five of the first 87 Indianapolis 500s that went the distance were completed in under three hours.
This year's grid features...
12 Americans...
Three New Zealanders...
Three Britons...
Two Swedes...
Two Brazilians...
Two Danes...
A Spaniard...
A Mexican...
A Caymanian...
A Dutchman...
A Japanese...
An Australian...
A Frenchman...
A German and...
A Norwegian.
This will be the 18th consecutive Indianapolis 500 to feature at least ten different nationalities.
Ten drivers have won on both the oval and road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. They are Alex Lloyd, Jack Harvey, Dean Stoneman, Colton Herta, Will Power, Simon Pagenaud, Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden, Alexander Rossi and Álex Palou.
The drivers who could become the 11th driver to win on both the oval and road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this weekend are, Patricio O'Ward, Rinus VeeKay, Christian Rasmussen, Louis Foster, Kyle Kirkwood, Dennis Hauger, Jacob Abel and Sting Ray Robb.
Rinus VeeKay or Christian Lundgaard could join Will Power, Simon Pagenaud, Scott Dixon Alexander Rossi, Josef Newgarden and Álex Palou as the only drivers to win an IndyCar race on the IMS oval and road course.
The last fastest rookie qualifier has been the Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year in three consecutive years.
The average starting position for an Indianapolis 500 winner is 7.449 with a median of fifth.
Eight of the last nine Indianapolis 500 winners have started in one of the first three rows.
The average number of lead changes in the Indianapolis 500 is 14.779 with a median of ten.
In the DW12-era, the average number of lead changes in the Indianapolis 500 is 38.35714 with a median of 35.
The driver who led the most laps has won only two of the last 14 Indianapolis 500s, Ryan Hunter-Reay in 2014 and Simon Pagenaud in 2019.
The driver who led the most laps has not won the last six Indianapolis 500s. The last time there were at least six consecutive Indianapolis 500s where the driver who led the most laps did not win the race was an eight-year streak from 1990 through 1997.
The average number of cautions in the Indianapolis 500 is 7.568 with a median of seven. The average number of caution laps is 43.411 with a median of 43.
In the last 15 Indianapolis 500s, 11 races have had more than five cautions.
This will be the 77th Indianapolis 500 victory for Firestone.
This will be the 26th Indianapolis 500 victory for Dallara, extending Dallara's record for most Indianapolis 500 victories for a chassis manufacturer.
If Honda wins the race, it will be the manufacturer's 17th Indianapolis 500 victory. Honda is currently second all-time in victories for engine manufacturers, 11 victories behind Offenhauser's 27.
Chevrolet is third all-time with 13 Indianapolis 500 victories.
Predictions
Álex Palou, but if it isn't Álex Palou... well... it is difficult to pick against Álex Palou. Most of Palou's laps led will come in the final 80 laps of the race, and the driver who leads the most laps within the first half of the race will finish outside the top five. Josef Newgarden will be the biggest improver from his grid position at the checkered flag. The best Dane will be Christian Lundgaard. Ryan Hunter-Reay does not have any issues running out of fuel. Marcus Ericsson has at least a top 15 finish. Kyle Kirkwood makes up at least 12 positions. Katherine Legge sees the checkered flag but she finishes at least one lap down. Ed Carpenter will be the best finishing Ed Carpenter Racing driver. Sleeper: Scott Dixon.