Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Best of the Month: May 2022

The end of May is always a sentimental part of the year. It is beautiful outside, but we have cleared a milestone for the year. The Indianapolis 500 is over. A few other major events remain and basically every championship is undecided, but it is sad when Indianapolis is behind you. We have to wait another 11 months before we are back again. 

The Indianapolis Motor Speedway is the home for all that was good this May, and this Best of the Month celebrates some key, but possibly overlooked moments at the corner of 16th and Georgetown. 

Power's Poles
William Steven Power took one step closer to IndyCar history earlier this month with his pole position in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. Power now has 64 pole positions, three shy of tying Mario Andretti's record. Last year, Power only won one pole position and he is 41 years old, so the record is not inevitably going to be his, but the odds are still considerably in his favor. 

We lose vision of what Power is approaching. These aren't race victories, but pole positions are not much easier to win. It requires the car being setup close to perfection and then nailing the lap, hitting the limit and never going over it. It is a matter of timing, taking to the track at the right point on a road/street course, and making sure to have the best track conditions for your flyer. There is also timing when you start a lap to make sure no other competitor can top your run. 

With the current road/street course qualifying format, it is three rounds of facing those challenges. You need to be great just to advance from round one and you are still a round away from getting a shot at topping the grid. 

Power regularly has pulled out time from nowhere. There have been plenty of qualifying session where Power appears to be set to get knocked out in round two, only for him to scratch through by a fraction of a second and then smack one out of the park and leave the field stunned in the final round. 

There is no one close to matching Power's ability in IndyCar, and arguably there is no one else in the world of motorsport in his zip code. 

With Power flirting with a record, we need perspective on where he stands compared to the rest of the field. 

Power has 64 pole positions from 258 opportunities. Remember, he won pole position for a race he didn't even start back at St. Petersburg in 2016, hence more opportunities than starts. His batting average is 0.248. Hélio Castroneves and Scott Dixon have both made more starts than Power, around a hundred more starts for each. Castroneves has 50 pole positions in 363 opportunities and Dixon has 29 in 358 opportunities (remember qualifying for infamous 2001 Texas CART race remained in the record book). They are batting 0.137 and 0.081 respectively. 

Neither Castroneves nor Dixon are going to contend for the record, but what about a younger driver? Is there anyone who could possibly chase down Power 15 or 20 years from now or is at least matching Power's pace?

Among active drivers born since 1990, Josef Newgarden leads the way with 15 pole positions, but Newgarden has made 170 starts. That is an average of 0.088, basically in Dixon's range. For Newgarden to reach 68 pole positions at his current rate, he would need to make 762 starts! Mario Andretti's record for most starts is 407. 

Even if Newgarden won every pole position for the rest of the season, his average would only get up to 0.1436, slightly better than Castroneves. He would have 26 pole positions from 181 starts, and even at the rate of a pole position every seventh race, it would still take Newgarden until about his 473 starts to get to 68 pole positions. 

Colton Herta already has eight pole positions, and he is only 22 years old. Time is on Herta's side but eight pole positions in 54 starts has his average at 0.14814 starts. At that rate, Herta would reach 68 pole positions around his 459th start, 52 starts more than Andretti's record. If Herta remains in IndyCar and if he makes an average of 17 starts a season, he would reach his 459th start late in the 2045 season! He would only be 45 years old, just shy of 46. Tony Kanaan and Hélio Castroneves are both 47 years old and still competing in IndyCar. 

It is not impossible for Herta, but still unlikely. Let's see how the 2030s go before we start taking this seriously. 

As for other drivers, no one is worth mentioning. 

Patricio O'Ward has four pole positions in 44 starts (0.0909), Alexander Rossi has six pole positions in 103 starts (0.0582), and Rinus VeeKay has two in 35 starts (0.0571).

If the record does become Power's, he will be able to put his feet up and relax. Nobody will be touching him for quite some time.

Speed Draws
The qualifying speeds weren't the only thing up at Indianapolis this year. The interest in qualifying was as well. 

Viewership for Sunday's Indianapolis 500 qualifying session on NBC was up over 40% from NBC's 2021 Indianapolis 500 qualifying coverage. Some of that could be because of Jimmie Johnson. Johnson made the Fast 12 and had a shot at pole position. I am not sure how many percentage points Johnson is adding to a broadcast rating, but it is not 40%, especially for qualifying. 

I think with the buzz of practice week and Saturday's qualifying session, people were expecting big times, and Scott Dixon's pole position run of 234.046 mph was the second fastest qualifying run in the history of the event. Everyone got what they came for.

And viewers didn't just show up in front of their television screen, they were at the track. The Sunday crowd was good compared to previous qualifying days. 

For too damn long, IndyCar was in the mid-220s, flirting with the high 220s, and that was seen as acceptable. Laps of 220 mph are quick, no bones about it, but when you have seen 230 mph and felt that rush, you are shorting everyone accepting slower times. 

We have finally got back into the 230-range and are now running some of the fastest times ever. It has been a long wait to see these kind of qualifying runs again, but this is what gets people's attention. These are bonkers runs. Only the best drivers can pull these off, and better yet we are pushing the boundaries again. 

Arie Luyendyk's four-lap record of 236.986 mph was an aberration in 1996, a misdirection of where IndyCar was in the 1990s when the split occurred. Everyone was creeping to the 233-mph territory and Luyendyk leaped to another galaxy with his record run. 

We haven't even explored the 234-range and now we are there. We are going to see if anyone can get back there in 2023, and if they can how far can they climb? The track record is still safe, but we are in the neighborhood. We are seeing the bar raised, and when you consider from 2019 to 2020 over two miles per hour was found and from 2021 to 2022 nearly 2.5 miles per hour were found, I think it is healthy to wonder if a new track record will be possible soon. 

We are not going to see a sellout on pole day like it is the 1960s, 1970s or 1980s, but if a track record is possible, people are going to show up. We are approaching 30 years since it was set. People will want to be there to see it fall. IndyCar has to realize what it is approaching and not be afraid to push that boundary.

Should Johnny Aitken Be Nervous?
Speaking of records, for the first time in my life I am considering Johnny Aitken's record of 15 Indianapolis Motor Speedway victories in jeopardy. And it is all because of Alex Quinn.

Quinn showed up to the U.S. F2000 weekend during the Grand Prix of Indianapolis weekend and swept all three races on his debut weekend. Three starts, three victories. 

With the increase of competitions at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, I think Aitken's 15 victories is reachable. 

Quinn has three victories. If a driver starts at the bottom of the Road to Indy, competes in all three series, and works his or her way to IndyCar, he or she will make at least eight starts at IMS before even driving an IndyCar and IndyCar currently has three races at the speedway. 

Let's take into consideration Kyle Kirkwood won all seven starts he made at Mid-Ohio in his Road to Indy career. Why couldn't that happen for a driver on the IMS road course? A driver could be about halfway to the record in junior series competition alone. Then that driver could get to IndyCar and have a 15-year IndyCar career and could possibly make 45 starts at the track between the Indianapolis 500 and the road course races. 

Will Power is one of seven drivers with at least six IMS victories, all in an IndyCar, and five of those are on the road course. If a kid is lights out in the Road to Indy and then replicates Will Power's career, 16 victories is possible. 

Will we see it? We will have to wait, just as we will have to wait to see if anyone can catch Power if Power sets the pole position record. Next year will be the tenth edition of the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. The Road to Indy has supported it the entire time. In next ten years, we could see someone challenging that record. 

Colton Herta won twice in Indy Lights on the road course, the Freedom 100 once and he just won his first Grand Prix of Indianapolis. Patricio O'Ward won twice at IMS in Indy Pro 2000. Someone is going to reach ten IMS victories eventually, and then we will have a deeper discussion about the record, but we should keep it in mind.

June Preview
This June sees the return of last year's breakout series. The Superstar Racing Experience is back!

SRX will have another six-race championship running on a selection of short tracks around the United States of both the paved and dirt variety. 

What is different this year?
There are four new tracks starting with the season opener on June 18 at Five Flags Speedway in Pensacola, Florida. On June 25, the series visits South Boston Speedway in Virginia for the first time. 

The middle third of the season are the two returning tracks. Stafford Motor Speedway in Connecticut hosts round three on July 2 ahead of the Nashville Fairgrounds on July 9.

The final two races of the season are the dirt races. I-55 Raceway in Missouri hosts the penultimate round on July 16 before Sharon Speedway in Ohio hosts the season finale on July 23. 

Who is driving?
There will be more drivers this season, but fewer full-time drivers, as only eight are signed up for the full season. 

Tony Stewart will be back to defend his championship while race winner Marco Andretti returns as well. Bobby Labonte, Paul Tracy and Michael Waltrip are all back as full-timers. 

There are three new full-timers. Greg Biffle made two SRX starts last year and was runner-up in the Stafford season opener. Biffle will run the full season. Ryan Hunter-Reay joins the series after spending the previous 15 seasons in IndyCar. Ryan Newman joins the SRX after stepping away from NASCAR Cup Series competition. 

For the rest of the grid, it will be easier to go round-by-round to see who is signed up, as we may see the largest grid in SRX history at one event this season.

Five Flags: Tony Kanaan, Bill Elliott, Ernie Francis, Jr., Bubba Pollard

Kanaan will run five of six events in 2022, while Elliott and Francis, Jr. were full-time in 2021, but each will only run two races in 2022. Francis, Jr. is full-time in Indy Lights this year. Pollard, a highly successful super late model driver, will be the guest driver.

South Boston: Kanaan, Francis, Jr., Hélio Castroneves, Peyton Sellers

Castroneves was fifth in the SRX championship last year, and he will run three races in 2022. Sellers is a six-time South Boston Speedway track champion and a two-time NASCAR Weekly Series champion.

Stafford: Castroneves, Elliott, Hailie Deegan, Matt Hirschman

Deegan was part-time in 2021 and she will run twice in 2022 combined with her NASCAR Truck Series responsibilities. Hirschman won the Spring Sizzler modified race at Stafford in April to earn this guest driver spot.

Nashville: Kanaan, Castroneves, Josef Newgarden, Matt Kenseth, Cole Williams

The first SRX race with 13 drivers entered on paper. Newgarden makes his lone appearance in his hometown race, while Kenseth makes his first of three SRX appearances. Williams is a regular competitor at the Nashville Fairgrounds and won a fan vote to receive the guest driver spot. 

I-55: Kanaan, Deegan, Kenseth, Ken Schrader

Schrader makes his SRX debut after being one of the test drivers for the series in 2021. I-55 Raceway is Schrader's home track and Schrader is a co-owner of the track.

Sharon: Kanaan, Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney, Dave Blaney

The SRX finale sees the 2021 Nashville finale winner Elliott return while the Blaneys will have a home race as the family owns part of Sharon Speedway.

Twenty-three drivers are signed up to compete in at least one SRX event this year. Nineteen drivers competed in the entire 2021 season. 

One subtle note ahead of the 2022 SRX season is Ray Evernham is no longer involved with the series after being one of the co-founders and designing the car. 

Other Notable Events in June:
The 24 Hours of Le Mans is back in June!
IndyCar has two races, Belle Isle and Road America, before a mini-summer break. 
NASCAR visits Gateway for the first time with the Cup Series and has Sonoma before its one off-week midseason. 
Formula One will go from Azerbaijan to Canada because that is sensible schedule.
MotoGP has races in Spain, Germany and the Netherlands. 
The 69th Safari Rally takes place.
Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters visits Imola for the first time. 
IMSA closes the month with the 6 Hours of the Glen.


Monday, May 30, 2022

Musings From the Weekend: 106th Indianapolis 500 Dissection

Marcus Ericsson had a good day for a pay driver. Formula One must be allergic to rain. Ferrari is dropping the ball. MotoGP's Finnish returned has been delayed yet another year. Marc Márquez will have surgery and miss some time. Goodyear tire issues forced the cancellation of the World Touring Car Cup races on the Nürburgring Nordschleife. There was Vanthoor-on-Vanthoor violence. The Coca-Cola 600 went long in more ways than one. Here is a rundown of what got me thinking. 

106th Indianapolis 500 Dissection
Another Indianapolis 500 is behind us, a lot happened, let's pick apart the 106th edition of this race and Marcus Ericsson's victory. 

Ericsson is now the 74th driver to win the Indianapolis 500. His victory ended Chip Ganassi Racing's ten-year Indianapolis 500 drought and Ericsson is the four driver to win the Indianapolis 500 for Ganassi joining Juan Pablo Montoya, Scott Dixon and Dario Franchitti.

With Ericsson's victory, Sweden has now won the Indianapolis 500 twice. Sweden is the eighth country to have multiple Indianapolis 500 victories and it is only the fifth country to have multiple drivers win a race joining the United States, the United Kingdom, Brazil and France. 

Ericsson's average running position in this race was 4.575. He spent 145 laps in the top five and 196 laps in the top ten. The first time Ericsson fell out of the top ten was on lap 178 after his final pit stop. He dropped to 13th, ran 13th for three laps, was 11th for a lap and was back into the top ten on lap 182.

Ericsson won the Indianapolis 500 and scored fastest lap in the race. This is the first time the Indianapolis 500 had fastest lap since Alexander Rossi in 2019, but prior to Rossi it had not be done since Emerson Fittipaldi in 1993. Since 1950, only 13 Indianapolis 500 winners had the fastest lap of the race. 

Ericsson is the 13th consecutive different driver to have fastest lap in the Indianapolis 500 and he is the first European driver to have fastest lap since Justin Wilson in 2013. 

Ericsson won from fifth on the grid, the first time the Indianapolis 500 winner has started fifth since Buddy Lazier in 1996. 

This was the fourth Indianapolis 500 victory for car #8. The others were Joe Dawson in 1912, Louis Meyer in 1936 and Pat Flaherty in 1956. 

An even-numbered car has won nine consecutive Indianapolis 500s. Prior to this stretch, the longest run for even-numbered cars was five races on two separate occasions, 1911 to 1915 and 1952 to 1956. The longest winning streak for odd-numbered cars is five races on two separate occasions, 1947 to 1951 and 1994 to 1998.

This was the fifth different nationality to win the Indianapolis 500 in the last five years. There has never been a stretch of six consecutive different nationalities winning the Indianapolis 500. This is the third stretch of five consecutive different nationalities winning the race after 1997-2001 and 2015-2019. 

Ericsson led only 13 laps on his way to victory, the fewest laps led for an Indianapolis 500 winner since Juan Pablo Montoya only led nine laps in 2015. 

Ericsson is the seventh driver to win the Indianapolis 500 when 31 years old, but he is the first to do it since Al Unser in 1970. 

This was Honda's third consecutive Indianapolis 500 victory. This is the first time since engine competition returned in IndyCar in 2012 that a manufacture has won three consecutive Indianapolis 500s. This was Honda's 15th Indianapolis 500 victory overall, now 12 behind Offenhauser's record and four clear of Chevrolet, which is fourth all-time behind Miller's 12 victories. 

Ericsson's victory gave him the IndyCar championship lead. It is the first time a Swede has led an IndyCar championship since Kenny Bräck led after the September 22, 2001 CART round at Rockingham Motor Speedway in England. Gil de Ferran won that race after memorable battle with Bräck that saw de Ferran take the lead on the final lap. Cristiano da Matta was third. Other notable finishers in that 2001 Rockingham race were Hélio Castroneves in fourth, Tony Kanaan in eighth and Scott Dixon in 22nd. Oh, and Bräck drove the #8 car at that time for Team Rahal. 

Ericsson is the 23rd Indianapolis 500 winner to have started a Formula One race prior to an Indianapolis 500 victory. Ten of those 23 winners were drivers who started the Indianapolis 500 from between 1950-1960 when Indianapolis counted toward the world championship. Excluding those ten drivers, only Emerson Fittipaldi and Eddie Cheever had made more Formula One starts than Ericsson at the time of their Indianapolis 500 victories. Hell, even if we included those ten drivers, Ericsson would still be the third most experienced Formula One driver at the time of an Indianapolis 500 victory.

Rookies aside, here is a list of drivers that scored their personal best Indianapolis 500 finish this year:

Marcus Ericsson (1st)
Patricio O'Ward (2nd)
Felix Rosenqvist (4th)
Conor Daly (6th)

It was the first top ten finish in the Indianapolis 500 for both Ericsson and Rosenqvist. 

Scott Dixon is now the all-time leader in Indianapolis 500 laps led. Dixon has led 665 laps in 20 Indianapolis 500 starts. This was the sixth time Dixon has led the most laps in the Indianapolis 500, extending the record he set in 2019. 

However, this was the tenth time in the last 12 years the driver that led the most laps did not win the Indianapolis 500. 

With Dixon and Tony Kanaan each leading laps in this race, they each remain tied for most Indianapolis 500s led, each having led in 15 Indianapolis 500s. 

With his 47 laps led in this year's race, Álex Palou is now 75th all-time in laps led on 82, three behind Takuma Sato and five more than Alexander Rossi. Ninety-nine drivers have now led at least 50 laps in the Indianapolis 500. 

This was the first time Ericsson has led in the Indianapolis 500 and his 13 laps led are tied for 157th all-time with Russ Snowberger, Josele Garza, Billy Boat, Justin Wilson, Townsend Bell and J.R. Hildebrand. 

The only other driver to get his first career laps led in the Indianapolis 500 was Jimmie Johnson, who led two laps. Johnson is the fifth driver to have laps led in the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400 joining Tony Stewart, Juan Pablo Montoya, John Andretti and Robby Gordon.

For those of you wondering at home, Johnson's average running position over his 193 laps was 21.326. He entered the top ten for the first time on lap 145 during a pit cycle and was seventh for two laps. Then he ran 13 laps in the top ten from lap 177 through lap 189 and was in the top five for the final eight laps of that run. 

Funny enough, Johnson spent more laps in the top five than Kurt Busch did in Busch's lone Indianapolis 500 start in 2014. Busch spent zero laps in the top five in that race and finished sixth! Busch's average running position in 2014 was 14.34.

This year's race had an average speed of 175.428 mph, the seventh time the race has averaged faster than 175 mph. Five of those seven races have occurred in the last ten years. 

There were 38 lead changes in this year's race, the third most in Indianapolis 500 history behind only the 68 that occurred in 2013 and the 54 that happened in 2016. 

However, there was a slight dip in the passing statistics. There were 423 total passes, 338 for position in this year's race, down from 465 and 361 in those respective categories. This year's 423 total passes was the fewest in the Indianapolis 500 since the introduction of the universal aero kits and the only race with fewer passes for position was 2019 when there were only 323 passes for position. 

Strangely enough, the Indianapolis 500 with the most passes since the introduction of the universal aero kit was 2018, the first one with this kit, when there were 633 total passes, 428 of which were for position. And everybody hated that 2018 race!

Hélio Castroneves was seventh in this year's race, his tenth top ten finish in the Indianapolis 500. The only other drivers with at least ten top ten finishes in the Indianapolis 500 are Al Unser and A.J. Foyt.

There were six different teams represented in the top ten of the Indianapolis 500: Chip Ganassi Racing, Arrow McLaren SP, Andretti Autosport, Ed Carpenter Racing, Meyer Shank Racing and Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. 

While seven teams were in the top ten, Team Penske was not, the first time Penske did not have a top ten finisher at Indianapolis since 2011. The team also didn't lead a lap, the first time the team hasn't led since 2011 as well.

Due to Sage Karam's accident on the final lap in turn two, this was the second Indianapolis 500 in three years to finish under caution. Excluding rain-shortened races, this is the 11th time the Indianapolis 500 has finished under caution, but this is the fifth time the caution came on the final lap of the race.

Rinus VeeKay led a lap, lap 31 to be specific, but on lap 39, VeeKay had an accident in turn two and was the first retirement of the race. When was the last time the last-place finisher in the Indianapolis 500 led a lap? It was 2000 when Greg Ray led the first 26 laps from pole position and then was the first car out after an accident on lap 66 in turn two. 

Winners From the Weekend
You know about Marcus Ericsson, but did you know...

Sergio Pérez won the Monaco Grand Prix. 

Francesco Bagnaia won MotoGP's Italian Grand Prix, his second victory of the season. Pedro Acosta won the Moto2 race. Sergio García won the Moto3 race after Izan Guevara was docked a position for exceeding track limits on the final lap. Dominique Aegerter and Matteo Ferrari split the MotoE races.

Denny Hamlin won the Coca-Cola 600, his second victory of the season. Josh Berry won the Grand National Series race, his second victory of the season. Ross Chastain won the Truck race.

The #15 Phoenix Racing of Kelvin van der Linde, Dries Vanhtoor, Frédéric Vervisch and Robin Frijns won the 24 Hours Nürburging.

The #3 NDDP Racing Nissan of Katsumasa Chiyo and Mitsunori Takaboshi won the Super GT race from Suzuka. The #7 BMW Team Studie x CSL BMW of Seiji Ara and Tsubasa Kondo won in GT300.

Dennis Hauger and Felipe Drugovich split the Formula Two races from Monaco. 

Louis Foster won the Indy Pro 2000 race at Indianapolis Raceway Park, his second victory of the season. Michael d'Orlando won the U.S. F2000 race.

Coming Up This Weekend
IndyCar and IMSA make a final visit to Belle Isle, only one race for each. 
The NASCAR Cup Series makes its first visit to Gateway.
MotoGP will be in Barcelona. 
Formula E makes its first visit to Jakarta.
GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup has a 1000-kilometer race at Circuit Paul Ricard.
The World Rally Championship will be in Sardinia. 


Sunday, May 29, 2022

106th Indianapolis 500: First Impressions

1. I hate Leigh Diffey's nickname for Marcus Ericsson. "The Sneaky Swede." If I had to guess the nationality of the blond-haired, blue-eyed, white guy named "Marcus Ericsson" I am guessing Swedish on my first shot. But there is something sneaky about Ericsson.

Ever since Ericsson joined Chip Ganassi Racing in 2020, he has been good, constantly in the top ten, but he doesn't get the recognition. It was tough when your teammates Scott Dixon and Álex Palou are winning races and championships, but Ericsson has scored strong results and done nothing wrong. Entering today, in 35 starts with Ganassi, he had 24 top ten finishes. Ericsson's two victories were fortunate, but he put himself in those positions to capitalize. Top tens are good, a great foundation for a championship push, and last year he earned his best championship finish in sixth. 

Ericsson spent basically the first 400 miles of this race in fifth-place. He was hiding like a snake in the grass. Scott Dixon was dominating this race. Álex Palou had been at the front before his fuel concerns forced an emergency stop under the second caution of the race, but Ericsson was hanging out in position, remaining at the front, as was Tony Kanaan. 

When push came to shove for the final stops, Dixon went over the speed limit entering pit lane for his final stop, earning the New Zealander a crushing drive through penalty. Ganassi's leading gun was out of it with 23 laps to go. The Arrow McLaren SP full-timers Patricio O'Ward and Felix Rosenqvist were set to take over the point, but when Ganassi needed Ericsson to step up, Ericsson did and he was shot out of a cannon, driving pass both AMSP cars and he pulled away during the final pit cycle. The gap was over three seconds when Ericsson inherited the lead during the pit cycle, but Ganassi nearly had one of his other cars spoil the part. 

Jimmie Johnson spun in turn two with seven laps to go bringing out a caution and eventually a red flag with four laps to go. The race was going to restart with two laps remaining. Ericsson was in the lead, and many consider the leader a sitting duck on restarts. Without two laps, there was no time to counter any move should Ericsson have lost the top position. If he lost the lead, it was likely gone for good at that point. 

Defense was the only strategy and Ericsson weaved all over the straightaway, covering patches of asphalt that had gone untouched over the first 495 miles of this race. O'Ward had a few chances and heading into turn one on the final lap, O'Ward had the outside but could not make it stick and Ericsson pulled through on the bottom in the lead. An accident at the back of the field with Sage Karam exiting turn two sealed the victory for Ericsson, but even before the caution the Swede's defense held strong to secure this victory. 

Ericsson has had good runs at Indianapolis, but the finish had not gone his way. He did well as a rookie, but spun entering the pit lane. He had an early accident in 2020. Last year, he was 11th after starting ninth, not a great day, but not a bad one either. Ericsson has been good on ovals. As a rookie, he had a top five finish in his hands at Iowa before an improper pit entry led to a penalty. He had a top five at Gateway in 2020 and a rear wing issue cost him a second top five that weekend. A few pit lane issues kept him from top five finishes at Texas, but this year he was third at Texas and was competitive that entire race. 

The entire practice week, Ericsson was in the middle of the top ten, but never the top Ganassi driver. He may have only led 13 laps, but this wasn't a surprise even if it snuck up on us. 

For a driver who had a tough Formula One career, Ericsson's second act in IndyCar was about winning races. He had plenty of junior formula success in Europe and the breakthrough never came in Formula One. There are more than five or six great drivers in Formula One. Too often talent is downgraded because of employer. Ericsson drove for Caterham and Sauber. The points-paying results he pulled out were impressive, but ninth and tenth-place finishes are going to open many doors in an already congested driver market. 

There are going to be plenty who see Ericsson's victory and dismiss the level of IndyCar because Ericsson's best championship finish in Formula One 17th, but there are plenty who know there is more than the results when considering a driver's ability. During the pandemic, Daniel Ricciardo wrote a list of drivers he felt was underrated. The first one he listed was Marcus Ericsson. 

This is a case of talent getting a chance to shine and in four seasons Ericsson has accomplished what he set out to do in America. Today, he did it on the biggest stage. 

2. Two years running Patricio O'Ward is in the mix late at Indianapolis but falls short. O'Ward was third for majority of this race, first behind Dixon and Palou, then behind Dixon and Conor Daly. O'Ward played the waiting game, letting other drivers burn their fuel while he was running long on his stints. On the penultimate stop, running long was in his favor and it got him the lead. The pace was going to be there for the sprint to the finish.

However, Scott McLaughlin's accident with 50 laps to go fell at an odd time. Everyone had just made their penultimate stop. The final pit window was going to be at least ten laps away once the race restarted, but a few drivers took a splash and were going to run deep into the race before needing to make their final stop. A few drivers stopped right when the window opened and another group was going to be in the middle, stopping with about 20 laps to go. O'Ward was caught in traffic during the pit cycle. Ericsson made the pass and then O'Ward lost time to Ericsson negotiating traffic. 

The caution was O'Ward's saving grace and he had his shot. Considering how good O'Ward looked, I expected him to make that pass stick, but he backed out and it was game over. It stinks for O'Ward. He spent about 450 miles ahead of Ericsson and when it was go time, Ericsson pulled out a little extra. Perhaps every Ganassi entry had that little bit extra and there was nothing O'Ward could do about it. But I bet O'Ward feels he should have pulled this one out considering who he was against. 

3. Tony Kanaan was third, and in the same way Ericsson stepped up when Ganassi needed him to, Kanaan did the same. He was charging in the closing laps and though he was over five seconds behind Ericsson, Kanaan was catching O'Ward. 

For a driver who had a handful of Indianapolis 500s get away from him, I was having flashbacks to 2013 when a late restart saw Kanaan slide into the lead and get his first Indianapolis 500 victory. Knowing Ericsson and O'Ward were both competing for their first Indianapolis 500 victory and both are full-time drivers, it would have been poetic if Kanaan stole one as a part-timer, a veteran who had seen it all before and made it count in the two-lap sprint. 

Kanaan didn't make 320,000 people leap for joy with a second victory, but third shows something is still there. I want Kanaan to race the Indianapolis 500 when he is 50 years old. That means he needs to go another three years. I am not sure he will make it. The sound in his voice during his post-race interview expresses the end is near, but it isn't here yet. 

4. Felix Rosenqvist is making it difficult on Arrow McLaren SP on whether or not the team will retain him for 2023 and onward. Pace has been there but results haven't followed, and Rosenqvist drove his best race of the season and you could argue the best race of his IndyCar career today. 

Rosenqvist matched O'Ward for this entire race and Rosenqvist made a late charge on the final restart. The Swede was sixth on the IMS road course two weeks ago. If he can build on these results, I think the team will have a tough time letting him go. Simultaneously, I think Rosenqvist needs to stay at AMSP, because who is going to hire him otherwise? 

He isn't going back to Ganassi. Penske isn't hiring. Andretti is a step back at this point. Rosenqvist doesn't bring any funding. I am not sure there is a team that would take a chance on him. He has to make this work. He made it work in the month of May. Now he has to continue for the final three and a half months.

5. Alexander Rossi saved Andretti Autosport's day, and this result is mostly on the driver. The team gets some credit, but Rossi was the only Andretti car that could do a damn thing, and he was mired in 15th for much of this race. The pit stops got him a few spots, but on the penultimate restart he went from about ninth to sixth and made up another spot in the final pit cycle.

Andretti Autosport needs to do a temperature check because Rossi is likely leaving and he is likely heading to the team that was second and fourth today. 

Rossi said he is leaving because he wants to win a championship. He basically said the team isn't good enough and it isn't good enough. This groups has made too many poor decisions. Look at qualifying, only one Andretti car made the Fast 12 and the team was never a threat for pole position. That is a stark compared to a few years ago when it had five cars in the Fast Nine and won pole position. 

Rossi was on the back foot and made the most of it today. 

6. Conor Daly is the luckiest son-of-a-gun in Indianapolis. The caution falls at the right time after his second pit stop and only Dixon and Daly are on the lead lap. Then it happens again but this time only Daly had stopped. Daly wasn't close to the front. He started 18th and was running about 18th when luck fell his way the first time. If that caution never comes, Daly might not even break into the top ten today. 

Daly made the most of the break and remain in the top five the entire race. He dropped to sixth in the last cycle when Ericsson, Kanaan and Rossi pounced. This is two consecutive years the cautions vaulted Daly into the leading pack. It doesn't entire absolve Daly of his poor form compared to his teammates, but he did well today and deserves a celebration.

7. The fifth Indianapolis 500 victory will have to wait until 2023, but Hélio Castroneves had a respectable run. Castroneves went the longest on the opening stint and that took him from starting in 27th into the top fifteen. From there, Castroneves pick away a few spots each stint. He got into the top ten but didn't quite have what it took to enter the leading pack. It was a smart drive from the most experienced driver on the grid. You wouldn't have expected any less from him.

8. Meyer Shank Racing deserves some praise because while it doesn't have a second consecutive Indianapolis 500 victory, its cars were seventh and eighth with Simon Pagenaud a spot behind Castroneves and that is kind of where Meyer Shank Racing was the entire month. 

It wasn't ever flashy, but it wasn't disappointing. Pagenaud was on the fringe of the top ten in nearly every session. He spent a good portion of the race in the top ten and ahead of Castroneves until the closing stints. No one goes to Indianapolis 500 to finish eighth, but MSR hit its marks today. It wants more but it didn't get less than it deserved when many teams are leaving feeling empty. 

9. The comeback of the day was Álex Palou. For the second consecutive year, a Ganassi car was bit with an untimely caution. Dixon had just made his second pit stop and when Palou was approaching pit entrance, the caution came out for Callum Ilott, who hit the barrier in turn two. Palou didn't enter before the caution, but he couldn't jut out into the racetrack to avoid pit entrance. He had to slow down, drive through, and re-emerge in the pack. He went from first to tenth without getting any service.

But he needed fuel and had to make an emergency stop for a splash of gas. That dropped him to the back. Then he had to go to the very back to serve that penalty and he was out of it before we had even completed 200 miles. He needed a caution to go his way, but that never happened. Palou did fight his way forward. 

Palou pulled out everything he could and slowly he was back in the top twenty and then the top fifteen. He positioned himself to get into the top ten in the final stint and ninth sucks considering how good his car was, but it was a remarkable recovery and looking at the bigger picture of the championship, he kept himself from being in a deep hole entering the final 11 races.

10. Fourth Indianapolis 500 start and fourth top ten finish for Santino Ferrucci, who drove flawlessly, but Dreyer & Reinbold Racing needs some attention because Ferrucci's crew kept earning him positions through pit stops. Ferrucci made passes of his own but the pit crew was always gaining ground for him. That is remarkable considering it is a one-off team. And the pace was in the cars, something D&R struggled with for much of the last decade since becoming an Indianapolis-only team. 

There was some flirtation with Dreyer & Reinbold expanding to more than the Indianapolis 500. In 2020, it ran all the Indianapolis races with Sage Karam, four total races. Results weren't great. I am not sure there is any incentive to run Iowa or Gateway, especially since those are high downforce ovals, but it could be worth it and Ferrucci doesn't have any other races on his schedule. 

11. Juan Pablo Montoya kept his nose clean and finished 11th. Montoya was vocal all month about how he wasn't planning on returning to Indianapolis and Arrow McLaren SP talked him into it, and then twisted his arm into running the IMS road course race.

With AMSP about to expand to three cars, this might be the final time we saw Montoya run the Indianapolis 500. He struggled for speed the entire month. The other two AMSP cars were regularly in the top ten and Montoya was struggling to break the top 30 on a few days. In the race, Montoya looked good and made some magic happen, but if he is ready to walk away I think we should let him go. 

I am grateful Montoya returned to IndyCar and thrilled he got to win a second Indianapolis 500. He is the best of his generation. Sure, his Indianapolis 500 stats are slim, but let's be thankful for what we got to see. I find it fitting that it is highly probable his final IndyCar start, Formula One start and NASCAR start were all at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He ended with a strong run should this be it.

12. J.R. Hildebrand was not mentioned once on the broadcast and ended up 12th. How did that happen? Honestly, I am not sure because Hildebrand was one of the first cars to pit in this race, stopping on lap 26. I thought he was committing to a six-stop strategy because starting 17th meant he was never going to see clean air and if he ran short stints he could pit, get into clean air and possibly pull himself up the order leapfrogging other drivers.

But Hildebrand was caught a lap down with that strategy. He was waved around back onto the lead lap, but still had some work to do and still wound up 12th. That is a good run for Hildebrand and I am happy he still has three more starts in the remaining oval races.

13. Josef Newgarden had a good day going and then stalled after his pit stop under the Romain Grosjean caution just after the halfway point in the race. That killed any hopes of climbing into the challenge. Newgarden had worked his way into the top ten at that point. He topped off on fuel with about 47 laps to go. 

He was never going to be able to go that long on the final, but he did effectively split the final stint in half. He had greater range late in the race. He could stop in 12 laps and make it or he could go likely as late as 15 to go. There was greater flexibility for decisions and he wound up getting to 13th, a good recovery but a result that still smarts. For the first time since 2011, Team Penske does not have a top ten finisher in the Indianapolis 500.

14. Graham Rahal wasn't noted once and he finished 14th. That fits Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing's month. The team never showed any pace. I didn't see it climbing far up the order and throwing its weight around. The team has some work to do.

15. Will Power had an odd race. Power made up spots in the opening laps but he lost more than he gained toward the end of that first stint and the team could never find balance in the car. He settled in the middle of the field and never looked right for a top ten run. Making it even more strange is Newgarden and Scott McLaughlin were going forward and there was a thought either to those could have mixed it up and held on with the leaders if they got there. Rough day for Team Penske.

16. We come to our top two rookie finishers. David Malukas was 16th and Kyle Kirkwood was 17th. With three rookies crashing out, I would say it is between these two for Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year. 

Malukas qualified 13th and looked respectable throughout practice and qualifying. Kirkwood gained 11 positions after starting 28th. I would vote for Malukas. Honestly, none of the performances were all that great this year. Malukas was good in qualifying. He was good in the race even if it wasn't much to brag about and Malukas was the top finishing rookie after his car had to be repaired after a Carb Day accident. 

Both drivers get praise, Malukas gets the award.

17. Ed Carpenter was tenth when the red lag came out and the car would not re-fire after the red flag was initially lifted. The car was eventually restarted, but Carpenter lost those positions and instead of being tenth, he had to fight back in two laps just to get 18th. 

IndyCar has allowed the teams to put more fans on the cars after the Will Power incident at Belle Isle last year. It is not a perfect world. You cannot guarantee every car is going to restart no matter the circumstances. This is always a risk when the red flag is lifted whether it is with four laps remaining in the Indianapolis 500 or lifted after four laps into the Portland race because of a massive accident at the chicane. Machinery will fail you at the most inopportune time. 

In Carpenter's case, it was while tenth in the Indianapolis 500 with a two-lap dash ahead of him. It is cruel because Carpenter was in the top ten for basically this entire race.

18. Devlin DeFrancesco was 19th. Yeah, that's about right. Nothing flashy plus no mistakes equals 19th. The bar wasn't set much higher than this.

19. Christian Lundgaard was 20th. Yeah, that's about right. Nothing flashy plus no mistakes equals 20th. The bar wasn't set much higher than that. 

You can see why David Malukas really is the only choice for Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year. DeFrancesco and Lundgaard went from 24th to 19th and 31st to 20th. Nothing earth-shattering from that rookie duo. But they completed all 500 miles! Good for them.

20. This is the most crushing defeat of Scott Dixon's career. A pit lane speeding penalty on the final stop of the Indianapolis 500 while coming in from the lead and having already led 95 laps. That is a dagger of historic proportions. Thank goodness Dixon has already won this race otherwise this would go down in Indianapolis 500 history alongside "Andretti is slowing."

It is still devastating because with 95 laps led, Dixon is now the all-time leader in Indianapolis 500 laps led, breaking the record Al Unser had held since 1987. After winning his fifth Indianapolis 500 pole position last week, getting the all-time laps led record in this race while also leading the most laps in a record-extending sixth Indianapolis 500, this was on a platter to be Dixon's grand performance, one he deserves. Not to forget mentioning it would have been his 52nd career victory, tying him with Mario Andretti for second all-time. 

All the pieces were there for a glorious ceremony fitting for the best IndyCar driver in the 21st century and arguably the best IndyCar driver all-time, and a pit lane speeding penalty on the final stop erased that celebration.

Dixon has been in a rut for over a year. Any concerns about him falling off a cliff were eradicated with this performance and then he made the one error you did not expect Dixon to make. After a spate of pit lane entry issues last year, there were only two speeding penalties in this race, one for Dixon and the other was for Stefan Wilson when Wilson was already a lap down. 

It is baffling Dixon made this error. If he nails that stop he wins this race. I don't think Ericsson would have charged to the lead if Dixon was under the limit. Ericsson likely would have charged forward just to provide support for his teammate against the AMSP duo. 

Now we have to wait, at least another seven days until Dixon can end this year-plus winless drought and finally tie Mario Andretti for second all-time in victory, and we wait 364 days until Dixon gets another shot at a second Indianapolis 500 victory.

21. Marco Andretti was 22nd but led three laps during the final pit cycle. Andretti was the final car on the lead lap.

How long is Andretti going to keep doing this? He started 23rd and finished 22nd. He was running just inside the top twenty for much of this race. I like him. I think people have been too harsh to him. He wasn't his grandfather or his father, tough. But he wasn't a bad guy. A shy guy, sure, and people for some reason had a problem with Andretti's shyness. 

But it is one thing to be an Indianapolis one-off, qualify in the top half of the field and possibly be in the mix. At no point was that on Andretti's radar this year. With the direction the team is heading that likely will not be the case next year as well. 

The ride will always be waiting for Andretti. It is only one race a year, but will this one race be worth it if your best hope is 15th?

22. Sage Karam was good for most of this race, not quite in the top ten but on the cusp of it for much of the day. Then Karam had an accident exiting turn two on the final lap. 

Karam did make some aggressive moves today. Nothing that was over the line dirty, but this is his only IndyCar race of the year and he wants his best result possible. I think he likely felt some extra pressure with Ferrucci joining the team and spending much of the race in the top ten. Karam was respectable throughout practice. Dreyer & Reinbold has a solid program. Hopefully Karam is back. Nothing suggests he will not be, but this result does not do him justice. 

23. Jack Harvey and Takuma Sato both stopped at lap 157 just prior to the restart after the Scott McLaughlin incident. There was almost no way they were going to make it 43 laps on fuel, but they tried. Unfortunately, both stopped just prior to the Johnson accident and were caught a lap down. 

This was Harvey's one gamble. He was on the tail end of the lead lap the entire race. Sato was running well inside the top ten and then faded. I am not quite sure what bit Sato in this one.

24. Dalton Kellett was two laps down in 27th. A.J. Foyt Racing didn't have great qualifying pace, but when you see J.R. Hildebrand qualify 17th and then turnaround a lackluster strategy into a 12th-place finish and you see Kirkwood finish 17th, the center point of the field on the lead lap, you have to wonder if Kirkwood had a senior teammate for the full season and someone with more experience at Indianapolis, how well Foyt could do?

People punch down on Kellett. He is a good guy and accessible. He is an asset to IndyCar and though he isn't competitive, I think Kellett is valuable to the series and could be an ambassador explaining the intricate nature of the series. 

At some point, finishing outside the top twenty each week catches up to you. A driver cannot make a 15-year career doing it. Unless you are Dick Simon but this is a different era. I hope Kellett can remain involved even if it isn't as a driver.

25. Stefan Wilson completed 198 laps, a big improvement from last year. This was a piecemeal entry. It didn't have any hopes competing for a top ten result. A lead lap result was asking a lot. Wilson got it to the checkered flag, which is a moral victory. He went a lap down basically after this first pit stop and never saw the lead lap again, always out of rotation for the wave around. 

I like Stefan Wilson. He is another good guy. I want to see him driving regularly somewhere. If he can combine that with an Indianapolis 500 program then great. It will likely help his form and could improve his results, but that also depends on the car. Wilson could have been driving for Red Bull and winning grand prix and he wasn't going to do much better than what he did today in 27th. 

26. There were six cautions today for six incidents. Five of those were in turn two. That happens. It is a combination of the wind, track temperature, tire wear and the downforce levels on these cars. Almost all of these incidents occurred at the end of fuel stints with tears worn. Like clockwork, we were preparing for green flag pit stops and someone was in the wall. 

I don't like it because I like seeing a race develop and watching green flag pit stops. There is added pressure on everyone. IndyCar has tried to add a little more downforce to these cars to increase stability, but with this universal aero kit only so much can be done. I don't think IndyCar and Dallara are going to develop a larger rear wing especially since we hope a new car will be here in 2024 or 2025 or 2026... soon is what I am saying. 

It is more difficult to pass with the universal aero kit. It isn't impossible but there were more dull periods in this race than we were accustomed to seeing. We got a little spoiled but there is also a happy medium. These cars are more weather sensitive than the original DW12 aero package and the manufacture-specific packages. 

IndyCar cannot bank on it being cloudy and under 75º F to have a good race. I thought today was a good race, but it needs to be a little better than just waiting 30 laps for another pit cycle. It is too late with the universal aero kit, but that should be a focus whenever we see a new chassis and new bodywork introduced. 

27. Speaking of those incidents, Jimmie Johnson slammed the wall in turn two. I know many were high 
on Johnson possibly winning this race. When Johnson qualified 12th, I expected him to struggle in turbulent air and remain in the middle of the field. That happened and then he was caught a lap down after his second pit stop. He did get the wave around, but he was at the tail for the rest of the race. 

Johnson was on the same strategy as Andretti, and Johnson did get to lead lap 188, but this wasn't a great day for Johnson even before the accident. It would have been a shame if Johnson finished ahead of Dixon and after Dixon's penalty that looked likely. 

I thought the broadcast had a healthy amount of Johnson coverage. It wasn't overboard. It acknowledged he was in the race, you had to considering he is a seven-time NASCAR champion making his Indianapolis 500 debut, but he wasn't the focus. Once he was in the back third of the field, his pit stops might have been shown or mentioned, but the broadcast didn't listen into his radio just to hear what he was struggling with. He wasn't a factor in the race and didn't receive more attention than warranted. 

28. Scott McLaughlin looked competitive today. If McLaughlin hadn't been caught in the qualifying line when the rains came and forced to make an attempt when the conditions cleared, he would have started about ten positions better and McLaughlin likely would have been in the top ten by the end of the first pit cycle. 

It is an entirely different race if McLaughlin is in the top ten within the first 50 laps than the race we saw today. He had a moment in turn three and that was game over with a quarter of the race to play. He climbed into the top ten fight. This is a bummer, but there is always next year. 

29. Colton Herta had the race from hell and it all started with his Carb Day accident. Herta was forced to the backup car, which was his winning car from the Grand Prix of Indianapolis a fortnight ago. The car wasn't even shaken down before the race and Herta was in a losing position from the drop of the green flag. His pace was woeful. It felt like a piece or two was missing because he couldn't even run laps in the 41-second range. 

I am not sure what could have been done. I don't think Herta should have gotten a special session yesterday. Maybe just a ten-lap shakedown, not that it would have mattered considering how poor the car was. I will say I was surprised Andretti didn't have a spare speedway car ready to go. 

I know it is a five-car effort and even Andretti Autosport doesn't have a dozen spare chassis laying around, but it didn't have one spare car ready in case of emergency? I feel like that would be something the team would have. It is unlikely two or three cars would have had incidents big enough after qualifying weekend and Monday practice that would have required back ups. It would just seem prudent to have a spare ready. The spare wouldn't be perfect, but it would at least be in the ballpark. 

At the start of practice week, Rossi said his car was the exact same car he raced last year at Indianapolis and that the car hadn't been touched since last year's race. What car did Rossi use during the Indianapolis test in April? There had to be another car out there capable of being set up for the speedway. I know Belle Isle is a tight turnaround, but this is the Indianapolis 500. Have a spare ready and once you get through Carb Day begin turning it over for Belle Isle if that is where it has to be used next. 

This is all easier said than done, but after watching what Herta went through today, he should have just remained in bed. He had a better chance of winning with his mattress than that car.

30. Romain Grosjean made it 105 laps before his spin. Grosjean never had a handle on race setup. He was always raving about his qualifying trim, but the race setup was a beast for him. He was smack dap in the middle of the field, behind Rossi before his accident. If Grosjean doesn't spin, I am not sure he would have been much better than DeFranesco. 

31. Callum Ilott might have broken his wrist in his lap 69 accident. Ilott started well. He didn't look out of sorts. The car just got away from him in turn two. I am sure this raises a question mark about his availability for Belle Isle. That is a tough circuit with two good hands, and Ilott is already down one. We have something to keep an eye on this week.

32. The first car out today was Rinus VeeKay after 38 laps when he spun in turn two. It was too early to tell whether or not VeeKay actually would have been there at the end. He looked strong, but there were also two capable AMSP cars and eventually winner Marcus Ericsson that jumped up there. VeeKay could have fallen behind all three. He could have remained ahead of all three and won. He could have had a pit lane speeding penalty of his own in the middle of the race. We will never know. Either way, it was disappointing to see such a challenger out before completing 100 miles.

33. 364 days until the 107th Indianapolis 500.


Morning Warm-Up: 106th Indianapolis 500

For the 106th time, Indianapolis Motor Speedway hosts the greatest race in the world. The Indianapolis 500 will be back in front of a capacity crowd after being behind closed doors in 2020 and at around half-capacity last year. Thirty-three drivers are ready to compete with a few historic outcomes on the table. There are five drivers going after a second victory. Two drivers are looking for a third victory. And for the first time since 1993, a fifth victory is in play. But 25 drivers are looking to make this day remembered for their first mark on history. After a period of senior statesmen coming out on top, there is a slew of youngsters looking for a breakthrough and change the tide.

Starting Grid
Row 1:
Scott Dixon
This will be Dixon’s 20th Indianapolis 500 start.
2008 Indianapolis 500 winner.
Car #9 has won the Indianapolis 500 four times with Dixon’s 2008 victory being the most recent. 
Twenty-one times has the pole-sitter won the race, most recently Simon Pagenaud three years ago.

This is the second consecutive year Dixon is starting on pole position. It is the 12th time a driver has won consecutive Indianapolis 500 pole positions. 
This is Dixon's fifth career Indianapolis 500 pole position, one behind Rick Mears' all-time record. 
This is Dixon's third consecutive front row start and his seventh in his Indianapolis 500 career.
Dixon will become the 11th driver with at least 20 Indianapolis 500 starts and only the third international driver to reach that milestone.

Dixon is third all-time in Indianapolis 500 laps led with 570. 
If Dixon leads 30 laps, he will become the third driver to reach the 600 laps led milestone. If he leads 43 laps, he will pass Ralph DePalma for second most all-time. If he leads 75 laps, Dixon will surpass Al Unser for the most laps led in the history of the Indianapolis 500.
If Dixon leads a lap, he will break the record for most Indianapolis 500s led with this being his 15th Indianapolis 500 led.
Dixon has led the most laps in the Indianapolis 500 a record five times. 
Dixon is currently in an eight-way tied for most runner-up finishes in Indianapolis 500 history. Harry Hartz, Wilbur Shaw, Bill Holland, Jim Rathmann, Tom Sneva, Al Unser, Hélio Castroneves and Dixon have all finished runner-up three times in this race.

This is the 14th Indianapolis 500 since Dixon’s lone victory in 2008. The only driver with more races between Indianapolis 500 victories is Juan Pablo Montoya, though Montoya did not start every race between 2000 and 2015.
Dixon has the 30th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 11.0555.

Álex Palou
This will be Palou’s third Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 2nd (2021)
Car #10 has won the Indianapolis 500 once, Dario Franchitti 2010.
Eleven times has the winner started second, most recently Juan Pablo Montoya in 2000.

This is the fourth consecutive race Palou has started in the top five.
Last year, Palou led 35 laps, making him the Spaniard with the most laps led in Indianapolis 500 history. He has led one more lap than Oriol Servià.

Palou could become the first defending IndyCar champion to win the Indianapolis 500 since Dario Franchitti in 2012.
Palou does not have a victory this IndyCar season. Four of the last six Indianapolis 500 winner had the Indianapolis 500 be their first victory of the season. 

Palou could become the 15th driver to win the Indianapolis 500 the year after finishing second in the race. The last driver to do it was Dan Wheldon in 2011.

Palou could become the first Spaniard to win the Indianapolis 500. Spain would become the 13th different nation to produce an Indianapolis 500 winner. 

Rinus VeeKay
This will be VeeKay’s third Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 8th (2021)
Car #21 has never won the Indianapolis 500. 
Thirteen times has the Indianapolis 500 winner started third, most recently Takuma Sato two years ago.

VeeKay's only top five finish on an oval was a fourth-place finish in the second Gateway race in 2020.
VeeKay led 32 laps in last year's race, the third most in last year's race. 

VeeKay could become the first driver born in the 21st century to win the Indianapolis 500. He would also be the youngest winner at 21 years, eight months and 18 days old. This is VeeKay’s last chance to become the youngest Indianapolis 500 winner.
VeeKay could become the second Dutchman to win the Indianapolis 500 after Arie Luyendyk.

Row Two:
Ed Carpenter
This will be Carpenter’s 19th Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 2nd (2018).
Car #33 has never won the Indianapolis 500.
Seven times has the winner started fourth, most recently Takuma Sato in 2017.

Carpenter could break Sam Hanks’ record for most starts before first Indianapolis 500 victory. Hanks’ won the 1957 Indianapolis 500, his 13th start in the race.
Carpenter could become the first Illinois-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500 since Floyd Davis was a co-winner with Mauri Rose in 1941.
It has been 2,913 days since Carpenter's most recent IndyCar victory at Texas in 2014.

Carpenter needs to lead 54 laps to reach the 200 laps led milestone in the Indianapolis 500.
Carpenter could be the first driver to win the Freedom 100 and Indianapolis 500.
Carpenter has the 102nd best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 15.473.

Marcus Ericsson
This will be Ericsson’s fourth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 11th (2021)
Car #8 has won the Indianapolis 500 three times but not since Pat Flaherty in 1956.
Seven times has the winner started fifth, most recently Buddy Lazier in 1996.

This is Ericsson's best starting position of the season and it is only the third time he has started in the top five in his IndyCar career.
Ericsson was fourth in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. The only time he has consecutive top five finishes in his IndyCar career was last year at Mid-Ohio and Nashville. He was second at Mid-Ohio and famously won at Nashville. 

Ericsson could become the second Swede to win the Indianapolis 500 after Kenny Bräck.

Tony Kanaan
This will be Kanaan’s 21st Indianapolis 500 start.
2013 Indianapolis 500 winner.
Car #1 has won the Indianapolis 500 seven times but not since Al Unser in 1971.
Five times has the winner started sixth, most recently Dan Wheldon in 2011.

Kanaan has led a lap in 14 Indianapolis 500s, tied with Scott Dixon for most all-time.
If Kanaan leads a lap, he will break the record for most Indianapolis 500s led with this being his 15th Indianapolis 500 led.
Kanaan has led 346 laps, the second most amongst active drivers. If Kanaan leads 54 laps, he will become the 14th driver to lead 400 laps in the Indianapolis 500.

Kanaan could become the second oldest Indianapolis 500 winner at 47 years, four months and 29 days old.
Kanaan has the 56th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 12.85.

Kanaan joins Emerson Fittipaldi as the only Brazilians to use the #1 in the Indianapolis 500.
Kanaan could become the first driver to win the Indianapolis 500 for Chevrolet and Honda in the DW12-era. He would become the 12th driver to win the Indianapolis 500 with multiple engine manufactures.
Kanaan could join Mario Andretti as the only drivers to win an IndyCar race in four different decades.

Row Three:
Patricio O'Ward
This will be O’Ward third Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 4th (2021)
Car #5 has won the Indianapolis 500 six times but not since Arie Luyendyk in 1997.
Five times has the winner started seventh, most recently A.J. Foyt in 1961.

O'Ward led 17 laps last year, becoming the third Mexican driver to lead the Indianapolis 500, joining Josele Garza and Adrián Fernández.
O'Ward was 19th in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. He has never finished in the top ten in the race preceding the Indianapolis 500 in his career. 

O’Ward could become the first Mexican driver to win the Indianapolis 500. Mexico would become the 13th different nation to produce an Indianapolis 500 winner.
O’Ward could become the third youngest Indianapolis 500 winner at 23 years and 23 days old.

Felix Rosenqvist
This will be Rosenqvist’s fourth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 12th (2020)
Car #7 has won the Indianapolis 500 twice but not since Bill Holland in 1949. 
Last year, Hélio Castroneves became the third Indianapolis 500 winner to start in the eighth position.

Rosenqvist could become the second driver with victories in the Macau Grand Prix and the Indianapolis 500 joining Takuma Sato. 
Rosenqvist has not had a top five finish in his last 21 starts. He has never had a top five finish on an oval. His best oval finish was seventh in the second Gateway race in 2020.

Rosenqvist led a lap in each of his two Indianapolis 500 starts, six laps in 2019,  eight laps in 2020 and 14 laps last year. He is currently tied with Graham Rahal for the 132nd most laps led in an Indianapolis 500  career and he has led more laps in the Indianapolis 500 than Fernando Alonso, Jimmie Vasser and Jacques Villeneuve. 
Kenny Bräck has the most laps led for a Swede in Indianapolis 500 history with 89 laps led. 
Rosenqvist could become the second Swede to win the Indianapolis 500 after Kenny Bräck.

Romain Grosjean
This will be Grosjean’s first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #28 has won the Indianapolis 500 once, Ryan Hunter-Reay 2014.
Only once has the winner started ninth and that was Emerson Fittipaldi in 1993.

Grosjean was the top rookie qualifier. This is the fourth time in seven years Andretti Autosport had the top rookie qualifier.
This will be Grosjean's second oval start after finishing 14th at Gateway last year. 
Grosjean has four podium finishes in 18 career starts. 
This will be Grosjean's 19th career start. Eight drivers have had their first career victory in their 19th career start (Earl Devore, Pat O'Connor, Elmer George, Parnelli Jones, Al Unser, Jr. Greg Ray, Dan Wheldon and Rinus VeeKay).

Grosjean could become the fifth different Frenchman to win the Indianapolis 500.
Grosjean could become the first Frenchman to win Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year.
Grosjean could become the second Frenchman to win the Indianapolis 500 as a rookie after 1913 winner Jules Goux.

Row Four:
Takuma Sato
This will be Sato’s 13th Indianapolis 500 start.
Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner (2017, 2020).
Car #51 won the 1998 Indianapolis 500 with Eddie Cheever.
Twice has the winner started tenth, most recently Gil de Ferran in 2003.

Sato needs to lead 15 laps to reach the 100 laps led milestone in the Indianapolis 500. Sato is the only multi-time Indianapolis 500 winner to have led fewer than 100 laps. Sixty-four drivers have led at least 100 laps in the Indianapolis 500. 

Sato could become the sixth oldest Indianapolis 500 winner at 45 years, four months and one day old. He would become the first driver to win three Indianapolis 500s after turning 40 years old.
Sato could join A.J. Foyt, Bobby Unser and Al Unser as the only drivers to win the Indianapolis 500 with three different teams.
Sato has the 117th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 16.181818.

Will Power
This will be Power’s 15th Indianapolis 500 start.
2018 Indianapolis 500 winner.
Car #12 has won the Indianapolis 500 twice, most recently with Power in 2019. The other was Peter DePaolo in 1925 driving the #12 Miller.
Three times has the winner started 11th, most recently Alexander Rossi in 2016.

Power has five consecutive top five finishes entering the Indianapolis 500 and leads the IndyCar championship for the first time since after the second Belle Isle race in 2018.
The championship lead has changed after the Indianapolis 500 in five of the eight seasons since double points were awarded for the race.

Power is currently tied with Johnny Rutherford for the fifth most 500-mile race victories in IndyCar history with five.

Power needs to lead 56 laps to reach the 200 laps led milestone in the Indianapolis 500.
Power is tied for the 57th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 12.8571 with Earl Cooper.

Jimmie Johnson
This will be Johnson’s first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #48 has won the Indianapolis 500 once, Bobby Unser 1975.
Twice has the winner started 12th, most recently Tony Kanaan in 2013.

Johnson will be the third oldest rookie in Indianapolis 500 history behind only Jean Alesi and Jack Hewitt.
Johnson becomes the 61st driver to start the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500. 
Johnson could become the third oldest Indianapolis 500 winner at 46 years, eight months and 12 days old.

Johnson could become the third driver to win the Indianapolis 500 and Daytona 500, joining Mario Andretti and A.J. Foyt.
Johnson could become the first driver to win the Indianapolis 500 and Brickyard 400. He would also be the first driver to win the Indianapolis 500 and the NASCAR Cup Series championship. 

Johnson has the 22nd best average finish among the 89 drivers with at least five Brickyard 400 starts at 16.5.
Johnson led 306 laps in his 18 Brickyard 400 starts, fourth all-time behind Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch.

Row Five:
David Malukas
This will be Malukas’ first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #18 has never won the Indianapolis 500.
Four times has the winner started 13th, most recently Hélio Castroneves in 2002.

Malukas could become the first Dale Coyne Racing driver to win Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year. 
Malukas suffered an accident in Carb Day practice after contact with Santino Ferrucci entering turn one.

Malukas could become the first driver born in the 21st century to win the Indianapolis 500. He would also be the youngest winner at 20 years, eight months and two days old.
Malukas could become the first Illinois-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500 since Floyd Davis was a co-winner with Mauri Rose in 1941.

Josef Newgarden
This will be Newgarden’s 11th Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 3rd (2016).
Car #2 has won the Indianapolis 500 nine times, most recently Juan Pablo Montoya 2015. 
Only once has the winner started 14th and that was Bob Sweikert in 1955.

Newgarden is one of six drivers with at least 20 career victories but no Indianapolis 500 victories. The other drivers are Michael Andretti, Sébastien Bourdais, Paul Tracy, Ted Horn and Tony Bettenhausen.
Newgarden could be the first driver to win the Freedom 100 and Indianapolis 500.
Newgarden could become the first driver to win the Grand Prix of Long Beach and the Indianapolis 500 in the same season since Hélio Castroneves in 2001. The only other driver to win Long Beach and Indianapolis in the same season was Al Unser, Jr. in 1994. 

Newgarden could become the first Tennessee-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500.
Newgarden has the 77th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 14.3.

Newgarden's team won the Carb Day Pit Stop Competition. He is the first Americans driver to win the pit stop competition since Sam Hornish, Jr. in 2005. Six times has the pit stop competition winner gone on to win the Indianapolis 500, most recently was Hélio Castroneves in 2009.

Santino Ferrucci
This will be Ferrucci’s fourth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 4th (2020)
Car #23 has won the Indianapolis 500 twice, 1931 with Louis Schneider and 1938 with Floyd Roberts. Those are the only race victories for car #23 in IndyCar history
Four times has the winner started 15th, most recently Juan Pablo Montoya in 2015.

Dreyer & Reinbold Racing is the third different team Ferrucci has driven for in his four Indianapolis 500 appearances. This is Ferrucci's first IndyCar start in a Chevrolet-powered car.
This is Ferrucci's best starting position in the Indianapolis 500. This is the best starting position for a Dreyer & Reinbold Racing entry since Oriol Servià started 13th for the 2013 Indianapolis 500.

Ferrucci has finished in the top ten in each of his first three Indianapolis 500 starts.
Ferrucci scored fastest lap in last year's race, the 12th consecutive different driver to have fastest lap in the Indianapolis 500. The last driver to have fastest lap in consecutive Indianapolis 500s was Tony Stewart in 1997-98.

Ferrucci could become the first Connecticut-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500 and he would be just the second Nutmugger to win an IndyCar race, joining Scott Sharp.
Ferrucci could become the fifth youngest Indianapolis 500 winner at 23 years, 11 months and 29 days old.

Row Six:
Simon Pagenaud
This will be Pagenaud’s 11th Indianapolis 500 start.
2019 Indianapolis 500 winner
Car #60 has never won the Indianapolis 500.
Twice has the winner started 16th, most recently Dario Franchitti in 2012.

Pagenaud has not won a race in his last 30 starts. 
Pagenaud has finished in the top five of the sixth race of the season the last three years. 
Pagenaud could become the first driver to win the Indianapolis 500 for Chevrolet and Honda in the DW12-era. He would become the 12th driver to win the Indianapolis 500 with multiple engine manufactures.

Pagenaud will tie Oriol Servià for second most Indianapolis 500 starts for a European driver behind only Arie Luyendyk, who made 17 Indianapolis 500 starts.

Pagenaud needs to lead 31 laps to reach the 200 laps led milestone in the Indianapolis 500. 
Pagenaud has the 31st best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 11.1.

J.R. Hildebrand
This will be Hildebrand’s 12th Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 2nd (2011).
Car #11 has won the Indianapolis 500 once, Tony Kanaan 2013.
Twice has the winner started 17th, most recently Eddie Cheever in 1998.

This is Hildebrand's best Indianapolis 500 starting position since starting sixth in 2017. 
Hildebrand has finished outside the top ten in his last 11 IndyCar starts. 
Hildebrand has led 13 laps in his Indianapolis 500 career, but has not led since the 2017 race.

Hildebrand has the 71st best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 13.7272.

Conor Daly
This will be Daly’s ninth Indianapolis 500 and hopefully eighth start.
Best Finish: 10th (2019)
Car #20 has won the Indianapolis 500 three times but not since Emerson Fittipaldi in 1989. 
The best finish for the 18th-starter is second, which occurred in 1920 by René Thomas and in 2009 and 2010 by Dan Wheldon.

Daly led 40 laps in last year’s race, the most laps led. The last driver to lead the most laps in the Indianapolis 500 and then win the race the following year was Al Unser in 1971, the second consecutive victory for Unser.
The last driver to lead the most laps in the Indianapolis 500 but not win it and then win the race the following year was Parnelli Jones, who led the most laps in 1962 but finished 12th before winning in 1963, a race where he also led the most laps. 

Daly has the 244th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 23.375.
Daly could become the first Hoosier-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500 since Wilbur Shaw in 1940.

Row Seven:
Callum Ilott
This will be Ilott’s first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #77 has never won the Indianapolis 500.
Twice has the winner started 19th, most recently Ryan Hunter-Reay in 2014.

This is Juncos Hollinger Racing's first Indianapolis 500 appearance since 2019. The team's best finish in the race was 15th in 2017 with Sebastián Saavedra.
Ilott could become the first Briton to win Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year since Nigel Mansell in 1993. The only other British drivers to win Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year are Jim Clark and Jackie Stewart. 

Ilott could become the fourth youngest Indianapolis 500 winner at 23 years, six months and 18 days.
Ilott joins Harris Insinger as the only drivers to start the Indianapolis 500 with a last name beginning with the letter "I." Insinger started 31st and finished 14th in the 1935 race, completing 185 laps.

Alexander Rossi
This will be Rossi’s seventh Indianapolis 500 start.
2016 Indianapolis 500 winner.
Car #27 has won the Indianapolis 500 three times, most recently with Dario Franchitti in 2007.
Three times has the winner started 20th, most recently Al Unser in 1987.

Rossi has not finished in the top five in seven consecutive races. He has not had a top five finish on an oval since he was second at Texas in 2019. 
Rossi has not won in his last 42 starts. 

Rossi needs to lead 23 laps to reach the 100 laps led milestone in the Indianapolis 500. Sixty-four drivers have led 100 laps in the Indianapolis 500.
Rossi has only led laps twice in the last 21 races, two laps at the first Belle Isle race in 2021 and ten laps at St. Petersburg this year. He has not led an oval race since he led 17 laps in the 2020 Indianapolis 500.

Rossi is tied for the 38th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 11.667 with Frank Elliott, Vitor Meira and Jimmy Reece.
After finishing no worse than seventh in his first four Indianapolis 500 starts, Rossi has finished 27th and 29th the last two years.

Graham Rahal
This will be Rahal’s 15th Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 3rd (2011, 2020).
Car #15 has won the Indianapolis 500 three times, most recently with Buddy Rice in 2004.
Only once has the winner started 21st and that was L.L. Corum and Joe Boyer in 1924.

Rahal could break Sam Hanks’ record for most starts before first Indianapolis 500 victory. Hanks’ first victory was in his 13th start.

Rahal has led 28 laps in his Indianapolis 500 career. His father Bobby led 126 laps in his 13 Indianapolis 500 starts.
Rahal could tie Salt Walther and George Snider for most 33rd-place finishes in the Indianapolis 500 at three.
Rahal has made 78 starts since his most recent IndyCar victory in the second Belle Isle race in 2017.

Rahal has the 166th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 18.0714. He is directly ahead of John Andretti (18.0833), Peter Revson (18.2) and Mario Andretti (18.25).

Row Eight:
Sage Karam
This will be Karam’s ninth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 7th (2021).
Car #24 has won the Indianapolis 500 once, Graham Hill 1966.
Twice has the winner started 22nd but not since Kelly Petillo in 1935.

This is Karam's best starting position in the Indianapolis 500 since he started 21st in 2017. Karam has never started inside the top twenty for the Indianapolis 500.
Karam was seventh in last year's Indianapolis 500, his most recent IndyCar start. He has never had consecutive top ten finishes in his IndyCar career.
This will be the 25th start of Karam's IndyCar career.

Karam could become the first Pennsylvania-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500 since Bill Holland in 1949.
Karam has the 235th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 22.125.

Marco Andretti
This will be Andretti’s 17th Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 2nd (2006).
Car #98 has won the Indianapolis 500 four times, most recently Alexander Rossi 2016.
The best finish for the 23rd-starter is second by Wilbur Shaw in 1933.

Andretti could break Sam Hanks’ record for most starts before first Indianapolis 500 victory. Hanks’ won the 1957 Indianapolis 500, his 13th start in the race.
Andretti needs to lead 59 laps to reach the 200 laps led milestone in the Indianapolis 500.
He has not finished in the top five of his last six Indianapolis 500 starts after having five top five finishes in his first ten Indianapolis 500 starts. He has also not led a lap in any of the last six races after leading a lap in seven of his first ten Indianapolis 500s.

Andretti could become the first Pennsylvania-born driver to win the Indianapolis 500 since Bill Holland in 1949.
A victory for Andretti would make him and his grandfather Mario the first grandfather-grandson duo to win the Indianapolis 500.
If Andretti complete 41 laps, he will surpass his grandfather Mario’s Indianapolis 500 lap total of 3,040.
Andretti has the 53rd best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 12.4375.

This will be the 250th start in Andretti's IndyCar career. He will become the 17th driver with 250 starts. Andretti has made 158 starts since his most recent IndyCar victory at Iowa in 2011. The record for most starts between victories is 124, which Graham Rahal set in 2015. 

Devlin DeFrancesco
This will be DeFrancesco’s first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #29 has never won the Indianapolis 500.
The best finish for the 24th-starter is fourth on five occasions (Denny Hulme in 1967, Mel Kenyon in 1969, Sammy Sessions in 1972, Eliseo Salazar in 1995 and Townsend Bell in 2009).

This is the worst starting position of DeFrancesco's career. He has finished worse than his starting position in four of his five starts this season. 

DeFrancesco could become the second youngest Indianapolis 500 winner at 22 years, four months and 12 days old.
DeFrancesco could become the second Canadian Indianapolis 500 winner.
DeFrancesco could become the fourth Canadian Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year after Jacques Villeneuve, Alex Tagliani and Robert Wickens.


Row Nine:
Colton Herta
This will be Herta’s fourth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 8th (2020)
Car #26 has won the Indianapolis 500 twice, Dan Wheldon in 2005 and Takuma Sato 2017.
Only once has the winner started 25th and that was Johnny Rutherford in 1974.

Herta could be the first driver to win the Freedom 100 and Indianapolis 500.
A top five finish for Colton would make him and Bryan Herta the tenth father/son duo to each have a top five finish in the Indianapolis 500.

Herta could become the third driver in the last five seasons to win the race before the Indianapolis 500 and the Indianapolis 500.

Herta could become the first driver born in the 21st century to win the Indianapolis 500. He would also be the youngest winner at 22 years, one month, and 29 days old. This is Herta’s last chance to become the youngest Indianapolis 500 winner.

Herta had an accident in Carb Day practice after hitting the barrier exiting turn one and flipping over after air got under the front wing. Herta walked away from the accident and has been cleared to drive. He will be driving a backup car.

Scott McLaughlin 
This will be McLaughlin’s second Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 20th (2021)
Car #3 has won the Indianapolis 500 eleven times, the most victories for a car number. The last victory was in 2009 with Hélio Castroneves. 
The best finish for the 26th-starter is third by Don Freeland in 1956, Paul Goldsmith in 1960 and Simon Pagenaud last year.

McLaughlin was Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year last year.
The last reigning Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year to win the following Indianapolis 500 was Hélio Castroneves in 2002, who won the race in 2001. The next previous time it happened was in 1995, when Jacques Villeneuve won the race after finishing runner-up as a rookie in 1994. The only other reigning Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year to win the race the following year was Rick Mears, who shared the 1978 rookie of the year honor with Larry Rice, and then won the 1979.

McLaughlin could become the first driver to win the Bathurst 1000 and the Indianapolis 500.

Hélio Castroneves
This will be Castroneves’ 22nd Indianapolis 500 start.
Four-time and defending Indianapolis 500 winner (2001, 2002, 2009, 2021).
Castroneves’ victory last year was the first Indianapolis 500 victory for car #06.
Castroneves will become the first driver to use #06 in multiple Indianapolis 500s.
Only once has the winner started 27th and that was by Fred Frame in 1932.

Castroneves could become the first five-time Indianapolis 500 winner.
Castroneves could become the first driver to win consecutive Indianapolis 500s on multiple occasions. 

Castroneves has the seventh best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 8.309. He cannot move up the order, as a victory will only lower his average finish to 8.045 and Carlos Muñoz is seventh all-time at 7.5. As long as Castroneves finishes 17th or better, he will not fall behind Tom Alley and Albert Guyot, who both had an average finish of 8.8 in their Indianapolis 500 careers. 

Castroneves has led 325 laps in the Indianapolis, which has him ranked 18th all-time. If he leads 75 laps, he will become the 14th driver to lead 400 laps in the Indianapolis 500. 
Castroneves could also match the record for most Indianapolis 500s led if neither Scott Dixon nor Tony Kanaan leads in this year's race. Castroneves has led in 13 Indianapolis 500s.
Castroneves could become the third oldest Indianapolis 500 winner at 47 years and 19 days old.
A top ten finish would be Castroneves’ tenth in the Indianapolis 500 and he would join Al Unser and A.J. Foyt as the only drivers to reach that milestone.

If Castroneves completes two laps, he will become the third driver to complete 4,000 lap (10,000 miles) in an Indianapolis 500 career joining A.J. Foyt and Al Unser.

Row Ten:
Kyle Kirkwood
This will be Kirkwood’s first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #14 has won the Indianapolis 500 six times, most recently with Kenny Bräck in 1999.
Twice has the winner started 28th, inaugural winner Ray Harroun in 1911 and Louis Meyer in 1936.

Kirkwood could become the third Indy Lights champion to win the Indianapolis 500 joining Scott Dixon and Tony Kanaan. 
Kirkwood is the first American driver to use the #14 since A.J. Foyt IV in 2005.

Kirkwwod could become the fourth youngest driver to win the Indianapolis 500 at 23 years, seven months and ten days old.
Kirkwood could become the first Florida-born driver to not only win the Indianapolis 500 but to win any IndyCar race.

Dalton Kellett
This will be Kellett’s third Indianapolis 500 start
Best Finish: 24th (2021)
Car #4 has won the Indianapolis 500 five times but not since Emerson Fittipaldi in 1993.
The best finish for the 29th-starter is second in 1911 by Ralph Mulford and in 2002 by Paul Tracy.

This is the second consecutive year Kellett has started on row ten. He has started outside the top twenty in five consecutive races. He has retired from three of five races this season. 
Kellett suffered an accident in the Monday practice after qualifying weekend. 
This will be Kellett's 30th IndyCar start. He has three lead lap finishes in his career, all coming in 2021 (Texas I, Gateway and Long Beach).

Kellett could become the second Canadian to win the Indianapolis 500.

Juan Pablo Montoya
This will be Montoya’s seventh Indianapolis 500 start.
Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner.
Car #6 has won the Indianapolis 500 five times, most recently with Sam Hornish, Jr. in 2006.
The best finish for the 30th-starter was fourth in 1936 by Mauri Rose.

This is the worst starting position in Montoya's IndyCar career. His previous worst starting position was 25th in the 2021 Grand Prix of Indianapolis. 

Montoya needs to lead seven laps to become the 31st driver to lead 200 laps in the Indianapolis 500.
Montoya could join Bobby Unser and Rick Mears as the only drivers to win the Indianapolis 500 in three different decades. 
Montoya could join A.J. Foyt, Bobby Unser and Al Unser as the only drivers to win the Indianapolis 500 with three different teams.
Montoya could become the third oldest Indianapolis 500 winner at 46 years, eight months and nine days old. 

Montoya could join Mario Andretti as the only drivers to win an IndyCar race in four different decades.

Montoya has the 12th best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 9.1667. A victory would lower Montoya’s average finish to eight and move him up to seventh all-time.

Row Eleven:
Christian Lundgaard
This will be Lundgaard’s first Indianapolis 500 start.
Car #30 has won the Indianapolis 500 twice, Arie Luyendyk 1990 and Takuma Sato 2020.
The best finish for the 31st-starter is fourth in 1951 by Andy Linden.

Lundgaard could become the first driver born in the 21st century to win the Indianapolis 500. He would also be the youngest winner at 20 years, ten months and six days old.

Lundgaard will become the first Danish driver to start the Indianapolis 500.
Denmark will become the 30th different country represented in the Indianapolis 500. Denmark could become the 13th different country to produce an Indianapolis 500 winner.

Jack Harvey
This will be Harvey’s sixth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 9th (2020).
Car #45 has never won the Indianapolis 500.
The best finish for the 32nd-starter is second in 1957 by Jim Rathmann and 1981 by Mario Andretti.

Harvey could become the first driver to win the Freedom 100 and Indianapolis 500.
Harvey is tied for the 183rd best average finish among the 258 drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts at 19th with Geoff Brabham, Andy Linden and Paul Tracy.

This is the worst starting position of Harvey's IndyCar career and his second time starting on the last row of the Indianapolis 500. 
Harvey has never finished in the top five of an IndyCar oval race. His best oval finish is seventh on three occasions, both Iowa races in 2020 and the first Texas race last year. 

Stefan Wilson
This will be Wilson's fourth Indianapolis 500 start.
Best Finish: 15th (2018)
Car #25 has won the Indianapolis 500 once, Al Unser’s fourth victory in 1987.
The best finish for the 33rd-starter is second in 1980 by Tom Sneva and 1992 by Scott Goodyear.

Wilson becomes the fifth driver in Indianapolis 500 history to make the race with an official qualifying speed of 000.000 mph.
Wilson is the first driver to finish last in the Indianapolis 500 and then return the following year to start last in the Indianapolis 500 since Johnny Unser, who finished 33rd in 1996 and started 35th in 1997 after Lyn St. James and Unser had their times reinstated to ensure the fastest 33 cars started the race during the 25/8-rule era.
Wilson could join Andy Linden and Salt Walther as the only drivers to finish last in consecutive Indianapolis 500s.

NBC's pre-race coverage for the 106th Indianapolis 500 will begin at 11:00 a.m. ET. Green flag is scheduled for 12:45 p.m. ET. The race is scheduled for 200 laps.