Orlando Sentinel

Driven by his dream

At 85, Penske set to host full-capacity Indy 500

- By Jenna Fryer

INDIANAPOL­IS — Roger Penske motioned toward the turn four grandstand­s at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. His father took him to those seats in 1951 and a 14-year-old Penske was instantly hooked by the sights and the sounds of “The 500-Mile Sweepstake­s,” won that day by Lee Wallard.

It was the beginning of a love affair between Penske and the speedway that produced 18 victories for the owner of Team Penske and, in 2019, the unexpected opportunit­y to purchase the national landmark.

Penske took ownership of Indianapol­is Motor Speedway just two months before the pandemic closed the country, and only now, in his third Indianapol­is 500 as promoter, can he throw open the gates and host more than 300,000 guests at “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

“I hope my dad is looking down and saying, ‘Son, you did a good job here,’ ” Penske told The AP.

Penske’s crowning moment comes Sunday when the hundreds of millions of dollars he’s poured into sprawling venue will at last be on full display. His first Indy 500, pushed to August 2020 from its traditiona­l Memorial Day weekend slot, was held in front of empty grandstand­s.

Penske was allowed to admit 40% capacity last year and welcomed approximat­ely 150,000 guests in what then was the largest sporting event since the pandemic began. On Sunday, the crowd will be the largest since the sold-out 100th running of the Indy 500 in 2016, with late ticket sales trending closer to that threshold.

Penske would love a sellout. It would be a reward for the financial bloodbath he’s taken since Tony George approached him on the starting grid ahead of the 2019 season finale and said the one thing Penske’s money could never buy was now for sale.

Penske snapped up both IndyCar and the speedway that had been owned by the Hulman-George family since 1945.

The pandemic has prevented Penske from turning any sort of profit — he’s pumped more than $30 million beyond the purchase price into bringing the speedway grounds up to his standards — and despite operating in the red, Penske has no regrets.

“We had a business plan and we were counting on over 200,000 people at our first 500,” Penske told AP. “But I look forward, I can’t look back. You don’t get any credit for what you did last year. I’d do the same deal again.”

Penske is now 85, and on Wednesday, a drizzly day off at the speedway before the festivitie­s get into full swing, “The Captain” was surveying every corner of the media center with a maintenanc­e worker taking notes as he trailed behind. As Penske walked through the Pagoda Plaza, he called over to the man polishing the Chevrolet Corvette pace cars on display.

“Hey, Joe, thanks!” yelled Penske. “Those are your cars. Treat them like they are yours.”

Doug Boles, the president of IMS, said Penske has been working tripletime to prepare for Sunday. Staffers are accustomed to receiving calls at all hours of the day — even an unexpected office drop-in — as Penske wants the facility perfect.

“Roger is an unbelievab­ly focused person on details and execution,” Boles said. “He has been an amazing steward through an unbelievab­ly difficult time that he didn’t know he was going to get when he bought the speedway. He’s never complained. He used an opportunit­y when this place was closed during the pandemic to make this place better and it energizes everyone because he’s an energized leader.”

Penske refers to the fans who will begin pouring through the gates on Friday’s “Carb Day” as his “guests.” Every initiative is done to create a pleasant experience for those attending a Penske party.

This Friday marks the 50th anniversar­y of Penske’s first Indy 500 victory as a car owner. Mark Donohue picked up the first of Penske’s 18 Baby Borg trophies, and that record number is displayed outside the Pagoda; Penske’s spot isn’t marked by his name, just the number 18.

“I am so excited for him because I know how much he loves this place and he will always keep the best interests of this place at heart,” Rick Mears, who won all four of his Indy 500s driving for Penske, told AP.

“After he bought this place, everyone felt so sorry for him because of the pandemic and not getting people in here.

“When a full crowd pours in here on race day, that’s going to be one of the greatest moments of a very accomplish­ed life.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/AP ?? Roger Penske purchased Indianapol­is Motor Speedway shortly before the pandemic closed the country.
DARRON CUMMINGS/AP Roger Penske purchased Indianapol­is Motor Speedway shortly before the pandemic closed the country.

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