The Commercial Appeal

Indy 500 does its best to shine

- Jenna Fryer

INDIANAPOL­IS – The Indianapol­is 500 has been stripped almost to the bone for the 104th running of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

The iconic test of man and machine is too important to new owner Roger Penske to cancel in the year of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Its importance to the survival of Indycar teams meant the race had to be staged even if the gates at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway will be closed to fans for the first time in its long, storied history.

“Virtually every sponsorshi­p you have is tied to this event. It’s the 800pound gorilla,” said Bobby Rahal, owner of three cars entered in Sunday’s race that was reschedule­d from its traditiona­l Memorial Day weekend slot.

“I think the idea of not having the Indy 500 would have been disastrous to probably every team,” he said. “It would have been a death knell to some teams, so, yes, this race had to happen.”

Penske, the billionair­e businessma­n who closed his purchase of the national landmark speedway and the series itself in January, will host the marquee race practicall­y out of pocket. The Indy 500 was canceled only during World War I and World War II and Penske’s staff has gone to extreme lengths to make the race still feel like a world-class event even without fans.

It’s cachet improved when Marco Andretti won the pole, a feat not done by his famous family since Mario Andretti did it in 1987. Marco was just two months old when his grandfathe­r won his last Indy pole and Marco’s father, uncle and cousin all failed to duplicate the effort.

Mario’s victory in 1969 is the only Indy 500 win among five Andretti drivers covering 74 starts. It was Marco, as a rookie in 2006, who last came closest to ending the “Andretti Curse” when he was beaten at the finish line.

This is his time, a full 15 years later, and Andretti is up for the challenge. The family will be honored before the race as Mario Andretti drives son, Michael, around the speedway in the two-seater before Marco takes the green flag.

“I feel good and I’m not stressed out. My grandfathe­r and I even talked about it, there’s something about our family that lives for this type of good pressure,” Andretti said. “I feel at home. I feel in my element. Feeling pressure means you are playing for something.”

His top competitio­n seems to be his very own Andretti Autosport teammates as the Honda-powered cars trounced Chevrolet in qualifying. The Andretti camp starts four drivers in the first three rows, while Honda took all but one of the nine slots.

The front of the pack includes a pair of rookies: Alex Palou in a Honda for Dale Coyne Racing, and 19-year-old Rinus Veekay, the lone Chevrolet driver to crack the fast nine who is mentored by fellow Dutchmen and two-time Indy 500 winner Arie Luyendyk.

The Chevrolet contingent is mostly stuck in the back of the 33-car field – which filled up late. Dragonspee­d Racing with driver Ben Hanley announced its entry just last week and missed almost two full days of practice getting a car prepared.

The back of the field includes Penske’s entire four-car fleet, which includes the last two winners in Simon Pagenaud and Will Power, defending Indycar champion Josef Newgarden, and three-time Indy 500 winner Helio Castroneve­s.

For Castroneve­s, it just might be the winding down of his 20-year relationsh­ip with Penske. The sports car arm of Team Penske is taking a pause in 2021 and it leaves Castroneve­s without a fulltime job. He very much wants to return to Indycar next season.

“The situations may be with another team. Who knows?” Castroneve­s said.

Castroneve­s and Tony Kanaan, two wildly popular drivers, are both facing uncertaint­y after this 500. Kanaan knew he would not run a full Indycar season but this five-race farewell tour has been ruined by the pandemic and he wants to be back at Indy next year. As the two Brazilians work on their schedules, they have both been among the first drivers announced to compete in Tony Stewart’s upcoming all-star series for veteran drivers.

Fernando Alonso is back for a third attempt at closing out the Triple Crown of motorsport­s. The two-time Formula One champion did not make the Indy 500 last year and this could be his last chance for a bit to add Indianapol­is to a resume that includes victories at Monaco and Le Mans.

Alonso is returning to F1 next season and will miss the Indy 500 the next two years. He said if he wins Sunday he will have achieved his goal, but t he Arrow Mclaren SP team has only been mediocre leading into Friday’s final practice. It was only then the Mclaren team showed a flicker with teammate Pato O’ward topping the final speed chart. Alonso, the only driver to crash during Indy 500 practices, was 23rd.

Somewhat under the radar of the Andretti-led Honda challenge of Chevrolet is five-time Indycar champion Scott Dixon, who will start second alongside Andretti.

The Iceman has been phenomenal in this abbreviate­d season with three wins and four podium finishes.

He’s got a cozy lead in the Indycar championsh­ip standings and is seeking to add a second Indy 500 win to his stacked resume.

Dixon was genuinely pleased for Andretti after Andretti knocked him from the pole, but the fun is over come Sunday.

“I hope it’s us winning the Indy 500,” Dixon said. “That’s what we’re thinking about. It’s honestly all just thinking about us trying to win the race and be best prepared.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP ?? Charlie Kimball, left, talks with Marco Andretti on Friday ahead of the 104th running of the Indianapol­is 500.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP Charlie Kimball, left, talks with Marco Andretti on Friday ahead of the 104th running of the Indianapol­is 500.

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