National Post

Briscoe to slide in for injured Hinchcliff­e

- BY DAVE SKRETTA

INDIANAPOL­IS • Ryan Briscoe was home in Connecticu­t, getting ready to leave for France next week for the 24 Hours of Le Mans, when he received a call he had been anticipati­ng.

Ever since the devastatin­g wreck that sent James Hinchcliff­e to the hospital during Monday’s practice for the Indianapol­is 500, the natural assumption had been that Briscoe would step into the No. 5 car for Schmidt Peterson Motorsport­s for the 99th running of the race.

It became official when team co-owner Sam Schmidt dialed his number Tuesday morning.

“Obviously coming into the Indy 500, the day before Carb Day, is not ideal,” Briscoe said Thursday, shortly before taking his first few laps in a special familiariz­ation session.

“It’s not how you prepare for this race,” the 33-year-old Australian said. “Often a year out, you’re visualizin­g how you’re going to practice and all the prep you’re going to do. When something like this comes up, you have to throw that all out the window.”

Briscoe is no rookie. He has started the race nine times, three from the front row.

“After we got through Monday, all that situation, and started looking forward to this weekend, it was an obvious decision,” Schmidt said. “It was great that he was still available.”

Hinchcliff­e had qualified outside Row 8 when he took to the track Monday for practice. His wreck occurred in Turn 3 when a piece of the car’s suspension, later identified as the rocker arm, failed and sent the car slamming into the wall at more than 220 mph. Part of the suspension wound up piercing the tub and going through Hinchcliff­e’s upper leg and pelvis. Despite massive blood loss, Hinchcliff­e underwent surgery and is expected to recover.

In the meantime, Schmidt had to come up with a driver for Sunday.

Briscoe, a former Indy 500 pole winner, had nearly worked out a deal with the team to field a separate entry, but sponsorshi­p fell through and he was left without a ride. He kept track of what was happening in Indianapol­is this month — wrecks involving Helio Castroneve­s, Ed Carpenter and others — and knew he might get a call when word reached him of Hinchcliff­e’s wreck.

“Sam knows everything there is to know about this place,” Briscoe said, when asked about the difficulti­es of a short preparatio­n. “It’s been great talking to him about it. I’ve been made as comfortabl­e as I possibly could in this situation.”

Briscoe is unlikely to stick in the car past this weekend.

For one thing, he has commitment­s at Le Mans. For another, those happen to be with Corvette Racing. Schmidt f i el ds IndyCars powered by Chevrolet’s main rival, Honda.

Briscoe at least got the goahead from the American manufactur­er to drive this weekend, and he’s slid into a three-car team alongside James Jakes and Conor Daly.

“Ryan has been at this for a long time,” Jakes said. “He’s been here with Ganassi, he’s been here with Penske. That’s just a testament to the driver that he is.”

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