Houston Chronicle Sunday

Qualifying speeds are fastest in 26 years

- By Jenna Fryer

INDIANAPOL­IS — Rain held off long enough Saturday to complete the first round of qualifying for the Indianapol­is 500 on a soupy day that still produced eye-popping speeds not seen since 1996 at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

Rising stars Rinus VeeKay and Pato O’Ward posted blistering qualifying averages of over 233 mph in a flex of Chevrolet horsepower.

NASCAR star Jimmie Johnson qualified for his first Indy 500, and his Chip Ganassi Racing team showed it might be the strongest organizati­on at Indy right now.

Meanwhile, Andretti Autosport had a terrible day. And Team Penske got bit by the weather when it pulled Scott McLaughlin’s qualifying time late Saturday afternoon and sent him back out to try for the top 12. McLaughlin was 15th on the board when his time was forfeited; the New Zealander went even slower and dropped to 26th.

“Well this place just kicked (me) in the privates — ah well,” McLaughlin posted on social media.

Penske teammate Josef Newgarden followed McLaughlin out for his own attempt to make the top 12, but his run was halted when lightning flashed. It was the second lightning stoppage of the day, and the rain followed minutes later. IndyCar called it a day about 70 minutes early.

Only spots 13 through 33 were locked in Saturday, and the top 12 return Sunday in a shootout for the pole. Chevrolet swept the top three spots Saturday with VeeKay and O’Ward, who posted the third- and fifth-fastest four-lap qualifying averages in track history, and Felix Rosenqvist.

Reigning IndyCar champion Alex Palou was fourth-fastest as Ganassi advanced its entire fivecar fleet into Sunday’s action. Tony Kanaan was fifth, Johnson was sixth, Marcus Ericsson was eighth and Scott Dixon was 10th for the Hondapower­ed team.

Ed Carpenter, who on Saturday morning posted the eighth-fastest lap in track history at 234.410 mph, was sixth-fastest in qualifying as he and Will Power (11th) completed the Chevrolet group.

Honda advanced seven drivers to Sunday as the Ganassi group was joined by Romain Grosjean, the only Andretti driver to make the top 12, and twotime winner Takuma Sato.

Sato had an rollercoas­ter session; he was disqualifi­ed after his first qualifying attempt for interferin­g with Marco Andretti’s lap. When he made his second attempt, Sato scrubbed the wall and still made it into the top 12.

Spots seven through 12 for the May 29 race will be determined in another qualifying round, then after a break, a “Fast Six” shootout will set the first two rows for the 106th running of the Indy 500.

VeeKay put his Chevrolet atop the scoring pylon for Ed Carpenter Racing with a four-lap average speed of 233.655 mph that bumped O’Ward of Arrow McLaren SP to second at 233.037.

Arie Luyendyk set the four-lap qualifying record in 1996 at 236.986, with Scott Brayton, VeeKay, Tony Stewart and O’Ward rounding out the top five.

“It’s very, very cool to have two Dutch guys in the top-five fastest of all time,” said VeeKay, who like Luyendyk is from The Netherland­s.

Johnson turned in a lap at 233.961 mph — 14th-fastest in track history.

“I think the speed scared my kids,” Johnson said. “When they saw me, the look in their eyes. They’ve been to plenty of races, but they never looked at me like that.”

The seven-time NASCAR champion steadily has become a legitimate contender to win the Indy 500, which would be his fifth victory on the Indianapol­is oval; Johnson won four times in NASCAR.

“There were some quiet moments I had before I rolled off. I was able to look around and really take in the moment,” Johnson said, “and what a special moment it was, I am just so happy to here. Things are looking good for now.”

Not long after Johnson’s morning run, teammate Dixon turned in the 13thfastes­t lap in history at 234.093. Carpenter closed the session as the leader with the fastest lap in Indy 500 practice since Luyendyk set the track record of 237.498 mph in 1996.

Andretti Autosport struggled from the get-go as Marco Andretti had to abort his qualifying run when Sato failed to get off the track after his run moments earlier.

Andretti will start 23rd. “Don’t count the 98 out to win this race,” he said.

 ?? Darron Cummings/Associated Press ?? Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson qualified for his first Indianapol­is 500.
Darron Cummings/Associated Press Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson qualified for his first Indianapol­is 500.

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