Houston Chronicle

Pagenaud secures Indianapol­is 500 pole

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Simon Pagenaud earned his first career Indianapol­is 500 pole with a four-lap average of 229.992 mph, edging three-time pole winner Ed Carpenter and Spencer Pigot on Sunday. He is the first Frenchman to win the Indy 500 pole in 100 years.

Carpenter, also the team owner, will start second while Pigot, the fastest qualifier Saturday, completes the front row and Chevrolet sweep of the top three spots.

Pagenaud will try to become the 18th Indy 500 winner for Team Penske and second consecutiv­e to sweep the month of May at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. Will Power of Penske did it last season.

“This is incredible, this is the biggest race in the world,” said Pagenaud, who snapped a 21-race losing streak last week with a win on Indy’s road course.

This month has been every bit as memorable for Pagenaud as it has been for Roger Penske, who is celebratin­g the 50th anniversar­y of making his first 500 as a team owner.

But Pagenaud came to the party on shaky footing because his job status with Penske is believed to be unsecure. But the road course win was his first since the 2017 season finale and now Pagenaud has his first pole since 2017 and momentum heading into next weekend’s race.

Defending race winner Power qualified sixth at 228.645. Josef Newgarden, the 2017 series champ, was eighth at 228.396 and three-time 500 champion Helio Castroneve­s did not make the pole shootout.

Ed Jones will start fourth as the Carpenter’s trio went 2-3-4 behind Pagenaud.

Rookie Colton Herta was the top Honda-powered driver at fifth with a speed of 229.086.

Sebastien Bourdais was seventh at 228.621 and Alexander Rossi, the 2016 Indy winner, was ninth at 228.247.

Fernando Alonso and McLaren missed the Indianapol­is 500 after a 23year-old American in a rebuilt race car for an underfunde­d team snagged the final spot in the field. Kyle Kaiser bumped Alonso out of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” by .02 mph in the “Last Row Shootout” to set the 33-driver field.

 ?? Michael Conroy / Associated Press ?? Car owner Roger Penske, left, congratula­tes Simon Pagenaud on winning the Indy 500 pole.
Michael Conroy / Associated Press Car owner Roger Penske, left, congratula­tes Simon Pagenaud on winning the Indy 500 pole.

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