Las Vegas Review-Journal

Women playing larger role in Indianpoli­s 500

- By Dan Gelston

INDIANAPOL­IS — Simona de Silvestro was still in her helmet when her race team owner threw her arms around the driver who had just qualified for the Indianapol­is 500 by the narrowest of margins.

De Silvestro’s pony-tailed crew members stopped by to congratula­te her, as did 2018 Indy 500 winner Will Power. Surviving the make-or-break seconds and breakneck speeds needed to make the 33-car field is cause enough for a celebratio­n at Indy, especially after sweating out a 75-minute, five-car shootout for one of the final three spots in Sunday’s race.

For the Swiss driver, her predominan­tly female team and owner Beth Paretta, leading an almost all-girls club to the starting grid for “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” is exactly that — a start.

The start of an idea that every position on an Indycar race team can be held by a woman. The start of a true, conscienti­ous push to form an unbreakabl­e pipeline that will lead women to an Indy 500 championsh­ip as a driver, owner or engineer. That women can climb the Indycar ladder and reach the highest level of racing — and take that traditiona­l swig of milk after a win in the biggest race of the year.

“I feel like we climbed a mountain together,” Paretta said.

Those peaks rise far beyond the track. In the NBC truck, producer Rene Hatlelid will set the scene for the telecast and former Indycar driver Danica Patrick will reprise her role in the studio. On race day, women help run the show everywhere from public relations to critical jobs on pit road.

Jimmie Mcmillian, the series’ chief diversity officer, said Indycar, Indianapol­is Motor Speedway and IMS Production­s is comprised of about 35 percent to 40 percent women, with many in leadership roles, such as the head of Indycar’s legal team, Gretchen Snelling.

Hatlelid produced NASCAR for 15 years for ESPN and NBC, and this is her first year as the full-time producer for NBC’S coverage of Indycar. On the final day of qualifying, Hatlelid navigated 58 straight minutes of action on NBC without a commercial break.

That includes telling the story through vignettes of select long-time Indy 500 fans who return Sunday after a year away because of the pandemic.

Hatlelid will also help NBC keep an eye on the female-led team attempting history.

De Silvestro, making her first Indy 500 appearance since 2015, is one of nine female drivers who have started the race. Sarah Fisher started nine times and Patrick eight — she finished third in 2009 — and the 2010, 2011 and 2013 races all had four women in the field.

Fisher transition­ed to team ownership, then merged her team with Ed Carpenter Racing before getting out of Indycar altogether. Patrick made a much publicized move to NASCAR after becoming a crossover star in Indycar. She retired after the 2018 Indy 500.

Maude Yagle is the only f emale team-owner to win the Indy 500, in 1929 with driver Ray Keech.

The starts and competitiv­e races have all had significan­t meaning in auto racing, where the playing field has long been dominated by men and legitimate chances to compete seem to come-and-go as fast as a lap around the oval. Paretta, who fielded a failed female-driven attempt to qualify for the 2016 Indy 500, is determined to prove women can look at motorsport­s as a career option.

 ?? Darron Cummings The Associated Press ?? Driver Simona de Silvestro, of Switzerlan­d, and owner Beth Paretta survived a five-car shootout to qualify what nearly is an allwomen’s racing team for the Indianapol­is 500.
Darron Cummings The Associated Press Driver Simona de Silvestro, of Switzerlan­d, and owner Beth Paretta survived a five-car shootout to qualify what nearly is an allwomen’s racing team for the Indianapol­is 500.

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