Miami Herald

Owners split on qualifying format

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Bobby Rahal remembers watching the start of the Indianapol­is 500 from a suite with his sponsors after he failed to make the 1993 field.

He was bitter to miss “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” but understood the sanctity of only the fastest 33 racing at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

“As a driver, I'll never forget sitting up in our suite, watching the pace lap, all our sponsors there, [thinking] ‘I belong here, not up there,’ ” Rahal said Friday. “It was an emotional time. You make the best of it and go on.”

Rahal falls firmly on the side of tradition in that 33 drivers qualify on pure speed for the Indy 500. He’s against guarantees for teams racing full time in the IndyCar Series because Rahal subscribes to the purest form of the race.

But opinions are split with 36 drivers vying for 33 positions in the two-day qualifying format that begins Saturday. There were 35 drivers last year and series regular James Hinchcliff­e, a popular championsh­ip contender, was one of two not to make the field.

It could have been crippling to Hinchcliff­e’s race team, which leaned heavily on sponsor Arrow for activation and support. Roger Penske is among those who believe sponsor relationsh­ips should have protection. Penske this year is marking his 50th anniversar­y at Indianapol­is.

Penske missed the 1995 race with both of his cars, but Team Penske has a record 17 victories and won last year’s race with Will Power.

“I think in today’s world, under the current situation, if you’re going to commit and run the whole season, you should have an opportunit­y to run in this race,” Penske said Friday. “At the present time, that would be my position.”

Penske supports guarantees for the 20-something cars that run all 17 of the IndyCar races, even if it’s a slap at tradition. The race is worth double points, too, and missing it last year hurt Hinchcliff­e’s title effort.

Chip Ganassi is split on the argument. He prefers the tradition but doesn’t like this year’s format. A year ago, Hinchcliff­e and Pippa Mann were eliminated at the end of the first day of qualifying. To ensure teams a second chance, IndyCar this year said the fastest 30 are locked into the race on Saturday and the remaining entrants will have one chance to post a qualifying attempt for the final three positions. Ganassi argues that all six of the Sunday cars could go faster than some in the first 30, but three still won’t qualify. To him, that’s not truly the fastest 33.

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