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The Indy 500...We're Back

By A.J. Foyt
This year’s Indianapolis 500 contained all of the
elements that make this race the greatest one in the
world. It had great driving (Scott Dixon was the class
of the field), it had suspense (would the outraged
Danica Patrick actually pop Ryan Briscoe?), and it had
plenty of crashes (with 13 rookies that wasn’t
surprising but having veteran drivers and teams mess up,
was).
But most of all, it had people. Lots of them. There were
people everywhere. It didn’t matter to them that gas
cost about $4 a gallon (when I started driving there in
1958, it cost 24 cents!).
With windy, cold, wet weather being the norm all month,
the sunny, warm weather on race day forced race teams to
guesstimate on their set-ups. Some nailed it, some
didn’t.
Scott Dixon’s team did. Dixon drove a flawless race to
win his first Indy 500 and he did it from the
pole—something I never did. Congratulations to Chip
Ganassi and his team.
It took us most of the month to find the sweet spots in
our No. 14 and 41 ABC Supply Dallara/Hondas. Our chief
engineer Mike Colliver worked closely with our drivers
Darren Manning and Jeff Simmons and myself. It became
frustrating at times but it all came together on race
day.
Darren started 14th in the 14 and Jeff started 24th in
the 41. We were having a good race with both of our
cars. Just past lap 30 they were running 9th and 13th.
Then the yellow came out for Graham Rahal’s accident,
and the pitstops started.
So did the trouble.
Rookie Alex Lloyd dove into his pit from the outside
lane and he made contact with Jeff who was leaving his
pit box. Jeff needed a new front wing. We made it as
close to the other as we could but it wasn’t the same
race car after that.
Darren was running strong and had moved into the top 10
with a good stop. By the time of his second pitstop, he
was running sixth comfortably.
His stop went fine, but my son Larry Foyt (who was
calling Darren’s race) told him it would be close with
the cars pitting around him. As Darren was leaving,
Larry yelled to him to stop but Darren thought he could
make it past Alex Lloyd (him again!) and Darren did. But
he didn’t make it past Buddy Rice turning into his pit
and the right front endplate came flying off the 14.
We’d used Darren’s spare nose for Jeff so Craig
Baranouski got one from my grandson A.J. IV’s team. It
worked pretty good even though Mike had to compensate
for a very different configuration of the endplates. A.J.
IV, who was 24 on race day, had his own problems with a
pit fire on his first stop, luckily he didn’t get hurt.
That boy has had a really tough month.
Darren dropped back to 24th – he was back in Jeff’s
neighborhood now becase we couldn’t get the loose
feeling out of Jeff’s car. He drifted back even further
on the next stint. Getting ready for another restart on
lap 112, Jeff lit up the tires and the rear broke loose;
the car veered into the outside wall and then into the
inside wall. He thought he hit the gas too hard but it
should have made it go left with the stagger in the car
so we’re checking the data. He felt terrible but I was
glad he didn’t get hurt. The car was another matter--it
hit harder than I thought.
At least Darren was happy with his car. He battled back
up to ninth making some good restarts and passing cars
down the front straight—where the ABC Supply guests
could appreciate it from their suite. He might have
gotten Buddy Rice for eighth but the tire sensors showed
Darren had a left rear tire going down--probably from
something he picked up on the track. With cars crashing
like they were, there is always some debris on the
track. He was lucky that the race didn’t go another four
or five laps.
My son Larry did a great job calling Darren’s race. So
far he has two top-10 finishes in two races (he called
the Japan race too). He and Mike seem to work well with
Darren and that is working for our team.
It’s been a while since I’ve been happy with a top-10
finish at the Indianapolis 500 but this year I was,
especially considering the problems we had. We worked
through them as a team and we’re stronger for it.
I think it’s fair to say that the Indy
500 is back and so are we.
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