2013 Indianapolis 500

97th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning body IndyCar
Season 2013 IndyCar season
Date May 26, 2013
Winner Brazil Tony Kanaan
Winning team KV Racing Technology
Average speed 187.433 mph (301.644 km/h) Race Record
Pole position United States Ed Carpenter
Pole speed 228.762 mph (368.157 km/h)
Fastest qualifier Australia Will Power
Rookie of the Year Colombia Carlos Muñoz
Most laps led United States Ed Carpenter (57)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthem Sandi Patty
"Back Home Again in Indiana" Jim Nabors
Starting Command Mari Hulman George
Pace car 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray
Pace car driver Jim Harbaugh
Honorary starter Michael Peña
Attendance TBD
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Announcers Marty Reid
Scott Goodyear
Eddie Cheever
Nielsen Ratings 3.7[1]
Chronology
Previous Next
2012 2014

The 97th Indianapolis 500 was run on Sunday, May 26, 2013, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It was the premier event of the 2013 IZOD IndyCar Series season. Tony Kanaan, a native of Brazil, was victorious on a record-setting day.

The track opened for practice on Saturday, May 11. Time trials were held May 18–19, and the final practice, traditionally dubbed "Carb Day," was Friday, May 24. A support race, the Freedom 100 for the Indy Lights series was also held on Carb Day. In time trials, owner/driver Ed Carpenter of Indianapolis won the pole position, the first American-born pole-sitter since 2006, and the first owner/driver to sit on the pole since 1975.

For the first time since 1987, two drivers in the field entered the race attempting to win a fourth Indianapolis 500.[2] Three-time winners Hélio Castroneves (2001, 2002, 2009) and Dario Franchitti (2007, 2010, 2012) attempted to tie A. J. Foyt, Al Unser Sr., and Rick Mears for the most Indy 500 victories.

After eleven previous attempts, Tony Kanaan, racing for KV Racing Technology, won the race. On a restart with three laps remaining, Kanaan overtook leader Ryan Hunter-Reay in the first turn. Three-time champion Dario Franchitti got loose and crashed into the outside wall bringing out the final caution of the race. Kanaan led Rookie of the Year Carlos Muñoz and Hunter-Reay across the line. The average speed of the race – 187.433 mph (301.644 km/h) – was the fastest Indianapolis 500, breaking the record set in 1990 by Arie Luyendyk. The 68 lead changes, and 14 different leaders, set during the race are also new records. Other records set include most cars running at the finish (26), fewest caution laps (21), most laps completed by the field (5,863), as well as a 133-lap caution-free segment from lap 61 through 193.

Chevrolet swept the top four finishing positions, and took its first Indianapolis 500 win since 2002, breaking Honda's streak of nine consecutive Indy 500 wins. Chassis manufacturer Dallara won its 8th straight Indy 500, and 13th overall since joining the series in 1997.

Event background

Selected rules and rule changes

Schedule

Race schedule — May, 2013
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1
 
2
 
3
 
4
Mini-Marathon
5
São Paulo
6
 
7
 
8
 
9
Testing
10
 
11
Practice/ROP
12
Practice/ROP
13
Practice
14
Practice
15
Practice
16
Practice
17
Practice
18
Pole Day
19
Bump Day
20
 
21
 
22
Comm. Day
23
Indy Lights
24
Carb Day
25
Legends Day
26
Indy 500
27
Memorial Day
28
 
29
 
30
 
31
 
 
Color Notes
Green Practice
Dark Blue Time trials
Silver Race day
Red Rained out
Blank No track activity

* Includes days where track activity
was significantly limited due to rain

ROP — denotes Rookie Orientation Program

Comm. — denotes 500 Festival Community Day

Entry list

The official entry list was released May 7, featuring 34 entries.[8] The initial entry list included four rookies (A. J. Allmendinger, Conor Daly, Tristan Vautier, Carlos Muñoz) and four former winners in Hélio Castroneves, Dario Franchitti, Scott Dixon and Buddy Lazier.

Ryan Briscoe—who took pole position for the 2012 race—was unable to secure a full-time drive for the 2013 season, but participated in the race in a fourth car entered by Chip Ganassi Racing.

No. Driver Status Entrant Engine Sponsor
1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet DHL
2 United States A. J. Allmendinger R Team Penske Chevrolet IZOD
3 Brazil Helio Castroneves W Team Penske Chevrolet Shell V-Power/Pennzoil Ultra
4 United States J. R. Hildebrand Panther Racing Chevrolet National Guard/Man of Steel
5 Venezuela E. J. Viso Team Venezuela/Andretti Autosport/HVM Chevrolet PDVSA/Citgo
6 Colombia Sebastián Saavedra Dragon Racing Chevrolet TrueCar
7 France Sebastien Bourdais Dragon Racing Chevrolet McAfee/Bing
8 Australia Ryan Briscoe Chip Ganassi Racing Honda NTT DATA/Hulu
9 New Zealand Scott Dixon W Target Chip Ganassi Racing Honda Target
10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti W Target Chip Ganassi Racing Honda Target
11 Brazil Tony Kanaan KV Racing Technology Chevrolet Hydroxycut/Mouser
12 Australia Will Power Team Penske Chevrolet Verizon
14 Japan Takuma Sato A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda ABC Supply Co./Panasonic
15 United States Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda Midas/Big O Tires
16 United Kingdom James Jakes Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda Acorn Stairlifts
17 Mexico Michel Jourdain, Jr. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda Office Depot
18 Brazil Ana Beatriz Dale Coyne Racing Honda Ipiranga
19 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dale Coyne Racing Honda Boy Scouts of America/Sonny's BBQ
20 United States Ed Carpenter Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet Fuzzy's Vodka
21 United States Josef Newgarden Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing Honda Century 21
22 Spain Oriol Servià Panther DRR Chevrolet Mecum Auto Auctions
25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet RC Cola
26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz R Andretti Autosport Chevrolet Electric Energy Straws/Dially-Ser
27 Canada James Hinchcliffe Andretti Autosport Chevrolet GoDaddy.com
41 United States Conor Daly R A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda ABC Supply Co.
55 France Tristan Vautier R Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda Lucas Oil
60 United States Townsend Bell Panther Racing Chevrolet Sunoco "Turbo"
63 United Kingdom Pippa Mann Dale Coyne Racing Honda Cyclops Gear
77 France Simon Pagenaud Schmidt Hamilton Motorsports Honda Hewlett-Packard
78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro KV Racing Technology Chevrolet Nuclear Energy
81 United Kingdom Katherine Legge Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda Angie's List
83 United States Charlie Kimball Chip Ganassi Racing Honda NovoLog FlexPen
91 United States Buddy Lazier W Lazier Partners Racing Chevrolet Advance Auto Parts
98 Canada Alex Tagliani Bryan Herta Autosport Honda Barracuda Networks/Bowers & Wilkins
Icon Meaning
R Rookie driver
W Former winner

Practice and Rookie orientation

Rookie orientation was scheduled for Thursday April 11. However, due to a poor weather forecast, was postponed. Instead, rookies will participate in special two-hour sessions during the first two days of Indianapolis 500 practice.[9]

Testing – Thursday May 9

A private test focused on NASCAR driver Kurt Busch, who tested a car for Andretti Autosport. Busch conducted the evaluation test with the possibility of attempting "Double Duty" in 2014. Busch reached a top lap of 218 mph.[10]

Practice and Rookie Orientation – Saturday May 11

Rookie orientation featured three drivers, A. J. Allmendinger, Carlos Muñoz, and Tristan Vautier.[11] Conor Daly was absent due to his participation in the GP3 race at Barcelona. All three drivers passed the three-phase rookie test, and became eligible to practice during the veteran sessions.[11] Daly will be given time to complete the test on Monday.
After rookie orientation, a brief rain shower closed the track from 4:00 p.m. to 4:33 p.m. A total of 15 drivers completed 480 laps Saturday without incident.
Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 20 United States Ed Carpenter Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet 220.970
2 21T United States Josef Newgarden Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing Honda 220.920
3 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 220.720
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Practice – Sunday May 12

Rookie Carlos Muñoz led practice on two days, and qualified second on the starting grid.
Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 223.023
2 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 222.825
3 5 Venezuela E. J. Viso Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 222.523
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Practice – Monday May 13

Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 225.100
2 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Chevrolet 225.075
3 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 224.386
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Practice – Tuesday May 14

Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 25 Canada James Hinchcliffe Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 224.210
2 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand Panther Racing Chevrolet 223.652
3 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 223.570
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Practice – Wednesday May 15

Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Target Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 224.235
2 60 United States Townsend Bell Panther Racing Chevrolet 223.716
3 3 Brazil Helio Castroneves Team Penske Chevrolet 223.699
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Practice – Thursday May 16

For the second time of the week, rookie Carlos Muñoz topped the speed chart, with a lap of 225.163 mph, the fastest of the month.[17] It was Andretti Autosport's fourth day leading practice, and the second time they swept the top three speeds for the day. A total of 2,227 laps were completed, with 33 drivers having taken laps during the month. Buddy Lazier made it 33 as he took the track for the first time.[17] He conducted installation laps in preparations for a refresher test scheduled for Friday.
Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 225.163
2 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 225.006
3 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 224.882
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Fast Friday Practice – Friday May 17

Top Practice Speeds
Pos No. Driver Team Engine Speed
1 5 Venezuela E. J. Viso Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 229.537
2 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.754
3 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.520
OFFICIAL DAILY TRACKSIDE REPORT

Time trials

Pole Day time trials: Segment 1 – Saturday May 18

As the segment came to a close, the attention focused on Graham Rahal, Josef Newgarden, and Simona de Silvestro. All three were among the drivers attempting to make the top 24 for the day. Rahal was too slow to make the field, while de Silvestro managed to bump her way in.[20] In the last 30 minutes, Townsend Bell made two attempts, the second of which bumped his way in. With time running out, Newgarden was bumped out by James Jakes. Newgarden ran out of time to get back in line to make an attempt, and would have to wait until Sunday to qualify.
Pole Day – First Segment – Saturday, May 18, 2013
Pos. No. Driver Team Engine Speed Pts.
Positions 1–9
1 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske Chevrolet 228.844  
2 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.282  
3 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.171  
4 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Chevrolet 227.975  
5 20 United States Ed Carpenter Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet 227.952  
6 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 227.893  
7 2 United States A. J. Allmendinger (R) Team Penske Chevrolet 227.761  
8 5 Venezuela E. J. Viso Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 227.612  
9 27 Canada James Hinchcliffe Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 227.493  
Positions 10–24
10 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand Panther Racing Chevrolet 227.441 4
11 98 Canada Alex Tagliani Barracuda Racing Honda 227.386 4
12 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan KV Racing Technology Chevrolet 226.949 4
13 22 Spain Oriol Servià Panther DRR Chevrolet 226.814 4
14 19 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dale Coyne Racing Honda 226.370 4
15 7 France Sebastien Bourdais Dragon Racing Chevrolet 226.196 4
16 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 226.158 4
17 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 226.069 4
18 14 Japan Takuma Sato A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda 225.892 4
19 83 United States Charlie Kimball Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 225.880 4
20 16 United Kingdom James Jakes Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda 225.809 4
21 77 France Simon Pagenaud Schmidt Hamilton Motorsports Honda 225.674 4
22 60 United States Townsend Bell Panther Racing Chevrolet 225.643 4
23 8 Australia Ryan Briscoe Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 225.265 4
24 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro KV Racing Technology Chevrolet 225.226 4
Other Attempts
21 United States Josef Newgarden Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing Honda 225.210
18 Brazil Ana Beatriz Dale Coyne Racing Honda 225.117
15 United States Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda 224.950
6 Colombia Sebastián Saavedra Dragon Racing Chevrolet 224.656
55 France Tristan Vautier (R) Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda 224.156
91 United States Buddy Lazier Lazier Partners Racing Chevrolet 223.073
17 Mexico Michel Jourdain, Jr. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda 218.329
41 United States Conor Daly (R) A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda Waved Off
63 United Kingdom Pippa Mann Dale Coyne Racing Honda No Attempt

Pole Day time trials: Fast Nine Shootout – Saturday May 18

Ed Carpenter won the pole position.
Marco Andretti was the first driver to make a significant improvement on his starting position, putting himself tentatively on the pole. The next car out, Ed Carpenter, raised eyebrows with a first lap of 229.347 mph, and a four-lap average of 228.762 mph.[20] Carpenter bumped Andretti off the top spot, but still had four drivers waiting to make attempts. Rookie Carlos Muñoz squeezed himself on to the front row, landing in second starting position.[20] The final driver with a shot for the pole was Will Power, who was fastest in Segment 1. Power's first lap was in the 229 mph range, but his third and fourth laps dropped off significantly. Power ended up 6th, and Ed Carpenter secured his first Indy 500 pole position.[21] It was the first pole for an American-born driver since Sam Hornish, Jr. in 2006, and the first by an owner/driver since A. J. Foyt in 1975.
Pole Day – Fast Nine Shootout – Saturday, May 18, 2013
Pos. No. Driver Team Engine Speed Pts.
1 20 United States Ed Carpenter Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet 228.762 15
2 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.342 13
3 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.261 12
4 5 Venezuela E. J. Viso Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 228.150 11
5 2 United States A. J. Allmendinger (R) Team Penske Chevrolet 228.099 10
6 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske Chevrolet 228.087 9
7 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 227.904 8
8 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske Chevrolet 227.762 7
9 27 Canada James Hinchcliffe Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 227.070 6

Bump Day time trials – Sunday May 19

Bump Day – Sunday, May 19, 2013
Pos. No. Driver Team Engine Speed Pts.
25 21 United States Josef Newgarden Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing Honda 225.731 3
26 15 United States Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda 225.007 3
27 6 Colombia Sebastián Saavedra Dragon Racing Chevrolet 224.929 3
28 55 France Tristan Vautier (R) Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda 224.873 3
29 18 Brazil Ana Beatriz Dale Coyne Racing Honda 224.184 3
30 63 United Kingdom Pippa Mann Dale Coyne Racing Honda 224.005 3
31 41 United States Conor Daly (R) A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda 223.582 3
32 91 United States Buddy Lazier Lazier Partners Racing Chevrolet 223.442 3
33 81 United Kingdom Katherine Legge Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda 223.176 3

Starting grid

(R) = Indianapolis 500 rookie; (W) = Former Indianapolis 500 winner

Row Inside Middle Outside
1 20 United States Ed Carpenter 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) 25 United States Marco Andretti
2 5 Venezuela E.J. Viso 2 United States A. J. Allmendinger (R) 12 Australia Will Power
3 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves (W) 27 Canada James Hinchcliffe
4 4 United States J.R. Hildebrand 98 Canada Alex Tagliani 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan
5 22 Spain Oriol Servià 19 United Kingdom Justin Wilson 7 France Sebastien Bourdais
6 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (W) 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (W) 14 Japan Takuma Sato
7 83 United States Charlie Kimball 16 United Kingdom James Jakes 77 France Simon Pagenaud
8 60 United States Townsend Bell 8 Australia Ryan Briscoe 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro
9 21 United States Josef Newgarden 15 United States Graham Rahal 6 Colombia Sebastián Saavedra
10 55 France Tristan Vautier (R) 18 Brazil Ana Beatriz 63 United Kingdom Pippa Mann
11 41 United States Conor Daly (R) 91 United States Buddy Lazier (W) 81 United Kingdom Katherine Legge

Failed to qualify

Race summary

External video
2013 Indy 500 race highlights

Start

For the first time since 1987, multiple three-time winners of the race were in contention (Franchitti and Castroneves); however, neither driver ended up being a serious threat to win the race.[23] The race started at 12:15 p.m. EDT (4:15 p.m. UTC). Ed Carpenter started in pole position,[23] but Marco Andretti, who started in third position, soon took the lead. The initial start and first laps commenced without any crashes or yellow flags.[24]

First half

The first caution flag flew when JR Hildebrand hit the wall in Turn 1 on the fourth lap of the race, just after posting the fastest time for a lap in the race.[25] Hildebrand had almost won the 2011 Indianapolis 500 but lost due to a crash during the final lap, and in the 2013 was then was out of contention after the early crash.[25] On lap 27, driver Sebastian Saavedra was bumped between turns three and four and subsequently crashed into the wall outside of turn four. Driver Pippa Mann later apologized for the accident on her website.[26] The first half of the race featured many lead changes, with Tony Kanaan, Carpenter, and Andretti exchanging the leading spot; however, just before the halfway point in the race, AJ Allmendinger passed Kanaan to take the lead, with Ryan Hunter-Reay and Andretti following behind in third and fourth, respectively.[27]

Second half

Allmendinger, leading with 70 laps to go, had a clasp from his seatbelt come loose and was forced to make a pitstop so his pit crew could refasten it, losing the lead.[28] Driver Graham Rahal then crashed with 7 laps left to go, bringing the race under a yellow caution flag.[28] Ryan Hunter-Reay had been in the lead during this caution flag, but when the caution ended, Kanaan, who ran in the top ten most of the race, slipped by Hunter-Reay to take the lead.[24] Just when Kanaan led in the first turn, Dario Franchitti crashed with three laps left, causing another yellow caution flag that would last for the remainder of the race.[24] Under the yellow flag, Kanaan finished the final 3 1/2 laps to win his first Indy 500, with Carlos Muñoz in second place and Hunter-Reay in third. The race featured more lead changes than any previous Indianapolis 500 with 68, twice the number of the previous record (34), set in 2012.[24] Kanaan said after the race, "I was looking at the stands, and it was unbelievable ... This is it, man. I made it. Finally they're going to put my ugly face on this trophy".[24]

Race results

Pos No. Driver Team Engine Laps Time/Retired Pit Stops Grid Laps Led Points1
1 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan KV Racing Technology Chevrolet 200 2:40:03.4181 6 12 34 55
2 26 Colombia Carlos Muñoz (R) Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 200 + 0.1159 6 2 12 54
3 1 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 200 + 0.2480 6 7 26 44
4 25 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 200 + 0.3634 6 3 31 45
5 19 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dale Coyne Racing Honda 200 + 0.8138 6 14 34
6 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves (W) Team Penske Chevrolet 200 + 3.0086 6 8 1 36
7 2 United States A. J. Allmendinger (R) Team Penske Chevrolet 200 + 4.0107 7 5 23 37
8 77 France Simon Pagenaud Schmidt Hamilton Motorsports Honda 200 + 4.2609 6 21 28
9 83 United States Charlie Kimball Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 200 + 5.6864 8 19 26
10 20 United States Ed Carpenter Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet 200 + 6.8425 6 1 37 38
11 22 Spain Oriol Servià Panther DRR Chevrolet 200 + 7.8633 6 13 23
12 8 Australia Ryan Briscoe Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 200 + 8.9216 6 23 22
13 14 Japan Takuma Sato A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda 200 + 10.2602 6 18 21
14 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (W) Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 200 + 11.3858 6 16 1 21
15 18 Brazil Ana Beatriz Dale Coyne Racing Honda 200 + 12.2657 7 29 18
16 55 France Tristan Vautier (R) Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda 200 + 15.3045 6 28 17
17 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro KV Racing Technology Chevrolet 200 + 15.7201 8 24 17
18 5 Venezuela E. J. Viso Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 200 + 17.8056 6 4 5 24
19 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske Chevrolet 200 + 22.5403 7 6 16 21
20 16 United Kingdom James Jakes Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda 199 + 1 lap 8 20 5 15
21 27 Canada James Hinchcliffe Andretti Autosport Chevrolet 199 + 1 lap 7 9 7 16
22 41 United States Conor Daly (R) A. J. Foyt Enterprises Honda 198 + 2 laps 7 31 11
23 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (W) Chip Ganassi Racing Honda 197 Contact 6 17 11
24 98 Canada Alex Tagliani Barracuda Racing Honda 196 + 4 laps 6 11 1 11
25 15 United States Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda 193 Contact 7 26 8
26 81 United Kingdom Katherine Legge Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda 193 + 7 laps 9 33 8
27 60 United States Townsend Bell Panther Racing Chevrolet 192 + 8 laps 6 22 1 10
28 21 United States Josef Newgarden Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing Honda 191 + 9 laps 8 25 8
29 7 France Sebastien Bourdais Dragon Racing Chevrolet 178 Contact 5 15 9
30 63 United Kingdom Pippa Mann Dale Coyne Racing Honda 46 Contact 2 30 8
31 91 United States Buddy Lazier (W) Lazier Partners Racing Chevrolet 44 Mechanical 2 32 8
32 6 Colombia Sebastián Saavedra Dragon Racing Chevrolet 34 Contact 1 27 8
33 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand Panther Racing Chevrolet 3 Contact 0 10 9
Under caution
OFFICIAL BOX SCORE
Notes

1 Points include qualification points from Time Trials, 1 point for leading a lap, and 2 points for most laps led.

Race statistics

Lap Leaders
Laps Leader Laps Leader
1–8 Carpenter 123 Tagliani
9 Kanaan 124 Bell
10–12 Carpenter 125 Hinchcliffe
13–14 Kanaan 126–130Andretti
15–16 Andretti 131 Hunter-Reay
17–20 Kanaan 132–135Viso
21–22 Andretti 136 Hunter-Reay
23 Kanaan 137–142Allmendinger
24–26 Andretti 143–144Hunter-Reay
27–28 Kanaan 145 Castroneves
29 Andretti 146–150Andretti
30 Hunter-Reay 151 Hunter-Reay
31–32 Power 152–154Muñoz
33–37 Jakes 155 Dixon
38–42 Carpenter 156–157Hinchcliffe
43 Andretti 158–164Hunter-Reay
44–50 Carpenter 165–167Allmendinger
51–53 Andretti 168 Andretti
54–58 Carpenter 169 Hunter-Reay
59–60 Hunter-Reay 170 Andretti
61 Andretti 171 Hunter-Reay
62–63 Hunter-Reay 172–173Andretti
64–72 Carpenter 174 Kanaan
73–74 Kanaan 175 Andretti
75–88 Power 176–177Kanaan
89 Kanaan 178 Muñoz
90 Viso 179 Andretti
91–92 Muñoz 180–184Muñoz
93–97 Kanaan 185–188Hinchcliffe
98–111 Allmendinger189 Kanaan
112 Kanaan 190 Hunter-Reay
113–114Andretti 191–192Kanaan
115–120Kanaan 193–197Hunter-Reay
121 Hunter-Reay 198–200Kanaan
122 Muñoz

Total laps led
Laps Leader
Ed Carpenter 37
Tony Kanaan 34
Marco Andretti 31
Ryan Hunter-Reay 26
A. J. Allmendinger 23
Will Power 16
Carlos Muñoz 12
James Hinchcliffe 7
James Jakes 5
E. J. Viso 5
Helio Castroneves 1
Townsend Bell 1
Alex Tagliani 1
Scott Dixon 1

Cautions: 5 for 21 laps
Laps Reason
4–6 J. R. Hildebrand crash (turn 2)
35–42 Sebastien Saavedra crash (turn 4)
57–60 Takuma Sato spin (turn 2)
194–196 Graham Rahal crash (turn 2)
198–200 Dario Franchitti crash (turn 1)

Record and milestones

Numerous race records and statistical milestones were set during the race:

Source: Daily Trackside Report

Broadcasting

Television

The race was broadcast live in high definition in the United States on ABC. A newcomer to the telecast was Lindsay Czarniak, served as host. Brent Musburger, who served as host from 2005–2012, departed the broadcast crew.[29]

Australian broadcasts moved to Foxtel for 2013.

Time trials, Carb Day, and the 500 Festival Parade were covered live in the United States on NBC Sports Network.[30] Two separate crews will be used for the qualifying weekend and final practice.

For qualifying, the on-air crew was Leigh Diffey, Gil de Ferran, and Jon Beekhuis in the booth, with Kevin Lee, Marty Snider, Robin Miller, and Will Buxton in the pits and garage area.[31] de Ferran substituted for regular Townsend Bell, who is participating in the event.[31]

For final practice, the on-air crew was Bob Jenkins, Beekhuis, and Wally Dallenbach, Jr. in the booth, with pit reporters Snider, Lee, and Miller.[32] Jenkins was filling in for Diffey, who was leading NBC's Monaco Grand Prix broadcast. The Freedom 100 was covered by Mike King and Jake Query, and the parade coverage on Saturday was anchored by Jenkins, Diane Willis, and Lee.[32]

ABC Television
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reporters

Host: Lindsay Czarniak
Announcer: Marty Reid
Color: Scott Goodyear
Color: Eddie Cheever

Jerry Punch
Vince Welch
Jamie Little
Rick DeBruhl

Radio

The IMS Radio Network broadcast the race live on approximately 400 affiliates, as well as AFN, the LeSEA broadcasting network, and World Harvest Radio.[33] The broadcast was carried on XM channel 94 and Sirius channel 212.[34] Mike King served as anchor for the 15th and final year.[33] King resigned his position in late-October 2013.[35] Historian Donald Davidson celebrated his 50th year as an official member of the network broadcast. Several drivers, including A. J. Foyt and Bobby Unser recorded celebratory greetings. The commercial out-cues used in 2013 were the drivers (like 2010) during the pre-race coverage, and the historical chief announcers during the race (like 2011-2012).

Katie Hargitt, who had worked other races during the year as a pit reporter, joined the crew for the first time. Her duties were limited to interviews during the pre-race coverage. During the first half of the race, Mike King interviewed Indiana Governor Mike Pence in the broadcast booth.

1070 The Fan broadcast nightly with Trackside with Curt Cavin and Kevin Lee, followed by Donald Davidson's The Talk of Gasoline Alley.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Mike King
Driver expert: Davey Hamilton
Color: Paul Page
Historian: Donald Davidson
Analyst: Jerry Baker

Turn 1: not used
Turn 2: Jake Query
Turn 3: Mark Jaynes
Turn 4: Chris Denari

Dave Furst (north pits)
Michael Young (north-center pits)
Nick Yeoman (south-center pits)
Kevin Lee (south pits)
Katie Hargitt (pre-race)
Dave Wilson (garages)

References

  1. "Indy 500: Final Rating Avoids Low, But Race Least-Viewed Ever". Sports Media Watch. 2013-05-29. Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  2. The Talk of Gasoline AlleyWFNI, May 13, 2013
  3. Lewandowski, Dave (2012-09-30). "$1 million bonus awaits new Triple Crown winner". IndyCar.com. Retrieved 2012-10-22.
  4. Woodyard, Chris (2013-05-02). "Chevrolet Corvette Stingray will pace Indianapolis 500". USA Today. Retrieved 2013-05-10.
  5. "Firestone to remain tire supplier through 2018". IndyCar.com. December 21, 2012. Retrieved December 21, 2012.
  6. Hunsinger Benbow, Dana (2013-05-16). "Indy 500: Zip line up and running at Indianapolis Motor Speedway". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 2013-05-017. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  7. Lewandowski, Dave (2013-05-16). "Rookie Munoz Fastest In Day 6". Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
  8. "3 past winners, 4 series champs among 33 entries". IndyCar.com. 2013-05-07. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
  9. Cavin, Curt (2013-04-07). "Paddock Talk: Briscoe makes 30 at Indy". IndyStar. Retrieved 2013-04-07.
  10. Cavin, Curt (2013-05-10). "Indianapolis 500 blog: On Kurt Busch and Marco Andretti". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved 2013-05-10.
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External links

Previous race:
2013 São Paulo Indy 300
IndyCar Series
2013 season
Next race:
2013 Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix
Previous race:
2012 Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis 500 Next race:
2014 Indianapolis 500
Preceded by
185.981 mph
(1990 Indianapolis 500)
Record for the Indianapolis 500 fastest average speed
187.433
mph
Succeeded by
Incumbent