2010 Indianapolis 500

94th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning body Indy Racing League
Season 2010 IndyCar season
Date May 30, 2010
Winner United Kingdom Dario Franchitti
Winning team Target Chip Ganassi Racing
Average speed 161.623 mph (260.107 km/h)
Pole position Brazil Hélio Castroneves
Pole speed 227.970 mph (366.882 km/h)
Fastest qualifier Brazil Hélio Castroneves
Rookie of the Year Switzerland Simona de Silvestro[1]
Most laps led United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (155)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthem Jewel[2]
"Back Home Again in Indiana" Jim Nabors
Starting Command Mari Hulman George
Pace car Chevrolet Camaro SS[3]
Pace car driver Robin Roberts[4]
Starter Paul Blevin
Honorary starter Jack Nicholson[5]
Estimated attendance 300,000 + (est.)
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Announcers Marty Reid
Scott Goodyear
Eddie Cheever, Jr.[6]
Nielsen Ratings 3.6,[7] 4.0 overnight[8] / 10
Chronology
Previous Next
2009 2011

The 94th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday May 30, 2010. It was the 15th Indy 500 sanctioned by the Indy Racing League, and was the premier event of the 2010 IZOD IndyCar Series season. The race was won by Dario Franchitti, ahead of Dan Wheldon and Marco Andretti. Tony Kanaan, who had started in the final position, ran as high as second during the race before finishing eleventh.

The race was the second of the three-year-long Centennial era, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the opening of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the 100th anniversary of the first Indianapolis 500. It was the 53rd time the race had been held on a May 30. This year marked the first race with four female drivers (repeated in 2011), and Simona de Silvestro was awarded Rookie of the Year.

Event news

Schedule

The 2010 schedule was a two-week condensed schedule, but featured only one fewer day of on-track activity compared to 2009.[14]

Race schedule — May 2010
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
Kansas
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
 
7
 
8
Mini-Marathon
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
 
14
 
15
ROP/Practice
16
ROP/Practice
17
Practice
18
Practice
19
Practice
20
Practice
21
Practice
22
Pole Day
23
Bump Day
24
 
25
 
26
Comm. Day
27
 
28
Carb Day
29
Parade
30
Indy 500
31
Memorial Day
         
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. Day — denotes 500 Festival Community Day

Entry list

Practice

Saturday May 15

May 15, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Best
Speed
1 3T Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 226.603 mph (365 km/h)
2 10T United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 226.535 mph (365 km/h)
3 9T New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 226.237 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Sunday May 16

May 16, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Best
Speed
1 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 227.046 mph (365 km/h)
2 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 226.202 mph (364 km/h)
3 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 226.044 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Monday May 17

Tuesday May 18

May 18, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Best
Speed
1 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 226.549 mph (365 km/h)
2 32 Brazil Mario Moraes KV Racing Technology 225.913 mph (364 km/h)
3 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 225.751 mph (363 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Wednesday May 19

May 19, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Best
Speed
1 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 226.971 mph (365 km/h)
2 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 226.633 mph (365 km/h)
3 77 Canada Alex Tagliani FAZZT Race Team 226.002 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Thursday May 20

May 20, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Best
Speed
1 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan Andretti Autosport 226.775 mph (365 km/h)
2 15 Canada Paul Tracy KV Racing Technology 226.322 mph (364 km/h)
3 06 Japan Hideki Mutoh Newman/Haas Racing 226.230 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Friday May 21 – Fast Friday

Danica Patrick's car on Fast Friday.
May 21, 2010 – Top Practice Speeds
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Best
Speed
1 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 226.558 mph (365 km/h)
2 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske 226.429 mph (364 km/h)
3 77 Canada Alex Tagliani FAZZT Race Team 226.153 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Qualifying

Saturday May 22 – Pole Day

Scott Dixon qualifies during the "shootout" segment. Dixon qualified for the sixth starting position.
Pole Day – Saturday, May 22, 2010
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Qualifying
Speed
Points
"Shootout" competitors (positions 1-9)
1 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 227.970 mph (367 km/h) 15
2 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske 227.578 mph (366 km/h) 13
3 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 226.990 mph (365 km/h) 12
4 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 226.554 mph (365 km/h) 11
5 77 Canada Alex Tagliani FAZZT Race Team 226.390 mph (364 km/h) 10
6 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 226.233 mph (364 km/h) 9
7 30 United States Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Racing 225.519 mph (363 km/h) 8
8 20 United States Ed Carpenter Panther Racing 224.507 mph (361 km/h) 7
9 06 Japan Hideki Mutoh Newman/Haas Racing 223.487 mph (360 km/h) 6
Positions 10-24
10 99 United States Townsend Bell Sam Schmidt Motorsports 225.097 mph (362 km/h) 4
11 22 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 225.050 mph (362 km/h) 4
12 2 Brazil Raphael Matos De Ferran Dragon Racing 225.028 mph (362 km/h) 4
13 32 Brazil Mario Moraes KV Racing Technology 224.888 mph (362 km/h) 4
14 21 United States Davey Hamilton De Ferran Dragon Racing 224.852 mph (362 km/h) 4
15 24 United Kingdom Mike Conway Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 224.583 mph (361 km/h) 4
16 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 224.575 mph (361 km/h) 4
17 37 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport 224.547 mph (361 km/h) 4
18 4 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon Panther Racing 224.464 mph (361 km/h) 4
19 8 Venezuela E. J. Viso KV Racing Technology 224.380 mph (361 km/h) 4
20 23 South Africa Tomas Scheckter Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 224.261 mph (361 km/h) 4
21 25 Brazil Ana Beatriz (R) Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 224.243 mph (361 km/h) 4
22 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro (R) HVM Racing 224.228 mph (361 km/h) 4
23 7 United States Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 224.217 mph (361 km/h) 4
24 36 Belgium Bertrand Baguette (R) Conquest Racing 224.189 mph (361 km/h) 4
OFFICIAL REPORT

Sunday May 23 – Bump Day

In the first hour of time trials, early runs filled the field to 33 cars. Several drivers put in safe speeds, including John Andretti, Alex Lloyd, Bruno Junqueira, and Sarah Fisher. A. J. Foyt IV parted ways with his grandfather's team and Jaques Lazier was drafted as his replacement.

As of 1 p.m., the rear of the field consisted of the following drivers:

At about 1:30 pm, practice began as the 80 °F temperatures made the track very hard to get good speed. Most drivers stayed off the track during the hottest period of the afternoon. At 5:23 p.m., Tony Kanaan took to the track in his repaired back-up car, and bumped his way into the field with a safe speed of 224.072 mph. Kanaan's run bumped Saavedra from the field. Saavedra experienced trouble of his own, as he wrecked his car during practice Sunday afternoon. Saavedra was sent to the hospital, and was unable to defend his qualifying speeds. As of 5:30 p.m., Romancini was now on the bubble.

Romancini withdrew his speed, and re-qualified, this time much faster. Jay Howard was now on the bubble. With 20 minutes remaining, Takuma Sato bumped Howard from the field. Paul Tracy now found himself on the bubble. Jay Howard then attempted to bump his way back in but was too slow.

In a surprising move, Paul Tracy withdrew his speed at 5:50 p.m. Tracy hoped to put in a safer speed, and prevent Howard from getting another chance to qualify. Tracy's withdraw re-instated Howard to the field temporarily. Tracy, however, got very loose in the hot conditions, and his speeds ended up being slower. He waved off after only two laps, and got back into the qualifying line. With only a couple minutes left in the day, Howard decided to withdraw his speed and make another attempt, in order to keep Tracy off the track. Howard's gamble backfired, however, as his speed much was slower this time. The 6 o'clock gun fired with Tracy still waiting in line. Since Howard withdrew, Sebastian Saavedra's car was re-instated to 33rd position, and he held on to make the field, while lying in a hospital bed.

Milka Duno made three attempts during the day, and none were run to completion. Jaques Lazier, who took over at the Foyt team, found little speed in his three attempts, and also missed the field. Howard and Tracy, however, were the heartbreak stories of the day.

After qualifying closed, Andretti Autosport decided to replace Tony Kanaan's qualified back-up car with the primary machine. The decision forced Kanaan to move to the 33rd position, but since he qualified 32nd, it was a drop of only one spot on the grid.

Bump Day – Sunday, May 23, 2010
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Qualifying
Speed
Points
25 33 Brazil Bruno Junqueira FAZZT Race Team 225.662 mph (363 km/h) 3
26 19 United Kingdom Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing 224.783 mph (362 km/h) 3
27 34 Brazil Mario Romancini (R) Conquest Racing 224.641 mph (362 km/h) 3
28 43 United States John Andretti Andretti Autosport 224.518 mph (361 km/h) 3
29 67 United States Sarah Fisher Sarah Fisher Racing 224.434 mph (361 km/h) 3
30 14 Brazil Vitor Meira A. J. Foyt Enterprises 224.388 mph (361 km/h) 3
31 5 Japan Takuma Sato (R) KV Racing Technology 224.178 mph (361 km/h) 3
32 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan Andretti Autosport 224.072 mph (361 km/h) 3
33 29 Colombia Sebastian Saavedra Bryan Herta Autosport 223.634 mph (360 km/h) 3
OFFICIAL REPORT

Carb Day

Indianapolis 500 Final Practice – Friday May 28

Pit Stop Challenge

  First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                                     
       
  Danica Patrick 8.855  
    Will Power 9.517  
Scott Dixon 9.462
Will Power 7.968  
  Danica Patrick  
  Helio Castroneves  
       
       
  Helio Castroneves 8.558
    Tony Kanaan 9.296  
Ryan Hunter-Reay DNF
Tony Kanaan  
  Helio Castroneves 8.001
  Hideki Mutoh 9.547
       
       
  Ryan Briscoe 9.628
    Hideki Mutoh 8.858  
Hideki Mutoh 8.875
Dan Wheldon 9.622  
  Hideki Mutoh 8.296
  Justin Wilson 9.255  
       
       
  Justin Wilson 8.097
    Marco Andretti 9.210  
7 Justin Wilson 8.408
Dario Franchitti 8.801  

Starting grid

Will Power's #12 Verizon Wireless machine, in which he qualified in the middle of row 1.
Row Inside Middle Outside
1 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves (W) 12 Australia Will Power 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (W)
2 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe 77 Canada Alex Tagliani 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (W)
3 30 United States Graham Rahal 20 United States Ed Carpenter 06 Japan Hideki Mutoh
4 99 United States Townsend Bell 22 United Kingdom Justin Wilson 2 Brazil Raphael Matos
5 32 Brazil Mario Moraes 21 United States Davey Hamilton 24 United Kingdom Mike Conway
6 26 United States Marco Andretti 37 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay 4 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (W)
7 8 Venezuela E. J. Viso 23 South Africa Tomas Scheckter 25 Brazil Ana Beatriz (R)
8 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro (R) 7 United States Danica Patrick 36 Belgium Bertrand Baguette (R)
9 33 Brazil Bruno Junqueira 19 United Kingdom Alex Lloyd 34 Brazil Mario Romancini (R)
10 43 United States John Andretti 67 United States Sarah Fisher 14 Brazil Vitor Meira
11 5 Japan Takuma Sato (R) 29 Colombia Sebastian Saavedra (R) 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan*

Failed to qualify

Race summary

Start

After the traditional starting command by Mari Hulman George, the pace car, driven by Robin Roberts, led the cars through the pace laps, followed by a special two-seater car driven by Michael Andretti and carrying Mark Wahlberg. Once the pace car came off the field, the two-seater sped around to join the back of the field, and honorary starter Jack Nicholson waved the green flag to start the race. (Nicholson refused to leave the flagstand and waved the green flag on the first two restarts, on laps 5 and 12.)[21][22][23]

On the first lap, Davey Hamilton spun on turn two, bringing out the yellow flag. Hamilton blamed Tomas Scheckter, who had narrowly passed Hamilton on the outside, forcing Hamilton to correct. "Tomas Scheckter's an idiot... You know, he does it every year. I mean, it's not a surprise with him, and he gets away with it," said Hamilton.[21][22] In just the half-lap of green-flag racing, however, Dario Franchitti had taken the lead, while Tony Kanaan had moved from the 33rd, final starting position to 25th.[21][24]

The race returned to green-flag racing on lap 5, but a spin by Bruno Junqueira brought out another caution for laps 8–11. By this time, Kanaan had moved up to 17th.[21][22]

First half

Franchitti held the lead for a long period of green-flag racing, until Will Power passed him for the lead on lap 31. However, on a pit stop, Power left before the fuel hose had been completely detached, leaving a coil dangling from his car. This would lead to a pit drive-through penalty for Power, dropping Power to 25th, as well as a caution period for debris as part of the coil fell onto the track. While Power would repeatedly work his way towards the front of the field, additional pit problems later in the race would lead to only an 8th-place finish.[21][22][25][26]

Franchitti would maintain his lead beyond the halfway point of the race. Meanwhile, John Andretti spun into the wall on lap 65, and on the ensuing round of yellow-flag pit stops, both Scott Dixon and Raphael Matos lost wheels while pulling out and had to return to their pits. Kanaan improved eight spots, from 12th to 4th, on the same round of pit stops. Matos's race did not last much longer, as he spun into the wall on lap 73.[21][22]

Second half

Vitor Meira hit the turn two wall in lap 106, bringing out the race's next caution. Ed Carpenter, who had been running well, had to come into the pits before they were officially open to avoid running out of fuel, but the rules then required him to come in again once the pits were open, costing him several spots.[21] While most drivers came into the pits on the yellow, Tomas Scheckter stayed out, briefly taking the lead, but Franchitti quickly took it back after the race returned to green-flag status.[22]

A long stretch of green-flag racing followed. Kanaan passed Hélio Castroneves and Scheckter to take the second spot, but Franchitti pulled away and had a lead of 9.7 seconds over Kanaan by lap 142.[21] A series of green-flag pits on laps 143–147 resulted in Marco Andretti and Ryan Briscoe briefly taking the lead, in turn, before they had to pit and Franchitti re-emerged as the leader, with Andretti Autosport teammates Andretti and Kanaan in second and third, respectively.[21][22] On the same round of pits, Castroneves stalled his car leaving the pits, dropping him from third to sixteenth. Continuing Penske Racing's problems, Briscoe crashed into the turn four wall on lap 148.[25] Most drivers stayed out during this caution, but Castroneves pitted, hoping that there would be enough additional laps under caution to extend his fuel mileage and allow him to finish the race without pitting again. Kanaan passed Andretti under the following green flag to retake the second position.[21]

Finish

A spin by rookie Sebastian Saavedra on lap 161 brought out another caution, and most drivers came into the pits, but Mike Conway, Justin Wilson, Castroneves, and Graham Rahal all stayed out, taking the top four spots, respectively. In the end, none of the four had enough fuel to complete the race and all had to pit before the end of the race under a green flag, giving Franchitti the lead again on lap 192, with Kanaan again in second.[21][22] Kanaan's hopes for a "worst-to-first" race came to an end on lap 196 when he had to come in for additional fuel.[21]

Franchitti slowed in the final laps to conserve fuel, but he was still able to stay ahead of second-place Dan Wheldon, who was also trying to save fuel. A dramatic crash occurred in the final lap as Ryan Hunter-Reay ran out of fuel and slowed, and Mike Conway hit Hunter-Reay's car, flipping Conway's car and sending it airborne and into the protective fence, shattering the car. Conway's teammate Ana Beatriz spun into the inside wall while avoiding the crash ahead of her. This brought out a final caution, and Franchitti led the field to the checkered flag, winning his second Indianapolis 500.[21]

Conway was airlifted to nearby Methodist Hospital with a broken lower left leg.[27] Of the crash, Hunter-Reay said, "I'm sorry Mike is hurt... It was totally uncalled for. We weren't going to make it anyway. When you run out of fuel in these cars, it's like hitting the brakes. In hindsight, we should have stopped for fuel." It was the only multi-car crash of the race.[28] Two spectators were treated for minor injuries from the crash.[29] ESPN SportsCenter and ESPN'S NASCAR Now program reported on May 31, 2010 Conway also suffered compression to his lower back and suffered a bad fracture to one of his vertebrae in his neck.

Dario Franchitti heads through the pits towards Victory Lane after winning.

After skulling the traditional bottle of milk for the winner, Franchitti stated "this tastes just as good the second time", referring to his victory in the 2007 race.[30] Franchitti led for 155 of the race's 200 laps. He survived the final 36 laps without taking a pit stop.[31]

Unofficial Top Six Finishers

  1. Dario Franchitti
  2. Dan Wheldon
  3. Alex Lloyd
  4. Scott Dixon
  5. Danica Patrick
  6. Marco Andretti

Post-race summary

Franchitti's team's owner, Chip Ganassi had already won the Daytona 500 with Jamie McMurray. When McMurray won the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis, Ganassi became the first owner to win the Daytona 500, Indy 500, and Brickyard 400 in the same season.[31] The Harley J. Earl Trophy had been brought to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway—the first time it had ever been away from Daytona—and it stood side by side with the Borg-Warner Trophy.[21]

Dan Wheldon finished second. In a post-race interview, he suggested that it was a mistake to be as conservative as he was on fuel: "I could see [Franchitti] at the end... unfortunately, I should have kept going 'cause I had fuel in the car when it came into the pits."[21] However, Franchitti also had additional fuel, with 1.6 gallons remaining in his tank at the end of the race, even after taking a cool-down lap.[29] It was the second consecutive second-place finish for Wheldon at the Indianapolis 500, and, along with Vitor Meira's finish in 2008, the third for Panther Racing.[32]

Marco Andretti was initially reported to have finished sixth,[21] but a post-race review revealed that three drivers had passed him during the final caution period, and he was restored to third place in the official race results, giving him his third top-three finish in five starts at the Indianapolis 500. The same review also revealed that Simona de Silvestro passed Mario Romancini after the caution came out, making Romancini, not de Silvestro, the highest finishing rookie, at 13th.[33] Marco Andretti was one of the three Andretti Autosport drivers (out of the team's five entries) to finish in the top eleven, even though none of the Andretti drivers had qualified higher than sixteenth. As late as lap 191, four of the Andretti drivers had been in the top nine.[24] Also among the Andretti drivers was Danica Patrick; starting twenty-third and finishing sixth, she scored the highest placement of the four female drivers in the race.[34]

Hélio Castroneves, who started from the pole and was considered a pre-race favorite, finished ninth after his problematic pit stop, and his late-race fuel strategy failed to pan out.[35] Castroneves praised Franchitti and took responsibility for his own finish, saying "I have to say, Dario was dominant. But this was the first time I feel like I let my guys down. We didn't have the best car, but we were better than ninth, certainly."[25]

Tony Kanaan, who had started in last place and had run as high as second, finished eleventh after he had to pit for a final splash of fuel, but still garnered much applause from nearby fans as he exited his car after the race.[24] Kanaan praised former teammate Franchitti: "The best car and the best driver today won the race."[21]

Race results

94th Indianapolis 500 – Race Results
Rank Car
No.
Driver Team Car Laps/Retired Laps Led Points
1 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (W) Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 155 52
2 4 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (W) Panther Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 40
3 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 1 35
4 19 United Kingdom Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 32
5 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (W) Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 30
6 7 United States Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 28
7 22 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 11 26
8 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 5 24
9 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves (W) Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 3 22
10 77 Canada Alex Tagliani FAZZT Race Team Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 20
11 11 Brazil Tony Kanaan Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 19
12 30 United States Graham Rahal Rahal Letterman Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 18
13 34 Brazil Mario Romancini (R) Conquest Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 17
14 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro (R) HVM Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 0 16
15 23 South Africa Tomas Scheckter Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 5 15
16 99 United States Townsend Bell Sam Schmidt Motorsports Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 0 14
17 20 United States Ed Carpenter Panther Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 0 13
18 37 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 198 (Contact) 0 12
19 24 United Kingdom Mike Conway Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 198 (Contact) 15 12
20 5 Japan Takuma Sato (R) KV Racing Technology Dallara/Honda/Firestone 198 0 12
21 25 Brazil Ana Beatriz (R) Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 196 (Contact) 0 12
22 36 Belgium Bertrand Baguette (R) Conquest Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 183 0 12
23 29 Colombia Sebastian Saavedra (R) Bryan Herta Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 159 (Contact) 0 12
24 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone 147 (Contact) 5 12
25 8 Venezuela E. J. Viso KV Racing Technology Dallara/Honda/Firestone 139 (Contact) 0 10
26 67 United States Sarah Fisher Sarah Fisher Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 125 (Contact) 0 10
27 14 Brazil Vitor Meira A. J. Foyt Enterprises Dallara/Honda/Firestone 105 (Contact) 0 10
28 06 Japan Hideki Mutoh Newman/Haas Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 76 (Handling) 0 10
29 2 Brazil Raphael Matos De Ferran Dragon Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 72 (Contact) 0 10
30 43 United States John Andretti Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 62 (Contact) 0 10
31 32 Brazil Mario Moraes KV Racing Technology Dallara/Honda/Firestone 17 (Contact) 0 10
32 33 Brazil Bruno Junqueira FAZZT Race Team Dallara/Honda/Firestone 7 (Contact) 0 10
33 21 United States Davey Hamilton De Ferran Dragon Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 0 (Contact) 0 10
Race average speed: 161.623 mph (260.107 km/h)
Lead changes: 13 between 8 drivers
Cautions: 9 for 44 laps
OFFICIAL REPORT

Race Leaders

8 drivers led the race, with a total of 13 lead changes.

Laps Leader
1–30 Dario Franchitti
31–35 Will Power
36 Dario Franchitti
37–38 Ryan Briscoe
39–108 Dario Franchitti
109–113 Tomas Scheckter
114–142 Dario Franchitti
143 Marco Andretti
144–146 Ryan Briscoe
147–162 Dario Franchitti
163–177 Mike Conway
178–188 Justin Wilson
189–191 Hélio Castroneves
192–200 Dario Franchitti

Driver Laps led
Dario Franchitti 155
Mike Conway 15
Justin Wilson 11
Tomas Scheckter 5
Ryan Briscoe 5
Will Power 5
Hélio Castroneves 3
Marco Andretti 1

Broadcasting

Television

The race was televised in high definition in the United States on ABC, the 46th consecutive year on that network. Marty Reid served as anchor. The telecast utilized the Side-by-Side format for commercial breaks.

"Fast Friday" Practice, Time trials, and Carb Day were shown live in high definition on Versus. Bob Jenkins served as anchor, along with Robbie Buhl and Jon Beekhuis as analysts. Jack Arute, Robbie Floyd, and Lindy Thackston covered the pits.

The race was carried live on TSN and on RDS in Canada,[36] and on ESPN Latin America. In Brazil, the race was carried live on Band TV/BandSports.

ABC Television
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reporters

Host: Brent Musburger
Announcer: Marty Reid
Color: Scott Goodyear
Color: Eddie Cheever

Vince Welch
Brienne Pedigo
Jamie Little
Rick DeBruhl

Radio

The race was broadcast on radio by the IMS Radio Network. Mike King served as anchor. For the second time, Paul Page and Bob Jenkins joined the booth to offer commentary and observations. For the first time, the turn one reporting location was eliminated. Jerry Baker instead joined the booth as analyst. The turn one vantage point was eliminated due to the fact that the booth announcers had a clear view of that part of the track, and it allowed better continuity.

The driver expert was Indy Lights competitor James Hinchcliffe, who joined the crew for the first time. For the fourth year in a row, Davey Hamilton was part of the crew serving as live in-car reporter. However, he was involved in a crash at the start of the race, and was unable to give any reports. He instead visited the booth during the race.

Chris Denari, the television voice of the Indiana Fever, covered a Fever game against the Shock Saturday night before the race in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He then drove ten hours overnight back to Indianapolis to make it to the race on time.

For 2010, a special change was made for the famous out-cue "Stay tuned for the greatest spectacle in racing." Rather than just have the chief announcer recite the line, numerous drivers from the starting field were recorded introducing themselves and reciting the cue. Each commercial break attempted to feature a different driver.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Mike King
Driver expert: James Hinchcliffe
Analyst: Jerry Baker
Analyst: Paul Page
Historian: Donald Davidson
Live in-car reports: Davey Hamilton
Commentary: Bob Jenkins

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

Nick Yeoman (north pits)
Dave Argabright (center pits)
Kevin Lee (south pits)
Dave Wilson (garages)

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2010 Indianapolis 500.

References

  1. Powell, Eric (2010-05-31). "Franchitti Earns $2.75 Million For Indy 500; De Silvestro Chase Rookie Of The Year". Indy500.com. Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Retrieved 2010-06-01. Simona de Silvestro earned the prestigious Indianapolis 500 Chase Rookie of the Year Award, which includes a $25,000 bonus plus the Chase Rookie of the Year Trophy. De Silvestro finished 14th in the No. 78 Team Stargate Worlds HVM Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone.
  2. Cavin, Curt (2010-05-02). "Bull-riding links bring Jewel for anthem". The Indianapolis Star. Michael G. Kane; Gannett Company. Archived from the original on 4 May 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-03.
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