2011 Indianapolis 500

95th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning body INDYCAR
Season 2011 IndyCar season
Date May 29, 2011
Winner United Kingdom Dan Wheldon[1]
Winning team Bryan Herta Autosport
Average speed 170.265 mph (274.015 km/h)
Pole position Canada Alex Tagliani
Pole speed 227.472 mph (366.081 km/h)
Fastest qualifier Canada Alex Tagliani
Rookie of the Year United States J. R. Hildebrand[1]
Most laps led New Zealand Scott Dixon (73)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthem Seal, Kelly Clarkson, and David Foster
"Back Home Again in Indiana" Jim Nabors[2]
Starting Command Mari Hulman George
Pace car Chevrolet Camaro SS Convertible
Pace car driver A. J. Foyt[3]
Starter Bryan Howard
Honorary starter Bruce P. Crandall[4]
Estimated attendance Est. 300,000+
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Announcers Marty Reid, Scott Goodyear, Eddie Cheever
Nielsen Ratings 4.0[5]
Chronology
Previous Next
2010 2012

The 95th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday May 29, 2011. The race was part of the 2011 IZOD IndyCar Series season. The track opened for practice on May 14 and time trials were held from May 21 to 22. The race was won by Dan Wheldon (his second after winning the 2005 race) and this was the last win of his racing career. Alex Tagliani won the pole position.

American rookie J. R. Hildebrand took the lead with two laps to go. As the leaders were frantically cycling through pit stops, Hildebrand was nursing a car very low on fuel. He was attempting to stretch his tank to the finish, and score a huge upset victory. On the final turn of the final lap, his car went high, and he hit the outside wall. As his wrecked car was coasting down the frontstretch, Dan Wheldon slipped by in the final 1,000 feet to take the victory. Hildebrand slid across the finish line to place second. Four months later, Wheldon was killed in a crash in the IZOD IndyCar World Championship at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, driving the car Tagliani had qualified on the pole in.[6]

The race was the culmination of the three-year-long Centennial era, celebrating the 100th anniversary of the opening of the track (1909) and the 100th anniversary of the inaugural race in 1911. Throughout May, the race was advertised as the 100th Anniversary Indianapolis 500 and the Centennial Indianapolis 500. Since the race was suspended during World Wars I and II, the 100th running of the 500 would not be held until 2016.

The race was billed as the "Most Important Race in History".[7] It was the final Indy 500 contested with the normally aspirated "spec" Dallara IR-05/Honda Indy V-8 machines. In 2012, the series implemented a new chassis package and reintroduced turbocharged engines.[8]

Event news

Tanner Foust from Team Hot Wheels sped down a 90-foot ramp, suspended on a 10-story high door and jumped across the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's infield inside the fourth turn.

Schedule

Race schedule — May 2011
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
São Paulo
2
São Paulo
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
 
7
Mini-Marathon
8
 
9
Testing
10
 
11
 
12
ROP
13
 
14
Practice
15
Practice
16
Practice
17
Practice
18
Practice
19
Practice
20
Practice
21
Pole Day
22
Bump Day
23
 
24
 
25
Comm. Day
26
 
27
Carb Day
28
Parade
29
Indy 500
30
Memorial Day
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. Day — denotes 500 Festival Community Day

Other events

The race logo drew elements from historical tickets and program cover art

Entry list

See Team and driver chart for more information

On April 15, 2011, the Official Entry List was released, featuring 83 cars for 42 entries. As of April 15, thirty-five car/driver combinations had been announced.[21] On May 9, a revised version of the entry list was released. The entry from China Racing was withdrawn. The final list includes 79 cars for 41 entries.

Confirmed former winners entered include Dario Franchitti, Hélio Castroneves, Scott Dixon, Dan Wheldon, and Buddy Rice.

Rookie orientation

Pre-Indy oval testing

Since the Indy 500 was the first oval race of the 2011 season, per IndyCar regulations, rookies who have not competed on an oval were required to take part in Pre-Indy Oval testing. Scott Speed and Ho-Pin Tung, along with Wade Cunningham (who didn't race Indy but participated at Texas) completed the test at Chicagoland Speedway on May 9.[22] Speed was legally exempt from this test because of previous high-speed oval experience in ARCA and NASCAR, but chose to test with his teammate to learn the car.

Thursday, May 12 – Rookie Orientation Program

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand Panther Racing 221.533
2 8 China Ho-Pin Tung Dragon Racing 220.477
3 06 Canada James Hinchcliffe Newman/Haas Racing 219.602
OFFICIAL REPORT

Practice

Saturday, May 14 – Opening Day

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 67 United States Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing 224.786
2 9T New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 224.491
3 4T United States J. R. Hildebrand Panther Racing 224.433
OFFICIAL REPORT

Sunday, May 15

Monday, May 16

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports 225.878
2 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 225.124
3 38 United States Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing 225.071
OFFICIAL REPORT

Tuesday, May 17

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeam Speed
1 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 220.656
2 27 United Kingdom Mike Conway Andretti Autosport 219.910
OFFICIAL REPORT

Wednesday, May 18

Thursday, May 19

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske 227.778
2 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports 227.652
3 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 227.217
OFFICIAL REPORT

Friday, May 20 – Fast Friday

Late in the day, reports surfaced that Scott Speed had quit Dragon Racing, after having trouble getting up to speed. The rumor was denied.[31]

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 228.611
2 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports 228.327
3 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 228.181
OFFICIAL REPORT

Time Trials

Saturday May 21 – Pole Day

Practice

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports 228.184
2 44 United States Buddy Rice Panther Racing 227.849
3 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske 227.766
OFFICIAL REPORT

Qualifying

Front row qualifiers (L to R): Scott Dixon, Alex Tagliani, and Oriol Servià.
Car owner Sam Schmidt with pole winner Alex Tagliani.
Pole Day – Saturday, May 21, 2011
Fast Nine Shootout (positions 1–9)
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeedPts
1 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports 227.472 mph (366 km/h) 15
2 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 227.340 mph (366 km/h) 13
3 2 Spain Oriol Servià Newman/Haas Racing 227.168 mph (366 km/h) 12
4 99 United States Townsend Bell Sam Schmidt Motorsports 226.887 mph (365 km/h) 11
5 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske 226.773 mph (365 km/h) 10
6 98 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon Bryan Herta Autosport 226.490 mph (365 km/h) 9
7 44 United States Buddy Rice Panther Racing 225.786 mph (363 km/h) 8
8 67 United States Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing 225.121 mph (362 km/h) 7
9 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing No time 6
OFFICIAL REPORT
Positions 10–24
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeedPts
10 5 Japan Takuma Sato KV Racing TechnologyLotus 225.736 mph (363 km/h) 4
11 14 Brazil Vitor Meira A. J. Foyt Enterprises 225.590 mph (363 km/h) 4
12 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand (R) Panther Racing 225.579 mph (363 km/h) 4
13 06 Canada James Hinchcliffe (R) Newman/Haas Racing 225.572 mph (363 km/h) 4
14 30 Belgium Bertrand Baguette Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 225.285 mph (363 km/h) 4
15 11 United States Davey Hamilton Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 225.250 mph (363 km/h) 4
16 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 225.216 mph (362 km/h) 4
17 43 United States John Andretti Andretti Autosport 224.981 mph (362 km/h) 4
18 59 Venezuela E. J. Viso KV Racing TechnologyLotus 224.732 mph (362 km/h) 4
19 41 Brazil Bruno Junqueira A. J. Foyt Enterprises 224.691 mph (362 km/h) 4
20 22 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 224.511 mph (361 km/h) 4
21 88 United Kingdom Jay Howard (R) Sam Schmidt Motorsports 224.483 mph (361 km/h) 4
22 07 South Africa Tomas Scheckter SH Racing 224.433 mph (361 km/h) 4
23 82 Brazil Tony Kanaan KV Racing TechnologyLotus 224.417 mph (361 km/h) 4
24 78T Switzerland Simona de Silvestro HVM Racing 224.392 mph (361 km/h) 4
OFFICIAL REPORT

Sunday May 22 – Bump Day

Practice

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeam Speed
1 83 United States Charlie Kimball Chip Ganassi Racing 226.822 mph (365 km/h)
2 7 United States Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 226.252 mph (364 km/h)
3 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 226.181 mph (364 km/h)
OFFICIAL REPORT

Qualifying

Bump Day – Sunday, May 22, 2011
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeedPts
25 23 Canada Paul Tracy Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 224.939 mph (362 km/h) 3
26 7 United States Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 224.861 mph (362 km/h) 3
27 6T Australia Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 224.639 mph (362 km/h) 3
28 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 224.628 mph (362 km/h) 3
29 83 United States Charlie Kimball (R) Chip Ganassi Racing 224.499 mph (361 km/h) 3
30 38 United States Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing 224.380 mph (361 km/h) 3
31 19 United Kingdom Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing 223.957 mph (360 km/h) 3
32 36 United Kingdom Pippa Mann (R) Conquest Racing 223.936 mph (360 km/h) 3
33 24 Brazil Ana Beatriz Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 223.879 mph (360 km/h) 3
OFFICIAL REPORT

Carb Day

Indianapolis 500 Final Practice – Friday May 27

Top Practice Speeds
PosNo.DriverTeamSpeed
1 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 225.474
2 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports 224.739
3 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 224.658
OFFICIAL REPORT

Pit Stop Challenge

  First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                                     
       
  12 Will Power  
    28 Ryan Hunter-Reay  
3 Hélio Castroneves
28 Ryan Hunter-Reay  
  12 Will Power  
  10 Dario Franchitti  
       
       
  10 Dario Franchitti
    19 Alex Lloyd  
19 Alex Lloyd
06 James Hinchcliffe  
  10 Dario Franchitti 8.481
  6 Ryan Briscoe 7.882
       
       
  9 Scott Dixon
    82 Tony Kanaan  
82 Tony Kanaan
26 Marco Andretti  
  82 Tony Kanaan
  6 Ryan Briscoe 7.568  
       
       
  6 Ryan Briscoe 7.788
    22 Justin Wilson  
5 Takuma Sato
22 Justin Wilson  

Source:

Starting grid

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

Row Inside Middle Outside
1 77 Canada Alex Tagliani 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (W) 2 Spain Oriol Servià
2 99 United States Townsend Bell 12 Australia Will Power 98 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (W)
3 44 United States Buddy Rice (W) 67 United States Ed Carpenter 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (W)
4 5 Japan Takuma Sato 14 Brazil Vitor Meira 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand (R)
5 06 Canada James Hinchcliffe (R) 30 Belgium Bertrand Baguette 11 United States Davey Hamilton
6 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves (W) 43 United States John Andretti 59 Venezuela E. J. Viso
7 22 United Kingdom Justin Wilson 88 United Kingdom Jay Howard (R) 07 South Africa Tomas Scheckter
8 82 Brazil Tony Kanaan 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro 23 Canada Paul Tracy
9 7 United States Danica Patrick 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe 26 United States Marco Andretti
10 83 United States Charlie Kimball (R) 38 United States Graham Rahal 19 United Kingdom Alex Lloyd
11 36 United Kingdom Pippa Mann (R) 24 Brazil Ana Beatriz 41 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay1

Post-qualifying changes

1 On Monday, May 23, Andretti Autosport and A. J. Foyt Enterprises reached an agreement for Ryan Hunter-Reay to replace Bruno Junqueira as driver of the #41 car. Per race rules, the car, which had originally qualified for the 19th starting position, was moved to the end of the field.[32]

Failed to qualify

No.DriverTeamReason
8 China Ho-Pin Tung (R) Dragon Racing Crashed during qualifying attempt on Pole Day, not medically cleared to continue taking part in qualifying.
20 United States Scott Speed (R)
Canada Patrick Carpentier
Dragon Racing Speed did not attempt to qualify on Pole Day.
Team withdrew on Bump Day after Carpentier crashed and the team could not secure a back-up car.
27 United Kingdom Mike Conway Andretti Autosport Bumped from the field, too slow to re-qualify.
34 Colombia Sebastián Saavedra Conquest Racing Bumped from the field, too slow to re-qualify.
17 Brazil Raphael Matos AFS Racing Bumped from the field, too slow to re-qualify.
18 United Kingdom James Jakes (R) Dale Coyne Racing Bumped from the field, too slow to re-qualify.
28 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport Bumped from the field – replaced Bruno Junqueira in the #41.

Race

A ceremonial golden brick was installed at the start/finish line of the track to commemorate the 100th anniversary

Summary

First half

The 95th running of the Indianapolis 500 began at 12:00 PM EDT on a hot, muggy day, shortly after the traditional pre-race ceremonies of the invocation, national anthem, and the singing Back Home Again in Indiana by Jim Nabors. Mari Hulman George gave the starting command around 12:05 PM, as the cars took two parade laps and one pace lap, led by four-time Indianapolis 500 winner A. J. Foyt, who was driving the pace car. The green flag came out to see Scott Dixon pass by pole-sitter Alex Tagliani to take the early lead in the race. The first 20 laps of the race saw a relatively smooth pace set in. Unlike past years there was no accident in the first two laps, with the first caution coming out on Lap 18 when Takuma Sato made contact with the wall. During the first caution period many team made pit-stops including Will Power who left the pit area and drove a lap without a left-rear tire, which all but eliminated the IndyCar points leader from having an opportunity to win the race.

Shortly following the green flag restart (which was changed to a two-car abreast start during the drivers meetings) Sato's teammate, E. J. Viso was turned heading into turn 1 by James Hinchcliffe and was the next driver to make contact with the wall and eliminate himself from the race. Following the cleanup and restart after Viso's crash saw the field taking shape and aligning themselves for the long 400+ miles remaining. Simona de Silvestro, who was burned in a crash earlier in the month, was not able to pick up speed in her back-up car and quickly fell from 23rd position, to last. On lap 44, it was clear that the car would not be able to keep up with the field, she was called into the pits and her day was over.

Defending winner Dario Franchitti, along with Scott Dixon, Alex Tagliani, and Oriol Servià all began to take their places at the top of the field with each of them leading more than 10 laps in the race respectively. Later accidents occurred with rookies Jay Howard and James Hinchcliffe. Howard lost a right-rear wheel on lap 61, while Hinchcliffe slid high in turn 3 and bounced off the wall at the halfway mark.

Second half

Following James Hinchcliffe's crash on lap 101, the green flag remained out for over 40 laps as many different drivers shared the lead and got in position for the shootout in the final 10. On lap 148, it was the pole-sitter Alex Tagliani who would be called into pit lane after making slight contact with the wall. Tagliani, who had not had a good day, started in first, fell all the way down to 12th before the crash, was finished for the day, with his final finish position being 28th. One of the few multi-car crashes of the day occurred on lap 158 between Ryan Briscoe and Townsend Bell. Up to that point in the day, Team Penske had been running slow and really did not have a good shot at any of their drivers winning the race, and with the crash and elimination of Ryan Briscoe all hope seemed gone as Helio Castroneves and Will Power were both down due to bad pit stops and slow cars. With no more lengthy cautions the remainder of the race it turned into a fight for the lead as the laps dwindled down.

As the race prepared to go back to green on lap 164, a handful of drivers ducked into the pit area to top off their fuel, in hopes of going the distance without another pit stop. Dario Franchitti and J. R. Hildebrand were among those who gave up their track position, and topped off their fuel.

For the first time in his Indy career, Graham Rahal took the lead of the race and held it for six laps. However, he lost a battle to Scott Dixon and was forced to a pit stop which dropped out of the top five. However, he was able to finish the race in third place. Tony Kanaan also saw his flirt with Indy glory as he made his way all from the middle of the pack to second place at one point, but was forced as well to drop on a pit stop with less than 20 laps to go. As the race came to down to its final 15 laps, it was still Scott Dixon and Dario Franchitti, two Chip Ganassi Racing cars and former winners, who looked like they would win the race. However, late in the race after a series of pit stops by most in the lead, it was an unlikely Bertrand Baguette who would lead the race as the action came to it climax. Baguette was expected to pit again but as the laps dwindled down and he did not come in, it became increasingly likely that this new face would win the race.

The final 10 laps became a battle between Baguette, Franchitti, and rookie J. R. Hildebrand (all of whom were all trying to stretch their fuel to the finish), as well as Dixon and Dan Wheldon behind but good to the finish having recently pitted. With three laps to go, Baguette pitted for fuel and Franchitti continued to slow to conserve fuel. This gave the lead to Hildebrand while Franchitti continued to fade, falling behind Dixon and the charging Wheldon. As the field was given the white flag, it seemed all but certain a rookie would win the 500 for the first time since Castroneves won it in 2001. Hildebrand moved his way down into the north short chute and down into turn four. Coming in on the front stretch, Hildebrand went high to avoid the slower car of Charlie Kimball, who was on the inside line, and collided with the wall. Without steering and on only three wheels, the car slid down the frontstretch towards the finish line. Dan Wheldon, who was second, skirted by in the final 1,000 feet, and crossed the line to win the race.[33] Hildebrand continued to slide, and crossed the finish line in second.

Post-race

Race winner Dan Wheldon celebrates in victory lane

Dan Wheldon became the 18th person to win two or more Indianapolis 500's, his first coming in 2005. The 200th lap was the only one he led in the race, breaking Joe Dawson's 99-year-old record for the fewest laps led by an Indy winner. As he took to victory lane, he celebrated with the traditional ceremonies of the wreath, glass of milk, and the presentation of the Borg Warner Trophy. As the celebration was occurring, his former team Panther Racing considered filing for a review, stating that Wheldon made an illegal pass during the yellow on Hildebrand's car. In the end, video showed that the yellow did not come out until after Wheldon had passed, and even if it would have come out before the pass, the president of competition ruled that Hildebrand's car was a "wounded car", and was therefore allowed to be passed in the race.[34]

Wheldon's average speed of 170.265 mph was the fourth-fastest Indy 500 in history, and was the first Indy 500 completed in less than three hours since Juan Pablo Montoya won in 2000.

Results

Box score

J. R. Hildebrand crashed on the final lap
PosNo.DriverTeamCarLapsTime/RetiredGridLaps LedPoints
1 98 United Kingdom Dan Wheldon (W) Bryan Herta Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 2:56:11.7267 6 1 59
2 4 United States J. R. Hildebrand (R) Panther Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +2.1086 12 7 44
3 38 United States Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +5.5949 29 6 38
4 82 Brazil Tony Kanaan KV Racing TechnologyLotus Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +7.4870 22 0 36
5 9 New Zealand Scott Dixon (W)1 Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +9.5434 2 73 45
6 2 Spain Oriol Servià1 Newman/Haas Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +9.5435*
(+8.8757)
3 18 42
7 30 Belgium Bertrand Baguette Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +23.9631 14 11 30
8 07 South Africa Tomas Scheckter SH Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +24.3299 21 0 28
9 26 United States Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +25.7411 27 0 25
10 7 United States Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +26.4483 25 10 23
11 67 United States Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +27.0375 8 3 26
12 10 United Kingdom Dario Franchitti (W) Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 200 +56.4167 9 51 24
13 83 United States Charlie Kimball (R) Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 +1 lap 28 0 20
14 12 Australia Will Power Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 +1 lap 5 0 26
15 14 Brazil Vitor Meira A. J. Foyt Enterprises Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 +1 lap 11 0 19
16 22 United Kingdom Justin Wilson Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 +1 lap 19 0 18
17 3 Brazil Hélio Castroneves (W) Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone 199 +1 lap 16 0 17
18 44 United States Buddy Rice (W) Panther Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 198 +2 laps 7 0 20
19 19 United Kingdom Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 198 +2 laps 30 0 15
20 36 United Kingdom Pippa Mann (R) Conquest Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 198 +2 laps 31 0 15
21 24 Brazil Ana Beatriz Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 197 +3 laps 32 0 15
22 43 United States John Andretti Andretti Autosport Dallara/Honda/Firestone 197 +3 laps 17 0 16
23 41 United States Ryan Hunter-Reay2 A. J. Foyt Enterprises Dallara/Honda/Firestone 197 +3 laps 33 0 12
24 11 United States Davey Hamilton Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 193 +7 laps 15 0 16
25 23 Canada Paul Tracy Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 175 +25 laps 24 0 13
26 99 United States Townsend Bell Sam Schmidt Motorsports Dallara/Honda/Firestone 157 Contact 4 0 21
27 6 Australia Ryan Briscoe Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone 157 Contact 26 0 13
28 77 Canada Alex Tagliani Sam Schmidt Motorsports Dallara/Honda/Firestone 147 Contact 1 20 25
29 06 Canada James Hinchcliffe (R) Newman/Haas Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 99 Contact 13 0 14
30 88 United Kingdom Jay Howard (R) Sam Schmidt Motorsports Dallara/Honda/Firestone 60 Contact 20 0 14
31 78 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro HVM Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone 44 Handling 23 0 14
32 59 Venezuela E. J. Viso KV Racing TechnologyLotus Dallara/Honda/Firestone 27 Contact 18 0 14
33 5 Japan Takuma Sato KV Racing TechnologyLotus Dallara/Honda/Firestone 20 Contact 10 0 14
Lead changes: 23 among 10 drivers
OFFICIAL RACE REPORT

Race statistics

The race had 23 lead changes among 10 drivers.[35]

Lead Changes
On Lap Leader
1 Scott Dixon
8 Alex Tagliani
27 Scott Dixon
34 Alex Tagliani
35 Scott Dixon
61 Dario Franchitti
62 Ed Carpenter
65 Dario Franchitti
73 Scott Dixon
99 Dario Franchitti
100 JR Hildebrand
104 Dario Franchitti
113 Oriol Servia
129 Dario Franchitti
138 JR Hildebrand
139 Bertrand Baguette
141 Dario Franchitti
164 Oriol Servia
166 Graham Rahal
172 Scott Dixon
179 Danica Patrick
189 Bertrand Baguette
198 JR Hildebrand
200 Dan Wheldon

Total laps led
Laps Leader
73 Scott Dixon
51 Dario Franchitti
20 Alex Tagliani
18 Oriol Servia
11 Bertrand Baguette
10 Danica Patrick
7 JR Hildebrand
6 Graham Rahal
3 Ed Carpenter
1 Dan Wheldon

Cautions: 7 for 40 laps
Laps Reason
21 to 26 Contact: Takuma Sato: Car #5 in Turn 1
28 to 32 Contact: James Hinchcliffe: Car #06 and E.J. Viso: Car #59 in Turn 1
62 to 69 Contact: Jay Howard: Car #88 in Turn 1
101 to 106 Contact: James Hinchcliffe: Car #06 in Turn 3
148 to 154 Contact: Alex Tagliani: Car #77 in Turn 4
158 to 164 Contact: Ryan Briscoe: Car #6 and Townsend Bell: Car #99 in Turn 1
200 to 200 Contact: JR Hildebrand: Car #4 in Turn 4

Awards

Winning car on display in 2012.

Race winner Dan Wheldon received $2,567,255 in cash prizes and designated awards.

Typically, the presentation of the Borg-Warner Trophy replicas ("Baby Borg") for the driver and owner takes place in January in Detroit during the North American International Auto Show, but Wheldon was killed at Las Vegas in October. Car owners Bryan Herta and Steve Newey, along with Wheldon's widow Susie, were presented in Detroit with their trophies.[36]

The Indianapolis 500-winning car, Dallara IR3007, was the seventh chassis made by Dallara Automobili from the 2003 specifications. Originally a Panther Racing car, it was sold to Adrian Fernandez and later Marty Roth, before FAZZT bought the car in 2010, which became Sam Schmidt Motorsports' car in 2011 when it was used to win the Indianapolis 500. It was raced the next race at Texas Motor Speedway as a Sam Schmidt Motorsports #99 for Wade Cunningham, who crashed it in the first of the Twin 275 km races. The car has been rebuilt and restored in 2011 Indianapolis 500 condition as part of a Wheldon tribute. (Andretti Autosport owns the other Wheldon winner, and is restoring that car too in 2005 Indianapolis 500 race-winning trim.)

Broadcasting

Television

The race was televised in high definition in the United States on ABC,[37][38] the 47th consecutive year on that network. Marty Reid served as anchor. The telecast utilized the Side-by-Side format for commercial breaks. In the Indianapolis market, the live broadcast was blacked out on WRTV, and shown same-day tape delay in prime time. In some markets in northern Indiana, the final 15 laps of the race were not shown due to a weather bulletin.

The race received a 4.3 overnight rating on ABC,[39] up 7% over 2010.[40] The top local markets included Indianapolis (14.5), Dayton (10.5), and Ft. Meyers/Naples (8.5).[41] The final rating was 4.0 with 6.711 million viewers, up 11% in ratings and 16% in viewership compared to 2010.[42]

ABC Television
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reporters

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

Vince Welch
Dr. Jerry Punch
Jamie Little
Rick DeBruhl

Time trials and Carb Day were covered live in the United States on Versus.[37] The announcing team consisted of Bob Jenkins, Jon Beekhuis and Wally Dallenbach, Jr. Pit reporters included Lindy Thackston, Marty Snider, and Kevin Lee. Robin Miller serves as analyst and "insider."[43]

Daily practice was streamed live over the internet.[44]

Radio

The race was broadcast on radio by the IMS Radio Network. Mike King served as anchor. The broadcast reached approximately 400 affiliates, as well as AFN, the LeSEA broadcasting network, and World Harvest Radio. The broadcast was carried on XM channel 145 and on Sirius channel 212 through the "Best of XM" package.

After eliminating the position for 2010, the turn one location was brought back for the broadcast. Jerry Baker reprised his role in turn 1. The position was brought back in response to the league adopting double-wide restarts. Kenny Brack returned as "driver expert," joining the booth in-progress after participating in various pre-race festivities.

WFNI broadcast nightly from the track with Trackside with Curt Cavin and Kevin Lee, followed by Donald Davidson's The Talk of Gasoline Alley.

In 2010, drivers from the starting field were used to recite the famous out-cue "Stay tuned for the greatest spectacle in racing." For 2011, in celebration of the Centennial Era, the out-cues for each commercial break were recordings of previous renditions by the former "Voices of the 500." Each commercial break would feature a different chief announcer, rotating through Sid Collins, Paul Page, Lou Palmer, Bob Jenkins, and Mike King. This format was also used in 2009.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Mike King
Driver expert: Kenny Brack
Analyst: Paul Page
Historian: Donald Davidson
Live in-car reports: Davey Hamilton
Commentary: Bob Jenkins

Turn 1: Jerry Baker
Turn 2: Jake Query
Turn 3: Mark Jaynes
Turn 4: Chris Denari

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

See also

References

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