Final practice, air demonstrations and music acts round out schedule Friday, May 24 at IMS. Read More>
Two departure times provide more flexibility for fans who want to commute to the track on their bike on Race Day. Read More>
This partnership represents the first time a major athlete's sponsorship has been decided by a vote using blockchain technology. Read More>
View images from the shortened first day of the Indianapolis 500 Open test at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. View Photos>
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Josef Newgarden unveils the 2024 Indianapolis 500 Ticket View Photos>
The Indianapolis Motor Speedway prides itself on its fire rescue and medical response teams that arrive to the scene of an accident within seconds. But how do they get that good? On Behind the Bricks, IMS President Doug Boles takes you through the annual Motorsports Safety Training at IMS, which features specific training scenarios for INDYCAR, NASCAR, IMSA and more to make sure every driver at IMS is safe. Watch Video>
On this episode of Doug and Drivers, 2022 Indy 500 winner Marcus Ericsson sits down with Doug Boles to talk about the pain of coming so close to scoring back-to-back wins, how he wanted to compete on ovals after his Formula 1 career and the transition to Andretti Global. Watch Video>
Why does Scott McLaughlin move his hands around so much in the car? What "button" is he pushing? What's the pressure of the iconic Yellow Submarine like? We cover that and so much more with Scott McLaughlin on the latest Doug and Drivers. Watch Video>
May 19, 2019 | By Phillip B. Wilson, Indianapolis Motor Speedway
After enduring the “most emotional 48 hours” of his 23-year-old life, Kyle Kaiser prepared to take the green flag on the most pressure-packed four laps of his career Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. All he was thinking about was the time needed in the Last Row Shootout to qualify his sponsor-less No. 32 Juncos Racing Chevrolet in the 103rd Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. Kaiser didn’t allow his mind to wander about the driver he was trying to bump from the 33-car field, two-time Formula One World Champion Fernando Alonso. “I didn’t think about that,” Kaiser said. “I knew the time I had to do, and I went out and gave it all I had.” When he knew he was in, Kaiser thought of Alonso. “It crossed my mind when I came across the bricks and finished the run,” Kaiser said. “I mean, that guy is probably the greatest driver of our era. That guy is unreal and very deserving to be in this race. “It just shows that this place shows no favors to anybody. It doesn’t owe anybody anything. I learned that the other day in Turn 3 (crashing on Fast Friday). It doesn’t anybody any favors, no matter who you are and what you’ve done.” Kaiser earned the spot with a four-lap average of 227.372 mph compared to Alonso’s 227.353 mph. Instead of Alonso making his second “500” start after leading 27 laps in his 2017 debut, it will be Kaiser rolling off the line in “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” for a second time next Sunday. The margin was so close, Kaiser was unsure even as he crossed the line. “Did we make it?” he said on the radio. All he heard was his crew screaming. “I started crying when I heard the yelling,” Kaiser said. After a Friday crash took the team’s sponsor-less “white rabbit” primary car out of the equation, the team toiled for about 40 consecutive hours to put another car together. As the exhausted crew celebrated on pit road, emotional team owner Ricardo Juncos exhaled. “We put everything on the line,” he said. “You don’t want to crash again. We had no more money to keep going. Imagine another crash? At the same time, you have to be fast. We didn’t practice (earlier) today, so we didn’t know the pace. It was a lot of gambling here. We trusted ourselves.” The Argentinian who came to the U.S. with $400 in his pocket in 2003 will have a car in the “500” for a third consecutive year. Kaiser finished 29th last year. Sebastian Saavedra was 15th and Spencer Pigot 18th in 2017. Perhaps most importantly for a team that has been successful in Indy Lights presented by Cooper Tires as well as the Indy Pro 2000 Championship, Sunday’s dramatic run to glory could translate to sponsorship dollars that will not only help Juncos Racing in the “500” but further sustain the owner’s ambition of racing more in the NTT IndyCar Series. “I hope so,” Juncos said. “We’re going to keep trying. I hope this is some momentum that we can carry on so we can find the money to continue to race in INDYCAR.” That his team was able to get a car ready for Kaiser to make the final, fateful run was considered a victory, Juncos said. The only relief he had before the run was the realization that Juncos Racing gave everything it had. “We had no more energy,” Juncos said. He didn’t get much sleep Saturday night. Nobody did with that overnight thrashing. Kaiser received a text from James Hinchcliffe, another driver facing the same precarious Last Row Shootout challenge. The Arrow Schmidt Peterson Motorsports driver wondered with Kaiser who the three qualifiers would be out of six in the running. Kaiser texted: “As long as it’s you and me, I don’t care.” Hinchcliffe, who failed to qualify for last year’s “500,” went out first and had a solid four-lap average of 227.543 mph that would hold up for 32nd. Max Chilton and Alonso made their runs to fill the field. Sage Karam bumped Chilton to put Alonso on the bubble. Rookie Patricio O’Ward came close but just missed supplanting Alonso with an average speed of 227.092 mph. That left Kaiser, who knew his first two laps were faster than 227 mph and sensed he could pull this off. The 2017 Indy Lights champion from California couldn’t compare Sunday to anything he had ever experienced in racing, especially when he rolled down pit road to be reunited with his crew. “It felt like we qualified on the pole when I came in,” Kaiser said. While motorsports legends McLaren and Alonso tried to comprehend and accept what went wrong, the small team and young driver who persevered displayed the kind of genuine appreciation for their accomplishment that reminded why the “500” is so special. “It means everything,” Kaiser said. “This is May, right?”