Английская Википедия:1980 Indianapolis 500

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox Indy500 The 64th 500 Mile International Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 25, 1980. Johnny Rutherford won the pole position, led 118 laps, and won the race by a commanding 29.92 second margin. After failing to finish the race the year before (with Al Unser behind the wheel), Jim Hall's radical new Chaparral 2K ground effects chassis was a heavy favorite entering the month,[1] and drove a flawless race. Rutherford, the winner in 1974 and 1976, became the sixth driver to win the Indy 500 three times.

Tom Sneva broke an Indy 500 record by becoming the first driver to start last (33rd) and lead the race. Sneva led two times for 16 laps, and finished the race in second position. Sneva likewise became the first driver in Indy history to start last and finish second (a feat tied by Scott Goodyear in 1992). It was Sneva's third runner-up finish in four years, matching Bill Holland's achievement exactly 30 years earlier in 1947, 1948 and 1950. Sneva's efforts were often branded afterwards with a "bridesmaid" reference, until he would finally go on to win the race in 1983.

The starting lineup featured 10 rookies, a sharp contrast from 1979, which had only one.[2]

For the first time in Indy history, the three drivers that started in the eleventh and final row finished in the top eight — Tom Sneva 2nd, Gary Bettenhausen 3rd, and Tom Bigelow 8th.[3]

Background

After the tumultuous and controversial month of May at Indy in 1979, the landscape of Indy car racing was starting to settle into a more civilized fashion. During the offseason, USAC published their 1980 schedule, which featured such races as the Indianapolis 500, Texas World Speedway, Talladega, and Charlotte.[4] Meanwhile, CART released their own schedule. Before the season began, the leaders of USAC and CART jointly formed the new Championship Racing League (CRL) to co-sanction the season of events. Several of the USAC-planned events were scrapped, including Talladega, Charlotte, Mosport, and Road Atlanta, and the two schedules were instead merged.

A major change for 1980 designated the Indianapolis 500 now as an "Invitational" event, rather than an "Open" type event.[5][6] This was done, in part, to prevent the uproar of denied entries as happened in 1979. Originally the plan was to grant automatic invitations to the teams that competed in all three 500-mile "Triple Crown" races in 1979 (Indianapolis, Pocono, and Ontario). However, that plan was scuttled when only one car (Danny Ongais) fulfilled those conditions, and furthermore when Ontario switched alliances to the CART series. In January 1980, the criteria for receiving an invitation to the Indianapolis 500 was announced,[7] and essentially included any certified team in USAC or CART that was judged to have a realistic intent of making a qualifying attempt. Brand new teams were subject to review, and required written documentation of the operational plans. In general, the new invitational rules would exclude few, if any, teams in Indy car racing, whether they were part of the USAC Trail or the CART series.[8]

The 1980 CART PPG Indy Car World Series began in April, and Indianapolis was the second race of the season. CART awarded points for Indianapolis towards their championship. After Indianapolis, Speedway officials became unhappy with the CRL arrangement. In the middle of July, after a total of five races had been run, USAC would pull out of the CRL.

Rule changes

Going into the month USAC dropped turbocharger "boost" levels to 48 inHG across the board. Previously the levels were 50 inHG, and before that 80 inHG. The rule change slowed cars down by as much as Шаблон:Convert, and drew the ire of many competitors. Outspoken critics included A. J. Foyt who referred to it as "taxicab racing,"[2] and Johnny Rutherford who said it made it difficult to pass other cars.

Race schedule

Race schedule — May, 1980
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1
 
2
 
3
Opening Day
4
Practice
5
Practice
6
Practice
7
Practice
8
Practice
9
Practice
10
Pole Day
11
Time Trials
12
Practice
13
Practice
14
Practice
15
Practice
16
Practice
17
Time Trials
18
Time Trials
19
 
20
 
21
 
22
Carb Day
23
Mini-Marathon
24
Parade
25
Indy 500
26
Memorial Day
27
 
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

Time trials

Pole Day – Saturday May 10

Файл:Chaparral 2K.jpg
Johnny Rutherford's pole and race-winning Chaparral 2K

The first day of time trials opened with cloudy skies and temperatures in the low 70s (°F). Scattered rain showers were in the forecast. The favorites for the pole included Mario Andretti, Johnny Rutherford, and rookie Tim Richmond. A. J. Foyt was also a dark horse for the front row. Richmond had set the fastest lap of the month (Шаблон:Convert) in practice, but a crash on pole day morning sidelined him for the weekend.

Defending champion and defending pole winner Rick Mears was the first driver out to qualify at 11:00 a.m., and he set the early pace at Шаблон:Convert. An hour later, Spike Gehlhausen (Шаблон:Convert) knocked Mears off the top spot. At 12:45 p.m., Mario Andretti took over the provisional pole with a speed of Шаблон:Convert.

A short rain shower closed the track for 20 minutes.

At 2:08 p.m., Johnny Rutherford in the Jim Hall Chaparral 2K chassis (nicknamed the "Yellow Submarine" due to its bright yellow Pennzoil paint job) took to the track. Rutherford secured the pole position with a four-lap average speed of Шаблон:Convert.

The next car out was Bobby Unser, who squeezed on to the front row with a speed of Шаблон:Convert. A. J. Foyt, took to the track twice – the first attempt he waved off before taking the green flag, and the second attempt was aborted due to a rain shower. After a rain and hail delay of over an hour and a half, Foyt got one last chance to qualify. His speed of Шаблон:Convert was good enough only for 12th starting position.

At the end of the first day of time trials, the field was filled to 16 cars.

Second Day – Sunday May 11

Three cars completed runs, with Danny Ongais (Шаблон:Convert) the fastest of the afternoon. Gordon Johncock, who broke his ankle in a practice crash on Thursday, got in a back-up car to qualify for 18th starting position.

Third Day – Saturday May 17

The third day of time trials was rained out. With a starting spot at Indy secured for the middle of the front row, Mario Andretti flew to Monte Carlo for the Monaco Grand Prix. Andretti would finish 3 laps down in 7th, then would return to Indy on Carburetion Day.

Tom Sneva, who had qualified 14th, wrecked his primary car during the second week of practice. His team obtained a back-up car, and Sneva arranged to drive that car in the race. According to the rules, Sneva would move to the rear of the field, and start the race in last (33rd) position.

Bump Day – Sunday May 18

The final day of time trials opened with 14 spots open. There were roughly 38 cars in the garage area prepared to qualify, and the day was expected to be busy and hectic.

Non-stop qualifying took place when the track opened at noon. The field was filled to 33 cars by 2:40 p.m. Rookie Tim Richmond was the fastest of the day at Шаблон:Convert, the 5th-fastest car overall in the field. Tony Bettenhausen Jr. (Шаблон:Convert) was the first driver on the bubble.

The bumping began with John Martin bumping out Bettenhausen. In total, seven drivers were bumped by 4 p.m. Eventually, Martin was bumped himself.

With weather starting to enter the area at 4 o'clock, time was running out for qualifying. Gary Bettenhausen (Tony's brother) was now on the bubble. Bettenhausen survived three attempts over the next 15 minutes. At 4:20 p.m., Ron Shuman was lined up to make an attempt, but rain began to fall before he pulled away. Bettenhausen held on to make the field, and the track was closed for the day.

Carburetion Day – Thursday May 22

The final practice session before race day saw Mario Andretti set the best lap at Шаблон:Convert. Tom Bagley spun and crashed in turn 3, but he was uninjured. Bill Vukovich blew his engine. A total of 31 of the 33 qualified cars took laps.

Later on, Tom Bigelow's AMI Racing/Sherman Armstrong team won the Miller Pit Stop Contest.

Tragedy struck in the infield during the session. Timothy Scott Vail, 19, of Indianapolis, was killed in the infield when his jeep overturned in the notorious "Snake Pit" area of the turn 1 infield. He suffered a fractured skull.[9]

Starting grid

Row Inside Middle Outside
1 Шаблон:Flagicon Johnny Rutherford Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Mario Andretti Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Bobby Unser Шаблон:Color box
2 Шаблон:Flagicon Spike Gehlhausen Шаблон:Flagicon Jerry Sneva Шаблон:Flagicon Rick Mears Шаблон:Color box
3 Шаблон:Flagicon Johnny Parsons Шаблон:Flagicon Pancho Carter Шаблон:Flagicon Al Unser Шаблон:Color box
4 Шаблон:Flagicon Roger Rager Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Jim McElreath Шаблон:Flagicon A. J. Foyt Шаблон:Color box
5 Шаблон:Flagicon Tom Bagley Шаблон:Flagicon Larry Cannon Шаблон:Flagicon Dick Ferguson Шаблон:Color box
6 Шаблон:Flagicon Danny Ongais Шаблон:Flagicon Gordon Johncock Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Don Whittington Шаблон:Color box
7 Шаблон:Flagicon Tim Richmond Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Gordon Smiley Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon George Snider
8 Шаблон:Flagicon Billy Engelhart Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Greg Leffler Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Dennis Firestone Шаблон:Color box
9 Шаблон:Flagicon Hurley Haywood Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Flagicon Mike Mosley Шаблон:Flagicon Bill Whittington Шаблон:Color box
10 Шаблон:Flagicon Jerry Karl Шаблон:Flagicon Dick Simon Шаблон:Flagicon Bill Vukovich II
11 Шаблон:Flagicon Tom Bigelow Шаблон:Flagicon Gary Bettenhausen Шаблон:Flagicon Tom Sneva
  • † - Tom Sneva qualified 14th on pole day, but afterwards suffered a crash during practice. The car was replaced with a back-up car, and he was moved the rear of the field.

Alternates

Failed to qualify

Шаблон:Div col

Шаблон:Div col end

Race summary

Pre-race

Mary F. Hulman gave the command to start engines shortly before 11:00 a.m. With Janet Guthrie failing to qualify, the command reverted to the traditional "Gentlemen, start your engines!" for the first time since 1976.

While sitting on the starting grid, polesitter Johnny Rutherford claims that a lady bug landed on his uniform — and considered it a fortuitous good luck omen.[10]

First half

At the start, polesitter Johnny Rutherford and Bobby Unser went into turn one side-by-side, with Rutherford taking the lead. Mario Andretti settled into third. Larry "Boom Boom" Cannon and Mike Mosley were both out with engine problems in the first 5 laps.

The first of several cautions came out on lap 4, for a tow-in for Cannon. On lap 9, the yellow was out again for a crash between Bill Whittington and Dick Ferguson. Ferguson hit the inside wall in the southchute hard, sustaining a broken toe. Whittington needed assistance out of his car and suffered a broken right leg.[11] The race was restarted, and after only one lap of green, Spike Gehlhausen crashed in turn 1.

During the sequence of pit stops and yellows, the lead changed hands several times in the first 60 laps. Rookie Tim Richmond led lap 73, then on lap 74, Tom Sneva set an Indy 500 record by leading the race after starting last (33rd). Sneva led the next 11 laps.

After leading 10 laps during the race, and being in contention, Mario Andretti dropped out with engine trouble.

Second half

At the halfway point, 20 cars were still running. Bobby Unser led at the halfway point. Johnny Rutherford, Rick Mears, and Tom Sneva were all in the top five.

Bobby Unser dropped out with turbo failure after 126 laps. Jerry Sneva crashed in turn one on lap 132 while two laps down, suffering a bruised knee.[12] With Unser out, Johnny Rutherford dominated most of the second half, but Tom Sneva and Rick Mears both managed to lead laps, and were far from out-of-contention.

On lap 172, Rick Mears took the lead, with Sneva second, Rutherford third. One final scheduled pit stop remained for the leaders. Rutherford was the first to pit, under green. A. J. Foyt brought out the yellow on lap 177 for stalling in turn 3. Mears held a 20-second lead. Tom Sneva ducked into the pits under the yellow for tires and fuel. One lap later, leader Mears was in the pits. Mears gambled with track position, and took on only fuel. Still under the yellow, Johnny Rutherford assumed the lead, and Mears' strategy failed and he dropped to third.

Finish

In the final 20 laps, Johnny Rutherford held a comfortable lead over Tom Sneva, and was pulling away at will. Third place was now being dueled out between Gary Bettenhausen and Gordon Johncock. In the final stages, Rick Mears ducked into the pits for an unscheduled stop to change a punctured tire, which dropped him from contention.

With Rutherford cruising to a certain victory, and second-place Sneva also unchallenged, the attention began to focus on the battle for third place. Gordon Johncock was tucked right behind Gary Bettenhausen. Danny Ongais (7th place) was right with them, albeit a lap down. On the final lap, Bettenhausen held a car-length advantage as they approached turn 4. Suddenly, Ongais smacked the outside wall exiting turn four. Johncock attempted a slingshot pass at the line, but Bettenhausen held him off for third place by 0.27 seconds.

Rutherford won his third Indy 500 by a margin of 29.92 seconds over Tom Sneva. Sneva was lauded for charging from last starting position (33rd) to a second-place finish. He became the first driver in Indy history to do so. He missed, by 29 seconds, becoming the first driver in history to win the Indy 500 after starting dead last. Sneva was disappointed by the defeat stating: "The car was good but it looks like no matter how good I am or how good the car is, I will always just be finishing second."

As Rutherford was pulling into the pits off his victory lap, rookie Tim Richmond ran out of fuel and stopped at the head of the mainstretch. Richmond, the future NASCAR star and "hot shot" personality on the circuit, led one lap during the race, was credited with 9th place, and won the rookie of the year. Rutherford stopped next to Richmond's car, and signaled for Richmond to hop on board and ride back to the pits. With much applause from the crowd, Richmond rode in on the sidepod of the winner's machine and the two exchanged congratulatory waves and handshakes.[13]

The race was slowed by a then-record 13 cautions for 65 laps - race records that would stand until 1988 and 1992, respectively.

Box score

Finish Start No Name Chassis Engine Qual Laps Status
1 1 4 Шаблон:Flagicon Johnny Rutherford Шаблон:Color box Chaparral Cosworth 192.257 200 Шаблон:Convert
2 33 9 Шаблон:Flagicon Tom Sneva McLaren Cosworth 185.290 200 +29.29 seconds
3 32 46 Шаблон:Flagicon Gary Bettenhausen Wildcat DGS 182.463 200 +33.34 seconds
4 17 20 Шаблон:Flagicon Gordon Johncock Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 186.075 200 +33.61 seconds
5 6 1 Шаблон:Flagicon Rick Mears Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 187.491 199 +1 lap
6 8 10 Шаблон:Flagicon Pancho Carter Penske Cosworth 186.480 199 +1 lap ‡
7 16 25 Шаблон:Flagicon Danny Ongais Parnelli Cosworth 186.606 199 +1 lap
8 31 43 Шаблон:Flagicon Tom Bigelow Lola Cosworth 182.547 198 +2 laps
9 19 21 Шаблон:Flagicon Tim Richmond Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 188.334 197 +3 laps
10 23 44 Шаблон:Flagicon Greg Leffler Шаблон:Color box Lola Cosworth 183.749 197 +3 laps
11 22 29 Шаблон:Flagicon Billy Engelhart Шаблон:Color box McLaren Cosworth 184.237 193 +7 laps
12 30 2 Шаблон:Flagicon Bill Vukovich II Watson Offenhauser 182.741 192 +8 laps
13 18 96 Шаблон:Flagicon Don Whittington Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 183.927 178 +22 laps
14 12 14 Шаблон:Flagicon A. J. Foyt Шаблон:Color box Parnelli Cosworth 185.500 173 Valve
15 21 16 Шаблон:Flagicon George Snider Parnelli Cosworth 185.386 169 Engine
16 24 18 Шаблон:Flagicon Dennis Firestone Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 183.701 137 Transmission
17 5 7 Шаблон:Flagicon Jerry Sneva Lola Cosworth 187.852 130 Crash T1
18 25 99 Шаблон:Flagicon Hurley Haywood Шаблон:Color box Lightning Chevrolet 183.561 127 Fire
19 3 11 Шаблон:Flagicon Bobby Unser Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 189.994 126 Turbocharger
20 2 12 Шаблон:Flagicon Mario Andretti Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 191.012 71 Engine
21 28 38 Шаблон:Flagicon Jerry Karl McLaren Chevrolet 183.011 64 Clutch
22 29 8 Шаблон:Flagicon Dick Simon Vollstedt Offenhauser 182.787 58 Lost wheel
23 10 66 Шаблон:Flagicon Roger Rager Шаблон:Color box Wildcat Chevrolet 186.374 55 Crash SC
24 11 23 Шаблон:Flagicon Jim McElreath Penske Cosworth 186.249 54 Crash SC
25 20 70 Шаблон:Flagicon Gordon Smiley Шаблон:Color box Phoenix Cosworth 186.848 47 Turbocharger
26 7 15 Шаблон:Flagicon Johnny Parsons Lightning Offenhauser 187.412 44 Piston
27 9 5 Шаблон:Flagicon Al Unser Шаблон:Color box Longhorn Cosworth 186.442 33 Cylinder
28 13 40 Шаблон:Flagicon Tom Bagley Wildcat Cosworth 185.405 29 Pump
29 4 35 Шаблон:Flagicon Spike Gehlhausen Penske Cosworth 188.344 20 Crash T1
30 27 94 Шаблон:Flagicon Bill Whittington Шаблон:Color box Parnelli Cosworth 183.262 9 Crash T1
31 15 26 Шаблон:Flagicon Dick Ferguson Шаблон:Color box Penske Cosworth 182.880 9 Crash T1
32 26 48 Шаблон:Flagicon Mike Mosley Eagle Chevrolet 183.449 5 Gasket
33 14 95 Шаблон:Flagicon Larry Cannon Wildcat DGS 183.253 2 Camshaft

Pancho Carter was penalized one lap for passing the pace car under yellow on lap 58. At the end of the race, Carter was running approximately 20 seconds behind Rutherford; the penalty reduced his standing from 2nd to 6th. Carter's team protested the ruling, claiming he was waved past the pace car, but USAC upheld the penalty.[14][15]

Race statistics

Шаблон:Col-begin Шаблон:Col-break

Lap Leaders
Laps Leader
1-15 Johnny Rutherford
16-17 Roger Rager
18 George Snider
19-24 Gordon Johncock
25-30 Bobby Unser
31-35 Gordon Johncock
36-39 Pancho Carter
40-46 Johnny Rutherford
47-56 Mario Andretti
57 Pancho Carter
58-72 Johnny Rutherford
73 Tim Richmond
74-84 Tom Sneva
85-103 Bobby Unser
104-113 Johnny Rutherford
114-116 Rick Mears
117 Bobby Unser
118-142 Johnny Rutherford
143-147 Tom Sneva
148-171 Johnny Rutherford
172-178 Rick Mears
179-200 Johnny Rutherford

Шаблон:Col-break

Total laps led
Leader Laps
Johnny Rutherford 118
Bobby Unser 26
Tom Sneva 16
Gordon Johncock 11
Mario Andretti 10
Rick Mears 10
Pancho Carter 5
Roger Rager 2
Tim Richmond 1
George Snider 1

Шаблон:Col-break

Caution Periods
13 for 65 laps
Laps* Reason
4-6 Cannon stalled in turn 1
10-18 Bill Whittington/Ferguson crash turn 2
21-24 Gelhausen crash turn 1
30-33 Bagley stalled on backstretch
45-49 Parsons stalled in turn 1
57-62 Rager/McElreath crash in south chute
72-75 Andretti stalled on backstretch
85-90 Don Whittington spin in turn 4
118-124 Simon lost wheel
132-137 Jerry Sneva crash in turn 1
142-146 Firestone stalled on backstretch
157-159 Debris
177-179 Foyt stalled in turn 3

Шаблон:Col-end

Broadcasting

Radio

The race was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Paul Page served as anchor for the fourth year. Lou Palmer reported from victory lane. Rodger Ward, who previously served as a commentator for ABC Sports, joined the crew as "Driver Expert." It was the first time that a former winner served as the expert. This was the last year of Bob Jenkins on the Backstretch. This would be the final year for Darl Wibel on the crew.

The reporting location for turn one was located atop the Southwest Vista grandstand, whereas in other years it was normally in the upper deck of the E Stand.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth Announcers Turn Reporters Pit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Paul Page
Driver expert: Rodger Ward
Statistician: John DeCamp
Historian: Donald Davidson

Turn 1: Ron Carrell
Turn 2: Howdy Bell
Backstretch: Bob Jenkins
Turn 3: Doug Zink
Turn 4: Darl Wible

Jerry Baker (north pits)
Chuck Marlowe (north-center pits)
Luke Walton (south-center pits)
Lou Palmer (south pits)
Bob Forbes (garages/hospital)

Television

The race was carried in the United States on ABC Sports on a same-day tape delay basis. For the first time, the broadcast was expanded to three-hours. Chris Schenkel rode along and reported live from inside one of the pace cars at the start of the race. Sam Posey returned to serve as reporter after missing the 1979 race.

The broadcast has re-aired on ESPN Classic since May 2011.

ABC Television
Booth Announcers Pit/garage reporters

Host: Chris Schenkel
Announcer: Jim McKay
Color: Jackie Stewart

Chris Economaki
Sam Posey
Dave Diles

Gallery

Шаблон:Commons category

Notes

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Works cited

Шаблон:Indy 500 Walker

Шаблон:Indy 500 Шаблон:IndyCar Series on ABC