The 2005 Indianapolis 500 was held at Indianapolis on Sunday, May 29, 2005. Dan Wheldon won the race under a yellow flag.
Rookie Danica Patrick, who qualified fourth and finished fourth, became the first female driver to lead laps during the race and won the Rookie of the Year award. Patrick led three separate times for a total of 19 laps, even after spinning and recovering between the third and fourth turns on a restart. She was the fourth driver in history to do so. However, she slipped back from the lead to fourth place during the last seven laps, with Dan Wheldon winning to become the first English victor since Graham Hill in the 1966 race.
Starting Grid
[1]
Full race results
Failed to qualify:
#91 Paul Dana (injured)
#98 Arie Luyendyk, Jr.
#41 Scott Mayer (failed rookie orientation)
#15 Buddy Rice (injured)
(W) = former Indianapolis 500 winner; (R) = Indianapolis 500 rookie
*C Chassis: D=Dallara; P=Panoz.
*E Engine: C=Chevrolet; H=Honda; T=Toyota.
All cars in the 2005 Indianapolis 500 used Firestone tires.
Race leaders
Seven drivers led the race, with a total of twenty-seven lead changes. [2]
| Laps |
Leader |
| 1-2 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. |
| 3 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 4-7 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. |
| 8-25 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 26 |
Dario Franchitti |
| 27-37 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 38-54 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. |
| 55 |
Dario Franchitti |
| 56 |
Danica Patrick |
| 57-58 |
Bruno Junqueira |
| 59-97 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. |
| 98-100 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 101-111 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. |
| 112-115 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 116-119 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. |
| 120-122 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 123 |
Dario Franchitti |
| 124-135 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 136-143 |
Dario Franchitti |
| 144-145 |
Tony Kanaan |
| 146-149 |
Dario Franchitti |
| 150-161 |
Dan Wheldon |
| 162-164 |
Vitor Meira |
| 165-171 |
Dan Wheldon |
| 172-185 |
Danica Patrick |
| 186-189 |
Dan Wheldon |
| 190-193 |
Danica Patrick |
| 194-200 |
Dan Wheldon |
|
|
| Driver |
Laps led |
| Sam Hornish, Jr. |
77 |
| Tony Kanaan |
54 |
| Dan Wheldon |
30 |
| Danica Patrick |
19 |
| Dario Franchitti |
15 |
| Vitor Meira |
3 |
| Bruno Junqueira |
2 |
|
Caution periods
There were 8 caution periods during the race, with a total of forty-six laps run under yellow, including the race's final lap. [2]
| Laps |
Cause |
| 18-24 |
Larry Foyt crash |
| 77-86 |
Bruno Junqueira crash and A.J. Foyt IV incident |
| 114-119 |
Scott Dixon/Richie Hearn crash |
| 147-154 |
Sam Hornish, Jr. crash |
| 155-161 |
Tomáš Enge/Tomas Scheckter/Danica Patrick/Jeff Bucknum crash
(Patrick received minimal damage and was able to remain in the race) |
| 171-173 |
Roger Yasukawa car smoking |
| 187-189 |
Kosuke Matsuura crash |
| 199-200 |
Sébastien Bourdais crash |
ABC's television coverage controversy
ABC Sports and in particular first-time lead IRL announcer Todd Harris (having taken over for veteran announcer Paul Page) were widely criticized by sportswriters after the race for their alleged bias in coverage. Harris, from World's Strongest Man was largely inexperienced calling live auto racing, and used to pre-recorded, highlight-style reporting.
One of the most significant stories of the race was that female racer Danica Patrick, who started 4th and finished 4th, became the first woman ever to lead the race (leading 19 laps total). Even when Patrick was running mid-pack, as she had through the middle portion of the race, ABC and Harris focused significant attention on her. This angered several columnists, who thought the front-runners deserved more coverage than they received.
When Patrick took the race lead for the first time on lap 59, during a sequence of pit stops by the leaders, Harris said, "50 years from now, you will remember where you were." Orlando Sentinel sportswriter Jerry Greene disputed this, writing the next day, "I seriously doubt it, Todd." Greene also wrote that Harris "said many stupid things Sunday because of Ms. Patrick's efforts."
Houston Chronicle writer David Barron said during the pre-race show and the race's first 90 minutes, he "counted an average of one Patrick reference every five minutes, and each reference went on for some time."
Toronto Star writer Richard Sandomir wrote that Harris and his analyst, former two-time Indy 500 runner-up Scott Goodyear, failed to note that Wheldon had overtaken Patrick on lap 193, seven from the finish, until 20 seconds after it happened. Sandomir also wrote that it took Harris thirty seconds to note Patrick had drifted back to fourth place, behind Vitor Meira and Bryan Herta.
Jerry Lundquist of the Richmond Times-Dispatch mentioned Page in his review, saying, "Viewers lose. [Page's] professionalism was missed. Harris' enthusiasm for the event was over the edge." Lundquist also wrote, "Either [Harris] was told to or took it on himself to become Patrick's personal flack."
Newsday writer Steve Zipay said that in the final laps, Harris "raised the volume in what seemed suspiciously like rooting for Patrick." Two days later, on May 31, Zipay appeared on sportscaster Tim Brando's radio show on The Sporting News' radio network, and wondered if ABC seemed like too much of a cheerleader for Patrick.
The television broadcast of the race concluded with The Finn Brothers song "Luckiest Man Alive" being played during the credits. It is not known whether ABC Sports would have chosen a different song had Patrick had won the race.
References
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Indianapolis 500-Mile Race |
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| Statistics |
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| Race Results |
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| Sanctioning bodies |
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| Ownership |
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| Broadcasting |
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| Officials |
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| Related events |
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| Related area |
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