1998 Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway | |||||
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Indianapolis 500 | |||||
Sanctioning body | Indy Racing League | ||||
Season | 1998 IRL season | ||||
Date | May 24, 1998 | ||||
Winner | Eddie Cheever | ||||
Winning team | Team Cheever | ||||
Average speed | 145.155 mph (234 km/h) | ||||
Pole position | Billy Boat | ||||
Pole speed | 223.503 mph (360 km/h) | ||||
Fastest qualifier | Billy Boat | ||||
Rookie of the Year | Steve Knapp | ||||
Most laps led | Eddie Cheever (76) | ||||
Pre-race ceremonies | |||||
National anthem | Elizabeth Burch | ||||
"Back Home Again in Indiana" | Jim Nabors | ||||
Starting command | Mari Hulman George | ||||
Pace car | Chevrolet Corvette | ||||
Pace car driver | Parnelli Jones | ||||
Starter | Bryan Howard | ||||
Honorary starter | Mark Page (Pep Boys) | ||||
Estimated attendance | 250,000 | ||||
TV in the United States | |||||
Network | ABC | ||||
Announcers | Paul Page, Tom Sneva | ||||
Nielsen ratings | 6.0 / 19 | ||||
Chronology | |||||
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The 82nd Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 24, 1998. This was the third Indianapolis 500 run as part of the Indy Racing League, but the first fully-sanctioned by the IRL after they relied on USAC to sanction the 1996–1997 races. The race was part of the 1998 Pep Boys Indy Racing League season.
Eddie Cheever, a former Formula One driver that had competed in Indy car racing since 1990, highlighted his racing career with this lone Indianapolis win. Cheever finished three seconds ahead of second place Buddy Lazier, the 1996 winner. Cheever became the first owner/driver to win the "500" since A. J. Foyt in 1977. The 1998 race ushered in a compacted, two-week schedule for the Indy 500, omitting an entire week of practice, and trimming qualifying from four days down to two.
During time trials, Billy Boat secured the first pole position at Indy for the Foyt team since 1975.
This was the first Indianapolis victory for the Dallara chassis. In the second year utilizing the 4.0 L, normally aspirated, 32-valve production-based engines (Aurora L47 and Infiniti VH), qualifying speeds climbed, topping out nearly six miles per hour faster than 1997.
Schedule
[edit]
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Background
[edit]Continuing split from CART
[edit]The ongoing IRL/CART split continued into its third year. The two series began moving further apart, and for the second time, no major teams from the CART ranks entered at Indianapolis. CART teams raced on Saturday at the Motorola 300.
Rule changes
[edit]- After controversy in 1997, the "25/8 Rule", which locked in entries to the starting field based on championship points standings, was scrapped for 1998. The 33-car field would revert to the traditional 33 fastest qualifiers.
- For 1998, the schedule for the month of May was trimmed down, in an effort to reduce costs. An experimental "two-week" schedule was proposed, consisting of one full week of practice, and two days of time trials. An open test was scheduled in April which also included rookie orientation.
- During qualifying, once the field is filled to 33, cars that subsequently bump their way into the field on the second day of time trials (Bump Day) will at that moment be (tentatively) slotted in the 33rd starting position, regardless of their overall speed rank on the second day. Previously cars that bumped their way into the field lined up based on speed rank of the day they qualified. The change was made to encourage more cars qualifying on pole day. As a result, the field was lined up the order of: first day (pole day) qualifiers, followed by second day qualifiers (those that qualified before the field was filled to 33), followed by cars that bumped their way into the field on the second day.[1]
- A new rule change for 1998 allowed cars to return to the garage area to make repairs and subsequently re-enter the race. Previously, all repairs (whether major or minor) had to be done in the pit area only. Prior to 1998, any car that crossed the entrance to Gasoline Alley was ruled out of the race, regardless of its condition. Likewise, any stalled car towed back to the garage area through escape roads in the infield (instead of around the circuit itself) was ruled out of the race, even if the issue was something as harmless as running out of fuel (that aspect of the rule was the source of controversy in the 1972 race with Jim Hurtubise). The repair rule change was made at the request of teams, which considered it a safety measure, as well as a fair way to allow more cars to finish the race. Pit crew members working for extended periods of time on the actual pit lane felt exposed to injuries/accidents from other cars entering and exiting the pits literally inches away. It also allowed them access to necessary tools and allowed them to make major repairs. This new rule was similar in practice to the policy that NASCAR had, where cars were allowed to "go behind the wall" to make repairs and re-enter the competition. A limit was enforced, however, such that no car could make repairs and re-enter the race after the leaders completed 190 laps.
Entry list
[edit]The first entry list was published on April 14. The 34 cars that had run in any of the first two rounds of 1998 were entered, including the #27 Blueprint Racing entry, initially unassigned after Robbie Groff failed to complete a racing lap. The car was initially scheduled to be run by Cary Faas at the Rookie Orientation Program, but the test never happened. RSM Marko also failed to undertake his scheduled Rookie Orientation Program test with driver Dave Steele, and the team would not appear afterwards, while Team Coulson Racing never appointed a driver for the #41 car.
Earlier in the month, D. B. Mann Motorsports had named Dan Drinan in the #24 car driven by Billy Roe at Orlando. Two cars had driver changes before the start of practice due to budgetary issues: Chitwood Motorsports signed Andy Michner in the #17 car the day before ROP in place of Brian Tyler, both passing their tests with the team, and PDM Racing replaced John Paul Jr. on May 5 with rookie Jack Hewitt, who had passed all but one of his rookie test phases in Jack Miller's Sinden Racing entry on April. Finally, Blueprint announced during Opening Day that the #27 seat would go to second-year driver Claude Bourbonnais.
Before the start of practice, eight further car/driver combinations were registered, pushing the total to 40 competitors. Team Scandia announced the signing of Billy Roe for a second car in late March, both Robby Unser and Steve Knapp were announced for additional entries by Team Cheever and ISM Racing on April 9, and Donnie Beechler was confirmed a day later for a new team, Cahill Auto Racing. At the release of the entry list, Lyn St. James confirmed her programme as a driver/owner, while LP Racing entered a second car for Scott Harrington. In the final week leading to practice, Joe Gosek was signed by new outfit Liberty Racing, and veteran Danny Ongais received a call-up before Opening Day to drive for yet another new team, Pelfrey, which had been denied a request to field Shawn Bayliff due to a lack of experience.
- W Former winner
- R Indy 500 Rookie
- ^ Entered on May 11.
- ^ Brian Tyler R took laps in the spare car on Bump Day while Groff hadn't qualified yet for the race.
- ^ Switched to the #19 spare car on Bump Day after being bumped from the field.
- ^ The car was entered without a driver, and never took part in practice.
- ^ Entered on May 14.
- ^ Jaques Lazier was entered, but claimed he didn't have a program in place, and neither he or the car took part in practice.
- ^ Entered on May 14. Danny Ongais, the entry's original driver, was injured in a crash on May 11.
Practice
[edit]Sunday May 10
[edit]Opening day saw Mike Groff take the honor of "first car on the track." Crashes during the day were suffered by Jack Hewitt and Jimmy Kite, neither were serious. Robbie Buhl was the fastest car of the day, at 219.325 mph.
Monday May 11
[edit]Tony Stewart led the speed chart, with a lap of 223.703 mph. It was the fastest lap since the normally aspirated engine formula was adopted in 1997. Eight drivers in total broke the 200 mph barrier.
Danny Ongais suffered the most serious crash thus far for the month, and was sidelined with a concussion. He would never race an IndyCar/Champ Car again. Arie Luyendyk, Mike Groff, Raul Boesel and Tony Stewart all suffered mechanical problems, and required tows back to the garage area.
Off the track, Eddie Cheever announced a sponsorship deal with Rachel's Gourmet Potato Chips.
Tuesday May 12
[edit]Tony Stewart nearly matched his speed from a day before, with a fast lap of 223.691 mph. Second best Kenny Bräck was a full 2 mph slower at 221.593 mph.
Sunny skies, with temperatures in the 70s greeted the Speedway for the third day in a row.
Wednesday May 13
[edit]Moisture from an overnight shower delayed the start of practice for about a half-hour. Billy Boat took the honors for fastest of the day at 221.691 mph, while Tony Stewart sat out the day. Temperatures topped out at 80 degrees late in the day.
Thursday May 14
[edit]Jimmy Kite suffered his second wall contact of the week, backing the car into the wall in turn 4. Another warm, 83 degree afternoon saw Tony Stewart once again on top of the speed chart (223.430 mph).
"Fast" Friday May 15
[edit]The final day of practice before pole day was warm, with a high of 81 degrees. Tony Stewart topped the speed chart with the fastest lap of the month (223.797 mph). Kenny Bräck and Billy Boat were also over 221 mph.
Boat, however, wrecked his primary car in turn 3 shortly after the 11 a.m. start. Also spinning in a separate incident (but not making contact) was Jack Hewitt.
At the close of practice, Tony Stewart entered time trials as the favorite for the pole position. Stewart led the speed chart on four of the six days of practice (sitting out one day). Foyt drivers Kenny Bräck and Billy Boat were also front row favorites, however, Boat's crash on Friday seemed to dim his chances.
Time trials
[edit]Pole Day – Saturday May 16
[edit]Pole day dawned sunny and clear, with temperatures in the high 70s. Qualifying started on-time promptly at 11 a.m., but saw two early wave-offs. The first two notable runs were put in by Robbie Buhl (220.236 mph) and Tony Stewart (220.386 mph), but the speeds were down from their expectations.
At noon, Kenny Bräck took over the provisional pole with a run of 220.982 mph. Minutes later, Jimmy Kite crashed for the third time of the week. At 12:45 p.m., Billy Boat took to the track for his run. His first lap was a remarkable 224.573 mph, the fastest lap of the month. The three other laps dropped off, but his four-lap average of 223.503 mph was fast enough to secure the pole position.
Sixteen cars completed runs before the mid-afternoon down time. Around 4:15 p.m., qualifying resumed, with drivers Scott Sharp and Eddie Cheever among those making the field. At 5:15 p.m., Greg Ray squeezed onto the front row, as the second-fastest qualifier (221.125 mph).
At the end of the day, the field was filled to 26 cars, after a record 42 qualifying attempts. Among the notables not yet in the field were Arie Luyendyk, Lyn St. James, and Jeff Ward. Luyendyk suffered through engine trouble most of the day.
Billy Boat's unexpected speed in qualifying drew the attention of competitors, given that it occurred in the heat of the day, and it was 2+1⁄2 miles per hour faster than he had run all week. Team Menard threatened to protest, and accused Foyt Racing of cheating by illegally using nitrous.[2][3] The Indy Racing League took no action, and Boat was not penalized.
Bump Day – Sunday May 17
[edit]With seven positions remaining in the field, the second and final day of time trials saw heavy activity. In the first hour, veterans Raul Boesel, Arie Luyendyk and Jeff Ward were among the early qualifiers. Scott Harrington, however, blew an engine and wrecked on his second lap, which put a halt to qualifying for nearly 45 minutes.
In the heat of the day (1:52 p.m.), Eliseo Salazar completed a run at 216.259 mph, the second-slowest in the field. His run was followed by a long down-time, as teams waited for optimum conditions.
At 4:30 p.m., qualifying resumed, and several cars took to the track. During the next hour, 13 attempts were made, but only 5 were run to completion. After three wrecks for the week, Jimmy Kite found the needed speed, and managed to fill the field to 33 cars at 4:55 p.m. With Billy Roe (215.781 mph) the first driver on the bubble, Mike Groff bumped him out at 5:23 p.m. That put Eliseo Salazar (216.259 mph) on the bubble. Minutes later, Roe went back out and bumped his way back into the field. The move placed Johnny Unser (216.316 mph) now on the bubble.
Claude Bourbonnais, Dan Drinan, and Lyn St. James all fell short of Johnny Unser's speed, and failed to bump him out. With four minutes remaining, Eliseo Salazar scrambled into Stan Wattles' back-up car, but managed only 211 mph on the first two laps. The car began smoking, and he was waved off. The 6 o'clock gun fired with Hideshi Matsuda waiting in line.
With Lyn St. James having failed to qualify, the 500 had an all-male field for the first time since 1991.
Carburetion Day
[edit]The final practice session was held Thursday May 21. The Foyt entries of Kenny Bräck and Billy Boat top the speed chart. Bräck (220.994 mph) was the only driver over 220 mph. No incidents were reported, but Stan Wattles twice stalled on the track with mechanical problems.
Pit Stop Challenge
[edit]The 22nd annual Coors Pit Stop Challenge was held Thursday May 21. Eight teams competed for a $40,000 top prize. The top three race qualifiers and their respective pit crews were automatically eligible: Billy Boat, Greg Ray, and Kenny Bräck. Five additional spots would be earned by teams that won the Pit Performance Award at the seven IRL races held since the previous year's Indy 500.[4]
To win the Pit Performance Award at a race, all cars were timed for their pit stops (entrance to exit). The driver with the lowest total elapsed time in the pit area during each race, provided that driver won the race or was running at the finish - within ten laps of the winner - would earn the berth. The drivers that earned berths were as follows: Arie Luyendyk (Texas), Tony Stewart (PPIR), Eddie Cheever (Charlotte), Robbie Buhl (Loudon), and Scott Goodyear (Las Vegas, Phoenix). Cheever chose to not participate in the event. His slot was filled by Buddy Lazier for a total of eight entries. Treadway Racing was initially eligible for two slots, but the team dropped down to a one-car operation for 1998. Scott Goodyear, who earned a berth with Treadway at Las Vegas in 1997 parted ways with the team during the offseason. However, he re-qualified for the event with Panther in early 1998.
The eight-team, head-to-head elimination competition was held after the final practice. Panther Racing and driver Scott Goodyear defeated Team Menard with driver Robbie Buhl in the finals. Buhl's car failed to leave the pit box. It was Panther's first of two victories in the event. Galles Racing, which had won the previous two years (and five overall), did not participate, as they did not compete in the IRL during the 1998 season.
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||||||
11 | Billy Boat (A. J. Foyt Enterprises) | 14.435 | ||||||||||||
91 | Buddy Lazier (Hemelgarn Racing) | 20.420 | ||||||||||||
3 | Robbie Buhl (Team Menard) | 13.223 | ||||||||||||
11 | Billy Boat (A. J. Foyt Enterprises) | 16.247 | ||||||||||||
3 | Robbie Buhl (Team Menard) | 16.660 | ||||||||||||
1 | Tony Stewart (Team Menard) | 17.215 | ||||||||||||
4 | Scott Goodyear (Panther Racing) | 17.307 | ||||||||||||
3 | Robbie Buhl (Team Menard) | no time | ||||||||||||
4 | Scott Goodyear (Panther Racing) | 13.967 | ||||||||||||
97 | Greg Ray (Knapp Motorsports) | 21.114 | ||||||||||||
4 | Scott Goodyear (Panther Racing) | 12.684 | ||||||||||||
5 | Arie Luyendyk (Treadway Racing) | 13.215 | ||||||||||||
5 | Arie Luyendyk (Treadway Racing) | 12.704 | ||||||||||||
14 | Kenny Bräck (A. J. Foyt Enterprises) | 16.802 |
Starting grid
[edit]Row | Inside | Middle | Outside | |||
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1 | 11 | Billy Boat | 97 | Greg Ray | 14 | Kenny Bräck |
2 | 1 | Tony Stewart | 3 | Robbie Buhl | 99 | Sam Schmidt |
3 | 8 | Scott Sharp | 6 | Davey Hamilton | 21 | Roberto Guerrero |
4 | 4 | Scott Goodyear | 91 | Buddy Lazier W | 28 | Mark Dismore |
5 | 44 | J. J. Yeley R | 16 | Marco Greco | 40 | Jack Miller |
6 | 81 | John Paul Jr. | 51 | Eddie Cheever | 12 | Buzz Calkins |
7 | 17 | Andy Michner R | 53 | Jim Guthrie | 52 | Robby Unser R |
8 | 18 | Jack Hewitt R | 55 | Steve Knapp R | 98 | Donnie Beechler R |
9 | 9 | Johnny Unser | 7 | Jimmy Kite R | 35 | Jeff Ward |
10 | 5 | Arie Luyendyk W | 19 | Stan Wattles R | 30 | Raul Boesel |
11 | 77 | Stéphan Grégoire | 10 | Mike Groff | 33 | Billy Roe |
Alternates
[edit]- First alternate: Eliseo Salazar (#15) - Bumped
- Second alternate: Lyn St. James (#90) - Too slow
Failed to qualify
[edit]- #20 Tyce Carlson - practice crash
- #27 Claude Bourbonnais
- #29 Joe Gosek
- #54 Hideshi Matsuda
- #66 Scott Harrington
- #24 Dan Drinan R
- #23 Paul Durant
Race recap
[edit]Pre race
[edit]Rain fell during the morning of the race, delaying the start of the race by about 35 minutes. During track drying efforts, a dog sneaked out onto the track in turn four, and ran down the pit lane while eluding officials, all the way to turn two before being caught. Mari Hulman George finally gave the command to start engines at 11:32 a.m. EST. Before the final pace lap, Raul Boesel went into the pits with a fuel pump problem and missed the start of the race. Boesel would only complete three racing laps before being towed to the garage on Lap 8, going on to lose 35 laps until he was back on track.
Start
[edit]At the start, Eddie Cheever got loose in turn one, and pinched J. J. Yeley down to the inside, which resulted in a half-spin for both of them, and an early caution for three laps. Despite a slight contact, Cheever continued unharmed. Yeley managed to stop the car and not hit the wall, but his engine stalled, and lost a lap before being restarted by safety crews.
At the front of the field, Billy Boat led the first dozen laps, while Kenny Bräck dropped on the restart from third to tenth after missing a shift. On lap 13, Greg Ray took over the lead, and Tony Stewart charged in third after exchanging passes with teammate Robbie Buhl. On Lap 16, Buddy Lazier pitted out of sequence from tenth place, as part of an alternative strategy. By Lap 19, Bräck had regained third place, passing Buhl and Boat in the same lap.
On Lap 21, Ray was slowed by traffic, and Stewart dove into the lead down the main stretch. Just one lap later, Stewart's engine blew as he approached the finish line, coasting to a stop in the outside of turn 1. A dejected Stewart threw his steering wheel and gloves into his empty cockpit, as misfortune had struck him again for the third straight "500".
"Well, I mean, this is the only thing I've ever wanted to do in my life, this has been my number one goal, and every year I get shit on doing it, so... How would you feel?"
First half
[edit]Under caution, the first round of pit stops featured an incident between Jeff Ward and Stéphan Grégoire. After being serviced, Ward damaged his front wing when he collided with the left rear tyre of Grégoire, who was entering his pit box. Billy Boat fell to the bottom of the top 10 after stalling his car, and Arie Luyendyk stalled three times before getting back on the track, due to a clutch issue that prevented him from downshifting into first or second gear. Just before the restart, Scott Goodyear relinquished his fourth place because of clutch issues, losing 35 laps for repairs.
Greg Ray led the race order on Lap 27 ahead of Kenny Bräck and Davey Hamilton, but restarted the race behind Luyendyk and Lazier, both still on the lead lap. Eddie Cheever had not stopped in the previous caution and was already up to 10th place, having passed several cars before. On Lap 32, race leader Ray slowed suddenly on the backstraight with a broken transmission. He made it to the pits, and rejoined the race 18 laps later. As other cars briefly slowed down, Robbie Buhl took advantage and passed Hamilton for second place behind new race leader Kenny Bräck.
On Lap 34, Donnie Beechler broke an engine and brought out the third caution, which included Lazier's second pit stop and Boat making additional stops to correct handling issues in his car. At the end of the caution period, Robbie Buhl encountered water temperature problems in his engine. He lost places to Hamilton and Scott Sharp after the Lap 39 restart, and was already down in seventh place when he suffered yet another engine failure, ending Team Menard's race on Lap 45. Before the yellow, Cheever had continued his charge towards the front; having passed Roberto Guerrero and rookie Steve Knapp earlier, he also got past Sam Schmidt, Buhl and Sharp to claim third place, just missing on a pass for second over Hamilton when the caution came out.
"Going into (turn) 3, I thought Davey saw me, I thought we were gonna go through side by side. At the last minute, he just took his line, which is his right, and I just stood on the brakes, and then just all hell broke loose after that"
Buzz Calkins and Buddy Lazier, both out of sequence, led the restart as the green came out on Lap 49, while Billy Boat's gearbox finally seized as it got stuck in second gear. Several cars were running two-wide at the front of the field, when a major crash occurred in turn 3. Sam Schmidt, who tried an inside pass on Davey Hamilton for second place, got into the grass, lost control, and spun backwards into the turn three wall. Eddie Cheever was immediately behind after getting passed by Schmidt, but slipped underneath and escaped the incident. Stan Wattles ran into the back of Mark Dismore, and both cars collected Roberto Guerrero.
As he approached the scene, Jim Guthrie tried to avoid the crash by shortcutting into the grass. Just as he rejoined the racetrack, he collected an errant wing from Schmidt's car that fell in front of his car, and his machine shot head-on into the outside wall. Guthrie was extricated by the medical team and transported to Methodist Hospital with a broken elbow, a broken leg and cracked ribs. Billy Roe avoided the incident at first, but spun the car on the deceleration lane between turns 3 and 4, and crashed into the inside wall.
After a long yellow flag, and a series of pit stops, Kenny Bräck and Eddie Cheever were leading the race over Scott Sharp. Owing to good restarts and the high attrition, Arie Luyendyk was up to fourth place over the improving John Paul Jr. and Davey Hamilton, who had minor repairs during his pit stop. Buddy Lazier, on the other hand, stayed out in the lead until Lap 61 and was placed in tenth at the time, with 13 cars on the lead lap. The race went back to green on Lap 64, and Cheever took the lead for the first time on Lap 68. Paul Jr. progressed into second place by Lap 73, while Sharp lost places steadily.
Green flag pit stops began on Lap 83, with Buddy Lazier pitting ten laps later. Arie Luyendyk had to be pushed out due to his clutch issues, and a miscalculation by Foyt's crew caused Kenny Bräck to run out of fuel, costing him two laps. The gaffe angered A. J. Foyt, who was caught on the TV broadcast scolding his engineers and smashing one of the team's laptops. Eddie Cheever left his pit box before his crew removed the fuel nozzle and lost some time, but he managed to retain the lead by 1.5 seconds over John Paul Jr., with Davey Hamilton another five seconds behind and Robby Unser holding Luyendyk for fourth. As more drivers were being lapped, Steve Knapp and Lazier were the last cars on the lead lap, half a minute behind. Just after the pit stop window, another yellow came out on Lap 96 when Jimmy Kite stopped along the track.
Second half
[edit]With just seven cars on the lead lap, Eddie Cheever and Steve Knapp took advantage of the yellow to top off on fuel, handing John Paul Jr. the lead of the race. The green came out at the halfway point, as Johnny Unser retired with a blown engine. Paul pulled a five second lead over Davey Hamilton before pitting on Lap 113, with Robby Unser, Hamilton and Arie Luyendyk following suit. After completing his pit stop, Jack Miller stopped on Turn 2 with a battery issue, with the new caution period affording Cheever, Buddy Lazier and Knapp the opportunity to pit again.
After the Lap 128 restart, Luyendyk passed Hamilton for second, and Cheever followed suit into third. After his earlier gearbox troubles, Billy Boat finally dropped out for good on Lap 132, and Jeff Ward lost a rear wheel under caution; the wheel had been poorly attached in a previous green flag stop. The race restarted on Lap 136, with Paul Jr., Luyendyk and Cheever running close together. Paul Jr. picked up a big piece of plastic in his radiators and had a slow pit stop on Lap 147 to retrieve it, while Robby Unser overshoot his pit stall.
Luyendyk's clutch problems finally took their toll on Lap 150 as he left the pits very slowly. He had to pull off between turns 3 and 4, and the race was slowed three laps later, which left Robby Unser out of the lead lap. Out of nine caution periods until that point, six of them had been caused by cars stopped on track with mechanical issues. Paul Jr. and Hamilton had managed to not lose a lap with Cheever and led the restart order on Lap 157, although Hamilton was quickly dealt with. Paul Jr. offered more resistance until Lap 163, as he lifted off briefly due to a malfunction in the yellow flag indicator of his steering wheel. This left Buddy Lazier and Steve Knapp as the only other drivers on the lead lap, four and seven seconds back respectively.
Stéphan Grégoire brushed the wall heavily in Turn 4 with 24 laps to go, with the caution setting the stage for the end of the race. John Paul Jr.'s slim chances of winning vanished as he was unable to leave the pits, where he stayed for almost four minutes. His car stalled four times before being able to engage first gear, but he had lost three laps in the process.
All three drivers in the lead lap were now in the same strategy, with Cheever and Lazier separated by the lapped cars of Robby Unser and Jeff Ward, and four other cars between Lazier and Steve Knapp. The restart on Lap 180 was short lived, as Jack Hewitt spun the car on the outside of Turn 1, although the veteran rookie managed to employ his dirt track skills and keep the car off the wall. In the following restart, Scott Sharp lost second gear and had to retire from fifth place.
Finish
[edit]"I don't know what I'm supposed to say. [...] I had about 15 guardian angels help me today, I had five or six close calls, but I squeezed through all of them. I wasn't gonna finish second, second was not on the books today. (I was) Either gonna win, or not finish at all"
With 17 laps to go, Buddy Lazier passed the remaining lapped cars on the restart and went after Cheever, being able to keep up for a few laps. Cheever eventually stretched the lead to over 3 seconds, but yet another yellow was brought out on Lap 191 due to the smoking car of Marco Greco. With five laps to go in the final restart, Lazier was nose-to-tail with Cheever, who held off the challenge as he weaved from side to side in the front straight. Cheever set off on a blistering pace and almost brushed the wall a lap later at the exit of Turn 3, but stretched out to a 3.19-second margin to grab the victory.
Cheever became the first driver to win the Indy 500 in his own car since A. J. Foyt in 1977, and the first winner since 1989 to have led the most laps. Having started 17th on the grid, his win had the lowest starting position for both Indy Car racing and the Indy 500 since Al Unser's fourth win in 1987 from 20th place. For the first time since 1982, and last as of 2024, all drivers in the top 5 hailed from the United States, with Bräck as the lone foreign driver within the top 13, and four rookies finished in the top 10 for the first time since 1965. Due to high attrition among the main favourites, none of the top 3 drivers had started in the first three rows, which also happened in the highly infamous 1973 and 1992 editions of the race.
Steve Knapp, the only other driver to finish on the lead lap in third place, won rookie of the year honours in his first Indy car race, a feat last accomplished by Lyn St. James in 1992. Kenny Bräck salvaged a sixth place finish, and Andy Michner kept his nose clean while battling an electrical problem to cross the line eighth over J. J. Yeley. Both were scored three laps down, and neither would run the Indianapolis 500 again. Mike Groff suffered from engine misfires during the whole race in route to a 15th place finish, in what would be his final Indy car start.
Box score
[edit]W Former Indianapolis 500 winner
R Indianapolis 500 Rookie
Race statistics
[edit]
|
|
|
Tire participation chart | |
---|---|
Supplier | No. of starters |
Goodyear | 22* |
Firestone | 11 |
* - Denotes race winner |
Broadcasting
[edit]Radio
[edit]The race was carried live on the Indy Racing Radio Network. The network, previously known as the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network, had changed its name for 1998, to reflect its coverage of the entire Indy Racing League season. At least 541 affiliates carried the broadcast across the United States.[5]
Bob Jenkins served as chief announcer for the ninth and final year. Overall it would be the 20th and final year for Jenkins on the radio network crew (except for a brief stint as a turn reporter in 2007–2008). In addition, Jerry Baker celebrated his milestone 25th year on the broadcast.
Johnny Rutherford served as "driver expert". WTHR sports director and Speedway public address announcer Dave Calabro joined the crew as a pit reporter, his lone radio network appearance. This was also Gary Lee's final year on the radio network.
Indy Racing Radio Network | ||
---|---|---|
Booth Announcers | Turn Reporters | Pit/garage reporters |
Chief Announcer: Bob Jenkins |
Turn 1: Jerry Baker |
Mark Jaynes (north pits) Dave Calabro (center pits) Vince Welch (south pits) Chuck Marlowe (garages) |
Television
[edit]The race was carried live flag-to-flag coverage in the United States on ABC Sports. Paul Page served as host and play-by-play announcer with Tom Sneva as analyst. Longtime color commentator Bobby Unser left ABC, while Danny Sullivan was reassigned to cover CART races exclusively and would no longer be with the broadcast. This would be Page's final 500 for the next three years. After the 1998 season, Page would move exclusively to CART series broadcasts while being replaced in 1999 by soon to be former voice of the 500 Bob Jenkins.
For the first time since the early 1980s, one of the pit reporters (Gary Gerould) rode in the pace car, reporting live at the start of the race. During the broadcast itself, Brent Musburger had a small role as Wide World of Sports studio host.
At the track itself, the Speedway broadcast the race live on a special targeted signal, intended to be picked up by television sets within the radius of the grounds. This was the first and only time this special signal has been used.
ABC Television | |
---|---|
Booth Announcers | Pit/garage reporters |
Jack Arute Gary Gerould Dr. Jerry Punch |
Practice and time trials were carried over three networks: ABC, ESPN, and ESPN2.
- Live Daily Reports (ESPN2): Paul Page, Jon Beekhuis, Jerry Punch, Jack Arute, Gary Gerould
- Time trials (ABC): Paul Page, Tom Sneva, Jack Arute, Gary Gerould, Brent Musberger (studio host)
- Time trials (ESPN/ESPN2): Paul Page, Jon Beekhuis, Jerry Punch, Gary Gerould
Gallery
[edit]-
1998 Chevrolet Corvette pace car
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Cavin, Curt (May 18, 1998). "The little engine that couldn't". The Indianapolis Star. p. 38. Retrieved April 24, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "The Callahan Report: Tony Stewart's Team Owner Should Shut Up and Race". The Auto Channel. 1998-06-30. Retrieved 2009-10-09.
- ^ "Columnist Brian Hilderbrand: Bahre battling lung disease". Las Vegas Sun. 1998-07-02. Retrieved 2009-10-09.
- ^ "IRL: Contingency awards for 1998". Motorsport. January 20, 1998. Retrieved August 30, 2024.
- ^ 1998 Indianapolis 500 - Daily Trackside Report; pg. 105
Works cited
[edit]- 1998 Indianapolis 500 Daily Trackside Report for the Media
- Indianapolis 500 History: Race & All-Time Stats - Official Site
- 1998 Indianapolis 500 Radio Broadcast, Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
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Indy Racing League 1998 season |
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