Special moments through years at Indy
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AP Sports Writer Steve Herman will be covering his 37th Indy 500 this Sunday. Here are a few of his favorite recollections, based on stories he’s written throughout the years.
INDIANAPOLIS - Roger Rager is remembered as the junkyard scavenger who lifted a Chevy engine from an old school bus and drove his hybrid car to the front of the Indianapolis 500.
The veteran sprint car driver made his only appearance in the race in 1980.
“My theory was if I got a block out of a truck or a heavy unit that had been hot and cold and pulled a lot of weight, that block would have already done everything it was ever going to do,” he recalled in a 1996 interview. “So we were at the junkyard, and there sat a bus and it was a Chevrolet and it had what we wanted.
“We pulled two or three motors out of different vehicles, but that one looked to be in the best shape, so we used that block.”
Rager qualified his car at 186.374 mph, faster than veterans A.J. Foyt, Tom Sneva and Gordon Johncock, and started 10th. By the 16th lap, he was leading the race, but his fling at history ended 40 laps later when Jim McElreath spun in front of him in turn one. Rager hit the inside wall and finished 23rd.
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He failed to get into the race again, but his stock block saga remains one of Indy’s most enduring memories.
First ... and almost last
A.J. Foyt first came to Indianapolis in 1958, finishing 16th in a race that almost was his last.
He saw a first-lap, 15-car crash that killed Pat O’Connor and wasn’t sure he wanted to come back. But he did, going on to drive in a record 35 straight Indianapolis 500s and becoming one of only three drivers — Al Unser Sr. and Rick Mears are the others — to win at Indy four times.
Foyt’s career spanned three racing generations and included midgets, sprint cars, dirt cars, stock cars, sports cars and Indy cars. He was the first driver to compete at Indianapolis in four decades and the only driver to win the 500 in an old front-engine roadster and in a modern rear-engine race car.
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“I’m not one of these guys who’s a hero race driver. The guy who tells you that is fooling himself,” he once said. “There’s not a man alive who wants to go out and break his arms or legs or back, and I’ve had all that happen to me.
“When you get right down to it, every individual body has a little fear in it — unless he’s a complete idiot, and they don’t last very long.”
Foyt won his first race at the Speedway in 1961, his second in 1964, his third in 1967 and his fourth in 1977. His final race as a driver was in 1992, and he returns to the Speedway each year as a team owner.
Fantastic finishes
Two of the most dramatic finishes in Indianapolis 500 history involved Emerson Fittipaldi and Al Unser Jr.
Fittipaldi, a former Formula One champion from Brazil, led 148 laps and appeared a cinch for his third Indy victory in 1994, but he was running low on fuel and wanted to go a full lap ahead of Unser, his teammate, who was running second with 15 laps to go.
It was the reverse from 1989, when Unser passed Fittipaldi for the lead with four laps to go. The two drivers battled almost side-to-side until they approached slower traffic in the third turn of the next-to-last lap.
Fittipaldi’s front wheel touched Unser’s rear wheel, sending Unser into the wall and Fittipaldi to his first win at Indy.
Milk moments
The traditional Victory Lane chugalug began nearly 75 years ago when a photographer walked by a Gasoline Alley garage and snapped Louis Meyer swigging a bottle of his mother’s buttermilk.
Meyer, the first three-time winner of the race, was parched after his 1933 win and made a
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beeline for his garage, where the milk was waiting in an icebox.
Indiana Dairy Association officials saw the picture of him taking a swig in the next day’s newspaper and thought it would be great publicity for their product. They talked the Speedway into letting them have a bottle waiting for the winner the next year.
Every Indianapolis 500 winner since then has hoisted a bottle of milk in Victory Lane except Emerson Fittipaldi, who reached for orange juice after his second Indy win in 1993.
Fittipaldi, whose business holdings included a 500,000-acre orange tree plantation in Brazil, apologized two days later.
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