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Qualified!!
By
A.J. Foyt
Qualifying for the Indianapolis 500 comes with its own
kind of pressure and I don’t care how long you’ve been
doing it, it never gets any easier. And you just don’t
know the relief a driver feels when you get in the race.
You might be disappointed with the run but you’re still
very relieved to get in the race.
And the sooner you do it, the better.
Qualifying at Indy is different from any other race and
it’s always been complicated. A couple years ago, they
managed to make it even more complicated and a little
more exciting for the fans. They limited the number of
cars that could lock in their positions to 11 a day. And
while it used to be you had three chances to get in the
race with your car for the whole month, now you have
three chances a day to get in the race.
The thing to remember is that when the 33 car field is
set, it is the fastest 33 cars lined up in the order of
the days they qualified: Pole Day, Second Day
Qualifying, Third Day Qualifying and Bump Day.
We didn’t get in on Pole Day because we didn’t have the
speed in practice to be in the top 11 so I didn’t even
put them in line to qualify. The track conditions
weren’t good because it was very windy. Several cars
spun and hit the wall.
We ran Sunday. Vitor Meira qualified first and his speed
was fast enough but then the No. 14 car was disqualified
because the rear track width didn’t pass the
post-qualifying tech inspection. My grandson Anthony
also made a qualifying run but he brushed the wall so we
figured his 220 average speed wouldn’t hold. We were
still looking for more speed with both ABC Supply
Dallara/Honda/Firestone cars.
I decided to make some big changes to the set-ups
because our specially-made stuff for Indy wasn’t worth a
damn—it may be good in the future but right here, right
now, it was slowing us down.
We went back to the basics and picked up three miles an
hour! A little embarrassing but I didn’t care. We tried
it first with Vitor’s No. 14 ABC Supply car and we knew
right away. He said the car didn’t feel that much
different to him driving-wise, it was just faster. He
put it in the race at a four-lap average speed of
223.054mph--third quick for the day and fast enough to
have gotten in the first day. He bumped Anthony from the
field, which we expected. Vitor will start 14th—same
place we started last year but the competition is
stronger this year.
Vitor qualified with two hours left. We tried a slightly
different set-up with Anthony’s No. 41 ABC Supply car
and he still wasn’t fast enough so I told them to put
Vitor’s set-up on Anthony’s car…right there in pit lane.
We didn’t have time to go back to the garage.
I know he was nervous – I had fussed at him a little bit
earlier in the day but I think he understood I was
trying to help him. Most drivers wouldn’t like watching
the mechanics run around making changes to the car while
sitting in it in pit lane--wondering if they screwed all
the nuts and bolts tight. But Anthony had trust in me
and our ABC Supply team and he went out and ran a lap at
223.5 mph! He asked for a little more security in the
rear of the car, and we made a couple more adjustments
and rolled him into line to qualify.
I told him he just needed to be fast enough to get it
in—high 221 mph laps would do it.
He gave me a little more—all of his laps were in the 222
mph range which gave him a little cushion speed wise. He
qualified at 222.586mph and will start 19th.
I think he did a fine job especially considering he
hadn’t been in an Indy car since last October.
When we started the week out, we had both ABC Supply
cars in race set-ups to get the drivers used to the
speeds here at Indy and they were both very comfortable
with the cars. So now that we’re in the race, we’ll
focus on the race set-ups when we get back on the track
Thursday. We have a good baseline so we won’t need to do
too much because the drivers really like their cars.
Me? I like the fact that we’re in the show with no
worries of getting bumped. For as long as I’ve been
doing this, qualifying at Indy is still a
pressure-filled day. That hasn’t changed. Neither has
the feeling when you get your cars in the show--it still
feels great! |