2013 Indianapolis 500
The 97th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday May 26, 2013. It was the premier event of the 2013 IZOD IndyCar Series season. Tony Kanaan, a native of Brazil, was victorious on a record-setting day. Kanaan became the fourth Brazilian driver to win the Indianapolis 500 joined by Emerson Fittipaldi, Helio Castroneves, and Gil de Ferran.
The track opened for practice on Saturday, May 11. Time trials were held May 18–19, and the final practice, traditionally dubbed "Carb Day", was Friday, May 24. A support race, the Freedom 100 for the Indy Lights series was also held on Carb Day. In time trials, owner/driver Ed Carpenter of Indianapolis won the pole position, the first American-born pole-sitter since 2006, and the first owner/driver to sit on the pole since 1975.
For the first time since 1987, two drivers in the field entered the race attempting to win a fourth Indianapolis 500. Three-time winners Hélio Castroneves and Dario Franchitti attempted to tie A. J. Foyt, Al Unser Sr. and Rick Mears for the most Indy 500 victories. Neither driver was victorious this day, though Castroneves would achieve the feat in 2021. Unknown at the time, the 2013 race would be Franchitti's last; he retired after suffering severe injuries in a crash at Houston about five months later.
After eleven previous attempts, Tony Kanaan, racing for KV Racing Technology, won the race. On a restart with three laps remaining, Kanaan overtook leader Ryan Hunter-Reay in the first turn. Three-time champion Dario Franchitti got loose and crashed into the outside wall bringing out the final caution of the race. Kanaan led Rookie of the Year Carlos Muñoz and Hunter-Reay across the line. The average speed of the race – – was the fastest Indianapolis 500, breaking the record set in 1990 by Arie Luyendyk. The record would stand until 2021. The 68 lead changes, and 14 different leaders, set during the race are also new records. Other records set included most cars running at the finish in a race that completed 200 laps, fewest caution laps, most laps completed by the field, as well as a 133-lap caution-free segment from lap 61 through 193.
Chevrolet swept the top four finishing positions, and took its first Indianapolis 500 win since 2002, breaking Honda's streak of nine consecutive Indy 500 wins. Chassis manufacturer Dallara won its 8th straight Indy 500, and 13th overall since joining the series in 1997.
Event background
- For the first time since 1989, the Indy 500 was part of an Indy car "triple crown" along with Pocono and Fontana. A $1 million bonus prize was offered for any driver to win all three races in the same season.
- Lotus, who fielded underpowered and uncompetitive engines in 2012, was released from its contract, and did not participate from 2013 onwards.
- On December 21, 2012, Firestone signed a five-year contract extension to be the exclusive official tire supplier through 2018.
- Following its popular success during the festivities surrounding Super Bowl XLVI, a zip-line was installed in the infield.
- After missing the 2012 race due to an illness, Jim Nabors returned to perform "Back Home Again in Indiana" during the pre-race ceremonies. It was his 33rd year performing the song in-person, and 35th overall.
Selected rules and rule changes
- Cars will be allowed 130 kPa of turbocharger "boost" during practice, Carb Day, and race day. Cars will be allowed 140 kPa of boost for "Fast Friday" practice, and during time trials.
- All entries will be allowed a total of 33 sets of tires for practice, time trials and race day. Rookie orientation participants receive four additional sets for exclusive use during that session, and likewise refresher test participants receive two additional sets for use during that session. Entries that qualify for the Fast Nine "Shootout" on Pole Day will receive an additional new set of tires for use during each shootout qualifying attempt, but they must be returned and can not be used during the race.
- Full-time IndyCar entries must adhere to the required 2,000-mile engine mileage limits. Unapproved engine changes will see a 10-position grid penalty at the next race of the season. Most full-time teams will enter the month with the same engine they used earlier in the season. The 2,000 miles on the engine must be exhausted during practice before installing a fresh engine for "Fast Friday" and qualifying. At the close of time trials, an additional fresh engine may be installed for Carb Day and race day, without penalty. However, the time trials engine must be re-installed and utilized for later events if it still has miles remaining on it.
- Part-time teams utilizing the "Short" engine program will be provided with one engine for use during practice, time trials, and race day.
Schedule
| Color | Notes |
| Green | Practice |
| Dark blue | Time trials |
| Silver | Race day |
| Red | Rained out |
| Blank | No track activity |
was significantly limited due to rain
ROP — denotes rookie orientation program
Comm. — denotes 500 Festival Community Day
Entry list
The official entry list was released May 7, featuring 34 entries. The initial entry list included four rookies and four former winners in Hélio Castroneves, Dario Franchitti, Scott Dixon and Buddy Lazier.Ryan Briscoe—who took pole position for the 2012 race—was unable to secure a full-time drive for the 2013 season, but participated in the race in a fourth car entered by Chip Ganassi Racing.
| Driver | Status | Entrant | Engine | Sponsor | |
| 1 | ![]() Practice and rookie orientationRookie orientation was scheduled for Thursday, April 11. However, due to a poor weather forecast, was postponed. Instead, rookies will participate in special two-hour sessions during the first two days of Indianapolis 500 practice.Testing – Thursday, May 9A private test focused on NASCAR driver Kurt Busch, who tested a car for Andretti Autosport. Busch conducted the evaluation test with the possibility of attempting "Double Duty" in 2014. Busch reached a top lap of 218 mph.Practice and rookie orientation – Saturday, May 11
Practice – Sunday, May 12
Practice – Monday, May 13
Practice – Tuesday, May 14
Practice – Wednesday, May 15
Practice – Thursday, May 16
Fast Friday practice – Friday, May 17
Time trialsPole Day time trials: segment 1 – Saturday, May 18
Pole Day time trials: Fast Nine Shootout – Saturday, May 18
Bump Day time trials – Sunday, May 19
Carb DayPracticeThe final practice session was held Friday May 24. Simon Pagenaud turned the fastest lap of the day. Three minor incidents were reported. Takuma Sato had a small engine fire at the beginning of the session, but it was extinguished quickly by the team. Ana Beatriz made contact with Carlos Muñoz entering the pits. The car suffered minor damage to the front wing. Ryan Briscoe suffered an engine fire as time expired in the session. He pulled the car over in the warm-up lane of turn four, and climbed from the cockpit uninjured.Pit Stop ChallengeThe 36th annual Pit Stop Challenge was held on Friday May 24. The competition featured twelve participants in a single-elimination bracket-style match-up. Four teams received byes, while eight teams competed in the first round. The format has two cars competing in a head-to-head layout resembling a drag race. The cars race from a standing start and drive into the pit box, change four tires, simulate a refueling, and race to a finish line a few hundred feet down the pit lane. Team Penske won the pit stop competition for the 14th time, with driver Helio Castroneves.Starting grid
Race summaryStartFor the first time since 1987, multiple three-time winners of the race were in contention ; however, neither driver ended up being a serious threat to win the race. The race started at 12:15 p.m. EDT. Ed Carpenter started in pole position, but Marco Andretti, who started in third position, soon took the lead. The initial start and first laps commenced without any crashes or yellow flags.First halfThe first caution flag flew when J. R. Hildebrand hit the wall in Turn 2 on the fourth lap of the race, just after posting the fastest time for a lap in the race. Hildebrand had almost won the 2011 Indianapolis 500 but lost due to a crash during the final lap, and then in the 2013 was out of contention after the early crash. On lap 36, driver Sebastián Saavedra was bumped between turns three and four and subsequently crashed into the wall outside of turn four. Driver Pippa Mann later apologized for the accident on her website. The first half of the race featured many lead changes, with Tony Kanaan, Carpenter, and Andretti exchanging the leading spot; however, just before the halfway point in the race, A. J. Allmendinger passed Kanaan to take the lead, with Ryan Hunter-Reay and Andretti following behind in third and fourth, respectively.Second halfAllmendinger, leading with under 90 laps to go, had a clasp from his seatbelt come loose and was forced to make a pitstop so his pit crew could refasten it, losing the lead. Driver Graham Rahal then crashed with 7 laps left to go, bringing the race under a yellow caution flag. Ryan Hunter-Reay had been in the lead during this caution flag, but when the caution ended, Kanaan, who ran in the top ten most of the race, slipped by Hunter-Reay to take the lead. Just when Kanaan led in the first turn, Dario Franchitti crashed with three laps left, causing another yellow caution flag that would last for the remainder of the race. Under the yellow flag, Kanaan finished the final 2.5 laps to win his first Indy 500, with Carlos Muñoz in second place and Hunter-Reay in third. The race featured more lead changes than any previous Indianapolis 500 with 68, twice the number of the previous record, set in 2012. Kanaan said after the race, "I was looking at the stands, and it was unbelievable... This is it, man. I made it. Finally they're going to put my ugly face on this trophy".Box score' Former Indianapolis 500 winner' Indianapolis 500 Rookie All entrants utilized Firestone tires. Race statistics
Record and milestonesNumerous race records and statistical milestones were set during the race:
BroadcastingTelevisionThe race was broadcast live in high definition in the United States on ABC. A newcomer to the telecast was Lindsay Czarniak, served as host. Brent Musburger, who served as host from 2005 to 2012, departed the broadcast crew.Australian broadcasts moved to Foxtel for 2013. Time trials, Carb Day, and the 500 Festival Parade were covered live in the United States on NBC Sports Network. Two separate crews will be used for the qualifying weekend and final practice. For qualifying, the on-air crew was Leigh Diffey, Gil de Ferran and Jon Beekhuis in the booth, with Kevin Lee, Marty Snider, Robin Miller and Will Buxton in the pits and garage area. de Ferran substituted for regular Townsend Bell, who was participating in the event. For final practice, the on-air crew was Bob Jenkins, Jon Beekhuis and Wally Dallenbach Jr. in the booth, with pit reporters Snider, Lee and Miller. Jenkins was filling in for Diffey, who was leading NBC's Monaco Grand Prix broadcast. The Freedom 100 was covered by Mike King, Davey Hamilton and Josef Newgarden, with Jake Query covering the pits, and the parade coverage on Saturday was anchored by Jenkins, Diane Willis and Lee. RadioThe IMS Radio Network broadcast the race live on approximately 400 affiliates, as well as AFN, the LeSEA broadcasting network, and World Harvest Radio. The broadcast was carried on XM channel 94 and Sirius channel 212. Mike King served as anchor for the 15th and unknown to all final year. King resigned his position in late October 2013. Historian Donald Davidson celebrated his 50th year as an official member of the network broadcast. Several drivers, including A. J. Foyt and Bobby Unser recorded celebratory greetings. The commercial out-cues used in 2013 were the drivers during the pre-race coverage, and the historical chief announcers during the race.Katie Hargitt, who had worked other races during the year as a pit reporter, joined the crew for the first time. Her duties were limited to interviews during the pre-race coverage. During the first half of the race, Mike King interviewed future Vice President of the United States and current Indiana Governor Mike Pence in the broadcast booth. 1070 The Fan broadcast nightly with Trackside with Curt Cavin and Kevin Lee, followed by Donald Davidson's The Talk of Gasoline Alley. |
