Indy 500 Bump Day delivers drama in spades once again

Katherine Legge summed up the totality of her first experience of being at risk of failing to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 after being relegated to the Last Chance Qualifying session on Sunday along with Marcus Ericsson, Graham Rahal, and Nolan …

Katherine Legge summed up the totality of her first experience of being at risk of failing to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 after being relegated to the Last Chance Qualifying session on Sunday along with Marcus Ericsson, Graham Rahal, and Nolan Siegel.

“Terrifying,” the Dale Coyne Racing driver said. “I feel sick and shaky and like I want to cry.”

The shakes and onset of tears visited the other three drivers in the LCQ, and when the one-hour session was over, it was her young teammate, 19-year-old rookie Nolan Siegel, who was bumped from the field of 33 after crashing on the final attempt to make the “Greatest Spectacle In Racing.”

“I’m fine, but I don’t really care if I’m fine at this point,” Siegel said. “That’s somewhat irrelevant. We’re going home because we did everything we could, and I think we can be very proud of that. I did the first run, and the balance was fine. If anything, it felt pretty maximized on the trim but we knew we had to have more speed; there was no speed in it as I was flat out for four laps and on the limit of being too loose and crashing the car. We took downforce out of it because we were going to be out of the race anyway. I wasn’t going to go home without lifting. It was the last run in qualifying and I was going to go flat, and I went flat. I hit the wall because we went too far but we tried.

“I want to thank the team for all their hard work. I appreciate everything the team has done. They wanted it too. It’s not like I was the only one in this. They wanted it as well and they worked really, really, really hard for a long time. Big thank you to them. They’re not thanking me for doing a good job. Everyone did a good job. I know ultimately the result doesn’t reflect that, but they worked really hard and I’m super appreciative of all the effort they put in. We were in it together; it’s like family.”

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Legge, Ericsson, and Rahal survived to fill out the final row of 11.

Rahal was understandably relieved to be in the show, but wasn’t cheering over how it happened. It wouldn’t be a surprise to see Siegel in a RLL car in the near future based on the respect he’s earned from Rahal and his father Bobby Rahal.

“Today was similar to last year,” he said. “We knew he had the speed to get in and look at how close it is. Kat, Marcus, and me — the same time in essence. It’s a game of thousandths around here. If I can say anything, it’s just ‘Great job’ to Dale Coyne Racing because honestly, they were able to successfully find a lot of speed. If you looked at where Nolan was on Friday and even yesterday, they closed the gap to us considerably as we kept losing pace. We were hanging on by a thread. I’ve been talking about that plenty. Kat did a wonderful job finding a couple of miles per hour — something we have not been able to do, frankly. Those guys put up a valiant effort.

“Nolan. Most of you guys don’t know his name but you will. He’s won in every class and category he’s been in. I’ve watched him. I’ve known the kid for 10 years. He was a little, little guy then. But you’re going to know his name in the future. He’s a winner and will be winning at this level sometime soon.”

Ericsson, the 2022 Indy 500 winner, nearly botched his chance to make it into the race after slowing at the conclusion of his third qualifying lap—one lap early—and having to make another attempt to get into the race.

“That was extremely tough, but this place just brings everything out of everyone,” the Swede said. “Today, I was sitting here waiting in pit lane for the chance to go out and get a speed to even make it into the race. It was just very tough mentally, but we did it. I’m very proud of my team. They’ve been fighting so hard the last few days and to finally get the reward of having the chance to fight in the race means a lot.

“The car has been a challenge since we had to go to the backup, but the team worked extremely hard trying to improve it and make it better. Today we had a car that should have safely put us in a guaranteed spot, but I made a mistake on the first run, so we had to dig deep. It was not easy in this heat to go for a second run but we made it work and pulled it off.”

Rahal misses Indy 500 after being bumped by teammate Harvey

Graham Rahal will not start the 107th running of the Indianapolis 500 after being knocked out at the last minute by Rahal Letterman Lanigan Honda teammate Jack Harvey (pictured above). Grand Prix of Indianapolis pole-winner Christian Lundgaard hit …

Graham Rahal will not start the 107th running of the Indianapolis 500 after being knocked out at the last minute by Rahal Letterman Lanigan Honda teammate Jack Harvey (pictured above).

Grand Prix of Indianapolis pole-winner Christian Lundgaard hit the track first in the one-hour session and opened his first attempt with a 230.325mph and dropped to 229.776mph on his second, 229.371mph on his third and finished off with a 229.129mph. This average of 229.649mph was slower than expected, for he had been the fastest of the four Last Chance Qualifier contenders in morning practice. The car looked secure – possibly too secure – perhaps carrying too much downforce in response to the 124 degree track temperature.

Sting Ray Robb of Dale Coyne Racing with RWR was next up, and the first and second laps from the 21-year-old rookie from Idaho were slower than Lundgaard’s equivalents. His third lap virtually matched his second, but his fourth was slower and he fell behind Lundgaard despite just 1mph dropoff from lap one to lap four.

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Harvey looked doomed from the word go, with 229.034mph on the first tour of the legendary 2.5-mile course, dropping him into the 228mphs for the next two laps, and a 227.914mph on his final lap dropping him to 228.477mph – over 1mph behind Robb.

Teammate Graham Rahal had a weight jacker issue, so his average 229.159mph was nothing to shout about, but it was over 0.68mph clear of Harvey. Falling short of Robb’s speed, however, left RLL in an invidious position. If Harvey was to improve significantly, he would bump out Rahal. And making a second attempt meant the driver relinquished his first time, so no one was going to blink unless Harvey, the man with nothing to lose, went out.

Harvey made a 170mph run on old tires to drive air through the engine, to remove the power-sapping heat-soak that all IndyCars suffer while sitting on pitlane. Then he made his second qualifying attempt with 10 minutes to go, leaving enough time for Rahal to respond should he need to.

Harvey’s opening lap of 229.393mph, a second lap of 228.968mph and a third of 228.941mph meant he was down to 34th again, even before he closed out with a 228.416mph. But he pitted again, grabbed some fuel and hit the track once more, and with the clock running out as he warmed up, Rahal wouldn’t have any more time left.

The 30-year-old from Bassingham, Lincolnshire, UK delivered two laps of 229.435mph and 229.082mph, which didn’t look good, but then his third lap was 229.176mph and a 228.971mph was his closer. It was enough to beat Rahal out of the 107th Indy 500 by just 0.07mph.

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