1986 Indianapolis 500

70th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning body USAC
Season 1986 CART season
1985-86 Gold Crown
Date May 31, 1986
Winner Bobby Rahal
Winning team Truesports
Average speed 170.722 mph (274.750 km/h)
Pole position Rick Mears
Pole speed 216.828 mph (348.951 km/h)
Fastest qualifier Mears
Rookie of the Year Randy Lanier
Most laps led Rick Mears (76)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthem David Hasselhoff
"Back Home Again in Indiana" John Davies
Starting Command Mary F. Hulman
Tony George (restart)
Pace car Chevrolet Corvette
Pace car driver Chuck Yeager
Attendance 250,000 (estimated)
TV in the United States
Network ABC
Announcers Jim Lampley, Sam Posey
Nielsen Ratings 8.8 / 31
Chronology
Previous Next
1985 1987

The 70th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Saturday, May 31, 1986. After being rained out on May 25–26, the race was rescheduled for the following weekend. Bobby Rahal was the winner, becoming the first driver in Indy history to complete the 500 miles (800 km) in less than three hours.

Nearly the entire race unfolded as a three-way battle between polesitter Rick Mears, Bobby Rahal, and Kevin Cogan. Cogan, who was a key fixture in the controversial crash on the opening lap of the 1982 race, took the lead in dramatic fashion with 13 laps to go. He appeared to be on his way to victory, and career redemption, but his lead evaporated when a caution came out on lap 194. With two laps to go, the green flag came back out, and second place Bobby Rahal got the jump on the restart and grabbed the lead. Rahal pulled away and won the race, with car owner Jim Trueman, stricken with cancer, cheering him on in the pit area. Trueman died eleven days after the victory.[1]

The race was sanctioned by USAC, and was included as part of the 1986 CART PPG Indy Car World Series. For the first time ever, ABC Sports televised the race live "flag-to-flag" on network television in the United States. The race celebrated the 75th anniversary of the first 500, but there was very little fanfare of the milestone outside of the cover art of the official program.

Offseason news

The new Gasoline Alley garage area at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Garage area

The highlight of offseason construction at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was the construction of a new, state of the art garage area. Just days after the 1985 race, the old Gasoline Alley garage area, most of which had stood since the 1940s, was dismantled and demolished. Official groundbreaking for the new facility occurred on August 26, 1985. The new concrete garages increased to 96 units (up from 88), and each stall provided approximately 30% more working room than their predecessors. The green and white barn doors were replaced with overhead garage doors, and the layout was changed from east-west to north-south.[2] The access lanes were widened substantially, improving ingress and egress, and various vendor and support units were also part of the complex. Most of the work was completed in April, however, some of the finishing touches were still being completed during the first week of on-track activity.

Though the new garages were universally praised for their increased space and function, they were criticized for lack of aesthetics, and for breaking tradition. The plain precast concrete walls resembled the cookie-cutter stadiums of the era that were largely criticized in baseball and football. The design was a sharp and striking contrast to the previous garage complex, which led some to call them too plain or "antiseptic."[3] Changing the layout to north-south based was also a thinly-veiled attempt by the management to further scale back the oft-rowdy "Snakepit" area formerly located inside the turn one infield.

Victory lane

The new victory lane, visible in 1988.

A new victory lane area was constructed for the 1986 race. From 1971-1985, the winner drove up the checkerboard ramps into the "horseshoe" area below the Master Control Tower. A hydraulic platform was now used, which was located in the actual pit area, in line with the pit stalls. The car would drive onto the platform, and it would raise into the air, and then slowly spin 360° for the fans to see the winner.

This victory lane was popular, but could only a hold a small number of people when raised. It would be used through 1993.

Television

On August 19, 1985, after years of being shown tape delayed, ABC Sports signed an initial three-year deal to cover the Indianapolis 500 live flag-to-flag starting in 1986.[4][5] Longtime anchor Jim McKay was moved to the host position, and play-by-play would be handled by Jim Lampley and Sam Posey.[6]

The Daytona 500 had been shown live flag-to-flag on CBS since 1979, and ABC officials had wanted to do the same for Indianapolis for several years. ABC's landmark telecast was scheduled to feature 32 cameras, three RaceCams, and an hour-long live pre-race.

Team and driver changes

Defending Indy 500 winner Danny Sullivan returned to Penske Racing, however, the rest of the team saw a shake-up from the previous year. Rick Mears returned to full-time driving. After his serious crash at Sanair in 1984, Mears only drove a partial schedule (ovals only) in 1985. Al Unser, Sr., who drove full-time for Penske in 1985, and won the 1985 CART championship, dropped to part-time. Unser would race only the three 500 milers (Indy, Michigan, and Pocono), along with Phoenix and Tamiami. Unser was assigned the duty of being the first driver to roll out the brand new PC-15/Ilmor Chevy Indy V-8 265A.

Kevin Cogan moved over from the Kraco Team to Patrick Racing. Cogan joined Emerson Fittipaldi to make the team a two-car effort. Fittipaldi's new livery for 1986 featured a new sponsor to the sport, Marlboro, which would become a big part of the sport for over two decades.

Bobby Rahal won three of the last six races of 1985, and finished third in the points. Despite a heavy crash at Michigan in August, and a testing crash in the fall at Indy, Rahal was hot off the finish of the 1985 season, returning with Truesports, and a favorite entering the season.

Borg-Warner Trophy

For the month of May 1986, the Borg-Warner Trophy celebrated its 50th anniversary sporting a new look, featuring a brand new three-row base. The likeness of the 1986 race winner was going to fill the body of the trophy, and the new base was constructed in order to accommodate winners through 2003. On the base, the first square was filled with a gold likeness of the late Speedway president Tony Hulman. The base increased the height of the trophy to 55 inches, and the weight to about 95 pounds.

Race schedule

Race schedule — April/May 1986
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
20
 
21
 
22
 
23
 
24
 
25
ROP
26
ROP
27
ROP
28
 
29
 
30
 
1
 
2
 
3
Practice
4
Practice
5
Practice
6
Practice
7
Practice
8
Practice
9
Practice
10
Pole Day
11
Time Trials
12
Practice
13
Practice
14
Practice
15
Practice
16
Practice
17
Time Trials
18
Bump Day
19
 
20
 
21
 
22
Carb Day
23
Mini-Marathon
24
Parade
25
Indy 500
26
Indy 500
27
 
28
 
29
 
30
Practice
31
Indy 500
Color Notes
Green Practice
Dark Blue Time trials
Silver Race day
Red Rained out
Blank No track activity

* Includes days where track
activity was significantly
limited due to rain

ROP — denotes Rookie
Orientation Program

Practice and qualifying

Jim Trueman during practice.

Practice – week 1

Practice started on Opening Day, Saturday May 3. Chip Ganassi earned the honor of first car on the track.[7][8][9] Michael and Mario Andretti led the speed chart for the day, both over 210 mph (340 km/h).[8] On the second day of practice, the Andrettis continued their dominance, again posting the top two speeds.[8]

On Tuesday May 6, three single cars crashes marked the first incidents of the month.[8] Danny Ongais, Herm Johnson, and Johnny Parsons all suffered single-car crashes in turn one, with Johnson's the most serious. Around 3:30 p.m., a piece of bodywork flew off Johnson's car in turn 1, which caused him to break into a hard spin. His car hit nearly head on into the retaining wall, and he suffered serious fractures to his feet and back.[7][9]

Penske teammates Rick Mears and Danny Sullivan nudged the speeds up over 214 mph (344 km/h) by Wednesday May 7, then the day ended early due to a rain shower.[7][8] On Thursday May 8, Emerson Fittipaldi joined them as the third driver over 214 mph (344 km/h).[8]

By Friday May 9, the last practice session before pole day, seven drivers were over 214 mph (344 km/h), with Mears still the fastest of the month at 214.694 mph (345.517 km/h).[8] The only incident of the day was a suspension failure and spin by Johnny Rutherford, but no wall contact resulted.[7]

Pole Day time trials

During the morning practice on Saturday May 10, Rick Mears set an all-time unofficial track record, at 217.548 mph (350.110 km/h).[8][9] Later in the session, Michael Andretti and Bobby Rahal both broke the 216 mph (348 km/h) barrier.[8] No incidents were reported.

Mario Andretti took the honor of first-in-the-field, with a qualifying run of 212.300 mph (341.664 km/h).[8] Three cars later, defending champion Danny Sullivan took the provisional pole position with a new track record of 215.382 mph (346.624 km/h).[7][8] The speed did not hold up long, as less than an hour later, Rick Mears blistered the track with a first lap of 217.581 mph (350.163 km/h) and a four lap average of 216.828 mph (348.951 km/h).[7][8] Mears' one- and four- lap track records would stand for two years.

Michael Andretti squeezed himself into the front row, with a run of 214.522 mph (345.240 km/h), faster than his father Mario. Emerson Fittipaldi ran 2 laps over 213 mph (343 km/h), but a flat tire slowed his average to just over 210 mph (340 km/h).[8][9] Bobby Rahal managed one lap over 214 mph (344 km/h), and qualified 4th.[8][9]

With about 10 minutes to go, A. J. Foyt lined up to make an attempt, but his car failed technical inspection, and he was sidelined for the day. After qualifying was over, the cars of Raul Boesel and Dick Simon, both of the same team, were disqualified for faulty pop-off valve fitting.[7][8][9]

Second day time trials

After missing out on a qualifying attempt on pole day, A. J. Foyt took to the track on Sunday May 11 to qualify for his 29th career Indy 500. He posted the 5th fastest speed in the field, but since he was a second day qualifier, he lined up deep in the field.

Raul Boesel re-qualified his machine, after being disqualified a day earlier.[8][9] At the close of the day, the field was filled to 28 cars.[7]

Practice – week 2

Rain delayed the opening of practice on Monday May 12, and only 21 cars took laps Tuesday (May 13). Both days saw light activity, and the biggest news came off-the-track. Two-time winner Gordon Johncock planned to end a one-year retirement, and purchase a back-up car from Penske. His funding fell through at the last minute, and he was forced to sit out the race.

On Tuesday May 14, Mario Andretti was practicing his qualified car. A suspension piece failed, and he crashed hard into the turn 3 wall. Newman/Haas Racing would spend the next several days trying to make repairs, but the car's tub was rendered a total loss. Later in the week, Andretti started practicing his back-up car, which the team announced he would be driving on race day.

The remainder of the week saw sparse track activity. Most cars on the track belonged to yet-unqualified drivers. Thursday May 15 was almost a complete wash out due to a thunderstorm.

Day 3 time trials

Despite threatening weather for the next two days, the third day of qualifying saw only four additional cars added to the field. Jim Crawford was the fastest of the day, over 209 mph (336 km/h). Dick Simon, who was disqualified the previous weekend, put his car back into the field with a speed of 204.978 mph (329.880 km/h).

The day ended with 1 position left vacant in the field.

Bump Day time trials

As many as 12 cars started the day with hopes to make the field on the final day of time trials. Rain kept the track closed until 3 p.m., with qualifying finally getting underway at 4 p.m. By late afternoon, however, several cars were pulled out of line and chose not to make an attempt.

George Snider went out first in an A. J. Foyt back-up car, and filled the field to 33 cars. That placed Dick Simon on the bubble as the slowest car in the field. After a wave-off by Steve Chassey, Gary Bettenhausen took to the track, found some much sought after speed, and bumped his way into the field with ease.

With Geoff Brabham on the bubble, and with rain approaching, Rick Miaskiewicz was the next car out. His first two laps were not nearly fast enough, and his team waved him off. That gave Derek Daly just enough time to get out on the track. His first two laps were fast enough to bump Brabham, but as he was completing his second lap, the skies poured rain, and the run was negated.

Geoff Brabham held on as the slowest car in the field, while Dick Simon, the only car bumped, stood as the first alternate. Qualifying for the day lasted less than 45 minutes.

Carburetion Day

On Thursday, May 23, the final scheduled practice session was held. All 33 qualified cars except Phil Krueger took practice laps. At 11:43 a.m., a major crash occurred. A brake rotor on Dennis Firestone's car exploded, blowing his left rear tire. He spun wildly out of turn four, collecting the car of Roberto Moreno. Both cars spun into the inside wall, and Firestone slammed into the pit-entrance barrier, splitting the car in half. Moreno continued to spin through the pits, running into the back of George Snider's car, and crashing into the parked car of Josele Garza.

None of the drivers were seriously injured, however, Firestone's car was damaged beyond repair. The following day, Firestone's car was withdrawn from the field. George Snider and Roberto Moreno announced they would be driving back-up cars in the race. Both cars moved to the back of the grid. After Firestone withdrew, the first alternate Dick Simon was awarded the 33rd starting position.

Rick Mears led the speed chart for the afternoon, with a hand-timed lap of 212.7 mph (342.3 km/h). Later in the day, Penske Racing and driver Danny Sullivan won the annual Miller Indy Pit Stop Contest. Sullivan's team defeated the Truesports team (Bobby Rahal) in the final round to win the event for the second year in a row.

Starting grid

Row Inside Middle Outside
1 United States Rick Mears (W) United States Danny Sullivan (W) United States Michael Andretti
2 United States Bobby Rahal United States Al Unser (W) United States Kevin Cogan
3 United States Tom Sneva (W) Colombia Roberto Guerrero United States Al Unser, Jr.
4 United States Ed Pimm Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi United States Johnny Rutherford (W)
5 United States Randy Lanier (R) United States Pancho Carter Canada Jacques Villeneuve (R)
6 United States Danny Ongais Mexico Josele Garza United States Tony Bettenhausen, Jr.
7 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk Australia Geoff Brabham United States A.J. Foyt (W)
8 Brazil Raul Boesel United States Scott Brayton United States Phil Krueger (R)
9 United States Chip Ganassi United Kingdom Jim Crawford United States Rich Vogler
10 United States Johnny Parsons United States Gary Bettenhausen United States Mario Andretti(W)
11 United States George Snider†† Brazil Roberto Moreno†† (R) United States Dick Simon

Qualified cars withdrawn

Alternates

Failed to qualify

Rain delay

Sunday May 25

After two days of rain, the Speedway infield became a quagmire of mud and garbage.

The race was scheduled to be held Sunday May 25. Despite a forecast of only a 15% chance of precipitation,[10] race morning saw overcast skies and steady rain. Track drying efforts began around 10:45 a.m.[10] EST. The track was close to dry, and spectators began filing into their seats. The cars were then wheeled to the pits, in preparations for a start. At 1:15 p.m., however, the rain resumed, and threatened to wash out the entire day. The rain stopped, and track drying efforts started a second time. The rain returned once more, and at 3:35 p.m., officials rescheduled the race for Monday. During the delay, ABC-TV diverted its programming for several minutes in favor of live coverage of Hands Across America.

Grim memories of the tragic 1973 race were still in many people's minds, and all involved were determined to make certain the race would not be hastily put on in a rushed, last-minute, fashion. In addition, officials were uncommitted on how late they would permit a start, and if they would aim for a 101-lap race (the minimum distance for the event to be official), or insist on adequate time for a full 200-lap race before sunset. The weather forecast for Monday (80% chance of rain) was yet another concern.[10]

Monday May 26

On Monday May 26, there was no chance to hold the race, as it rained all day. The infield turned into a sea of mud, and most of the spectators had since departed, going home to their jobs. Authorities estimated Monday's attendance at a paltry 5,800 spectators. Those who did arrive merely milled around, as most of the infield was impassable, concession stands were out of food, and souvenir tents were empty and abandoned. Some visited the Speedway museum.

At 3:20 p.m., officials announced that the race was going to be postponed, but did not yet announce the date or time to which it would be rescheduled. Unsubstantiated rumors even circulated about canceling the race outright.[11] ABC television was scheduled to cover the race live for the first time, but did not commit to live coverage on Tuesday. Track officials were faced with the possibility of running the race on Tuesday in front of empty grandstands, and without live TV coverage. Weather forecasts for Tuesday and Wednesday were not promising,[11] a substantial amount of the track staff was unavailable,[11] and the sloppy conditions made parts of the facility impassable. Around 6 p.m. on Monday evening, a deal had been struck to reschedule the race for Saturday May 31.[11]

Mid-week

During the week, teams spent time resting and relaxing, while others prepared for the next race at Milwaukee. Track crews worked diligently to clean up the infield, and make it passable for Saturday. As a result of the postponement, a special 30-minute practice session was arranged on Friday May 30. Participants were held to a 120 mph (190 km/h) speed limit, and it served mostly as an oil leak check exercise. Some drivers, including polesitter Rick Mears, as well as Bobby Rahal, did not even participate. The five-day delay wound up being a popular choice by nearly all of the participants.[11] It allowed them to unwind, and regroup for race day without the uncertainty that was looming over them of when the race would start.

For the weekend, the Rex Mays 200 at Milwaukee, originally scheduled for Sunday June 1, was pushed back one week to accommodate the Indy rain delay. The 1986 race marked the first time since 1973 that the race was pushed to another day, and the first time since 1915 that 'not a single wheel had turned' all weekend because of rain. It also marked the first time since 1967 the race was held May 31; until 1971, when the race was always held on May 30, if that day was a Sunday, it was held the ensuing Monday, May 31.

Race summary

Bobby Rahal during the race

Start

Saturday May 31 saw sunny skies and temperatures in the low 80s. Traditional pre-race ceremonies were retooled slightly, with some replacement performers, and a smaller balloon spectacle. Mary F. Hulman gave the starting command just minutes before 11 a.m., and the field pulled away for the parade and pace laps.

On the final pace lap, Tom Sneva veered off-course at the exit of turn 2. Further down the backstretch, a massive smoke bomb was set off by some unruly spectators. The yellow flag was displayed, and the start was waved off. The next time by, the field was red flagged, and halted on the frontstretch. Sneva's crash was cleaned up, but it was determined that the field had burned an unnecessary four laps of fuel. A decision was made to replenish each of the 32 remaining cars' pitside fuel tanks with 3 gallons of methanol. The red flag wound up delaying the start by over a half-hour.

At 11:34 a.m., Tony George gave the command to restart the engines, and the field assembled for two pace laps. The field was straggling through the fourth turn to take the green, and Michael Andretti jumped into the lead from the outside of the front row. He set a new all-time record for the first lap at 202.940 mph (326.600 km/h), the first time the opening lap was run over 200 mph (320 km/h).

First half

After charging from the 30th starting position, Mario Andretti's day was short-lived. On the 15th lap, he brought out the yellow when he stalled in turn 3 with an ignition problem. Michael Andretti set the early pace, leading the first 42 laps.

The first half of the race saw record average speed, with only two yellows for 10 laps, and no major incidents. The second yellow on lap 52 came out for debris when Michael Andretti lost a mirror. Rick Mears came to the lead by lap 49, and held it until the next round of pit stops. On lap 83, Bobby Rahal took the lead for 19 laps, and led at the halfway point.

Second half

Johnny Parsons spun out of turn two on lap 102, and came to a stop along the inside wall. The car suffered minor damage, and Parsons was uninjured. After another long stretch of green, Rich Vogler crashed in turn 3 on lap 135.

On the 135th lap, Rahal (1st) and Cogan (2nd) pitted under caution. Rahal's team nearly made a serious error, and did not change the left-front tire (it had not been changed yet in the race). Rahal had to pit once again the next time around to correct the oversight. Since the field was under caution, the consequences were not quite as serious, but he still fell from 1st to 4th.

On the restart, Rick Mears resumed as the leader. Short-pitting due to poor handling, 4th place Michael Andretti was the first of the leaders to pit again (on lap 163). Mears led all the way until his final scheduled pit stop on lap 165. Moments later Roberto Moreno brought out the caution by stalling in turn four. After Rahal and Cogan cycled through their final planned stops on lap 166, Mears again found himself up front. Michael Andretti (at the tail-end of the lead lap in 4th place) actually led the field behind the pace car as the field went back to green with 31 laps to go.

Finish

With 14 laps to go, Rick Mears led Bobby Rahal and Kevin Cogan. Fourth place Michael Andretti was still clinging on to the tail-end of the lead lap, just ahead of Mears. As the leaders approached traffic, Rahal looked to pass Mears for the lead. Down the backstretch, Rahal took the lead and headed towards turn 3. Cogan passed Mears on the outside of turn four and took second place. Down the frontstretch, Rahal was caught up behind the lap car of Randy Lanier. Cogan diced back and forth, and slipped by Rahal going into turn one.

With then 13 laps to go, Cogan suddenly pulled out to a sizable 3-second lead. Cogan's car was visibly loose in the turns, and on several occasions nearly clipped the outside wall in turn 2. With 7 laps to go, fourth place Michael Andretti ducked into the pit area for a splash of fuel. On lap 194, Arie Luyendyk who was running 11th, spun exiting turn four. His car whipped around and lightly tagged the inside wall near the entrance of the pits. The yellow flag came out, and the field was bunched up behind the pace car.

Safety crews were able to clean up the incident quickly. Cogan led, with Rahal second, and Mears third, all together on the track. With 2½ laps to go, the lights on the pace car were turned off, signifying that the field was ready to go back to green. Cogan, Rahal, and Mears picked up the pace in the northchute, and came out of turn four for a restart and two laps to go. Rahal got the jump on Cogan out of turn four, and took the lead mid-way down the frontstretch. Rahal led at the line, and dove in front of Cogan in turn one.

Down the backstretch, Rahal pulled to over a 1-second lead, and Mears set up to pass Cogan in turn three. Cogan held off the challenge, as Rahal took the white flag. Rahal's speed on the 199th lap was a noteworthy 203 mph (327 km/h). Rahal pulled out to a 1.4 second advantage, and won his first Indianapolis 500. Cogan and Mears finished second and third, in what was the closest three-car finish to date. Rahal's final lap was an all-time record 209.152 mph (336.598 km/h), the fastest race lap to-date in Indy 500 competition.

Rahal completed the 500 miles (800 km) in 2 hours, 55 minutes, 43.470 seconds; becoming the first driver to complete the Indianapolis 500 in less than three hours. His average speed of 170.722 broke Rick Mears' 1984 record. Rahal later claimed his fuel light had come on during the final lap, and a post-race inspection showed that only two gallons of methanol fuel remained in his tank.[12]

Race box score

Finish Start No Name Qual Laps Status
1 4 3 United States Bobby Rahal 213.550 200 170.722 mph
2 6 7 United States Kevin Cogan 211.922 200 +1.441 seconds
3 1 4 United States Rick Mears (W) 216.828 200 +1.881 seconds
4 8 5 Colombia Roberto Guerrero 211.576 200 +10.558 seconds
5 9 30 United States Al Unser, Jr. 211.533 199 Flagged
6 3 18 United States Michael Andretti 214.522 199 Flagged
7 11 20 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi 210.237 199 Flagged
8 12 21 United States Johnny Rutherford (W) 210.220 198 Flagged
9 2 1 United States Danny Sullivan (W) 215.382 197 Flagged
10 13 12 United States Randy Lanier (R) 209.964 195 Flagged
11 29 24 United States Gary Bettenhausen 209.756 193 Flagged
12 20 8 Australia Geoff Brabham 207.082 193 Flagged
13 22 22 Brazil Raul Boesel 211.202 192 Flagged
14 33 23 United States Dick Simon 204.978 189 Flagged
15 19 61 Netherlands Arie Luyendyk 207.811 188 Crash T4
16 14 15 United States Pancho Carter 209.635 179 Wheel Bearing
17 10 66 United States Ed Pimm 210.874 168 Electrical
18 17 55 Mexico Josele Garza 208.939 167 Flagged
19 32 9 Brazil Roberto Moreno (R) 209.469 158 Stalled
20 15 81 Canada Jacques Villeneuve (R) 209.397 154 Main Bearing
21 25 59 United States Chip Ganassi 207.590 151 Engine
22 5 11 United States Al Unser (W) 212.295 149 Vibration
23 16 25 United States Danny Ongais 209.158 136 Ignition
24 21 14 United States A.J. Foyt (W) 213.212 135 Spun in pits
25 27 6 United States Rich Vogler 209.089 132 Crash T3
26 31 84 United States George Snider 209.025 110 Ignition
27 28 95 United States Johnny Parsons 207.894 100 CV Joint
28 18 16 United States Tony Bettenhausen, Jr. 208.933 77 Valve Spring
29 26 31 United Kingdom Jim Crawford 208.911 70 Head Gasket
30 23 71 United States Scott Brayton 208.079 69 Engine
31 24 42 United States Phil Krueger (R) 207.948 67 Engine
32 30 2 United States Mario Andretti (W) 212.300 19 Ignition
33 7 33 United States Tom Sneva (W) 211.878 0 Crash T2

Statistics

Lap Leaders
Laps Leader
1–42 Michael Andretti
43 Kevin Cogan
44–47 Al Unser, Jr.
48 Emerson Fittipaldi
49–74 Rick Mears
75 Bobby Rahal
76–77 Kevin Cogan
78–79 Al Unser, Jr.
80–82 Michael Andretti
83–101 Bobby Rahal
102 Rick Mears
103–135 Bobby Rahal
136–165 Rick Mears
166 Bobby Rahal
167 Rick Mears
168 Roberto Guerrero
169–186 Rick Mears
187 Bobby Rahal
188–197 Kevin Cogan
198–200 Bobby Rahal

Total laps led
Laps Leader
76 Rick Mears
58 Bobby Rahal
45 Michael Andretti
13 Kevin Cogan
6 Al Unser, Jr.
1 Emerson Fittipaldi
1 Roberto Guerrero

Cautions: 6 for 29 laps
Laps Reason
Pace lap (Red Flag) Tom Sneva crashed in exit of turn 2
15–19 Mario Andretti stalled in turn 3
52–56 Debris in turn 1
102–106 Johnny Parsons crashed on backstretch
136–141 Rich Vogler crashed in turn 3
166–169 Roberto Moreno stalled in turn 3
195–198 Arie Luyendyk spun and crashed near pit entrance

Post race

Truesports victory parade

The race celebration was emotional for the Truesports team, in that owner Jim Trueman was stricken with cancer. Visibly frail and lacking strength, he managed to arrive in victory lane to celebrate with his driver Bobby Rahal. Due to the rain delay, the traditional victory banquet was canceled. A makeshift victory luncheon was held in its place on Sunday June 1 at the Speedway Motel. The top three finishers were invited to the private reception.

The city of Columbus held a victory celebration downtown on June 5. Over 300 Red Roof Inn employees took part in a parade down Broad Street. Trueman was too sick to attend. On June 11, Trueman succumbed to his illness, at the age of 51.

Rahal and the Truesports team rode the wave of success to five additional wins during the CART season, and clinched the 1986 CART championship. The team made it back-to-back titles by winning the 1987 CART championship as well.

Kevin Cogan suffered through his second major disappointment at Indy, following the misfortunes of 1982. Despite winning the season opener at Phoenix, he faded as a contender during the season.

Broadcasting

Radio

The race was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Paul Page served as the chief announcer for the tenth year. It was Page's thirteenth year overall as part of the network crew. Lou Palmer reported from victory lane. Bobby Unser, Page's frequent booth partner on NBC Sports, joined the broadcast for the first time as "driver expert."

Ron Carrell, who debuted in 1965, missed the race for the first time. Carrell would eventually return as a pit reporter for a few additional years. Jerry Baker, who debuted on the crew in 1974, moved to the high profile Turn 1 location, where he would remain through 2011. Gary Gerould (one of Page's NBC colleagues), made his first appearance as a pit reporter, sharing duties in the south pits with Lou Palmer.

Luke Walton reprised his traditional duty of introducing the starting command during the pre-race, however, he did not have an active role during the race.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Paul Page
Driver expert: Bobby Unser
Statistician: John DeCamp
Historian: Donald Davidson

Turn 1: Jerry Baker
Turn 2: Howdy Bell
Turn 3: Larry Henry
Turn 4: Bob Jenkins

Luke Walton (pre-race)
Sally Larvick (interviews)
Bob Forbes (north pits/garages)
Chuck Marlowe (center pits)
Gary Gerould (south pits)
Lou Palmer (south pits)

Television

The race was carried in the United States on ABC Sports on live, flag-to-flag coverage for the first time. Jim McKay moved to the host position, while Jim Lampley served as announcer.

The initial live broadcast set for Sunday May 25 was rained out. The telecast was filled with interviews, talk, and highlights of previous races. The broadcast returned on Saturday May 31 for the live coverage of the race.

Three pit reporters served on the crew, joined by Donna de Varona, who was slated to serve as a roving reporter, conducting interviews and other features. However, she appeared only on the original Sunday telecast, and did not return on Saturday. Dr. Joe Randolph was also announced as part of the team, slated to report from the medical center, but he never appears on-air.

Three RaceCams were used (none were utilized in 1985), with defending champion Danny Sullivan the highest-profile driver to feature one. For the first time, the broadcast carried all of the pre-race ceremonies live, although they omitted coverage of the invocation.

The broadcast has re-aired numerous times on ESPN Classic since the mid-2000s.

ABC Television
Booth AnnouncersPit/garage reporters

Host: Jim McKay
Announcer: Jim Lampley
Color: Sam Posey

Jack Arute
Larry Nuber
Al Trautwig
Donna de Varona (May 25 only)
Dr. Joe Randolph (not utilized)

Quotes

Paul Page described the finish of IMS Radio Network:

The final roar of the racing engines...Bobby Rahal accelerates...and Bobby Rahal has won his first Indianapolis 500.

Kevin Cogan responding to Sam Posey for an in-race radio interview with only 3 laps to go:

I'm kind of busy right now Sam, I'll talk to you afterwards.

Sam Posey on ABC-TV after being snubbed by Kevin Cogan:

I wouldn't want to talk to me either.

Gallery

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1986 Indianapolis 500.

Notes

References

  1. "1986 Indianapolis 500 Yearbook". Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. 1986.
  2. Indianapolis Motor Speedway (May 1986). Donaldson, William R., ed. "New Garages for Indy Horsepower". 1986 Indianapolis 500 Official Program. IMS Corporation: 88.
  3. 1986 Indy 500 Pole Day Telecast - ABC Sports, May 10, 1986
  4. Miller, Robin (August 20, 1985). "'86 Indianapolis 500 to be televised live by ABC (Part 1)". The Indianapolis Star. p. 1. Retrieved September 19, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  5. Miller, Robin (August 20, 1985). "'86 Indianapolis 500 to be televised live by ABC (Part 2)". The Indianapolis Star. p. 7. Retrieved September 19, 2016 via Newspapers.com.
  6. Indianapolis Motor Speedway (May 1986). Donaldson, William R., ed. "ABC Sports Live". 1986 Indianapolis 500 Official Program. IMS Corporation: 83.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Ganassi's first run started hectic month". Indianapolis Star. 1986-05-24.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "1986 Indianapolis 500 Daily Trackside Report" (PDF). Indy500.com. 1986. Retrieved 2008-06-22.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Hungness, Carl (1986). The 1986 Indianapolis 500 Yearbook. Carl Hungness Publishing. ISBN 0-915088-44-4.
  10. 1 2 3 "Weather rains on Indy 500's parade". Wilmington Morning Star. May 26, 1986. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 "Race rescheduled for Saturday". Wilmington Morning Star. May 27, 1986. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  12. "Rahal wins hotly contested Indy 500 in final laps". Lawrence Journal-Worlf. 1983-06-01. Retrieved 2012-08-29.

Works cited

1985 Indianapolis 500
Danny Sullivan
1986 Indianapolis 500
Bobby Rahal
1987 Indianapolis 500
Al Unser
Preceded by
163.612 mph
(1984 Indianapolis 500)
Record for the fastest average speed
170.722 mph
Succeeded by
185.981 mph
(1990 Indianapolis 500)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.