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Wheldon holds off Patrick, wins Indy 500
Dan Wheldon overcame an electrifying run by Danica Patrick and ended 35 years of fabled Andretti bad luck to win the Indianapolis 500 Sunday. Wheldon took team co-owner Michael Andretti with him to Victory Lane, ending years of frustration for the Andretti family, which last got a taste of the Indy winner's jug of milk when Michael's father, Mario, won in 1969. Wheldon is the first Englishman to win at Indy since Graham Hill in 1966. To do it, he had to overcome one of the greatest rookie runs in the 89 years of racing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, with the 23-year old Patrick overcoming two big mistakes to lead the race with just eight laps to go.
Andretti gave all the credit for the win to the 26-year-old Wheldon, who now has won four of five Indy Racing League events this year. "I'm just so happy for him," Michael said. "I think this is the first of many for him."
"This has been a dream come true for me. I've loved the Indianapolis 500 ever since I was a young kid," he said. "I came here and watched it for the first time in 1999. I'm having an emotional moment. I'm so proud." Patrick, running out of fuel in the waning laps, held on to finish fourth, helped by a crash by fellow rookie Sebastien Bourdais one lap from the end. Wheldon ran out of fuel on his cooldown lap. The best previous finish by a woman was 9th by Janet Guthrie in 1978. The story at Indy all month has been Patrick, only the fourth woman to race at Indianapolis, and Sunday was no exception. After starting fourth and becoming the first woman to lead a lap at Indy on lap 57, she stalled the engine in the pits on her Honda-power Panoz on lap 79, falling to 16th, last on the lead lap. Patrick kept her cool and moved all the way to eighth before making another mistake as the cars begin to speed up for a restart after a long caution period. She nearly ran into the car of Scott Sharp, turning sideways and getting hit hard by fellow rookie Tomas Enge. Tomas Scheckter spun to avoid Patrick and slid into the inside wall. "I'm sorry," said told her team on the radio. "They slowed." Patrick was able to get her damaged car back to the pits, where the Rahal Letterman Racing team, which won the race last year with Buddy Rice, changed the nose and sent her back out on the lead lap. She made one more stop under caution on 159 to complete the repairs and got a full load of fuel on that last stop. She came out 11th and moved up to eighth before the rest of the leaders pitted under a caution on lap 172, giving Patrick the lead again. "She's been getting good fuel mileage, so we gambled," said team co-owner Bobby Rahal, the 1986 Indy winner. Wheldon caught Patrick and passed her on lap 186 seconds before Kosuke Matsuura crashed, bringing out another yellow flag. But Patrick had the huge crowd cheering when she passed Wheldon for the lead on the restart on lap 190. "I thought for a second we were going to win that thing at the end," Patrick said. "When you've got to save fuel at the end you're not as quick." As she tried desperately to conserve fuel, her speeds dropped from 226 mph to 221 and Wheldon shot past into the lead on lap 194. By the time Bourdais crashed on lap 199, both Vitor Meira, Patrick's teammate, and Bryan Herta, Wheldon's teammate, had gotten past. Buddy Lazier, the 1996 Indy winner, finished fifth, followed by Andretti Green Racing driver Dario Franchitti, Scott Sharp and polewinner Tony Kanaan, the fourth Andretti entry. Two-time Indy winner Helio Castroneves was the only other driver on the lead lap at the end. Thanks at least in part to the mania caused by Patrick this month, as well as the nearly perfect weather Sunday, the empty seats that were visible in many areas of the vast Indy grandstands a year ago were filled — and the crowd estimated at more than 300,000 had plenty of cheer about. There were numerous lead changes in the 200-lap race, many of them passes under the green flag. Sam Hornish Jr., a two-time IRL champion, had a great battle in the first half of the race with Kanaan, the two exchanging the lead several times. Hornish, who has yet to completed the entire race, led 77 laps but lost control on lap 146 and hit the wall. Bruno Junqueira, who finished fifth in the rain-shortened race in 2004, ran among the leaders and was sixth when he tried to pass A.J. Foyt IV and wound up in the wall. The Brazilian driver, one of only two drivers from the rival Champ Car series in the Indy field, was taken to Methodist Hospital complaining of back pain. Larry Foyt, Foyt IV's uncle, also crashed hard, backing into the wall early in the race, and wound up at the hospital also complaining of back pain.
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