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1966 Indianapolis 500

50th running of the Indianapolis 500

1966 Indianapolis 500

50th running of the Indianapolis 500

FieldValue
race_name50th Indianapolis 500
race_logoLola-Ford T90 "Red Ball Special" - Flickr - andrewbasterfield.jpg
sanctionUSAC
season[1966 USAC season](1966-usac-championship-car-season)
teamJohn Mecom, Jr.
dateMay 30, 1966
winnerGraham Hill
mph144.317 mi/h
poleMario Andretti
pole_speed165.899 mi/h
fast_timeMario Andretti
rookieJackie Stewart
leaderLloyd Ruby (68)
anthemPurdue Band
back_homeEd Ames
start_enginesTony Hulman
pace_carMercury Comet Cyclone GT
pace_driverBenson Ford
starterPat Vidan
honorary_refRaymond Firestone
attendance275,000
networkABC's Wide World of Sports
announcersChris Schenkel Rodger Ward
previous[1965](1965-indianapolis-500)
next[1967](1967-indianapolis-500)

The 50th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Monday, May 30, 1966. The official program cover for the race celebrated both the 50th running of the race, and 150th anniversary of Indiana statehood.

Eleven of the 33 starters were eliminated in a first-lap accident right after receiving the green flag on the main stretch. Only A. J. Foyt was injured, hurting his hand scaling the catch fence trying to escape the wreck scene. Only seven cars, the fewest finishers ever, were still running by the end of the race. First-time starter Jackie Stewart led by over a lap late in the race in John Mecom's Lola T90-Ford. However, inside ten laps to go, his oil pressure dropped too low due to a broken scavenge pump. Stewart parked the car, and after briefly attempting to push some ways, he walked back to the pits. Fellow first-time starter Graham Hill inherited the lead and led a total of 10 laps to win, the first rookie winner since 1927. Despite parking his car, Stewart was voted the rookie of the year over Hill, completing enough laps to finish in 6th place.

Defending race winner Jim Clark spun twice during the race, and finished second. A mild controversy developed at the conclusion of the race, as Clark's crew - and some observers - erroneously believed their car was the race winner over Hill. However, during post-race review, the scoring serials were settled later that evening, confirming Hill the race winner and Clark placing second. For the second year in a row, the Wood Brothers from the NASCAR Grand National circuit were invited to work pit stops, this time for Dan Gurney. However, the car dropped out of the race in the crash on the opening lap.

Race schedule

Race schedule – April/May 1966SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
24
Trenton25
26
27
28
29
30
Practice
1
Practice2
Practice3
Practice4
Practice5
Practice6
Practice7
Practice
8
Practice9
Practice10
Practice11
Practice12
Practice13
Practice14
Time Trials
15
Time Trials16
Practice17
Practice18
Practice19
Practice20
Practice21
Time Trials
22
Bump Day23
24
25
26
27
Carb Day28
29
Parade30
Indy 50031
ColorNotes
GreenPractice
Dark BlueTime trials
SilverRace day
RedRained out*
BlankNo track activity
  • Includes days where track activity was significantly limited due to rain |} |}

Practice and time trials

Background

Three-year veteran Johnny Rutherford was injured in a serious crash on April 3 at Eldora, and was forced to sit out the 1966 race.

The Mecom Racing Team was scheduled to field drivers Walt Hansgen, Rodger Ward, and Jackie Stewart. However, Hansgen died from injuries suffered in a crash during a test session at Le Mans on April 3. Graham Hill was named as a late replacement, and his name was not even listed on the entry list in the official program.

Practice

Practice for the "Golden Anniversary 500" opened on Saturday April 30,{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=DBIrAAAAIBAJ&pg=5209,7115609&dq=indianapolis+500&hl=en

On Tuesday May 10, Mario Andretti turned a practice lap of 164.5 mph during practice, establishing himself as an early favorite for the pole position. Among the others over the 160 mph mark were A. J. Foyt, George Snider, and Dan Gurney.

Rain washed out practice on Wednesday May 11.

On Friday May 13, the final day of practice before time trials, Mario Andretti shattered the unofficial track record by more than 5 mph, running a lap of 167.411 mph. Rain hampered most of the day, but Andretti put together additional laps of 166 mph, and 164 mph. The next-fastest car was Jim Clark, whose best lap was 165.7 mph.

Saturday May 14 – Pole Day time trials

Mario Andretti won the pole position with a four-lap track record of 165.889 mph. His best single lap was a record 166.328 mph.

Chuck Rodee was killed in a crash. On his second warmup lap in turn one, Rodee backed into the outside wall, and he died of his injuries at the hospital.

A total of 18 cars completed qualifying runs on a chilly pole day.

Sunday May 15 – Second Day Time trials

After crashing on pole day, A. J. Foyt qualified at 161.355 mph, the fourth-fastest car in the field.

Saturday May 21 – Third Day Time trials

Unser brothers Bobby and Al qualified, with Al (162.272 mph) leading the speeds for the day. Bobby Grim qualified his turbo Offy front-engined roadster at 158.367 mph, the only such car in the field.

Sunday May 22 – Bump Day Time trials

Two drivers managed to bump their way into the field, Ronnie Duman and Larry Dickson. Greg Weld wrecked two cars (one of which was a popular Granatelli-Novi), but was uninjured. Bobby Grim, the slowest qualifier, holds on to the make the field in his front-engined roadster.

Starting grid

RowInsideMiddleOutside1234567891011
USA Mario AndrettiGBR Jim Clark ****USA George Snider
USA Parnelli Jones ****USA Lloyd RubyUSA Gordon Johncock
USA Jim McElreathUSA Chuck HulseUSA Don Branson
USA Jerry GrantGBR Jackie Stewart ****CAN Billy Foster
USA Rodger Ward ****USA Johnny BoydGBR Graham Hill ****
USA Gary Congdon ****USA Mel Kenyon ****USA A. J. Foyt ****
USA Dan GurneyUSA Joe LeonardUSA Roger McCluskey
USA Jim HurtubiseUSA Al UnserUSA Cale Yarborough ****
USA Carl Williams ****USA Arnie KnepperUSA Bud Tingelstad
USA Bobby UnserUSA Eddie JohnsonUSA Al Miller
USA Bobby GrimUSA Larry Dickson ****USA Ronnie Duman


Yellow indicates the driver was eliminated in the first lap accident.

Tan indicated the driver was involved in the first lap accident, but was able to restart the race.

Alternates

  • First alternate: Dick Atkins **** (#97)

Failed to qualify

  • Jim Adams **** – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Gary Bettenhausen (#61) **** – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Ronnie Bucknum **** (#68)
  • Bill Cheesbourg (#79, #99)
  • Jack Conely (#89) **** – Did not appear/failed engine in practice
  • Dick Fries **** – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Masten Gregory (#63, #78)
  • Dick Guldstrand **** – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Bob Harkey (#85)
  • Bob Hurt **** (#36)
  • Bruce Jacobi **** (#68)
  • Bobby Johns (#41)
  • Jud Larson – Did not appear
  • Ron Lux **** (#55)
  • Art Malone (#32)
  • Bob Mathouser (#96)
  • Mike McGreevey **** (#85)
  • Hal Minyard **** (#44)
  • Dave Paul ****
  • Art Pollard **** (#44)
  • Red Riegel **** (#87)
  • Chuck Rodee (#92) – Fatal accident
  • Ebb Rose – Did not appear
  • Johnny Rutherford (#92) – Withdrew, injured
  • Sammy Sessions **** (#38)
  • Gig Stephens **** (#71) – Did not appear
  • Chuck Stevenson (#11)
  • Bob Tattersall **** (#61)
  • Bob Veith (#67)
  • Greg Weld **** (#15, #76)
  • Bob Wente (#65, #85)
  • Billy Wilkerson **** – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Dempsey Wilson (#51)
  • LeeRoy Yarbrough **** (#76)

Race recap

Start

As the field came down the main stretch for the start, Billy Foster was among those jockeying for position. As the green flag fell, he nearly touched wheels with Gordon Johncock and lost control. He spun directly into the outside wall, just beyond the start/finish line, and triggered a huge pileup. Sixteen cars were involved, with debris and loose wheels bouncing all over the racing surface.

As the drivers instinctively scurried out of their machines to avoid possible flames (although no significant fires had broken out), A. J. Foyt became the only driver casualty of the incident. He injured his hand climbing over the catch fence on the outside of the track. He was checked out at the infield hospital, and cleared to drive relief if needed. One spectator was hit by a wheel from the crash.

Of the sixteen cars, eleven were damaged beyond repair. The red flag came out, and after the cleanup, the race lined up for a restart with only 22 cars. The red flag delay was about 1 hour and 24 minutes.

When the race was restarted, the field took several warm up laps, and restarted single file. The yellow light came back on almost immediately when Johnny Boyd crashed in turn 1 on the first green lap.

Race

The early half of the race was dominated by Lloyd Ruby, who was seeking his first win in the Indianapolis 500. However, a bad pit stop resulted in Ruby losing a couple of laps and he went on to finish 11th. Jackie Stewart dominated the second half of the race, leading 40 laps. Stewart was leading by a little over a lap before he began to suffer from low oil pressure with tenlaps to go. Stewart parked his car in turn four, and briefly attempted to push the car back to the pits. Eventually Stewart abandoned the machine, and walked back to the garage area.

Graham Hill inherited the lead, led the final ten laps, and won the race. His original margin of victory was 42 seconds over second place, Jim Clark, pending the final results.

Controversy over who won the race

During the race, confusion broke out over the running order, which resulted in people being unsure, even to this day, on who won the race. The confusion in the scoring led to a controversy, wherein second place Jim Clark's team thought they were the rightful winner. Clark had spun on two separate occasions during the race, but did not make serious contact during either incident. He did not stall his engine either time, and was able to drive to the pits for the crew to inspect the car quickly both times. Clark's team contended that he did not lose a significant amount of track position, and estimated that they were still one lap ahead of Graham Hill at the finish.{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=cF40AAAAIBAJ&pg=7127,5107648

Race winner Graham Hill admitted to having an "uneventful race", being "puzzled" and "surprised" to be the winner, while other unsatisfied competitors quipped that he had "never passed a car all day long." The IMS Radio Network, which scored the race independently from the USAC officials, also came up with Hill as the first place car. The apparent controversy died out quickly, and no official action was ever taken. Years later the subject is still mildly debated in racing circles. A theory emerged that scorers accidentally omitted one lap from Jim Clark's official tally. Therefore, he was effectively placed behind Hill at the finish. The car of Al Unser was painted nearly identical to that of Clark's. The theory is that when Al Unser crashed out of the race on lap 161, scorers mistakenly thought it was Clark, and as Clark drove by in the immediate aftermath, they credited that lap to Unser by mistake.

Another version of the theory suggests an opposite situation - one of Unser's laps was erroneously credited to Clark's tally early on, and when the scoring serials were compiled and settled later in the race, the extra lap was correctly deleted. Alongside the controversy between Hill and Clark, fourth place Gordon Johncock is also theorized by some observers to have actually been the rightful winner of the race. Johncock completed the 500 miles in less elapsed time than Hill, Clark, and third place Jim McElreath. However, Johncock had suffered minor damage during the first lap accident, and restarted the race in the pit lane due to the crew changing the nose cone. USAC officials did not score his first lap out of the pit lane, and he effectively ran all day carrying a one-lap penalty to the rest of the field.

Box score

FinishStartNoNameChassisEngineTiresQualLapsStatus123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233
1524GBR Graham Hill ****LolaFord159.243200Running
219GBR Jim Clark ****LotusFord164.114200+41.10
73USA Jim McElreathBrabhamFord160.908200+49.89
672USA Gordon JohncockGerhardtFord161.059200+1:47.48
1794USA Mel Kenyon ****GerhardtOffenhauser158.555198Flagged
1143GBR Jackie Stewart ****LolaFord159.972190Oil Pressure
2954USA Eddie JohnsonHuffakerOffenhauser158.898175Stalled
2811USA Bobby UnserHuffakerOffenhauser159.109171Flagged
206USA Joe LeonardEagleFord159.560170Stalled
1088USA Jerry GrantEagleFord160.335167Flagged
514USA Lloyd RubyEagleFord162.433166Cam Stud
2318USA Al UnserLotusFord162.372161Crash T4
218USA Roger McCluskeyEagleFord159.271129Oil Leak
498USA Parnelli Jones ****ShrikeOffenhauser162.48487Wheel Bearing
1326USA Rodger Ward ****LolaOffenhauser159.46874Handling
2577USA Carl Williams ****GerhardtFord159.64538Valve
2256USA Jim HurtubiseGerhardtOffenhauser159.20829Oil line
11USA Mario AndrettiBrawnerFord165.84927Valve
382USA George SniderCoyoteFord162.52122Crash T2
812USA Chuck HulseWatsonFord160.84422Crash T2
2722USA Bud TingelstadGerhardtOffenhauser159.14416Overheating
1428USA Johnny BoydBRPFord159.3845Crash T1
94USA Don BransonGerhardtFord160.3850Crash FS
1227CAN Billy FosterVollstedtFord159.4900Crash FS
1653USA Gary Congdon ****HuffakerOffenhauser158.6880Crash FS
182USA A. J. Foyt ****LotusFord161.3550Crash FS
1931USA Dan GurneyEagleFord160.4990Crash FS
2466USA Cale Yarborough ****VollstedtFord159.7940Crash FS
2637USA Arnie KnepperCecilFord159.4400Crash FS
3075USA Al MillerLotusFord158.6810Crash FS
3139USA Bobby GrimWatsonOffenhauser158.3670Crash FS
3234USA Larry Dickson ****LolaFord159.1440Crash FS
3396USA Ronnie DumanEisertFord158.6460Crash FS

**** Former Indianapolis 500 winner

**** Indianapolis 500 Rookie

Race statistics

Lap LeadersLapsLeader
1–16Mario Andretti
17–64Jim Clark
65–75Lloyd Ruby
76–86Jim Clark
87–132Lloyd Ruby
133–139Jim Clark
140–150Lloyd Ruby
151–190Jackie Stewart
191–200Graham Hill
Total laps ledDriverLaps
Lloyd Ruby68
Jim Clark66
Jackie Stewart40
Mario Andretti16
Graham Hill10
Yellow Lights: 6 for 41 minutes (37 laps)Laps*Reason
StartMulti-car crash on frontstretch (red flag)
1–5Restart warm up laps (9 minutes)
6–16Johnny Boyd crash in turn 1 (12 minutes)
22–31Hulse/Snider crash in turn 2 (12 minutes)
65–68Jim Clark spun in turn 4 (4 minutes)
87–89Jim Clark spun in turn 3 (3 minutes)
161–170Al Unser crash in turn 4 (10 minutes)
* – *Approximate lap counts*
Tire participation chartSupplierNo. of starters
**Goodyear****16**
**Firestone****17***
* – *Denotes race winner*

Broadcasting

Radio

The race was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Sid Collins served as chief announcer. Len Sutton joined the crew, serving as "driver expert," replacing Fred Agabashian. The network had gained sponsorship from Autolite, but Agabashian worked for Champion, and he considered it a conflict of interest, so he stepped aside. He would eventually return to the network in 1973–77. At the conclusion of the race, Lou Palmer reported from victory lane. The broadcast was scheduled for four and a half hours (including a 30-minute pre-race), but the red flag delay at the start extended it.

The broadcast was carried on over 725 affiliates in all 50 states, and 850 stations worldwide including shortwave transmissions from New York and Los Angeles, and XEVIP in Mexico City. Through Armed Forces Network, the broadcast reached worldwide to locations including Vietnam, Japan, Korea, Saigon, Okinowa, Philippines, England, Spain, the Azores, Italy, France, Germany, Turkey, Greece, Pakistan, Morocco, Libya, Newfoundland, Iceland, Labrador, Greenland, and both the North and South poles. In the Indianapolis area, nearly every major radio station simulcast the broadcast. The race was heard by an estimated 100 million listeners.

Bill Frosh, who had reported from turn one for over a decade, left the on-air crew, working instead in production. Mike Ahern took over the prestigious turn one position. Newcomer Doug Zink took the backstretch location, while second-year member Ron Carrell moved to turn three.

The off-air, two-man serial scoring team of Bill Fleetemeyer and Bill Lamb were commended for their contributions to the broadcast. During this era, the radio network crew typically facilitated its own team of unofficial serial scorers to track the progress of the race. That allowed the scoring reports to be announced on-air faster than the official USAC scorekeepers could produce them from race control. Despite the controversy over the scoring between winner Graham Hill and second place Jim Clark, Fleetemeyer and Lamb also came up with Hill as the first place car.

For 1967, the flagship station changed from WIBC to WTHI in Terre Haute. Guests in the booth during the red flag delay included Peter DePaolo, Cesar Romero, Johnnie Parsons, Wally Parks, Lucy Foyt, Phil Harris, General Howdy Wilcox, and Larry Bisceglia. During the race, guests that stopped by included Walt Arfons, Frank Borman, Al Bloemker, Louis Meyer, Mickey Thompson, J. C. Agajanian, and Duke Nalon. Senator Birch Bayh visited the booth, accompanied by Wyoming Senator Gale W. McGee and Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman.

As a gesture celebrating the network's 15th anniversary, as well as the 50th running of the 500, guests were presented with a commemorative gold filled Zippo lighter. One station, KXO in California, was noted and recognized as being one of the few original affiliates to carry the race all fifteen years since the network's inception.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio NetworkBooth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters
Chuck Marlowe (north)
Luke Walton (center)
Lou Palmer (south)

Television

The race was shown live on MCA closed-circuit television in nearly 200 theaters across the United States. Charlie Brockman served as anchor. For the first time, the feed was transmitted internationally to Europe utilizing the "Early Bird" satellite. A short video clip showing the restart after the first-lap accident, and a longer clip of the last 55 laps of the race, both synchronized to audio from the IMS Radio broadcast, have been posted on YouTube.

The race was carried in the United States on ABC's Wide World of Sports. The broadcast aired on Saturday June 4. Chris Schenkel anchored the telecast for the first time. Much of the video was culled from the live closed-circuit color telecast of the race.

Notes

References

Works cited

Indy 500 Walker| Previous_race = 1965| Previous_winner = Jim Clark| This_race = 1966| This_winner = Graham Hill| Next_race = 1967| Next_winner = A. J. Foyt|

References

  1. Fox, Jack C.. (1994). "The Illustrated History of the Indianapolis 500 1911-1994". Carl Hungness Publishing.
  2. Ullmann, Harrison. (May 31, 1966). "Potpourri In Infield Stages Own Show". The Indianapolis Star.
  3. Kettlewell, p. 2192.
  4. ''[[Donald Davidson (historian). The Talk of Gasoline Alley]]'' - [[WIBC (FM). 1070-AM WIBC]], August 6, 2005
  5. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=19660404&id=fyYxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=jQEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4684,4557895 Toledo Blade – Google News Archive Search]
  6. (June 2023)
  7. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=c_1bAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rVQNAAAAIBAJ&pg=1609,209544&dq=indianapolis+500&hl=en Pollard Passes Rookie Test At 500 Track]
  8. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZIEuAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rp8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=4246,2565090&dq=indianapolis+500&hl=en Rain Curtails Indy Practice]
  9. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gBwsAAAAIBAJ&sjid=KckEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4383,2331702&dq=indianapolis+500+rain&hl=en Andretti Solid Choice To Win Indy Pole Slot]
  10. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=e0c0AAAAIBAJ&sjid=vWUEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6936,3934989&dq=indianapolis+time+trials&hl=en Sarasota Herald-Tribune - Google News Archive Search]
  11. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gUc0AAAAIBAJ&sjid=vWUEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4447,5685519&dq=indianapolis+time+trials&hl=en Sarasota Herald-Tribune - Google News Archive Search]
  12. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=QDgiAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wqsFAAAAIBAJ&pg=671,2430308&dq=indianapolis+time+trials&hl=en The Owosso Argus-Press - Google News Archive Search]
  13. ''[[Donald Davidson (historian). The Talk of Gasoline Alley]]'' - [[WIBC (FM). 1070-AM WIBC]], May 14, 2004
  14. "1966 International 500 Mile Sweepstakes".
  15. (12 June 2015). "Graham Hill's 'American Red Ball Spl' Lola T90 Ford: Indy Winner 1966…".
  16. (2011). "The Greatest 33: Jim Clark". Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
  17. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=6nBjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=X3kNAAAAIBAJ&pg=7219,136653&dq=1965+indianapolis+500+clark&hl=en Saskatoon Star-Phoenix - Google News Archive Search]
  18. "Archived copy".
  19. "The Talk of Gasoline Alley," Network Indiana, May 11, 2006
  20. Miller, Robin. (May 20, 2016). "Indy's weird, wild, wonderful 1966". Racer.com.
  21. Popular Science, December 1966, Pg. 169, Perfect Circle advertisement regarding the May 30, 1966 Indianapolis 500 winners
  22. (May 30, 1966). "Firestone Puts Tires On 17, Goodyear 16". [[Indianapolis News]].
  23. (May 30, 1966). "Race Score Card". [[The Indianapolis Star]].
  24. {{cite episode. 1070 WIBC-AM]]
  25. (May 30, 1969). "Race Broadcast Spans The Globe". The Indianapolis Star.
  26. (May 30, 1966). "Closed-Circuit TV To Europe 1st Time". The Indianapolis Star.
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