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1968 Indianapolis 500

52nd running of the Indianapolis 500

1968 Indianapolis 500

52nd running of the Indianapolis 500

FieldValue
race_name52nd Indianapolis 500
race_logoEagle Rislone Special front Honda Collection Hall.jpg
sanctionUSAC
season[1968 USAC season](1968-usac-championship-car-season)
teamLeader Cards
dateMay 30, 1968
winnerBobby Unser
mph152.882 mi/h
poleJoe Leonard
pole_speed171.559 mi/h
fast_timeJoe Leonard
rookieBill Vukovich II
leaderBobby Unser (127)
anthemPurdue Band
back_homeRichard O. Plothow
start_enginesTony Hulman
pace_carFord Torino GT
pace_driverWilliam Clay Ford Sr.
starterPat Vidan
attendance300,000
networkABC's Wide World of Sports
announcersJim McKay, Rodger Ward
previous[1967](1967-indianapolis-500)
next[1969](1969-indianapolis-500)

The 52nd International 500 Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Thursday May 30, 1968. Bobby Unser won the first of his three Indy 500 victories (1968, 1975, 1981). This was the final Indianapolis 500 to feature a front-engined car in the starting field. Of the 33 cars, 32 were rear-engined machines (including three turbines). Jim Hurtubise's entry, which dropped out after only nine laps, was the last front-engine car to race in the 500. This was also the first 500 won by a turbocharged engine.

For the second year in a row, one of Andy Granatelli's STP Turbine-powered machines was leading late in the race, but once again, it failed within sight of victory. On lap 174, Lloyd Ruby's engine misfired allowing Joe Leonard to take the lead in the Lotus 56 Turbine. Leonard, however, suffered a flameout on the lap 191 restart, and rolled to a silent and shocking halt. Unser, in the venerable piston-powered Offenhauser, inherited the lead and won the race despite gear linkage trouble.

During the month, film crews were on hand to film various action shots and stock footage of the race proceedings to be used in the 1969 film Winning, starring Paul Newman.

With 9.25 in of precipitation in the Indianapolis area in May, the 1968 race featured the wettest month on record for the Indy 500.{{Cite news| url =http://www.crh.noaa.gov/ind/print_localdata.php?loc=txtdat&data=MAYXTRM.TXT

Race schedule

Time trials was scheduled for four days, but for the first time under the current schedule format, qualifying was carried over into a fifth day. Most of Bump Day (May 26) was rained out, and the track closed due to darkness with the field not yet filled to 33 cars. A special session was held Monday in order to complete the field.

Race schedule — May 1968SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1
Practice2
Practice3
Practice4
Practice
5
Practice6
Practice7
Practice8
Practice9
Practice10
Practice11
Practice
12
Practice13
Practice14
Practice15
Practice16
Practice17
Practice18
Pole Day
19
Time Trials20
Practice21
Practice22
Practice23
Practice24
Practice25
Time Trials
26
Bump Day27
Time Trials28
Carb Day
Parade29
Meeting30
Indy 50031
Banquet
ColorNotes
GreenPractice
Dark BlueTime trials
SilverRace day
RedRained out*
BlankNo track activity
  • Includes days where track activity was significantly limited due to rain |} |}
  • The 500 Festival Parade was held Tuesday night, May 28.

Practice and time trials

Graham Hill's 1968 Lotus 56 Turbine

The 1968 Indianapolis 500 was the second and ultimately the final year of participation by the controversial STP Granatelli Turbine machines. For 1968, the Pratt & Whitney turbine engine was installed in the Lotus 56 chassis, often known colloquially as the "Wedge Turbine," and sometimes affectionately as the "Doorstop." In a veiled effort to curtail the turbine's power output, USAC had imposed revised regulations regarding the maximum annulus inlet (reduced from 23.999 in2 to 15.999 in2).

Another rule change dictated that cars were required to conduct three mandatory pit stops, up from two that were required from 1965 to 1967.

Mike Spence was fatally injured after a crash in turn one on May 7. A tire broke off his Lotus "Wedge" Turbine and struck him in the head. He died of his injuries a few hours after the accident after being taken to the hospital. Spence's death came one month after Jim Clark's at Hockenheim; Clark was scheduled to drive one of the Lotus Wedge Turbines at Indy.

Pole Day Time trials – Saturday May 18

Graham Hill, the 1966 winner, in the #70 STP Turbine, was first to qualify and set a new qualifying record. Later, his STP Lotus 56 teammate Joe Leonard in #60 won the pole position with a four-lap average speed of 171.559 mph. Despite the expected dominance of the Turbines, Bobby Unser put his turbocharged Offenhauser on the outside of the front row at a noteworthy 169.507 mph.

Second Day time trials – Sunday May 19

Rain kept cars off the track most of the day. Only two cars were able to make an attempt, and only one was run to completion. At 5:45 p.m., the track was finally opened for qualifications, and Jochen Rindt was the lone qualifier at 164.144 mph, while Denny Hulme waved off as the 6 o'clock gun went off.

At the conclusion of the first weekend of time trials, the field was filled to 16 cars.

Third Day time trials – Saturday May 25

Sixteen cars made a total of 24 attempts, and filled the field to 26 cars. High winds kept some cars off the track, and speeds were down from the previous weekend. Many cars waved off, and Mel Kenyon, at 165.191 mph, was the fastest of the day.

After qualifying, Ronnie Bucknum's car was disqualified for being 20 lb underweight.

Fourth day time trials – Sunday May 26

With the field filled to 25 cars (eight spots open), rain kept the cars off the track until late in the day. The final scheduled day of time trials ("Bump Day") was almost a complete wash out. The traditional 6 o'clock closing time came and went, and the track was still wet. Track crews continued to work, and the track opened for practice at 6:55 p.m. After the mandatory 30-minute practice session, the track opened for time trials at 7:31 p.m.

With overcast skies and darkness looming, three cars made attempts. Bill Puterbaugh and Bill Cheesbourg completed runs, while Bobby Johns spun on his second warm up lap. At that time, officials deemed the conditions unsafe due to darkness, and postponed the remainder of qualifying until Monday morning.

Time trials – Monday May 27

For the first time since 1952, time trials were pushed into a fifth day. Officials ruled that all 25 cars that were in the starting field at 6 p.m. Sunday (May 26) were "locked in" and could not be bumped. In addition, all cars that were in line to qualify Sunday evening at 7:54 p.m. were eligible to make one qualifying attempt on Monday. Only cars that qualified after 6 p.m. on Sunday evening were subject to bumping (including Puterbaugh and Cheesbourg).

Ronnie Bucknum was reinstated to the field when it was determined that during his inspection, the scale used to weight the car was defective. With Bucknum's car back in the field, only seven spots were now available.

Though rain hampered the day, the qualifying was successfully completed on Monday. A frantic session saw two crashes (Bob Hurt and Rick Muther). Eighteen cars took to the track to fill the seven open spots. Both Puterbaugh and Cheesebourg were bumped, and Mike Mosley was the fastest of the day. Jim Hurtubise qualified his front-engined Mallard for 30th starting position. It would be the final front-engined car to qualify for the Indy 500.

Qualification Chronology

Att
#Car
#DriverLapsQual
SpeedRankStartCommentSaturday May 18, 196812345678910111213141516171819Sunday May 19, 19682021Saturday May 25, 1968222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445Sunday May 26, 19684647Monday May 27, 196848495051525354555657585960616263
70Graham Hill4171.20822
25Lloyd Ruby4167.61355
8Roger McCluskey4166.97677
15Mel Kenyon2Waved off
54Wally Dallenbach3Waved off
3Bobby Unser4169.50733
4Gordon Johncock3Waved off
1A. J. Foyt4166.82188
48Dan Gurney4166.5121010
27Jim Malloy4165.0321514
60Joe Leonard4171.55911
4Gordon Johncock4166.77599
82Jim McElreath4165.5121313
24Al Unser4167.06966
2Mario Andretti4167.69144
54Wally Dallenbach4165.5481212
56Jim Hurtubise1Accident
78Jerry Grant4164.7821615
20Art Pollard4166.2971111
35Jochen Rindt4164.1442016
42Denis Hulme3Waved off
21Arnie Knepper1Accident
15Mel Kenyon3Waved off
62Bruce Walkup3
11Gary Bettenhausen4163.5622222
18Johnny Rutherford4163.8302121
45Ronnie Bucknum4164.2111819Disqualified 5/25; Reinstated 5/27; Bumps #88
88Bob Harkey3Waved off
36Larry Dickson3Waved off
59Ronnie Duman4162.3382726
98Billy Vukovich II4163.5102323
26Bobby Johns3Waved off
14Bob Hurt3Waved off
16Bob Veith4163.4952424
10Bud Tingelstad1Pulled off
90Mike Mosley2Waved off
6Bobby Grim4162.8662525
84Carl Williams2Waved off
26Bobby Johns3Waved off
10Bud Tingelstad4164.4441718
21Arnie Knepper3Waved off
42Denis Hulme4164.1891920
15Mel Kenyon4165.1911417
84Carl Williams3Waved off
36Larry Dickson3Waved off
77Bill Puterbaugh4157.301Bumped by #84
22Bill Cheesbourg4157.274Bumped by #21
Bobby Johns157.274Spun on second warm up lap
88Bob Harkey4159.915Bumped by #45 reinstatement
90Mike Mosley4162.4492627
41George Follmer4158.877Bumped by #62
28Rick Muther2Accident
94Sam Sessions4162.1183131
31Sonny Ates4158.221Bumped by #29
36Larry Dickson4159.652Bumped by #56
21Arnie Knepper4161.9003232Bumps #22
84Carl Williams4162.2322929Bumps #77
29George Snider4162.2642828Bumps #31
62Bruce Walkup4160.514Bumps #41; Bumped by #64
56Jim Hurtubise4162.1913030Bumps #36
32Al Miller II4157.109Too slow
71Bob Harkey4156.257Too slow
64Larry Dickson4161.1243333Bumps #88
76Jerry Titus4154.540Too slow

Starting grid

RowInsideMiddleOutside1234567891011
60USA Joe Leonard70GBR Graham Hill3USA Bobby Unser
2USA Mario Andretti25USA Lloyd Ruby24USA Al Unser
8USA Roger McCluskey1USA A. J. Foyt4USA Gordon Johncock
48USA Dan Gurney20USA Art Pollard54USA Wally Dallenbach Sr.
82USA Jim McElreath27USA Jim Malloy78USA Jerry Grant
35AUT Jochen Rindt15USA Mel Kenyon10USA Bud Tingelstad
45USA Ronnie Bucknum42NZL Denny Hulme18USA Johnny Rutherford
11USA Gary Bettenhausen98USA Bill Vukovich II16USA Bob Veith
6USA Bobby Grim59USA Ronnie Duman90USA Mike Mosley
84USA Carl Williams29USA George Snider56USA Jim Hurtubise
94USA Sammy Sessions21USA Arnie Knepper64USA Larry Dickson

Alternates

  • First alternate: Bruce Walkup **** (#59, #62)

Failed to qualify

  • Otto Becker (#46) - Entry Declined
  • Sonny Ates **** (#19, #31)
  • Rollie Beale **** (#32, #88)
  • Chuck Booth (#34) – Entered, did not drive
  • Bill Cheesbourg (#22, #75, #81)
  • Jim Clark – Withdrawn
  • George Follmer **** (#28, #41, #42)
  • Masten Gregory (#28, #95)
  • Bob Harkey (#71, #77, #88)
  • Chuck Hulse (#90) – Wrecked practice, retired
  • Bob Hurt **** (#11, #14, #36, #72, #81, #90)
  • Bobby Johns (#17, #25)
  • Dee Jones **** (#34, #46)
  • Ralph Ligouri **** (#71, #77, #88)
  • Bruce McLaren **** (#66, #69)
  • Al Miller (#9, #32)
  • Rick Muther **** (#22, #28)
  • Danny Ongais **** (#63) – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Henry Pens **** (#17) – Entry declined, lack of experience
  • Bill Puterbaugh **** (#63, #71, #77)
  • Les Scott **** (#50) – Failed refresher test
  • Mike Spence **** (#30, #60) – Fatal accident
  • Chuck Stevenson (#90) – Wrecked, retired
  • Jackie Stewart (#20)
  • Jerry Titus **** (#50, #71, #75, #76)
  • Greg Weld **** (#17, #19, #30)
  • Dempsey Wilson (#51, #63, #81)
  • LeeRoy Yarbrough (#59, #62)

Race Day

First half

At the drop of the green flag, Joe Leonard in the #60 STP Turbine took the lead, with Bobby Unser in second and Roger McCluskey up to third at the end of lap one. A fast pace was set over the first 100 miles, with no yellow caution lights. Bobby Unser took the lead for the first time on lap 8, and led most of the first half.

After only nine laps, Jim Hurtubise in the front-engined PepsiCo Frito-lay special had burned a piston, and was out, finishing 30th, the final front-engined "roadster" to race at lap at the 500. Also in the pits was Mario Andretti, who dropped out with a bad piston. Moments later, he hopped into the car of his teammate Larry Dickson, but that was also short-lived. That car also suffered a broken piston after 24 laps.

On lap 41, the caution flag flew for the first time. Al Unser Sr. made a routine pit stop, but a fire broke out in the turbocharger. He was able to return to the race, but after only one lap, he lost a wheel and hit the wall in turn one. Arnie Knepper and Gary Bettenhausen were also involved. After 200 mi, defending champion A. J. Foyt was out with a blown engine.

Second half

On lap 110, Graham Hill lost a wheel and smashed into the turn two wall, which brought out the second caution. It was the first of the three Granatelli Turbines to drop out of the race. On the restart, Bobby Unser took the lead, blowing by Joe Leonard, showing the traditional piston-powered engines were still a match for the powerful turbines.

On lap 127, Mel Kenyon and rookie Billy Vukovich II tangled in turn four. Both were able to re-enter the race, but Johnny Rutherford, while trying to slow down, was rear-ended by Jim McElreath. Mike Mosley also spun into the turn four grass trying to avoid the accident. Rutherford was out, but McElreath limped back to the pits where his crew repaired the nosecone.

When Bobby Unser made his last pit stop on lap 166, his gearshift linkage was broken, and the car was stuck in high gear. As he slowly left his pit, struggling to accelerate back to racing speed, both Leonard and Ruby passed him. Leonard now led in the Turbine. Ruby was up to second, but moments later on lap 178, Ruby was back in the pits with a faulty ignition coil. His crew was able to replace the coil, but the six-minute pit stop dropped him out of contention for the win.

With 19 laps to go, Joe Leonard led, with Bobby Unser back up to second. Carl Williams crashed on the backstretch, triggering a fire which brought out the yellow light. Under the caution, Leonard led, with Bobby Unser second, and Dan Gurney in third. For a brief moment, a controversy started brewing as Art Pollard (teammate to Joe Leonard), who was a couple laps down, was not keeping up with the caution pace. As a result, Bobby Unser was stuck behind him, and losing track position to Leonard.

Finish

After the cleanup, the green flag was given to the field at the start of lap 192. At that instant, both leader Joe Leonard and his teammate Art Pollard hesitated and instantly slowed with identical snapped fuel pump drive shafts. The turbine engines again failed in sight of the finish, stunning the racing fraternity. Bobby Unser swept by into the lead with Dan Gurney inheriting second place. With a nearly full-lap lead, Unser cruised over the final nine laps to win his first Indianapolis 500.

Cars using Goodyear tires swept the top four positions, and Goodyear won their second 500 in row. Officials allowed the top five cars to finish the full 500 miles, then flagged the rest of the field off the track. This would be the final 500 in which finishers were named to the prestigious Champion Spark Plug 100 mph Club. Unlike the 1967 race, the Turbine did not run away from the field in 1968. Bobby Unser led the most laps in the Offenhauser, but Joe Leonard spent most of the day on Unser's tail, in the top three. Graham Hill ran in the top five, but complained that he lacked speed down the long straights, and was running 4th when he wrecked. Art Pollard, in the third Turbine, spent most of the day in the top ten before the car quit, but was never really a factor for the win.

Box score

FinishStartNoNameChassisEngineTireQualLapsStatus123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233
33USA Bobby UnserEagleOffenhauser169.507200Running
1048USA Dan GurneyEagleFord-Weslake166.512200+53.80
1715USA Mel KenyonGerhardtOffenhauser165.191200+4:48.62
2042NZL Denis HulmeEagleFord164.189200+4:55.41
525USA Lloyd RubyMongooseOffenhauser167.613200+5:45.06
2659USA Ronnie DumanBrabhamOffenhauser162.338200Running
2398USA Bill Vukovich II ****ShrikeOffenhauser163.510198Flagged
2790USA Mike Mosley ****WatsonOffenhauser162.499197Flagged
3194USA Sammy Sessions ****FinleyOffenhauser162.118197Flagged
256USA Bobby GrimMongooseOffenhauser162.866196Flagged
2416USA Bob VeithGerhardtOffenhauser163.495196Flagged
160USA Joe LeonardLotusPratt & Whitney171.599191Fuel Shaft
1120USA Art PollardLotusPratt & Whitney166.297188Fuel Shaft
1382USA Jim McElreathCoyoteFord165.327179Stalled
2884USA Carl WilliamsCoyoteFord162.323163Crash BS
1810USA Bud TingelstadGerhardtFord164.444158Oil Pressure
1254USA Wally Dallenbach Sr.FinleyOffenhauser165.548148Engine
2118USA Johnny RutherfordEagleFord163.830125Crash T4
270GBR Graham Hill ****LotusPratt & Whitney171.208110Crash T2
81USA A. J. Foyt ****CoyoteFord166.82186Rear End
1945USA Ronnie Bucknum ****EagleFord164.21176Fuel Leak
1427USA Jim Malloy ****VollstedtFord165.03264Rear End
1578USA Jerry GrantEagleFord164.78250Oil Leak
2211USA Gary Bettenhausen ****GerhardtOffenhauser163.56243Accident T1
3221USA Arnie KnepperVollstedtFord161.90042Accident T1
624USA Al UnserLolaFord167.06940Crash T1
94USA Gordon JohncockGerhardtOffenhauser166.77537Rear End
3364USA Larry Dickson
(Mario Andretti Laps 14–24)BrawnerFord161.12424Piston
78USA Roger McCluskeyEagleOffenhauser166.97616Oil Filter
3056USA Jim HurtubiseMallardOffenhauser162.1919Piston
2929USA George SniderMongooseFord162.2649Oil Leak
1635AUT Jochen RindtBrabhamRepco-Brabham164.1445Piston
42USA Mario AndrettiBrawnerFord167.6912Piston

Note: Relief drivers in parentheses

**** Former Indianapolis 500 winner

**** Indianapolis 500 Rookie

Race statistics

Lap LeadersLapsLeader
1–7Joe Leonard
8–56Bobby Unser
57–89Lloyd Ruby
90–112Bobby Unser
113–119Joe Leonard
120–165Bobby Unser
166–174Lloyd Ruby
175–191Joe Leonard
192–200Bobby Unser
Total laps ledDriverLaps
Bobby Unser127
Lloyd Ruby42
Joe Leonard31
Yellow Lights: 5 for 47 minutesLaps*Reason
41–51Al Unser crash in turn 1 (12 minutes)
110–119Graham Hill crash in turn 2 (10 minutes)
127–138Vukovich brushed wall in turn 3 (12 minutes)
Rutherford/Mosely spun in turn 4
158Debris on frontstretch (1 minute)
183–191Carl Williams crash in turn 2 (12 minutes)
* – *Approximate lap counts*
Tire participation chartSupplierNo. of starters
**Goodyear****19***
**Firestone****14**
* – *Denotes race winner*

Race notes

  • This was the fourth consecutive race victory for Bobby Unser in the 1968 season, he would go on the claim the National Championship.
  • This would be the final Indy 500 documented by the popular Floyd Clymer 500 Mile Race yearbooks.
  • 6th-place finisher Ronnie Duman would be killed ten days later at Milwaukee.
  • Mike Spence was the third person with the surname of Spence (none of whom were related) to lose his life at the Speedway.

Broadcasting

Radio

The race was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Sid Collins served as chief announcer. Len Sutton served as "driver expert" for the third year. At the conclusion of the race, Lou Palmer reported from victory lane.

Pre-race coverage was 30 minutes. The entire on-air crew remained consistent from 1966 & 1967. The broadcast was carried by over 900 affiliates including 761 in the United States, Armed Forces Network, the CBC, and reached New Zealand and Australia for the first time. The broadcast had an estimated 100 million listeners worldwide.

Collins greeted numerous guests in the booth during the race. Among those who stopped by were Chuck Stevenson, Sam Hanks, J. C. Agajanian, former (and future) radio analyst Fred Agabashian, Duke Nalon, Pete DePaolo, Henry Banks, Tom Binford, Johnnie Parsons, and Johnny Boyd. Indiana Senator Vance Hartke visited the booth, escorting a delegation that included Secretary of Transportation Alan Boyd, FCC chairman Rosel H. Hyde, Utah Senator Frank Moss, and Jack Kauffmann (The Washington Star). Senator Birch Bayh also visited the booth, accompanied by his teenage son, future governor and future senator Evan Bayh, who was attending his first race. On the air, Evan correctly predicted Bobby Unser would win the race.

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

Television

The race was carried in the United States on ABC's Wide World of Sports. The broadcast was supposed to air on Saturday, June 8 but was postponed a week to Saturday June 15 due to the funeral that day of Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Jim McKay anchored the broadcast with Rodger Ward as analyst, and Chris Economaki as a pit reporter..

The race was shown live on MCA closed-circuit television in approximately 175 theaters across the United States. Charlie Brockman served as anchor.

Notes

References

Works cited

(1967 Indianapolis 500) (1969 Indianapolis 500)

References

  1. Fox, Jack C.. (1994). "The Illustrated History of the Indianapolis 500 1911-1994". Carl Hungness Publishing.
  2. Lyst, John H.. (May 31, 1968). "Infielders Real Mudders". The Indianapolis Star.
  3. (May 31, 1968). "Bobby Unser wins 500 as turbines fail". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  4. (May 31, 1968). "Unser wins Indy 500 race". The Bulletin.
  5. Taylor, Jim. (May 31, 1968). "Unser, 'King Offy' got all the help they needed". Toledo Blade.
  6. Ottum, Bob. (June 10, 1968). "Rude setback for the jet age".
  7. (May 26, 1968). "Nine more qualify; final eight today". Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
  8. (May 27, 1968). "Indy drivers given another chance". Toledo Blade.
  9. (November 2021)
  10. (May 28, 1968). "Wrecks mar Indy time trials". Daytona Beach Morning Journal.
  11. ''[[Donald Davidson (historian). The Talk of Gasoline Alley]]'' - [[WIBC (FM). 1070-AM WIBC]], May 14, 2004
  12. "1968 International 500 Mile Sweepstakes". ChampCarStats.com.
  13. "International 500 Mile Sweepstakes – May 30, 1968". ChampCarStats.com.
  14. (May 30, 1968). "Here's Your 500-Mile Race Scorecard". [[Indianapolis News]].
  15. (May 30, 1968). "Race Score Card". [[The Indianapolis Star]].
  16. (1968-05-29). "Facts And Figures On Indianapolis 500". [[The Daily News (Kentucky).
  17. (1968-05-14). "Indianapolis 500".
  18. (1968-06-05). "Computers to Help Report Indianapolis 500 Race". Computer World.
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