Friday, May 14, 2021

30 Days in May: No. 14, A.J. Foyt, 1973 Gilmore Racing Coyote/Foyt

Welcome to our monthlong countdown celebrating notable drivers and cars from the history of the Indianapolis 500!

A.J. Foyt was still working out the bugs in his new Coyote/Foyt at Indianapolis in 1973.
No surprise, Super Tex figured it out. The Coyote/Foyt combination won the pole in 1974
and 1975 and got Foyt his  record fourth Indianapolis 500 victory in 1977. 


30 Days in May: No. 14, A.J. Foyt, 1973 Gilmore Racing Coyote/Foyt. Amazingly, A.J. Foyt was close to the bubble for the 1973 500, as his speed average of 188.927 mph was 32nd-fastest (or second-slowest). Not surprisingly, the 1973 race was one to forget for Foyt. His Coyote dropped out after 37 laps, then Foyt took over teammate George Snider’s car, which wound up 11th.

Why Foyt had so much trouble in time trials in 1973 is hard to fathom because Super Tex usually was an excellent qualifier. Consider this: In 1991, 33 years after his 500 debut plus coming off devastating lower-leg injuries suffered in a gruesome crash at Road America and at age 56 (!) no less, the amazing Foyt earned a front-row stating position – between Rick Mears and Mario Andretti. Many consider this the greatest front row in Indianapolis 500 history. And it has to rank as one of the greatest feats (no pun intended) in Foyt’s amazing career. 

#Indy500 @IMS @IMSMuseum @IndyCar @AJFoytRacing

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