In addition to
the Month of May countdown, we’re also recounting the front rows of the 1970s,
which included some of the most accomplished drivers in the history of the
Indianapolis 500.
Faithful
readers of this space know that this decade is part of my personal golden age
at the Speedway. I’m grateful I got to witness much of it first-hand as a boy.
Here’s a
statistical look at the front-row drivers of the 1970s:
Driver
|
Indianapolis
500 poles (career)
|
Indianapolis
500 wins (career)
|
Al Unser
|
1
|
4
|
Johnny
Rutherford
|
3
|
3
|
A.J. Foyt
|
4
|
4
|
Peter Revson
|
1
|
0
|
Mark Donohue
|
0
|
1
|
Bobby Unser
|
2
|
3
|
Wally
Dallenbach
|
0
|
0
|
Mike Hiss
|
0
|
0
|
Gordon
Johncock
|
0
|
2
|
Tom Sneva
|
3
|
1
|
Danny Ongais
|
0
|
0
|
Rick Mears
|
6
|
4
|
Totals
|
20
|
22
|
For each year,
we’ll have the front row, how many Indianapolis 500 wins were represented on
the front row at the start of the race, the number of Indianapolis 500 wins in
the drivers’ respective careers, and a brief recap of practice, qualifying and
the race.
 |
Penske Entertainment/Indianapolis Motor Speedway Perfectly aligned front row for the 1979 Indianapolis 500, with Rick Mears on the pole, Tom Sneva in the middle and Al Unser on the outside. That's a Penske PC-6, McLaren and a Chaparral, respectively. |
1979
Indianapolis 500 front row: Rick Mears (pole), Tom Sneva (middle), Al Unser
How it
started: 3 Indianapolis 500 victories (All by Al Unser)
How it ended:
9 Indianapolis 500 victories (Rick Mears 1979, 1984, 1988, 1991; Tom Sneva
1983; Al Unser 1970, 1971, 1978, 1987)
About the
1979 race: The year 1979 was one of transition and controversy in major
open-wheel racing. A new group, Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART), sprang
up in the off-season. Featuring almost all the big-name drivers and teams, it
held events at familiar tracks (like Phoenix and Trenton) that once were the
purview of the United States Auto Club (USAC), the sanctioning body of the
Indianapolis 500.
The Month of
May was basically one giant headache, with lawsuits, shenanigans during time
trials and an added session of qualifying – the day before the race, no less –
all part of the “fun.” You can read my retrospective here.
From a
competition perspective, the big news was Al Unser’s beautiful and futuristic Pennzoil
Chaparral/Cosworth, one of the first “ground-effects” cars in Indy racing. No
other car looked remotely like it. Not surprisingly, Unser set fast time in
qualifying before Tom Sneva, going for a record third-straight pole, nudged him
over one spot in his Sugaripe Prune McLaren/Cosworth.
Then,
dramatically, Rick Mears, with the final pole run of the day, knocked Sneva off
his perch for the first of what would be a record six Indianapolis poles, all
with Penske.
Al Unser
dominated the first half of the race before retiring with a bad transmission
seal after 104 laps. That left it to brother Bobby Unser, who replaced Sneva at
Penske. Bobby Unser looked like a sure three-time winner in his Norton Spirit
Penske PC-7/Cosworth before his top gear failed, something that almost never
happens.
Unser tried his
best to hold on, but faded. Mears, driving the older PC-6/Cosworth, rolled home
in the Gould Charge for the first of his record-tying four Indianapolis 500
victories.
Front-row
starters Mears, Sneva and Al Unser all would notch at least one Indianapolis
500 victory in the 1980s. The 1970s were truly a remarkable decade featuring
some of the greatest drivers of all time. During this competitive era, all but
one of the 12 front-row starters at Indianapolis won an IndyCar race during
their careers. The exception was Mike Hiss, who started third in 1974.
#Indy500
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