1984 Indianapolis 500 Explained

Race Name:68th Indianapolis 500
Race Logo:Indy500winningcar1984.JPG
Sanction:USAC
Season:1984 CART season
1983-84 Gold Crown
Team:Penske Racing
Date:May 27, 1984
Winner: Rick Mears
Mph:163.612mi/h
Pole: Tom Sneva
Pole Speed:210.029mi/h
Fast Time: Tom Sneva
Rookie: Roberto Guerrero & Michael Andretti
Leader: Rick Mears(119)
Anthem:Purdue Band
Back Home:Jim Nabors
Start Engines:Mary F. Hulman
Pace Car:Pontiac Fiero
Pace Driver:John Callies (Pontiac)
Starter:Duane Sweeney[1]
Attendance:400,000[2]
Network:ABC
Announcers:Host: Jackie Stewart
Lap-by-lap: Jim McKay
Color Analyst: Sam Posey
Rating:12.9
Share:25
Previous:1983
Next:1985

The 68th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday May 27, 1984. Rick Mears, who previously won in 1979, won his second (of four) Indy 500 victories driving for Penske. Contenders Tom Sneva and Mario Andretti dropped out of the race in the second half, leaving Mears alone two laps ahead of the field, and he cruised to the victory. Three months after the race, however, Mears would suffer severe leg injuries in a practice crash at Sanair.

Three rookies finished in the top five: Roberto Guerrero (2nd), Al Holbert (4th), and Michael Andretti (5th). Guerrero and Andretti shared the rookie of the year award. The race is well-remembered for the terrible crash of sportswriter-turned-racer, Pat Bedard, who tumbled through the infield in turn 4 on lap 58. Another rookie, two-time World Champion and future two-time Indy winner Emerson Fittipaldi made a quiet debut.

The race was sanctioned by USAC, and was included as part of the 1984 CART PPG Indy Car World Series. The 1984 race has the distinction of having the record for most entries (117), and the most cars to actually be seen in the garage (87). Defending race winner Tom Sneva, who broke the 200 mph barrier during time trials in 1977, headlined qualifying on pole day. Sneva made history once again, as he became the first driver to break the 210 mph barrier, en route to his third pole position. This Indy 500 was the last for 33 years that an active Formula One driver, Teo Fabi, featured in the field, with double World Champion Fernando Alonso making his 500 debut in 2017.[3]

Race schedule

Race schedule — April/May 1984
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
22
 
23
 
24
 
25
 
26
 
27
ROP
28
ROP
29
ROP
30
 
1
 
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
Practice
6
Practice
7
Practice
8
Practice
9
Practice
10
Practice
11
Practice
12
Pole Day
13
Time Trials
14
Practice
15
Practice
16
Practice
17
Practice
18
Practice
19
Time Trials
20
Bump Day
21
 
22
 
23
 
24
Carb Day
25
Mini-Marathon
26
Parade
27
Indy 500
28
Memorial Day
29
 
30
 
31
 
  
ColorNotes
GreenPractice
Dark BlueTime trials
SilverRace day
RedRained out*|-| Blank| No track activity|}* Includes days where track
activity was significantly
limited due to rain

ROP — denotes Rookie
Orientation Program

Time trials

Pole Day – Saturday May 12

Pole Day was a historic day as Tom Sneva broke the track record with the first lap over 210 mph at Indy. Sneva was also the first driver to break the 200 mph barrier, which he accomplished during time trials in 1977. Nonetheless, going into Pole Day, Mario Andretti was actually the favorite for the pole position, after he ran a practice lap of 212 mph.

Rick Mears was the first driver in the field, completing his run with a track record of 207.847 mph. Rookie Michael Andretti was the next car out (207.805 mph), running surprisingly close to Mears. At 12:45 pm, Mario Andretti took to the track, with high expectations. His first lap was completed at 209.687 mph, a new one-lap track record. His second and third laps dropped off, however. As he came out of turn four on the fourth and final lap, his car quit. He coasted across the finish line powerless to complete the run, but the average speed sank to 207.467 mph. It would be good enough for row 2, but a disappointment compared to his practice speeds earlier in the week.

Shortly before 2 p.m., Tom Sneva took to the track, and electrified the crowd. His third lap was run at 210.423 mph, a new track record, and the first qualifying lap ever at Indy over 210 mph. His fourth lap (210.689) mph was the fastest. His four-lap speed of 210.029 mph was a record, and secured him the pole position. It was Sneva's third Indy pole, and fourth time overall as the fastest qualifier.

Later in the day, Howdy Holmes squeezed onto the front row with a run of 207.977 mph. It put him in second starting position, and bumped Rick Mears to the outside of the front row. Rookie Michael Andretti out-qualified his father, and would line up in 4th position (Mario qualified 6th).

A total of 28 cars qualified on pole day.

Second Day – Sunday May 13

Rain kept the track closed until nearly 1 p.m. Only three cars made attempts all afternoon, but none of them were run to completion. Johnny Rutherford went out for his second attempt in a Foyt entry, but never completed a lap due to mechanical problems.

During a practice run, John Paul Jr. wrecked in turn four, suffering leg injuries.

Third Day – Saturday May 19

The day began with five spots remaining unfilled on the grid. With rain in the forecast for Sunday, several teams scrambled to get their cars prepared to qualify on this day. Bill Alsup was the first driver to make an attempt, but his crew waved off.

George Snider was the first driver to complete his run, putting in a safe run of 201.860 mph in a Foyt backup car. Later, Steve Chassey wrecked on the first lap of his qualifying attempt. He would sit out the rest of the month with a concussion.

At 1 p.m. the field was filled to 33 cars. Chris Kneifel (199.831 mph) was on the bubble. Among the drivers still not in the field was three-time winner Johnny Rutherford. He was struggling to get his car up to speed, and exhausted his three allotted attempts in a Foyt Chevy V-6. The team bought a back-up car from Galles, and Rutherford immediately began shaking the car down. Rutherford was in danger of missing the race for the second year in a row. In 1983, he was sidelined with a broken foot and broken ankle from a practice crash.

At 5:50 p.m., with only ten minutes left before the 6 o'clock gun, Johnny Rutherford took to the track for one last attempt to qualify. His first lap was an impressive 203.156 mph, but the car began smoking throughout. Rutherford decided to ride it out, and he was not black-flagged. His speed dropped over the final three laps, but his four-lap average of 202.062 mph was fast enough to bump his way into the field.

Spike Gehlhausen (200.478 mph) was now on the bubble. Gary Bettenhausen made a last-ditch effort to bump him out, but he waved off after only two laps.

Bump Day – Sunday May 20

As expected, rain washed out the final day of time trials. Since the field had been filled to 33 cars a day earlier, the field was set, and there would be no further qualifying.

Jacques Villeneuve, who suffered a crash during practice, withdrew from the starting field due to injury. The first alternate, Chris Kneifel was re-instated to the field to fill the vacancy. He became the last driver to start the Indianapolis 500 with a qualifying speed under 200 mph.

Starting grid

RowInsideMiddleOutside
1 1 - Tom Sneva 41 - Howdy Holmes 6 - Rick Mears
2 99 - Michael Andretti 20 - Gordon Johncock 3 - Mario Andretti
3 9 - Roberto Guerrero 18 - Geoff Brabham 28 - Herm Johnson
4 2 - Al Unser 25 - Danny Ongais 14 - A. J. Foyt
5 77 - Tom Gloy 33 - Teo Fabi 7 - Al Unser Jr.
6 21 - Al Holbert 16 - Tony Bettenhausen Jr. 5 - Bobby Rahal
7 35 - Patrick Bedard 22 - Dick Simon 10 - Pancho Carter
8 40 - Chip Ganassi 47 - Emerson Fittipaldi 55 - Josele Garza
9 57 - Spike Gehlhausen 37 - Scott Brayton 98 - Kevin Cogan
10 30 - Danny Sullivan 61 - Derek Daly 84 - Johnny Rutherford
11 4 - George Snider 50 - Dennis Firestone 73 - Chris Kneifel

Qualified cars withdrawn

Alternates

  • First alternate: Chris Kneifel (#73) - Bumped; Named to the starting field on 5/24
  • Second alternate: none

Failed to qualify

Race summary

Start

Race day dawned cool and clear, with temperatures in the 60s. Rain was forecast for later in the afternoon, but was not expected to affect the race. Mary F. Hulman gave the command to start engines just before 11 a.m., and all cars pulled away for the pace laps.

At the start, Rick Mears got the jump and swept across the track to take the lead in turn one. Pole sitter Tom Sneva settled into second, and rookie Michael Andretti went from the inside of row 2 to take third. Mears led the first lap at a speed of 195.610 mph, a new Indy record for the opening lap.[4] Geoff Brabham ducked into the pits after one lap, dropping out with a bad fuel line.

A few laps later, Michael Andretti passed Tom Sneva to take second place. Gordon Johncock also went to the pits for an unscheduled pit stop.

First half

The first 100 miles were run clean, with no incidents. Tom Sneva led Al Unser Jr., Rick Mears, Mario and Michael Andretti.

After 37 laps, race rookie and future two-time winner Emerson Fittipaldi dropped out due to low oil pressure. The two-time Formula One World Champion had a relatively quiet month of May, acclimating himself gradually to the Indy car circuit. It was a largely unnoticed effort in the underfunded W.I.T. Promotions entry, a pink-painted car. On lap 45, Spike Gehlhausen spun in turn 1, and came to a rest in turn 2 without contact.

Rick Mears took the lead for the second time on lap 54. On lap 58, Patrick Bedard suffered a terrible crash in turn four. The car spun to the inside of the north shortchute, hit the inside wall, flipped over, and barrel-rolled through the grass. The car broke into two pieces, the tub and the engine. Debris littered the track, and a lengthy caution was needed to clean up the incident. Bedard was injured, but the injuries were not life-threatening. Under the caution, Danny Sullivan came up too fast and ran into the car of Roberto Guerrero, hopping up on two wheels, and damaging his right-front suspension. Sullivan dropped out of the race, but Guerrero was able to continue.

The lead traded amongst Mears, Sneva, Mario Andretti, Teo Fabi, and Danny Ongais. After the lengthy caution for Bedard's crash, Tom Sneva came to the lead, and led at the halfway point. Around lap 70, the DataSpeed computer timing and scoring system crashed. The remainder of the race would have to be scored manually, and the scoring serials were at times incomplete. However, at no point was the leader of the race unknown or disputed.[5]

Second half

At lap 100, Tom Sneva led, looking for back-to-back wins. Al Unser Jr. was in second, Rick Mears third, Mario Andretti fourth, and Michael Andretti fifth. The rest of the top ten was Bobby Rahal, Roberto Guerrero, Al Holbert, Al Unser, Sr., and Teo Fabi. Four laps later, however, Fabi was out with a broken fuel system.

On lap 103, Gordon Johncock hit the wall coming out of turn four. He spun to the inside, hit the pit wall, then spun back across the pits and hit the wall separating the pits from the track. He missed hitting Teo Fabi's car, which was being pushed back to the garage, and somehow missed hitting the crew members that were in the sign board area. Johncock injured his left ankle (he had suffered a right ankle injury at Michigan the previous year), and ultimately took a short retirement from racing.

With Rick Mears now leading, Mario Andretti started slipping in the standings due to a broken exhaust pipe. The engine was losing rpm, but he was still managing to stay in contention. After running in the top five most of the day, Al Unser Jr. dropped out on lap 131 with a broken water pump.

Tom Sneva briefly took the lead on laps 142-143 during a sequence of pit stops. Rick Mears was back in front on lap 144. With 50 laps to go, Rick Mears led Tom Sneva and Roberto Guerrero. Al Unser Sr. had now worked his way into the top five. Michael Andretti and Mario Andretti were also still in contention.

On lap 153, Mario Andretti went into the pits for a routine stop. He was held up in traffic, and the car of Josele Garza cut in front of him down the pit lane. Garza's car made contact, and broke the nosecone of Mario's car. It was too damaged to continue, and Mario was forced to drop out.

Finish

With several contenders dropping out in quick succession, the race came down to two drivers in the final 100 miles: Rick Mears and Tom Sneva. Scott Brayton stalled on the track on the leader's lap 163, bringing out the caution. With 33 laps to go, Sneva's crew debated pitting, hoping to make it to the finish on one more stop. They planned on pitting with 30 laps to go. On lap 168, however, sparks came from the back of Sneva's car in turn 3 as the field was preparing to go back to green. Sneva immediately ducked into the pits with a broken CV joint, and he climbed from the car. Mears, post-race, would remark, "I feel bad for him, but it's a relief for me...he was my toughest competitor."

With Sneva out of the race, Rick Mears now held a commanding lead. No other cars were in contention, with Mears now two laps ahead of the entire field. Mears cruised to the finish, and was not challenged the rest of the way. The only battle remained for second place, between Roberto Guerrero and Al Unser Sr.

A light drizzle started entering the area in the final 30 laps or so, threatening to end the race early. The heavy rain did not come, and Mears completed the 200 laps at a race record 163.612 mph. Mears won his second Indy 500, with a margin of victory of over two laps. Due to the ongoing scoring issues from the DataSpeed timing and scoring system, Al Unser Sr. was tentatively hand scored in second, with Roberto Guerrero unofficially third. For a brief period, it was Penske Racing's first 1-2 finish in the Indy 500. However, when scoring was ultimately resolved, Guerrero was rightfully elevated to second, with Unser dropping to third.[6] After an eventful day - nearly being caught up in the Bedard crash, being hit by Sullivan during the ensuring yellow flag, overshooting his pit stall during one of his stops, and spinning in turn two - Guerrero was surprised to find out he finished second, and was voted co-Rookie of the Year.[7]

Box score

FinishGridNoNameChassisEngineQualLapsStatus
136 Rick Mears March 84CCosworth DFX207.847200163.612 mph
279 Roberto Guerrero March 84CCosworth DFX205.717 198-2 Laps
3102 Al Unser March 84CCosworth DFX204.441 198-2 Laps
41621 Al Holbert March 84CCosworth DFX203.016 198-2 Laps
5499 Michael Andretti March 84CCosworth DFX207.805 198-2 Laps
61214 A. J. Foyt March 84CCosworth DFX203.860 197-3 Laps
7185 Bobby RahalMarch 84CCosworth DFX202.230 197-3 Laps
8928 Herm JohnsonMarch 84CCosworth DFX204.618 194-6 Laps
91125 Danny OngaisMarch 84CCosworth DFX203.978 193-7 Laps
102455 Josele GarzaMarch 84CCosworth DFX200.615 193-7 Laps
11314 George SniderMarch 84CCosworth DFX201.861 193-7 Laps
123250 Dennis FirestoneMarch 82CCosworth DFX201.217 186-14 Laps
13241 Howdy HolmesMarch 84CCosworth DFX207.977 185-15 Laps
141377 Tom Gloy March 84CCosworth DFX203.758 179Engine
153373 Chris KneifelPrimus 84Cosworth DFX199.831 175Transmission
1611 Tom Sneva March 84CCosworth DFX210.029 168Left CV Joint
1763 Mario Andretti Lola T800Cosworth DFX207.466 153Broken Nosecone
182637 Scott BraytonMarch 84CBuick V-6203.637 150Transmission
192110 Pancho CarterMarch 84CCosworth DFX201.820 141Engine
202798 Kevin CoganEagle 84SBPontiac203.622 137Frozen Wheel
21157 Al Unser Jr.March 84CCosworth DFX203.404 131Water Pump
223084 Johnny Rutherford March 84CCosworth DFX202.062 116Engine
232022 Dick SimonMarch 84CCosworth DFX201.835 112In Pits
241433 Teo FabiMarch 84CCosworth DFX203.600 104Fuel System
25520 Gordon Johncock March 84CCosworth DFX207.545 103Crash T4
261716 Tony Bettenhausen Jr.March 84CCosworth DFX202.814 86Piston
272961 Derek DalyMarch 84CCosworth DFX202.443 76Handling
282240 Chip GanassiMarch 84CCosworth DFX201.612 61Engine
292830 Danny SullivanLola T800Cosworth DFX203.567 57Broken Wheel
301935 Patrick BedardMarch 84CBuick V-6201.915 55Crash NC
312557 Spike GehlhausenMarch 84CCosworth DFX200.478 45Spun SC
322347 Emerson Fittipaldi March 84CCosworth DFX201.078 37Oil Pressure
33818 Geoff BrabhamMarch 84CCosworth DFX204.931 1Fuel Line

Former Indianapolis 500 winner

Indianapolis 500 Rookie

All cars utilized Goodyear tires.

Statistics

Lap Leaders
LapsLeader
1–24 Rick Mears
25 Tom Sneva
26–47 Mario Andretti
48–49 Tom Sneva
50–53 Mario Andretti
54–59 Rick Mears
60 Tom Sneva
61–63 Mario Andretti
64–70 Teo Fabi
71–73 Danny Ongais
74–80 Teo Fabi
81–82 Tom Sneva
83–86 Al Unser Jr.
87–109 Tom Sneva
110–141 Rick Mears
142–143 Tom Sneva
144–200 Rick Mears
Total laps led
DriverLaps
119
31
29
14
4
3
Cautions: 5 for 34 laps
LapsReason
48–53 Spike Gehlhausen spin in turn 1
59–68 Patrick Bedard crash in turn 4
107–114 Gordon Johncock crash in pit area
154–158 Roberto Guerrero spin in turn 2
163–167 Scott Brayton stalled

Broadcasting

Radio

The race was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Paul Page served as the chief announcer for the eighth year. It was Page's eleventh year overall as part of the network crew. Lou Palmer reported from victory lane. Luke Walton introduced the starting command during the pre-race ceremonies, but did not have on-air duties during the race itself.

Bob Forbes spent the early segments of the race covering the center pits, then spent the second half of the race concentrating on covering the garage area and track hospital. Sally Larvick was once again used in a limited role, conducting interviews. She also reported from the track hospital in the early portions of the race. This was the last year of the Backstretch reporter. The Backstretch reporter would return for a two-year period from 1989 to 1990 but have a very limited role both years.

This would be the final 500 on the crew for Doug Zink, who debuted in 1966. Zink died April 3, 2016.[8]

Booth AnnouncersTurn ReportersPit/garage reporters
Chief Announcer

Paul Page
Driver expert: Rodger Ward
Statistician

John DeCamp
Historian

Donald Davidson

Turn 1: Ron Carrell
Turn 2: Doug Zink
Backstretch: Howdy Bell
Turn 3: Larry Henry
Turn 4: Bob Jenkins
Luke Walton (pre-race)
Sally Larvick (interviews/hospital)
Jerry Baker (north pits)
Chuck Marlowe (center pits)
Bob Forbes (center pits/garages)
Lou Palmer (south pits)

Television

The race was carried in the United States on ABC Sports on a same-day tape delay basis. Jackie Stewart served as the host position in "ABC Race Central" for the final time. Jack Arute joined the crew as a pit reporter, a position he would hold for over 20 years. After 1983, Chris Economaki left ABC, and joined CBS for the Daytona 500 and other NASCAR events. Larry Nuber debuted as a pit reporter in his first Indy assignment, and ABC News and ABC Sports correspondent Ray Gandolf supplied in-depth features.

A new camera angle was introduced for this broadcast, located on the start's stand over the shoulder of the flagman. The angle would be used at the dropping of the green flag as well as the finish.

The race was televised in Brasil for the first time, as the debut of former Formula One champion Emerson Fittipaldi attracted national interest. Record aired the race with Emerson's father Wilson Fittipaldi as announcer.

The broadcast has re-aired on ESPN Classic since May 2011.

Gallery

1984 Pontiac Fiero pace car

Notes

See also

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Book: Fox, Jack C.. The Illustrated History of the Indianapolis 500 1911-1994. Carl Hungness Publishing. 4th. 1994. 22. en. 0-915088-05-3.
  2. News: Takes second '500' victory by 2 laps over Guerrero. Robin. Miller. Robin Miller (journalist). The Indianapolis Star. 1. Newspapers.com. May 28, 1984. June 2, 2017.
  3. 28 May 2017 . TSN . SportsCentre .
  4. News: 500 Race Records. The Indianapolis NewsOrlando Sentinel. 20. Newspapers.com. May 28, 1984. August 23, 2022.
  5. News: USAC finds bug in its computer. Dave. Overpeck. The Indianapolis Star. 9. Newspapers.com. May 28, 1984. April 2, 2019.
  6. News: Unser Sr. survives 'one of those days'. Jerry. Garau. The Indianapolis Star. 5. Newspapers.com. May 28, 1984. March 25, 2019.
  7. News: Guerrero finishes second, the hard way. David. Benner. The Indianapolis Star. 5. Newspapers.com. May 28, 1984. April 2, 2019.
  8. News: Indy 500 Announcer Doug Zink, Motor Builder Larry Slutter Pass Away. NBC Sports. Jerry. Bonkowsik. April 7, 2016. April 26, 2016.