fbpx
Wikipedia

2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship

The 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship was the scheduled final race of the 2011 IZOD IndyCar series. It was to be run at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, Nevada USA on October 16, 2011, and was scheduled for 200 laps around the facility's 1.544 mile oval.

2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship
Race details
18th round of the 2011 IndyCar Series season
The layout of Las Vegas Motor Speedway, where the race was held
DateOctober 16, 2011
Official nameIZOD IndyCar World Championship
LocationLas Vegas Motor Speedway
Clark County, Nevada, U.S.
CourseOval
1.544 mi / 2.485 km
Distance12 laps
18.528 mi / 29.817 km
Scheduled Distance200 laps
308.800 mi / 496.965 km
WeatherTemperatures reaching up to 93.9 °F (34.4 °C); wind speeds up to 17.1 miles per hour (27.5 km/h)[1]
Pole position
DriverTony Kanaan (KV Racing Technology)
Time50.0582, 222.078 mph (357.400 km/h)
Podium
FirstNone, race abandoned after 12 laps
SecondN/A
ThirdN/A
2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship program cover

The race, however, was cancelled after only 12 laps had been run. Contact between drivers Wade Cunningham and James Hinchcliffe triggered a massive chain reaction crash that involved fifteen of the thirty-four entrants in the event and resulted in the death of former IndyCar Series champion Dan Wheldon, less than five months after his second Indianapolis 500 victory.[2][3] Open wheel racing has not returned to Las Vegas Motor Speedway since the incident.

Report edit

Background edit

The Las Vegas race was added to the schedule for the 2011 season,[4] replacing the event at Homestead-Miami Speedway as the final race of the IndyCar season. The races at Homestead and the International Speedway Corporation tracks were removed from the schedule following the previous year's season. Las Vegas Motor Speedway was returning to the IndyCar schedule for the first time since 2000,[4] and the event marked the first open-wheel race at the circuit since the Hurricane Relief 400 Champ Car event in 2005.[4] The circuit since was reconfigured in 2006, which saw a greater degree of banking added to the circuit to encourage side-by-side racing.[4][5] The race was scheduled for 200 laps around the 1.544 mi (2.485 km) oval, totaling 308.800 mi (496.965 km).

As the final race of the 2011 season, this was also the final race for the Dallara IR05 chassis, which would be replaced by an all-new design the following year. This situation, combined with the great deal of publicity and expectation surrounding the race, encouraged multiple teams to field additional entries for this race. The entry list featured a total of 34 drivers, five more than the previous event at Kentucky. It had the highest number of drivers entered for an American open-wheel racing event outside of the Indianapolis 500 since the 1993 Toyota Grand Prix of Monterey at Laguna Seca Raceway, the highest number of starters since the 1997 Indianapolis 500 that featured 35 drivers, and the highest outside of the Indy 500 since the 1983 Pocono 500.

Among the 25 cars that contested the full season, Sebastián Saavedra returned to the No. 34 car for Conquest Racing after missing the Motegi and Kentucky races because of an sponsorship shortfall, and Townsend Bell remained in the No. 22 car for Dreyer & Reinbold, having become the fourth injury replacement for Justin Wilson at Kentucky. Dreyer & Reinbold added a third car in the No. 11 for veteran Davey Hamilton, a combination had been raced at Indianapolis and Texas, and Buddy Rice joined Panther Racing in a second No. 44 car after doing so at Indianapolis, also racing at Kentucky as part of the deal.

Part-time teams in the series also competed, as Sarah Fisher Racing was fielding their regular oval specialist Ed Carpenter in the No. 67 after his surprising win at Kentucky. He was joined in a one-off entry, the No. 57, by Tomas Scheckter, who had contested three races that season for other teams. AFS Racing, who had missed a number of races before striking an alliance with Sam Schmidt Motorsports, entered the No. 17 car for Wade Cunningham, fresh from a 7th-place finish at Kentucky in his third IndyCar start.

Dragon Racing contested their seventh event of the season with Paul Tracy, who was making his fifth appearance in the No. 8 in 2011. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing entered Pippa Mann in the No. 30 for Kentucky and Las Vegas, having also done so at New Hampshire previously, and she was joined in the No. 15 one-off entry by Jay Howard, who had last raced at Indianapolis and the Texas twin races for Sam Schmidt. Finally, there was the Bryan Herta Autosport entry, which involved a switch of drivers between Dan Wheldon and Alex Tagliani (see The $5 Million Challenge below).

This race was also touted in the leading weeks to the event as the potential final entry for Danica Patrick in IndyCar racing, after she had announced a full-time move to the NASCAR Nationwide Series in 2012. Patrick wouldn't race in IndyCar again until 2018, where she would participate in the Indianapolis 500 to conclude her racing career.

The $5 Million Challenge edit

On February 22, 2011, IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard announced that a $5,000,000 (USD) purse would be awarded to any driver not on the IndyCar circuit to enter the race at Las Vegas and win while starting from the back of the field.[6][7] Bernard's original offer was exclusively to "any race car driver in the world outside of the IZOD IndyCar Series,"[4] hoping to attract interest from Formula 1 or NASCAR.[8][7] Bernard received offers that he deemed viable from motocross racer Travis Pastrana, former IndyCar champion Alex Zanardi, and NASCAR's Kasey Kahne, but all three offers were not without issue.[9]

Pastrana, who also drove rally cars and would eventually compete in NASCAR, had entered the Best Trick event at X Games XVII in Los Angeles in July 2011. During his attempt at a rodeo 720, Pastrana crashed on landing and broke his foot and ankle. He was still working to rehabilitate the injury, and would likely have required special controls to be put in the car if he was to attempt the feat.

Zanardi's problem was twofold. He had not competed in an IndyCar event since the 2001 American Memorial at EuroSpeedway Lausitz, during which both of his legs were severed on impact after Alex Tagliani hit his car after Zanardi, who had been exiting out road, lost control of his vehicle. Zanardi also requested to drive for his former team, Chip Ganassi Racing, and they were unable to fulfill his request due to a lack of available resources. Kahne also had this problem, as he desired to drive for Team Penske.[9] In his case, cross-country travel would cause a logistical issue; NASCAR would be running the Bank of America 500 at Lowe's Motor Speedway the night before IndyCar's event.

Bernard later revised the challenge to include a driver who had only competed in IndyCar part-time during the 2011 season; on September 11, 2011, the challenge was officially accepted by 2011 Indianapolis 500 winner Dan Wheldon, who agreed to split the purse with a fan if he went on to win.[9] To compete in the event, Wheldon reached a deal with Sam Schmidt Motorsports to drive the No. 77 car, raced by Alex Tagliani during the season, in a joint effort with Bryan Herta Autosport.

Wheldon had won the Indianapolis 500 in the No. 98 car fielded by Herta, which was loaned and prepared by Sam Schmidt's team, but that car was crashed at the following event in Texas by Wade Cunningham, while driven as the No. 99. Therefore, the deal allowed Wheldon to race the car on which Tagliani had scored the pole position at Indianapolis and Texas, the two high-speed ovals that had been raced until that point. In return, Tagliani would get to drive the No. 98 car for Bryan Herta Autosport at Las Vegas.

Up until that point, Wheldon had only run at Indianapolis, but he later reached a deal to race the No. 77 at the Kentucky Indy 300, the penultimate round of the season, as a warm-up to Las Vegas.[10] Also starting towards the back of the field after failing a pre-qualifying tech inspection, Wheldon went from a 28th starting position to a 14th-place finish at Kentucky.[9]

Championship battle edit

Entering the race, the only two drivers still in contention for the IndyCar Championship were Ganassi's Franchitti and Penske's Power, for the second year in a row. Franchitti was 18 points ahead of Power, retaking the championship points lead from him with a second-place finish at the 2011 Kentucky Indy 300 two weeks prior. Power was still mathematically in the points race despite an awful finish at Kentucky, but needed to finish far ahead of Franchitti in order to win the championship. Power had to finish in the top 6 to have any chance of taking the title, and a top 10 finish by Franchitti would've forced Power to finish first or second, positions he hadn't achieved yet in a full-distance oval race.[11]

The race's honorary grand marshal was skateboarder Tony Hawk, who gave the command to start the engines.[12]

Qualifying edit

 
Tony Kanaan won the pole position with an average speed of 222.078 miles per hour

All thirty-four entered cars qualified for the race. Tony Kanaan, driving the No. 82 Dallara for KV Racing Technology, qualified on the pole, scoring the 15th and final pole position of his career, and his first one since the 2008 SunTrust Indy Challenge at Richmond Raceway. Kanaan had started on the pole in the second of the twin-races at Texas earlier in the year, but it didn't count towards his total as it was achieved through a draw. Kanaan shared the front row with Oriol Servià, who fell short of his second career pole by 0.017 mph driving the No. 2 Dallara for Newman/Haas Racing.

Ed Carpenter, the winner at Kentucky two weeks earlier, qualified third in the No. 67 Dallara for Sarah Fisher Racing ahead of Indianapolis 500 polesitter Alex Tagliani, driving the No. 98 Dallara for Bryan Herta Autosport that had been driven to victory by Dan Wheldon at Indianapolis. Danica Patrick, driving the No. 7 Dallara for Andretti Autosport, started 9th in what was her final IndyCar start before joining NASCAR.[13]

Team Penske and Chip Ganassi Racing unexpectedly struggled in qualifying, only making the top 10 with Ryan Briscoe, who was fifth in the No. 6 Dallara, and Graham Rahal, who qualified 8th in the No. 38 Dallara, splitting the four Andretti Autosport cars. Their two championship contenders qualified on row 9, with Power 17th in the No. 12 Dallara and Franchitti 18th in the No. 10 Dallara.[14]

Wheldon, who was publicly unhappy with the performance of the No. 77 Dallara in practice, posted the 29th fastest time in qualifying, defaulting to the 34th spot in the field for the $5 Million Challenge. Buddy Rice, who had qualified in 19th place, was also forced to start from the rear of the field for driving the No. 44 Dallara below the track's white line.[7]

Media coverage edit

ABC broadcast the race on American television. Marty Reid was the lead commentator with Scott Goodyear and Eddie Cheever as analysts. Vince Welch, Jamie Little, and Rick DeBruhl were the pit reporters.[15]

The IMS Radio Network provided the radio coverage with Mike King on lead. Josef Newgarden, who had run the Indy Lights series event earlier in the day and had been crowned that series’ champion for 2011, was the booth analyst; Davey Hamilton, who normally occupied that role, entered the event in a car fielded by Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. Mark Jaynes reported from Turn 3, and Jake Query and Kevin Lee served as the pit reporters.

Start of the race edit

The race started at its scheduled green flag time of 12:45 p.m. PST (3:45 p.m. EST) before an estimated crowd of 50,000 spectators, who had either bought a ticket for the race or had been given one for attending another IndyCar event during the year.[16] Wheldon had been chosen as the 'in-race reporter' for the ABC broadcast, and spoke briefly with the TV booth during the pace laps. As it had been predicted by drivers and teams alike since practice, the first laps were characterized by high intensity and a consistent trait of pack racing, similar to that experienced at a former venue like Chicagoland Speedway, but in a narrower surface and with a higher car count. Tony Kanaan led the field from pole, and Oriol Servià lost second place to Ed Carpenter at the end of Lap 1, eventually falling back to the fifth spot behind Ryan Briscoe and Marco Andretti.

"Coming out of Turn Four, Graham (Rahal) and (Ryan) Hunter-Reay were banging wheels and Helio (Castroneves) and I had to lift. That allowed Wade (Cunningham) to get a run on us and we went three-wide into Turn 1. Wade got into my right rear (tire) with his front wing and that's what made his car loose and he spun out in front everybody."

James Hinchcliffe's description of the on-track fight that led to the 15-car crash on Lap 11.[17]

During the 10 laps of green flag racing, there were multiple instances of three-wide and four-wide racing at various points, as some drivers tried to advance through the field. Most notably, Alex Tagliani and Ryan Briscoe touched wheels on Lap 6 while battling for fifth place, before the top 6 drivers eventually settled into a single-car line formation. By the time Lap 11 started, the top 13 cars were running within a second of each other, and all 34 cars were separated by just 4.2 seconds, with no small packs breaking up the field yet. Jay Howard had been the biggest mover, climbing from 27th to 15th, and Dan Wheldon had already gained 10 spots through this period, placing 24th at the end of the tenth lap. Sam Schmidt stated in a 2016 post that Wheldon was 'hooting and yelling' over the radio due to the good performance of his car, after multiple changes had been made overnight.[18]

Other drivers like Townsend Bell, Tomas Scheckter, Vitor Meira and E. J. Viso had also made up between 6 and 8 places during their early run. Multiple drivers complained over their radios and afterwards about the aggressive racing from some drivers in such an early stage of the race. Championship leader Dario Franchitti took the bottom lane to avoid being caught up in any incident and dropped from 18th to 21st. His rival for the IndyCar title, Will Power, was even more conservative and lost 10 places, running in 27th spot. A similar approach was followed by drivers like Danica Patrick, Scott Dixon and Mike Conway, all of them electing to play it safe in the bottom lane while dropping down the order.

Lap 11 crash – Death of Dan Wheldon edit

 
The crash scene just shortly after it began. Dan Wheldon's car, seen at the bottom of the picture (white nose cone, damaged front wing), has just left the racing surface.

The accident began on the front straightaway as the field headed into turn one. Wade Cunningham, Wheldon's teammate in No. 17, who was running in 12th place at the time, tried to make a pass on the outside of a three-wide situation with James Hinchcliffe, driving No. 06, who had Hélio Castroneves in the No. 3 car on his inside.[19] As the drivers approached the turn, Cunningham's left front tire touched with Hinchcliffe's right rear tire. Cunningham swerved to the inside of the track as a result, and J. R. Hildebrand in No. 4 drove over the rear of his car, causing him to go airborne. Cunningham collected Jay Howard in No. 15 on the inside and then Townsend Bell in No. 22 on the outside before colliding with the retaining wall.

Attempting to avoid the crash ahead, Vítor Meira lost control of his No. 14 and spun inward, collecting both Charlie Kimball's No. 83 and E. J. Viso's No. 59. Tomas Scheckter, in No. 57, was also attempting to avoid the crash by rapidly slowing down on the outside. Following that, Paul Tracy ran into the back of his car with his No. 8 and Pippa Mann, rapidly approaching in No. 30 and jerking to the outside to avoid crashing into Alex Lloyd in No. 19, went over the top of Tracy, which caused her car to make a high-speed barrel roll towards the SAFER barrier .[20]

As cars continued to drive through the accident scene, the No. 77 car driven by Wheldon and the No. 12 driven by Power left the racing surface. Wheldon was racing at 220 miles per hour (350 km/h) when he came upon the scene, frantically trying to avoid the collision. Although he was able to considerably slow it down, Wheldon's car went airborne about 325 feet (99 m) after running into the back of Kimball's and went barrel-rolling into the catch fence cockpit-first, causing the lower right-hand side of his head to hit one of the poles. The No. 77 landed back on the racing surface having been sliced apart by the fence.[21] Meanwhile, Power went airborne when he ran over the back of Lloyd's car and struck the SAFER barrier. The car landed sideways on the track and rolled over, which caused the front wheel assembly to break; one of the front tires flew over Power's head and barely missed hitting him. Wheldon's car came to rest close to Power's machine, along the apron at the exit of Turn Two.[22]

The seven drivers that were running behind Power at the time of the crash took evasive action into the apron, but Buddy Rice's No. 44 car suffered damage from flying debris and crashed at low speed into Meira's stationary car. James Jakes in the No. 18 was closely behind Rice and had a minor contact with his car. Jakes stopped his car further down the track, but it was eventually refired and was able to make it back to the pits. Meira's car was also refired and completed lap 11, but it was officially retired in the pits due to damage.

"The debris we all had to drive through the lap later, it looked like a war scene from [The] Terminator or something. I mean, there were just pieces of metal and car on fire in the middle of the track with no car attached to it and just debris everywhere."

Ryan Briscoe's reaction to driving through the scene of the accident, one lap after the collision.[23]

A total of 15 cars were involved, with the most severe injuries suffered by Wheldon, Power, Hildebrand, and Mann.[24] Wheldon was extricated from his car and was airlifted to the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada. He was officially pronounced dead on arrival two hours later at 1:54 pm Pacific Daylight Time. The official cause of Wheldon's death was given by the Clark County Coroner as blunt force trauma to his head due to the incident.[25] Mann and Hildebrand were later taken to the hospital for overnight observation, while Power was evaluated and released that day.[24]

IndyCar officials stopped the proceedings one lap later and put the race under a red flag. The nineteen cars that were still running were called to their pit boxes, and work began on the cleanup. The damage caused by the crash was significant. The catch fence had been damaged where the #77 had made contact with it and would need to be repaired before racing resumed. In addition, as some of the drivers drove through the scene during the brief caution period, they reported massive amounts of debris that they could not avoid driving over and that the asphalt surface had received several gashes in it that would need to be patched. With all of the work that needed to be done, there would be a significant delay in resuming the race. The only thing left to be determined would be to see who would win the race. Power's involvement in the incident had resulted in Franchitti clinching the points championship, and with Wheldon also out of the race, since no other driver had taken the $5,000,000 challenge, there would be no prize awarded.[22]

Still, IndyCar officials elected to keep the race under red flag conditions as they worked on a solution. The delay extended for nearly three hours, and tension began to mount over both the status of the race and the condition of Wheldon, as there had been no updates since the accident. During the lengthy delay, ESPN conducted interviews with several drivers, who expressed their growing concern for their fellow competitor, as well as team owner Michael Andretti, who took it upon himself to head to the trailer on pit road where the officials were located. He would be turned away by the officials and return with no further information. Andretti later revealed that he finally made it into the trailer, along with race director Brian Barnhart and drivers Dario Franchitti and Tony Kanaan, where they were notified that Wheldon had 'died on the helicopter' on his way to the hospital.[22]

At approximately 3:00 pm PST, IndyCar Series director Brian Barnhart called for all race team personnel to report to the infield media center for a meeting that was closed to reporters. The ABC broadcast was able to capture video of the drivers and team personnel as they left the media center with grim expressions. Tony Kanaan, who had been a teammate of Wheldon from their days driving for Andretti Green Racing, was shown sobbing as he returned to his pit box. ABC's Vince Welch reported that Kanaan and Franchitti broke the news of Wheldon's death to the other drivers, before discussing what steps would be taken next. There was dissent among the attending drivers over whether to continue with the race in some fashion, as Mario Andretti advocated, or cancelling the race.[26]

"IndyCar is very sad to announce that Dan Wheldon has passed away from unsurvivable injuries. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family today. IndyCar, its drivers and team owners, has decided to end the race. In honor of Dan Wheldon, the drivers have decided to do a five-lap salute in his honor. It will take place in approximately 10 minutes. Thank you."

Randy Bernard, announcing the confirmation of Wheldon's death to the media.[27]

As the meeting ended, Randy Bernard called a press conference. There, he gave a brief statement where he informed the media that Wheldon had died of his injuries suffered in the accident. He then announced that the remainder of the race was abandoned and that the drivers would be returning to the track for what he referred to as a "five lap salute" to honor their fallen competitor, then left without taking any questions. ABC cut into the press conference late and missed Bernard's initial statement, which left Marty Reid to break the news to the viewing audience.[22] The "five lap salute" was proposed by Bernard himself, and was met with unanimous approval by all the drivers.

Meanwhile, the scoring tower was blanked except for the number 77, which was displayed in the first-place position. With Kanaan, Ed Carpenter, and Ryan Briscoe leading, eighteen of the nineteen cars that were still running when the accident happened lined up on pit road in six rows of three, akin to the starting formation for the Indianapolis 500. The only car that did not take part in the salute was Bryan Herta Autosport's car, which Wheldon drove to victory at Indianapolis earlier in 2011 but was driven that day by Alex Tagliani.[22] Instead, James Jakes took part in the salute behind the six rows of three, as the minor damages in his car had been eventually repaired.

The safety car then led the cars back onto the track while every crew member and person behind the wall moved to the grass separating pit road from the track to watch.[28][29] The track loudspeakers played bagpipe renditions of "Danny Boy" and "Amazing Grace" while the cars went around the track at pace lap speed, and each time the cars passed the start/finish line the fans remaining in the front-stretch grandstand offered applause. At the end of the five tribute laps, the starter waved two checkered flags to signify the end while the cars proceeded around the track one more time before exiting for the pits in turn four.[24][28]

Wheldon's death was the first suffered by an IndyCar driver since Paul Dana was killed in a race-morning practice crash at Homestead-Miami in 2006, and the first during a race since Greg Moore died in a crash at Auto Club Speedway in 1999, also at the final race of the season.[27] In the lead-up to the race, SPEED reported that Wheldon was set to replace Danica Patrick at Andretti Autosport for 2012 in the GoDaddy sponsored car, with the company having also sponsored the $5 Million Challenge.[30] Michael Andretti later confirmed that a multi-year contract was signed on Sunday morning, just hours before the race.[31] James Hinchcliffe was eventually signed in early January to take Wheldon's place, and GoDaddy honored the two years of their sponsorship deal.[32]

Championship resolution edit

As noted above, the accident on lap 11 ended the championship points battle and would have clinched the season championship for Franchitti regardless of the results of the race. Since the event did not reach IndyCar standards for an official race, meaning it did not pass the halfway mark before it was abandoned, none of the drivers involved were awarded points and the driver point totals entering the race stood as the final totals for the season.

This was Franchitti's third consecutive[28] and fourth overall championship, and fourth consecutive championship for Chip Ganassi Racing (equaling a feat achieved in CART from 1996 to 1999).[21] Indy Racing League, LLC. delayed all official prize-giving, choosing instead to conduct it during the annual State of IndyCar speech in February 2012; Franchitti also delayed his own celebration of his championship victory.

Reactions edit

 
After the race was abandoned, the 19 cars that were not involved in the accident returned to the circuit at pace-lap speed for five laps as a mark of respect to Dan Wheldon. At the far right of this photo is the scoring pylon showing Wheldon's No. 77 at the top.

At the time of his death, Wheldon had been working with IndyCar officials to develop the ICONIC chassis with the intention of improving safety in the sport.[33] Planned changes to the chassis include larger cockpits for driver protection and bodywork over the rear wheels to prevent cars from launching off one another in the event of a collision, long a problem in open-wheel racing, regardless of oval or road course, but troublesome on high-speed ovals and tight street circuits with a long straight and a tight turn, similar to the style of many modern road courses.[34]

Prominent figures within the IndyCar fraternity and the wider international motorsport community expressed their condolences to Wheldon and his family.[35] Wheldon had been scheduled to take part in the Gold Coast 600, a round of the V8 Supercars championship, on October 22, racing alongside his friend James Courtney. Upon hearing of Wheldon's death, Courtney described the accident as a sobering reminder of the dangers faced by racing drivers.[36] As the first major international motorsport event after Wheldon's death, organizers of the V8 Supercars series planned a series of tributes to him at the Gold Coast 600.[37] Wheldon's place was taken by another British driver, Darren Turner, an FIA GT1 World Championship competitor. Wheldon's name was left on the car as a mark of respect,[38] while British drivers at the event paid tribute to him with helmet decals, and several other drivers planned individual tributes to Wheldon.[39]

Kanaan, who had also been scheduled to race in Australia, announced his withdrawal from the event out of respect for Wheldon. However, Briscoe, Tagliani, and Hélio Castroneves, all of whom raced at Las Vegas, along with other part-time IndyCar drivers Sébastien Bourdais and Simon Pagenaud, who were not at Las Vegas, did race.[40] Bourdais, the best performing "International" driver, received the Dan Wheldon Memorial Trophy. Sam Schmidt, for whom Wheldon had been racing at the time of his accident, admitted that the events at Las Vegas Motor Speedway had prompted him to re-evaluate his involvement in motorsports.[41]

"I could see within five laps [that] people were starting to do crazy stuff. I love hard racing, but that to me is not really what it's about. One small mistake from somebody [...] right now I'm numb and speechless. One minute you're joking around in driver intros and the next he's gone. He was six years old when I first met him. I told his son Thursday night at the parade on The Strip that I’ve known his dad since he was about your size. And then I talked to a friend of mine, Jesse Spence, that I used to race go-karts with that we’ve known him since he was this little kid. His mouth worked plenty good, but he was just this little kid and the next thing you know he was my teammate in IndyCars. We put so much pressure on ourselves to win races and championships, it’s what we love to do, it’s what we live for, and then on days like today it doesn’t really matter. Everybody in the IndyCar Series was Dan's friend."

Dario Franchitti, describing his feelings in the aftermath of the accident.[28]

In the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, several drivers at the 2011 Good Sam Club 500 at Talladega on the weekend after Wheldon's death put special tributes on their cars, like NASCAR issuing the "Lionheart Knight" decal Wheldon wore on his helmet,[42] which were placed on the cars' b-pillars,[43] along with T. J. Bell putting Wheldon's name on the namerail.[44]

In Formula One, a moment of silence was held at the Indian Grand Prix in memory of Wheldon and MotoGP rider Marco Simoncelli, who died the weekend after Wheldon in a crash at the Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix, with Jenson Button dedicating his runner-up finish at the race to both of them.

Driver Marco Andretti withdrew from The Celebrity Apprentice, which started taping days after the incident, and was replaced by his father Michael, team principal of Andretti Autosport.[45]

On December 9, 2011, IndyCar decided that they were not going to return to Las Vegas for the 2012 season.[46] Randy Bernard expressed reluctance to return to the speedway following Wheldon's death, despite the insistence of Speedway Motorsports, Inc. president Bruton Smith (who owns the track in Las Vegas as well as three other tracks used by the IndyCar series) for the series to honor its three-year contract with the track. As of that date, the investigation into the accident was still ongoing. IndyCar was holding back on the release of its 2012 schedule until the investigation concluded. The IndyCar series also conducted an investigation into whether or not the series should continue racing on high-banked ovals such as Las Vegas and Texas Motor Speedway in Denton, Texas. Texas had been one of the staples of the IndyCar series since 1997 and had yet to be confirmed for 2012 prior to the Las Vegas race in 2011. Indycar's future at high-banked ovals was in jeopardy pending the results of the investigation.[47] Texas was eventually placed on the 2012 schedule.[45]

The series went to new restrictions on restarts. IndyCar announced that restarts would only be single-file in 2012, rather than double-file as they had been the previous season.[48]

Apart from Dan Wheldon, this became the last IndyCar race for several drivers, although unofficially, as the race was erased from the record books. All of them had been involved in the crash; 2003 CART champion Paul Tracy and Tomas Scheckter elected to retire, with both drivers citing the crash as a major factor in their decision. Davey Hamilton transitioned into team ownership for 2012, and while he denied at first to have retired, he would never make another IndyCar start. 2004 Indianapolis 500 winner Buddy Rice, Vítor Meira and Alex Lloyd also made their last start at Vegas, after all three of them failed in their efforts to find a seat in the following years.

After losing an IndyCar ride for 2012 at the last minute, Jay Howard would not start another IndyCar race for six years until the 2017 Indianapolis 500, one year before Danica Patrick's return to the race in her last professional motorsports competition. One year after the crash, Mike Conway pulled out of the final event of the 2012 season at the high-speed Auto Club Speedway and gave up on oval racing, citing the death of Dan Wheldon, as well as two major crashes at Indianapolis, as the main reasons behind his decision.[49]

Criticism edit

"A lot of things that happened in this race they are hoping would not happen with these changes. Maybe the scale has tipped a little bit too far to make it more entertaining. They would serve themselves well if they listened to the drivers a little bit more ... and the concerns they voiced."

ABC commentator and former driver Eddie Cheever's criticism of series officials' renewed focus on entertainment.[34]

In the build-up to the event, several drivers expressed unease at the race – with Franchitti, Oriol Servià and Alex Lloyd the most vocal opponents – particularly given the high degree of banking around the circuit,[34] with between 18 and 20 degrees of banking in the corners. Franchitti was quoted as saying that the track was "not suitable" for IndyCar racing,[50] while championship rival Will Power described the race as "an accident waiting to happen".[51]

The field of 34 drivers was the biggest in an IndyCar series race since 1997. A typical oval track race has six to eight fewer drivers, except for the Indianapolis 500, which normally has a 33-car field, but is run at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, which is two and a half miles in distance with a maximum banking of 9.2 degrees, as opposed to Las Vegas which is one and a half miles in distance and has banking up to 20 degrees.[52] ESPN.com senior motorsports writer Terry Blount wrote: "Obviously more cars presents more danger. They wanted a whole lot of cars cause obviously this is their season finale and they wanted it to be a big deal. Some of the people that were driving in this event yesterday had no business being in it. Some of them had never driven on a track like this. That was a mistake".[50] Chris Powell, president of Las Vegas Motor Speedway, defended the race, saying that the circuit had passed all of the IndyCar Series' accreditation procedures and was deemed suitable for racing. He also went on the record to say that despite the media reporting the concerns of several drivers over the safety of the event, none of those concerns had been raised with him.[53]

1979 Formula One World Champion Jody Scheckter, whose son Tomas was involved in the accident, was highly critical of the series organizers, stating that a serious accident was "inevitable" as "they were basically touching wheels at 220 mph (350 km/h). They all bunch up together so there are thirty-four cars in a small space of track. One person makes a mistake and this happens. You [shouldn't] have to get killed if you make a mistake. It was madness."[54] Former Formula One and IndyCar driver Mark Blundell agreed, claiming that the Las Vegas circuit was unsuitable for IndyCar racing – this was the last race for the Dallara IR05 – while NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson called for the series to leave oval racing altogether,[55] though he clarified his statement by saying that the open-wheel type cars on a resurfaced 1.5 mi (2.4 km) track built for the heavier Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series cars was a bad idea; ten years later, Johnson took the Rookie Orientation Program for the 2022 Indianapolis 500 and raced at Texas Motor Speedway, a 1.5 mi oval track, with the added protection of the Aeroscreen.[56]

Former champion Mario Andretti said that the accident was a "freakish" one-off incident and that facilities at the circuit were adequate for racing.[57] While he admitted surprise that more drivers were not seriously injured, he also cautioned against what he called "knee-jerk reactions" to the accident, calling for any changes to the sport to be carefully considered before being introduced, rather than being rushed into action. Former Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) President Max Mosley, a long-time advocate of increased safety in motorsport, agreed with Andretti, urging a "calm and scientific" approach to any proposed changes,[58] particularly when asked about the proposed introduction of closed canopies for open-wheel racing cars.[59]

The five million dollar prize was also the subject of criticism in that a driver inexperienced in driving IndyCars would have a higher risk of causing a crash,[5] though Formula One driver Anthony Davidson downplayed the influence of the prize in causing the accident, stating that racing drivers by their nature try to win every race, whether they start from first or last.[54]

In the days following the incident, it was learned that at least three additional drivers had been approached to try for the $5 million challenge prize. One was Scott Speed, who previously ran open-wheel Formula One cars for Scuderia Toro Rosso and who had raced on the reconfigured LVMS track in the Craftsman Truck Series for Morgan-Dollar Motorsports in 2008 and for Team Red Bull in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in 2009 and 2010. Speed, in an interview he gave to Inside Edition on October 18, 2011, said that he declined to take the offer saying that the track conditions were too dangerous for Indy-type cars.[60] Likewise, A. J. Allmendinger, who also had previous open-wheel experience, had expressed early interest,[61] though he later declined, recalling, "[When] we raced CART at Vegas...it scared the living hell out of me."[62] Finnish media reported that 2007 Formula One World Champion Kimi Räikkönen, who was splitting time between the World Rally Championship and NASCAR in 2011, had also been approached to take part in the race, but Räikkönen rejected the offer as he was not confident of having a competitive car, rather than having concerns over safety.[63]

Investigation edit

"The chassis of the [Wheldon's] #77 impacted a post along the right-side of the tub and created a deep defect in the tub that extended from the pedal bulkhead, along the upper border of the tub, and through the cockpit. As the race car passed by, the pole intruded into the cockpit and made contact with the drivers' helmet and head. Dan's injury was limited to his head injury. Dan appeared to suffer two distinct head forces. The first head force created a level of Head Injury Criterion, also known as a HIC number, that normally does not produce any injury. During the initial crash sequence, the accident data recorder measured 12 or 13 impacts. During that timeframe one of those impacts measured a measurable HIC number for Dan – that's the number that does not normally cause injury. The number was low enough. The second force was a physical impact, and it was the second force that caused a non-survivable blunt force injury trauma to Dan's head."

Brian Barnhart, detailing the sequence of events surrounding the accident in the official report on Wheldon's death.[64]

Three days after the accident, series organizers announced that the race would be the subject of a full investigation. The other members of the Automobile Competition Committee for the United States (ACCUS), the national governing body of automobile racing in the United States, and a member of the FIA made their resources available for the investigation, which IndyCar officials expected to take several weeks.[65] As all ACCUS/FIA members participated in the investigation, IndyCar would have full use of the NASCAR R&D Center in Concord, North Carolina. In the meantime, all testing at Las Vegas Motor Speedway was cancelled indefinitely; Franchitti and Chip Ganassi Racing had been planning to test the 2012-spec Dallara chassis at the circuit in the week following the race.[65]

Results edit

The results of the investigation into Wheldon's death were released on December 15, 2011. In a report prepared by crash investigators, it was found that Wheldon's death was caused by an impact with the catch fencing around the circuit.[64] Brian Barnhart further rejected claims that the banking had also contributed to the accident,[66] stating that it created two ideal racing lines, and that these lines made the location of cars more predictable for other drivers; at the time of the accident, all 34 cars had been behaving as expected.

The report also revealed that the right front pull rod of the suspension assembly penetrated Wheldon's survival cell, though it did not cause him any injury. The report recommended further investigation of this phenomenon, as it was the first recorded incident of its kind in nine years of the use of the IR03 and later IR05 model chassis, which was being retired at the end of the race. The pull-rod suspension chassis is not being utilised in the DW12,[67] however, a similar penetration in a DW12 would later cause significant injury to James Hinchcliffe during practice for the 2015 Indianapolis 500.[68]

Legacy edit

Since Wheldon's death at the Las Vegas oval, much emphasis has been put into the elimination of "pack racing" through changes to the tires and downforce levels on high-banked ovals (particularly at Texas Motor Speedway, for its annual IndyCar event). Such racing has been seen on occasion since the Vegas race, most notably at the 2015 MAVTV 500 at Auto Club Speedway (which ended with contact entering the final lap that sent Ryan Briscoe, subbing for Hinchcliffe, airborne),[69] and the 2017 Rainguard Water Sealers 600 at Texas, where "pack racing" again reappeared (the latter event also featured a NASCAR phenomenon known as "The Big One") and only a handful of drivers finished the race, although none were seriously injured.[70] However, for the most part the league has avoided pack races in the years since the 2011 Finale.

Talk of a canopy or halo to protect the driver was accelerated by the fatal Formula One accident that killed Jules Bianchi in October 2014 and an incident where Justin Wilson was fatally struck in the head by debris at the August 2015 ABC Supply 500 at Pocono Raceway.[71] In particular, following Wilson's death, Allmendinger stated that he would "never again" run open-wheel cars, adding "The only way I would do it is if they put in a closed cockpit over the car and tested it and they thought that was a good direction in safety then I might think about doing it again."[72] As a result, several major open-wheel series have implemented cockpit protection systems, with Formula One,[73] Formula Two,[74] Formula Three[75] and Formula E[76] all introducing the halo in 2018, and IndyCar instituting the Aeroscreen in 2020.[77]

The rear wheel pods introduced to IndyCar in 2012 intended to prevent cars from becoming airborne when hitting another in the rear proved to be ineffective as there were major crashes resulting from such contact, including Dario Franchitti's career-ending crash during the 2013 race in Houston,[78] as well as the 2017 Indianapolis 500 involving Scott Dixon.[79] In addition the pods were often ripped from cars from light contact, placing hazardous debris on the track. As a result, the rear pods were eliminated for 2018.[80][81]

In March 2016, during the Kobalt 400 NASCAR weekend, Fox Sports reporter Jamie Little, who was on the ESPN broadcast and drove to University Medical Center as part of post-crash coverage, and Wheldon's close friend Brent Brush placed a memorial plaque at the site Wheldon's car impacted the catch fencing post.[82] For the 2022 NASCAR October weekend as Las Vegas, Nick Yeoman, an INDYCAR Radio broadcaster, worked the PRN broadcast in Turn 2 near the Wheldon plaque. Yeoman posted on Twitter, "Here’s to remembering legends and creating better memories on October 16th," while showing the Wheldon memorial and his broadcast position.[83]

INDYCAR returned to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway slightly over a decade later in January 2022 with the Indy Autonomous Challenge, held as part of the Consumer Electronics Show, using Indy NXT Dallara spec chassis modified for the challenge. The PoliMOVE team of Politecnico di Milano and the University of Alabama won the first two events.[84] Speeds reached 180 mph in the 2023 challenge at CES.[85]

Technical University of Munich defeated the University of Virginia in finals of the 2024 Las Vegas round.

Classification edit

Qualifying edit

Final qualifying classification
Pos No. Driver Team Speed
1 82   Tony Kanaan KV Racing TechnologyLotus 222.078
2 2   Oriol Servià Newman/Haas Racing 222.061
3 67   Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing 221.509
4 98   Alex Tagliani Bryan Herta Autosport 221.330
5 6   Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 221.130
6 26   Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 221.129
7 28   Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport 221.040
8 38   Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing 220.958
9 7   Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 220.925
10 27   Mike Conway Andretti Autosport 220.922
11 3   Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 220.907
12 17   Wade Cunningham (R) AFS Racing/Sam Schmidt Motorsports 220.790
13 9   Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 220.715
14 06   James Hinchcliffe (R) Newman/Haas Racing 220.701
15 4   J. R. Hildebrand (R) Panther Racing 220.639
16 5   Takuma Sato KV Racing Technology – Lotus 220.627
17 12   Will Power Team Penske 220.524
18 10   Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 220.489
19 44   Buddy Rice Panther Racing 220.3921
20 34   Sebastián Saavedra (R) Conquest Racing 220.335
21 19   Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing 220.314
22 83   Charlie Kimball (R) Chip Ganassi Racing 219.982
23 22   Townsend Bell Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 219.942
24 57   Tomas Scheckter Sarah Fisher Racing 219.816
25 11   Davey Hamilton Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 219.493
26 14   Vítor Meira A. J. Foyt Enterprises 219.273
27 8   Paul Tracy Dragon Racing 218.661
28 15   Jay Howard Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 218.577
29 77   Dan Wheldon Sam Schmidt Motorsports 218.4102
30 30   Pippa Mann (R) Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 218.157
31 24   Ana Beatriz (R) Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 218.153
32 78   Simona de Silvestro HVM Racing 218.132
33 59   E. J. Viso KV Racing Technology – Lotus no time set
34 18   James Jakes (R) Dale Coyne Racing no time set
Source:[13][86]

Notes:

  1. ^ – Rice was moved to the back of the grid after receiving a penalty for running below the white line.[13][87]
  2. ^ – Wheldon agreed to start the race from thirty-fourth and last place on the grid as part of the organizers' five million dollar challenge.[7]

Scoring when abandoned edit

Scoring when the race was abandoned. Unlike the FIA Code, which requires three laps for an official race, INDYCAR requires to exceed half the scheduled distance (101 laps) for a race to be official. As only 12 laps were completed, the race was declared abandoned (a non-event).
Pos No. Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid Laps Led
1 82   Tony Kanaan KV Racing Technology – Lotus 12 Running 1 12
2 67   Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing 12 Running 3 0
3 6   Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 12 Running 5 0
4 26   Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 12 Running 6 0
5 2   Oriol Servià Newman/Haas Racing 12 Running 2 0
6 98   Alex Tagliani Bryan Herta Autosport 12 Running 4 0
7 38   Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing 12 Running 8 0
8 28   Ryan Hunter-Reay Andretti Autosport 12 Running 7 0
9 3   Hélio Castroneves Team Penske 12 Running 11 0
10 06   James Hinchcliffe (R) Newman/Haas Racing 12 Running 14 0
11 5   Takuma Sato KV Racing Technology – Lotus 12 Running 16 0
12 7   Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 12 Running 9 0
13 9   Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 12 Running 13 0
14 10   Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 12 Running 18 0
15 34   Sebastián Saavedra (R) Conquest Racing 12 Running 19 0
16 27   Mike Conway Andretti Autosport 12 Running 10 0
17 78   Simona de Silvestro HVM Racing 12 Running 30 0
18 24   Ana Beatriz (R) Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 12 Running 29 0
19 11   Davey Hamilton Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 12 Running 24 0
20 18   James Jakes (R) Dale Coyne Racing 11 Running 32 0
21 14   Vítor Meira A. J. Foyt Enterprises 11 Contact 25 0
22 17   Wade Cunningham (R) AFS Racing/Sam Schmidt Motorsports 10 Contact 12 0
23 4   J. R. Hildebrand (R) Panther Racing 10 Contact 15 0
24 22   Townsend Bell Dreyer & Reinbold Racing 10 Contact 22 0
25 15   Jay Howard Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 10 Contact 27 0
26 57   Tomas Scheckter Sarah Fisher Racing 10 Contact 23 0
27 83   Charlie Kimball (R) Chip Ganassi Racing 10 Contact 21 0
28 8   Paul Tracy Dragon Racing 10 Contact 26 0
29 59   E. J. Viso KV Racing Technology – Lotus 10 Contact 31 0
30 77   Dan Wheldon Sam Schmidt Motorsports 10 Contact (fatal) 34 0
31 19   Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing 10 Contact 20 0
32 30   Pippa Mann (R) Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 10 Contact 28 0
33 12   Will Power Team Penske 10 Contact 17 0
34 44   Buddy Rice Panther Racing 10 Contact 33 0
Source:[20]

Standings after the race edit

 
As the race was abandoned after the accident, Dario Franchitti defended his series championship, finishing with 573 points
Drivers' Championship standings
Pos Driver Points
1   Dario Franchitti 573
2   Will Power 555
3   Scott Dixon 518
4   Oriol Servià 425
5   Tony Kanaan 366
Source:[88]
  • Note: Only the Top 5 positions are included.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship weather information". The Old Farmers' Almanac. Yankee Publishing. Archived from the original on October 23, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2014.
  2. ^ "Dan Wheldon's fatal crash at LVMS recalled 10 years later". October 16, 2021.
  3. ^ Garrett, Jerry (October 18, 2011). "Worries Circled Las Vegas Track Before a Pileup". The New York Times.
  4. ^ a b c d e . Las Vegas Motor Speedway (Press release). Speedway Motorsports, Inc. February 22, 2011. Archived from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Fryer, Jenna (October 18, 2011). "Factors converged in crash that killed Dan Wheldon". Yahoo! News. Yahoo Inc. Associated Press. from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  6. ^ "Outsiders eligible for IndyCar title race". ESPN. February 22, 2011.
  7. ^ a b c d Allen, James (October 16, 2011). "Dan Wheldon". James Allen on F1. James Allen. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  8. ^ Caldwell, Dave (February 24, 2011). "IndyCar's $5 Million Las Vegas Challenge Is a Ringer's Delight". The New York Times. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  9. ^ a b c d Sturbin, John (September 14, 2011). "Bernard Revises INDYCAR Vegas Challenge". Racintoday.com. from the original on November 20, 2011. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
  10. ^ "Dan Wheldon to drive SSM's No. 77 at Kentucky". us.motorsport.com. September 26, 2011. Retrieved December 29, 2023.
  11. ^ Peltz, Jim (October 3, 2011). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on October 23, 2011.
  12. ^ "Hawk to be Grand Marshal at Vegas". PaddockTalk. October 12, 2011. Archived from the original on February 15, 2015. Retrieved February 13, 2015.
  13. ^ a b c Levin, Andrew (October 15, 2011). "Las Vegas – Qualifying times". Crash. Crash Media Group. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  14. ^ . AutoWeek. Crain Communications. October 14, 2011. Archived from the original on October 17, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  15. ^ Hall, Andy (October 10, 2011). "Motorsports This Week on ESPN and ABC". ESPN PressRoom. from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  16. ^ "IndyCar Opts Not To Finish Race Following Wheldon's Death; Was LVMS Safe Enough For Cars?". www.sportsbusinessjournal.com. October 17, 2011. Retrieved December 29, 2023.
  17. ^ Tuttle, Tim (October 17, 2011). "Dan Wheldon: Triumph and Tragedy". RoadAndTrack.com. Retrieved December 29, 2023.
  18. ^ "No rhyme or reason: Wheldon taken far too soon". IndyCar.com. Retrieved December 29, 2023.
  19. ^ Bradley, Charles (October 16, 2011). "IndyCar finale red-flagged after 13-car accident". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  20. ^ a b "2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championships". Racing-Reference. from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  21. ^ a b Oreovicz, John (October 17, 2011). "Dan Wheldon's death stuns racing world". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  22. ^ a b c d e Cheever, Eddie (October 16, 2011). IZOD IndyCar World Championship (Television production). Las Vegas, Nevada, United States: American Broadcasting Company.
  23. ^ Clark, Laine (October 17, 2011). "IndyCar drivers want change after fatality". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. Australian Associated Press. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  24. ^ a b c "Dan Wheldon dies in huge crash at IndyCar finale". USA Today. David Hunke; Gannett Company. Associated Press. October 16, 2011. from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  25. ^ Ritter, Ken (October 17, 2011). . Yahoo! Sports. Yahoo!. Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 22, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  26. ^ Moody, Dave (October 18, 2011). "The Godfather's Blog: Tracy Mulling Retirement: "I Saw Him Dying In Front Of My Eyes,"". The Godfather's Blog. Retrieved December 30, 2023.
  27. ^ a b "Dan Wheldon dies following IndyCar crash at Vegas". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. October 17, 2011. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  28. ^ a b c d Lewandowski, Dave (October 16, 2011). . IndyCar Series. IndyCar. Archived from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  29. ^ "Briton Dan Wheldon dies in IndyCar race in Las Vegas". BBC Sport. BBC. October 17, 2011. from the original on April 12, 2014. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  30. ^ . October 15, 2011. Archived from the original on October 15, 2011. Retrieved December 30, 2023.
  31. ^ Anderson, Lars. "DAN WHELDON 1978--2011". Sports Illustrated Vault | SI.com. Retrieved December 30, 2023.
  32. ^ "Andretti Autosport signs Hinchcliffe for 2012". us.motorsport.com. January 12, 2012. Retrieved December 30, 2023.
  33. ^ Cavin, Curt (October 17, 2011). "Dan Wheldon had been helping IndyCar with safety for 2012". USA Today. David Hunke; Gannett Company. from the original on April 18, 2015. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  34. ^ a b c "Dan Wheldon's death ignites fresh IndyCar danger debate". PerthNow. News Limited. Agence France-Presse. October 18, 2011. Archived from the original on October 12, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  35. ^ "Motorsport pays tribute to Dan Wheldon". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. October 16, 2011. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  36. ^ "Courtney: Wheldon's fate a reality check". Speedcafe.com. SpeedCafe. October 17, 2011. from the original on June 8, 2012. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  37. ^ "V8s and teams plan tributes to Wheldon". Speedcafe.com. SpeedCafe. October 18, 2011. from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  38. ^ "Wheldon's name to run on #1 HRT window". Speedcafe.com. SpeedCafe. October 20, 2011. from the original on October 22, 2011. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  39. ^ "BRDC members pay tribute to Dan Wheldon". Speedcafe.com. SpeedCafe. October 20, 2011. from the original on October 22, 2011. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  40. ^ Noble, Jonathan (October 17, 2011). "Tony Kanaan and Will Power pull out of all-star Surfers race". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  41. ^ O'Leary, Jamie; Strang, Simon (October 18, 2011). "Sam Schmidt could close team following Dan Wheldon's death". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 20, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  42. ^ Newton, David (October 20, 2011). "Wheldon tribute in works at Talladega". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. from the original on October 13, 2013. Retrieved January 12, 2014.
  43. ^ . Autoweek. October 20, 2011. Archived from the original on December 27, 2011. Retrieved January 12, 2014.
  44. ^ The Racer's Group (October 21, 2011). "TRG Motorsports to field two cars at Talladega II". Motorsport. from the original on January 13, 2014. Retrieved January 12, 2014.
  45. ^ a b Cavin, Curt (January 6, 2012). "IndyCar season may conclude in Fort Lauderdale". The Indianapolis Star. Karen Crotchfelt; Gannett Company. from the original on January 9, 2012. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
  46. ^ "IndyCar will not race at Las Vegas in 2012 after Dan Wheldon's fatal crash". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. December 9, 2011. from the original on January 7, 2012. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  47. ^ "IndyCar won't race Las Vegas in '12". ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. Associated Press. December 8, 2011. from the original on August 19, 2021. Retrieved December 9, 2011.
  48. ^ "IndyCar: Single-file restarts to return; standing starts next?". Autoweek. Crain Communications. February 13, 2012. from the original on February 15, 2015. Retrieved February 13, 2015.
  49. ^ "Mike Conway: 'I've had a few big ones and I'm lucky to be here today'". The Independent. March 23, 2013. Retrieved December 30, 2023.
  50. ^ a b Francis, Enjoli (October 17, 2011). "Crowded Track, Young Drivers Factor in Fatal Indy Crash, Expert Says". ABC News. American Broadcasting Company. from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2011.
  51. ^ "Will Power says Las Vegas race was a "recipe for disaster"". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. October 19, 2011. from the original on October 20, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  52. ^ Martin, Bruce (October 17, 2011). . CNN Sports Illustrated. Time Inc. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved October 28, 2011.
  53. ^ Strang, Simon (October 18, 2011). "Las Vegas boss defends venue in aftermath of Wheldon accident". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on July 22, 2015. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  54. ^ a b "Jody Scheckter wants son to quit IndyCar after Dan Wheldon's death". BBC Sport. BBC. October 17, 2011. from the original on December 17, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  55. ^ Mejia, Diego (October 17, 2011). "Jimmie Johnson thinks IndyCar should quit racing on ovals". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 19, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  56. ^ Miller, Robin (October 19, 2011). . SPEEDTV.com. Speed. Archived from the original on June 10, 2012. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  57. ^ Bradley, Charles (October 18, 2011). "Mario Andretti says Dan Wheldon's fatal Indycar crash was "freakish" one-off". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 20, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  58. ^ Noble, Jonathan (October 20, 2011). "Mosley says IndyCar should take calm approach to Wheldon investigation". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 21, 2011. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  59. ^ Richards, Giles (October 18, 2011). "Dan Wheldon's death puts cockpits back on the agenda in F1". The Guardian. from the original on October 1, 2015. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  60. ^ "Race Car Driver Says Las Vegas Track Was Too Dangerous". Inside Edition. CBS Television Distribution. October 18, 2011. from the original on December 28, 2013. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  61. ^ Martin, Bruce (March 3, 2011). "Bernard hopes $5 million challenge can renew interest in IndyCar". Sports Illustrated. Time Inc. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017. The only NASCAR driver so far who expressed interest is former Champ Car Series driver A. J. Allmendinger.
  62. ^ "Drivers saw dangers in IndyCar finale". Fox Sports. October 16, 2011. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  63. ^ [Kimi Räikkönen lured into a fateful contest]. Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish). Sanoma. October 18, 2011. Archived from the original on October 23, 2014. Retrieved October 25, 2014.
  64. ^ a b Glendenning, Mark (December 15, 2011). "Indycar confirms contact with fence pole caused Dan Wheldon's death at Las Vegas". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on January 7, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
  65. ^ a b Strang, Simon (October 19, 2011). "FIA to assist IndyCar Series in its investigation into Dan Wheldon's death". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 20, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2011.
  66. ^ Glendenning, Mark (December 15, 2011). "IndyCar's Barnhart says Las Vegas banking not to blame for Wheldon's accident". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on July 21, 2015. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
  67. ^ (PDF). CNN Sports Illustrated. Brickyard.com; IMS LLC. December 15, 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2013. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  68. ^ Morales, Robert (April 6, 2017). "James Hinchcliffe recalls near-fatal crash at Indy 500". Los Angeles Daily News. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  69. ^ DiZinno, Tony (June 28, 2015). "DiZinno: IndyCar's Double-Edged Sword in Fontana". NBC Sports. from the original on February 9, 2019. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  70. ^ DeZinno, Tony (June 11, 2017). "IndyCar field brings 'pack race' term back to vernacular at Texas". NBC Sports. from the original on September 24, 2017. Retrieved September 23, 2017.
  71. ^ Noble, Jonathan (July 27, 2017). "Refusing Halo would be "ignorant and stupid" – Vettel". Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. from the original on October 24, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  72. ^ Tucker, Heather (February 16, 2016). "AJ Allmendinger: I'll never race open cockpit again". USA Today. Gannett Company. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  73. ^ FIA (July 19, 2017). "Halo protection system to be introduced for 2018". Formula1.com. Formula One World Championship Limited. from the original on November 29, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  74. ^ Kalinauckas, Alex (August 31, 2017). "Formula 2 unveils 2018 car with Halo". Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. from the original on October 24, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  75. ^ Errington, Tom (October 19, 2017). "United States F3 series launched, 2018 car revealed with halo". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 25, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  76. ^ Edmondson, Laurence (January 30, 2018). "Formula E reveals next generation car with Halo". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. from the original on April 16, 2018. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  77. ^ The Aeroscreen[permanent dead link] Official Site of Indycar. Retrieved 2020-08-01.
  78. ^ "Video:Dario Franchitti involved in horrific crash at IndyCar race in Houston". Autoweek. Crain Communications. October 5, 2013. from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  79. ^ "Frame by frame: Scott Dixon's insane crash at the Indy 500". Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. May 30, 2017. from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  80. ^ Robinson, Mark (August 2, 2017). "Test Drivers Like Exposed Rear Tires on Universal Aero Kit". IndyCar.com. Brickyard Trademarks, Inc. from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  81. ^ Malshar, David (September 20, 2017). ""Awesome" 2018 IndyCar aerokit will improve racing, says Servia". Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  82. ^ Kantowski, Ron (October 16, 2021). "Dan Wheldon's fatal crash at LVMS recalled 10 years later". Las Vegas Review-Journal. LaVRJ. Retrieved October 25, 2021.
  83. ^ @NYeoman (October 16, 2022). "Here's to remembering legends and creating better memories on October 16th" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  84. ^ "Polimove Wins the Autonomous Challenge at CES®, Making History as the First Head-To-Head Autonomous Racecar Competition Champion". Indy Autonomous Challenge. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  85. ^ "PoliMOVE Wins the Autonomous Challenge @ CES 2023, Setting a New Autonomous Speed World Record for a Racetrack". Indy Autonomous Challenge. IMS. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  86. ^ "2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championships qualifying results". Racing-Reference. Fox Sports Digital. from the original on November 4, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  87. ^ Strang, Simon (October 15, 2011). "Buddy Rice sent to back of Vegas grid after penalty". Autosport. Haymarket Publications. from the original on October 17, 2011. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  88. ^ "IZOD IndyCar Series standings for 2011". Racing-Reference. Fox Sports Digital. from the original on February 21, 2015. Retrieved February 20, 2015.

External links edit


2011, izod, indycar, world, championship, scheduled, final, race, 2011, izod, indycar, series, vegas, motor, speedway, vegas, nevada, october, 2011, scheduled, laps, around, facility, mile, oval, race, details18th, round, 2011, indycar, series, seasonthe, layo. The 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship was the scheduled final race of the 2011 IZOD IndyCar series It was to be run at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas Nevada USA on October 16 2011 and was scheduled for 200 laps around the facility s 1 544 mile oval 2011 IZOD IndyCar World ChampionshipRace details18th round of the 2011 IndyCar Series seasonThe layout of Las Vegas Motor Speedway where the race was heldDateOctober 16 2011Official nameIZOD IndyCar World ChampionshipLocationLas Vegas Motor SpeedwayClark County Nevada U S CourseOval1 544 mi 2 485 kmDistance12 laps18 528 mi 29 817 kmScheduled Distance200 laps308 800 mi 496 965 kmWeatherTemperatures reaching up to 93 9 F 34 4 C wind speeds up to 17 1 miles per hour 27 5 km h 1 Pole positionDriverTony Kanaan KV Racing Technology Time50 0582 222 078 mph 357 400 km h PodiumFirstNone race abandoned after 12 lapsSecondN AThirdN A 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship program coverThe race however was cancelled after only 12 laps had been run Contact between drivers Wade Cunningham and James Hinchcliffe triggered a massive chain reaction crash that involved fifteen of the thirty four entrants in the event and resulted in the death of former IndyCar Series champion Dan Wheldon less than five months after his second Indianapolis 500 victory 2 3 Open wheel racing has not returned to Las Vegas Motor Speedway since the incident Contents 1 Report 1 1 Background 1 2 The 5 Million Challenge 1 3 Championship battle 1 4 Qualifying 1 5 Media coverage 1 6 Start of the race 1 7 Lap 11 crash Death of Dan Wheldon 2 Championship resolution 3 Reactions 3 1 Criticism 3 2 Investigation 3 2 1 Results 4 Legacy 5 Classification 5 1 Qualifying 5 2 Scoring when abandoned 6 Standings after the race 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksReport editBackground edit The Las Vegas race was added to the schedule for the 2011 season 4 replacing the event at Homestead Miami Speedway as the final race of the IndyCar season The races at Homestead and the International Speedway Corporation tracks were removed from the schedule following the previous year s season Las Vegas Motor Speedway was returning to the IndyCar schedule for the first time since 2000 4 and the event marked the first open wheel race at the circuit since the Hurricane Relief 400 Champ Car event in 2005 4 The circuit since was reconfigured in 2006 which saw a greater degree of banking added to the circuit to encourage side by side racing 4 5 The race was scheduled for 200 laps around the 1 544 mi 2 485 km oval totaling 308 800 mi 496 965 km As the final race of the 2011 season this was also the final race for the Dallara IR05 chassis which would be replaced by an all new design the following year This situation combined with the great deal of publicity and expectation surrounding the race encouraged multiple teams to field additional entries for this race The entry list featured a total of 34 drivers five more than the previous event at Kentucky It had the highest number of drivers entered for an American open wheel racing event outside of the Indianapolis 500 since the 1993 Toyota Grand Prix of Monterey at Laguna Seca Raceway the highest number of starters since the 1997 Indianapolis 500 that featured 35 drivers and the highest outside of the Indy 500 since the 1983 Pocono 500 Among the 25 cars that contested the full season Sebastian Saavedra returned to the No 34 car for Conquest Racing after missing the Motegi and Kentucky races because of an sponsorship shortfall and Townsend Bell remained in the No 22 car for Dreyer amp Reinbold having become the fourth injury replacement for Justin Wilson at Kentucky Dreyer amp Reinbold added a third car in the No 11 for veteran Davey Hamilton a combination had been raced at Indianapolis and Texas and Buddy Rice joined Panther Racing in a second No 44 car after doing so at Indianapolis also racing at Kentucky as part of the deal Part time teams in the series also competed as Sarah Fisher Racing was fielding their regular oval specialist Ed Carpenter in the No 67 after his surprising win at Kentucky He was joined in a one off entry the No 57 by Tomas Scheckter who had contested three races that season for other teams AFS Racing who had missed a number of races before striking an alliance with Sam Schmidt Motorsports entered the No 17 car for Wade Cunningham fresh from a 7th place finish at Kentucky in his third IndyCar start Dragon Racing contested their seventh event of the season with Paul Tracy who was making his fifth appearance in the No 8 in 2011 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing entered Pippa Mann in the No 30 for Kentucky and Las Vegas having also done so at New Hampshire previously and she was joined in the No 15 one off entry by Jay Howard who had last raced at Indianapolis and the Texas twin races for Sam Schmidt Finally there was the Bryan Herta Autosport entry which involved a switch of drivers between Dan Wheldon and Alex Tagliani see The 5 Million Challenge below This race was also touted in the leading weeks to the event as the potential final entry for Danica Patrick in IndyCar racing after she had announced a full time move to the NASCAR Nationwide Series in 2012 Patrick wouldn t race in IndyCar again until 2018 where she would participate in the Indianapolis 500 to conclude her racing career The 5 Million Challenge edit On February 22 2011 IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard announced that a 5 000 000 USD purse would be awarded to any driver not on the IndyCar circuit to enter the race at Las Vegas and win while starting from the back of the field 6 7 Bernard s original offer was exclusively to any race car driver in the world outside of the IZOD IndyCar Series 4 hoping to attract interest from Formula 1 or NASCAR 8 7 Bernard received offers that he deemed viable from motocross racer Travis Pastrana former IndyCar champion Alex Zanardi and NASCAR s Kasey Kahne but all three offers were not without issue 9 Pastrana who also drove rally cars and would eventually compete in NASCAR had entered the Best Trick event at X Games XVII in Los Angeles in July 2011 During his attempt at a rodeo 720 Pastrana crashed on landing and broke his foot and ankle He was still working to rehabilitate the injury and would likely have required special controls to be put in the car if he was to attempt the feat Zanardi s problem was twofold He had not competed in an IndyCar event since the 2001 American Memorial at EuroSpeedway Lausitz during which both of his legs were severed on impact after Alex Tagliani hit his car after Zanardi who had been exiting out road lost control of his vehicle Zanardi also requested to drive for his former team Chip Ganassi Racing and they were unable to fulfill his request due to a lack of available resources Kahne also had this problem as he desired to drive for Team Penske 9 In his case cross country travel would cause a logistical issue NASCAR would be running the Bank of America 500 at Lowe s Motor Speedway the night before IndyCar s event Bernard later revised the challenge to include a driver who had only competed in IndyCar part time during the 2011 season on September 11 2011 the challenge was officially accepted by 2011 Indianapolis 500 winner Dan Wheldon who agreed to split the purse with a fan if he went on to win 9 To compete in the event Wheldon reached a deal with Sam Schmidt Motorsports to drive the No 77 car raced by Alex Tagliani during the season in a joint effort with Bryan Herta Autosport Wheldon had won the Indianapolis 500 in the No 98 car fielded by Herta which was loaned and prepared by Sam Schmidt s team but that car was crashed at the following event in Texas by Wade Cunningham while driven as the No 99 Therefore the deal allowed Wheldon to race the car on which Tagliani had scored the pole position at Indianapolis and Texas the two high speed ovals that had been raced until that point In return Tagliani would get to drive the No 98 car for Bryan Herta Autosport at Las Vegas Up until that point Wheldon had only run at Indianapolis but he later reached a deal to race the No 77 at the Kentucky Indy 300 the penultimate round of the season as a warm up to Las Vegas 10 Also starting towards the back of the field after failing a pre qualifying tech inspection Wheldon went from a 28th starting position to a 14th place finish at Kentucky 9 Championship battle edit Entering the race the only two drivers still in contention for the IndyCar Championship were Ganassi s Franchitti and Penske s Power for the second year in a row Franchitti was 18 points ahead of Power retaking the championship points lead from him with a second place finish at the 2011 Kentucky Indy 300 two weeks prior Power was still mathematically in the points race despite an awful finish at Kentucky but needed to finish far ahead of Franchitti in order to win the championship Power had to finish in the top 6 to have any chance of taking the title and a top 10 finish by Franchitti would ve forced Power to finish first or second positions he hadn t achieved yet in a full distance oval race 11 The race s honorary grand marshal was skateboarder Tony Hawk who gave the command to start the engines 12 Qualifying edit nbsp Tony Kanaan won the pole position with an average speed of 222 078 miles per hourAll thirty four entered cars qualified for the race Tony Kanaan driving the No 82 Dallara for KV Racing Technology qualified on the pole scoring the 15th and final pole position of his career and his first one since the 2008 SunTrust Indy Challenge at Richmond Raceway Kanaan had started on the pole in the second of the twin races at Texas earlier in the year but it didn t count towards his total as it was achieved through a draw Kanaan shared the front row with Oriol Servia who fell short of his second career pole by 0 017 mph driving the No 2 Dallara for Newman Haas Racing Ed Carpenter the winner at Kentucky two weeks earlier qualified third in the No 67 Dallara for Sarah Fisher Racing ahead of Indianapolis 500 polesitter Alex Tagliani driving the No 98 Dallara for Bryan Herta Autosport that had been driven to victory by Dan Wheldon at Indianapolis Danica Patrick driving the No 7 Dallara for Andretti Autosport started 9th in what was her final IndyCar start before joining NASCAR 13 Team Penske and Chip Ganassi Racing unexpectedly struggled in qualifying only making the top 10 with Ryan Briscoe who was fifth in the No 6 Dallara and Graham Rahal who qualified 8th in the No 38 Dallara splitting the four Andretti Autosport cars Their two championship contenders qualified on row 9 with Power 17th in the No 12 Dallara and Franchitti 18th in the No 10 Dallara 14 Wheldon who was publicly unhappy with the performance of the No 77 Dallara in practice posted the 29th fastest time in qualifying defaulting to the 34th spot in the field for the 5 Million Challenge Buddy Rice who had qualified in 19th place was also forced to start from the rear of the field for driving the No 44 Dallara below the track s white line 7 Media coverage edit ABC broadcast the race on American television Marty Reid was the lead commentator with Scott Goodyear and Eddie Cheever as analysts Vince Welch Jamie Little and Rick DeBruhl were the pit reporters 15 The IMS Radio Network provided the radio coverage with Mike King on lead Josef Newgarden who had run the Indy Lights series event earlier in the day and had been crowned that series champion for 2011 was the booth analyst Davey Hamilton who normally occupied that role entered the event in a car fielded by Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing Mark Jaynes reported from Turn 3 and Jake Query and Kevin Lee served as the pit reporters Start of the race edit The race started at its scheduled green flag time of 12 45 p m PST 3 45 p m EST before an estimated crowd of 50 000 spectators who had either bought a ticket for the race or had been given one for attending another IndyCar event during the year 16 Wheldon had been chosen as the in race reporter for the ABC broadcast and spoke briefly with the TV booth during the pace laps As it had been predicted by drivers and teams alike since practice the first laps were characterized by high intensity and a consistent trait of pack racing similar to that experienced at a former venue like Chicagoland Speedway but in a narrower surface and with a higher car count Tony Kanaan led the field from pole and Oriol Servia lost second place to Ed Carpenter at the end of Lap 1 eventually falling back to the fifth spot behind Ryan Briscoe and Marco Andretti Coming out of Turn Four Graham Rahal and Ryan Hunter Reay were banging wheels and Helio Castroneves and I had to lift That allowed Wade Cunningham to get a run on us and we went three wide into Turn 1 Wade got into my right rear tire with his front wing and that s what made his car loose and he spun out in front everybody James Hinchcliffe s description of the on track fight that led to the 15 car crash on Lap 11 17 During the 10 laps of green flag racing there were multiple instances of three wide and four wide racing at various points as some drivers tried to advance through the field Most notably Alex Tagliani and Ryan Briscoe touched wheels on Lap 6 while battling for fifth place before the top 6 drivers eventually settled into a single car line formation By the time Lap 11 started the top 13 cars were running within a second of each other and all 34 cars were separated by just 4 2 seconds with no small packs breaking up the field yet Jay Howard had been the biggest mover climbing from 27th to 15th and Dan Wheldon had already gained 10 spots through this period placing 24th at the end of the tenth lap Sam Schmidt stated in a 2016 post that Wheldon was hooting and yelling over the radio due to the good performance of his car after multiple changes had been made overnight 18 Other drivers like Townsend Bell Tomas Scheckter Vitor Meira and E J Viso had also made up between 6 and 8 places during their early run Multiple drivers complained over their radios and afterwards about the aggressive racing from some drivers in such an early stage of the race Championship leader Dario Franchitti took the bottom lane to avoid being caught up in any incident and dropped from 18th to 21st His rival for the IndyCar title Will Power was even more conservative and lost 10 places running in 27th spot A similar approach was followed by drivers like Danica Patrick Scott Dixon and Mike Conway all of them electing to play it safe in the bottom lane while dropping down the order Lap 11 crash Death of Dan Wheldon edit nbsp The crash scene just shortly after it began Dan Wheldon s car seen at the bottom of the picture white nose cone damaged front wing has just left the racing surface The accident began on the front straightaway as the field headed into turn one Wade Cunningham Wheldon s teammate in No 17 who was running in 12th place at the time tried to make a pass on the outside of a three wide situation with James Hinchcliffe driving No 06 who had Helio Castroneves in the No 3 car on his inside 19 As the drivers approached the turn Cunningham s left front tire touched with Hinchcliffe s right rear tire Cunningham swerved to the inside of the track as a result and J R Hildebrand in No 4 drove over the rear of his car causing him to go airborne Cunningham collected Jay Howard in No 15 on the inside and then Townsend Bell in No 22 on the outside before colliding with the retaining wall Attempting to avoid the crash ahead Vitor Meira lost control of his No 14 and spun inward collecting both Charlie Kimball s No 83 and E J Viso s No 59 Tomas Scheckter in No 57 was also attempting to avoid the crash by rapidly slowing down on the outside Following that Paul Tracy ran into the back of his car with his No 8 and Pippa Mann rapidly approaching in No 30 and jerking to the outside to avoid crashing into Alex Lloyd in No 19 went over the top of Tracy which caused her car to make a high speed barrel roll towards the SAFER barrier 20 As cars continued to drive through the accident scene the No 77 car driven by Wheldon and the No 12 driven by Power left the racing surface Wheldon was racing at 220 miles per hour 350 km h when he came upon the scene frantically trying to avoid the collision Although he was able to considerably slow it down Wheldon s car went airborne about 325 feet 99 m after running into the back of Kimball s and went barrel rolling into the catch fence cockpit first causing the lower right hand side of his head to hit one of the poles The No 77 landed back on the racing surface having been sliced apart by the fence 21 Meanwhile Power went airborne when he ran over the back of Lloyd s car and struck the SAFER barrier The car landed sideways on the track and rolled over which caused the front wheel assembly to break one of the front tires flew over Power s head and barely missed hitting him Wheldon s car came to rest close to Power s machine along the apron at the exit of Turn Two 22 The seven drivers that were running behind Power at the time of the crash took evasive action into the apron but Buddy Rice s No 44 car suffered damage from flying debris and crashed at low speed into Meira s stationary car James Jakes in the No 18 was closely behind Rice and had a minor contact with his car Jakes stopped his car further down the track but it was eventually refired and was able to make it back to the pits Meira s car was also refired and completed lap 11 but it was officially retired in the pits due to damage The debris we all had to drive through the lap later it looked like a war scene from The Terminator or something I mean there were just pieces of metal and car on fire in the middle of the track with no car attached to it and just debris everywhere Ryan Briscoe s reaction to driving through the scene of the accident one lap after the collision 23 A total of 15 cars were involved with the most severe injuries suffered by Wheldon Power Hildebrand and Mann 24 Wheldon was extricated from his car and was airlifted to the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada He was officially pronounced dead on arrival two hours later at 1 54 pm Pacific Daylight Time The official cause of Wheldon s death was given by the Clark County Coroner as blunt force trauma to his head due to the incident 25 Mann and Hildebrand were later taken to the hospital for overnight observation while Power was evaluated and released that day 24 IndyCar officials stopped the proceedings one lap later and put the race under a red flag The nineteen cars that were still running were called to their pit boxes and work began on the cleanup The damage caused by the crash was significant The catch fence had been damaged where the 77 had made contact with it and would need to be repaired before racing resumed In addition as some of the drivers drove through the scene during the brief caution period they reported massive amounts of debris that they could not avoid driving over and that the asphalt surface had received several gashes in it that would need to be patched With all of the work that needed to be done there would be a significant delay in resuming the race The only thing left to be determined would be to see who would win the race Power s involvement in the incident had resulted in Franchitti clinching the points championship and with Wheldon also out of the race since no other driver had taken the 5 000 000 challenge there would be no prize awarded 22 Still IndyCar officials elected to keep the race under red flag conditions as they worked on a solution The delay extended for nearly three hours and tension began to mount over both the status of the race and the condition of Wheldon as there had been no updates since the accident During the lengthy delay ESPN conducted interviews with several drivers who expressed their growing concern for their fellow competitor as well as team owner Michael Andretti who took it upon himself to head to the trailer on pit road where the officials were located He would be turned away by the officials and return with no further information Andretti later revealed that he finally made it into the trailer along with race director Brian Barnhart and drivers Dario Franchitti and Tony Kanaan where they were notified that Wheldon had died on the helicopter on his way to the hospital 22 At approximately 3 00 pm PST IndyCar Series director Brian Barnhart called for all race team personnel to report to the infield media center for a meeting that was closed to reporters The ABC broadcast was able to capture video of the drivers and team personnel as they left the media center with grim expressions Tony Kanaan who had been a teammate of Wheldon from their days driving for Andretti Green Racing was shown sobbing as he returned to his pit box ABC s Vince Welch reported that Kanaan and Franchitti broke the news of Wheldon s death to the other drivers before discussing what steps would be taken next There was dissent among the attending drivers over whether to continue with the race in some fashion as Mario Andretti advocated or cancelling the race 26 IndyCar is very sad to announce that Dan Wheldon has passed away from unsurvivable injuries Our thoughts and prayers are with his family today IndyCar its drivers and team owners has decided to end the race In honor of Dan Wheldon the drivers have decided to do a five lap salute in his honor It will take place in approximately 10 minutes Thank you Randy Bernard announcing the confirmation of Wheldon s death to the media 27 As the meeting ended Randy Bernard called a press conference There he gave a brief statement where he informed the media that Wheldon had died of his injuries suffered in the accident He then announced that the remainder of the race was abandoned and that the drivers would be returning to the track for what he referred to as a five lap salute to honor their fallen competitor then left without taking any questions ABC cut into the press conference late and missed Bernard s initial statement which left Marty Reid to break the news to the viewing audience 22 The five lap salute was proposed by Bernard himself and was met with unanimous approval by all the drivers Meanwhile the scoring tower was blanked except for the number 77 which was displayed in the first place position With Kanaan Ed Carpenter and Ryan Briscoe leading eighteen of the nineteen cars that were still running when the accident happened lined up on pit road in six rows of three akin to the starting formation for the Indianapolis 500 The only car that did not take part in the salute was Bryan Herta Autosport s car which Wheldon drove to victory at Indianapolis earlier in 2011 but was driven that day by Alex Tagliani 22 Instead James Jakes took part in the salute behind the six rows of three as the minor damages in his car had been eventually repaired The safety car then led the cars back onto the track while every crew member and person behind the wall moved to the grass separating pit road from the track to watch 28 29 The track loudspeakers played bagpipe renditions of Danny Boy and Amazing Grace while the cars went around the track at pace lap speed and each time the cars passed the start finish line the fans remaining in the front stretch grandstand offered applause At the end of the five tribute laps the starter waved two checkered flags to signify the end while the cars proceeded around the track one more time before exiting for the pits in turn four 24 28 Wheldon s death was the first suffered by an IndyCar driver since Paul Dana was killed in a race morning practice crash at Homestead Miami in 2006 and the first during a race since Greg Moore died in a crash at Auto Club Speedway in 1999 also at the final race of the season 27 In the lead up to the race SPEED reported that Wheldon was set to replace Danica Patrick at Andretti Autosport for 2012 in the GoDaddy sponsored car with the company having also sponsored the 5 Million Challenge 30 Michael Andretti later confirmed that a multi year contract was signed on Sunday morning just hours before the race 31 James Hinchcliffe was eventually signed in early January to take Wheldon s place and GoDaddy honored the two years of their sponsorship deal 32 Championship resolution editAs noted above the accident on lap 11 ended the championship points battle and would have clinched the season championship for Franchitti regardless of the results of the race Since the event did not reach IndyCar standards for an official race meaning it did not pass the halfway mark before it was abandoned none of the drivers involved were awarded points and the driver point totals entering the race stood as the final totals for the season This was Franchitti s third consecutive 28 and fourth overall championship and fourth consecutive championship for Chip Ganassi Racing equaling a feat achieved in CART from 1996 to 1999 21 Indy Racing League LLC delayed all official prize giving choosing instead to conduct it during the annual State of IndyCar speech in February 2012 Franchitti also delayed his own celebration of his championship victory Reactions edit nbsp After the race was abandoned the 19 cars that were not involved in the accident returned to the circuit at pace lap speed for five laps as a mark of respect to Dan Wheldon At the far right of this photo is the scoring pylon showing Wheldon s No 77 at the top At the time of his death Wheldon had been working with IndyCar officials to develop the ICONIC chassis with the intention of improving safety in the sport 33 Planned changes to the chassis include larger cockpits for driver protection and bodywork over the rear wheels to prevent cars from launching off one another in the event of a collision long a problem in open wheel racing regardless of oval or road course but troublesome on high speed ovals and tight street circuits with a long straight and a tight turn similar to the style of many modern road courses 34 Prominent figures within the IndyCar fraternity and the wider international motorsport community expressed their condolences to Wheldon and his family 35 Wheldon had been scheduled to take part in the Gold Coast 600 a round of the V8 Supercars championship on October 22 racing alongside his friend James Courtney Upon hearing of Wheldon s death Courtney described the accident as a sobering reminder of the dangers faced by racing drivers 36 As the first major international motorsport event after Wheldon s death organizers of the V8 Supercars series planned a series of tributes to him at the Gold Coast 600 37 Wheldon s place was taken by another British driver Darren Turner an FIA GT1 World Championship competitor Wheldon s name was left on the car as a mark of respect 38 while British drivers at the event paid tribute to him with helmet decals and several other drivers planned individual tributes to Wheldon 39 Kanaan who had also been scheduled to race in Australia announced his withdrawal from the event out of respect for Wheldon However Briscoe Tagliani and Helio Castroneves all of whom raced at Las Vegas along with other part time IndyCar drivers Sebastien Bourdais and Simon Pagenaud who were not at Las Vegas did race 40 Bourdais the best performing International driver received the Dan Wheldon Memorial Trophy Sam Schmidt for whom Wheldon had been racing at the time of his accident admitted that the events at Las Vegas Motor Speedway had prompted him to re evaluate his involvement in motorsports 41 I could see within five laps that people were starting to do crazy stuff I love hard racing but that to me is not really what it s about One small mistake from somebody right now I m numb and speechless One minute you re joking around in driver intros and the next he s gone He was six years old when I first met him I told his son Thursday night at the parade on The Strip that I ve known his dad since he was about your size And then I talked to a friend of mine Jesse Spence that I used to race go karts with that we ve known him since he was this little kid His mouth worked plenty good but he was just this little kid and the next thing you know he was my teammate in IndyCars We put so much pressure on ourselves to win races and championships it s what we love to do it s what we live for and then on days like today it doesn t really matter Everybody in the IndyCar Series was Dan s friend Dario Franchitti describing his feelings in the aftermath of the accident 28 In the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series several drivers at the 2011 Good Sam Club 500 at Talladega on the weekend after Wheldon s death put special tributes on their cars like NASCAR issuing the Lionheart Knight decal Wheldon wore on his helmet 42 which were placed on the cars b pillars 43 along with T J Bell putting Wheldon s name on the namerail 44 In Formula One a moment of silence was held at the Indian Grand Prix in memory of Wheldon and MotoGP rider Marco Simoncelli who died the weekend after Wheldon in a crash at the Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix with Jenson Button dedicating his runner up finish at the race to both of them Driver Marco Andretti withdrew from The Celebrity Apprentice which started taping days after the incident and was replaced by his father Michael team principal of Andretti Autosport 45 On December 9 2011 IndyCar decided that they were not going to return to Las Vegas for the 2012 season 46 Randy Bernard expressed reluctance to return to the speedway following Wheldon s death despite the insistence of Speedway Motorsports Inc president Bruton Smith who owns the track in Las Vegas as well as three other tracks used by the IndyCar series for the series to honor its three year contract with the track As of that date the investigation into the accident was still ongoing IndyCar was holding back on the release of its 2012 schedule until the investigation concluded The IndyCar series also conducted an investigation into whether or not the series should continue racing on high banked ovals such as Las Vegas and Texas Motor Speedway in Denton Texas Texas had been one of the staples of the IndyCar series since 1997 and had yet to be confirmed for 2012 prior to the Las Vegas race in 2011 Indycar s future at high banked ovals was in jeopardy pending the results of the investigation 47 Texas was eventually placed on the 2012 schedule 45 The series went to new restrictions on restarts IndyCar announced that restarts would only be single file in 2012 rather than double file as they had been the previous season 48 Apart from Dan Wheldon this became the last IndyCar race for several drivers although unofficially as the race was erased from the record books All of them had been involved in the crash 2003 CART champion Paul Tracy and Tomas Scheckter elected to retire with both drivers citing the crash as a major factor in their decision Davey Hamilton transitioned into team ownership for 2012 and while he denied at first to have retired he would never make another IndyCar start 2004 Indianapolis 500 winner Buddy Rice Vitor Meira and Alex Lloyd also made their last start at Vegas after all three of them failed in their efforts to find a seat in the following years After losing an IndyCar ride for 2012 at the last minute Jay Howard would not start another IndyCar race for six years until the 2017 Indianapolis 500 one year before Danica Patrick s return to the race in her last professional motorsports competition One year after the crash Mike Conway pulled out of the final event of the 2012 season at the high speed Auto Club Speedway and gave up on oval racing citing the death of Dan Wheldon as well as two major crashes at Indianapolis as the main reasons behind his decision 49 Criticism edit A lot of things that happened in this race they are hoping would not happen with these changes Maybe the scale has tipped a little bit too far to make it more entertaining They would serve themselves well if they listened to the drivers a little bit more and the concerns they voiced ABC commentator and former driver Eddie Cheever s criticism of series officials renewed focus on entertainment 34 In the build up to the event several drivers expressed unease at the race with Franchitti Oriol Servia and Alex Lloyd the most vocal opponents particularly given the high degree of banking around the circuit 34 with between 18 and 20 degrees of banking in the corners Franchitti was quoted as saying that the track was not suitable for IndyCar racing 50 while championship rival Will Power described the race as an accident waiting to happen 51 The field of 34 drivers was the biggest in an IndyCar series race since 1997 A typical oval track race has six to eight fewer drivers except for the Indianapolis 500 which normally has a 33 car field but is run at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway which is two and a half miles in distance with a maximum banking of 9 2 degrees as opposed to Las Vegas which is one and a half miles in distance and has banking up to 20 degrees 52 ESPN com senior motorsports writer Terry Blount wrote Obviously more cars presents more danger They wanted a whole lot of cars cause obviously this is their season finale and they wanted it to be a big deal Some of the people that were driving in this event yesterday had no business being in it Some of them had never driven on a track like this That was a mistake 50 Chris Powell president of Las Vegas Motor Speedway defended the race saying that the circuit had passed all of the IndyCar Series accreditation procedures and was deemed suitable for racing He also went on the record to say that despite the media reporting the concerns of several drivers over the safety of the event none of those concerns had been raised with him 53 1979 Formula One World Champion Jody Scheckter whose son Tomas was involved in the accident was highly critical of the series organizers stating that a serious accident was inevitable as they were basically touching wheels at 220 mph 350 km h They all bunch up together so there are thirty four cars in a small space of track One person makes a mistake and this happens You shouldn t have to get killed if you make a mistake It was madness 54 Former Formula One and IndyCar driver Mark Blundell agreed claiming that the Las Vegas circuit was unsuitable for IndyCar racing this was the last race for the Dallara IR05 while NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson called for the series to leave oval racing altogether 55 though he clarified his statement by saying that the open wheel type cars on a resurfaced 1 5 mi 2 4 km track built for the heavier Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series cars was a bad idea ten years later Johnson took the Rookie Orientation Program for the 2022 Indianapolis 500 and raced at Texas Motor Speedway a 1 5 mi oval track with the added protection of the Aeroscreen 56 Former champion Mario Andretti said that the accident was a freakish one off incident and that facilities at the circuit were adequate for racing 57 While he admitted surprise that more drivers were not seriously injured he also cautioned against what he called knee jerk reactions to the accident calling for any changes to the sport to be carefully considered before being introduced rather than being rushed into action Former Federation Internationale de l Automobile FIA President Max Mosley a long time advocate of increased safety in motorsport agreed with Andretti urging a calm and scientific approach to any proposed changes 58 particularly when asked about the proposed introduction of closed canopies for open wheel racing cars 59 The five million dollar prize was also the subject of criticism in that a driver inexperienced in driving IndyCars would have a higher risk of causing a crash 5 though Formula One driver Anthony Davidson downplayed the influence of the prize in causing the accident stating that racing drivers by their nature try to win every race whether they start from first or last 54 In the days following the incident it was learned that at least three additional drivers had been approached to try for the 5 million challenge prize One was Scott Speed who previously ran open wheel Formula One cars for Scuderia Toro Rosso and who had raced on the reconfigured LVMS track in the Craftsman Truck Series for Morgan Dollar Motorsports in 2008 and for Team Red Bull in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in 2009 and 2010 Speed in an interview he gave to Inside Edition on October 18 2011 said that he declined to take the offer saying that the track conditions were too dangerous for Indy type cars 60 Likewise A J Allmendinger who also had previous open wheel experience had expressed early interest 61 though he later declined recalling When we raced CART at Vegas it scared the living hell out of me 62 Finnish media reported that 2007 Formula One World Champion Kimi Raikkonen who was splitting time between the World Rally Championship and NASCAR in 2011 had also been approached to take part in the race but Raikkonen rejected the offer as he was not confident of having a competitive car rather than having concerns over safety 63 Investigation edit The chassis of the Wheldon s 77 impacted a post along the right side of the tub and created a deep defect in the tub that extended from the pedal bulkhead along the upper border of the tub and through the cockpit As the race car passed by the pole intruded into the cockpit and made contact with the drivers helmet and head Dan s injury was limited to his head injury Dan appeared to suffer two distinct head forces The first head force created a level of Head Injury Criterion also known as a HIC number that normally does not produce any injury During the initial crash sequence the accident data recorder measured 12 or 13 impacts During that timeframe one of those impacts measured a measurable HIC number for Dan that s the number that does not normally cause injury The number was low enough The second force was a physical impact and it was the second force that caused a non survivable blunt force injury trauma to Dan s head Brian Barnhart detailing the sequence of events surrounding the accident in the official report on Wheldon s death 64 Three days after the accident series organizers announced that the race would be the subject of a full investigation The other members of the Automobile Competition Committee for the United States ACCUS the national governing body of automobile racing in the United States and a member of the FIA made their resources available for the investigation which IndyCar officials expected to take several weeks 65 As all ACCUS FIA members participated in the investigation IndyCar would have full use of the NASCAR R amp D Center in Concord North Carolina In the meantime all testing at Las Vegas Motor Speedway was cancelled indefinitely Franchitti and Chip Ganassi Racing had been planning to test the 2012 spec Dallara chassis at the circuit in the week following the race 65 Results edit The results of the investigation into Wheldon s death were released on December 15 2011 In a report prepared by crash investigators it was found that Wheldon s death was caused by an impact with the catch fencing around the circuit 64 Brian Barnhart further rejected claims that the banking had also contributed to the accident 66 stating that it created two ideal racing lines and that these lines made the location of cars more predictable for other drivers at the time of the accident all 34 cars had been behaving as expected The report also revealed that the right front pull rod of the suspension assembly penetrated Wheldon s survival cell though it did not cause him any injury The report recommended further investigation of this phenomenon as it was the first recorded incident of its kind in nine years of the use of the IR03 and later IR05 model chassis which was being retired at the end of the race The pull rod suspension chassis is not being utilised in the DW12 67 however a similar penetration in a DW12 would later cause significant injury to James Hinchcliffe during practice for the 2015 Indianapolis 500 68 Legacy editSince Wheldon s death at the Las Vegas oval much emphasis has been put into the elimination of pack racing through changes to the tires and downforce levels on high banked ovals particularly at Texas Motor Speedway for its annual IndyCar event Such racing has been seen on occasion since the Vegas race most notably at the 2015 MAVTV 500 at Auto Club Speedway which ended with contact entering the final lap that sent Ryan Briscoe subbing for Hinchcliffe airborne 69 and the 2017 Rainguard Water Sealers 600 at Texas where pack racing again reappeared the latter event also featured a NASCAR phenomenon known as The Big One and only a handful of drivers finished the race although none were seriously injured 70 However for the most part the league has avoided pack races in the years since the 2011 Finale Talk of a canopy or halo to protect the driver was accelerated by the fatal Formula One accident that killed Jules Bianchi in October 2014 and an incident where Justin Wilson was fatally struck in the head by debris at the August 2015 ABC Supply 500 at Pocono Raceway 71 In particular following Wilson s death Allmendinger stated that he would never again run open wheel cars adding The only way I would do it is if they put in a closed cockpit over the car and tested it and they thought that was a good direction in safety then I might think about doing it again 72 As a result several major open wheel series have implemented cockpit protection systems with Formula One 73 Formula Two 74 Formula Three 75 and Formula E 76 all introducing the halo in 2018 and IndyCar instituting the Aeroscreen in 2020 77 The rear wheel pods introduced to IndyCar in 2012 intended to prevent cars from becoming airborne when hitting another in the rear proved to be ineffective as there were major crashes resulting from such contact including Dario Franchitti s career ending crash during the 2013 race in Houston 78 as well as the 2017 Indianapolis 500 involving Scott Dixon 79 In addition the pods were often ripped from cars from light contact placing hazardous debris on the track As a result the rear pods were eliminated for 2018 80 81 In March 2016 during the Kobalt 400 NASCAR weekend Fox Sports reporter Jamie Little who was on the ESPN broadcast and drove to University Medical Center as part of post crash coverage and Wheldon s close friend Brent Brush placed a memorial plaque at the site Wheldon s car impacted the catch fencing post 82 For the 2022 NASCAR October weekend as Las Vegas Nick Yeoman an INDYCAR Radio broadcaster worked the PRN broadcast in Turn 2 near the Wheldon plaque Yeoman posted on Twitter Here s to remembering legends and creating better memories on October 16th while showing the Wheldon memorial and his broadcast position 83 INDYCAR returned to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway slightly over a decade later in January 2022 with the Indy Autonomous Challenge held as part of the Consumer Electronics Show using Indy NXT Dallara spec chassis modified for the challenge The PoliMOVE team of Politecnico di Milano and the University of Alabama won the first two events 84 Speeds reached 180 mph in the 2023 challenge at CES 85 Technical University of Munich defeated the University of Virginia in finals of the 2024 Las Vegas round Classification editQualifying edit Final qualifying classification Pos No Driver Team Speed1 82 nbsp Tony Kanaan KV Racing Technology Lotus 222 0782 2 nbsp Oriol Servia Newman Haas Racing 222 0613 67 nbsp Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing 221 5094 98 nbsp Alex Tagliani Bryan Herta Autosport 221 3305 6 nbsp Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 221 1306 26 nbsp Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 221 1297 28 nbsp Ryan Hunter Reay Andretti Autosport 221 0408 38 nbsp Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing 220 9589 7 nbsp Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 220 92510 27 nbsp Mike Conway Andretti Autosport 220 92211 3 nbsp Helio Castroneves Team Penske 220 90712 17 nbsp Wade Cunningham R AFS Racing Sam Schmidt Motorsports 220 79013 9 nbsp Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 220 71514 06 nbsp James Hinchcliffe R Newman Haas Racing 220 70115 4 nbsp J R Hildebrand R Panther Racing 220 63916 5 nbsp Takuma Sato KV Racing Technology Lotus 220 62717 12 nbsp Will Power Team Penske 220 52418 10 nbsp Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 220 48919 44 nbsp Buddy Rice Panther Racing 220 392120 34 nbsp Sebastian Saavedra R Conquest Racing 220 33521 19 nbsp Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing 220 31422 83 nbsp Charlie Kimball R Chip Ganassi Racing 219 98223 22 nbsp Townsend Bell Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing 219 94224 57 nbsp Tomas Scheckter Sarah Fisher Racing 219 81625 11 nbsp Davey Hamilton Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing 219 49326 14 nbsp Vitor Meira A J Foyt Enterprises 219 27327 8 nbsp Paul Tracy Dragon Racing 218 66128 15 nbsp Jay Howard Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 218 57729 77 nbsp Dan Wheldon Sam Schmidt Motorsports 218 410230 30 nbsp Pippa Mann R Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 218 15731 24 nbsp Ana Beatriz R Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing 218 15332 78 nbsp Simona de Silvestro HVM Racing 218 13233 59 nbsp E J Viso KV Racing Technology Lotus no time set34 18 nbsp James Jakes R Dale Coyne Racing no time setSource 13 86 Notes Rice was moved to the back of the grid after receiving a penalty for running below the white line 13 87 Wheldon agreed to start the race from thirty fourth and last place on the grid as part of the organizers five million dollar challenge 7 Scoring when abandoned edit Scoring when the race was abandoned Unlike the FIA Code which requires three laps for an official race INDYCAR requires to exceed half the scheduled distance 101 laps for a race to be official As only 12 laps were completed the race was declared abandoned a non event Pos No Driver Team Laps Time Retired Grid Laps Led1 82 nbsp Tony Kanaan KV Racing Technology Lotus 12 Running 1 122 67 nbsp Ed Carpenter Sarah Fisher Racing 12 Running 3 03 6 nbsp Ryan Briscoe Team Penske 12 Running 5 04 26 nbsp Marco Andretti Andretti Autosport 12 Running 6 05 2 nbsp Oriol Servia Newman Haas Racing 12 Running 2 06 98 nbsp Alex Tagliani Bryan Herta Autosport 12 Running 4 07 38 nbsp Graham Rahal Chip Ganassi Racing 12 Running 8 08 28 nbsp Ryan Hunter Reay Andretti Autosport 12 Running 7 09 3 nbsp Helio Castroneves Team Penske 12 Running 11 010 06 nbsp James Hinchcliffe R Newman Haas Racing 12 Running 14 011 5 nbsp Takuma Sato KV Racing Technology Lotus 12 Running 16 012 7 nbsp Danica Patrick Andretti Autosport 12 Running 9 013 9 nbsp Scott Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 12 Running 13 014 10 nbsp Dario Franchitti Chip Ganassi Racing 12 Running 18 015 34 nbsp Sebastian Saavedra R Conquest Racing 12 Running 19 016 27 nbsp Mike Conway Andretti Autosport 12 Running 10 017 78 nbsp Simona de Silvestro HVM Racing 12 Running 30 018 24 nbsp Ana Beatriz R Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing 12 Running 29 019 11 nbsp Davey Hamilton Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing 12 Running 24 020 18 nbsp James Jakes R Dale Coyne Racing 11 Running 32 021 14 nbsp Vitor Meira A J Foyt Enterprises 11 Contact 25 022 17 nbsp Wade Cunningham R AFS Racing Sam Schmidt Motorsports 10 Contact 12 023 4 nbsp J R Hildebrand R Panther Racing 10 Contact 15 024 22 nbsp Townsend Bell Dreyer amp Reinbold Racing 10 Contact 22 025 15 nbsp Jay Howard Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 10 Contact 27 026 57 nbsp Tomas Scheckter Sarah Fisher Racing 10 Contact 23 027 83 nbsp Charlie Kimball R Chip Ganassi Racing 10 Contact 21 028 8 nbsp Paul Tracy Dragon Racing 10 Contact 26 029 59 nbsp E J Viso KV Racing Technology Lotus 10 Contact 31 030 77 nbsp Dan Wheldon Sam Schmidt Motorsports 10 Contact fatal 34 031 19 nbsp Alex Lloyd Dale Coyne Racing 10 Contact 20 032 30 nbsp Pippa Mann R Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 10 Contact 28 033 12 nbsp Will Power Team Penske 10 Contact 17 034 44 nbsp Buddy Rice Panther Racing 10 Contact 33 0Source 20 Standings after the race edit nbsp As the race was abandoned after the accident Dario Franchitti defended his series championship finishing with 573 pointsDrivers Championship standings Pos Driver Points1 nbsp Dario Franchitti 5732 nbsp Will Power 5553 nbsp Scott Dixon 5184 nbsp Oriol Servia 4255 nbsp Tony Kanaan 366Source 88 Note Only the Top 5 positions are included See also editPortals nbsp Sports nbsp United StatesReferences edit 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship weather information The Old Farmers Almanac Yankee Publishing Archived from the original on October 23 2014 Retrieved October 22 2014 Dan Wheldon s fatal crash at LVMS recalled 10 years later October 16 2021 Garrett Jerry October 18 2011 Worries Circled Las Vegas Track Before a Pileup The New York Times a b c d e INDYCAR to cap 2011 season at Las Vegas Motor Speedway Las Vegas Motor Speedway Press release Speedway Motorsports Inc February 22 2011 Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 a b Fryer Jenna October 18 2011 Factors converged in crash that killed Dan Wheldon Yahoo News Yahoo Inc Associated Press Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 Outsiders eligible for IndyCar title race ESPN February 22 2011 a b c d Allen James October 16 2011 Dan Wheldon James Allen on F1 James Allen Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 Caldwell Dave February 24 2011 IndyCar s 5 Million Las Vegas Challenge Is a Ringer s Delight The New York Times Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 a b c d Sturbin John September 14 2011 Bernard Revises INDYCAR Vegas Challenge Racintoday com Archived from the original on November 20 2011 Retrieved October 16 2012 Dan Wheldon to drive SSM s No 77 at Kentucky us motorsport com September 26 2011 Retrieved December 29 2023 Peltz Jim October 3 2011 IndyCar racing fires on all cylinders at Kentucky event Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on October 23 2011 Hawk to be Grand Marshal at Vegas PaddockTalk October 12 2011 Archived from the original on February 15 2015 Retrieved February 13 2015 a b c Levin Andrew October 15 2011 Las Vegas Qualifying times Crash Crash Media Group Retrieved August 19 2021 Tony Kanaan takes pole for season finale in Las Vegas AutoWeek Crain Communications October 14 2011 Archived from the original on October 17 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 Hall Andy October 10 2011 Motorsports This Week on ESPN and ABC ESPN PressRoom Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved August 19 2021 IndyCar Opts Not To Finish Race Following Wheldon s Death Was LVMS Safe Enough For Cars www sportsbusinessjournal com October 17 2011 Retrieved December 29 2023 Tuttle Tim October 17 2011 Dan Wheldon Triumph and Tragedy RoadAndTrack com Retrieved December 29 2023 No rhyme or reason Wheldon taken far too soon IndyCar com Retrieved December 29 2023 Bradley Charles October 16 2011 IndyCar finale red flagged after 13 car accident Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 a b 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championships Racing Reference Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 a b Oreovicz John October 17 2011 Dan Wheldon s death stuns racing world ESPN ESPN Internet Ventures Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 a b c d e Cheever Eddie October 16 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship Television production Las Vegas Nevada United States American Broadcasting Company Clark Laine October 17 2011 IndyCar drivers want change after fatality The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Australian Associated Press Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 a b c Dan Wheldon dies in huge crash at IndyCar finale USA Today David Hunke Gannett Company Associated Press October 16 2011 Archived from the original on January 6 2013 Retrieved October 17 2011 Ritter Ken October 17 2011 Wheldon died of head injuries Yahoo Sports Yahoo Associated Press Archived from the original on October 22 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 Moody Dave October 18 2011 The Godfather s Blog Tracy Mulling Retirement I Saw Him Dying In Front Of My Eyes The Godfather s Blog Retrieved December 30 2023 a b Dan Wheldon dies following IndyCar crash at Vegas ESPN ESPN Internet Ventures October 17 2011 Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 a b c d Lewandowski Dave October 16 2011 Wheldon succumbs to injuries in crash IndyCar Series IndyCar Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 Briton Dan Wheldon dies in IndyCar race in Las Vegas BBC Sport BBC October 17 2011 Archived from the original on April 12 2014 Retrieved October 17 2011 AUTO RACING INDYCAR Wheldon Set For Andretti Return In 2012 October 15 2011 Archived from the original on October 15 2011 Retrieved December 30 2023 Anderson Lars DAN WHELDON 1978 2011 Sports Illustrated Vault SI com Retrieved December 30 2023 Andretti Autosport signs Hinchcliffe for 2012 us motorsport com January 12 2012 Retrieved December 30 2023 Cavin Curt October 17 2011 Dan Wheldon had been helping IndyCar with safety for 2012 USA Today David Hunke Gannett Company Archived from the original on April 18 2015 Retrieved October 17 2011 a b c Dan Wheldon s death ignites fresh IndyCar danger debate PerthNow News Limited Agence France Presse October 18 2011 Archived from the original on October 12 2014 Retrieved October 18 2011 Motorsport pays tribute to Dan Wheldon Autosport Haymarket Publications October 16 2011 Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 Courtney Wheldon s fate a reality check Speedcafe com SpeedCafe October 17 2011 Archived from the original on June 8 2012 Retrieved October 17 2011 V8s and teams plan tributes to Wheldon Speedcafe com SpeedCafe October 18 2011 Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved October 20 2011 Wheldon s name to run on 1 HRT window Speedcafe com SpeedCafe October 20 2011 Archived from the original on October 22 2011 Retrieved October 20 2011 BRDC members pay tribute to Dan Wheldon Speedcafe com SpeedCafe October 20 2011 Archived from the original on October 22 2011 Retrieved October 20 2011 Noble Jonathan October 17 2011 Tony Kanaan and Will Power pull out of all star Surfers race Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 O Leary Jamie Strang Simon October 18 2011 Sam Schmidt could close team following Dan Wheldon s death Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 Newton David October 20 2011 Wheldon tribute in works at Talladega ESPN ESPN Internet Ventures Archived from the original on October 13 2013 Retrieved January 12 2014 IndyCar NASCAR drivers to display Dan Wheldon tribute decals at Talladega Autoweek October 20 2011 Archived from the original on December 27 2011 Retrieved January 12 2014 The Racer s Group October 21 2011 TRG Motorsports to field two cars at Talladega II Motorsport Archived from the original on January 13 2014 Retrieved January 12 2014 a b Cavin Curt January 6 2012 IndyCar season may conclude in Fort Lauderdale The Indianapolis Star Karen Crotchfelt Gannett Company Archived from the original on January 9 2012 Retrieved January 9 2012 IndyCar will not race at Las Vegas in 2012 after Dan Wheldon s fatal crash Autosport Haymarket Publications December 9 2011 Archived from the original on January 7 2012 Retrieved December 9 2011 IndyCar won t race Las Vegas in 12 ESPN ESPN Internet Ventures Associated Press December 8 2011 Archived from the original on August 19 2021 Retrieved December 9 2011 IndyCar Single file restarts to return standing starts next Autoweek Crain Communications February 13 2012 Archived from the original on February 15 2015 Retrieved February 13 2015 Mike Conway I ve had a few big ones and I m lucky to be here today The Independent March 23 2013 Retrieved December 30 2023 a b Francis Enjoli October 17 2011 Crowded Track Young Drivers Factor in Fatal Indy Crash Expert Says ABC News American Broadcasting Company Archived from the original on October 18 2011 Retrieved October 17 2011 Will Power says Las Vegas race was a recipe for disaster Autosport Haymarket Publications October 19 2011 Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved October 19 2011 Martin Bruce October 17 2011 Changes to IndyCar need to be made following Wheldon s death CNN Sports Illustrated Time Inc Archived from the original on February 3 2013 Retrieved October 28 2011 Strang Simon October 18 2011 Las Vegas boss defends venue in aftermath of Wheldon accident Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on July 22 2015 Retrieved October 19 2011 a b Jody Scheckter wants son to quit IndyCar after Dan Wheldon s death BBC Sport BBC October 17 2011 Archived from the original on December 17 2014 Retrieved October 18 2011 Mejia Diego October 17 2011 Jimmie Johnson thinks IndyCar should quit racing on ovals Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 19 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 Miller Robin October 19 2011 Jimmie Johnson clarifies his oval racing statements SPEEDTV com Speed Archived from the original on June 10 2012 Retrieved October 20 2011 Bradley Charles October 18 2011 Mario Andretti says Dan Wheldon s fatal Indycar crash was freakish one off Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 Noble Jonathan October 20 2011 Mosley says IndyCar should take calm approach to Wheldon investigation Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 21 2011 Retrieved October 20 2011 Richards Giles October 18 2011 Dan Wheldon s death puts cockpits back on the agenda in F1 The Guardian Archived from the original on October 1 2015 Retrieved October 20 2011 Race Car Driver Says Las Vegas Track Was Too Dangerous Inside Edition CBS Television Distribution October 18 2011 Archived from the original on December 28 2013 Retrieved October 19 2011 Martin Bruce March 3 2011 Bernard hopes 5 million challenge can renew interest in IndyCar Sports Illustrated Time Inc Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 The only NASCAR driver so far who expressed interest is former Champ Car Series driver A J Allmendinger Drivers saw dangers in IndyCar finale Fox Sports October 16 2011 Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 Kimi Raikkosta houkuteltiin kohtalokkaaseen kisaan Kimi Raikkonen lured into a fateful contest Ilta Sanomat in Finnish Sanoma October 18 2011 Archived from the original on October 23 2014 Retrieved October 25 2014 a b Glendenning Mark December 15 2011 Indycar confirms contact with fence pole caused Dan Wheldon s death at Las Vegas Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on January 7 2012 Retrieved December 16 2011 a b Strang Simon October 19 2011 FIA to assist IndyCar Series in its investigation into Dan Wheldon s death Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 20 2011 Retrieved October 19 2011 Glendenning Mark December 15 2011 IndyCar s Barnhart says Las Vegas banking not to blame for Wheldon s accident Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on July 21 2015 Retrieved December 16 2011 2011 Las Vegas Accident Investigation PDF CNN Sports Illustrated Brickyard com IMS LLC December 15 2011 Archived from the original PDF on February 25 2013 Retrieved January 1 2012 Morales Robert April 6 2017 James Hinchcliffe recalls near fatal crash at Indy 500 Los Angeles Daily News Retrieved August 19 2021 DiZinno Tony June 28 2015 DiZinno IndyCar s Double Edged Sword in Fontana NBC Sports Archived from the original on February 9 2019 Retrieved April 15 2018 DeZinno Tony June 11 2017 IndyCar field brings pack race term back to vernacular at Texas NBC Sports Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Retrieved September 23 2017 Noble Jonathan July 27 2017 Refusing Halo would be ignorant and stupid Vettel Motorsport com Motorsport Network Archived from the original on October 24 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 Tucker Heather February 16 2016 AJ Allmendinger I ll never race open cockpit again USA Today Gannett Company Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 FIA July 19 2017 Halo protection system to be introduced for 2018 Formula1 com Formula One World Championship Limited Archived from the original on November 29 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 Kalinauckas Alex August 31 2017 Formula 2 unveils 2018 car with Halo Motorsport com Motorsport Network Archived from the original on October 24 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 Errington Tom October 19 2017 United States F3 series launched 2018 car revealed with halo Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 25 2017 Retrieved October 24 2017 Edmondson Laurence January 30 2018 Formula E reveals next generation car with Halo ESPN com ESPN Internet Ventures Archived from the original on April 16 2018 Retrieved April 15 2018 The Aeroscreen permanent dead link Official Site of Indycar Retrieved 2020 08 01 Video Dario Franchitti involved in horrific crash at IndyCar race in Houston Autoweek Crain Communications October 5 2013 Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Frame by frame Scott Dixon s insane crash at the Indy 500 Motorsport com Motorsport Network May 30 2017 Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Robinson Mark August 2 2017 Test Drivers Like Exposed Rear Tires on Universal Aero Kit IndyCar com Brickyard Trademarks Inc Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Malshar David September 20 2017 Awesome 2018 IndyCar aerokit will improve racing says Servia Motorsport com Motorsport Network Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved February 16 2018 Kantowski Ron October 16 2021 Dan Wheldon s fatal crash at LVMS recalled 10 years later Las Vegas Review Journal LaVRJ Retrieved October 25 2021 NYeoman October 16 2022 Here s to remembering legends and creating better memories on October 16th Tweet via Twitter Polimove Wins the Autonomous Challenge at CES Making History as the First Head To Head Autonomous Racecar Competition Champion Indy Autonomous Challenge Retrieved March 1 2023 PoliMOVE Wins the Autonomous Challenge CES 2023 Setting a New Autonomous Speed World Record for a Racetrack Indy Autonomous Challenge IMS Retrieved March 1 2023 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championships qualifying results Racing Reference Fox Sports Digital Archived from the original on November 4 2014 Retrieved October 26 2014 Strang Simon October 15 2011 Buddy Rice sent to back of Vegas grid after penalty Autosport Haymarket Publications Archived from the original on October 17 2011 Retrieved October 18 2011 IZOD IndyCar Series standings for 2011 Racing Reference Fox Sports Digital Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved February 20 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship Presented by Honda of Las Vegas Previous race 2011 Kentucky Indy 300 IndyCar Series2011 season Next race 2012 Honda Grand Prix of St PetersburgPrevious race 2010 Cafes do Brasil Indy 300Homestead Miami Speedway INDYCAR World Championship Denotes final race of season naming convention adopted in 2011 Next race 2012 MAVTV 500 IndyCar World Championships Auto Club Speedway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2011 IZOD IndyCar World Championship amp oldid 1216804751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.