Indianapolis, IN
The best seat at the Indianapolis 500? I went out and found it
SPEEDWAY, Ind. — It’s 6:01 a.m. and the cannons are booming at 16th and Georgetown, startling most from their sleep. Some are sprawled out in the back of pickup trucks, others on cots. My head is ringing. Twelve hours after enjoying the westside delicacy that is Mug-N-Bun pizza, breakfast is on its way: sausage links fried up on a George Foreman grill, washed down by whatever Miller Lites survived an overly ambitious Saturday tailgate.
This is how Bryan Grangier and his crew do the Indianapolis 500: Race weekend has started in the same parking lot for the better part of 40 years, a church that sits a few blocks from Indianapolis Motor Speedway. In his younger days, Grangier would spend the night before the race passed out on the sidewalk or on the hood of his car. The cannons, he came to learn, doubled as an alarm clock. There was no need for a snooze button.
For Hoosiers, this is our Christmas, this wonderful and uniquely Indiana tradition that’s been embedded in our DNA, passed from one generation to the next like a rite of passage. As far as we’re concerned, nothing else happens on Memorial Day weekend. Friends are wise not to schedule weddings that conflict; it’s never fun to tell them their nuptials take a back seat to an automobile race the locals can’t even watch live on TV.
Grangier’s missed just two races since his first in 1975, and both absences bother him all these years later: In 1987, his wife had an appendectomy — “How’s that for timing?” he shrugs — and in 1996, he refused to go, so irate at the open-wheel racing split that he sold his tickets, bought a six-pack of beer and went fishing instead, refusing to even flip on the radio.
He was back a year later.
For the die-hards like the 63-year-old Grangier, it’s “the race” and not the 500, “the track” instead of the Speedway. It’s not a day, not a week, but a month of buildup and anticipation, a celebration of American ingenuity and Hoosier hospitality. It’s the biggest family reunion on the planet. Across the city, “WELCOME RACE FANS” banners are unfurled after 11 months in the garage and hung on fences. Checkered flags line the sidewalks of neighborhoods from Greenwood up to Noblesville. Fans identify themselves by the turn they sit in.
For a decade-plus, I took in the Indy 500 from the spacious, air-conditioned media center that lines the home stretch; it’s a pretty enticing vantage point if you don’t mind missing out on the authenticity of a truly authentic spectacle. But it’s eerily quiet in there. Most watch on the flat-screen TVs that hang above the desks while the cars roar past.
All the while, there was this thought in the back of my head, gnawing at me a little more as the years passed: This race wasn’t meant to be watched inside.
Or on a TV.
Or quietly, for that matter.
This is a race that needs to be felt. Both vocally and viscerally.
Like it was when I was growing up, tagging along with Dad to Turn 2, grabbing a copy of The Indianapolis Star in the morning and picking out the driver I wanted to win.
There’s just something about sitting in the stands, cooler packed, nerves climbing, roars coming. There’s just something about hearing “Back Home Again …” with 300,000 friends standing in every direction, as far as the eyes can see. You don’t get that in the media center.
So this year, I decided to forget the press badge. For the first time in 12 years, I decided to watch the race from where it’s meant to be watched.
Here’s what it was like:
7:18 a.m.: It’s race morning, but the effects of Saturday are lingering. Progress is slow. Speedway is quiet, a sleepy town of 13,000 that’s about to — for a wild few hours — transform into the second-biggest city in the state of Indiana. Over a quarter-million people are on their way. Save for the COVID-19-marred year of 2020, when the race was held inside an empty IMS, this is where so many of them have spent every Sunday of Memorial Day weekend their entire adult lives.
Where progress isn’t slow is the Coke Lot, where sleep and proper hydration are optional. Music thumps. Horns blare. The energy is palpable, and the place is buzzing. I wonder how many will make it to see the end of the race.
Heck, some might not even see the start of the race.
8:48 a.m.: Driver picks. From the parking lot of the church, our group debates the favorites, logical and sentimental. Can Alex Palou sweep the month of May, winning the Grand Prix, the 500 pole and the race itself?
Alexander Rossi is a popular one. Takuma Sato. Scott Dixon. Locals Ed Carpenter and Conor Daly. And, of course, Tony Kanaan, who’s making his last of 22 Indianapolis starts. I side with Kanaan for the simple fact I often see him during drop-off at our kids’ school, and there’s just something that makes me chuckle about one of the best open-wheel drivers of his generation speeding off in a minivan.
9:23 a.m.: How many sporting venues open their gates and allow spectators on the field or court before the start? Imagine fans strolling across the infield a few hours before the World Series, hanging out at Centre Court at Wimbledon or taking photos at the 50-yard-line before the Super Bowl.
Even three hours before the green flag is first waved, the electricity is palpable. The yard of bricks is the place to be.
It speaks to this event’s versatility; it is a deeply communal race while also being an intensely personal one. The city and state have made it Indiana’s own. But each fan has their own story, their own seats, their own traditions.
So do those who are a part of it. Leigh Diffey, who calls the race on NBC, always finds a break in his race-day schedule to sneak in a few quiet moments on the yard of bricks. He’ll chat with a few “yellow shirts” — that’s what volunteers are called around here — and soak it all in, the opportunity at hand. It was 28 years ago he quit his job as a PE teacher in Queensland, Australia, to pursue a career in sportscasting.
For him and his team, this is the ultimate stage.
“You never forget the first time you stood in a corner and watch an IndyCar take one of the four turns at speed,” Diffey said this week. “You don’t know whether to giggle or be afraid.
“It doesn’t matter what anybody says,” he continued, “there is nothing like this event on the planet.”
10:44 a.m.: Walk toward the Snake Pit.
10:46 a.m.: Walk away from the Snake Pit.
11:01 a.m.: The sights. The 500 is a smorgasbord of style. Common sense ceases to matter. So does decorum. Mullets are not only acceptable but encouraged. Jorts are standard fare and have been for decades. One man is selling T-shirts that read, “B—, it’s race day.” Clever.
You don’t see those in the media center.
For a few hours, this place might be the single-greatest people-watching venue on the planet. The entertainment is endless.
11:49 a.m.: The smells. Those who’ve trekked to Indy know the scent, an amalgam of God knows what — asphalt and gasoline and light beer and nicotine and sunscreen and every type of fried food imaginable, all of it mixed with endless, endless, endless streams of people, plenty of whom have seemed to forget the whole personal hygiene route this weekend.
For better or worse, there’s nothing like it.
12:23 p.m.: It’s hitting me more and more as the pre-race festivities roll on how much better it is to experience these from the stands. There’s nothing like the buildup before the 500. It starts with “God Bless America” and continues with another stirring rendition of “Back Home Again in Indiana” from Jim Cornelison. The drivers are on the grid, and as the pageantry fades, the nerves rise.
The fans can feel it.
It’s almost time.
Diffey’s NBC broadcast teammate, Dale Earnhardt Jr., grew up the son of NASCAR royalty, believing the Daytona 500 was the ultimate when it came to motor racing in this country.
In his mind, one trip to Indianapolis changed that.
“Going through the traditional process of the pre-race leading right up to the moment the drivers kind of shoo everybody away from the cars and the drivers get in, I had seen nothing like that,” Earnhardt Jr. said this week. “I had never been around anything like that in motorsports.”
Then when he witnessed 33 cars topping out at 220 miles an hour?
“It looked like jet fighters floating right across the top of the racetrack.”
12:42 p.m.: The sounds. For my money, there’s no better sound in sports than an IndyCar zipping around the track at top speed. It’s a feeling that creeps up your spine and reverberates throughout your entire body. It stays with you. For Hoosiers, it reminds them of home.
I ask Grangier’s wife, Rhonda, how loud it gets when the green flag drops and the cars are 20 feet in front of us.
“Well,” she said with a smile, “we don’t do much talking.”
12:45 p.m.: Green flag!
From Stand E, Box 16, Seat 1, this is the thought that jumps to the front of my mind: I do not miss watching this race from the media center one bit.
This is how this race should be experienced.
12:46 p.m.: Uh-oh. Graham Rahal, starting at the back of the pack, is having some trouble. Apparently, he has a dead battery.
Make a mental note: A proper working battery is useful before covering 500 miles in a little over 2 1/2 hours.
1:01 p.m.: Lunch happens to be double-fried chicken. Heavenly.
1:29 p.m.: Nearly 60 laps in and no signs of a caution flag. Will this be the shortest race in history?
A good line from public address announcer Dave Calabro as he scans the masses: “Does anyone in the Snake Pit know the race has even started?”
I once asked Calabro what it was like, serving as the voice — and eyes — for a quarter-million fans for almost four straight hours.
“You can’t screw it up,” he said with a laugh.
1:52 p.m.: After 90 laps of green to start, the race’s first crash. Rookie Sting Ray Robb — yes, that’s his real name — is out just before halfway.
2:06 p.m.: A four-wide restart. Incredible. It feels like this should be illegal.
2:16 p.m.: One of the most daring passes of the entire race: Kanaan slides past Scott McLaughlin on the backstretch by skidding all four tires through the grass. Not sure I’ve ever seen that before here.
2:20 p.m.: A storyline to watch is emerging: Conor Daly, the stepson of IMS president Doug Boles, is climbing the field, and climbing fast. He’s running sixth, and a victory would make him the first Hoosier native to win this race since Wilbur Shaw did so for a third time in 1940.
3:10 p.m.: A surreal scene: With less than 20 laps to go, Felix Rosenqvist, who started third and had been running near the front all afternoon, spins out right in front of us, between turns 1 and 2, colliding with Kyle Kirkwood’s pink No. 27 car.
The impact loosened Kirkwood’s back left tire, ricocheting it over the catch fence and … into the stands?
No. Luckily. Thankfully. The tire missed the bleachers, careening between the Turn 2 grandstands and a row of suites. A white Chevy Cruze took the brunt of the impact, a far cry from a similar instance 36 years earlier when a tire wobbled loose from one car and smacked into another, soaring skyward and into the top row of the K grandstands. That’s where it collided with a Wisconsin man named Lyle Kurtenbach, killing him in an instant. His death remains the last spectator death at the Indianapolis 500.
“It looked like a flying saucer,” one witness said that day. “There was no time to think.”
There wasn’t Sunday, either, when Kirkwood’s Firestone Firehawk skied over the catch fence.
I spoke with Kurtenbach’s widow, Karen, for a story five years ago, and she came to mind after Sunday’s scare.
To this day she’s never watched or listened to another automobile race.
3:35 p.m.: A chaotic restart with nine laps to go features three-wide, with Pato O’Ward, defending champ Marcus Ericsson and Josef Newgarden warring at the front. Another former champ, Rossi, lurks in fourth, waiting for an opening.
This is getting good.
3:39 p.m.: O’Ward won’t wait. He goes for it. He crashes.
It’s the second red flag in a matter of minutes.
The drivers will restart with five to go.
3:45 p.m.: Another restart, another crash!
This time, it was Carpenter’s day that came to an end.
The result: another red flag, the third of the race — all coming across the final 16 laps.
The crowd in Stand E roars in approval. No one wants this ending under yellow-flagged caution. They’ll restart with a single lap remaining, a 2.5-mile shootout to decide the 107th running of the Indianapolis 500.
One lap, with immortality on the line.
Either Ericsson wins his second straight, or Newgarden earns his spot on the Borg-Warner Trophy.
Fair or not — Ericsson will vent afterward he didn’t feel it was the right thing to do — the drama is undeniable. Not a fan around us is in a seat. Hearts are racing.
3:49 p.m.: What a gamble.
What a race.
What a finish.
Newgarden stalks his prey like a lion in the wilderness, waiting … waiting … then pouncing, slipping past Ericsson on the high side of the backstretch, then weaving all over the track to protect his lead — right, left, right, left, right, left. Back and forth, all the way down the front stretch, toward the yard of bricks and the checkered flag.
On the TV broadcast, Diffey seizes his moment.
“JOSEF NEWGARDEN!” he screams, almost losing his voice. “IS THIS THE MOMENT WHEN THE PAIN ENDS?”
It was.
He’d done it.
Newgarden pumps his fists. His team jumps up and down in pit road. His wife keels over and fights back tears.
For a driver, nothing changes your life like winning the Indianapolis 500.
One victory lap was enough. Newgarden wanted out. He wanted to celebrate with the people. He slid down the home stretch, leaped from his No. 2 Shell Chevrolet, snuck through a hole in the netting and hopped a wall.
A man of the people!
Josef Newgarden goes INTO THE CROWD to celebrate his Indy 500 victory! #INDY500 pic.twitter.com/1mBUzoMSfH
— INDYCAR on NBC (@IndyCaronNBC) May 28, 2023
He pumped his fists. He high-fived fans. He climbed the bleachers, hugging strangers, roaring in excitement, letting the greatest triumph of his career wash over him.
And in that moment, it was clear: how much this place means to the drivers, and how much it means to so, so many more.
(Top photo of the view from Stand E, Box 16, Seat 1: Zak Keefer / The Athletic)
Indianapolis, IN
Colts Have an X-Factor for Lions’ Defense
The Indianapolis Colts (5-6) have arguably their toughest test of the 2024 season this Sunday as they host the Detroit Lions (9-1) at 1:00 p.m. E.T. at Lucas Oil Stadium.
The Lions are revered as one of the best teams in the NFL, but it’s important to find out more about them ahead of time beyond what’s commonly known nationally. Are there areas the Colts can take advantage of to provide fans some hope, or are the Lions the giants they are perceived to be?
This week, Horseshoe Huddle exchanged questions with John Maakaron of Detroit Lions On SI to uncover more. Check out HH‘s answers for Lions On SI here!
HH: Jared Goff is playing out of his mind this year. What do you think is the biggest thing that Ben Johnson and Goff are leaning into to reach that level of efficiency?
JM: The Lions have placed an emphasis on taking care of the ball, and outside of the game against Houston, Goff has been very good at that. That’s not to say that he only makes safe throws, as the veteran quarterback has pushed the ball downfield as well. He also has several talented route runners around him, as they are able to beat coverages and get open on what seems like every play. All of this adds up to Goff being able to put the ball wherever he wants it, whenever he wants it.
HH: Given the short distance and indoor playing facility, this probably won’t feel like a typical road game for the Lions, but how differently do they play on the road versus at home?
JM: The Lions’ fans have traveled very well over the last several seasons, and with Indianapolis being a relatively short distance away, it’s likely that many fans make the trip. The team feeds off the energy that its fan base provides, and the fans take pride in making road stadiums feel like Ford Field. As a result, the Lions have played with a little extra edge in their road games.
HH: Is there a weak link on that Lions offensive line?
JM: When everyone is healthy, the Lions’ offensive line is one of the best units in the league. There have been some struggles at points this season, but overall, the unit has been solid and has lived up to expectations. Taylor Decker had some struggles for a stretch but looked better after returning from injury last week. As a whole, there are few issues with the group, but pass protection can always be improved upon.
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HH: How is the Lions defense at defending the pass over the middle of the field?
JM: This is an area that the Colts can test on Sunday, as veteran linebacker Alex Anzalone will be out for the first of what is expected to be between six-to-eight weeks. Jack Campbell fits the physical profile of an ideal middle linebacker with his size, but has room to grow in coverage. Still, the safety tandem of Brian Branch and Kerby Joseph has been elite this season and will make throwing the ball difficult, particularly over the middle of the field where both often lurk.
HH: Who wins and why?
JM: The Lions are hoping to get their ninth consecutive win. The Colts present a unique challenge with Anthony Richardson’s rushing abilities, as well as the threat he presents with his arm. However, he has been mistake-prone, and Branch and Joseph feed off mistakes. On offense, Detroit has been able to run the ball effectively for most of the season regardless of opponent, and this opens up the passing game. Indianapolis challenges early, but the Lions make enough plays to win comfortably: Lions 35, Colts 17
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Indianapolis, IN
Lions Matchup Huge Opportunity for Colts’ Anthony Richardson
The Indianapolis Colts need everything they can to defeat the Detroit Lions at Lucas Oil Stadium tomorrow afternoon. While there are plenty of players to highlight in this cross-conference battle, all Colts fans’ eyes will be on quarterback Anthony Richardson and whether he can build on a solid week 11 victory. Bleacher Report‘s Brad Gagnon believes this game against the mighty Lions will be a big one for Richardson’s outlook.
Is the sudden resurgence of Anthony Richardson a sign of things to come or an aberrational performance from a dude who is talented enough to put those together on occasion? Sunday’s matchup with the Lions will be telling.
– Brad Gagnon | Bleacher Report
Richardson can’t let up with Detroit, as the Lions have an impressive 14 interceptions led by safeties Kerby Joseph (7 interceptions) and Brian Branch (4 interceptions). The Lions also boast a solid run defense, ranking 5th in the NFL with 94.8 yards allowed per contest. In short, while the Lions’ defense is exploitable without defensive end Aidan Hutchinson and linebacker Alex Anzalone, they still take the football away from reckless passers.
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How Richardson plays at home tomorrow against arguably the Super Bowl favorites will paint somewhat of a picture of what type of quarterback he can be. The Colts offense has great weapons like Jonathan Taylor, Josh Downs, Michael Pittman Jr., and Alec Pierce to help Richardson progress Shane Steichen’s attack. Still, it will need to be at 100mph to keep up with a scary Lions offense led by coordinator Ben Johnson and quarterback Jared Goff.
The Colts are still in the mix for a playoff hunt in the AFC but will probably see their toughest game of 2024 when Detroit visits the Circle City. The Lions’ brutalizing offense has put up 52 points on two occasions this year (Tennessee Titans and Jacksonville Jaguars), so the Colts can’t afford many miscues on offense or defense. However, Richardson’s performance will likely decide if the Colts are or aren’t in the game.
Want more Colts content? Check out the latest episode of the Horseshoe Huddle Podcast!
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Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis man leads class action lawsuits claiming rental discrimination
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — An Indianapolis man is leading two class action lawsuits, accusing two separate housing providers of discriminatory practices in their rental policies.
Marckus Williams and the Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana are suing Tricon Residential and Progress Residential, two nationwide housing providers that collectively managing more than 130,000 properties.
Williams tells I-Team 8 that he had long since served his time for a felony conviction, and even had his record expunged, when both housing providers denied his rental applications.
“This is not just me. This is an everyday thing for people who have felonies,” Williams said.
Williams says he’s changed since being convicted on drug charges in 2012. He now co-owns the Indy Fresh Market, a grocery built to serve an Indianapolis food desert.
“I did my time, I came home, I’m an advocate for the community,” Williams said.
Amy Nelson, the executive director of Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana, says the lawsuits are aimed at ending “blanket bans” on criminal and eviction history. The center advocates for applicants to be judged on a case-by-case basis.
“Past histories, past crimes should not always be continually held against us,” Nelson said. “People deserve second chances, particularly those who paid their debt to society.”
The housing center’s lawsuit against Progress alleges “arbitrary criminal history policies.”
It claims a Progress “blanket ban” on renting to people with felony convictions led to Black applicants being disqualified at a rate more than eight times than the proportion of white people disqualified, between 2012 and 2021.
The housing center says Tricon’s ban on renting to people with felonies disqualified Black applicants more than five times the amount of white applicants in the last seven years.
Tricon Residential told I-Team 8 in a statement, “Tricon Residential adheres to all fair housing laws and believes the allegations in this suit are baseless. We review resident applications fairly, ethically, and objectively, employing a ‘blind’ screening process not dissimilar from procedures used to review applicants for mortgages, apartment rentals, car leases, and credit cards.”
A spokesperson for Progress Residential said, “As a leading professional property manager, we are committed to promoting a fair and equitable screening process for all applicants. Although we do not comment on pending litigation, we take these allegations seriously and are currently reviewing the claims made in the lawsuit.”
Both class action lawsuits are still adding plaintiffs nationwide.
The housing center asks that anyone who believes they have experienced similar discrimination involving this company to contact them.
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