Sebastien Bourdais was injured in the lone incident in qualifying

Signage for the 101st Indianapolis 500 along pit lane — Photo by: Chris Owens

Four-time Indy car champion Sebastien Bourdais was involved in the lone incident of qualifying when he lost control of his No. 18 GEICO Honda, which made hard contact with the SAFER Barrier in Turn 2. Bourdais had completed the fastest two laps of qualifying until the incident on the third lap. The Dale Coyne Racing driver was transported to IU Health Methodist Hospital where, according to
Dr. Geoffrey Billows, INDYCAR medical director, he was diagnosed with multiple fractures to his pelvis and a fracture to his right hip.

“Sebastien is in good hands here at IU Methodist Hospital with the staff and now we just wait for him to recover,” said team owner Dale Coyne.

Bourdais was scheduled to undergo surgery on the pelvis tonight. INDYCAR will release updates on Bourdais’ condition when they become available.

Medical update on driver Sebastien Bourdais

INDIANAPOLIS (Sunday, May 21, 2017) – Verizon IndyCar Series driver Sebastien Bourdais underwent successful surgery Saturday night for pelvic injuries he sustained while attempting to qualify for the 101st Running of the Indianapolis 500 Mile Race.

The Dale Coyne Racing driver sustained multiple fractures to his pelvis and a fracture to his right hip in the incident Saturday.

“Surgery went well,” INDYCAR Medical Director Dr. Geoffrey Billows said. “I’ve met with Sebastien this morning and he was doing even better than I expected.” Additional updates on Bourdais’ condition will be released when available.

Statement from Sebastien Bourdais, Dale Coyne Racing driver

INDIANAPOLIS (Sunday, May 21, 2017) – The following is a statement from Dale Coyne Racing driver Sebastien Bourdais, who sustained multiple pelvic fractures and a fractured right hip in an incident during qualifying Saturday for the 101st Running of the Indianapolis 500 Mile Race. Bourdais underwent surgery Saturday night and is recovering at IU Health Methodist Hospital.

“I want to thank everybody for the support and the messages, quite a few drivers have already dropped by. It’s going to take time, but I’m feeling pretty good since the surgery. I’ll be back at some point. Just don’t know when yet!”

Carpenter leads first-day qualifying for 101st Indianapolis 500

INDIANAPOLIS (Saturday, May 20, 2017) – Ed Carpenter once again displayed his prowess on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval, leading first-day qualifying for the 101st Indianapolis 500 presented
by PennGrade Motor Oil.

The team owner/driver posted a four-lap qualifying run at 230.468 mph in the No. 20 Fuzzy’s Vodka Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet to lead 31 drivers who completed attempts. Carpenter and the next eight fastest qualifiers from today advance to Sunday’s Fast Nine Shootout that will determine the Verizon P1 Award pole sitter for the epic race on May 28.

“It feels like 2013 right now,” said Carpenter, who won the Indianapolis 500 pole in 2013 and ’14. “I wasn’t expecting that. I thought I could run a 230 (lap), but not four of them. Thanks to Chevrolet for giving me a good bullet and for making the best aero out here right now.”

Joining Carpenter in the Fast Nine Shootout will be Takuma Sato, Scott Dixon, JR Hildebrand, reigning Indy 500 winner Alexander Rossi, Will Power, Fernando Alonso, Tony Kanaan and Marco Andretti.

Amazon Prime models welcome media members to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway — Photo by: David Yowe

101st INDIANAPOLIS 500: First-day qualifying results

Sato benefited from being the last of six Andretti Autosport drivers to qualify, taking his teammates’ input and putting four laps together at an average speed of 230.382 mph in the No. 26 Andretti Autosport Honda. The 40-year-old veteran’s run missed out on top honors by less than six-hundredths of a second.

“It was great, the car was working good,” Sato said. “Usually lapping through the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for qualifying, I’m not enjoying. But the car was very, very stable. I was starting to really enjoy after Turn 1 and the green-flag lap. Very free off the corner, so I think the car was really good. Tremendous support from all the team effort.”

Dixon, the 2008 Indy 500 winner, was eighth in line to qualify, putting together four laps at 230.333 mph despite sunshine bathing the track. Later attempts were run under cloudy skies.

“I think we were in the tougher kind of conditions,” Dixon said. “The track temp was definitely very high when we did our attempt, the sun was out. We’re happy with our time and we’re pleased with the laps we ran. There is still tomorrow, of course, so doing the best we can on Sunday is what really matters.”

In his first oval-track qualifying attempt, two-time Formula One champion Alonso qualified seventh in the No. 29 McLaren-Honda-Andretti Honda.

“It gets stressful, it gets difficult, tricky,” Alonso said. “But at the same time, huge adrenaline when you cross the line (to conclude the run). Today was all about being in the fast nine. We did it and tomorrow is the real thing, so let’s see.”

Qualifying was delayed five hours after heavy rain saturated the 2.5-mile oval at the time the session was slated to begin. Rookie Ed Jones was among the early qualifiers after qualifying started and impressed with a four-lap run at 229.717 mph in the No. 18 Boy Scouts of America Honda for Dale Coyne Racing. Jones remained in the fast nine until Hildebrand, the next-to-last qualifier,
completed a run at 230.205 mph in the No. 21 Preferred Freezer Service Chevrolet that put the Ed Carpenter Racing driver in the fourth spot.

Jones slipped to 10th on today’s qualifying chart, meaning he will be the final driver to make an attempt in Group 1 qualifying Sunday to determine race starting positions 10-33. All times from first-day qualifying are erased and drivers in Group 1 will each make a single attempt in reverse order of where they qualified today. That sessions runs from 2:45-4:45 p.m. ET.

The Fast Nine Shootout follows from 5-5:45 p.m. Also with times from first-day qualifying erased, drivers will each make a four-lap attempt in the reverse order of where they finished today to decide the pole winner. Verizon IndyCar Series championship points are also on the line in qualifying, ranging from 42 to the pole winner down to one point for the 33rd-fastest qualifier.

 

Second-day qualifying airs from 2:30-4 p.m. ET Sunday on WatchESPN and from 4-6 p.m. on ABC. The 101st Indianapolis 500 airs live at 11 a.m. May 28 on ABC and the Advance Auto Parts INDYCAR Radio Network.

IndyCar
http://www.indycar.com/
Graphics & Photos Courtesy of Indycar

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