Indianapolis Motor Speedway (Speedway, Ind.) — Alexander Rossi hopes to race in the Indianapolis 500 this weekend despite undergoing outpatient procedures to his right ankle and a finger on his left hand for injuries suffered in a crash Monday afternoon.
ECR Racing, in a social media post, characterized the injuries as “minor” and said the 2016 Indy 500 winner “will continue to be evaluated with the full intent of participating in final practice on Friday.”
Rossi, who is set to start in the middle of the front row for the race, has no additional injuries, according to the team.
After a week void of incidents ahead of the Indianapolis 500, a brutal crash with Rossi and Pato O’Ward among those involved left two of the best cars in the field with severe damage.
Rossi, O’Ward and Romain Grosjean, who was also involved, got out of their cars without assistance.
“Man, we’re going so fast, and you know these cars are all on a knife’s edge — at least mine is — and that’s how you’ve got to run it if you want to be competitive,” O’Ward told me and other reporters after exiting the medical center. “And when you want to run there in the middle of the pack, these risks can happen. And it was just the wrong place, wrong time, and I’m just glad everybody involved is all right.”
Rossi was subject to several hard hits in the wreck, where he hit the wall, got two wheels off the ground and was later hit by a sliding O’Ward, who spun while trying to avoid the accident.
“I saw Rossi spinning, and it’s really tough to stop these cars especially in the middle of a corner when you smash the brake,” O’Ward said. “It’s obviously very heavy rearward [where the hybrid is located], and did not actually have a number of stopping energy with how all of us run the brakes.”
The identical factor occurred to Grosjean, whose automotive snapped when he tried to slam on the brakes.
“I needed to go right down to the left to keep away from the vehicles on the right-hand facet, and that was the very best level of G’s I needed to brake, decelerate — and slowing down, attempting to go left, it simply caught and spun,” Grosjean instructed me and different reporters. “S— occurs.”
Groups have been evaluating Monday whether or not they might restore the first vehicles over the subsequent few days with no monitor exercise till Friday — the final couple hours of observe earlier than the Indy 500 set for Sunday.
O’Ward and Rossi will each want backup vehicles to the race, however Indy 500 guidelines permit them to maintain their beginning place. Each groups are primarily based in Indianapolis and might do the preparation of the backup vehicles on the store forward of the subsequent on-track session, which will likely be Friday for the ultimate Indy 500 observe.
“I’ve had loads of hits right here, so I am going to be capable to get again in it identical to nothing occurred,” O’Ward stated. “And I do know my guys will be capable to substitute no matter it’s that is broken to be sure that we’re proper again the place we have been.”
This was the sixth observe of the Indy 500 weeks and the primary, together with qualifying Sunday, the place there was an accident.
Only a day earlier, when requested at his post-qualifying information convention why there weren’t any accidents, Rossi stated: “It is no simpler, I can promise you that. That was one of many more durable qualifying days I’ve had round right here.”
O’Ward indicated he didn’t really feel it was only a matter of time when there can be an accident.
“You’re by no means pondering of crashing. When you’re pondering of crashing, it may occur. There’s dangers that you’ll want to take note of once you do that — clearly, that is certainly one of them.
“Even earlier than the race, you’ll want to put your automotive in conditions that you’ll be racing it, as a result of in any other case then you do not actually get to work with regardless of the race goes to throw at you. It’s only a matter of typically not one thing that you just do, however another person had a difficulty, and also you’re only a passenger to the state of affairs.”
