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To the last drop: Rossi wins Indy 500 on fumes
- Updated: May 29, 2016
6:51 PM ET
INDIANAPOLIS — A new era for the Indianapolis 500 arrived in the form of a most unfamiliar driver.
An American, no less.
Alexander Rossi outlasted his faster rivals — and his fuel tank — for a stunning victory Sunday in the historic 100th running of “The Greatest Spectacle In Racing.” The unlikely win allowed the long-suffering Andretti family to celebrate in the biggest race of their storied careers and it left the top drivers in the field fuming over Rossi’s good fortune.
Editor’s PicksOreovicz: Alexander Rossi’s Indy 500 win took teamwork
One team owner came up with the strategy, while another figured it was worth the risk. But it was rookie Alexander Rossi who worked the fuel-mileage game to perfection to win the Indy 500.
McGee: Don’t blame Alexander Rossi for winning the Indy 500
It’s OK if you didn’t know who Alexander Rossi was before he won Sunday’s Indy 500. It’s OK if you though the finish was a letdown. Ryan McGee’s take? We are all spoiled rotten.
Montoya out of Indy 500 after crash on lap 64
Juan Pablo Montoya’s quest to become a three-time winner of the Indianapolis 500 ended in the Turn 2 wall Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
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Rossi was a 66-to-1 long shot and certainly not the driver anyone would have picked to win. But the 24-year-old Californian used fuel strategy to outsmart a handful of drivers who had the most dominant cars in the race.
Rossi stretched his final tank of gas 90 miles to cycle into the lead as others had to duck into the pits for a splash of fuel in the waning laps. He was sputtering on the final lap, working his clutch and getting screamed at by team co-owner Bryan Herta to conserve fuel, and he ultimately ran out of gas after taking the checkered flag.
His victory celebration came only after his Honda was towed to the party. He sat in the car for some time before climbing out to take that sweet sip of milk.
“I have no idea how we pulled that off,” he declared.
“I really was focused on taking it one lap at a time,” Rossi said. “The emotional roller-coaster of this race is ridiculous. There were moments I was really stoked, really heartbroken, really stoked. I was like, ‘Wow, I’ll need to see a psychiatrist after this.'”
Rossi didn’t have the speed of Carlos Munoz, who was charging hard over the final 50 miles. But Munoz also had to stop for gas and didn’t have a chance to race his teammate for the victory, even though Rossi was running on fumes and …
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