Indy 500 rookies on opposite ends

Carlos Munoz, of Colombia, puts on his helmet as he prepares to drive during practice for the Indianapolis 500 auto race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Sunday, May 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
Carlos Munoz, of Colombia, puts on his helmet as he prepares to drive during practice for the Indianapolis 500 auto race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Sunday, May 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

97th Indianapolis 500 WHEN Sunday. Green flag at 11:12 a.m.

WHERE Indianapolis Motor Speedway TV ABC, pre-race coverage begins at 10 a.m.

DEFENDING CHAMPION Dario Franchitti ON THE POLE Ed Carpenter

INDIANAPOLIS - Carlos Munoz’s initiation to Indianapolis went relatively smoothly.

Conor Daly’s first week on the 2.5-mile oval was a little rougher.

Either way, the two 21-yearolds will find themselves at the same place Sunday, starting their engines for the biggest race in the IndyCar Series.

“It doesn’t really matter where you qualify, it’s still cool to be here,” Daly said Tuesday before the annual rookie luncheon at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

All four rookies - Munoz, Daly, AJ Allmendinger and Tristan Vautier - would agree.

But there’s almost nothing that compares to starting onthe front row as a rookie, which is what Munoz will do at the 97th running of the Indianapolis 500.

The last rookie driver to start on the front row was another Colombian, Juan Pablo Montoya, who qualified second in 2000 and dominated the race en route to his only Indy victory.

Munoz said he remembers it well. Back then, he was just a kid watching his childhood racing idol on TV and savoring every precious moment of a memorable victory that sent Colombians pouring into the streets. It was enough to convince Munoz then that he could one day follow in Montoya’s footsteps. He just never dreamed their paths would be so similar.

Like Montoya in 2000, Munoz came to the historic track with one of the big-name teams in American open wheel racing. Montoya drove for Chip Ganassi, Munoz is working for Michael Andretti.

Like Montoya in 2000, Munoz is the fastest rookie in the field with a qualifying speed of 228.342 mph.

Like Montoya in 2000, Munoz will start second, the middle of the front row.

And in Colombia, his ability to find speed certainly has raised expectations.

“Before coming here, my main goal was to the Indy Lights championship,” said Munoz, who has started on the front row of every Lights race. “Right now, I’m the championship leader, so I’m saying I have to win Indy Lights first and I’m not putting any pressure on me towin it [the 500].”

For Munoz, this May could not have gone any better.

He passed his rookie test on opening day. A little more than 24 hours later, he posted the fastest lap in practice. He spent the rest of the week near the top of the speed charts and when qualifying began Saturday, Munoz and his four better-known teammates - Marco Andretti, Canada’s James Hinchcliffe, defending series champ Ryan Hunter-Reay and Venezuela’s E.J. Viso - were all considered front-runners in the battle to win the pole. Somehow, Munoz wound up the top qualifier of the Andretti five after the nine-car pole shootout.

Daly’s month couldn’t have gone much worse.

The problems began after Daly missed the first two days of Indy practice so he could race in Spain. Then he returned to Indy late Sunday only to learn that someone had lost his luggage - a bag that included his protective HANS device. Fortunately, Marco Andretti gave his to Daly so he could pass rookie orientation.

Last Thursday, Daly got into real trouble when he sensed something wrong with his car. Suddenly, the car spun coming out of the first turn, sending him into the wall and skidding down the track between turns one and two with the car on its side.

It was the only practice crash of the month and it sent A.J. Foyt’s team scrambling to rebuild the car in time for qualifying.

The hard knocks still weren’t over for Daly, the son of a former Formula One driver, Indy starter and television racing analyst.

On Pole Day, Daly’s first lap was clocked at 221.528 mph, then dropped to 214.210 and then came puffs of smoke out of the rear end of his car. Again, Foyt’s team was scrambling, this time installing a new engine overnight to give Daly a chance to make the 33-car starting grid on Bump Day. Daly did just that with a four-lap average of 223.582, putting him on the inside of the 11th row.

For Daly, that was good enough.

“In the end, I finally got run in qualifying trim Sunday morning and then we decided just to get it in the show and not worry too much about the speed,” Daly said. “The crash was a big learning experience for me because I was able to feel how car was on the edge a little bit too far.”

Allmendinger, the 31-yearold who drove in NASCAR and Champ Car before coming to Indy, feels a little out of place around these young guys. But he’s not complaining. Allmendinger was the highest qualifier from Roger Penske’s team. He’ll start fifth, the middle of the second row after posting an average of 228.099.

“I look at these guys and think, ‘God, all these rookies they’re so young,’ ” Allmendinger said. “I guess maybe I’ll have to rely on youthful experience.”

Daly just hopes his luck changes Sunday. And Munoz hopes nothing changes at all.

“It means a lot, you know,” Munoz said when asked about being mentioned with Montoya. “I think we’ve had some great days, but I have to do a great job in the race also.”

Sports, Pages 19 on 05/22/2013

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