John Andretti, Jim Crawford, Billy Vukovich, Stan Fox, Gary Bettenhausen, Tony Bettenhausen, Scott Brayton , John Paul Jr & Also Rich Vogler (who was bumped) Rest in very wonderful peace guys. Thank you.
@@SN-nh6pq Huntington's disease. A rare, hereditary degenerative neurological disease that presents similarly to ALS & is always fatal. His mother suffered from it as well.
In the modern era of racing, yellows are the big factor in slowing the race down, more than the speed of the cars themselves. There's a reason this stood as "the fastest 500" for 23 years. In order to beat the speed record, you have to race fast, _and_ there can't be too many laps under yellow.
damn, this was my 2nd time watching the 1990 Indy 500 and this race went by FAST! What a drive by everyone who kept it clean and finished the race! Hate it for the ones that cold not finish, unfortunately. What a fast 500!
The 1990 Indianapolis 500 was won by Arie Luyendyk, who sported his Domino's Pizza sponsorship to win the fastest race in the 33-year history of the Greatest Spectacle in Auto Racing on Philippine Television. This race was jointly produced by SilverStar Communications, Inc. and Focal Media Arts, Inc. and aired live, nationwide, and via-satellite on New Vision 9 on May 28, 1990, as the race was hosted by the late Harry Gasser from the New Vision 9 NewsWatch, together with the PBA on Vintage Sports Television Panelists, the late Smokin' Joe Cantada (lap-by-lap) and the late Butch Maniego (color commentary) as commentators, alongside Ronnie Nathanielsz, Cathy Veloso-Santillan, Cielo Villaluna, and Dodie Lacuna as Pit Reporters, while the narrator of the intro and it's starting grid was Andy Santillan
One of my favorite little parts of this race is on the start when they go to the rearview camera on Bobby Rahal's car. I love to hear the sound of him coming up through the gearbox. It's 2019 when I'm writing this and I still love that sound!
these are by far my favorite indycars of all time, the sound and body style was so fantastic. The sound of those engines going by the side track camera is something ill always miss. The new cars dont have that amazing sound.
Must admit though. IndyCar is doing a better job of adhering to what their cars should be than anyone else... NASCAR Gen 7 is a turd on wheels, new F1 car leaves a lot to be desired but in fairness is much better than the old one, and Until we see the IMSA GT-P cars, the DPi's are losing a lot of momentum due to manufacturers pulling out of the current series...
I meet Arie at a Ballys Health Club in Phoenix Az in January 1991 8 months after his 500 win, couldn't believe it he looked like he was still walking on air i went right up to him and said great job!
In the 1990 Indianapolis 500, A.J. Foyt qualified in the 13th starting position with a four-lap average speed of 220.920 mph. However, he crashed out of the race on lap 116 and was credited with a 30th place finish. It's worth noting that A.J. Foyt is a legendary figure in the world of IndyCar racing, and he is the only driver to have won the Indianapolis 500, the Daytona 500, the 24 Hours of Daytona, and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. He is also a seven-time IndyCar champion and has won a total of 67 IndyCar races as a driver.
It is interesting to note that in the 1990 Daytona 500 and the 1990 Indy 500 both races were won by race car drivers that had never tasted victory before at the highest level... Derick Cope = Daytona 500 and Arie Luyendyk = Indy 500...
And it was to be a year of fast 500-mile races broadcast on network TV. The 1990 Daytona 500 averaged over 165 MPH, as it only had three caution periods, and the NASCAR race ABC did at Atlanta earlier that year was a harbinger for ABC's three biggest racing events of 1990, as that nearly ran caution-free, with Dale Earnhardt setting a race record by nearly 12 MPH. Then there was this race, in which Arie Luyendyk nearly broke Bill Elliott's all-time 500-mile record (which was never brought up in this broadcast) and broke the existing race record by more than 15 MPH, which was shades of the 1980 Daytona 500, and then Al Unser, Jr. won that year's Michigan 500 at an average of nearly 190 MPH, which did break Elliott's all-time 500-mile record by more than 3.5 MPH.
@@dougauzene8389 Jim McKay always had such reverence for "the human drama of athletic competition" that his words always lent weight to what the viewer was about to watch. I'm glad I was around to listen to those old narrations of big events and have them influence the way I view competition as an adult. None of these chest-thumping, disrespectful dick measuring contests of today. Just good honest may-the-best-man-win sportsmanship.
@@wellblowmedown7645 I was watching a 1989 race and Paul starts talking about how Porsche let him lap Teo Fabi's IndyCar around the Nurburgring! I had to rewind a couple of times to make sure I heard it correctly
Fun Fact, in the five 500-mile IndyCar races contested between 1989 and 1990, Emerson Fittipaldi had four poles (including this race) and led 587 of 1100 possible laps, or approx. 57% of all laps led, but only won one race in that timespan, the 1989 Indy 500.
Emerson was an incredible talent and IMO vastly underrated by the ABC crew. I swear they ALWAYS hyped up a mediocre run by Michael Andretti, the Unsers, Mears, or Mansell before alluding to the quality of a drive Emmo was putting in. He was incredibly competitive throughout his CART career. From 88=94 he was in a position to win every one of those races. He really could've easily been a 4 or 5 time indy winner in a very short period. I think Emmo and Mears really benefited a lot from each other from 90-92. On paper that was an incredible driver pairing. I just don't think the Penske cars were greatt in 90 and 91. Great stat you threw out there Randy. Thanks!
1:11:10, that was a hard hit. And it happened right in front of me. I was there, first row of turn 1, SW vista. I still remember the Screech....screech....screech of the tires as he spun past us.
Many people were surprised at the fact that Arie Luyendyk won it, but in retrospect, probably it shouldn't have been much of a surprise, given his team's record there and how well he always ran there, even prior to this race. This was the ninth and final Indianapolis 500 for Doug Shierson's team, and only three times did they finish worse than seventh (1982, '84-'85), and their finishes in the previous four Indianapolis 500s had been fifth in 1986, fourth in 1987, seventh in 1988, and third in 1989, nearly having victory land in their lap that year, despite a sick engine in the closing laps. And they'd even run in the top five for much of the 1983 race with Howdy Holmes, when Tom Sneva won. So they'd run up front a lot at Indy, and in 1990, finally having a car capable of running with the leaders, this win probably should not have been that big of a surprise after all.
They were always a strong contender maybe an underdog especially those days against Penske Galles Newman Haas Ganassi but Arie definitely had it at Indy
@@z71pack And the sign of a really strong team is that you could run up front, no matter who was driving the car, and Doug Shierson's team was just such a team. It didn't matter who drove their car, they were usually up front at some point in the race. Their best years were definitely when Al Unser, Jr. drove their car, but they won with Danny Sullivan, were competitive with Howdy Holmes and Raul Boesel, and then in 1990, won the big one with Arie Luyendyk. And certainly the depth of teams was strong in the 80s. Not only was there Penske, Newman-Haas, and Galles, but there was also Patrick Racing, Truesports, Kraco, Alex Morales' team that twice won the Michigan 500, and for a time, Bignotti-Cotter. And every once in a while, A.J. would still be capable of a surprise, even in his 50s.
Been watching Indycar the past couple of seasons, and the sport's the best it's been in 30 years. Still not on the level it was in the golden age, but well worth watching.
2:53:52 = It is funny how ABC picked up Emo on the national feed coming to the finish line and not Arie!! 2:53:56 = ABC got lucky they captured the win live... 2:54:32 = What a day for Doug Shierson (Last win as a car owner) Arie Luyendyk (First win of career) Lola (Last win for them at Indy as a chassis manufacture)
47:44 race start/green flag 59:42 yellow flag 1:04:05 2nd green flag 1:13:33 2nd yellow flag 1:20:26 3rd green flag 1:25:51 3rd yellow flag 1:35:16 4th green flag 2:18:32 4th yellow flag 2:22:42 5th green flag 2:33:55 end of the race
The one criticism I have of the TV Coverage of the Indy 500 from this era was the annoying way that they would cut to showing the Pit Commentators (e.g. Jack Arute) and driver wives instead of showing the action on the race track. By then, other ABC broadcasts were using insets in the upper-right to do similar thing for other sports - so it's inexplicable as to why ABC didn't use this technology for the 500.
Yeah, I remember watching this live. It was a gas on the big TV set with loud audio to compliment the moment. First time I ever saw that happen after watching the 500 since 1979 onwards. Wish that they would have let it go on for another lap though.
Hey Andrew question. Would It be okay if I downloaded this race on a DVD for my personal use. Because I used to have this Indy 500, The 1991 Indy 500 and the 1992 Indy 500 on Videotape
Pretty much missed this entire race due to events in my life(positive though). It was the week before I graduated from high school and between church services honoring the seniors that morning and the graduation open houses later that afternoon(and the record average speed of the race) I was only able to see a few laps of this race.
Watched this live in Bamberg, W. Germany. Battalion SDO (staff duty officer) came to our room wondering what all the fuss was about (nope, we weren't drunk). Warned us twice to keep it down. Moments after the finish, he was ready to have the tv removed, but declined once he realized it was over. lol
Anybody have an idea of what song that is at 9:11? I found some other race music that was used by Eurosport, but I've been looking for this one forever!!
ninguém merece aquilo que fizeram ao al.unser jr. no ano passado mas infelizmente temos muitos maus exemplos nas corridas no desporto automóvel em geral e desde que sou vivo nunca vi a fazer se justiça.
1:08:00 - 1:08:48 = Um, neat idea, bad execution.. Music was to loud.. The In Car to low. Would of been better had they just muted the in car entirely and went with just the music...
Personally I don't understand the need for music at all. Would much rather just hear the sound of the car without the commentary team talking over everything.
There is a whole section of this race missing around the 1-hour mark.This includes Danny Sullivan's crash and a couple laps of the ensuing yellow...One can watch it elsewhere on RUclips.I can't understand why it isn't on this video.I agree with some other posters that there were still too many stupid human interest stories for the casual viewer 28 years ago.It's exasperating for serious race fans.
Sam Posey and Bobby Unser use to get on my nerves with their constant disagreements. I really never thought it could get worse than that but now we have to listen to Mike Torico, Danica Patrick, Dale Jr. and Rutledge Wood. Jesus Christ!!!! I'd rather have Unser and Posey. RIP Bobby
She kept doing it for at least another 5-6 years and it was almost miraculous when she managed to get through it. The only reason she stopped (at which point her daughter, i.e. Tony George's mom, took over) was that she died.
Kind of a boring race -- first with Fittipaldi dominating then Rahahl and then Luyendyk... Weird how no commentary over several laps before last two laps...
they had a happen in that era to go stretches without commentary to let the action tell the story. the race coverage back then won sports emmy's for a reason.
John Andretti, Jim Crawford, Billy Vukovich, Stan Fox, Gary Bettenhausen, Tony Bettenhausen, Scott Brayton , John Paul Jr & Also Rich Vogler (who was bumped) Rest in very wonderful peace guys. Thank you.
what did john Paul jr die from?
I believe cancer
@@SN-nh6pq Huntington's disease. A rare, hereditary degenerative neurological disease that presents similarly to ALS & is always fatal. His mother suffered from it as well.
Al Unser too RIP LEGEND
@@Demetris.YiokkasBobby Unser also.
Not only was this a fast 500, but it was a clean race- only 26 laps under caution and just 2 crashes.
It was fast, but not reckless.
Yes exactly and the final laps tell the story little commentary just the cars and drivers telling the story
Three crashes, actually: Danny Sullivan, Pancho Carter, and John Andretti. Both Sullivan's and Carter's crashes were caused by wheel bearing failures.
In the modern era of racing, yellows are the big factor in slowing the race down, more than the speed of the cars themselves. There's a reason this stood as "the fastest 500" for 23 years. In order to beat the speed record, you have to race fast, _and_ there can't be too many laps under yellow.
The greatest TV team in IndyCar history! Paul, Bobby, Sam, Jack, Gary, and Dr. Punch.
don't forget jack arute and vince welch!
@@healthyone100 I mentioned Jack. I'd rather forget Vince.
OH man i really liked Vince!@@NotSteveCook
damn, this was my 2nd time watching the 1990 Indy 500 and this race went by FAST!
What a drive by everyone who kept it clean and finished the race! Hate it for the ones that cold not finish, unfortunately. What a fast 500!
The 1990 Indianapolis 500 was won by Arie Luyendyk, who sported his Domino's Pizza sponsorship to win the fastest race in the 33-year history of the Greatest Spectacle in Auto Racing on Philippine Television. This race was jointly produced by SilverStar Communications, Inc. and Focal Media Arts, Inc. and aired live, nationwide, and via-satellite on New Vision 9 on May 28, 1990, as the race was hosted by the late Harry Gasser from the New Vision 9 NewsWatch, together with the PBA on Vintage Sports Television Panelists, the late Smokin' Joe Cantada (lap-by-lap) and the late Butch Maniego (color commentary) as commentators, alongside Ronnie Nathanielsz, Cathy Veloso-Santillan, Cielo Villaluna, and Dodie Lacuna as Pit Reporters, while the narrator of the intro and it's starting grid was Andy Santillan
One of my favorite little parts of this race is on the start when they go to the rearview camera on Bobby Rahal's car. I love to hear the sound of him coming up through the gearbox. It's 2019 when I'm writing this and I still love that sound!
these are by far my favorite indycars of all time, the sound and body style was so fantastic. The sound of those engines going by the side track camera is something ill always miss. The new cars dont have that amazing sound.
Must admit though. IndyCar is doing a better job of adhering to what their cars should be than anyone else... NASCAR Gen 7 is a turd on wheels, new F1 car leaves a lot to be desired but in fairness is much better than the old one, and Until we see the IMSA GT-P cars, the DPi's are losing a lot of momentum due to manufacturers pulling out of the current series...
I meet Arie at a Ballys Health Club in Phoenix Az in January 1991 8 months after his 500 win, couldn't believe it he looked like he was still walking on air i went right up to him and said great job!
Man that pass Arie made on Bobby, what a great thing
A wonderful race with wonderful cars, times were good back then, thank fk I lived it all. AUG '22
Agreed 👍
In the 1990 Indianapolis 500, A.J. Foyt qualified in the 13th starting position with a four-lap average speed of 220.920 mph. However, he crashed out of the race on lap 116 and was credited with a 30th place finish.
It's worth noting that A.J. Foyt is a legendary figure in the world of IndyCar racing, and he is the only driver to have won the Indianapolis 500, the Daytona 500, the 24 Hours of Daytona, and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. He is also a seven-time IndyCar champion and has won a total of 67 IndyCar races as a driver.
1990. My favourite Indianapolis Indy 500 of all time apart from many others.
RIP John Paul Jr., John Andretti, and Gary Bettenhausen amongst others.
What did John Paul jr die from?
@@healthyone100 Huntington's Disease, the same neurological disease that made him retire about 20 years ago from endurance and sports car racing.
It is interesting to note that in the 1990 Daytona 500 and the 1990 Indy 500 both races were won by race car drivers that had never tasted victory before at the highest level... Derick Cope = Daytona 500 and Arie Luyendyk = Indy 500...
And it was to be a year of fast 500-mile races broadcast on network TV. The 1990 Daytona 500 averaged over 165 MPH, as it only had three caution periods, and the NASCAR race ABC did at Atlanta earlier that year was a harbinger for ABC's three biggest racing events of 1990, as that nearly ran caution-free, with Dale Earnhardt setting a race record by nearly 12 MPH. Then there was this race, in which Arie Luyendyk nearly broke Bill Elliott's all-time 500-mile record (which was never brought up in this broadcast) and broke the existing race record by more than 15 MPH, which was shades of the 1980 Daytona 500, and then Al Unser, Jr. won that year's Michigan 500 at an average of nearly 190 MPH, which did break Elliott's all-time 500-mile record by more than 3.5 MPH.
One of the great trouble free races ever.
Paul Page did the absolute best intros for the Indy 500
Jim McKay...& Paul Page, TYVVM! Be Well!
@@dougauzene8389 him him McKay yes. Paul's head got to big for what was inside of it. became a legend in his own mind , hell tell you himself
Passion.
@@dougauzene8389 Jim McKay always had such reverence for "the human drama of athletic competition" that his words always lent weight to what the viewer was about to watch. I'm glad I was around to listen to those old narrations of big events and have them influence the way I view competition as an adult.
None of these chest-thumping, disrespectful dick measuring contests of today. Just good honest may-the-best-man-win sportsmanship.
@@wellblowmedown7645 I was watching a 1989 race and Paul starts talking about how Porsche let him lap Teo Fabi's IndyCar around the Nurburgring! I had to rewind a couple of times to make sure I heard it correctly
Amazing how Al Jr's head is being buffeted.
Love the Domino's car this is a classic race for all the reasons, fast car.
If i had to win One, it would be the Indianapolis 500 your part of legendary track Forever. .
Fun Fact, in the five 500-mile IndyCar races contested between 1989 and 1990, Emerson Fittipaldi had four poles (including this race) and led 587 of 1100 possible laps, or approx. 57% of all laps led, but only won one race in that timespan, the 1989 Indy 500.
Emerson was an incredible talent and IMO vastly underrated by the ABC crew. I swear they ALWAYS hyped up a mediocre run by Michael Andretti, the Unsers, Mears, or Mansell before alluding to the quality of a drive Emmo was putting in. He was incredibly competitive throughout his CART career. From 88=94 he was in a position to win every one of those races. He really could've easily been a 4 or 5 time indy winner in a very short period. I think Emmo and Mears really benefited a lot from each other from 90-92. On paper that was an incredible driver pairing. I just don't think the Penske cars were greatt in 90 and 91. Great stat you threw out there Randy. Thanks!
@@erikcorredor255 he was the man of the hour at times. answered can F1 drivers compete in Indy car. why certainly!!
Emmo was awesome 2nd in 88 won 89 dominated 90 and I believe had the best car in 91 til the gearbox retainer snapped in the pits and 94 well?
1:08:00 Trance Music: *plays*
TV Audience: *Trips Balls* (❂‿❂)
1:11:10, that was a hard hit. And it happened right in front of me. I was there, first row of turn 1, SW vista. I still remember the Screech....screech....screech of the tires as he spun past us.
Many people were surprised at the fact that Arie Luyendyk won it, but in retrospect, probably it shouldn't have been much of a surprise, given his team's record there and how well he always ran there, even prior to this race.
This was the ninth and final Indianapolis 500 for Doug Shierson's team, and only three times did they finish worse than seventh (1982, '84-'85), and their finishes in the previous four Indianapolis 500s had been fifth in 1986, fourth in 1987, seventh in 1988, and third in 1989, nearly having victory land in their lap that year, despite a sick engine in the closing laps. And they'd even run in the top five for much of the 1983 race with Howdy Holmes, when Tom Sneva won. So they'd run up front a lot at Indy, and in 1990, finally having a car capable of running with the leaders, this win probably should not have been that big of a surprise after all.
They were always a strong contender maybe an underdog especially those days against Penske Galles Newman Haas Ganassi but Arie definitely had it at Indy
@@z71pack And the sign of a really strong team is that you could run up front, no matter who was driving the car, and Doug Shierson's team was just such a team. It didn't matter who drove their car, they were usually up front at some point in the race. Their best years were definitely when Al Unser, Jr. drove their car, but they won with Danny Sullivan, were competitive with Howdy Holmes and Raul Boesel, and then in 1990, won the big one with Arie Luyendyk.
And certainly the depth of teams was strong in the 80s. Not only was there Penske, Newman-Haas, and Galles, but there was also Patrick Racing, Truesports, Kraco, Alex Morales' team that twice won the Michigan 500, and for a time, Bignotti-Cotter. And every once in a while, A.J. would still be capable of a surprise, even in his 50s.
John Andretti RIP
Along with Billy Vukovich III, Scott Brayton, Tony Bettenhausen Jr, Stan Fox, Jim Crawford, and Gary Bettenhausen.
1:17:30 = greatest racing tow vehicle EVER!!
A shame that the audio is damged......otherwise, thank you for uploading!
Gary Jerrell, Jack Arute and Vince Welch the best pit reporters in indy history i miss those guys!
One of the greatest pace cars..EVER.
My friend baught it and is restoring it to new gunna look sick
Dr. A.J. Foyt (Hon.) tell me you ever thought you'd see that. That's Doctor SuperTex to you sir ;)
CART years of IndyCar BEST years of IndyCar!!
Been watching Indycar the past couple of seasons, and the sport's the best it's been in 30 years. Still not on the level it was in the golden age, but well worth watching.
16:36-17:12 NBC Sports music used there. (Most notably used in the intro to the 1990 Meadowlands race.)
Beautiful day and a great race.
damn, this race sounds so good in stereo!!
Damn their heads are moving...so much different without HANS and the cushions.
Mika is gorgeous!
proud to be dutch and see this! :D
Next dutch Indy 500 will be Max Verstappen eh?
@@homeperson11244 Most likely young Rinus van Kalmthout, if he gets up to speed on ovals.
2:53:52 = It is funny how ABC picked up Emo on the national feed coming to
the finish line and not Arie!!
2:53:56 = ABC got lucky they captured the win live...
2:54:32 = What a day for Doug Shierson (Last win as a car owner)
Arie Luyendyk (First win of career)
Lola (Last win for them at Indy as a chassis manufacture)
A entrada ta espectacular sem duvida!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
47:44 race start/green flag
59:42 yellow flag
1:04:05 2nd green flag
1:13:33 2nd yellow flag
1:20:26 3rd green flag
1:25:51 3rd yellow flag
1:35:16 4th green flag
2:18:32 4th yellow flag
2:22:42 5th green flag
2:33:55 end of the race
Little AL didn't lose the '89 race. He came in first in class and sportsmanship. Emmo just happened to take the checkered flag first.
That was a text book win!
11:49 spin and win
Fired it up John!
Paul Page and Delta Force. Man.....
The one criticism I have of the TV Coverage of the Indy 500 from this era was the annoying way that they would cut to showing the Pit Commentators (e.g. Jack Arute) and driver wives instead of showing the action on the race track. By then, other ABC broadcasts were using insets in the upper-right to do similar thing for other sports - so it's inexplicable as to why ABC didn't use this technology for the 500.
Not sure if anyone mentioned it but 6 different engine manufacturers in the race.
36:45 Back Home Again in Indiana 🎶
Jim Nabors (1930~2017)
by song, 1972~2015
11:15 eddie cheever is the 74th INDY 500 fastest rookie
2:50:54 - 2:52:40 = Wounder why the commentating crew went silent during
this period? No complaints though, love the pure sound
of Indy...
Yeah, I remember watching this live. It was a gas on the big TV set with loud audio to compliment the moment. First time I ever saw that happen after watching the 500 since 1979 onwards. Wish that they would have let it go on for another lap though.
1:53:11 for the indy 500 race to be official and if there is rain the leader has to complete 101 laps
Grabe! Nakuha ni Arie ang 1990 Indianapolis 500!
thank you
Disappointing that Sullivan's crash wasn't shown live. Way too many vignettes by ABC at expense of racing...
Sullivan's crash wasn't shown live because it happened during a commercial break
Hey Andrew question. Would It be okay if I downloaded this race on a DVD for my personal use. Because I used to have this Indy 500, The 1991 Indy 500 and the 1992 Indy 500 on Videotape
1:31:01 Beautiful and Wonderful Machine 👍
12:53 arie will put an end to that with a then race record for fastest average speed
One of the greatest wins in Indycar all time the Golden Age of Indycar
@@z71pack
Golden Age of Indycar is Over
Today, I am not see Indy500
Sound, Design, Speed all mess
Pretty much missed this entire race due to events in my life(positive though). It was the week before I graduated from high school and between church services honoring the seniors that morning and the graduation open houses later that afternoon(and the record average speed of the race) I was only able to see a few laps of this race.
Watched this live in Bamberg, W. Germany. Battalion SDO (staff duty officer) came to our room wondering what all the fuss was about (nope, we weren't drunk). Warned us twice to keep it down. Moments after the finish, he was ready to have the tv removed, but declined once he realized it was over. lol
Soon I'll post the race with the transmission in Portuguese, with the narration of the late Luciano do Valle.
What's the music used for the grid? It's awesome!
Space Flight - Rolf Wehmeier
Funny they mention the 1986 since it was Luyendyk’s crash which led to the yellow flag that helped Rahal win it
My late grandpappy’s 61st
This was a runaway win for Luyendyk.
Anybody have an idea of what song that is at 9:11? I found some other race music that was used by Eurosport, but I've been looking for this one forever!!
Space Flight - Rolf Wehmeier
I liked these years at Indy, and don't like the new cars at all.
Turbo charged V8 with the pop popoff valve were the greatest years of indycar/cart
Gotta be a rush to drive these cars.
Lmao Penske still looked old af in 1990
47:44 Race start 🟩
1:04:02
1:20:22
1:35:16
2:22:47
2:35:42 Arie Luyendyk
What happened to the audio?
12:54 He has never won an IndyCar race
*Wins Indianapolis 500 3 hours later*
Haha, gotta love the "Miami Vice Theme" knockoff song that is playing during the pre-race Time Trials segment.
A Holanda faz a festa do título do Max verstappen na formula 1
ninguém merece aquilo que fizeram ao al.unser jr. no ano passado mas infelizmente temos muitos maus exemplos nas corridas no desporto automóvel em geral e desde que sou vivo nunca vi a fazer se justiça.
9:11 you all wouldn’t happen to know what this song is?
Space Flight - Rolf Wehmeier
NASTY crashes back then.
Is that Paul Page or George Costanza??
Nowadays it's only close up camera coverage... you get to see nothing of the event.
26:10 the day before the race
12:53-12:56 Uh, oh. Was ABC and Paul Page trying to predict something there? LOLZ!
26:05 Dr. AJ Foyt.
Still the fastest Indy 500 in history ....31 years on.
Not true. Check 2013
@@heetseeker8017 You're right. Thanks for the correction.
And that record was broken this year at 190.360 MPH.
Helio 2021 190 maybe the greatest ever. TK broke it 187 in 2013
18:58
little al was always kinda distant in his interviews...
Is there anyway you can reupload this race? I know it seem's trivial but you are missing the first 41 seconds of the intro credits... thank you...
19:23
1:08:00 - 1:08:48 = Um, neat idea, bad execution.. Music was to loud.. The In
Car to low. Would of been better had they just muted the
in car entirely and went with just the music...
Personally I don't understand the need for music at all. Would much rather just hear the sound of the car without the commentary team talking over everything.
Jeez, Sam Posey's ramblings go absolutely nowhere.
I like the part where there is no sound. Which is all of it.
A Penske car should've won this race...
why?
+Raymond Dionne: Because 17 wins aren't enough apparently...
There is a whole section of this race missing around the 1-hour mark.This includes Danny Sullivan's crash and a couple laps of the ensuing yellow...One can watch it elsewhere on RUclips.I can't understand why it isn't on this video.I agree with some other posters that there were still too many stupid human interest stories for the casual viewer 28 years ago.It's exasperating for serious race fans.
"From across the sea?" Fiitipaldi came from Brasil --someone didn't know their geography. ; )
The Atlantic Ocean? Maybe the Caribbean?
Wifecam! Drink!
Yes, she's intent on the race. Amazing that. Yes, she's beautiful. You're overdoing it showing Arie Luyendyk's wife.
Sam Posey and Bobby Unser use to get on my nerves with their constant disagreements. I really never thought it could get worse than that but now we have to listen to Mike Torico, Danica Patrick, Dale Jr. and Rutledge Wood. Jesus Christ!!!! I'd rather have Unser and Posey. RIP Bobby
That’s the problem, these commentators act as if people are tuning in to hear them as opposed to watching the race
That doddery old biddy just about managed the command to start......lol
She kept doing it for at least another 5-6 years and it was almost miraculous when she managed to get through it. The only reason she stopped (at which point her daughter, i.e. Tony George's mom, took over) was that she died.
That's Tony Hulman's widow; show some respect.
@@NotSteveCook Thanks for the info. I'd never heard of him, but I have now.
Stick university testify date rail negotiation foreign await fund residential
Spot on
Kind of a boring race -- first with Fittipaldi dominating then Rahahl and then Luyendyk... Weird how no commentary over several laps before last two laps...
Henry Frederick Maybe audio issues that, fortunately, were corrected before the last lap.
+JesusHippie they had been silent earlier when Luyendyk was catching Rahal
they had a happen in that era to go stretches without commentary to let the action tell the story. the race coverage back then won sports emmy's for a reason.
I turn the volume off for a lot of different types of races. To me, the extra info is not a part of the race, and is distracting.
What better way to win your very first Indy car race than winning the big one?