In my opinion, one of the greatest and rarest feats in
sports is to attempt “The Double,” racing in the Indianapolis 500 and NASCAR’s
longest race of the season the Coca Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the
same day.
“The Double” is an extremely rare thing because of the short
amount of time between the end of the Indianapolis 500 and the beginning of the
Coca Cola 600. It’s also incredibly difficult because few drivers actually have
experience in both the open wheel racing world of IndyCar and the stock car
world of NASCAR. Novice sports fans might think all motor racing is the same or
at least similar, but there are numerous differences between the two.
In the 1960s and 1970s the Indianapolis 500 and Coca Cola
600 were run on different days and allowed drivers to compete in both events
rather easier than it would be to do today. Still it wasn’t a frequent occurrence.
Cale Yarborough was the first NASCAR driver to attempt both races in the same
year in 1968 finishing 41st at Charlotte on May 28 and 17th
at Indianapolis on May 30th and 31st, as the event was
completed over two days due to rain.
Jerry Grant, Lee Roy Yarbrough and Donnie Allison would also
compete in both races in the same year in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, with
Allison having the best of luck winning the NASCAR race in 1970 and then
finishing an incredible fourth in the Indy 500 six days later; To this date
that’s the best combined finish of a NASCAR driver running both races.
In the mid-‘70s the races started being held on the same
day, the Sunday before Memorial Day and drivers were forced to choose between
the Coke 600 and Indy 500, with most NASCAR drivers tending to stick to their
day job.
“The Double” started
in 1994 when John Andretti, a former open wheel driver making his way in
NASCAR, announced he would attempt both races on the same day. Andretti would
go on to post a tenth place finish at Indy, but blew an engine at Charlotte and
finished 36th. Andretti would go on to run many more Coca Cola 600s
and a few more Indy 500s, but never again on the same day.
In 1999, Tony Stewart started his first of what would be two
‘Double’ duties. He would find success finishing ninth at Indy and fourth at
Charlotte in his rookie season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series becoming the
first driver to post a top 10 in both races on the same day. However, Stewart
wasn’t able to complete the 1,100 miles between the two races as he didn’t
finish on the lead lap at Indy.
Stewart would later do “The Double” again in 2001 and would
become the first and to this date only driver to complete all 1,100 miles in
the duo races finishing sixth in the Indy 500 and third in the Coke 600. It
remains the standard performance for drivers running both races and would be
the last time Stewart would run “The Double.”
Robby Gordon tried the “The Double” more than anyone else
competing in both races on the same day four different times (2000, 2002, 2003
& 2004). The closest Gordon would come to finishing all 1,100 miles was
missing it by a single lap when he finished 16th at Charlotte in
2002 one lap down. He ran eighth that year in the Indianapolis 500.
In the nine seasons since Gordon’s last attempt in 2004
there hasn’t been a driver attempt “The Double,” with many of those years the
feat being impossible because of the start times for both races. However, this
year 2004 NASCAR champion and current Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kurt Busch is
going to run “The Double” attempting to complete all 1,100 miles by running an
Andretti Autosport car in the Indianapolis 500 before flying to Charlotte for
the Sprint Cup race.
Busch’s attempt at “The Double” may actually be the most
impressive of the four drivers to attempt both races on the same day because
unlike Andretti, Gordon and Stewart, who all got their start in open wheel
racing, Busch has never had experience in open wheel cars or racing. Unlike
Andretti, Gordon and Stewart, Busch has never even started an IndyCar race.
Busch has shown promise in Indy practice and qualified in
the top half of the field. He’ll start Sunday’s race in 12th
position. However, he did wreck his car earlier this week in practice, but will
retain that starting spot.
Busch has surprised many these last couple of weeks and
could continue to do so on Sunday during the Greatest Spectacle in Racing. He’s
already proven that his talent as a racecar driver surpasses his full-time
career in stock car racing. Will he become just the second guy to complete the
entire ‘Double’ by finishing all 1,100 miles in the same day? That’s to be
seen. If I had to guess I’d say he likely won’t accomplish that feat having no
prior experience in IndyCar racing. However, I know his attempt at all 1,100
miles on Sunday is going to be a blast to watch and something that the
Indianapolis 500, open wheel racing and motorsports in general could really use
to help infuse some new excitement into the sport.
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