Alex Palou Sets Pace In Monday Indianapolis 500 Practice

Alex Palou was fastest in Monday’s practice session for Sunday’s Indianapolis 500 with a lap at 229.441 mph around the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Photo: Penske Entertainment: Chris Owens

Alex Palou finished a close second in the 2021 Indianapolis 500 and qualified second Sunday for this year’s race, but he jumped to the top spot in practice Monday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, continuing a magical Month of May for Chip Ganassi Racing.

Palou led with a top lap of 229.441 mph in the No. 10 Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. He was the pacesetter of four Ganassi team cars in the top five.

Scott Dixon, who earned the NTT P1 Award for his fifth Indy 500 pole Sunday, was second at 229.000. Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and “500” rookie Jimmie Johnson was third at 228.467.

Two-time Indy 500 winner Takuma Sato was the only non-Ganassi driver inside the top five, running fourth at 228.381. Marcus Ericsson rounded out the top five at 228.017, as Honda-powered drivers swept the top five spots on the 2.5-mile oval.

Chip Ganassi Racing drivers occupied four of the top six spots in qualifying, with all five of its drivers in the top 12 of the starting grid for the 106th Indianapolis 500 this Sunday.

Josef Newgarden was the fastest Chevrolet-powered driver, sixth at 226.962.

Veteran Dalton Kellett became the first driver during “500” practice or qualifying this month to make significant contact with the wall. At 2:27 p.m., Kellett did a half-spin in turn 1 and made heavy contact with the SAFER Barrier with the left side of his No. 4 A.J. Foyt Racing Chevrolet. The car incurred heavy damage, but Toronto-area native Kellett was unhurt in the accident.

All 33 drivers in the starting field participated in the session, which featured plenty of traffic. The field combined to turn 2,602 laps in just two hours, with Sato leading the laps completed column with 106.

The 2.5-mile IMS oval will stay quiet until Friday, when the Miller Lite Carb Day practice takes place from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. It’s the final session before “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” on Sunday.

 

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