INDIANAPOLIS, May 28, 2007

Franchitti Wins Soggy Indy 500

2nd Win In 3 Years For Andretti Green Racing

    • Indy 500 winner Dario Franchitti of Scotland celebrates May 27, 2007, with a cold bottle of milk - the traditional victory beverage for the big race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

      Indy 500 winner Dario Franchitti of Scotland celebrates May 27, 2007, with a cold bottle of milk - the traditional victory beverage for the big race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  (AP)

    • Actress Ashley Judd climbed over a pit wall at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to stand by her man, husband Dario Franchitti of Andretti Green Racing, and celebrate his Indy 500 victory, May 27, 2007.

      Actress Ashley Judd climbed over a pit wall at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to stand by her man, husband Dario Franchitti of Andretti Green Racing, and celebrate his Indy 500 victory, May 27, 2007.  (AP)

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(AP)  Dario Franchitti prayed for rain as the dark clouds gathered above and fast cars filled his mirrors.

"It was going to come down to a dogfight, and there's a lot of strong cars," the Scotsman said. "Whatever happened, if it came down to that dogfight, it was going to be hard, so I was hoping for the rain."

He got it, winning an abbreviated Indianapolis 500.

The 91st running of the Memorial Day weekend classic drew its fair share of celebrities.

Indianapolis Colts quarterback and Super Bowl MVP Peyton Manning got to wave the green flag to start the race. "Grey's Anatomy" star Patrick Dempsey, who is a partner in Vision Racing with IRL and Speedway CEO Tony George, drove the pace car to start the race.

Other celebs on hand included: Olympic gold medalist and "Dancing with the Stars" winner Apolo Anton Ohno, actor Ray Liotta, NASCAR legend Richard Petty and future NBA lottery pick Greg Oden.

The 7-foot center, a former Indiana Mr. Basketball, was surprised by the size of the cars - too small.

"I think I was bigger than the car itself," said Oden, who played one season for Ohio State. "Someone said I could wear one as a skate and just roll around out there."

Sunday's race was another bittersweet day for the Andretti family at the Speedway.

Franchitti inherited the lead when the leaders pitted one last time for fuel, even as the skies darkened, and then drove slowly to the checkered flag in a downpour when the race was stopped after 166 laps, or 415 of the scheduled 500 miles.

"Our roll of the dice proved to be the lucky one," a jubilant Franchitti said. "I made a couple of good restarts and the rain came."

None too soon by Franchitti's reckoning.

As the dark clouds drew ever closer, crew chief John Anderson told him on the radio, "The rain's eight blocks away."

"Come on!" Franchitti said. "I was just hoping it would start soon."

The race had already been interrupted by rain for three hours shortly after the midway point, and Franchitti won it under a caution light brought out when teammate Marco Andretti crashed three laps from the premature finish.

It was a confusing and difficult day for nearly everyone.

A third of the race was run under caution - 11 yellow flags, 55 laps in all - and the winning average speed was more than 30 mph slower than the record.

"Restart after restart," said runner-up Scott Dixon. "It's just one of those days where you feel like you haven't even raced. It's sort of being on the freeway and watching lots of people smash into each other. It's just a frustrating day in general."

Not for the 34-year-old Franchitti, who got the biggest win of his life and gave his team its second Indy victory in three years.

Franchitti made a victory lap of the 2.5-mile oval in the heavy rain as actress wife Ashley Judd, soaking wet in a summer dress, climbed the pit wall and dashed toward the victory celebration.

Once Franchitti got out of his car, he was mobbed, hugged and kissed by teammates Tony Kanaan, Danica Patrick and Michael Andretti.

"I can't believe it. It's the Indy 500!" Franchitti said. "To be a member of this club is fantastic. I kind of have half of an idea of what it means to win this race. I'm so happy."

Two-time winner Helio Castroneves said Franchitti's win proves it's "not the young guy, not the fast guy, but the smart guy, and you have to put yourself in the right place at the right time."

Continued



By Mike Harris © MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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