1972 California 500

United States 1972 California 500
Race details
Race 8 of 10 in the 1972 USAC Championship Car season
DateSeptember 3, 1972
Official name1972 California 500
LocationOntario Motor Speedway, Ontario, California, United States
CoursePermanent racing facility
2.500 mi / 4.023 km
Distance200 laps
500.000 mi / 804.672 km
Pole position
DriverUnited States Jerry Grant (Oscar Olson)
Time199.600 mph (321.225 km/h)
Podium
FirstUnited States Roger McCluskey (Lindsey Hopkins)
SecondUnited States Mike Hiss (Team Penske)
ThirdUnited States Bill Vukovich II (Jerry O'Connell)

The 1972 California 500, the third running of the event, was held at the Ontario Motor Speedway in Ontario, California, on Sunday, September 3, 1972. The event was race number 8 of 10 in the 1972 USAC Championship Car season. The race was won by Roger McCluskey, his first 500-mile Indy Car victory. In qualifying, Jerry Grant became the first IndyCar driver to ever break to 200 mile per hour barrier.

Background

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Mark Donohue won the 1972 Indianapolis 500. On July 3, 1972, Donohue] suffered injuries to his left knee and thigh in a Can-Am testing crash at Road Atlanta. Donohue required surgery to repair torn ligaments and would miss the California 500.[1] He was replaced at Team Penske by Mike Hiss, who himself drove wearing a leg brace to recuperate a broken leg suffered in a motorcycle accident.[2]

Practice and Time Trials

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Practice began on Saturday, August 19. With a speed of 175.155 mph, Denny Zimmerman was the fastest of only three car that chose to participate.[3] On day two, Lloyd Ruby ran the fastest speed at 176.335 mph.[4] Monday's practice attracted more top drivers with Johnny Rutherford posting the fastest speed at 188.742 mph, followed by Mario Andretti and Joe Leonard.[2] On a Tuesday where air temperatures exceeded 100 degrees and track temperature reached 143 degrees, Rutherford upped his top speed to 191.530 mph. Mike Hiss suffered a minor back abrasion when he crashed into the wall with the rear of his Penske-prepared McLaren.[5] Mario Andretti led Wednesday's practice session with a speed of 189.681 mph.[6] On Thursday, Bobby Unser made his much-anticipated first practice run and ran a speed of 195.202 mph.[7]

On Friday, Unser's teammate, Jerry Grant, ran a fast lap of 196.287 mph post the fastest practice lap of the week. A special qualifying session was held for Peter Revson and George Follmer who planned to compete in the Can-Am Series race at Road America. Revson ran a four-lap average speed of 194.470 mph, with a fastest lap of 194.860 mph. Follmer suffered engine troubles and withdrew from the California 500. Rules stated that Revson would not be eligible for the pole because his run came on Friday, but he would be able to start as high as second depending on his speed.[8]

Pole Day - Saturday August 26

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A qualifying crowd of 61,430 saw the fastest lap in auto racing history. Jerry Grant became the first IndyCar driver to break the 200 mile per hour barrier when he ran a lap with a speed of 201.414 mph. His four lap average speed was 199.600 mph. Peter Revson's Friday speed was fast enough to claim the second position. Revson's McLaren teammate, Gordon Johncock completed the front row with an average speed of 194.041 mph. Johncock's run was interrupted after two laps when a caution flag was waved for a jackrabbit on track. After returning to the pits, Johncock completed his final two laps.[9]

Johnny Rutherford brushed the wall with his right-rear exiting turn one and spun into the infield. His car was repaired but unable to make another attempt before qualifying ended.[9]

Pole-favorite Bobby Unser suffered a series of engine problems that delayed his qualifying attempt. A pair of blown engines in morning and mid-day practices. A third engine was put in Unser's car for a last minute qualifying run but  after taking warm-up laps, Unser coasted to a stop on-track with a blown manifold.[10]

Bump Day - Sunday August 27

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Bobby Unser qualified for the race with an average speed of 201.374 mph. Unser's best speed was a lap of 201.965 mph. The engine he used was the same one he won the pole for the Pocono 500, retrieved by Dan Gurney from their nearby race shop after Unser's engine problems on Saturday. It was a track record and the first time an IndyCar qualified for a race with an average speed over 200 mph. Because the run came on day two of Time Trials, Unser starter the race 23rd.[11] Hoping to avoid continued bad luck, Unser carrier a horseshoe, a chicken wishbone, and a tiny olive branch with him on his run.[12]

Jim Hurtubise attempted to qualify late in the afternoon. After a lap of 187.464 mph, fast enough to make the field, his engine blew on lap two. Bill Simpson, Dick Simon, Jim McElreath, and Greg Weld were bumped from the field. Simpson pulled out a 1968 Eagle backup car and requalified for the race.[12]

Race

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161,240 spectators attended the California 500. Delivering the command to start engines was grand marshal, Tricia Nixon Cox, daughter of US President Richard Nixon. After failing to qualify for the race, Dick Simon drove the Datsun 240Z pace car.[13]

On the pace lap, pole-sitter Jerry Grant suffered engine failure and retired from the race. It was the first time in IndyCar's history of 500 mile races that a polesitter failed to start the race.[14]

The pole position was left vacant and put Peter Revson in control of the start with teammate Gordon Johncock alongside. Both McLaren cars got slow starts and A. J. Foyt, from his position on the outside of row two, swept to the inside of the McLarens and took the lead.

The first caution came out on lap four when a rabbit ran on track. The caution was out for seven laps while track workers chased it off track. One lap after the race returned to green, the rabbits returned and the caution was thrown again.

Foyt led the first 27 laps and was leading when the gearbox broke on his car on lap 28.[15] From his 23rd starting spot, Bobby Unser climbed through the field. He took the lead on lap 45 and led for 11 laps. Running third on lap 74, Unser blew an engine and stalled on track. The caution was thrown to retrieve Unser's car. While behind the pace car, rain began to fall and the race was stopped for almost two hours.[16]

USAC encountered confusion over who was leading. Initially, Mike Hiss was scored the leader. Later, officials corrected the leaderboard and put Gordon Johncock in the lead, with Hiss one lap down.[14]

After completing 134 laps, John Mahler spun when his ignition system cut off. The car hit the turn two wall and flipped over. The car landed upside down but Mahler walked away uninjured.

Roger McCluskey took the lead for the first time on lap 160. Running second with 30 laps remaining, Johncock suffered a water leak and crashed in turn two. Johncock had led a race-high 94 laps. With five laps remaining, the second-place car of Mike Mosley suffered a broken transmission and retired from the race. Mosley finished fifth.

Roger McCluskey won the California 500 by one lap over Mike Hiss and Bill Vukovich Jr. McCluskey won $131,081. It was his first IndyCar victory since 1968. McCluskey was driving the same McLaren chassis that Peter Revson used to win the pole and finish second in the 1971 Indianapolis 500.[14]

Box score

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Finish Grid No Name Entrant Chassis Engine Laps Time/Status Led Points
1 8 14 United States Roger McCluskey Lindsey Hopkins Racing McLaren M16A Offenhauser 200 3:17:58 40 1000
2 20 66 United States Mike Hiss Penske Racing McLaren M16B Offenhauser 199 Flagged 0 800
3 13 3 United States Bill Vukovich II Jerry O'Connell Racing Eagle Offenhauser 199 Flagged 5 700
4 11 84 United States Sammy Sessions A. J. Foyt Enterprises Coyote Ford 196 Flagged 0 600
5 10 98 United States Mike Mosley Leader Card Racers Eagle 68 Offenhauser 195 Transmission 23 500
6 18 77 United States Salt Walther Dayton-Walther McLaren Offenhauser 195 Flagged 0 400
7 31 20 United States Art Pollard Andy Granatelli Lola T270 Ford 194 Flagged 0 300
8 22 29 United States George Snider MVS Coyote Ford 192 Flagged 0 250
9 29 28 United States Bill Simpson Bill Simpson Eagle Offenhauser 183 Flagged 0 200
10 24 16 United States Johnny Rutherford Don Gerhardt Eagle Offenhauser 178 Differential 0 150
11 14 15 United States Steve Krisiloff Grant King Racers King Offenhauser 178 Flagged 0 100
12 7 52 United States Jimmy Caruthers Gene White Co. Atlanta Offenhauser 171 Water line 0 50
13 3 24 United States Gordon Johncock Team McLaren McLaren M16B Offenhauser 169 Crash 94 0
14 27 61 United States Carl Williams Eisenhour-Brayton Racing Team Coyote Ford 164 Throttle 0 0
15 30 97 United States Rick Muther Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing Eagle Offenhauser 162 Flagged 0 0
16 9 1 United States Joe Leonard Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing Parnelli VPJ1 Offenhauser 162 Piston 0 0
17 16 5 United States Lloyd Ruby Gene White Co. Lola T270 Ford 149 Turbocharger 0 0
18 15 68 United States John Mahler Roy Woods Racing McLaren Offenhauser 134 Crash 0 0
19 12 34 United States Sam Posey Champ Carr Inc. Eagle 72 Offenhauser 123 Ignition 0 0
20 19 18 United States Swede Savage Patrick-Mitchner Racing Brabham Offenhauser 118 Turocharger 0 0
21 32 40 United States Wally Dallenbach Andy Granatelli Lola T270 Ford 109 Valve 0 0
22 33 94 United States Johnny Parsons Vatis Enterprises Finley Offenhauser 88 Valve 0 0
23 2 12 United States Peter Revson Team McLaren McLaren M16B Offenhauser 81 Oil pressure 0 0
24 23 6 United States Bobby Unser All American Racers Eagle 72 Offenhauser 73 Engine 11 0
25 17 27 United States Denny Zimmerman Vollstedt Enterprises Vollstedt Offenhauser 58 Oil pressure 0 0
26 21 10 United States Lee Kunzman Lindsey Hopkins Racing Eagle Offenhauser 56 Spun out 0 0
27 5 9 United States Mario Andretti Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing Parnelli VPJ1 Offenhauser 52 Engine 0 0
28 26 23 United States Mel Kenyon Lindsey Hopkins Racing Eagle Offenhauser 48 Differential 0 0
29 25 83 United States Jerry Karl Smokey Yunick Eagle Chevrolet 45 Transmission 0 0
30 6 2 United States A. J. Foyt A. J. Foyt Enterprises Coyote Foyt 28 Differential 27 0
31 4 4 United States Al Unser Vel's Parnelli Jones Racing Parnelli VPJ1 Offenhauser 27 Throttle 0 0
32 28 89 United States John Martin Automotive Technology Brabham Offenhauser 19 Piston 0 0
33 1 48 United States Jerry Grant All American Racers Eagle Offenhauser 0 Engine 0 0
Sources:[17][18]

References

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  1. ^ "Donohue Will Recuperate for 13 Weeks". Asbury Park Press. (Pennsylvania). Associated Press. July 9, 1972. p. 70.
  2. ^ a b "Speeds Top 188 at OMS Practice". Progress Bulletin. (California). Associated Press. August 22, 1972. p. 17.
  3. ^ "Three Cars Take Laps For Cal 500". San Bernardino County Sun. (California). Associated Press. August 20, 1972. p. 59.
  4. ^ "Ruby Hits 176 at Ontario". Modesto Bee. (California). Associated Press. August 21, 1972. p. 7.
  5. ^ "Rutherford Forst to Exceed 190 MPH in Practice". San Bernardino County Sun. (California). Associated Press. August 23, 1972. p. 37.
  6. ^ "Unser to Make Practice Run". Hanford Sentinel. (California). Associated Press. August 24, 1972. p. 12.
  7. ^ "Bobby Unser Turns in 195 MPH Speed". San Bernardino County Sun. (California). Associated Press. August 25, 1972. p. 37.
  8. ^ "Revson Ready For Ontario". Enterprise Record. (California). Associated Press. August 26, 1972. p. 10.
  9. ^ a b "Grant Breaks 200 Barrier". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. August 27, 1972. p. 52.
  10. ^ "Grant Speeds to 201.414 mph". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. August 27, 1972. p. 37.
  11. ^ "Bobby U Does His Thing A Day Late". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. August 28, 1972. p. 29.
  12. ^ a b "Unser Sets Mark". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. August 28, 1972. p. 34.
  13. ^ "McCluskey- Rain Surprises in California 500". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. September 4, 1972. p. 57.
  14. ^ a b c "McCluskey Wins Cal 500". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. September 4, 1972. p. 60.
  15. ^ "Foyt Elated Over Engine's Showing". Los Angeles Times. (California). Associated Press. September 4, 1972. p. 60.
  16. ^ "McCluskey Dodges Rain, Rabbits to Capture California Victory". Indianapolis Star. (Indiana). Associated Press. September 4, 1972. p. 32.
  17. ^ 1972 California 500
  18. ^ 1972 California 500 - Round 8