The 47th International 500-Mile Sweepstakes was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Thursday, May 30, 1963. Rufus Parnelli Jones took his only Indy 500 win. This win was controversial because his car (nicknamed "Calhoun") spewed oil from a cracked overflow tank for many laps, which allegedly caused at least one driver to spin and crash. USAC officials put off black-flagging Jones after car owner J. C. Agajanian ran down pit lane and convinced them that the oil leak was below the level of a known crack and would not leak any further.[3] Lotus owner Colin Chapman, whose English-built, rear-engined Lotus-Ford finished second in the hands of Scotsman Jim Clark, accused USAC officials of being biased in favor of the American driver and car.

47th Indianapolis 500
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis 500
Sanctioning bodyUSAC
Season1963 USAC season
DateMay 30, 1963
WinnerParnelli Jones
Winning teamAgajanian Racing Enterprises
Average speed143.137 mph (230.357 km/h)
Pole positionParnelli Jones
Pole speed151.153 mph (243.257 km/h)
Fastest qualifierParnelli Jones
Rookie of the YearJim Clark
Most laps ledParnelli Jones (167)
Pre-race ceremonies
National anthemPurdue Band
"Back Home Again in Indiana"Brian Sullivan
Starting commandTony Hulman
Pace carChrysler 300
Pace car driverSam Hanks
StarterPat Vidan[1]
Honorary refereeBaxter F. Ball[1]
Estimated attendance250,000[2]
TV in the United States
NetworkN/A
AnnouncersN/A
Nielsen ratingsN/A / N/A
Chronology
Previous Next
1962 1964

The non-black flagging of Jones remains controversial. Many, including Chapman and writer Brock Yates, believed that officials would have black flagged Jones if an American driver and car had been in second place instead of Clark in the British built Lotus. Goodyear arrived at the track and supplied tires for some entries, but participated only in practice. No cars used Goodyear tires during time trials or the race itself. It was the first time since about 1921 that Goodyear attempted to compete at Indy. Goodyear had last won the race in 1919.

Time trials

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Time trials was scheduled for four days.

  • Saturday May 18 – Pole Day time trials
    • A huge crowd came on Pole Day to see potential records with some speculating there would be speeds over 152 MPH, but windy and gusty conditions kept speeds down. Dan Gurney's practice crash created problems for the Lotus team and required Gurney to later qualify and race the team's spare car. Jim McElreath was the first qualifier but all eyes were on Parnelli Jones who went out third and set the early pace with a track record of 151.153 MPH, including a one lap track record of 151.847 which would turn out to be enough for the pole. Several wave-offs followed before Jim Hurtubise, driving a popular Novi, and Don Branson filled out the front row with runs over 150 MPH. Jim Clark qualified fifth fastest in the Lotus-Ford. The day ended with 1962 winner Rodger Ward qualifying 4th fastest and 7 cars having qualified for the race.
  • Sunday May 19 – Second day time trials
    • Better Conditions on the second day saw increased track activity. The morning practice saw Jack Turner involved in a bad crash, he suffered third degree burns and announced his retirement later that day while in Methodist Hospital. A. J. Foyt set the pace with a run of 150.615 after having waived his run on pole day with other big name drivers such as Dan Gurney, Eddie Sachs and Paul Goldsmith also qualifying. Duane Carter and Masten Gregory qualified two of Mickey Thompson’s radical “rollerskate” cars while Pedro Rodriguez, driving an Aston Martin powered Cooper, was slowest in the field. At the end of the day there were 18 cars qualified, 5 of which qualified over 150 MPH.
  • Saturday May 25 – Third day time trials
  • Sunday May 26 – Fourth day time trials
    • The final day of qualifying opened with 16 cars preparing to qualify and Ebb Rose on the bubble. Heavy winds meant few cars went out early in the day before Troy Ruttman bumped Rose in mid afternoon and Al Miller, in a third Mickey Thompson car, bumped Len Sutton with the fastest run of the day. In the final half hour Ralph Liguori just bumped Masten Gregory but immediately found himself on the bubble. Len Sutton then set a near identical time to Liguori’s and, while officials were figuring out if Sutton had bumped Liguori, Ebb Rose went out in A. J. Foyt’s backup car and went even faster, eliminating both Sutton and Liguori. As time expired Masten Gregory went out in another Thompson car but was unable to bump Dempsey Wilson.[5]

Starting grid

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Row Inside Middle Outside
1 98   Parnelli Jones 56   Jim Hurtubise 4   Don Branson
2 1   Rodger Ward  W  92   Jim Clark  R  8   Jim McElreath
3 5   Bobby Marshman 2   A. J. Foyt  W  99   Paul Goldsmith
4 9   Eddie Sachs 10   Chuck Hulse 93   Dan Gurney
5 35   Allen Crowe 14   Roger McCluskey 83   Duane Carter
6 6   Bobby Unser  R  22   Dick Rathmann 65   Bob Christie
7 52   Lloyd Ruby 26   Bobby Grim 88   Eddie Johnson
8 45   Chuck Stevenson 75   Art Malone  R  86   Bob Veith
9 54   Bud Tingelstad 37   Johnny Rutherford  R  23   Johnny Boyd
10 21   Elmer George 16   Jim Rathmann  W  29   Dempsey Wilson
11 84   Al Miller  R  32   Ebb Rose 17   Troy Ruttman  W 
R Indianapolis 500 rookie
W Indianapolis 500 winner

Alternates

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Failed to qualify

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Race details

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Start

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Parnelli Jones started from the pole position, and at the start, led the field into turn one. A fierce duel broke out in the opening laps. Jim Hurtubise, who started in the middle of the front row, caught up to Jones down the backstretch, and passed him for the lead. Hurtubise led at the stripe at the completion of lap 1. On lap 2, Jones caught up to Hurtubise again, and took the lead back in turn four, and led lap 2. Hurtubise dove down to re-take the lead in turn one, but Jones was able to slip by and hold the position.

On lap 3, Bobby Unser swerved to avoid running into the car of Dick Rathmann. Unser spun out and crashed into the wall in turn one. The yellow light would stay on for nearly ten minutes to clean up a gasoline spill caused by the wreck. Jones continued to lead, and when the green flag came back out on lap 10, he pulled out to a sizable margin.

First half

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With Jones ahead, Hurtubise was running second, holding off Roger McCluskey and Bobby Marshman in 3rd-4th. Hurtubise held off their challenge for many laps, his powerful Novi engine blasting down the long straights. By lap 40, however, McCluskey and Marshman finally got by Hurtubise. Jones was all alone though, ahead by over 20 seconds.

On lap 46, the yellow came out for a crash by Bud Tingelstad in turn two. At the same time, Allen Crowe lost a wheel and crashed in turn 1. Still under the caution light on lap 50, Jim McElreath and Bobby Marshman spun in the pit area. They avoided a major mishap and made no contact. They got to their pit stalls, and rejoined the race.

Leader Parnelli Jones made his first pit stop on lap 62. As the other leaders pitted one by one, Jim Clark and Dan Gurney (driving the Lotus 29-Ford rear-engined machines) worked their way to the front of the field. The venerable front engine roadsters were expected to make 2–3 pits stops each, while the rear-engined Lotus machines were planning on only one pit stop for fuel. Tire wear was a concern for the heavy roadsters, but the Lotus team was hoping to go the whole way without changing any tires. Clark passed Roger McCluskey for the lead on lap 68.

With Clark and Gurney running 1st-2nd, Parnelli Jones was running third. Despite having already pitted, Jones remarkably was only about 18 seconds behind. The superior handling the rear-engined machines enjoyed in the corners was still somewhat trumped by the higher top speed the front-engined roadsters achieved down the long straights.

It was around lap 80 that observers began to see oil smoke intermittently trailing Parnelli Jones' car. Jim Clark made his lone scheduled pit stop on lap 95, taking on fuel and changing three tires (the rarely-worn left-front was left in place). His stop was timed at 33 seconds. That gave the lead back to Jones, who now enjoyed a 37-second margin. Dan Gurney in the other Lotus, however, had a worn out right-rear tire, and his pit stop dragged on for 42 seconds. Gurney went a lap down and dropped to 9th place.

Jim Hurtubise, an early contender who started slipping in the standings due to handling issues, dropped out at the halfway point with an oil leak.

Second half

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Jim McElreath spun in the pits, brushed the wall, and lost a wheel. He was able to get to his pit stall, and was able to rejoin the race.

Just after the 120-lap mark, Eddie Johnson spun about three-fourths the way down the backstretch, likely due to hitting an oil slick. He spun to the inside, and crashed into the inside wall. Under the yellow light on lap 125, Parnelli Jones made his second pit stop, taking advantage of the caution. After a 27-second pit stop, he came out of the pits still in the lead, and lost minimal ground.

With 50 laps to go, Parnelli Jones had a 43-second lead over second place Jim Clark, and A. J. Foyt was in third. All other cars were at least one lap down. Dan Gurney had worked his way back up to 4th, Roger McCluskey was running 5th, followed by Eddie Sachs, Rodger Ward, Jim McElreath, Don Branson, and Bobby Marshman filling out the top ten.

At around lap 160, Duane Carter blew an engine in turn one, bringing out the yellow light. Leader Parnelli Jones took advantage of the yellow once again, and ducked into the pits. He changed tires in 20 seconds, and was back out on the track. His once commanding lead, however, was down to only 10 seconds. The Lotus team of Jim Clark and Dan Gurney were now running 2nd and 4th, respectively, and the question remained if they would both be able to go the distance without another pit stop to change tires.

When the green came back out, Jim Clark began steadily closing the gap behind Parnelli Jones. With 25 laps to go, Jones' lead was down to only 5–6 seconds. Meanwhile, Dan Gurney was forced to the pits with a worn out right-rear tire. A couple laps later, he was back in the pits to change the right-front, and Gurney fell out of contention for the victory. He wound up 7th at the finish.

Finish

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In the closing laps, Eddie Sachs spun on two occasions, once on lap 179, then again in turn three on about lap 189, the second time hitting the wall and losing a wheel. The second spin was the impetus of a controversy that embroiled over the next few minutes.

With about twenty laps to go, USAC officials were growing increasingly concerned with the sight of smoke venting from the leader's car. Parnelli Jones had been visibly leaking oil for some time due to a horizontal crack in the external oil tank at the rear of the car. Some observers were reporting the smoke was more intense, particularly in the turns, and that dripping oil was making the track slick, which led to Eddie Sach's crash in turn three. USAC chief steward Harlan Fengler was contemplating displaying the black flag to Jones, which would have sent him to the pits for consultation, and almost certainly deny him any chance at victory.

J. C. Agajanian, the owner of the Jones entry, immediately confronted Harlan Fengler and Henry Banks in a heated exchange at the start/finish line. Colin Chapman of the Lotus team also rushed over to join the discussion, arguing for Clark's case, and that Jones should be disqualified for leaking oil. Agajanian argued that the leak was minor, and had ceased once it dropped below the level of the crack. He also quipped that other cars on the track were leaking worse, without recourse. The confrontation went on for several minutes on the grass parapet by the starter's stand, and USAC ultimately decided not to black flag Jones.

The green light came back on for lap 193, and Jones quickly pulled out to a 21-second lead. After Clark had narrowed the gap significantly, Jones was again holding a commanding lead. Parnelli Jones stayed in front and led to the finish. With the white flag waving, third place Roger McCluskey was running right with Jones down the mainstretch. The two cars were dicing through some traffic, and McCluskey spun out and came to a rest in turn three, bringing out a last-lap yellow flag. Jones narrowly skirted by the incident on the outside unscathed, and cruised to victory. Jim Clark come home second, and A. J. Foyt finished third.

Post-race

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The day after the race, Eddie Sachs and Parnelli Jones got into an argument, and exchanged fists over the oil leak controversy. Chief steward Harlan Fengler explained his decision not to black flag Jones, citing that the leak had subsided, and that so few laps were left, that he didn't want to "take this race away from a man on a snap judgement."[8]

The Lotus team, while unhappy with the perceived favoritism offered to the American participants, ultimately declined to protest. They acknowledged Jones' clear superiority in the event. In addition, Ford officials recognized that a victory through disqualification of Clark's biggest competitor would not be well received by the American public.

Box score

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Finish Start No Name Chassis Engine Qual Laps Status
1 1 98   Parnelli Jones Watson Offenhauser 151.153 200 Running
2 5 92   Jim Clark  R  Lotus Ford 149.750 200 33.84
3 8 2   A. J. Foyt  W  Trevis Offenhauser 150.615 200 1:21.97
4 4 1   Rodger Ward  W  Watson Offenhauser 149.800 200 3:02.45
5 3 4   Don Branson Watson Offenhauser 150.188 200 3:22.74
6 6 8   Jim McElreath Watson Offenhauser 149.744 200 3:23.10
7 12 93   Dan Gurney Lotus Ford 149.019 200 4:35.26
8 11 10   Chuck Hulse Ewing Offenhauser 149.340 200 4:35.90
9 31 84   Al Miller  R  Thompson Chevrolet 149.613 200 5:25.64
10 17 22   Dick Rathmann Watson Offenhauser 149.130 200 6:28.73
11 30 29   Dempsey Wilson Watson Offenhauser 147.832 200 6:54.08
12 33 17   Troy Ruttman  W  Kuzma Offenhauser 148.374 200 7:25.09
13 18 65   Bob Christie Christensen Offenhauser 149.123 200 10:49.82
14 32 32   Ebb Rose Watson Offenhauser 148.545 200 17:05.25
15 14 14   Roger McCluskey Watson Offenhauser 148.680 198 Spun T3
16 7 5   Bobby Marshman Epperly Offenhauser 149.458 196 Rear End
17 10 9   Eddie Sachs Watson Offenhauser 149.570 181 Crash T3
18 9 99   Paul Goldsmith Watson Offenhauser 150.163 149 Crankshaft
19 19 52   Lloyd Ruby Watson Offenhauser 149.123 126 Crash T4
20 21 88   Eddie Johnson Watson Offenhauser 148.509 112 Crash BS
21 22 45   Chuck Stevenson Watson Offenhauser 148.386 110 Valve
22 2 56   Jim Hurtubise Kurtis Kraft Novi 150.257 102 Oil Leak
23 15 83   Duane Carter Thompson Chevrolet 148.002 100 Rod
24 29 16   Jim Rathmann  W  Watson Offenhauser 147.838 99 Magneto
25 20 26   Bobby Grim Trevis Offenhauser 148.717 79 Oil Leak
26 24 86   Bob Veith Epperly Offenhauser 148.289 74 Valve
27 13 35   Allen Crowe Trevis Offenhauser 148.877 47 Crash T1
28 25 54   Bud Tingelstad Epperly Offenhauser 148.227 46 Crash T2
29 26 37   Johnny Rutherford  R  Watson Offenhauser 148.063 43 Transmission
30 28 21   Elmer George Lesovsky Offenhauser 147.893 21 Handling
31 23 75   Art Malone  R  Kurtis Kraft Novi 148.343 18 Clutch
32 27 23   Johnny Boyd Epperly Offenhauser 148.038 12 Oil Leak
33 16 6   Bobby Unser  R  Kurtis Kraft Novi 149.421 2 Crash T1
Sources:[9][10][11]

 W  Former Indianapolis 500 winner

 R  Indianapolis 500 Rookie

All entrants utilized Firestone tires.

Race statistics

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Race notes

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Broadcasting

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Radio

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The race was carried live on the IMS Radio Network. Sid Collins served as chief announcer. Fred Agabashian served as "driver expert."

Lou Palmer, who had debuted in 1958, moved from turn three to the pit area, replacing John Peterson, where he would remain for 25 years. Palmer also took over the duty of the winner's interview in victory lane. Mike Ahern returned to the broadcast after a year absence, and took over the turn three location. This was the last year with Charlie Brockman as Statistician, and also the last year with Bernie Herman on the Backstretch.

The radio affiliate count topped 700 stations worldwide.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network
Booth Announcers Turn Reporters Pit/garage reporters

Chief Announcer: Sid Collins
Driver expert: Fred Agabashian
Statistician: Charlie Brockman

Turn 1: Bill Frosh
Turn 2: Howdy Bell
Backstretch: Bernie Herman
Turn 3: Mike Ahern
Turn 4: Jim Shelton

Jack Shapiro (north)
Luke Walton (center)
Lou Palmer (south)

Television

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For the third year, a few minutes of race highlights were telecast on ABC's "Wide World Of Sports".

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Notes

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References

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  1. ^ a b Fox, Jack C. (1994). The Illustrated History of the Indianapolis 500 1911-1994 (4th ed.). Carl Hungness Publishing. p. 22. ISBN 0-915088-05-3.
  2. ^ Cadou Jr., Jep (May 31, 1963). "Shatter Track Record With Hot 143.137 Average". The Indianapolis Star. p. 1. Retrieved June 2, 2017 – via Newspapers.com. 
  3. ^ "Fist Fight Breaks Out Between Speedway Winner Parnelli Jones and Eddie Sachs". Lewiston Daily Sun. June 1, 1963. Retrieved March 21, 2013.
  4. ^ "The Leader-Post - Google News Archive Search".
  5. ^ "Indianapolis Motor Speedway".
  6. ^ The Talk of Gasoline Alley - 1070-AM WIBC, May 14, 2004
  7. ^ "1963 International 500 Mile Sweepstakes". ChampCarStats.com. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
  8. ^ Fist Fight Breaks Out between Speedway Winner Parneli Jones And Eddie Sachs
  9. ^ Davidson, Donald; Shaffer, Rick (2013). Autocourse Official History of the Indianapolis 500 (Second ed.). Malvern, Worcestershire, England: Icon Publishing. p. 374. ISBN 978-1-905334-82-7 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ Popely, Rick; Riggs, L. Spencer (1998). Indianapolis 500 Chronicle. Lincolnwood, Illinois: Publications International. p. 171. ISBN 0-7853-2798-3 – via Internet Archive.
  11. ^ "1963 Indianapolis 500". Racing-Reference. Archived from the original on April 28, 2021. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  12. ^ The Talk of Gasoline Alley. May 12, 2010. WFNI.

Works cited

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1962 Indianapolis 500
Rodger Ward
1963 Indianapolis 500
Parnelli Jones
1964 Indianapolis 500
A. J. Foyt
Preceded by
140.293 mph
(1962 Indianapolis 500)
Record for the fastest average speed
143.137 mph
Succeeded by