Long-time Indycar racer Jim McElreath dies
Jim McElreath, one of Indycar racing's tough guys who despite personal tragedies kept his racing dream alive, has died at the age of 89

Arlington, Texas-born McElreath won only five Indycar races in his career yet his versatility and consistency on the various types of ovals that comprised what was then the USAC National Championship meant he was able to accrue 47 top five finishes from his 167 starts.
This helped him finish in the top three in the title race four times between 1963 and 1970, the highlight being '66 when he was runner-up to Mario Andretti.
McElreath's victories included winning the inaugural race at Ontario Motor Speedway in 1970, and winning at the fearsome Langhorne Speedway, a circle track that some drivers felt became even more perilous when its dirt was replaced with pavement. In the first year after that change, McElreath won both events at Langhorne.
A statement from Indianapolis Motor Speedway read:
"One of the last eight surviving drivers who could claim to have driven a front-engined car in the 500, McElreath was 34 years old and had been racing on short tracks for 16 years when he burst on the scene at Indianapolis in 1962.
"Driving a six-year-old Kurtis-Kraft Offenhauser-powered roadster, once owned and driven by Ray Crawford, McElreath qualified seventh and went on to cause quite a stir by passing AJ Foyt and Rodger Ward in the early stages to run second by lap 20.
"He ended up finishing sixth, and many observers suggested he was hampered by pitstops performed less rapidly than those by the contestants ahead of him."

Still, the effort earned him rookie of the year honours in 1962, and McElreath would go on to score five more top-six finishes at Indy, the highlight being third in 1966 behind Graham Hill and Jimmy Clark.
This result would go a long way to helping him secure second in the championship that year behind the dominant Andretti.
In 1977, McElreath and his son Jimmy became the first father/son duo to attempt to qualify for the same Indy 500, but the younger man came up short in a year when 56 drivers competed for the 33 grid slots.
There would be no repeat attempts as McElreath Sr's life as a gritty racer who worked on his own cars was hit by personal tragedy when young Jimmy McElreath died in a sprint car accident at Winchester.
Jim and his wife Shirley would also lose one of their daughters, also named Shirley, who had married team owner Tony Bettenhausen Jr. The younger Shirley and Bettenhausen perished in a plane crash in 2000.
Shortly afterward, Shirley Sr suffered a stroke that has confined her to a wheelchair ever since.
She survives her husband, as does second daughter, Vicky, granddaughters Bryn and Taryn Bettenhausen, and great granddaughter, Kendyl Bettenhausen.

Alonso's vital Indy 500 weapon
Indianapolis 500 practice interrupted by weather with Bourdais top

Latest news
Daytona 24: Westbrook’s Ganassi Cadillac tops second practice
Richard Westbrook ensured Cadillac’s new V-LMDh snagged top spot in second practice for the Daytona 24 Hours, ahead of the #10 Wayne Taylor Racing Andretti Autosport Acura.
Auer suffers back injury in Daytona 24 practice shunt
Mercedes driver Lucas Auer has suffered a back injury and been taken to hospital following a violent crash in opening practice for this weekend's Daytona 24 Hours.
Daytona 24: WTR Acura tops heavily interrupted FP1
Five red flags disrupted the first practice session for this weekend's Daytona 24 Hours, while Filipe Albuquerque put the Wayne Taylor Racing Andretti Autosport Acura on top.
Pedrosa to make KTM MotoGP wildcard outing in Spanish GP
Dani Pedrosa will make his first MotoGP race start since the 2021 Styrian Grand Prix with a wildcard entry for KTM at this year’s Spanish GP in April.
Nigel Mansell’s greatest F1 and Indycar drives
It’s 30 years since Mansell won the Formula 1 world title and then headed off to do battle in America. Here are his best races – and the Briton’s memories of them
How Ericsson achieved Indy immortality as Ganassi's main man stumbled
Chip Ganassi Racing team was strong again in the Indianapolis 500, with poleman Scott Dixon and reigning champion Alex Palou leading almost three quarters of the race between them. But when dominator Dixon was penalised for pitlane speeding, ex-Formula 1 driver Marcus Ericsson stepped up to score the biggest win of his career and seize the IndyCar points lead
Ranking the top 10 IndyCar drivers of 2021
In an enthralling 2021 IndyCar campaign, the series bounced back from its COVID-19 truncated year prior and Alex Palou defeated both the established order and his fellow young guns to clinch a maiden title. It capped a remarkable season with plenty of standout performers
How F1's other IndyCar exile finally unlocked his potential
Romain Grosjean's swashbuckling rookie year in IndyCar captured the imagination of many in 2021. But another ex-Formula 1 driver whose potential was masked by five years of toil in, at best, middling machinery also enjoyed a breakout year in 2021 - winning twice and finishing sixth in points. Here's how Marcus Ericsson finally delivered on his promise
How Ganassi's relentless new champion outfoxed IndyCar's best
IndyCar sophomore Alex Palou stunned by overcoming team-mate Scott Dixon and the rest of a white-hot field in 2021. He was consistently fast and crucially showed a level head, rebounding well from setbacks to put himself in a near unassailable position entering the final round
Have Harvey and RLL formed IndyCar’s next winning match-up?
Despite appearing to have an IndyCar job for life with Meyer Shank Racing, Jack Harvey’s departure and move to Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing sparked plenty of debate. However, Harvey's and RLL's combined strengths could prove to be a winning combination - if they get the balance right
Remembering Dan Wheldon and his last and most amazing IndyCar win
Saturday 16 October marks the 10th anniversary of Dan Wheldon’s death. David Malsher-Lopez pays tribute, then asks Wheldon’s race engineer from 2011, Todd Malloy, to recall that magical second victory at the Indianapolis 500
Why Kyle Kirkwood is America's new IndyCar ace-in-waiting
Kyle Kirkwood, the record-setting junior formula driver, sealed the Indy Lights championship last weekend. But despite an absurdly strong junior career and scholarship money, his next move is far from clear
Subscribe and access Autosport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
You have 2 options:
- Become a subscriber.
- Disable your adblocker.