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Shane Lewis' Road to Indy


Homestead Oval Shows Strength of Lewis-Crawford Combination

HOMESTEAD, FL., March 28, 2007 – They call it the “
Road to Indy” and, for Shane Lewis, 
that is exactly what it is. The Jupiter, Florida-resident 
has a map that charts his course to the biggest race 
of his career, the 91st Running of the Indianapolis 
500, and to date, Lewis has paid all the tolls. The 24-
time, 24 Hour race starter has joined Michael 
Crawford Motorsports and together the two are 
working, step-by-step, to field a competitive entry for 
Indianapolis this “Month of May”. The native of 
Lancaster, Calif. continued his “Road to Indy” this past 
weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway by making 
his open wheel, oval debut in the Indy Pro Series 
Miami 100. There, the sports car ace immediately 
showed he is also a top-performer on the high-speed 
ovals.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Lewis left little doubt in the minds of even the most 
jaded oval racing aficionado that he could wheel a 
formula-style car around an oval. His Indy Pro Series 
test, held at Homestead-Miami on February 22, gave 
Indy Racing League officials a clear sign that he had 
the skill and was not only comfortable at speed but a 
natural. Once clear of the first hurdle, Lewis and team 
owner Michael Crawford (Indianapolis, Ind.) had 
hoped to get the three-time 24 Hours of Le Mans 
starter quickly through his IndyCar Series rookie test. 
Fate would intervene though in that the team does not 
yet have available a 2007-spec GForce chassis. 
Therefore, they opted to get valuable seat time in the 
No. 8 Michael Crawford Motorsports Indy Pro Series 
Dallara.

Lewis got off to an inspiring start running fifth quickest 
in his group at the first practice session of the 
weekend. As if to show it was no fluke, the former high 
school bull riding champion in tthe state of California 
took the bit in his teeth and turned a qualifying time 
that would place him second-quickest for much of the 
qualifying session. It was not until later in the session, 
as track conditions improved, did Lewis slip from 
second to seventh on the grid of 28 cars. However, the 
team was ecstatic with the remarkable performance 
and set-about preparing the car for the race.

Race day, a double for Lewis who was also working 
as lead driver on the No. 3 Southard Motorsports 
Daytona Prototype in the Grand-Am Rolex Series, 
dawned with great anticipation. With Lewis’ ever-
present fan club cheering him with their “Go Shane, 
Go!!!” banners, he took the green flag and began to 
work with a car that was much different than it had 
been earlier in the weekend. Lewis came to terms 
with the single-seater and began to make his move 
back towards the front when the first of two major 
accidents took place immediately in front of him. 
Lewis, who was tucked in behind another car, slowed 
immediately with the yellow flag but suddenly saw the 
car he was following snap to the left and he found 
himself bearing-down on the nose assembly of one of 
the cars involved. He narrowly squeaked by the 
bodywork and was unharmed in the first major 
accident of the race on lap 21.

Having learned a lesson of the large debris field that 
can be caused when two open wheel cars try and 
occupy the same track space, Lewis was more wary 
when he saw two more disintegrating Indy Pro Series 
cars before him on lap 47. Despite nearly missing the 
carnage, a piece of debris from Pablo Perez’s car 
would end Lewis’ day just as he was about to re-enter 
the top-ten. Lewis felt his No. 8 Dallara lift slightly and, 
before he knew it, it rotated and started to back into the 
outside wall. He fought the car but found his steering 
input futile. His brake pedal was working and he drug 
the car, almost by his own will, to a stop just feet 
before impacting the Homestead-Miami retaining wall. 
Unhurt and with the car apparently intact, but unable to 
start, Lewis called for help so that he could stay on the 
lead lap. When the Indy Racing League Safety Team 
went to pull the car to a start they found it would not 
move. Lewis was stuck in place not by his own brakes 
or flat tires but, instead, by the brake and clutch pedal 
off of Perez’s demolished car. The two unlikely 
parasites had lodged themselves onto the undertray 
of the car. It was this debris, that neither Lewis or his 
spotter could see on the track as he approached the 
crash site, that cost the multi-time Grand-Am 
sanctioned event winner a top-ten finish in his open 
wheel, oval debut.

Despite the disappointment of watching the top-ten 
finish fall to a 20th-place result, Lewis and Crawford 
saw a great deal of positives come from this effort. 
The communication between driver and team, an 
essential part of any program at Indianapolis, was 
excellent. The speed of Lewis and his ability to adapt 
to the cars impressed all around him and his 
dedication and work ethic to make the program a 
success is a testimony to Lewis’ commitment to his 
dream.

Lewis will test the Michael Crawford Motorsports 
IndyCar in April to earn his IndyCar Series driver 
license. Once that milestone is met, Lewis will move-
on to the hallowed grounds of the Indianapolis Motor 
Speedway where he will, for the first time, strap-in and 
lap the 2.5-mile oval as part of the Rookie Orientation 
Program (ROP) just days before official practice 
opens for all at the “Speedway”. Once cleared through 
ROP, Lewis will begin the month-long process of 
filling one of the 33 positions on the grid for the “500”, 
the final mile marker on the “Road to Indy” and on the 
way to making his dream of being an Indy 500 starter 
come true.

Quotes

Shane Lewis:

(About running in the Indy Pro Series): “Running 
the Indy Pro Series weekend at Homestead-Miami 
was a great experience and experience is what I was 
looking for. I not only had the chance to work on a race 
and qualifying set up, I had the opportunity to race in 
heavy traffic, work the draft and learn to manage the 
car when you lose the air off the wings. These are 
things you can’t do in testing. You need to learn them 
first hand in competition. We had 28 guys out there 
fighting hard for every position. Talk about baptism by 
fire!”

(About his experience): “While I hated being 
taken-out of the race by debris from a wreck, I am 
happy that I was able to keep the car off the outside 
wall. One of the things I have learned in my years of 
racing is a little patience goes a long way. There’s a 
time to go flat out and there is a time to be calculating 
in the race car. Hopefully all of this will make my 
transition into the Indy 500 that much better. The guys 
at Michael Crawford Motorsports were great to work 
with. We each have a goal and we are doing our best 
to join together to reach that goal this May. Michael 
and his entire team are focused on that, the same way 
I am. They have gone above and beyond in so many 
ways. It is a pleasure and an honor to get to work with 
this team.”

Michael Crawford, Owner: “Shane single-
handedly elevated our program. His character, his 
ability, his insight all contributed to a successful 
weekend. We’ve worked with some really good drivers 
over the course of the last two seasons but Shane’s 
feedback is phenomenal. The breadth of knowledge 
that he brings to the team helped us in many areas. 
We were 6/100ths [of a second] from sitting on our 
first provisional pole. It was a mutually beneficial 
experience in the sense that Shane was able to help 
us and we were able to demonstrate the capabilities 
of our team. In an incident-riddled race our results do 
not accurately demonstrate the successes we 
experienced over the course of the weekend. I had 
numerous peers stop by and congratulate us over the 
course of the weekend. And, but for an accident, we 
had, at least initially no involvement in, our weekend 
would have finished with a solid top-ten that would 
have shown that we are capable of running with 
anyone. The bottom-line is, looking at our goals from 
when we began our relationship, we more than 
achieved them in preparing both the team and Shane 
for the Indianapolis 500. Hopefully, we can gather-up 
the resources for the Indianapolis 500. I know that we 
can put Shane Lewis into the show.”