Helio Castroneves’ fourth Indy 500 win had fans staying late to honor him, drivers running up to hug him and Mario Andretti leaning down to kiss him.
Author: Gregg Doyel, Indianapolis Star
Referee Bert Smith’s fall in men’s NCAA Tournament game didn’t kill him. It saved his life.
When NCAA men’s basketball referee Bert Smith collapsed during the Gonzaga-USC game, some thought he had died. Turns out, that fall saved his life.
Opinion: Indianapolis Colts gave away playoff game against Buffalo Bills
Colts had their hands full against an excellent Bills team, but some head-scratching decisions from Frank Reich made things even harder for Indy.
Opinion: Our country cares more about protecting athletes from COVID-19 than protecting everyone else
As the coronavirus rages, our country sends a clear message: We care more about the safety of athletes than the safety of everyone else.
Doyel: After chaos in the Brickyard 400 pits, a wife waits for a phone call in North Carolina
An ugly Brickyard 400 crash on pit road sent a Ryan Blaney crew member to the hospital and had his nervous wife answering the phone in North Carolina.
Opinion: A handful of people at IMS watch Scott Dixon dominate GMR Grand Prix
Scott Dixon won the 2020 GMR Grand Prix at empty Indianapolis Motor Speedway, using tire strategy to bend the field to his will.
Opinion: NCAA’s new independent infractions structure is complicated and terrifying
A new, independent infractions structure for the NCAA to police schools sounds great, doesn’t it? Check the fine print. It’s terrifying.
Opinion: NCAA softens name, image and likeness stance, and chaos will follow
The NCAA’s name, image and likeness stance is a real-life chaos theory, and the T-Rex in our rear-view mirror is much closer than it appears.
Crazy day in Big Ten: Coach falls ill, coronavirus concerns heighten, questions linger
As games were canceled around the country, Nebraska saw its coach fall ill and leave the game during the last basketball games to played with fans.
Doyel: Cancer won the battle a year ago, but Purdue superfan Tyler Trent might just win the war
Purdue fan Tyler Trent inspired fight against cancer, and his impact grows a year after death as researchers near breakthrough thanks to his tissue.