INDIANAPOLIS — Ryan Hunter-Reay was the leader at the halfway point of the Indianapolis 500 as he looked for a second victory in ''The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.''
Hunter-Reay, in a one-off entry for DRR-Cusick Motorsports, won the Indy 500 in 2014 as a driver for Andretti Global. Him leading Sunday with 100 laps remaining was fitting for a race that was first briefly delayed by rain and then hit with a rash of weird incidents.
Scott McLaughlin crashed on the warm-up lap while swerving to get heat in his tires. Scott Dixon had a brake fire before the race went green and then Marco Andretti was crashed on the first lap.
It was reminiscent of the 1992 Indianapolis 500, when pole-sitter Roberto Guerrero spun out and crashed while also trying to warm up his tires during the parade laps.
''I really have no idea what happened,'' a heartbroken McLaughlin said. ''I can't believe we're out of the race. I had so much hope. It's the worst moment of my life.''
The bizarre only continued as Alexander Rossi went to pit road with smoke coming from the back of his car, only for it to erupt into flames and his fueler caught fire. Rossi angrily flung his gloves over the pit road wall as he fled from the flames.
Rinus VeeKay lost his brakes and crashed on pit road and then Robert Shwartzman, the first rookie to start from the pole since 1983, lost control entering his pit stall and hit several of his Prema Racing crew members.
''As soon as I touched my brakes, the whole front just locked and I ran into my guys,'' Shwartzman said. ''It was really scary because when I braked, I was just a passenger.''