INDIANAPOLIS — Kyle Larson survived his first Indianapolis 500 unscathed.
His luck ran out Thursday.
The 2021 NASCAR champion and defending Brickyard 400 winner spun coming out of the first turn on Indianapolis Motor Speedway's 2.5-mile oval, hit the wall, bounced down the track to the warmup lane, then went back up the track and tapped the wall again before his No. 17 Chevrolet rolled to a stop. It was his first IndyCar crash at the venerable Brickyard.
Larson blamed himself for the mistake that ended his second day of open testing for next month's Indy 500 more than six hours early.
''It was my fault,'' he said, noting the team was running in qualifying trim instead of race trim after series officials gave all 32 cars a power boost Thursday. ''They have this thing where you hit the weight jacker and then you've got to hit it again before you turn in the corner, and I forgot to hit it in the corner. So I have had the understeer like I should have and, unfortunately, got in the wall."
Larson was checked at the infield hospital before being cleared and released.
Still, it was an inauspicious start as Larson begins his second attempt to complete racing's marathon double — completing all 1,100 miles of racing at Indianapolis and Charlotte in one day. Last year's quest was derailed by early rain at Indy, which delayed the start of the 500.
And though he admittedly made some rookie mistakes, he never hit the wall — literally or figuratively — in his car. He qualified fifth after making the nine-driver pole shootout and finished 18th, thanks in part to a penalty for a speed violation in pit lane.