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‘Double’ trouble: Katherine Legge crashes, exits Indy 500: ‘I’m gutted’

By Thomson Reuters May 24, 2026 | 1:53 PM

Katherine Legge swerved from her high-side position to avoid a collision with Ryan Hunter-Reay but her Indianapolis 500 and attempt for the “double” with a Sunday night entry in the NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 ended in a spinout.

Legge was uninjured in the incident ​and will travel to Charlotte to run in the NASCAR race. The British driver ‌was making the sixth bid to complete both races on Memorial Day weekend before the 45-year-old ran into trouble in the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday afternoon.

Her Indy 500 experience lasted just 18 laps.

Coming out of Turn 2, Ryan Hunter-Reay lost control of his Chevrolet and bounced off the wall at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. As he tried ‌to ​right himself, Legge said she couldn’t see much ahead of ⁠her because of smoke from Hunter-Reay’s ⁠car. When she finally saw the car, Legge had to take quick action to avoid him. After a sharp left turn, she wound up crashing into the infield fence, with her car sustaining significant damage.

Both drivers were out of the race and checked in the medical ​tent. No apparent injuries were sustained.

“He came back up the track, so last minute I had to go left. It just wasn’t enough time to avoid,” Legge said Sunday.

Legge was able ⁠to exit her No. 11 Chevrolet for HMD Motorsports with ⁠A.J. Foyt Racing without assistance. Hunter-Reay was also uninjured.

“Desperately frustrating,” Legge said ​of her mindset Sunday afternoon. “To be taken out by something not in your control, it would be ​slightly better to be taken out by something in your control … we were ‌looking forward to a long day, 1,100 miles.”

Legge had only a few hours to switch her gear, her car and her mindset entering the Coca-Cola 600.

“I need to have an attitude adjustment, because right now I’m pissed,” Legge said. “And disappointed. I need to get on that plane and try and ⁠get into the right mindset.”

Legge, 45, was the only woman in the Indianapolis 500 field in 2026. She will start the Coca-Cola 600 from the 37th spot on the grid.

The “double” calls for a driver ⁠to compete in two premiere ‌races, covering 1,100 miles with barely a moment to spare between the ⁠Indy and NASCAR Cup Series races. Five drivers previously have attempted ​the double ‌since John Andretti hatched the idea in 1994 for AJ Foyt ​Racing. Andretti finished ⁠10th at Indy but was knocked out after 220 laps at Charlotte due to engine trouble.

“Very few drivers ever get the opportunity to attempt the ‘double,’ and I do not take that opportunity lightly,” Legge said last week. “This challenge is about pushing through perceived limits … and trying to do something unique.”

Tony Stewart in 2001 is the lone driver to finish on the lead lap of both races on the ​same day.

–Field Level Media