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Roger Penske will give the command to start engines for the Indy 500

Indy 500 engines command

During a press conference at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Roger Penske, chairman and founder of Penske Corporation, talks about the purchase of Hulman & Company, which includes Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the NTT IndyCar Series and Indianapolis Motor Speedway Productions subsidiaries, by Penske Entertainment Corp., a subsidiary of Penske Corporation on Monday, Nov. 4, 2019. Indianapolis Motor Speedway Sold To Penske Entertainment Corp

Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar, Indianapolis Star via Imagn Content Services, LLC

INDIANAPOLIS -- Roger Penske will give the command to start the engines Sunday for the 104th Indy 500 (1 p.m. ET, NBC, green flag 2:30 p.m.).

Penske will take over a role held by the late Tony Hulman or the Hulman-George family for decades.

Penske in January became the fourth owner of Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The track confirmed Friday to The Associated Press that it will be Penske giving the command.

Speedway officials also confirmed the Andretti family will be honored before Marco Andretti leads the field to green. Mario Andretti, the 1969 winner of the race, drives the IndyCar two-seater for the series before events and will be joined by son, Michael, for the ride.

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Marco Andretti is the first Andretti on the pole for the Indy 500 since Mario Andretti in 1987.

The two-seater ride for Mario and Michael will mark the first time three generations of the racing family will be on track together at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

“I’m one of the few that can say I’ve been teammates with both my father and my son, and now to have the opportunity for all three of us to be on track together, on race day at IMS, is really special,” Michael Andretti said. “Dad and I are really excited to do this together, but we’re still fighting about who’s going to drive.”

The starter for the Indy 500, meanwhile, is an important element to the tradition of the race and made famous when Hulman began giving it sometime in the 1950’s. Hulman was a soft-spoken man who would rehearse the line in order to perfectly deliver the command in a proud and vociferous manner.

Hulman’s widow took over the honor following his 1977 death, and it then went to their daughter, Mari George, and ultimately his grandson, Tony George.

Penske did not give the command for the July weekend in which both NASCAR and IndyCar shared the track in his first events as owners. The command for the IndyCar race was given by Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb. For the NASCAR race, the command was given by Scott Borchetta of Big Machine Records and he held a bottle of hand sanitizer for the occasion.