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'I'm gonna have to pee in this thing': Conor Daly admits to urinating in his Indy 500 car

'I'm gonna have to pee in this thing': Conor Daly admits to urinating in his Indy 500 car

Yahoo3 days ago

Nature delayed the start of the Indianapolis 500. It also called Conor Daly.
The eighth-place finisher in Sunday's race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway revealed Monday night that he had to go as he sat in his car awaiting the start.
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"Never in my life have a I urinated in my car until Sunday. I was sitting on the grid, and I was like, 'This is the best car I've ever had in my whole life. … I'm gonna have to pee in this thing.' I kid you not," he said at the victory celebration.
A brief rain shower delayed the Indy 500's start by about 45 minutes. Daly led 13 laps (120-133), but issues with his right rear tire forced him to pit earlier than he wanted, costing him a chance to compete for the win.
"I had to go really bad," Daly said. "I don't if it was the diabetes or I'm just getting really old. Helio (Castroneves) should know. He's halfway to 100. I don't know if that happens to him a lot.
"I literally did the whole race sitting in my pee."
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From 2018: James Hinchcliffe: 'You're talking to a man who just wet himself.'
The 33-year-old Hoosier crossed the finish line 10th but moved up two spots after Marcus Ericsson and Kyle Kirkwood were penalized after their cars failed post-race tech inspection.
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Conor Daly admits to peeing in Indy 500 car on starting grid

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I saw his guys, I apologized. When I saw Kyle the next day just before the session … we kind of laughed about it because it was obviously at an incredibly low speed with the very bottom of first gear just sort of idling along, I guess. "It wasn't like we're doing 100 miles an hour so we're doing literally 15 miles an hour or something, if that. "I thought it was Marcus Ericsson, and he had held me up a couple of times in the previous races, so I had a little bit of frustration there, but had I known it was Kirkwood's car, probably wouldn't have happened." Because Kirkwood was able to have a successful practice and ultimately win Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix for his second win this season, he was able to laugh it off with his teammates, including Ericsson and Colton Herta. "I think he was laughing about it, but he was definitely surprised," Ericsson said. "He said that as well. He never experienced anything like that previously in his career. 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