CHRISTIAN FITTIPALDI
“I saw the whole situation from the apron. Zanardi was so serious, so serious. (Alex) Tagliani had stuffed his car on Zanardi, and it ended up rolling another 200 meters. There was no one there. Probably the whole safety crew was on top of Zanardi’s car. And I remember seeing some blood. I remember seeing only up to his rear view mirror. … Yeah, we’re out there to put on a show. We’re all professionals, but at the same time to have fun. We’re not going to war. It seemed in a way that we were going to war. It makes you think on a bunch of different things, is it really worth it? Should I really be doing this?”
TOWNSEND BELL
“It was my first ever IndyCar race. I was drinking through a fire hose just driving, let alone landing in Europe on 9/11. As I recall, I was the first car to come across his accident under yellow. It was just a tough, tough week. I have so many strong memories: there’s Alex’s accident, there’s 9/11, but then I had one of my best races in my first-ever race. Exhausting, exhilarating, devastating all in one. I don’t think I’ve ever had a race weekend like that since.”
PAUL TRACY
“The weirdest thing was I was standing out on pit lane and everyone had disappeared. I thought, ‘Where is everyone? Did I get left at the track by myself?’ So I went into one of the offices and literally everyone was standing around watching a TV. A plane had gone into the first tower and like three minutes after I got there, the second plane hit. It was just mass confusion there over whether we would practice or race, we spent an entire day waiting and doing nothing as the series checked on the safety. There was a bunch of hoops that had to be jumped through before we had any clearance. Race day, I don’t particularly remember, I didn’t have a good car. Then I came around Turn 1 and there were parts everywhere on the track and I thought, ‘Oh Jesus, this is not good.’ It took a long time before anyone knew anything and everyone was fearing the worst because just by looking, you could see how bad it was.”
DR. TERRY TRAMMELL
“I was able to create a compression dressing on the right leg out of his firesuit and managed that for a tourniquet and used the belt to tourniquet the left stump but I couldn’t keep it on. It was like trying to put a band on a funnel. We just had to get him to the helicopter. We got to Berlin, and somewhere in all of that, someone handed me a plastic bag and said, ‘You asked for this.’ I was like, ‘I did?’ Well, it was his legs. It was all the pieces. The bag was X-rayed and then it went to the morgue. That was the first time the enormity of it all hit me, when I saw all the pieces in the bag, the body pieces that were not part of him anymore.”