INDIANAPOLIS — Arie Luyendyk Jr., bumped from the lineup in the final minutes of qualifications a year ago, will get another chance to drive in the Indianapolis 500, a race his father won twice.

A car for the 24-year-old Indy rookie was among the final batch of entries for the May 28 race.

The complete entry list released by the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Thursday included 66 cars and 26 drivers. Other drivers will be hired later by teams that entered spare cars to fill the 33-car starting field.

The younger Luyendyk qualified for his rookie race last year but was bumped by Felipe Giaffone, who was shopping for baby clothes earlier in the day when he got a call from car owner A.J. Foyt offering him a ride. Luyendyk had one more chance to get back into the lineup after he was bumped, but his final attempt was too slow.

He'll drive this year in the No. 61 Panoz entry fielded by his father's Luyendyk Racing team. The elder Luyendyk, who won at Indianapolis in 1990 and 1997, still holds the track records for qualifications (236.986 mph) and the race (185.981 mph).

Two other rookies were on the entry list, including 19-year-old Marco Andretti, the grandson of former winner Mario Andretti and son of car owner Michael Andretti. Michael, who drove 14 years at Indianapolis, retired after the 2003 race but will attempt a comeback this year to drive in his son's rookie race, just as his father did with him in 1984.

Marco is the youngest driver entered in the race.

The other rookie is P.J. Chesson, who is driving for the new Hemelgarn Racing team co-owned by NBA star Carmelo Anthony of the Denver Nuggets.

The other drivers include six former winners — defending Indy and IRL series champion Dan Wheldon, two-time winners Helio Castroneves and Al Unser Jr., and single winners Buddy Rice, Eddie Cheever and Buddy Lazier.

Three of the former winners did not race at Indianapolis last year.

Rice missed the race because he was injured in practice; Unser retired after the 2004 race; and Cheever, although never officially retired, stopped driving after 2002 in order to concentrate on running his team.

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Cheever, 48, is the oldest driver entered.

Among the other drivers are Danica Patrick, who last year became the first woman to lead a lap at Indianapolis and was the race rookie of the year, and Jeff Simmons, who joined Rice and Patrick with Rahal Letterman Racing after Paul Dana was killed in a crash at Homestead, Fla., last month.

The entry list includes no teams from the IRL's rival Champ Car World Series, which has races scheduled for both of Indy's qualification weekends. Newman/Haas Racing entered Indy last year with drivers Sebastien Bourdais and Bruno Junqueira.

Indy practice will begin May 7, with qualifications on May 13-14 and May 20-21.

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