McLaren offered to buy Fernando Alonso a seat in the Indianapolis 500, but the two-time Formula One world champion told the team he was uncomfortable replacing a driver who had earned a spot in the race.

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Alonso, with McLaren, failed to qualify for next Sunday’s race. The 37-year-old is trying to win motor sport’s version of the Triple Crown – the Monaco Grand Prix, Le Mans and the Indy 500 – and the latter is his remaining goal. McLaren was back at the 500 for the first time since it dominated the race in the 1970s. McLaren CEO Zak Brown said the team would not buy its way into the 500 and is halting this year’s effort. Bob Fernley, president of the team’s IndyCar operation, was fired on Sunday night after McLaren missed the race.

The team made inquiries into buying out another driver to give Alonso a spot in the 33-car field in a non-McLaren backed effort. Brown said Alonso initially supported McLaren running a car for him if the team needed to satisfy obligations to their sponsors. But once the Spaniard learned he’d be replacing another driver and competing for another team, he said he was uncomfortable with pursuing that route. McLaren had zeroed in on Oriol Servia’s seat with Arrow Schmidt Peterson Motorsports because McLaren already has a partnership with Arrow.

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“Fernando has done nothing wrong, he needs to be in the race and should be in the race and we do have a lot of partners who would like to be in the race,” Brown said on on Monday. “Do we buy him a seat? Well, he said ‘I know what it takes to get into this race, it doesn’t feel right to me to take another driver out that has earned it because my team has bought the seat.’ There is a lot of pride within Fernando and McLaren.”

McLaren’s miss is one of the biggest failures in Indy 500 history. Roger Penske missed the show with Al Unser Jr and Emerson Fittipaldi in 1995, a year after dominating the race. Reigning CART champion Bobby Rahal missed it in 1993, and two-time Indy winner Rodger Ward never got up to speed to make the 1965 field.