Category: NTT Indy

NTT IndyCar news and information

  • Tough Timing Tames Jack Harvey’s Strong Run at Indianapolis

    Tough Timing Tames Jack Harvey’s Strong Run at Indianapolis

    Harvey Leads First INDYCAR Race laps but caution comes at just the wrong moment

    Indianapolis, Ind. (4 July 2020) – After starting on the front row, running the first half of the race in podium position and leading the race, Jack Harvey and Meyer Shank Racing were on the fast track to a return to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway podium for the GMR Grand Prix on Saturday. But the promising effort was handed a significant setback following a lap 36 caution flag that saw the team return to the field deep in the pack on the way to a 17th place result.

    After making another appearance in the Firestone Fast Six in qualifying on Friday, Harvey earned a front row start with the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda for the 80 lap Fourth of July event.

    Harvey’s No. 60 Indy Car was on rails for the first quarter of the race, pulling away from the field as part of a lead pack of four cars. Harvey led his first official INDYCAR race on Lap 19 before heading into pit lane for his first stop of the race. Returning to the track, Harvey focused on keeping his pace consistent and fast while making sure to conserve as much fuel as possible.

    Continuing to monitor fuel strategy, tire wear, and track position, Meyer Shank Racing co-owner Mike Shank had called Harvey into the pits as he ran in second position in pursuit of a return to the IMS podium. But just moments later, that window closed as a full course caution closed pit lane on lap 36. Delaying his pit stop, Harvey came into pit lane three laps later on lap 38, but would unfortunately return back on track sixteenth in the order.

    Fighting to the finish, Harvey brought the AutoNation / Sirius XM entry home 17th.

    “Overall I’m disappointed with our race,” said Harvey. “If the yellow flag came out 30 seconds later our day would have looked a lot different. That really hurt us. We lost some speed during the race as well but we still had a top five kind of day. We showed that we have the pace and we a just have to keep building and moving forward.”

    “This was a tough pill to swallow,” said Mike Shank. “ We had the pace all weekend and Jack had the potential to easily get another podium finish or even the win. That yellow flag came out at probably the worst possible time for us and it shuffled us back through the field. I’m gutted for Jack and for the guys because the potential was there, but that’s racing.”

  • Weekend schedule for Indianapolis

    Weekend schedule for Indianapolis

    The world’s most famous 2.5-mile oval track, Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS), will host the first-ever NASCAR/INDYCAR triple-header this weekend. The 2-day event that kicks off with NTT INDYCAR SERIES (NTTICS) GMR Grand Prix on the track’s road course at noon on Saturday followed by NASCAR’s Xfinity Series (NXS) Pennzoil 150 at 3 p.m. on NBC. Then on Sunday, the NASCAR Cup Series will race the 27th running of the Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at 4 p.m. on NBC and broadcast live on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network.

    All times are Eastern.

    NASCAR Cup Series

    The Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 race will be 400 miles (160 laps) and broken up into three stages. The first two stages will be 50 laps each and the final stage will be 60 laps.

    Five former Indianapolis race winners are entered in this weekend race. Seven-time series champion Jimmie Johnson with four wins (2006, 2008, 2009, 2012), Kevin Harvick (2003, 2019), Kyle Busch (2015, 2016), Brad Keselowski (2018) and Ryan Newman (2013).

    NASCAR Xfinity Series

    The NASCAR Xfinity Series will race the road course for the first time in series history this weekend. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course is a 2.439-mile, 14-turn road course that will provide a whole new set of challenges for drivers and teams. Saturday’s race will be 62 laps for 151.22 miles with the first two stages being 20 laps each and the final stage is 22 laps.

    For the first time since the break from the COVID-19 pandemic, the NASCAR Xfinity Series will be allowed to practice prior to race. The teams and drivers will get two practice sessions on Friday, July 3 at 1:30 p.m. ET and at 3 p.m. ET.

    All times are Eastern.

    NASCAR:

    Friday, July 3

    1:30 p.m. – 2:25 p.m.: First Xfinity Series practice – NBC Sports App

    3 p.m. – 3:55 p.m.: Final Xfinity practice – NBC Sports App

    Saturday, July 4

    3 p.m.: Xfinity Series Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard (road course) – 62 laps/151.22 miles – Stages: 20/40/62 (NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN/IMS Radio Network, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

    Sunday, July 5

    4 p.m.: Cup Series Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 Powered by Big Machine Records – 160 laps/400 miles – Stages: 50/100/160 (NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN/IMS Radio Network, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

    NTT IndyCar:

    Friday, July 3

    11:30 a.m.: 1 p.m. IndyCar practice (NBC Gold)

    4:30 – 5:45 p.m.: IndyCar qualifying (NBCSN)

    Saturday, July 4

    Noon: IndyCar GMR Grand Prix – 80 laps/207.32 miles (NBC, IMS Radio Network)

  • The NASCAR Xfinity Series prepares for historic weekend at Indianapolis

    The NASCAR Xfinity Series prepares for historic weekend at Indianapolis

    For over a century, Indianapolis Motor Speedway has been an epicenter of racing and has featured a festivity of crown-jewel races across different motorsports regions. From the United States Grand Prix in Formula One to the Indianapolis 500 in IndyCar and NASCAR’s Brickyard 400, the track presents the best of racing and entertainment for the fans, the competitors and the teams, especially those aiming to achieve and stamp their name as a winner at the historic racing venue and pressing their lips against the yard of bricks on the frontstretch with a victorious kiss. Now, for the 2020 Independence Day weekend, the 2.5-mile track in Indianapolis will feature a unique and historic schedule lineup to kick off its first racing events of this year.

    For the second time in the last three seasons, the NASCAR Xfinity Series will be introduced to a racing event on a track very familiar to its schedule, but with a twist. The twist comes in the form of racing at the venue on a layout that is both an oval and a road course. That will be the case on Saturday, July 4, when the Xfinity Series races on the famed racetrack’s infield road course and parts of its 2.5-mile speedway, including the frontstretch with the start/finish line and the yard of bricks, for its 13th event of the 2020 season known as the Pennzoil 150.

    The Xfinity oval-road course event at Indy features 14 turns, making it a 2.439-mile event, and will span 62 laps, 150 miles. Stage breaks for the race are scheduled on Lap 20, 40 and 62. While the COVID-19 pandemic has prevented NASCAR from allowing drivers and teams to run practice or qualifying sessions prior to a race, there will be two practice sessions on Friday, July 3, at Indy’s road course to prep the competitors and the teams in time for the main event on Saturday. Jeb Burton, driver of the No. 8 Chevrolet Camaro for JR Motorsports, will start on the pole based on a random draw for the series’ race with no fans in attendance throughout the weekend.

    Every competitor and team will receive a first-hand experience of the track’s layout for the first time during Friday’s practice sessions. In January, Matt DiBenedetto, driver of the No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford Mustang in the NASCAR Cup Series, took part in a one-day Xfinity testing session on Indy’s road course layout in Team Penske’s No. 22 Xfinity Series Ford Mustang, driven by Austin Cindric. Due to DiBenedetto’s test session, he will not be eligible to compete in this weekend’s series race.

    This weekend’s Xfinity race at Indy will also provide an opportunity for road course ringers like A.J. Allmendinger, Chase Briscoe and Austin Cindric, and even hometown heroes like Briscoe and Justin Haley, to master their skills towards the historic track’s layout and stamp their names as the inaugural winner of NASCAR’s road course event at Indianapolis. For drivers like Cindric, Justin Allgaier, Ross Chastain and Michael Annett, this weekend comes with an opportunity for them to notch their first Xfinity Series win of the season and receive a free pass to the Playoff with the series reaching its midpoint of the regular season. For others like Myatt Snider, Brandon Brown and Jeremy Clements, this weekend comes with an opportunity to gain as many points and positions as possible, through aggressiveness or consistency, towards the battle for the top-12 cutline and towards the Playoffs. This weekend also features the return of Mike Wallace, a NASCAR veteran since 1990 who last competed in 2015, and the debut of Jade Buford, an IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge and Rolex Grand-Am Sports Car competitor from Brentwood, Tennessee.

    The 2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series has completed 12 races and has featured seven different winners, five of which are full-time series competitors and are guaranteed a spot in the Playoffs. With four wins, including last weekend at Pocono Raceway, Briscoe leads the regular-season series standings by three points over Noah Gragson and 33 over Chastain. Coming off his career-best fourth-place finish at Pocono, Snider holds sole possession of the 12th and final spot to the Playoffs by four points over Brown.

    The Xfinity Series has been racing at Indiana since 1982, but at Lucas Oil Raceway at Indianapolis through 2011. In 2012, the series made its debut at the 2.5-mile speedway as part of a doubleheader weekend with the NASCAR Cup Series, which has raced at the famed racetrack since 1994. From 2012 to 2019, five different drivers have won an Xfinity race at Indianapolis with Kyle Busch holding the most with four, including last season.

    While the experience of racing on an oval-road course layout at Indianapolis is new to NASCAR, it is not for the track along with other motorsports regions. Since 2014, the NTT IndyCar Series has raced at the track’s road course layout for the GMR Grand Prix, an event that runs two weeks prior to the Indianapolis 500 on the track’s 2.5-mile oval. From 2000 to 2007, Formula One raced at the Indianapolis road course for its annual United States Grand Prix, where names like Michael Schumacher, Lewis Hamilton and Rubens Barrichello won. From 2008 to 2015, the track’s road course featured Grand Prix motorcycle racing. Motorcycle racing will return at the track for its MotorAmerica Championship of Indianapolis on October 9-11, 2020. The track’s road course has even held the Brickyard Vintage Racing Invitational, a racing meet sanctioned by the Sportscar Vintage Racing Association. The Indy Lights, a development series sanctioned by IndyCar, was scheduled to race at Indy’s road course layout in early July, but the series’ season was cancelled and put in a hiatus until 2021.

    NASCAR, however, is no stranger in featuring an oval-road course venue to its schedule. Since 2018, Charlotte Motor Speedway utilized its infield road course configuration for a doubleheader weekend for the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series during the Playoffs. Known as the Charlotte Roval, the course measures 2.28 miles in length and features 17 turns between the infield course layout and multiple portions of the speedway’s oval-shape track. On March 4, 2020, Daytona International Speedway will host its annual Busch Clash race for the Cup Series on the speedway’s infield road course layout with parts of the speedway’s 2.5-mile high banks under the lights on February 9, 2021. NASCAR’s first oval-road course event at Daytona will mark the first of a six-day span of racing action leading up to the 2021 Daytona 500 on February 14. The layout has previously been used for the IMSA’s annual Rolex 24 at Daytona along with the annual Daytona 200 motorcycle race.

    The Xfinity Series will be part of motorsports’ history this weekend as this will mark the first IndyCar-NASCAR doubleheader at the same track on the exact date. With the Cup Series slated to run the Brickyard 400 on oval on Sunday, July 5, this weekend will be marked as a triple-header weekend between NASCAR and IndyCar. Prior to the Xfinity race on Saturday afternoon, the IndyCar Series will race its annual GMR Grand Prix at the Indianapolis road course layout on Saturday morning. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, IndyCar revised its schedule that included postponing the GMR Grand Prix from May to July 4, the exact date as the NASCAR Xfinity Series’ first oval-road course race on the track, and as the second race of the season for the series. Team Penske’s Simon Pagenaud, the reigning Indianapolis 500 winner, and Will Power, the 2018 Indy 500 champion, remain the only two IndyCar competitors to win at the track’s road course layout in its six-year history. The IndyCar Series completed its first race of the season at Texas Motor Speedway on June 6, which was won by Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon.

    The Fourth of July doubleheader will not mark the only IndyCar race at Indianapolis. With the revised schedule, the series will race for the third time at Indianapolis, second on the track’s road course known as the IndyCar Harvest GP, on October 3. The 104th running of the Indianapolis 500 on the track’s oval-shaped layout, which was initially scheduled to run on Memorial Day weekend, is scheduled to occur on August 23 with fans in attendance. Among the names who will attempt to make the starting grid for the race will be two-time Formula One champion Fernando Alonso, who will drive the No. 66 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet Dallara. The current and revised 2020 IndyCar Series schedule features 14 races across nine different tracks with seven races cancelled, among which includes the Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham, Alabama; the Grand Prix doubleheaders in Detroit, Michigan; the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas; the Streets of Long Beach, California; the Exhibition Place in Toronto, Canada; and the series’ anticipated return to Virginia’s Richmond Raceway.

    The upcoming NASCAR and IndyCar races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway serves as part of an eventful race weekend throughout Independence Day weekend. In other motorsports news, Formula One, which will celebrate its 70th anniversary of the first F1 season, will make its first anticipated start of the year at Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Styria, Austria, for the Austrian Grand Prix on July 5. It is the first of two races scheduled at Red Bull Ring with the F1 series to return the following weekend on July 12 for the Styrian Grand Prix. The start of the 2020 Formula One season was scheduled to commence in March, but was paused due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. This Sunday will provide a first opportunity for the current F1 drivers like Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas for Mercedes, Sebastian Vettel and Charles Leclerc for Ferrari, Max Verstappen and Alexander Albon for Red Bull Racing, Carlos Sainz Jr. for McLaren, Daniel Ricciardo for Renault, Kimi Räikkönen for Alfa Romeo Racing and Pierre Gasly for AlphaTauri along with Haas F1 competitors Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean to compete and make up for the loss time on the track. The current and revised 2020 F1 schedule features eight races across six countries with the rest of the schedule to be determined. Some countries like the United States of America, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Russia and China have postponed their scheduled F1 races to unknown dates while others like Australia, Monaco, Singapore, France and Japan have cancelled their F1 races this year.

    In addition, the 2020 WeatherTech SportsCar Championship season will resume on July 4 at Daytona International Speedway for the WeatherTech 240 spanning two hours and 40 minutes. It will mark the second SportsCar race of the season since the Rolex 24 at Daytona on January 25-26. There are 10 WeatherTech SportsCar races in 10 different tracks that are currently in schedule to occur through November 14 for the finale, the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring at Florida’s Sebring International Raceway.

    The inaugural Pennzoil 150 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course for the NASCAR Xfinity Series will air on July 4 at 3 p.m. ET on NBC after IndyCar’s GMR Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Road Course, which will air at noon ET on NBC. The NASCAR Cup Series’ Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway will air on July 5 at 4 p.m. ET on NBC.

  • CHEVY NTT INDYCAR SERIES GMR INDY GP: TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    CHEVY NTT INDYCAR SERIES GMR INDY GP: TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    CHEVY RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GMR GRAND PRIX
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
    TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
    JULY 2, 2020

    RACE #2 OF 2020 NTT INDYCAR SERES:
    Chevrolet will play a major role in the upcoming historic weekend at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. For the first time Team Chevy teams and drivers in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the NASCAR Cup Series will compete at the famous race track on the corner of 16th and Georgetown in Indianapolis, Indiana. A total of 57 Team Chevy drivers will compete for a win at the track nicknamed the Brickyard.

    The 2020 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season begins in earnest with Saturday’s GMR Grand Prix on the Road Course at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway as the first race of the trio of professional motorsports series making racing history.

    A total of 11 Chevrolet-powered teams and drivers are ready for the battle in the GMR Grand Prix on the 2.439-mile, 14-turn road course utilizes some of the 2.5-mile oval, including the short chute between turns one and two, through turn one and down the front straightaway before diving back into the infield.

    Chevrolet has had great success in the GP of Indy with five poles and five wins in the six races held there to date.

    Simon Pagenaud is ready to defend his spectacular 2019 victory in the rain, again behind the wheel of the bright No. 22 Menards Chevrolet.

    After scoring two podium and three of the top-five positions at Texas, the Chevy IndyCar 2.2 liter turbo charged direct injected V6 teams and drivers are ready to get their rhythm going for the remainder of the season, but especially for the return to Indianapolis Motor Speedway in August for the Indianapolis 500.

    Fans have multiple options for listening and watching all of the on-track activities. NBC Sports telecasts: Qualifying, 4:30 p.m. ET Friday, July 3, NBCSN (live); Race, noon ET Saturday, July 4, NBC (live).

    INDYCAR Radio Network broadcasts: Mark Jaynes is the chief announcer alongside analyst Davey Hamilton. The GMR Grand Prix race airs live on network affiliates, Sirius 211, XM 205, IndyCar.com and the INDYCAR Mobile app powered by NTT DATA.

    All NTT INDYCAR SERIES practices and qualifying are available on IndyCar.com and the INDYCAR Mobile app. NBC Sports Gold livestreaming: All NTT INDYCAR SERIES practice sessions and qualifying will stream live on INDYCAR Pass on NBC Sports Gold, NBC Sports’ direct-to-consumer live streaming product.

    At-track schedule (all times local): Friday, July 3 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. – NTT INDYCAR SERIES practice, NBC Sports Gold 4:30 p.m. – Qualifying for the NTT P1 Award (three rounds of NTT INDYCAR SERIES knockout qualifications), NBCSN (Live) Saturday, July 4 9-9:30 a.m. – NTT INDYCAR SERIES warmup, NBC Sports Gold Noon – NBC on air 12:01 p.m. – “Drivers, start your engines” 12:08 p.m. – GMR Grand Prix (80 laps/195.12 miles), NBC (Live)1

    Immediately following the conclusion of the NTT IndyCar race, 28 Camaro SS drivers will also compete on the road course in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Then the finale on Sunday will see 18 Camaro ZL1 1LE drivers will take to the 2.5-mile oval and race for the right to be called an Indianapolis Brickyard 400 winner.

    The NTT INDYCAR SERIES race and the NASCAR Xfinity race will be paced by a beautiful Camaro ZL1. The NASCAR Cup Series race will be led to the green flag by an all-new Chevrolet Silverado.

    BOWTIE BULLETS
    Since returning to INDYCAR manufacturer competition in 2012, Chevrolet has amassed 82 wins and 92 poles in 135 races along with six Manufacturer Championships.

    Chevrolet at IMS road course since 2014:
    o 5 wins (Will Power, 2015, ’17, ‘18); Simon Pagenaud 2016, ‘19)
    o All five wins for Team Penske
    o 5 poles (Will Power, 2015, ‘17, ‘18); Simon Pagenaud (2016); Sebastian Saavedra (2014)
    o Power holds circuit qualifying lap record (1:07.7044), set in 2017
    o Josef Newgarden holds circuit race lap record (1:09.3888), set in 2017
    o Power (2015) holds most laps led (65) record by winner
    o Pagenaud is the only driver to win on the IMS 2.439-mile, 14-turn road course and go on to win the championship (2016, with ChevrolPower is second all-time INDYCAR pole winner with 57 (behind only Mario Andretti with 67).

    The GMR Grand Prix (80 laps/195.12 miles) will see several driver and team adjustments among the 11 Team Chevy drivers compared to Texas.
    o Dalton Kellett (A.J. Foyt Racing) makes his IndyCar series debut. Sage Karam (Dreyer & Reinbold Racing) and Max Chilton (Carlin) make their first 2020 season starts. Conor Daly (Ed Carpenter Racing) makes his first start with Ed Carpenter Racing after finishing in sixth with Carlin at Texas.

    QUOTABLE QUOTES:

    ROB BUCKNER, CHEVROLET RACING ENGINEERING PROGRAM MANAGER FOR THE NTT INDYCAR SERIES:
    “The Chevrolet teams and drivers are ready to get the INDYCAR Series kicked off in earnest on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this weekend. We had a great race at Texas, but then we have had another long break. However, this time has given the Chevrolet engineers working with our teams and technical partners a great opportunity to take the learnings from the changes to the car this season, especially the aeroscreen, and work together to fine-tune those changes for upcoming stretch of races on a variety of tracks. With the highly technical Indy road course the first test. we are anxious to see if we have maximized the data to make key improvements to have a strong showing on Saturday. Chevrolet powered drivers have had great results in the six previous Indy Grand Prix events and we are looking forward to continuing that streak. Everyone wants to win at Indy!

    FROM THE COCKPIT:

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 1 XPEL TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET:
    “Indianapolis is such a special place. It’s like my second home so racing there means a lot to me personally, especially even more so now that Roger [Penske] owns the track. It’s such an honor racing for him but with this being our first race there since he purchased the track, it just makes it even more great. And not to mention this will be the first time ever INDYCAR and NASCAR have raced at the same track on the same weekend, and it’s the Fourth of July so it’s just going to be a huge event. I know myself and my crew on the XPEL Chevrolet are really pumped for this race weekend. We really miss the fans at our races but know precautions are necessary and are glad they will be joining us back at track soon. It’s going to be such a huge weekend for NBC and we are so thrilled to be part of it.”

    CHARLIE KIMBALL, NO. 4 TRESIBA AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET:
    “While the GMR Grand Prix usually kicks off the Month of May, this year’s race is just as exciting as INDYCAR and NASCAR come together to celebrate the July 4th weekend with a historic doubleheader. I’ve had great results on the IMS road course in the past and can’t wait to get on track for my first road course in the No. 4 Tresiba Chevrolet for A.J. Foyt Racing! The opportunity to race for A.J. is always special – it means even more when it’s at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway!”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET:
    “The next few weeks ahead of us are going to be intense and eventful. There is no better place to start it off than at the GMR Grand Prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Arrow McLaren SP and I have used this time off to prepare and be ready to tackle the challenges coming towards us at each track and event. I can’t wait to get going again this Friday and am really excited to be racing again on NBC. Hopefully Oliver and I can put on a show for all our fans and partners.”

    OLIVER ASKEW, NO. 7 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET:
    “I’ve always enjoyed racing on the Indianapolis road course, and I’ve had a lot of success there on the Road to Indy. I hope to take that experience into my first INDYCAR road course race. I think that everyone at Arrow McLaren SP has set the foundations for a very good month of racing, so I’m looking to take advantage of the cars we have been working hard to put together. It will feel weird to be racing in Indianapolis without fans but hopefully everyone tunes in to NBC to watch the race at noon on Saturday.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET:
    “Any time we race at Indianapolis is always just something else. There’s so much history at that track and it means so much to our series. With Roger [Penske] owning the track now, it’s even more special knowing how much the series, the track and our team mean to him. The Verizon Chevy guys have prepared a really great car for this weekend. We have had some amazing success there as a team since Simon [Pagenaud] and I are still the only winners. This is such a fun road course and always is a place where the series really can put on a show. NBC has put a lot of time and effort into this race weekend and having NASCAR and INDYCAR at the same track during the same weekend will be really cool.”

    DALTON KELLETT, NO 14 K-LINE USA AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET:
    “I’m excited to get my season underway at the GMR Grand Prix. I couldn’t be more grateful for the chance to make my debut in the K-Line Insulators USA No. 14 Chevrolet! With the long delay to the start of my season, it will be important to maximize all available track time. Especially given the condensed schedule. As a rookie, I expect there to be obstacles to overcome and new challenges to face. I am confident in the team we have put together to take these on. The goal is to perform well and learn the most that I can in my rookie event.”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 20 U.S. AIR FORCE ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET:
    “After what seems like many months together as a team, we still have yet to race together! I’m very excited to get out there with Ed Carpenter Racing and complete our first race together! The car looks incredible, I can’t wait to get out there for the U.S. Air Force. ECR has done well at the GMR Grand Prix before so it’s time to get out there and compete for a win! We’re looking to get some good points and start off this three-weekend stretch strong.”

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET:
    “I am really looking forward to the GMR Grand Prix, finally driving an Indy car at Indy! That’s something really special! I am excited to get to drive again and really get the season started now. We’ve got some really busy weeks coming up. I’m very confident and think we have a strong package for this weekend.”

    SIMON PAGENAUD, NO. 22 MENARDS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET:
    “I am thrilled to go back to Indianapolis. My whole life changed last May when my Menards Chevrolet team had that incredible month by winning both the Indianapolis 500 and the INDYCAR GP. Memories I will never forget. Now we finally have the opportunity to return and attempt to win again. We have been very fortunate at Team Penske with that particular road course race since my teammate Will Power and I are still the only winners of the event, which says a lot about how our team works together. I have been training pretty hard since our last race at Texas. Training is such an important part of my race prep. It’s great to feel in the best physical shape and mental space of my career right now. I wish fans could join us but know they will be back soon and I know all of us in the series can’t wait to see them back starting back at Road America. So until then, we will do our best to put on a great show for all of the fans tuned into NBC.”

    SAGE KARAM. NO. 24 WIX FILTERS DRYER & REINBOLD RACING CHEVROLET:
    “It’s been a long time for the Dreyer & Reinbold Racing team to run more than just the Indy 500. They have been trying hard to expand their IndyCar program and, this year, WIX Filters extended its partnership to run some road courses. We were already to go at St. Petersburg when the (COVID-19) pandemic lockout started. We had to pack up and take everything back to Indy. We had put in a lot of work with testing, simulation runs and purchasing some road course parts with Dallara. We were hoping to run more events in 2020. But some races were postponed or cancelled. So I’m very excited to run the IMS road circuit this weekend. The Indy GP was not originally on our 2020 schedule and I really wanted to do it. Now we get that opportunity. I ran a sim test recently for the IMS road course. I believe we are ready to go. It is a big learning curve for myself and DRR since it’s over seven years since DRR has run an NTT INDYCAR SERIES road race. I raced there in 2014 in the IMSA race with the Ganassi sports car and finished second. It was a tough situation at St. Pete as we were very excited to run there. And it just wasn’t me. There were guys moving up from the Indy Lights and other guys who were looking for full-time rides with new opportunities. It has been tough for all of the drivers to sit. Many guys had been chasing their dreams of IndyCar racing and had to wait. It’s good that we can show our sport in action again after so many sports have been halted. I think the drivers want to put on the best possible show for the fans because we all – teams, drivers, sponsors and fans – have missed the racing. The fans are what makes the racing world go round.”

    MAX CHILTON, NO. 59 GALLAGHER CARLIN CHEVROLET:
    “I couldn’t be more excited to get back behind the wheel of the No. 59 Gallagher Carlin Chevrolet this weekend on the road course at IMS after being out of the car for so long. It’s been a long time to be away from a race track, but I’ve been putting in a lot of time at my home gym and thankfully I was able to get some time on the sim last week as well as some testing in one of Carlin’s F3 cars at Silverstone to get back into the swing of things. I love being at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and really enjoy driving the road course layout there, so I’ve been anxious to get back over to the US for this one. Conor and the team did a great job in Texas a few weeks ago and got us off to a great start, so I’m hoping I can keep us moving in that direction and come away with another solid result for Carlin and Gallagher.”

    Chevrolet INDYCAR Series Statistics

    Chevrolet has recorded six NTT IndyCar Series Manufacturer Championships since returning to manufacturer competition in 2012.
    Chevrolet earned six consecutive CART Manufacturers’ Cup championships from 1988-93.
    Chevrolet has recorded 12 driver championships, including four in the past five years.
    Chevrolet has recorded 193 wins in Indy-style racing, including USAC, CART, Indy Racing League and IndyCar Series since 1965.
    Chevrolet’s initial win, under USAC sanction, was by Al Unser in the Pikes Peak Auto Hill Climb on July 4, 1965.
    Chevrolet has 82 wins and 93 poles in 136 in IndyCar Series races since returning to manufacturer competition in 2012.
    Chevrolet IndyCar V6 Year-By-Year Results

    2020 – 1 pole in 1 race
    Poles – Josef Newgarden (Texas)
    2019 – 9 wins, 9 poles in 17 races
    Driver/owner championship (Josef Newgarden/Roger Penske); Indianapolis 500 win (Simon Pagenaud)
    2018 – 6 wins, 9 poles in 17 races
    Indianapolis 500 win (Will Power)
    2017 – 10 wins, 11 poles in 17 races
    Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Josef Newgarden/Roger Penske)
    2016 – 14 wins, 13 poles in 16 races
    Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Simon Pagenaud/Roger Penske)
    2015 – 10 wins, 16 poles in 16 races
    Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Scott Dixon/Chip Ganassi);
    Indianapolis 500 win (Juan Pablo Montoya). First manufacturer to capture all titles since Chevrolet returned to INDYCAR in 2012
    2014 – 12 wins, 13 poles in 18 races
    Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Will Power/Roger Penske)
    2013 – 10 wins, 11 poles in 19 races
    Engine Manufacturer Championship; Indianapolis 500 win (Tony Kanaan)
    2012 – 11 wins, 10 poles in 15 races
    Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Ryan Hunter-Reay/Michael Andretti)
    Total – 82 wins, 93 poles in 136 races

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • CHEVY NTT INDYCAR SERIES GMR INDY GP: Simon Pagenaud and Conor Daly Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVY NTT INDYCAR SERIES GMR INDY GP: Simon Pagenaud and Conor Daly Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVY RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GMR GRAND PRIX
    INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
    JULY 1, 2020

    SIMON PAGENAUD, NO. 22 MENARDS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, AND CONOR DALY, NO. 2O US AIR FORCE ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, met with media to discuss the upcoming GMR Grand Prix on the Road Course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Pagenaud is the defending race winner, and Daly is making his debut with Ed Carpenter Racing. Full transcript:

    THE MODERATOR: Welcome, everybody, to today’s NTT INDYCAR Series video news conference in advance of the GMR Grand Prix on Saturday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The race will be noon at eastern on your local NBC affiliate.

    We’re pleased to be joined by the defending champion of the GMR Gran Prix, Simon Pagenaud of Team Penske, and Conor Daly, driver of the No. 20 US Air Force Chevrolet for Ed Carpenter Racing.

    Simon, we’ll start with you. I know last May at Indianapolis, it was pretty life-changing for you. How important was the win in the GMR Grand Prix for setting that stage?

    SIMON PAGENAUD: Hi, everyone. Thanks for joining.

    Obviously racing in Indianapolis to me, it’s what we’re all about. Obviously, our name is INDYCAR. I’ve always loved the Indy Grand Prix because it really sets the tone going into the month of May. It just showcases what INDYCAR is about, road course racing, then the week after that we usually go into the Indianapolis 500.

    That’s what’s really about our series, is diversity in terms of tracks and talents. I really enjoy it. I’m really excited to come to Indy again and race in Indianapolis again. That put a grin on my face.

    Obviously, the Grand Prix has been very blessed for me. I’ve had three wins there. I hope I can get it to number four. It’s definitely the goal this weekend. But it definitely changed my life last year. Now I can race very focused, yeah, very focused. Also, the chance to race with my personal pressure is off because I’ve achieved my dream. Now I can really focus on myself and getting the best out of myself which is what I really enjoy the most.

    THE MODERATOR: Conor, you’ve been going to IMS most of your life, raced in the GMR Grand Prix twice, had a sixth-place finish for Dale Coyne Racing in your debut race. How exciting is it to race at IMS and finally get started with Ed Carpenter Racing?

    CONOR DALY: As part of my one-off entries in the Indianapolis 500 in the past, I’ve tried to beg, borrow and plead with the teams, Hey, can I please do the Grand Prix as well? It hasn’t worked out yet.

    It’s nice to be back. It’s such an incredible way to start out the month of May. I love the road course at Indy. I love the racing opportunity it brings. We know it’s going to be hard to beat Team Penske there as usual, but it’s going to be a fun challenge. It’s going to be great just to get back on track on a road course, fight with everyone.

    There’s a lot of entries as well. We’ve obviously got some one-off entries. It’s great to see some other people in the field again, like Sage Karam and stuff like that. It’s going to be cool to just get back out, get on the road course, let these cars live a little bit at Indianapolis and just have a good weekend.

    THE MODERATOR: I know we have quite a few media on the line so we’ll open up for questions from the media.

    Q. Simon, you mentioned you’ve won this race three times. The only other person to have won in an INDYCAR on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course has been Will Power, your teammate. What do you make of your particular dominance on this course in these last several years? What has worked so incredibly well for the Team Penske cars?
    SIMON PAGENAUD: Well, I think what I know for a fact is that Will and I have a very similar driving style. I had the chance to score a win with the Schmidt Peterson Honda when I was there. That was the inaugural Grand Prix, 2014. As a smaller team taking on the big team, that was a lot of fun.

    Obviously, I joined the powerhouse of Team Penske and we’ve been able to carry on the tradition of winning at the Grand Prix. Obviously, I’m very proud of that. I feel, again, very blessed that we have the program to be able to contend for wins everywhere we go.

    Team Penske, you guys all know, we put a lot of work in, we work really well as teammates as well. That’s one of the things with Will, we have a very similar driving style, but that doesn’t mean that we’re the same speed in every corner. Some corners he’s better than me, some corners I’m better than him. We share a lot. We talk about it, talk about how to set the car up. We’ve been able to make the whole program better that way. Josef contributes a lot to that, as well.

    I think the three of us together, obviously we have phenomenal engineers that are able to bring some ideas on how to develop the car in a better way for that track or another track.

    But I do think there’s a little bit of mystery as to why sometimes you go to a track and you have more luck than you would at a different track. All I can think of is Detroit. I’ve never had much luck there. It doesn’t mean I’m not a good driver. I go to the Grand Prix and most of the time I’ve had good luck.

    There’s a bit of that mystery in racing. You can’t forget it. It’s certainly a testament to the great job that we do all together.

    Q. Simon, is there an additional comfort level that you get as a driver going to a track where recently you’ve had success and where your team has also won weekends that you haven’t won? This INDYCAR Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, does it feel any different as far as a comfort level for you guys?
    SIMON PAGENAUD: I think as a driver, when you go to a track where you’ve won before, a track where you’ve had good success, you just have a level of confidence. I’m going into the Grand Prix with very high expectations of myself and my car and my team. I’m going there to win the race. I’m not going to be third. I’m not going in thinking I could be fifth or sixth or seventh. The goal is to win.

    Quite frankly, that’s the only thought I have. But there are a lot of things that’s going to happen, a lot of things out of my control. All I can do is the best I can. Certainly with the team that I have, obviously you expect to win.

    Q. You’re both so accessible to fans, have been for a very long time. What will you miss most about not having fans there?
    CONOR DALY: Well, I mean, honestly it’s my home race. I’ve even seen some tweets today that, like, you know, Tony Donohue put out it’s 27 years since there’s been a race at IMS and he hasn’t been there. It is weird.

    I was a fan first. I was out there every day of my life, every month of May that I was allowed to get out of school early and go. It was such a part of my life. But we will still obviously be doing our best to put on the best show that we can for everyone at home.

    We know our job is to go out there and try to absolutely, you know, beat everyone and create an incredible race because we know that if the fans were there, they would be cheering along just as much as they would be at home.

    It’s tough. It’s strange. But I know that we continue to tell everyone, Hey, we appreciate you, hang with us, we’ll get back to the track eventually. Everyone will be there eventually. We’ll get back hopefully and enjoy it once again.

    As long as everyone tunes in on TV, I can guarantee it will be quite a show for everyone.

    Q. Simon, could you address that briefly?
    SIMON PAGENAUD: Yeah, of course, I think it’s a very tough time we’re in right now. We just all have to adapt. It’s quite unfortunate. INDYCAR has been doing everything they could to reorganize the schedule, make sure that we could put on a show for the fans. That’s what we’re going to do.

    Texas was a good example of it. We’re out there racing with the new windscreen, a lot of new things that make the series really exciting. I think we see the numbers.

    I think everybody in the series can’t wait to have the fans come back. Luckily that’s going to be at Road America. We don’t have to wait too long. It’s unfortunate it can’t happen in Indy. Obviously, health and safety is first. I think we’re in this position right now.

    When you ask that question, first thing I thought is back to my childhood. I was at a racetrack. One of the main drivers refused to give me an autograph. Obviously, I wanted to be a driver at some point, I was really young, I didn’t know if I was going to be a driver. I made myself a promise that I would always do the best I could to give an autograph every time I could.

    So the fans for me are a big part of my career, a big part of who I am as a racer. It’s the case for every INDYCAR driver, I can assure you that.

    It’s going to be weird. Hopefully, that changes very soon.

    Q. Conor, I know you’ve raced for 42 different INDYCAR teams. Having a split season, how does the communication flow from one team to the other, then from track to track? What is your mindset? Seems like you have good communication skills anyway. How are you suited for this?
    CONOR DALY: Well, there’s no sharing of information. Everyone wants to beat everyone. It’s tough (smiling).

    Oddly enough, I feel like I’ve been with ECR for quite a long time. We still have yet to race with each other. I was signed up in November. Guess what? It’s almost July. Haven’t even done a single race with them yet. It’s really interesting.

    But I feel like I’m part of their family already. We’ve done a lot of work together. We’ve done a lot of simulator days together. So working with the engineers, working with my teammates, Ed and Rinus. We’re ready. We’ve got everything in place. It’s just a matter of you can only think through so many things until your head starts to explode and you just want to get on the real racetrack.

    We’ve thought through every possible thing that we could possibly think through and we’re ready to go out there and deliver for the U.S. Air Force, for Chevrolet, for everyone that supports this group. I can’t wait.

    The car has been looking great for a long time. Now we got to see it in action side-by-side with a bunch of people. Hopefully at the front. That would be quite satisfactory.

    Q. Not complaining or anything, but we’ve gone so long with such a slow start to the season because of the shutdown, now this is going to be the first of five races over the next three weekends. Is it almost like a standing start to the season going from zero to 160 in a matter of a couple of seconds?
    SIMON PAGENAUD: It’s definitely an adjustment. Everybody I think in the world has been going at an interesting slow speed to going flat out.

    I think the advantage of it is we’ve all been able to train a lot, get ready for the heat. Obviously, the added windscreen makes for quite a hot day every day in the racecar. That’s also going to be an adjustment.

    But I’m personally ready, ready to go, couldn’t be any more ready, to be honest with you. It’s the best shape I’ve ever been in in my career.

    CONOR DALY: Yeah, I mean, like Simon said, I feel really good myself. I’m lighter than I’ve been starting a year before. I feel good. Obviously this weekend will be new for us. We’ve done some road course testing, of course, with the windscreen. But it’s going to be a good old Indiana summer day, plenty of humidity, nice and hot. That will be really tough I think. It will be really interesting.

    Really the doubleheaders are going to be the ones where I think it will really test us and put us on the limit. But that’s why we do what we do. We want to be the best athletes we can be and the best drivers we can be. It’s on us to be as prepared as possible.

    I can’t wait for it. I’ve been sitting around in this darn simulator room for way too many weekends. I’m ready to get back to the real racecar and be sweating as much as possible because that means we’re out there doing work and I can’t wait.

    Q. As racers, how excited are you to see the second race of the day on Saturday, to see how well they do on your course?
    CONOR DALY: If we’re allowed to watch, I can’t wait. I think it’s going to be great. Those guys, I’ve been getting a lot of texts from different Xfinity guys about the track. I know it will be totally new for them. But I’m excited.

    I wish I could do the race obviously. Got to stay focused on the INDYCAR program. I think it will be cool. I think they’ll race pretty well, too.

    SIMON PAGENAUD: Yeah, I’m excited to see obviously Austin Cindric, how well he does over there in the Xfinity on Saturday afternoon. But obviously there’s a lot of precautionary aspect we have to think about. I don’t think I can stay actually. I’m actually going to hop on the plane to get home to make sure we all stay safe. Obviously we just have to follow the guidelines. It’s the way it is. I don’t think I’ll be able to watch the race. I wish I could have. It’s the situation we’re in.

    I look forward to seeing the big NASCAR race on Sunday. That will be fun to watch. At the end of the day, it’s a historical moment, I think not just for American racing but for worldwide racing. I look forward to the weekend and seeing the reaction afterward.

    Q. Elaborate a little bit more on this crossover. How important is it to share a weekend with NASCAR? Do you want to do more of these weekends with these guys?
    CONOR DALY: I think it’s huge. I think it’s awesome. I mean, I love racing. I’m a race fan. Doesn’t matter if it’s Formula 1, NASCAR, Formula E, whatever it is, USAC. Anything like that is awesome. I would love to see more of it.

    This is the first time it will happen. Realistically we wish we could see both fan bases interacting and everyone there together. We’ll still wait on that. But I think it’s an exciting sign hopefully for the future because if one side of motorsport, NASCAR, is doing well, we want that success to kind of somehow — if we can work together, that would be great. This is a team effort. For motorsports to be successful, hopefully, we can all help each other. That would be a lot of fun.

    SIMON PAGENAUD: I totally agree with Conor. At the end of the day, we’re all racers. Doesn’t matter if you have a roof, no roof, windscreen, whatever it is. I’m like Conor, I love any sort of racing. I love anything with four wheels and a steering wheel.

    If you can join the power of NASCAR and the power of INDYCAR together, it’s fantastic. I think what’s happening for us, for everybody that enjoys racing, it’s massive. I can’t wait to see what the weekend is like, what it’s like.

    Obviously, it would have been phenomenal to have the fans come to that race for the first-ever time. We’ll see the attendance we get on TV and the response on social media. It’s going to be a big weekend.

    Q. You two have been good here. Is there a pressure moment to get a good result during the week against some of the guys that haven’t been as lucky?
    CONOR DALY: I think for me personally, yes, you want to kind of keep the momentum going because I know that I’ve been strong here in the past. But it’s also a new environment still with this team for me.

    We’re going to have a lot to learn about ourselves. Carlin and I at Texas, I knew that environment already. We were able to take advantage of that. We had a fantastic car. They did the job over the off-season, kind of working with what I had told them last year that we needed to do.

    This is still new for us at Ed Carpenter Racing. I’m just excited. We’re only one race in. We want to do well at every race. I’m not really thinking about points or anything yet. But I can’t wait to just get things going.

    Yes, Road America is going to be wild, Iowa is going to be tough, swapping teams and everything like that. It will just be nice to get things going. I think if you do well, though, at Indy right now, it does create some good momentum because you’re just going to be going back-to-back races. It’s always nice to have good momentum and cars that are in one piece, as well.

    SIMON PAGENAUD: For me, it’s a little different. It’s quite a bit different for me because I’ve been with Team Penske for six years. Same engineer for many, many years. Actually almost a decade. I’m in a very different situation where I’m going into the road course at Indy with the goal to win the race, score more points, strike the (indiscernible). We started the season really well in Texas. I feel this year we can’t be any more ready, quite frankly, despite the situation.

    I’m 100% full throttle right now in my head. I’m really in a good space mentally to go to this racetrack and score as many points as possible. I’m definitely thinking championship right now.

    Q. Simon, how much do you expect the Aeroscreen to change some of the setups from the past? You’ve been good in the last car. You saw Texas changed a little bit. Do you expect a change in the setups for this weekend?
    SIMON PAGENAUD: Yeah, it’s a great question because Texas was an eye-opener for a lot of us, I think. We realized after the race there was a lot of improvement to be made, but not enough time to really think about what we could do on-site.

    Obviously, it’s the same for the road course in Indy. We don’t really know yet what’s going to need change. Certainly, that hour and 20 minutes of practice is not that much. We’re going into qualifying after that, then it’s race day the next day.

    I think it’s going to take a few races to adjust and figure out what we need for each track. Each track is different. No matter what, this is going to be a year of adjustments. I think that might allow driver and engineer combinations to show strength.

    Q. Jumping ahead a week. First doubleheader at Road America. What are some of the challenges that go into doing that doubleheader when you have races that one is going to start less than 18 hours after the other one ends?
    CONOR DALY: I think from the team side, it’s just the amount of work that the guys have to put in. Our crews are going to be flat out, for sure. We appreciate everything that those guys do. They’re flat out.

    It’s going to be interesting for us. Road America, probably going to be warm, probably going to be a physical race. It’s been a little while since I’ve been there in an INDYCAR. It’s a great place to race.

    The key is, if you have a decent day in the first race, how do you make it an even better day for day two? You know what I mean? Each time on track, you’re going to have to do the best job possible. Use race one as a test session for race two if you’re struggling a little bit.

    We want to go there with a strong package immediately because you have two opportunities for points. But realistically you never know what could happen. It’s obviously going to be a very short weekend.

    I’m excited for it though. Two races at Road America, I don’t think any driver in the world would complain about that.

    SIMON PAGENAUD: I think it will be interesting. Obviously we’ve seen it with NASCAR in Pocono last weekend. First day you’re going to have some really good cars. The next day everybody gets better, like Conor said. The second day is actually really, really tough racing day where you’re a little bit drained from the day before. Decision making is going to have to be on point despite being tired.

    We’ve had some practice with Detroit. It’s grueling. The IndyCars are extremely physical cars. It’s going to be hot again with the new windscreen as well. A lot to take in combination there.

    I have no doubt it should be an amazing event. But certainly second race will be interesting to see who gets better.

    Q. You are in this busy stretch, the quick turnaround. There’s some pressure there not to make it any harder on your team than it needs to be. How much can you be thinking about that in the first race that I really don’t need to put one off in (Turn) 5 or whatever?
    CONOR DALY: I think drivers are going to go flat out, non-stop, no matter what day it is, what race it is. Yes, we have to think about the weekend as a whole. Obviously, we saw in Texas some mistakes in the day, whether that was in practice or qualifying, really, really affected some people’s race days in general.

    We got to be smart. That’s hopefully part of our job, is using our brains the right way, being smart about things. No matter what, I think we’re going to be flat out every day, no matter what.

    SIMON PAGENAUD: I actually looked at the schedule yesterday. We’re basically starting in July. October it’s going to be over. It’s half the season really, just as many races in half a season. It’s going to be compact, intense. We all know that INDYCAR racing is extremely intense.

    I think the big teams might have an advantage for sure because of the amount of people they have working with them. The smaller teams, on the other hand, it’s going to be hard for them because of all the work they have to do for all these weeks. They have reduced the amount of people.

    Overall all the teams are so professional that it should be normal. I expect nothing less than usual.

    A video of the Zoom conference is available here: https://bit.ly/GMR-SPCD
    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • Meyer Shank Racing Driver Jack Harvey Builds on IndyCar Oval Experience with Texas Race Finish

    Meyer Shank Racing Driver Jack Harvey Builds on IndyCar Oval Experience with Texas Race Finish

    Fort Worth, TX (6 June 2020) – Notorious for its thrilling races year after year, Texas Motor Speedway once again did not come up short of action after another exciting race under the lights on Saturday. Meyer Shank Racing driver Jack Harvey took to Texas Motor Speedway for the very first time on Saturday night to finish 16th in the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda.

    Competing at the challenging 1.5 mile oval for the first time in his career, Harvey embarked on a whirlwind event schedule with practice, qualifying and the Genesys 300 all within a seven hour period.

    Working fast was important for not only Harvey, but also for the Meyer Shank Racing crew, with just two hours of practice before qualifying. Once complete with qualifying, the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda was then impounded until the start of the race – only allowing the team to make minor changes ahead of the race start.

    With temperatures soaring above 95 degrees, Harvey took the green flag, making a strong run for nose-to-tail pack running. It did not take long for Harvey to get into a groove, as he was running speeds consistent with the top-ten and even pulling away from the the surrounding pack of front runners.

    Building his speed and confidence with every lap, Harvey battled back after losing a lap early in the run. He soon exceeded his qualifying times as he gained pace through the night. A yellow flag on lap 77 allowed Harvey to regain his lap and restart back on the lead lap. Running among the top five on track, Harvey kept the pace as he looked to make up lost ground in the late stages of the race.

    Growing his experience on the daunting and fast Texas track, Harvey showed a veterans approach in his first visit to the facility as he moved up to take sixteenth at the checkered flag.

    “It’s been a super busy and eventful day,” said Harvey. “We made some good gains in the race and we had some genuinely good moments. As a whole, Texas is a hard place to come to. I’ve never been here before, I’ve never done an oval in an Indy Car outside of Indy before, so it was a big ask coming here and cramming it all into one day. We also had a tough pit box which made it hard to get in. It was a fine day, not exactly what we wanted but we brought the car home in one piece.”

    Mike Shank expressed his appreciation for the gains that Harvey made during the 200 lap event several times during the race.

    “It was a very tough and difficult day for us, but what Jack showed us during the race was far beyond what I thought was possible,” said Shank. “We needed to get this race in, and get this experience in and we chalked it all up to learning. Jack had some great laps and he raced way quicker than he qualified and stayed out of trouble. I’m also very happy with the pit stops that we had today, the team executed really well. There are some positives to take out of today but we want to do better and we need to do better for AutoNation and SiriusXM. It is great to get this under our belt and now we can’t wait to get back to Indy where we had our first IndyCar podium last year and keep building. ”

    Meyer Shank Racing would like to thank all of the first responders that have been so critical to the country moving forward in this difficult time. Meyer Shank Racing looks forward to better days ahead, and is eager to compete once again as the team prepares for a dual event weekend with both the IMSA WeatherTech 240 at Daytona as well as the GMR Grand Prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 4th.

  • SCOTT DIXON DOMINATES THROUGHOUT GENESYS 300 EN ROUTE TO WIN AT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    SCOTT DIXON DOMINATES THROUGHOUT GENESYS 300 EN ROUTE TO WIN AT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY

    • The victory was Dixon’s record tying fourth at TMS (2020, 2018, 2015, 2008)
    • Texas Governor Greg Abbott meets with drivers on pit road before green flag

    FORT WORTH, Texas (JUNE 6, 2020) – A late-race caution only briefly delayed the inevitable victory for Scott Dixon whose dominant performance in the Genesys 300 earned him and the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda team their fourth victory at Texas Motor Speedway, tying a track record held by Helio Castroneves.

    Dixon, who qualified second in the heat of the day when temperatures reached near triple digits, took the lead on Lap 32 and went on to lead 157 of the 200-lap, 300-mile race that kicked off the COVID-19-delayed 2020 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season. The New Zealand native beat Simon Pagenaud in the No. 22 DXC Technology Team Penske Chevrolet by 4.411 seconds.

    Dixon’s previous victories at No Limits, Texas were in 2018, 2015 and 2008.
    “Such strange times right now and I just can’t thank the team enough, it’s such a team effort,” said the 39-year-old Dixon. “”It’s just so fast. Any situation we were in, we could just go for it. Huge thanks to everybody involved, and bummed that the fans weren’t here – I wish everyone was here to celebrate.”

    Reigning NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion and defending Texas Motor Speedway winner Josef Newgarden, who also earned the pole position for the Genesys 300, finished third in the No. 1 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet.

    The balance of the top-10 finishers were: Zack Veach (No. 26 Gainbridge Andretti Autosport Honda), Ed Carpenter (No. 20 Sonax Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet), Conor Daly (No. 59 Gallagher Carlin Chevrolet), Colton Herta (No. 88 Capstone Turbine Andretti Harding Steinbrenner Autosport Honda), Ryan Hunter-Reay (No. 28 DHL Andretti Autosport Honda), rookie Oliver Askew (No. 7 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet), and Tony Kanaan (No. 14 7-Eleven AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet).

    Teams had been informed in late May by series tire supplier Firestone of a 35-lap limit on tires as a result of new tire production halted due to COVID-19 work stoppages. Unused alternate right-side tires from last year’s Texas Motor Speedway race and unused left-side tires from last year’s Indianapolis 500 were made available.

    Texas Governor Greg Abbott attended the event, visiting with drivers on pit road from a safe distance before the green flag.

    “We’re honored to have Governor Abbott make another visit to Texas Motor Speedway because he’s a big race fan,” said Eddie Gossage, President and General Manager of Texas Motor Speedway. “He welcomed the crowd on NBC, which was his opportunity to tell everyone Texas is open more and more everyday as we all deal with COVID-19. He even got to pace the field before the start of the race. He is one of our biggest supporters.”

    Three cars had issues leaving pit road after the command to start engines, resulting in each receiving penalties. Graham Rahal, Ryan Hunter-Reay and Alexander Rossi received drive-through or stop-and-go penalties which put them at the back of the pack when the race went green.

    Newgarden led the field to the green flag and stayed at the point for the first 31 laps before pitting on Lap 33 due to a handling issue. Dixon took the top spot from there and was leading when the first caution flag waved on Lap 37 when rookies Rinus VeeKay and Alex Palou got together coming off Turn 2.

    Dixon maintained his lead until a second caution, on Lap 77, slowed the field. A slow pit stop by the five-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion, allowed Newgarden and Dixon’s Chip Ganassi Racing teammate, Felix Rosenqvist, to take the top two spots for the Lap 87 restart.

    Dixon was back to the lead just three laps later and began his domination shortly after the halfway point, leading by more than 10 seconds on Lap 118.

    The third caution of the night slowed the field with just 10 laps remaining when Rosenqvist, attempting to pass a slower car, ended up making contact with the outside wall in Turn 2.

    Despite there being just four laps remaining when the final green flag resumed competition, Dixon quickly opened up a more than four-second lead by the time the checkered flag concluded the Genesys 300.

    There were five lead changes among three drivers and four cautions for 24 laps.

    Notes
    Tony Kanaan, the 2004 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Champion who clinched the title at Texas Motor Speedway driving the now iconic 7-Eleven paint scheme, was honored earlier in the date with a special presentation by track president and general manager Eddie Gossage. Kanaan announced his retirement at the end of the season and is celebrating it through the #TKLastLap program. The AJ Foyt Enterprises driver ran the iconic 7-Eleven paint scheme in the Genesys 300 where he finished 10th.

    Dixon celebrated the victory in traditional Texas Motor Speedway fashion, wearing a cowboy hat and firing a pair of Smith & Wesson 629 Deluxe six-shooters while accepting the Foyt Rutherford Trophy produced by Jostens.
    The team for last year’s pole winner, Takuma Sato, was unable repair their car damaged in qualifying and therefore did not compete.

    Next up on the Texas Motor Speedway competition calendar is the rescheduled NASCAR Cup Series O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 weekend on July 18-19. Originally scheduled March 27-29 but postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a doubleheader kicks off the weekend on Saturday, July 18, with the NASCAR Xfinity Series My Bariatric Solutions 300 (NBCSN at 2 p.m. CT) and followed by the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series Vankor 350 (FS1 at 7 p.m. CT). The O’Reilly Auto Parts 500 is Sunday, July 19, with coverage beginning at 2 p.m. CT on NBCSN.

    Follow Us
    Keep track of all of Texas Motor Speedway’s events by following on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. Keep up with all the latest news and information with the Texas Motor Speedway mobile app.

  • Scott Dixon captures dominating win at Texas

    Scott Dixon captures dominating win at Texas

    When IndyCar was last on site at a racetrack, it was at the originally planned season opener in St. Petersburg back in March. Everything was going as planned until a few hours before practice started. Once more news came out about COVID-19, everyone in the world began shutting down, including major sporting leagues. IndyCar was sticking with their schedule before series officials called the entire race weekend and eventually parts of the season were either canceled or races were postponed.

    Fast forward to three months later, the NTT IndyCar Series drivers were back on-track for the season opener at Texas Motor Speedway, in what was a hot and steamy Saturday with temperatures well into the 90s.

    Hoping to continue his momentum and recent IndyCar dominance, Josef Newgarden qualified the No. 1 XPEL Chevrolet on the pole with a speed of 215.740 mph, while Scott Dixon was on the outside pole with a speed of 215.638 mph, just narrowly missing out on the pole position.

    Right up until the green flag, there was some pre-race drama. The No. 30 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing of Takuma Sato, crashed in the only practice session earlier in the day. Unfortunately, the team could not repair Sato’s car before the green flag flew. Due to the incident, the Japanese driver was credited with a last-place finish and was unable to start the race. Sato’s teammate, Graham Rahal, also faced issues with his car and spent a couple of laps in the infield when the event was underway. Rahal, however, got back on track but was eventually penalized for unapproved adjustments and for re-entry. Rahal was given a drive-through penalty after he returned to the track.

    The drama also continued with the Andretti Autosport team. Alexander Rossi in the No. 27 machine and teammate, Ryan Hunter-Reay in the No. 28 had problems of their own before the start. Though, despite not being able to start right away, both cars were able to get on the track before the green flag. However, Rossi and Hunter-Reay were also penalized for unapproved adjustments. Rossi was penalized again for speeding while serving his earlier penatly.

    Early on, Newgarden was the fastest car of the race and was keeping Dixon at a sizable pace. At Lap 11, Dixon made the pass for the lead and took the top spot from Newgarden. It was from that point on, where the Dixon domination began, but it wasn’t all that easy.

    Throughout the race, there 35 lap tire stints. Therefore, on Lap 35, it was mandatory for the drivers to come to pit road for a pit stop. Just a few laps before his pit stop, Newgarden had reported a vibration. In doing so, Newgarden pitted early in hopes of coming out ahead of Dixon on the track. After Dixon made his pit stop, he maintained the lead, but the first caution came out. Two rookies, Alex Palou and Rinus VeeKay were collected in a wreck off Turn 2. VeeKay’s car was way up in the marbles and came down in the middle of the backstretch. That is where Palou got involved, as VeeKay’s car would clip the No. 55 Dale Coyne Honda. While it was a heartbreaker for both of the rookies, the good news is, they were both checked and released from the accident.

    As the early caution flew, that still didn’t stop Dixon as the leader. The Chip Ganassi Racing driver would continue to extend his lead. In fact, Dixon had increased his lead over Newgarden by 4.5 seconds on Lap 70. Seven laps later, another caution flew for debris on the track. The leaders all came down pit road to make a pit stop. During the pit stop sequence, Team Penske driver Will Power stalled but eventually, Power’s car was restarted and he got back going.

    From Lap 86 to near the end of the race, there was a long green flag run. Dixon’s car continued to be the class of the field but he did have some challenges. His Chip Ganassi Racing teammate, Felix Rosenqvist, provided a challenge to Dixon. At one point, Rosenqvist was on the back bumper of Dixon, where he decreased the lead to 1.8 seconds. Another challenge for Dixon was maneuvering lap traffic. The lap traffic caused havoc for him, as the New Zealander had a tough time lapping the field with around 30 to go.

    When the final round of green-flag pit stops pursued, Rosenqvist had pitted with 15 to go. While Rosenqvist pitted, Dixon continued to stay out and wait for the right time to pit. Dixon finally did so with around 12 to go. Hoping not to make a mistake that could cost him the race, the No. 9 driver made a clean pit stop and now he could set sail. Unfortunately, like earlier where Dixon had trouble getting around lap traffic, his teammate Rosenqvist, was sent crashing into the wall after racing with a couple of lap down cars. Despite the strong effort, Rosenqvist finished 20th.

    A late-race restart was set up with three to go. Unlike NASCAR, there was some lap traffic separating Dixon and the leaders. This created an advantage for Dixon and he pulled away from the field. The checkered flag flew on lap 200 and Scott Dixon took home his fourth checkered flag at Texas, the 109th victory for Chip Ganassi Racing in IndyCar.

    “I can’t thank the team enough, everybody at PNC,” Dixon said. “It’s such strange times right now, and I just can’t thank the team. It was such a team effort. We had a couple of mistakes at the start and throughout the race, but we recovered. It was awesome. Honda, they were huge with the power out there. It was just so fast. Any situation we were in we could just go for it. Huge thanks to everybody involved. Bummed that the fans aren’t here. We wish everybody was here to celebrate.”

    With the victory, the win ties him with IndyCar legend, A.J. Foyt and he is now five wins away from Mario Andretti.

    Team Penske drivers, Simon Pagenaud and Josef Newgarden rounded out the podium finishers.

    1. Scott Dixon
    2. Simon Pagenaud
    3. Josef Newgarden
    4. Zach Veach
    5. Ed Carpenter
    6. Conor Daly
    7. Colton Herta
    8. Ryan Hunter-Reay
    9. Oliver Askew
    10. Tony Kanaan
    11. Charlie Kimball, one lap down
    12. Pato O’Ward, one lap down
    13. Will Power, one lap down
    14. Marco Andretti, one lap down
    15. Alexander Rossi, one lap down
    16. Jack Harvey, one lap down
    17. Graham Rahal, two laps down
    18. James Hinchcliffe, two laps down
    19. Marcus Ericsson, four laps down
    20. Felix Rosenqvist, OUT, Crash
    21. Santino Ferrucci, OUT, Mechanical
    22. Rinus VeeKay, OUT, Crash
    23. Alex Palou, OUT, Crash
    24. Takuma Sato, OUT, Did Not Start

    Up Next: The NTT IndyCar Series will have a few weeks off again, before visiting the famed Indianapolis on Saturday July 4 for the Indianapolis Grand Prix, scheduled for 12:15 p.m./ET live on NBC.

  • CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES AT TEXAS: TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES AT TEXAS: TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE

    ‌CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GENESYS 300
    TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    FT. WORTH, TEXAS
    TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
    JUNE 5, 2020

    TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
    NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GENESYS 300
    TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    FT. WORTH, TEXAS
    JUNE 6, 2020

    RACE #1 OF 2020 NTT INDYCAR SERES:
    It’s time to race! After waiting for almost three months as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and quarantine, the Chevrolet powered IndyCar teams and drivers are ready to kickoff the 2020 season Saturday night under the lights at Texas Motor Speedway. It will be the 24th consecutive season the NTT INDYCAR SERES will bring the excitement of INDYCAR to the famed Texas oval. Team Chevy drivers have posted eight victories on the 1.5-mile oval dating back to 2002 when Jeff Ward took the first trip with Texas Victory Lane with Chevy Power.

    Starting his march toward his second Series’ Championship, Josef Newgarden drove his Chevrolet powered Team Penske car to the win at TMS in 2019. With a total of four wins and seven podiums, Newgarden was crowned the NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion following the season finale at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca in September, 2019.

    BOWTIE BULLETS
    · Since returning to INDYCAR manufacturer competition in 2012, Chevrolet has amassed 82 wins and 92 poles in 135 races along with six Manufacturer Championships.

    · Of active Team Chevy drivers, Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet has won twice at Texas (2011 and 2017), Tony Kanaan, No. 14 7-Eleven AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet has one Texas win (2004, the same year he won the Series’ championship), Ed Carpenter, No. 20 Sonax Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet (2014) and Newgarden’s 2019 win. Team Chevy’s Helio Castroneves has the most Texas wins with four. Although not full-time in the Series, Chevrolet will welcome him back to join the Team Penske camp for the Indianapolis 500 currently scheduled for August 23, 2020. Castroneves will be racing for his record-tying fourth win.

    · Team Chevy drivers have won five of the eight races run at TMS since the highly successful Chevrolet 2.2 liter V6 engine program began competing in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES in 2012.

    · Power is second all-time INDYCAR pole winner with 57 (behind only Mario Andretti with 67).

    · The Genesys 300 (200 laps/300 miles will be the debut race for two rookie full-season drivers for Team Chevy: Oliver Askew (Arrow McLaren SP) and Rinus VeeKay (Ed Carpenter Racing).

    TUNE-IN:
    The Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway gets underway on Saturday, June 6 at 8:00 p.m. ET. Live coverage will air on NBC, Pennzoil IndyCar Radio, Sirius Channel 211, XM Channel 205 and the NTT INDYCAR SERIES app. Pre-race coverage will air at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN.

    QUOTABLE QUOTES:

    ROB BUCKNER, CHEVROLET RACING ENGINEERING PROGRAM MANAGER FOR THE NTT INDYCAR SERIES:
    “The Chevy powered teams are locked and loaded to officially get the NTT INDYCAR SERIES kicked off this Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway. Our Chevrolet engineers and technical partners have worked hard with each team to be as prepared as possible given the condensed schedule for the day. But racing under the lights at Texas is always exciting and a favorite for the drivers and fans, It will be a new experience for us to race without the fans physically present, but I know every Chevrolet team and their drivers will work hard to give the fans at home a great race and let them know INDYCAR is back on-track.”

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 1 XPEL TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET:
    “I am really excited to get back to racing, but we as a sport understand there is a lot of pressure on us to do everything right. I have the utmost confidence in our team, the series and the track that we will do everything to keep the entire INDYCAR community safe, all while putting on a good show. It will be interesting to finally get back on the track and have the first race be one of the most intense we have all year at Texas. That place takes a lot focus and is so fast. But I’m always confident with the car we bring to the track. This will also be our first race with XPEL on my Chevy. They’re a relatively new partner of ours and it’s great they will get to be on the car for our first race of the year. I just want to put on a great show for our fans that will be watching at home on NBC. All of us will miss seeing our fans out there, but we k now they will support us by tuning in.”

    CHARLIE KIMBALL, NO. 4 TRESIBA AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET:
    “I’m really excited to get back on track in the No. 4 Novo Nordisk Chevrolet especially at Texas Motor Speedway having sat on pole there with the track record in 2017 and being back with my INDYCAR family as socially distant as it will be. It will be hard and very different to be racing without fans, especially the Team Chevy fans, at the race track because that interaction is a large part of what I love about being at the race track. I’m glad everyone will be staying healthy and safe and able to watch the race live on NBC on Saturday night in primetime under the lights. It’s an honor for me to be a teammate again to Tony Kanaan as he starts his Last Lap [tour] in INDYCAR driving the 14 car. For me, getting to race for A.J. Foyt in his home state of Texas is extra special. One of my favorite quotes of all time is from Billie Jean King, she says ‘Pressure is a privilege,’ so the added pressure of performing for A.J. in Texas is a privilege that I look forward to stepping up to.”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET:
    “Finally, it’s race week! All of us at Arrow McLaren SP are so ready to get started. To be honest, it feels a bit weird, a bit funky. Everything has been stopped for so long that it’s hard to believe we are going to be racing this weekend. I’m looking forward to getting started and getting back into it with the team. I know it’s going to take a few laps to get back up to speed. I’m feeling a little rusty but we are definitely going to be as prepared as we can so we can use our time efficiently with everything is compressed into one single day. We are definitely ready and looking forward to the race. Let’s go!”

    OLIVER ASKEW, NO. 7 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET:
    “Everyone at Arrow McLaren SP, including me, is ready to go. I think with the extra time to prepare, we are more ready than we were before St. Pete. It will be a challenge for sure, being my first INDYCAR race, but I’m looking forward to taking in the experience and putting on a show on NBC for our partners and fans at home.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET:
    “I cannot wait to get back on track this weekend at Texas. It feels like it’s been a year since we were on the track for pre-season testing at COTA, then when we were in St. Pete. But the delay was the right thing to do – to make sure we are doing this right as a sport and taking all the proper precautions. I have seen a lot of the plans and we know INDYCAR has taken a lot of time to figure everything out to put on a good show, but to do it with everyone’s safety as the first priority. Once we get there and get in the swing of things, it will also be interesting to finally get a race with the new windscreen. On top of that, it will be the first time anyone has run the windscreen at night, so it should be a new experience for all of us. We don’t really know how the cars are going to react, so the one practice session will be really important. But we are all professionals and it will come back to all of us rather quickly. Also this is such a big opportunity to race on NBC. I know the fans will be tuning in this weekend. It won’t be the same without them there but safety is the most important thing and we can’t wait to see them back at track with us soon.”

    TONY KANAAN, NO 14 7-ELEVEN AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET:
    “I can’t express in words how happy I am to be back racing in the NTT INDYCAR Series this Saturday night at Texas Motor Speedway. It’s our first race of the season and we all want to put on a good show for the fans who will be watching on NBC during primetime TV. We’re living through unprecedented times, so being able to give our fans good entertainment to watch is key. 7-Eleven is back on board for this race with an awesome throwback paint scheme on the No. 14 A.J. Foyt Chevy and we’re hungry for a good result. It’s going to be a one day event with a lot going on for us at the track, but I couldn’t be happier to get the #TKLastLap campaign going and to be in a race car again, especially in Texas, home state of A.J. and 7-Eleven.”

    ED CAPRENTER, NO. 20 SONAX ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET:
    “Saturday cannot get here quick enough! I am so happy to know we are finally getting our season started. Texas Motor Speedway is one of my favorite stops of the year. I hope to find success and start off the season on a high note. I am very thankful for the hard work that INDYCAR, TMS, Eddie Gossage and Governor Abbott have put in to make this happen.”

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET:
    “I am extremely happy to finally be back in the U.S. and be able to make my NTT INDYCAR SERIES debut this weekend! It will be quite an experience for my first race but the team and I are fully prepared to have our best possible performance!”

    SIMON PAGENAUD, NO. 22 DXC TECHNOLOGY TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET:
    “I am thrilled to finally go INDYCAR Series racing. These times made me realize that racing is a full part of me and I have dedicated myself to it. We wish fans could be with us at Texas but understand safety is the most important thing for everyone involved. We will however provide the usual exciting entertainment that INDYCAR racing can provide while we can’t wait to see our fans back at the track again soon. We have had great success with the DXC Technology Chevrolet over the years and it will be an honor to take them on for our return at Texas which is such a tricky oval. We have a lot of exciting news in INDYCAR with the unveiling of the aeroscreen and its safety improvement for the drivers. We have a very interesting field with great rookies. It will definitely be a race and a season not to miss.”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 59 GALLAGHER CARLIN CHEVROLET:
    “First of all, I’m obviously very excited to get back to racing and get back out there on track – that’s the coolest part of this whole deal. I think it’s safe to say that we’re all more than just a little anxious to get to Texas Motor Speedway this weekend. On top of that, it’s an incredible accomplishment for me to back with a team I did this race with last year – that’s never happened before in my career. I had a great race last year with Carlin in the No. 59 Gallagher Carlin Chevrolet, so I’m excited to work on what we developed last year and not have to start from square one especially with the condensed schedule. We’re just going to do everything we can to come away with an ever better result this year and build on what we have. I think it’ll put a smile on everyone’s face just to be back at a race track.”

    Chevrolet INDYCAR Series Statistics

    Chevrolet has recorded six NTT IndyCar Series Manufacturer Championships since returning to manufacturer competition in 2012.
    Chevrolet earned six consecutive CART Manufacturers’ Cup championships from 1988-93.
    Chevrolet has recorded 12 driver championships, including four in the past five years.
    Chevrolet has recorded 193 wins in Indy-style racing, including USAC, CART, Indy Racing League and IndyCar Series since 1965.
    Chevrolet’s initial win, under USAC sanction, was by Al Unser in the Pikes Peak Auto Hill Climb on July 4, 1965.
    Chevrolet has 82 wins and 92 poles in 135 in IndyCar Series races since returning to manufacturer competition in 2012.

    Team Chevy high-resolution racing photos are available for editorial use.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is one of the world’s largest car brands, doing business in more than 100 countries and selling more than 4.0 million cars and trucks a year. Chevrolet provides customers with fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

  • CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Ed Carpenter and Rinus Veekay Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Ed Carpenter and Rinus Veekay Press Conference Transcript

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GENESYS 300
    TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
    FT. WORTH, TEXAS
    TEAM CHEVY DRIVER PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
    JUNE 4, 2020

    THE MODERATOR: Welcome to our video conference in advance of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES season opener, the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway. The race will be on at 8 p.m. eastern on NBC.

    We’re pleased to be joined by the two drivers who will race for Ed Carpenter Racing at Texas, owner/ driver Ed Carpenter and rookie Rinus VeeKay.

    Ed, Rinus, thanks for joining us.

    ED CARPENTER: Thank you. We’re excited to get going.

    THE MODERATOR: That was my first question to both of you. How excited are you, how anxious? What kind of anticipation have you had this week knowing we were going to the racetrack?

    ED CARPENTER: Since we left St. Pete, with all the uncertainty of everything going on in the world, we had I don’t know what iteration of schedule we’re on, but it’s nice to finally be in a final countdown to get the season kicked off.

    Very thankful to Eddie Gossage, the whole INDYCAR team to make this happen.

    THE MODERATOR: Rinus, it’s your INDYCAR debut and it’s on an oval. You’ve had success in the Road to Indy, but an oval race for your first INDYCAR race, is that something you imagined when you were going to move up to the NTT INDYCAR Series?

    RINUS VEEKAY: No, I never imagined it. Well, I’m very happy that I can make my debut after waiting quite some time.

    I’m happy with everything. I think with the team I’m driving with now, Ed Carpenter Racing, they have an excellent oval car. I’m not worried at all.

    THE MODERATOR: Rinus, I know that you went back to The Netherlands during the break. Can you talk about the challenge you had trying to figure out what you needed to do to get back so you could come race.

    RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, it was tough to get back to the U.S. When I heard the race was going to be on June 6, I knew the borders were going to remain closed. Well, we worked together really hard with the team, my management, the NTT INDYCAR SERIES. Yeah, we found some solution to go to Mexico, stay there for a little bit, yeah, stay there for my quarantine. We got the green light to go to the United States. I’m now in Texas so I’m very happy.

    THE MODERATOR: Ed, it’s been an interesting few weeks. You and your wife have been homeschooling your kids. You have a company to run. Driving at Texas and being in the season opener probably wasn’t something you expected.

    ED CARPENTER: Yeah, I mean, we kind of had to reshift all of our calendars and body clocks to the cadence of what this new season is, INDYCAR season. Really beyond that just our everyday lives, everything else.

    Fortunately, we’ve finished up with the school year. E-learning is over. We’re still making the kids do some things just to kind of stay educationally active since they did miss a lot of time and opportunity for learning. We’re keeping them going. But it’s definitely gotten easier since the official E-learning part of school has been over.

    There was a lot of time there for a while because the race shops were closed, we weren’t allowed to go back to work with the state and city guidelines. I guess we’ve been back about three and a half, four weeks, something like that now. The trucks are on their way to Texas. It’s finally starting to feel a little more normal.

    I think one of the weirdest things, I’ve been doing this so long, knowing the 500 is in August, it still feels like it’s going to be in May even though we’re in June. My body clock is all sorts of messed up. I kind of feel like even though we’re in June, it feels a whole lot more like March now that we’re getting started.

    THE MODERATOR: We’ll open it up for questions for the drivers.

    Q. Rinus, how complicated was the process to be able to get back into the United States? When you landed you tweeted a photo of how happy and excited you were to be in the U.S. How complicated was the process?
    RINUS VEEKAY: It was very complicated. Well, first of all, with the borders being closed, only flights going for necessary people, it was tough to make sure, yeah, the borders would open for me. I’ve had many weeks of no sleep.

    But at the end, yeah, everyone really worked extremely hard to make it happen for me. Ed also worked super hard. At the end it was quite a journey going through Mexico and then to the United States. But, yeah, at the end just being here for the race is what matters.

    Q. Ed, you’ve never been afraid to say what the package is going to be like at Texas. Years where you thought it was a little bit too cautious with the package, other times where you actually liked to see the really close racing aspect of the ovals. How do you feel this package is going to be?
    ED CARPENTER: It’s kind of an interesting dynamic right now because there’s been very little track time there with the new Aeroscreen, so there’s still a lot to learn about that. We’re going there with a tire that we really haven’t raced there, a tire combo that we haven’t raced. A new right-hand side compared to last year. Added some limited time to the tire test last year.

    I think that’s going to be one of the kind of crazy storylines, is none of us really know what to expect going in or what the differences are going to be from last year just because we don’t have experience with this whole package.

    I think that is the challenge, is maximizing our hour and a half to two hours of track time between our team to come to a quick solution. We’ve been working hard off the track with all our simulation tools to be prepared for multiple scenarios. I feel confident in the work we’ve done.

    It’s probably the most anxious I’ve been just because I don’t know what to expect relative to years past at Texas. It’s going to be hot, a lot of new things. It’s been a while since we’ve all been in the car.

    I think everyone is going to be wanting to be aggressive and get going, but at the same time, I think everybody is going to have to be a little more patient.

    Q. It’s also NBC in primetime, here is an opportunity that additional people may get a chance to see INDYCAR. The fine balance between being cautious and putting on a good show, how difficult is that?
    ED CARPENTER: It’s great that we’re going to be on NBC not only for our Genesys 300 in Texas but also for the July 4th Indy GP is also going to be on NBC. That’s a great opportunity.

    From a competitor’s standpoint I don’t think that matters, whether we’re on NBC Sports or NBC, CNBC, we’re out there to put on a great show, lay it all on the line, race as hard as we can regardless of what network we’re on. Hopefully, we’ll be able to do that with fans in attendance as well because that’s really what makes our sport go.

    I think we all put forward the same effort and aggression regardless of what the broadcast is on. But it’s certainly a great opportunity when we’re on network.

    Q. Ed, from a team owner perspective, take us through the logistics of a one-day show that also includes travel to and from Texas. I presume you are leaving early Saturday, coming back late or early Sunday morning. What is the itinerary like for your team?
    ED CARPENTER: It’s something that a lot of thought has been put into. I wouldn’t say it’s ideal to have the majority of the paddock traveling race morning.

    The team charter, the majority of the team personnel is going to be on is leaving 6 a.m. from Indy, that’s 5 a.m. Texas time. It will be nearly a 24-hour day by the time they get home.

    We’ve had a lot of questions and thought about how that’s going to work from when we land to what the processes are getting into the track, how we’re feeding our people with all the PPE and masks that are required. What are the rules as far as getting some fresh air for guys that are going to be outside in nearly 100-degree heat.

    It’s going to be a quick cadence to the event. There’s not a whole lot of time between when we get there and tech inspection, practice, track, qualifying, race, the impound process.

    There’s been a lot of communication behind the scenes between INDYCAR, the teams, the teams and employees, of what the expectations are because it’s very important that we do this right and safely to be able to continue our season.

    Q. Is the biggest challenge ensuring your team members get proper rest during the day?
    ED CARPENTER: There’s not going to be much time for rest during the day. It’s really about being as prepared as you can be beforehand, making sure we’ve got a meal plan for essentially having three meals at the racetrack, which isn’t something we normally have to deal with.

    I think between INDYCAR and the teams, we’ve got a very good plan. Obviously, it’s not what we’re used to, not ideal. But the most important thing is getting back racing, getting our season started, doing it the safest possible way.

    Q. Rinus, could you explain your travel ordeal. Were you in Mexico when you found out you were going to get approval that you were going to be able to enter the United States?
    RINUS VEEKAY: It took a long time to get the approval. At one time it was going to get less and less time till the race. We tried to go for safe, go to Mexico, at least be there, be closer to the U.S. If we don’t get an approval, I can stay in Mexico, yeah, then travel to the U.S.

    That was just something safe, trying to be sure that I made it. Once I was there, I got the approval. Yeah, so I stepped on the airplane and got to Texas.

    ED CARPENTER: I’d like to add to that, as a team, we worked very closely with INDYCAR, Senator Todd Young’s office in Indianapolis, other senators. There was a high level of transparency of what we were trying to do and accomplish. There was a whole lot of people that helped make that happen, do it the right way.

    Luckily, as all this was transpiring, they exempted pro athletes, which motorsports initially wasn’t on. It was an effort between INDYCAR, IMSA, NASCAR all working together to make sure that racing drivers weren’t excluded from entering.

    Really thankful for everyone that played a part in getting Rinus, Alex and many other drivers back in the country.

    Q. Rinus, in light of the fact that the Dutch Grand Prix has been put on hold, has there been a lot of attention paid in Holland to you becoming the first international star of motorsports to get back into action?
    RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, I think there’s many Dutch people, race fans, because the whole country, it’s one big race country. Everyone is very excited to get some racing started. They’re very happy that the INDYCAR is starting coming Saturday.

    Yeah, I’m getting called all day by Dutch TV stations, the biggest Dutch websites, just to promote the INDYCAR start on Saturday. I’m very happy with that. I think also with qualifying being streamed in The Netherlands now, it’s a big opportunity for INDYCAR and also myself.

    Q. Ed, your Texas win in 2014, a great kind of fight with you and Will right at the end where you’d done different tactics. Does the compression of the stints to just 35 laps remove one of those tactical, strategic potential advantages and difficult advantages?
    ED CARPENTER: Potentially it does. Again, kind of to what I was saying earlier, we don’t fully know what this tire is going to do, how long it’s going to last. Tire deg might be an issue, might not be as big of an issue.

    With the 35-lap stint limit, it certainly appears that it could limit some of the strategy options. At the same time, depending on when cautions may fall or may not fall, people may get off sequence from one another if they take a risk to try to gain some track position.

    I don’t know that it will be as straightforward as everyone thinks depending on how the race plays out. But Texas is always a challenging event. Traditionally tire wear does factor in. It is going to be quite warm. We’ll just have to see.

    I think in a perfect world we wouldn’t be limited to 35-lap stints. Firestone has gone through a whole lot of work and challenges with their shutdowns to get tires ready anyhow and come to a solution that works.

    We’re all going to be figuring it out as we go along. We’ve seen other racing series race with less prep than what we’re being given. We’ll learn what we can in that hour-and-a-half, two-hour practice and go from there. It’s the same for everybody.

    Q. Ed, how far down the road did you get with trying to find a replacement for Rinus?
    ED CARPENTER: I mean, obviously you have to have a Plan B in place with this complex of an issue that we were dealing with, with the border closures and travel restrictions. We had a very good Plan B. Plan A was always the focus and we worked hard to get Rinus back. We’re thankful that he’s here and he can finally get his season started.

    Q. Rinus, you did a rookie test at Texas. What were your first thoughts of a high-banked oval? How much will you rely on Ed’s experience this weekend to help you?
    RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, I had the oval test after the COTA test beginning of this season. Yeah, it was amazing actually with the INDYCAR. Everything feels so perfect. Yeah, just the speed, the g force, everything is very insane. It was a great test. We made good progress with the car also. I was very, very pleased with that.

    Yeah, I think coming to this weekend with limited time in running and everything, I think it’s very, very helpful to have Ed as my teammate. Yeah, I think I’ll be asking him a lot of questions in the weekend.

    Q. Rinus, this is obviously a new and challenging set of circumstances for everyone to navigate. What have you learned about Ed as an owner and Ed Carpenter Racing when faced with figuring out a challenge like this?
    RINUS VEEKAY: Of course, my experience with Ed and Ed Carpenter Racing is very, very small because this will be my first INDYCAR start also with them. Well, I think the team, what I’ve already experienced, they are very, very professional. Always, whenever we show up to a track for the test, the baseline setup is always right there.

    I think we will not have much trouble with getting up to speed. I think having Ed as a teammate and team boss is very unique. I think it will also, yeah, be good for the team atmosphere this weekend.

    Q. Ed, what are your thoughts on leadership within INDYCAR, how they’ve been able to navigate this really crazy and big situation?
    ED CARPENTER: I think everyone’s been very encouraged and pleased with what’s transpired, given the unprecedented circumstances that we’re all dealing with. The communication and leadership from Roger at the top, down through Mark and Jay and the rest of the staff, the amount of calls and transparency we’ve had as we’ve worked through this process and all the iterations to get to this point of being on track, it’s been encouraging.

    Really just can’t wait till we can fully hit the ground running and get back to more normal, have fans there, really get back to the vision that Roger started laying out to us as owners back in February at the Austin test. Everything has been sidetracked a little bit just trying to figure out how to save our season and support the teams.

    The leadership, the communication and the openness has been very encouraging.

    Q. Rinus, here in Holland there’s a lot of expectation from you. Do you have a special message for the fans here at home?
    RINUS VEEKAY: A special message? Just all tune in to Ziggo, go watch the race. I think it’s going to be a big spectacle. First INDYCAR race of the season. Texas is always a thriller. Yeah, myself, I’m looking forward a lot. I think also the fans that stay up very long at night will really enjoy it.

    Q. Ed, what kind of prerace advice will you give Rinus to handle the difficult Texas circuit?
    ED CARPENTER: I think one of the big things is it’s going to be different than what we tested there for his rookie test. It was like 40-some degrees and sunny with 70 degree-ish track temps. When we go back it’s going to be high 90s, track temps well over 100 degrees. We can take some experience from that test. It’s also going to be vastly different and feel so much so like a different racetrack just because of the conditions.

    Given the compressed format, one of the things we’ve always loved about Rinus is how quick he is, how quick he is to get up to speed, how he challenges the car and attacks a racetrack.

    I don’t want him to lose that mentality, but also it’s important to use this race and challenge of a shortened event to gain as much experience as he can and get through the whole event cleanly and learn as much as he can to take into the next oval at Iowa, working himself into a comfort level with ovals, so by the time we get to Indianapolis in August that we can turn him fully loose.

    Q. Ed, obviously you’re approaching the weekend a little bit differently because you’re obviously a driver and the team owner. How do you approach the weekend in that regard in terms of preparing yourself to get in the car but also getting your guys ready to go racing? How has that affected your preparation for the race itself?
    ED CARPENTER: It hasn’t. We get to this time of year, it’s been a little different with all the challenges of COVID, but I’ve been at the office some. Really like always in-season, I rely on Tim Broyles, (indiscernible), Colleen Howerton, all the engineering staff to focus on the operational side.

    My preparation hasn’t been affected as far as driver prep, no more than anyone has been affected by limiting where you can train and where you can go. I feel as prepared as anybody. Can’t wait to get behind the wheel.

    Q. Ed, with Indianapolis Motor Speedway just announcing today the 4th of July event is going to be run without spectators, what is your reaction to that? As someone who is from here, has great memories, experience at the Speedway, what were your thoughts when you heard that would be the case unfortunately?
    ED CARPENTER: I was disappointed. I was very hopeful that we were going to be able to have fans for that event in some capacity, IMS hosts the largest single-day sporting event in the world. I was hopeful we could put forward some plan that could allow some spectators to be there to join us.

    But the track, the series worked with the city and state and decided this was the best solution. Obviously the Indy 500 is a priority. I’d be lying to you if I told you I wasn’t disappointed. I was very optimistic we would be allowed to have some fans and sponsors there.

    It’s a unique situation. The governor’s plan, where the state will be with their phases, would have allowed it. The city of Indianapolis and the mayor and the leadership there has a different view, so this is where we are. We’ll make the best of it, hopefully see fans shortly after that.

    THE MODERATOR: That’s all the time we have with the drivers today. We’re going to thank Ed and Rinus for their time this afternoon, wish them both the best of luck this weekend at Texas. I believe Ed has a question for Rinus.

    ED CARPENTER: I have a question for Rinus. Haven’t seen him in person for a long time. The beard is a new addition. It’s quite strong for a 19-year-old young man. Is that something you’re going to keep?

    RINUS VEEKAY: I’m looking to keep it, yeah. It makes me look less rookie, so yeah. I think coming into the team and driving the road courses with Conor (Daly), I think I have to keep it.

    ED CARPENTER: It’s fine with me.

    RINUS VEEKAY: Cool.

    THE MODERATOR: Thank you everybody for joining us today.

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