Category: NTT Indy

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  • Newgarden Keeps Penske Perfect with Long Beach Victory

    Newgarden Keeps Penske Perfect with Long Beach Victory

    LONG BEACH, Calif. (Sunday, April 10, 2022) – Josef Newgarden kept Team Penske unbeaten in three NTT INDYCAR SERIES races this season with his second consecutive win of 2022, capturing the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach in a taut, three-way tussle under brilliant Southern California sunshine Sunday.

    Newgarden earned his first career Long Beach victory in the No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet, holding off Romain Grosjean in the No. 28 DHL Honda and reigning series champion Alex Palou in the No. 10 NTT DATA Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. Grosjean tied a career best by finishing second, with Palou rounding out the podium finishers in third.

    The race ended under caution after Takuma Sato speared the tire barrier in Turn 8 on Lap 84 of the 85-lap race.

    “This was a fight today,” Newgarden said. “This was not an easy race to win. I was working my butt off with Grosjean at the end there on the used reds (Firestone alternate tires). This Hitachi car was on it. I’ve been trying to win a race here for 11 years, so I’m so happy to get it done.”

    2014 series champion Will Power finished fourth in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet as Team Penske has claimed at least two of the first four spots at the finish in all three races this season. The last time Team Penske won the first three races of the season was 2012, and Chip Ganassi Racing in 2020 was the last NTT INDYCAR SERIES team to open a season with three straight wins.

    Pato O’Ward rounded out the top five in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet, his first top-10 result of the season.

    Two-time series champion Newgarden took the series points lead with his 22nd career INDYCAR SERIES victory. He leads teammate Scott McLaughlin, who won the season opener at St. Petersburg, 118-113. McLaughlin finished 14th in the No. 3 Snap-on Team Penske Chevrolet.

    Newgarden took the lead for good on Lap 55 when leader Palou made his final pit stop for fuel and primary Firestone tires. Newgarden pitted for the last time two laps later, also taking fuel and Firestone primary tires, and upon pit exit narrowly stayed ahead of Palou, who was screaming down the main straightaway on Shoreline Drive trying to win a drag race for the lead.

    The two series champions went side by side in a duel for the lead on Newgarden’s out lap after his pit stop, making slight hip check contact in Turn 5 of the 11-turn, 1.968-mile street circuit. But Newgarden stayed in front.

    “I think the out lap with Palou was more risky,” Newgarden said. “We got together in T5 going in deep, and that almost didn’t work out when we were side by side in that corner. We were side by side in Turn 6.

    “That was the difficult battle. But I think Grosjean, overall, just had a better shot of getting it done. But fortunately, we just held on.”

    Grosjean was on a different strategy than all the other leading cars, as he took Firestone alternate tires on his final pit stop on Lap 56, the lap between Palou and Newgarden’s last stops. The “red” tires offer more traction with their softer rubber, but they wear more quickly.

    Still, Grosjean was able to save his grippier but less durable tires over the final stint because two of the race’s four caution periods took place between his final stop and the race-ending caution after Sato collided with the tire barrier in the No. 51 Nurtec ODT Honda on Lap 84 after a joust for position with Rinus VeeKay’s No. 21 Alzamend Neuro Chevrolet.

    Grosjean took advantage of the extended tire wear to pass Palou with an outside move into Turn 1 on Lap 70. He then set his sights on Newgarden, pulling close while using all his available push-to-pass boost.

    A caution triggered by Jimmie Johnson spinning into the tire barriers in Turn 8 on Lap 76 in his No. 48 Carvana Chip Ganassi Racing Honda and collecting the No. 18 HMD Honda of rookie David Malukas bunched the field one last time and gave Grosjean his best chance at passing Newgarden.

    Newgarden got a strong jump on the restart, but an alert Grosjean also got a great restart and stayed on Newgarden’s gearbox, with Palou in tow. But Grosjean never got close enough before the race-ending caution.

    “Very close, but not close enough,” Grosjean said. “That was fun. With the right tire strategy and with the last caution, I thought it was going to be great. He (Newgarden) did one mistake, but I just couldn’t use it.”

    NTT P1 Award winner Colton Herta led 28 laps – just four shy of Newgarden’s race-high total of 32 – but his No. 26 Gainbridge Honda was eliminated from the race in a crash in Turn 9 while running third on his in lap to the pits on Lap 56.

    Newgarden is just one step away from winning the PeopleReady Force for Good Challenge with his victory. The challenge offered by the industrial staffing giant is a bonus of $1 million to be awarded to the first NTT INDYCAR SERIES driver who can win on all three unique styles of tracks – street circuits, road courses and ovals – this season. The reward, if earned, will be divided, with $500,000 shared by the driver and his team and $500,000 presented to their chosen charity.

    Newgarden already has won this season on an oval (Texas Motor Speedway) and a street circuit (Long Beach). His first opportunity for a road course victory comes at the next event, the Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama presented by AmFirst on May 1 at Barber Motorsports Park, where he has three career INDYCAR SERIES victories (2015, 2017, 2018).

    PeopleReady is offering an additional $10,000 to the winner of every race this season, also to be split with their selected charity. Newgarden is splitting his award from today’s race with SeriousFun Childrens Network and Wags & Walks Nashville.

    Results Sunday of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.968-mile Streets of Long Beach, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

    1. (2) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    2. (6) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 85, Running
    3. (3) Alex Palou, Honda, 85, Running
    4. (7) Will Power, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    5. (11) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    6. (16) Scott Dixon, Honda, 85, Running
    7. (13) Graham Rahal, Honda, 85, Running
    8. (5) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 85, Running
    9. (14) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 85, Running
    10. (12) Kyle Kirkwood, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    11. (4) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    12. (17) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    13. (15) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    14. (9) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 85, Running
    15. (20) Jack Harvey, Honda, 85, Running
    16. (26) Tatiana Calderon, Chevrolet, 84, Running
    17. (22) Takuma Sato, Honda, 83, Contact
    18. (19) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 83, Running
    19. (10) Simon Pagenaud, Honda, 81, Running
    20. (25) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 73, Contact
    21. (18) David Malukas, Honda, 72, Contact
    22. (8) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 66, Contact
    23. (1) Colton Herta, Honda, 55, Contact
    24. (21) Callum Ilott, Chevrolet, 55, Contact
    25. (23) Devlin DeFrancesco, Honda, 35, Contact
    26. (24) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 5, Contact

    Race Statistics
    Winner’s average speed: 93.977 mph
    Time of Race: 1:46:48.0102
    Margin of victory: Under caution
    Cautions: 4 for 14 laps
    Lead changes: 5 among 5 drivers
    Lap Leaders:
    Herta, Colton 1 – 28
    Newgarden, Josef 29
    Power, Will 30 – 31
    DeFrancesco, Devlin 32
    Palou, Alex 33 – 54
    Newgarden, Josef 55 – 85

    NTT INDYCAR SERIES Point Standings: Newgarden 118, McLaughlin 113, Palou 103, Power 102, Dixon 83, Grosjean 75, VeeKay 67, Ericsson 66, O’Ward 63, Rahal 60.

  • CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: ACURA GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH POST-RACE QUOTES

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: ACURA GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH POST-RACE QUOTES

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH
    STREETS OF LONG BEACH
    TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE QUOTES
    APRIL 10, 2022

    LONG BEACH, Calif. (April 10, 2022) – Josef Newgarden delivered Chevrolet its first victory at Long Beach in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES since 2016 with a thrilling victory in the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach – the first of his career at the street circuit and second in a row on the season in the No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet.

    Newgarden withstood a furious final 28 laps and two full-course caution periods before winning under yellow-flag conditions at Long Beach. It gave Team Chevy its third straight win to open the 2022 INDYCAR season for the first time in six years.

    Team Chevy recorded three of the first five finishing positions. Team Penske teammate Will Power was fourth in the No. 12 Verizon 5G Chevrolet, followed in fifth by Arrow McLaren SP’s Pato O’Ward in the No. 5 Vuse Chevrolet.

    A.J. Foyt Racing’s Kyle Kirkwood wrapped up the top-10 with his best finish of his rookie season in the No. 14 Rokit Chevrolet.

    TEAM CHEVY QUOTES

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE – RACE WINNER:
    IS THIS ONE OF YOUR GREATEST WINS?
    “This is definitely up there on the list. This was a fight today. This is not an easy race to win. I don’t know what it looked like from the outside, but I was working my butt off with Grosjean there at the end on the used reds. I was hoping he would fade a little bit, Holding him off on that restart was super difficult. This Hitachi car was on it. I knew coming in to the race we had a great strategy and with Team Chevy we were going to be alright. With pit stops helping me get around Alex (Palou), I’m so proud of Team Penske. I have been trying to win a race here for 11 years so I’m so happy to finally get it done.”

    WHAT WAS HARDEST BATTLE?
    “I think the out lap with Palou. We got together in Turn Five and that almost didn’t work. We went side-by-side in that corner and then again in Turn Six. That was the difficult battle, but I think overall Grosjean had the best shot at getting it done. Fortunately we just held.

    DID YOU HAVE HERTA COVERED?
    “Yes, I think we had him covered. I was pretty determined.”

    MORE ON THE WIN.
    “When I was walking out of the press conference room after qualifying, a reporter from the LA Times pulled me aside and said, ‘Hey Josef, real quick… at what point does Herta just check out tomorrow?’ I took total offense to that. The guy assumed Colton was going to run away with the race. So I was pretty determined. Alex (Palou) was fast but I think we had them both covered for sure.”
    IT’S BEEN FIVE YEARS SINCE YOU WON CONSECUTIVE RACES. IS SOMETHING SPECIAL HAPPENING RIGHT NOW?
    “It’s too early to say. It’s only three races in. We could have a horrible rest of the year. I’m not trying to wish bad juju on us, just looking at both sides of the argument. What I feel like we are building on the 2 car. We’ve got a good engineer in Eric Leichtle and all our crew plus everyone else at Team Penske that works on this team. I’m feeling positive about where we are going, but we have a long way to go. Indianapolis is where we have to perform for Team Penske. I want a Borg-Warner so bad. So let’s see what we can do during the Month of May.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE – FINISHED FOURTH: “It was a very solid day for the Verizon 5G Chevy. We’re playing the long game and banking those points. When we get a chance to win, we’ll go for it. At the start we said if we got in the top-five we’d be really happy. A podium would have been awesome, but I’m happy with this.”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP – FINISHED FIFTH: “We had a rough start to the weekend so this fifth-place feels really good. We wanted to just get a solid foundation for the rest of our year, and we’ve done this today. I’m happy and proud of the boys. We should be very satisfied with fifth because we started 11th. We went forward and not just one or two positions. We went up a handful so we can be proud of that.”

    KYLE KIRKWOOD, NO. 14 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING – FINISHED 10TH: “The race went exceptional for us at A.J. Foyt Racing. It’s a sweet win for us because we’ve had a couple of finishes we didn’t want with the pace we had. Today we had the pace and we were able to show that. Unfortunately, we couldn’t make some passes happen but we got into the top-10. We were absolutely solid on the red tires. I felt like we could make some passes but everyone was a little too bunched up in the first stint to make that happen. Once we went to the black tires, we were able to run with everyone else who was in front of us but it was a bit of a fuel-saving game so we were all kind of sitting in limbo. The restarts here are just so tough because you come out of the last corner and it’s a massive accordion effect. You can’t make passes happen into Turn One. It’s so tight between the walls to make the passes anywhere else. It’s just so difficult. We’re right there with the big dogs and we’re right there with the big teams. We were quick today and we showed that. All we did was go forward. It was solid points for the team. I’m super happy and everyone is smiling. We’re look forward to going testing at Indianapolis here in a couple of weeks.”

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 PPG CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE – FINISHED 14TH: “We had good pace but I made a mistake on the second exchange. It was bad judgement. I clipped the inside wall which spun me out. Once you lose track position like that, you’re pretty done. We managed to claw our way back to 14th and passed the most cars. We just didn’t have track position. I felt like it was a pretty good weekend overall pace-wise. We were right there but didn’t put it together. I’ll keep my head up and keep working and we’ll be OK. Team Penkse still won, which is the main thing. We’re in a good spot. Until that mistake, we made a good start, were in a good spot and in front of Grosjean who ultimately finished second. It’s disappointing, but we’ll keep building. We’re still second in the championship, which isn’t a bad thing.”

    TATIANA CALDERON, NO. 11 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING – FINISHED 16TH: “I’m really happy with the steps have we made since St. Petersburg. I feel much more confident in the car, even on pit stops and making little adjustments and learning how to deal with the tires better. I’m really thankful for the team. They did a fantastic job. Of course we want to be fighting more people in the next couple of races. The steps we took were huge and I’ll carry that confidence into Barber.”

    CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 DYNAMIC EDGE CHEVROLET, JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING – FINISHED 24TH: “Unfortunately, our race ended early with a little bit of contact with the wall in Turn Eight. We just knocked the rear out and had to retire. Otherwise, it was a weird race. There was so much grip on the track and the rubber was building up massively. It was a real shame to finish like that. We didn’t have a massive amount of pace which is something we need to work on, the different feelings with the tires from reds to blacks. We have a lot to look at after this weekend, some pros and some cons. We have Barber in two weeks, which I believe is a physical one, so I need to train a bit for that one. Overall, Long Beach was a challenge, but we will analyze and look to improve for the next one.”

    DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE INSULATORS CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING – FINISHED 26TH: “I got a little deep into the brake zone for Turn One and carried too much speed through the entry to the corner, got wide and hit the barriers. I was trying to shift into fuel-saving mode and kind of misjudged it on the brakes.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 80 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and 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’s Castroneves Ninth in Long Beach

    Meyer Shank Racing’s Castroneves Ninth in Long Beach

    Pagenaud caught in mid-race tangle and finishes 19th

    LONG BEACH, CA (10 April 2022) – Helio Castroneves took a ninth-place finish for Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) in Sunday’s Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, the third race of the 2022 NTT INDYCAR SERIES.

    Driving the No. 06 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda, the four-time Indianapolis 500 winner started 14th and made the most of MSR team execution and a well-balanced car to move up to ninth in the 85-lap race. While many of the top contenders experienced problems on the tight 11-turn, 1.968-mile street course, Castroneves capitalized on his clean driving style to gain two additional positions in the final laps of the race.

    MSR teammate Simon Pagenaud was not as fortunate as he was credited with a 19th-place result. Pagenaud had strong early weekend pace, topping the charts in first practice. Starting 10th in the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda Pagenaud advanced to seventh before making his first pit stop on lap 28.

    Unfortunately, with just under 30 laps to go, Pagenaud and another competitor made contact in the tricky fountain section, leaving him stranded off track. Pagenaud was able to restart after the AMR Safety team got him back on track to drive back to the pits. Returning to the race four laps in arrears, Pagenaud gained three positions in the closing laps to take 19th at the checkered flag under the final caution of the event.

    Next up for MSR and the IndyCar competitors is the Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama at Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham on Sunday, May 1. In the provisional championship standings Pagenaud holds 12th with Castroneves 13th.

    Driver Quotes:

    Helio Castroneves:

    “The car was pretty good today and we had good pace. It was a typical race here at Long Beach – saving fuel in the beginning, then finding out when the best time to try to move up would be. It’s a shame what happened to Simon, he’s had a heck of a weekend, his car was really strong. We got caught up in traffic but we got a top 10 finish, so we’re very pleased. It’s not a win or a podium, which is what we’re always going for, but at the end of the day, it was a good points day – and we need those points, especially given what happened in Texas. Great job by the team today, we’ll look forward to building up more points starting at Barber later in the month.”

    Simon Pagenaud:

    “Well it certainly wasn’t the best race for us. We went from being super fast all weekend long to not getting the result that we wanted. The strategy was fantastic, but as you saw the incident with Sato was not ideal – but we did get a lot of TV time for that! I don’t think I would do anything different on the Sato move if I had to do it all over again. Other than that, we had tremendous pace all weekend. Thank you to AutoNation, SiriusXM , Arctic Wolf and Honda.”

  • Newgarden goes back-to-back with his first IndyCar victory at the Streets of Long Beach

    Newgarden goes back-to-back with his first IndyCar victory at the Streets of Long Beach

    Three weeks after claiming his wildest and dramatic victories in his motorsports career in the Lone Star state, Josef Newgarden backed up his early momentum into this season by shining in the Golden State and winning the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach at the Streets of Long Beach, California, on Sunday, April 10.

    The two-time IndyCar champion from Hendersonville, Tennessee, led a race-high 32 of 85 laps and benefitted through an executed pit strategy to cycle to the front twice, including the second one as he fended off Alex Palou to reassume the lead approaching the final 30 laps. Newgarden then held off a challenge from Romain Grosjean through two late restarts to claim the win under caution after Takuma Sato wrecked prior to the final lap. The first Long Beach victory for Newgarden in his 11th attempt was enough for him and his No. 2 Team Penske Dallara-Chevrolet team to emerge as the new points leader.

    With on-track qualifying occurring on Saturday, Colton Herta, the reigning winner at Long Beach, started on pole position after establishing a pole-record qualifying lap at 108.480 mph in one minute, 6.2254 seconds. Joining him on the front row was Josef Newgarden, winner of the previous IndyCar event at Texas Motor Speedway in March who posted a fast lap at 107.745 mph in one minute, 5.7550 seconds.

    When the green flag waved and the race commenced, Herta rocketed away with an early advantage while Alex Palou challenged Newgarden for the runner-up spot. Behind, Felix Rosenqvist battled and fended off Alexander Rossi for fourth place while Marcus Ericsson was in sixth ahead of Romain Grosjean. 

    Through the 11-turn circuit and with the field settling in a long single-file line, Herta led the first lap while Newgarden settled in second place ahead of Palou, Rosenqvist and Rossi. 

    By the fifth lap, Herta was leading by more than two seconds over Newgarden, who was still ahead of Palou by more than half a second, while Rosenqvist and Rossi remained in the top five. Trailing behind in the top 10 were Ericsson, Grosjean, Will Power, Scott McLaughlin and Simon Pagenaud.

    A lap later, the first caution of the event flew when Dalton Kellett locked up his tires in Turn 1 and clipped the tire barriers, where he sustained heavy damage to his No. 4 AJ Foyt Enterprises Dallara-Honda as his race came to an end.

    Another two laps later and when the safety crew repaired the tire barriers while also towing Kellett’s car off the course, the race proceeded under green. At the start, Herta rocketed his No. 26 Gainbridge Dallara-Honda away from the field for a second time to retain the lead while Newgarden kept his No. 2 Hitachi Dallara-Chevrolet in front of Palou’s No. 10 NTT Data Dallara-Honda and the rest of the field. Behind, Rosenqvist kept his No. 7 Arrow McLaren SP Dallara-Chevrolet in front of Rossi’s No. 27 AutoNation/NAPA Dallara-Honda while Ericsson, Grosjean, Power, McLaughlin and Pagenaud remained in the top 10. By then, Pato O’Ward was in 11th in front of rookie Kyle Kirkwood, Hello Castroneves, Graham Rahal and Scott Dixon. Meanwhile, Rinus VeeKay, who damaged part of his front nose after getting into the rear of Castroneves prior to the restart basin 16th while Jimmie Johnson, who broke his right hand during a practice accident on Friday, was in 24th place.

    Through the first 20 laps of the event, Herta was out in front by more than a second over Newgarden while third-place Palou trailed by two-and-a-half seconds. Rosenqvist and Rossi, both of whom were more than eight seconds behind the leader Herta, battled for fourth place while Ericsson, Grosjean, Power, McLaughlin and Pagenaud remained in the top 10. 

    A lap later, Rossi muscled his way into fourth place followed by Ericsson, Grosjean, Power, McLaughlin and Pagenaud while Rosenqvist plummeted to 10th place in front of teammate Pato O’Ward.

    Not long after, some like Scott Dixon, Rinus VeeKay and Rosenqvist made a pit stop under green while Herta continued to lead. Meanwhile, Rossi and Ericsson were locked in a tight battle for fourth place before he prevailed on Lap 25. During the following lap, Grosjean made his move to muscle his No. 28 DHL Dallara-Honda into fifth place.

    On Lap 28, Palou pitted along with O’Ward. By then, Rossi also made a pit stop. Soon after, Pagenaud pitted along with Kirkwood.

    Then on Lap 29, Herta surrendered the lead to pit followed by teammate Grosjean, Conor Daly, Takuma Sato, David Malukas and Johnson. During the following lap, Newgarden pitted along with Ericsson and Scott McLaughlin and Callum Ilott. Following the pit stops, Malukas was penalized for speeding on pit road.

    By Lap 32, Will Power pitted along with Graham Rahal and Christian Lundgaard. Once the cycle of green flag pit stops were completed after Devlin DeFrancesco pitted, Palou cycled his way into the lead followed by Newgarden and Herta while Ericsson and Dixon were in the top five. Behind, McLaughlin spun in Turn 11 after he clipped the inside wall while settling behind Tatiana Calderon. Not long after, DeFrancesco, who just pitted, spun and shredded his tire as he limped back to pit road. Both incidents, however, were not enough for the caution flag to be drawn.

    Through the first 40 laps, Palou was leading by more than two seconds over Newgarden while third-place Herta trailed by less than a second behind Newgarden.

    At the halfway mark between Laps 42 and 43, Palou continued to lead by more than two seconds over Newgarden and less than three seconds over Herta. Ericsson was in fourth place, trailing by more than 10 seconds, while fifth-place Dixon trailed by more than 16 seconds. Rounding out the top 10 were Grosjean, Power, Rossi, O’Ward and Rahal while Kirkwood, Castroneves, Daly, Sato and Rosenqvist were in the top 15. By then, VeeKay, Pagenaud, McLaughlin and Johnson were mired in 17th, 19th, 20th and 22nd.

    By Lap 50, Palou stabilized his advantage to more than two seconds over Newgarden while third-place Palou trailed by more than three seconds. Ericsson was still in fourth place while Grosjean was up in fifth place. Trailing behind were Dixon, Power, Rossi, O’Ward and Rahal.

    Nearing the final 30 laps of the event, another round of green pit stops occurred as Rosenqvist pitted along with VeeKay and Jack Harvey. Among those who pitted included the leader Palou as Newgarden moved into the lead. 

    Just then and while the cycle of pit stops continued, trouble struck for Herta after Herta locked up his tires entering Turn 9 and smacked the wall hard as he then pulled his Honda off the course in Turn 10. While the race proceeded under green, Herta’s hopes of winning at Long Beach came to an end as the wreck mirrored a similar one Herta experienced at Nashville Street Circuit last August while contending for the win.

    “I just broke a little bit too late, got in there, locked the right front, and that’s it,” Herta, who led 32 laps, said on NBC. “It’s just a stupid mistake. We were definitely in that thing, running good there in third, keeping up with Alex and Josef. It’s unfortunate. I feel really bad.” 

    Back on the track, Newgarden, who pitted, managed to duel and fend off Palou to retain the lead on Lap 55 while Ericsson was up in third place. 

    With 26 laps remaining, the caution flew when Simon Pagenaud spun by the Dolphin Fountain between Turns 2 and 3 following contact with Takuma Sato. As Pagenaud tried to drive away, he came to a rest atop the flower bed by the Dolphin Foundation while McLaughlin got damage after running into the rear end of VeeKay, who was trying to dodge Pagenaud.

    Following an extensive cleanup, the race restarted under green with 19 laps remaining. At the start, Newgarden retained the lead ahead of Palou through the first two turns. Then behind, Ericsson, who was in third place, got loose and clipped the outside wall exiting Turn 4. While trying to continue under pace, he then got hit by teammate Dixon as he slipped sideways and was forced to pull his car off the course in Turn 5 while the field scattered. The incident spoiled Ericsson’s opportunity for back-to-back podiums of the season while Grosjean moved into third place. 

    With 15 laps remaining, Newgarden continued to lead by less than four-tenths of a second over Grosjean, who muscled his way into the runner-up spot over Palou during the pervious lap and began his challenge on Newgarden for the top spot. Behind, Will Power was in fourth place followed by Pato O’Ward while Dixon, following his late incident with teammate Ericsson, continued to run in sixth place.

    Down to the final 10 laps of the event, the caution flew when Jimmie Johnson spun and slapped his No. 48 Carvana Dallara-Honda against the tire barriers. David Malukas, who was running right behind Johnson, also got into the tire barriers after hitting Johnson’s car. At the moment of caution, Newgarden had stabilized his advantage to more than half a second over Grosjean followed by Palou, Power and O’Ward.

    Following another extensive cleanup and repairs made to the tire barriers in Turn 8, the race restarted under green with five laps remaining. At the start, Grosjean tried to launch an attack to the outside of Newgarden, but the latter defended the top spot through the first five turns. Through Turns 6, 7 and 8 before entering Turns 9, 10 and 11, Newgarden continued to lead ahead of Grosjean and Palou, Behind, Power was in fourth while O’Ward fended off Dixon to remain in the top five.

    With two laps remaining, Newgarden continued to lead by nearly six-tenths of a second over Grosjean, who had Palou starting to intimidate him for the runner-up spot.

    When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Newgarden remained as the leader by less than eight-tenths of a second over Grosjean while third-place Palou trailed by more than a second. By then, Takuma Sato ran into the tire barriers in Turn 8 while battling VeeKay for position.

    Just as the field cycled their way to Turn 8, where Sato was unable to continue in time until the leaders arrived, the caution flew and the race was over, which handed the victory to Newgarden for the first time at the Streets of Long Beach and for his second consecutive IndyCar win in recent weeks.

    In addition, Newgarden recorded his 22nd career win in the NTT IndyCar Series. With the win, Team Penske and Chevrolet have won the first three scheduled IndyCar events of the 2022 season. 

    “[The Long Beach victory]’s definitely up there on the list,” Newgarden said on NBC. “Man, this was a fight today. This was not an easy race to win. I don’t know if it looks simple from the outside, but I was working my butt off with Grosjean at the end there on the used reds [tires]. I was hoping he would fade a little bit towards the end, but I was just trying to hold him off on the restart. It was super difficult. This Hitachi car, it was on it. We knew, coming in the race, we have a good strategy. We make good fuel with Team Chevy. We were gonna be alright and I had everything I needed today with pit stops trying to get around Alex [Palou]. So proud of Team Penske. I’ve been trying to win a race here for 11 years, so I’m so happy to finally get it done.”

    The runner-up result for Grosjean was his third in the series coming in a total of 16 career starts in the IndyCar Series and first since finishing in second place at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course in August 2021. It also marked his fourth career podium result in IndyCar competition.

    “Very close, but not close enough, right?” Grosjean said. “It was fun. We had the right tire strategy. The last caution, I thought it was going to be great. [I] Lost a bit of time when Marcus [Ericsson] stuffed it in front of me and then catch Alex [Palou]…Josef was up there. He made one mistake, but I just couldn’t use [the car] and then, I have to be honest, the Chevy engine was fast on the straight, so I couldn’t quite keep up. Very happy with P2 today. First podium on the DHL color. It’s a great day. Looking forward to more. We take what it is.”

    Filling in the final podium result in third place and with his second podium result of the season was Alex Palou, who was in contention to claim his first victory of the season.

    “We took the gamble on the first [pit] stop,” Palou, who led 22 laps, said. “We did a good strategy. We went from third to first. That was only on strategy and the pit stop, the crew did an amazing job. We were so close…I’m super proud of everybody at the No. 10 car and everybody at the Chip Ganassi Racing team. It was not our day, but yeah, we’ll try again at Barber.”

    Power and O’Ward finished in the top five while Dixon, Rahal, Rossi, Castroneves and Kyle Kirkwood completed the top 10 on the track.

    There were five lead changes for five different leaders. The race featured four cautions for 14 laps.

    With his second consecutive victory in recent weeks, Josef Newgarden leads the NTT IndyCar Series standings by five points over teammate Scott McLaughlin, 15 over Alex Palou, 16 over Will Power, 35 over Scott Dixon and 43 over Romain Grosjean.

    Results.

    1. Josef Newgarden, 32 laps led

    2. Romain Grosjean

    3. Alex Palou, 22 laps led

    4. Will Power, two laps led

    5. Pato O’Ward

    6. Scott Dixon

    7. Graham Rahal

    8. Alexander Rossi

    9. Helio Castroneves

    10. Kyle Kirkwood

    11. Felix Rosenqvist

    12. Conor Daly

    13. Rinus VeeKay 

    14. Scott McLaughlin

    15. Jack Harvey

    16. Tatiana Calderon, one lap down

    17. Takuma Sato – OUT, Accident

    18. Christian Lundgaard, two laps down

    19. Simon Pagenaudm, four laps down

    20. Jimmie Johnson – OUT, Contact

    21. David Malukas – OUT, Contact

    22. Marcus Ericsson – OUT, Contact

    23. Colton Herta – OUT, Contact, 28 laps led

    24. Callum Ilott – OUT, Contact

    25. Devlin DeFrancesco – OUT, Contact, one lap led

    26. Dalton Kellett – OUT, Contact

    Next on the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series schedule is the Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama at Barber Motorsports Park, which will occur on May 1 at 1 p.m. ET on NBC.

  • CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: ACCURA LONG BEACH GP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: ACCURA LONG BEACH GP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH
    STREETS OF LONG BEACH
    TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP
    APRIL 9, 2020

    LONG BEACH, Calif (April 9, 2022) – In one of the more interesting Firestone Fast Six qualifying session, Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet, emerged as the runner-up qualifier to lead Team Chevy for Sunday’s Accura Grand Prix of Long Beach. Giving Chevrolet a starter in row one and row two will be Felix Rosenqvist, No. 7 VUSE Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet, will roll off fourth for the 85-lap race on the 1.968-mile/11-turn street course on the Pacific Coast in Lwoong Beach, California.

    With seconds left on the clock, Romain Grojean met with a tire wall causing a red flag. Per the rulebook, competitors are guaranteed six minutes in the Fast Six session. So, for anyone of the six drivers who wanted to take one more hot lap, it would be allowed. Newgarded and his No. 2 Chevy team decided they were good, but two of the group did take a chance, but were unable to challenge for the front row. Rosenqvist improved his time slightly be still remained on the outside of row two.

    Continuing their strong starts to the 2022 NTT INDYCAR Series season, points leader Scott McLaughlin, No. 2 Snap-On Team Penske Chevrolet will start ninth, while teammate Will Power, No. 12 Verizon 5G Chevrolet, who is second in the standings, will roll-off in seventh position to give the Team Chevy 2.2 liter V6 twin turbo direct injected engine four of the top-nine starters.

    Colton Herta won the pole with Alex Palou, Alexander Rossi and Romain Grojean started third, fifth and sixth respectively to complete the Firestone Fast Six.

    Chevrolet and the NTT INDYCAR Series continue the 2022 season at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, April 10 from the Long Beach (Calif.) street circuit. The race will air live on NBC, the Peacock streaming service and SiriusXM IndyCar Nation (Channel 160). Live timing and scoring will be available at racecontrol.indycar.com.

    DRIVER QUOTES
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI CHEVROlLET, TEAM PENSKE, QUALIFIED 2ND:
    ARE YOU GOING OUT TO MAKE ONE MORE LAP? “I’m not sure what is going on. It looks like there are two seconds left. I’vnever seen tChis in the Fast Six, but maybe I don’t understand the rule well enough. Even with other people having the opportunity to go back out, I don’t think we would. I was pretty happy with my lap. It was the set we wanted to use. We had hot brakes and all that. I think that’s about what I had. I’m not going to go much quicker than that unfortunately. (Colton) Herta (P1 winner) hadslightly better tires than us. I used mine up a little too much in Q1 & Q2. I had to do three laps on each sequencing wise and how I had to do my lap. I wish I could have done just one lap on them, that would have improved our speed. We could have picked up a couple of tenths off these guys today. Pretty happy being in the Fast Six today. If we can hold 2nd or 3rd, it will be a good starting place for us. We will work on our race car. The Hitachi car felt good today, just a tad off for some reason. But we are always in a good place with Team Penske.

    “We will work hard in the race, but Herta is going to be tough. Not only him, but Rossi and Grojean. You are seeing that with their entire team. We will put our best foot forward. I always have faith in Team Chevy and Team Penske that we can do the job. We will do our best to run strong against these guys tomorrow.”

    FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, QUALIFIED 4TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “This was another good qualifying for the No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet team. I ended up fourth and I’m pretty happy with that. We got three shots in the Firestone Fast Six and it didn’t seem to be able to go much quicker than what we got. We were there all of qualifying, but then in the Fast Six we couldn’t really follow the leaders but we will take fourth.

    It has been a messy weekend with a lot of red and yellow flags and crashes. So it feels good to come through all this with a P4 in qualifying. It’s a great result for the team.”
    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, QUALIFIED 7TH:
    HOW TOUGH IS TRAFFIC OUT THERE IN QUALIFYING?
    “It’s frustrating this weekend with traffic. It just sucks when they do it in the hairpin because it ruins the money lap. Man everyone backs up so much. P7 is alright. Can definitely do something from there. It’s better than where we started last year. Will work to get this Verizon 5G car on the podium or Victory Lane, At the least a top-five and a good points day. It’s just the accordion affect and there is just nothing you can do about it. It’s good if they do it on the backstretch it’s okay. You know you are going to have to abort that lap. But if they do it in the hairpin, you lose that lap and the next one after that. And there is nothing you can do when you are on someone else’s gearbox. In the car you can’t do much because you are in dirty air.”

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 PPG CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, QUALIFIED 9TH:
    TALK ABOUT YOUR QUALIFYING:
    “It’s just a cluster out there with all of that traffic Our Snap-On Chevy is very fast.. I don’t know what Marcus (Ericsson) was doing. I tried to do the right thing and pull out of his way and then he just stopped and clustered the whole thing up. I don’t know. We are all looking for gaps out there, and you pull over for a guy and then he just stops in front of you. It is what it is. It’s unfortunate, but we have a fast car and there is no reason we can’t cup up through. We will see what we’ve got. I just feel bad for the guys. They’ve worked hard and we had a solid car that I think we had a chance to be up there with Herta and challenge the Andrettl guys.
    “I’ll be bombing up through there for sure tomorrow. Just going to have a big crack at it. It will be fun for sure. As Danny Ric (Daniel Riccardo) says, just lick the stamp and send it.”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP VUSE CHEVROLET, QUALIFIED, 11TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “We definitely made a step forward. We’ve just had a really tough weekend so far. We couldn’t quite get the balance right, but it was a lot better here in qualifying. I think I left some on the table and was a bit too cautious. It is good that the car was better in qualifying but there is a lot of risk and reward during a Long Beach lap. I left some on the table there, but we will try to make it better for the race and see what we’ve got.”

    KYLE KIRKWOOD, NO. 14 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING: QUALIFIED 12TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “Just finished up qualifying here at the Long Beach Grand Prix. We had pretty good qualifying! Our goal was to get into the Top-12 and we made it into Q2. We transferred. Super happy with that. Of course we wanted more, but just didn’t have the pace to make it into the Fast Six. The car balance was good and we executed everything perfectly. We were just lacking a little bit of pace. Super happy with the performance and where we are starting tomorrow, We are surrounded by McClaren, and Penske, Ganassi and Andretti. We are there. We are in the mix. Hopefully the strategy plays out. The weather is supposed to be perfect tomorrow so really looking forward to it.

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 ALZAMEND NEURO CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, QUALIFIED 15TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “I am not really satisfied with qualifying, though we have improved a lot from last year! There was definitely a Top 12 in there, unfortunately we just missed the balance. We will analyze everything and work to get better tomorrow. We are a lot more competitive than last year and we did have a great race last year, until the car broke down! Mike Conway won for ECR from 17th, I can in from 15th!”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, QUALIFIED 18TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “We definitely made step forward today. We’re starting a bit higher up than we did last year with both cars. It is a bit of a shame that our time would have transferred us into the Fast 12 if we were in Group 1 instead of Group 2. That’s a good sign and shows how competitive our group was. We still need to take a step forward in grip, which we understand and will work on. We’re definitely in a better place than last year and we’ll see what we can put together for the race tomorrow.”

    CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 DYNAMIC EDGE CHEVROLET, JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING. QUALIFIED 22ND:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “Really tough session for us. Unfortunately we just didn’t get it right. We thought we made some improvements, but unfortunately conditions changed and we didn’t maximize it. We have a little bit of work to do now. A few puzzles to solve. The 11 crew is tight and quite tough but we will move on. We will do some studying and make some changes and give it a go tomorrow.”

    DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE INSULATORS CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING QUALIFIED 24TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “Just finished up qualifying here at Long Beach. Not really where we want to be starting on the grid tomorrow. It’s a long race, and we know we had a good race car when we were here six months ago at the end of the season, so I feel very confident about that. Pretty happy with the progression we’ve made during the weekend. I think we are on the right trajectory and if we have to keep executing on those points and I think we can more up during the race tomorrow.”

    TATIANA CALDERON, NO. 11 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, QUALIFIED 26TH:
    ON QUALIFYING:
    “We just finished qualifying and every lap I am getting more familiar with the track and more comfortable in the car. It’s been too many red flags during practice. So hopefully we can get even more comfortable tomorrow during the race. I hope you will be watching tomorrow in the No. 11 Rokit Chevrolet car.”

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 80 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and 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.

  • INDYCAR Announces Long Beach Grid Penalty

    INDYCAR Announces Long Beach Grid Penalty

    INDIANAPOLIS (Friday, April 8, 2022) – INDYCAR officials have announced a six-position starting grid penalty for the No. 29 Andretti Steinbrenner Autosport entry for avoidable contact involving driver Devlin DeFrancesco during the Sunday, March 20 race at Texas Motor Speedway.

    DeFrancesco was in violation of:

    Rule 9.3.3. Avoidable Contact – The primary responsibility for avoiding contact with a Competitor resides with the overtaking Competitor and the secondary responsibility resides with the Competitor(s) being overtaken. A Competitor who fails to demonstrate their responsibility and initiates a maneuver that results in contact with another Competitor may be penalized.

    According to the rulebook, a penalty can be applied at the next INDYCAR race if the penalty cannot be served at the event where the infraction took place. The series’ next 2022 event is the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach on Sunday, April 10 on the Streets of Long Beach.

  • CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: ACCURA LONG BEACH GP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: ACCURA LONG BEACH GP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH
    STREETS OF LONG BEACH
    TEAM CHEVY ADVANCE
    APRIL 7, 2020

    Team Chevy Hoping for Street Dreams at Long Beach
    Chevrolet IndyCar teams aim to continue strong start to 2022 season

    DETROIT (April 6, 2022) – Chevrolet’s collection of teams in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES head west this weekend as the Bowtie brand looks for its third straight race victory and pole position NTT P1 award to start 2022.

    The Acura Long Beach Grand Prix is the second street course of the INDYCAR season in three events. Eleven entries powered by Chevrolet’s 2.2-liter, twin-turbo V6 engine will around the 11-turn, 1.968-mile circuit in southern California. It’s a track where Chevrolet has competed since 2012 and seeks its fifth victory there.

    Fortunately, momentum is on the Chevrolet side. Team Chevy swept the first two races of the season for the first time since 2016 – the last time a Chevy-powered entry won at Long Beach.

    Scott McLaughlin of Team Penske won at St. Petersburg and claimed pole position there to open 2022. Three weeks later, Penske’s Josef Newgarden won at Texas Motor Speedway after Arrow McLaren SP’s Felix Rosenqvist claimed the P1 Award for pole.

    “It’s hard to think of a better start to our season,” said Rob Buckner, Chevrolet Program Manager for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES. “It’s encouraging to see the performance of our Chevrolet teams on both a street circuit and oval. That’s down to the work between our teams and our engineers to get the most of these packages at two tough venues.

    “As we go to Long Beach, there are a number of challenges compared to our last street race at St. Petersburg. The flow and track layout seem to promote a higher level of interaction between cars at Long Beach and some pretty high speeds. The tarmac goes from mostly concrete to a few asphalt sections, so that’s a consideration for car setup and engine calibration. Above all, there is the measure of risk versus reward at Long Beach. If we can put all those together, it will be another great weekend for Team Chevy.”

    Four different drivers claimed previous Long Beach victories with Chevrolet power including Will Power of Team Penske, which has taken pole position four times at Long Beach since 2012.

    Chevrolet also swept the podium in 2016 and 2015, when Team Chevy captured the top seven places in the race.

    While at the Long Beach GP event, Team Chevy fans can enjoy all that the Chevrolet display, located inside the convention center, has to offer. Included in the display activities will be two Q & A sessions with some of the star Chevrolet drivers. On Friday at 11:00 am local time, AJ Foyt Racing drivers Dalton Kellett, Tatiana Calderon and Kyle Kirkwood with chat with fans in the display.
    Saturday at 2:45 pm local time, Team Penske drivers Josef Newgarden, Scott McLaughlin and Will Power will make an appearance to talk with fans.

    The Chevrolet Motorsports Display opens at 8 a.m. Friday through Sunday and is located in the Long Beach Convention Center. Numerous Chevrolet vehicles and other highlights include:

    • The 2023 Corvette convertible 3LT
    • Additional Chevrolet products such as Blazer RS, Trailblazer RS, Camaro 2SS 1LE, Silverado Trail Boss and
    • A Corvette Racing C8.R showcar and LT6.R engine
    • An opportunity to receive a 2022 Chevrolet t-shirt

    Chevrolet and the NTT INDYCAR Series continue the 2022 season at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, April 10 from the Long Beach (Calif.) street circuit. The race will air live on NBC, the Peacock streaming service and SiriusXM IndyCar Nation (Channel 160). Live timing and scoring will be available at racecontrol.indycar.com.

    TEAM CHEVY QUOTES
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE: d Long Beach has been good to us .Two seconds (place finishes) the last two years hurts a bit. I would like to get a win there. We’ve been close before so, we’ve just got to figure out how to close the deal. That’s as simple as that. If we have a weak place, we’re going to make it a strong place, and I feel like Long Beach has been getting there slowly for us. It’s definitely become a strength, and we just need a little bit more to close the deal and feel like we can do that this weekend.

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 PPG CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE: The first two races is what INDYCAR is all about. This is why everyone loves it, why it’s becoming the world’s most competitive motorsport series. Proud to be a part of it, but it’s all about now. It was a great win at St. Pete and a strong run at Texas but had to get right back on the horse and get ready for what’s ahead at Long Beach and a few other things. I have had a lot of sim time, and more to come. It’s going to be hard, but I’m there.

    DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE INSULATORS CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING: “I’m excited to be back at a street circuit this weekend. Long Beach is one of the classic events in the IndyCar calendar. It’s a great track to drive and the event as a whole, both on TV and at the track, is really exciting for the fans. The layout has a good mix of tight and open corners and there are some opportunities to pass. From a technical perspective, I think we have a couple good setup directions from St. Pete that we will be looking at here. Continuing with the goal of focusing on qualifying, we’ll be working up to that throughout the first two practices, so we can put ourselves in the best position for a good start to the race.”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP:
    “I always have enjoyed coming to Long Beach. I haven’t quite had the preferred weekend there in the past so I hope that the third time’s the charm! We have a lot to look forward to this weekend, especially getting back to work with the team and turning our championship around as we look to challenge at the front.”

    FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP:
    “It’s good to be back in Long Beach. There were a lot of emotions last year here for the team, but I think it was one of our stronger tracks in general; especially from my side. I thought we had a really good package at the end of the year. It’s good to be back and race at another street course. We’ll see if we can get the season going a little bit, as it’s been a disappointing start for all of us, but we’re ready to turn this ship around. I’m excited to go back West again.”

    TATIANA CALDERON, NO. 11 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING: “It’s been a long time since St. Pete and I can’t wait to be back in the car after a long month away! It’s going to be my first time in Long Beach and I have also never been to L.A. so there’s lots of on and off track discovering to do over the week. The track looks super fun to drive and it seems most drivers love it so I can’t wait to see how it feels in reality! I have done a lot of simulator work, watched plenty of onboards in preparation for it with the team, so hopefully this will help us get up to speed quicker in Free Practice. I think I learnt a lot in the first race weekend, I had plenty of time to digest everything from St. Pete and there is plenty of work to be done. I expect another big challenge this weekend but one I definitely relish.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE: “I love where this No. 12 Verizon 5G team is to start the year. We’ve come out of the gates really strong – as has all three Team Penske cars – and there is just a good vibe going around right now. So, it’s nice to head into Long Beach with a lot of momentum and a lot of confidence. The series has done a great job in promoting all the races on the schedule, but Long Beach is still just behind the Indianapolis 500 with all of its history and prestige. I know the fans are going to come out in big numbers to see us this weekend, and they will see a good show. Both of my teammates have already won this year so Long Beach sounds like a great place to get mine.”

    KYLE KIRKWOOD, NO. 14 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING: “I really love street courses. Long Beach will be all new to me this year with the Road to Indy never going while I was a part of the series. I have comfort up against walls and I feel that getting up to speed quick is one of my attributes, so I don’t think lack of experience will hurt us this weekend. We’ve shown great pace in the first two events this year with no justified result, hopefully third time is a charm for us this weekend in Long Beach.”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING: “Long Beach is one of the most fun weekends of the year. I really, really love the track. We have put in hours and hours on the simulator, working on how we can improve there and have a good rebound from last year. We made a lot of progress on the sim and we really appreciate our partners at Chevrolet allowing us to put in those hours! I can’t wait to get back to Long Beach and get the BitNile car on track. We’re ready to right the ship and turn our luck around this weekend!”

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 ALZAMEND NEURO CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING: “We have some unfinished business in Long Beach! Last year, we had a tough weekend and ended the season with a mechanical issue. We know we can do a lot better! We found a lot of information over the winter that we can use, I can’t wait to see what we’ve got. I love the event; I love the track. I am very excited to go to the west coast and rock around the streets of Long Beach!”

    CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 DYNAMIC EDGE CHEVROLET, JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING: “To go back to Long Beach, which is where we finished off our trio of races at the end of last year will be a good experience for me to see where we are. Obviously, we hope to have made a lot of development with the No. 77 JHR Chevrolet since then, so I am excited to see what we can achieve. I am looking forward to the sun and a great race in front of the fans.”

    BY THE NUMBERS: CHEVROLET IN INDYCAR
    · 1: Chevrolet’s position in the INDYCAR Engine Manufacturer standings after two races
    · 2: Consecutive victories by Chevrolet to open the 2022 NTT INDYCAR SERIES. Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin won the pole and race at St. Petersburg. Penske teammate Josef Newgarden won the race at Texas Motor Speedway after Arrow McLaren SP’s Felix Rosenqvist claimed pole position
    · 2: Long Beach podium sweeps for Team Chevy (2015, 2016)
    · 4: Wins for Chevrolet IndyCar teams at Long Beach
    · 6: Different Chevrolet drivers to win races dating back to the start of 2020. Scott McLaughlin was the most recent at St. Petersburg
    · 6: Number of Manufacturer Championships in the NTT INDYCAR Series since 2012
    · 6: Number of Team Chevy Driver/Entrant championships since 2012
    · 9: Wins from pole by Will Power with Chevrolet power since 2012, most by any driver
    · 13: Consecutive seasons with at least one win by Will Power, including past 10 with Chevrolet
    · 25: Wins by Will Power since 2012. All have come with Chevrolet, giving him the most of any driver with same manufacturer
    · 39: Pole starts by Will Power since 2012 in a Chevrolet-powered car, most of any driver
    · 97: Chevrolet victories in NTT INDYCAR SERIES since 2012
    · 109: Earned poles by Chevrolet since 2012
    · 167: NTT INDYCAR SERIES races as V6 engine supplier since 2012 return to INDYCAR

    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 80 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and 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 RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: LONG BEACH GP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: LONG BEACH GP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    GRAND PRIX OF LONG BEACH
    STREETS OF LONG BEACH
    ZOOM CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT
    APRIL 6, 2020

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET MET WITH MEDIA ON THE NTT INDYCAR SERIES PRE-RACE ZOOM CONFERENCE. FULL TRANSCRIPT:

    THE MODERATOR: The NTT INDYCAR SERIES continues this weekend with the running of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach. Our guests today are looking to make some more memories in the historic streets of Southern California.

    Josef Newgarden, the driver of the number 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet.

    Josef has won pole there along with back-to-back second place finishes, a couple of podiums coming off a dramatic win at the XPEL 375 at Texas Motor Speedway.

    Good afternoon Josef, coming off a big win at Texas. What’s the mood like with the 2 crew heading back to Long Beach this week?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s really good. Thanks, Dave. It’s good to see everybody. I’m excited to get back racing this weekend. We’ve had two weeks off. Two weeks is a little long for us. I like a weekend off every now and then, but two is too lengthy. We’re really excited.
    The mood is very good within the team. Not just the 2 car, but Team Penske in general. We’ve been really pleased with the start of our year. As everyone does, they work pretty hard in the offseason to try and improve. This series is so tight now that you just can’t miss any little detail, and I feel like all the teams and drivers are pushing to the maximum these days. It’s no different for us at Team Penske.
    To have the effort pay off so quickly into the season for us has been encouraging. The mood is really good. On the 2 car we’re excited to get going again a little bit since St. Pete. I was pretty encouraged going into the St. Pete, and we were fighting a couple of things and didn’t quite have the start we wanted on a street course, so I’m hoping we can rectify that a bit coming into Long Beach.

    THE MODERATOR: Real quick follow-up, a couple of strong runs for you at Long Beach last couple of times you’ve been there. Can you put a finger on why?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don’t know. We always get that question, and I like everywhere we go. Truly there’s not a track that we go to that I’m ever sad or disappointed to go to, and Long Beach has been good to us.
    Two seconds the last two years hurts a bit. I would like to get a win there. We’ve been close before so, we’ve just got to figure out how to close the deal. That’s as simple as that.
    If we have a weak place, we’re going to make it a strong place, and I feel like Long Beach has been getting there slowly for us. It’s definitely become a strength, and we just need a little bit more to close the deal and feel like we can do that this weekend.
    THE MODERATOR: Maybe that will come this weekend for sure.

    Q. Josef, I was asking you about there’s been some comments I guess about the kind of third F1 race coming into the states and how that might impact INDYCAR in the future, and I know you’re someone who has always kind of got a great overview of what’s going on generally. What’s your kind of opinion on how that might impact INDYCAR in a positive or negative way?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think the momentum from the Formula 1 side is undeniable. It has been for the last couple of years. We’re seeing the effect of that. It’s just continuing to impact here in the United States probably more than anywhere else in the world. I think in a lot of ways it’s good to see.
    What I love about this effect is we’re drawing in so many new fans into motorsports that typically wouldn’t give it a look, and I think that can only be positive for us on the INDYCAR side, to be quite honest. If you are interested in Formula 1 and that captivates you, I don’t see any reason why if we get you exposed to INDYCAR racing, why you wouldn’t be captivating about that as well, if not more.
    I’ve always been in the camp that if you are a motorsports fan, you’re typically a fan of everything. Maybe that’s not the classification for everybody that’s being part of this influx into Formula 1, but I think because our style of racing is so similar and there are so many parallels between the two series that we can really engage with the surge of fans that they’re growing.
    Yeah, I love it. I love Formula 1. I love INDYCAR a little bit more, but I think both of them have plenty of room to grow together, and that’s not a bad thing for us.

    Q. Josef, for yourself, how beneficial was it to you to kind of get off the mark in terms of getting a victory in Texas so early in the season given that you have your new race engineer?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, Texas was good in a couple of different ways. You know, one being that St. Pete was not swimming for us. It did not go very well right off the bat, which was a huge disappointment in a lot of ways just because I felt so confident going into St. Pete. I felt like we didn’t have a lot of preparation coming into the season, but the small amount of prep work that we did had gone so well that there was nothing for me to believe that St. Pete couldn’t get off to a great start.
    There’s a lot we could dive in on that specific weekend, but ultimately, it just wasn’t a great result, and when we rolled into Texas, we just tried to reset and see what we could produce at that specific race. We had great cars. It was a great effort from the whole team, and I think you saw the strength of that across the board with all three of us.
    To be able to capitalize that early is important in any season, and I think more so for this season specifically on the 2 car because of how much turnover we’ve had.
    We always have a great crew on the 2 car, but it’s very different this year. Probably 60%, 70% turnover on just the people that we’re working with, so we’re trying to gel and engage with each other so quickly in the season, and to get a win that early is very positive.
    Now, the counterpoint to that is it’s great to get that win, but it’s still very early in the year. I don’t think that necessarily projects what the entire season is going to look like, so we have to stay on the ground and make sure that we’re working just as hard this weekend as every weekend that we go into and stay level and hopefully we can keep it up.

    Q. And in terms of this weekend, are you kind of expecting more of the same in terms of performance from Texas, or are you approaching it differently because it’s a different characteristic of track, right? We’re back to a street circuit.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: From a data point standpoint, sorry to just repeat words, but if you look at St. Pete, I’m very encouraged about what we have going into Long Beach. I think we can be good across all disciplines, which is so critical in this championship. We can’t have just good cars on a certain kind of oval or a street course, for instance. We’ve got to be good across the board. I think our street course package absolutely has a lot of new strengths to it.
    I look at St. Pete as on one hand it was a disappointment, but on the other hand it was an incredibly encouraging race for us. Scott was fantastic and him winning the event and Will being so close running with him as well, I think it shows the strength of our team and our cars. I don’t see why we can’t replicate that at Long Beach.
    It’s always difficult in this series, but I think we’ve got really good cars underneath us, and I don’t see why we can’t as a team be similar to the way we performed at St. Pete.

    Q. First one for Josef. Obviously, Long Beach, as Dave said at the top, it’s been a really good place for you as far as finishing-wise.
    Talking to some Andretti guys here in Indy, and they attempted a test last week. They mentioned the tire compound is different this year on the street courses. Kind of threw them for a loop a little bit.
    Was that contributing maybe a little bit to your pace in St. Pete compared to your teammates struggling on the different tire compounds? How much do you go for data compared to St. Pete now going into Long Beach over past Long Beach data that you’ve had?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yes, the compound is different on the street course, and I’m sure some teams are wrestling with it more than others. It’s always something you have to stay on top of. There are small changes every year, whether it’s the track or the tire.
    To answer your question, though, no, for me that was not a contributing factor. Has nothing really to do with the tire differences, but I think across the board there’s a lot of strengths to take from St. Pete with our race car, as you saw with Scott and Will.
    We’ll take those data points and apply them to Long Beach, but I don’t believe a tire difference between year-over-year will affect what we’ll be looking at when we specifically look at St. Pete to Long Beach. It will be more setup-specific stuff that we’ll try to carry over.

    Q. Among your wins in INDYCAR, and even Indy Lights, you have won 36 times, but once you’ve gone back-to-back. What’s so challenging in INDYCAR of winning two straight races? I know the parity is big. The talent across the board is bar none. Arguably better than anywhere across the world.
    What have you found is a challenge as far as going from one week winner to not winning the next week? Is there something there to be said?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think you said it. Honestly, it’s the parity. I don’t know another racing championship in the world that has the parity that INDYCAR does. Obviously, I’m biassed being a part of it, seeing how the paddock functions.
    When I first got into the series in 2012, that was not as present. It was getting better from the previous years, certainly from the ’01 to 2011 era. There was a jump forward right away when I started in 2012, but from that point all the way until now it’s just gotten tighter and tighter.
    The tolerances are really small as far as where you can find an edge performance-wise on your competitors. All the teams have raised the levels and their understanding of the car is pretty uniform across the board when you look at the series.
    So it’s just so difficult to get a tiny edge on the competition. Doesn’t matter what time you’re with, what driver you are. I think that’s the ultimate reason why it’s so hard to go week after week and you secure a win. I mean, any little thing can ruin your weekend now, or just a small hiccup can take victory away from you. It’s just incredibly difficult to rattle off wins.
    I think nowadays, the gold standard is kind of three or four wins. It’s still possible someone could win more races than that, but it’s just extremely difficult with how much parity there is.

    Q. One more for you before one for Alex. You’ve been close at Long Beach. Indy is obviously Indy. Everyone wants to win at Indy, but Long Beach is right in too.
    How much do you covet the trophy, a Long Beach trophy, to put on your mantel there? For you, Josef. You’ve been close.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I would love a trophy. I think it would be great. They’re all beautiful and special. I guess they’re like children. You don’t choose a favorite. They’re all special. I would love it. It would be great. Long Beach is an awesome place. I would love to win there.
    THE MODERATOR: To your previous point, I’m going to go back to the start of last year. I think there have been ten different winners in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES since the start of last year. It’s in the span of, what, 18 races now, and you are looking at one of the guys who have done it.

    Q. Pretty much have the same questions for both guys. I’ll start with Josef first. The fact that F1 is coming here for a third race. I have talked to a few of your peer drivers. Some are in favor of maybe going into F1’s backyard, maybe running a few INDYCAR races in Europe, maybe South America. What’s your thoughts about should INDYCAR essentially go play in F1’s backyard if they’re coming into your backyard?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s not an easy question to answer. There’s just a lot more to it than just in my opinion. There’s a lot more to it than just going and running a race in Europe.
    If you are asking me as a race car driver, I would love to go run an INDYCAR at SPA or BrandsHatch GP or Suzuka would probably be my ultimate pick if we went anywhere. I have fantasy tracks and dreams of doing that, and I would love to expose more of the world to INDYCAR racing.
    Running a race in Spain would be stellar. We have such great international talent that I would personally love to showcase that more so. Not just for the driver within the series, but to show the world what INDYCAR racing is all about.
    I do think there’s more to it. When you really try and talk about making those type of moves, we’re primarily a U.S.-based championship because of the fact that most of our partners are U.S.-based or at least their focus is U.S.-based. I don’t think it’s quite as simple, but I think at the end of the day trying to figure out a way to run some international events is still needed.
    I mean, that’s my opinion that I would love to go to a couple of different tracks. I wish we still had Surfers Paradise. That was one race I grew up watching and dreamt about going to, and I never had the opportunity. If something like that would come back up where we could have an opportunity in Europe somewhere or England or go back to Japan, I’m going to be all for it.
    I don’t know if that needs to be our cure for any illness right now, and not that we have that, but I don’t feel like that’s a cure for anything. It’s just something that I personally would love to do.

    Q. Josef, have you thought about if the opportunity would arise, you might consider going to F1? Josef.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, Formula 1 has always been a sport that — at least a form of racing that I followed. I watched everything growing up. For me it was INDYCAR, it was Formula 1, and NASCAR. I watched all three primarily. I watched sports car racing too, but those three religiously.
    I knew everything about all of those three series, and I still do. I watch everything very intimately, so I know exactly what’s going on in Formula 1 and NASCAR and the sports car world. I just love racing, so it would be very difficult I think to turn down the right opportunity to compete in a form of motorsports like F1 just because I’m one of those drivers that I don’t think drivers are very different personally.
    I think everyone would have the same answer. If you have the opportunity to run everything, you probably would. Just it would be such a treat to be able to try Formula 1, INDYCAR, NASCAR, pretty much everything.
    Yeah, it’s hard to say at this point in my career. I don’t know if that opportunity would ever come up, and if it was the right one, but, no, I think personally for me it would be fun to give it a go.

    Q. For Josef, I’m just curious, Long Beach has been a pretty good track for you recently with two second place finishes. Is there something that you are looking for out of the car or a level of comfort you need with the track to get to the top of the podium?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think Long Beach is indicative of a lot of the street courses. You are always looking for confidence in the car specifically the big break zones, T1, T9. Always jump out first. Yeah, it’s the confidence that you need from the race car and a street course to go quick, at least in my opinion.
    That’s very true to a lot of places, like I said, and that’s what we’re working on. We’re trying to find that confidence that you can be committed and make sure you nail a qualifying lap and be committed the entire race. That’s pretty much the key trait.

    Q. This is for Josef. If you can just talk about the strong start that Team Penske is off to. A couple of wins, obviously, and Will second in points, and maybe how that can give you as a team a little momentum or a little surge of confidence heading into a place like Long Beach.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Like we’ve talked about, it’s a good start, but that’s never the norm for the rest of the year. We don’t know what the middle of the season or the end of the season is going to bring, so we’re just trying to stay ready and focused on the next race.
    I think for Long Beach we definitely have good momentum, but that shifts so quickly in this sport. We’re just going to stay focused on the task and hopefully we can keep it up. Especially as we get into the month of May where it’s most important to carry some momentum.

    Q. Quick question for Josef. A couple of them. First one is, are you on baby watch yet?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I am on baby watch. I’ve been on baby watch the last week, but I’m on it. It’s like I have the Santa Tracker. It’s like that, but for a baby. Hopefully he stays on time, and I don’t get caught out this weekend.

    Q. I was going to ask, what’s the plan if that were to arise?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Not good. It’s not a happy plan. I’ll probably be unless there’s some dire issue, I’ll probably be staying and racing, unfortunately, but let’s see what happens. I think we’re going to be okay. I believe in a positive attitude and mindset, and I think it’s all going to work out as it should.

    Q. Then I just kind of wanted to touch a little bit on the 2024 test of the engine that you had last week. Obviously, hybrid. It wasn’t a part of it, but all in all seemed like it was pretty positive from the feedback.
    I mean, can you kind of talk about a little bit of what you felt and experienced and maybe how it compares to what we have currently?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It felt pretty seamless to me. At least plugging in the engine and just going. I mean, there wasn’t a lot of drama to getting it on track, so I think that speaks to Chevrolet and specifically with looking at the timeline that they’ve had with that engine. I think they did a really good job rolling it out and just having really no issues right away.
    Loved the power increase. I think that’s definitely the right direction. It’s what we’re wanting. More difficult car to drive. Just more speed and difficulty putting the power down.
    The hybrid component was not tested, so I don’t really have much to say towards that, but I think the engines that we did run were pretty much ready to rock as they are. You could put them in the car probably next week, and we could go racing. I think that’s really good news.
    We’re in this phase right now where INDYCAR is trying to stay diligent and make sure that they make the right decisions for the future, and it’s an exciting time. I’m very excited for this new package as we get to 2024, and we want to make sure we get all the details right.
    What’s going to accompany it? What’s the final details of the engine specifically? How is everything else integrated around that? There’s a lot of unknown answers, but that’s why we have this time to work on it and to make sure we get it right.

    Q. Do you feel like with the increased power that we could still have no power steering with these cars? Do you feel like maybe there needs to be some help or assistance on that with the increased power?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don’t think we need power steering because of the power increase. That’s not going to be detrimental. The overall weight of the car is going to be the crutch for that, but I’m sure everyone unanimously, if not unanimously, probably close to it, does not want power steering.
    It’s not part of the DNA of INDYCAR racing, and it’s not something we really want to change, so I think everything else associated with the engine, the overall weight of the chassis, will play into that much more.

    Q. I have a quick one from Josef. I just wanted to on the start of the season. I mean, last year it took a long time for you to get your first win. You were the only Team Penske driver who was really in title contention. Now all four of you are in the top four.
    How do you explain that? Where does that come from? Do you think that going back from four to three cars has something to do with that?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Honestly I thought it was so funny last year we kept getting. We were getting bombarded. The first eight races people were, like, ‘what’s wrong with you guys?’ How have you not had a win? It was just becoming comical because our performance was actually pretty good. We had good performances, and they just weren’t translating.
    We had an issue here, an issue there, and we could never really rattle off a complete victory. Because that went on for whatever it was. I think it was seven or eight events. Everyone just assumed that there was a really big issue within our team. There wasn’t.
    For me the performance was always there, especially in the 2 car. We showcased that in the middle of the season and almost had a good rally to win the championship, but just didn’t quite get there.
    To speak to this year, we’ve had a lot of effort that’s gone into this offseason. We knew that we had some deficiencies all around and across the board. I felt like we were capable of winning the championship last year, but even when you have that capability, you can still have deficiencies that you have to improve on.
    Indianapolis was number one for us. That was probably the biggest struggle that we had all year. It’s pretty glaring. We definitely had a problem there.
    Then across the board you think we’ve just cleaned up a lot of areas where we could have improved as a team, and that’s why you are seeing all three cars come out of the gates pretty strong.
    We didn’t know that was going to happen. You don’t know until you run the first couple of races and see where you stack up, but I think so far the evidence suggests that the work we’ve put in has been in the right direction. The real test is going to be Indianapolis. That’s the one place that we struggled the most, and so when we go into the month of May it’s going to be interesting to see if the work has really paid off for that specific track.

    Q. Do you feel more confident about Indianapolis compared to last year and with last year in mind?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I do. I strongly do. The problem is I went into last year’s month of May feeling like we had done everything we could to be at the top of our game and at the top of the board, and it was quite frankly the opposite.
    It happens sometimes. We took some directions. We made some decisions that obviously weren’t the right ones. We’ve just doubled down again. We’ve reassessed everything. We’ve tried to look under every stone that we already looked under just to make sure that we’re looking at it correctly.
    Hopefully this year it’s going to come back around the way that we hope to see it. I think Texas was a good indicator for us. We seemed to have good speed with our cars. Now we just have to translate that to the super speedway package. I think the possibility of us having a better run there is much higher as I look at it right now.

    Q. My question goes to Josef. Penske, your team, is right now in the first position of the championship. Your teammates are first and second. What is the atmosphere in the team considering these results?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s very good. Thanks for the question. At the moment it’s very good. We just have to focus on keeping it that way, but Scott is off to a great start. I can sense a lot more confidence in him this year.
    I think we’ve got him more comfortable with the car, and he has been doing just a stellar job. He was really doing a great job all last year. It was pretty easy to see from inside our racing team. Maybe not as much externally, but you could see how good he was going to be.
    I think he will be able to ride that momentum for a good time now. Will has had a really good start to the year too, and I think he is pretty pleased with it.
    Everyone is very encouraged. It’s early days. You can have two really good races and then all of a sudden everything can go bad. That’s just how quickly things can happen in INDYCAR, so we’re just trying to stay on the ground making sure that we’re just focusing on one race at a time, and hopefully we can keep up this effort.

    Q. Do you think that the three of you will compete for a championship at the end of the year, Josef?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I hope to. I hope it’s us in the 2 car. We’ve been in the hunt here every year for the last five years, it seems like. We just have to give ourselves a little better chance at the end. I feel like 2020 there was a lot of obstacles. 2021 there was less obstacles, but they were still present.
    This year if we can get a better head start and avoid some of the pitfalls that we’ve had in the past, then I don’t see why we can’t be in the conversation.
    Being in the conversation is the way that it starts. You’ve got to be there at the end with an opportunity to win it, so I think if we can put ourselves in position, then this team knows how to execute and get it done.

    Q. I just have a couple for Josef quickly. With the race not being the season finale like last year like it is being so early on in the season this year, how do you feel that that changes the approach for the drivers and the teams?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Obviously, the pressure of the championship is there. I don’t know that that changes much. The intensity is always high in this series. You have to execute whether it’s a championship day or not, so I think in a lot of ways it’s the same. I don’t know how that is going to change the mental approach.
    If you look at someone like Alex’s situation for them the priority was just getting the right amount of points. If you win the race, great, but the mental side is different when you are in the championship fight. Maybe that’s going to be the small change from last year to this year.
    You know, it’s early in the season. You can still take a bit more risk. You might see that. You might see some more moves that are maybe on the risky side that you wouldn’t take in the final race.
    But as far as the prep and trying to be quick, we’re going to do all the normal stuff that we did last season. Just trying to make the car as comfortable as possible. Confidence is key. Cars have got to be solid on the brakes, and you have to feel like you have the car underneath you on a street course to really be able to attack. I think in a lot of ways all that stuff is going to be the same.

    Q. With past seasons that’s normally not an issue. Herta came from 14th to win last year. How does Long Beach kind of compare in that way with being able to pass guys, especially with other street courses where it’s a little more difficult to?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think the ability to pass is there if you have the speed. Colton put that on display last year. It also depends on the scenarios. If there’s a big tire offset that traditionally brings a lot more passing, depending how everyone is shuffled on both the primary and the alternate tire.
    Fuel can always add into the equation. If it turns into a fuel race and not everybody is on that strategy, that can add to increase the passing.
    A lot of it is dependent on how the race forms. We can also have a pretty straight forward day. We’ve seen that at Long Beach before where everyone is on the same program, and there’s not as much passing. I think if we get enough tire offset, which the chance of that happening now with this new compound from Firestone is higher. I think passing for sure is very possible there as we’ve seen with INDYCAR pretty much everywhere.

    Q. The first one is for Josef. Since 2017 when the Long Beach Grand Prix had except one year you were always on the podium. Not to mention you hold lap record here since 2018.
    2017 was a special year for you because this year was the first time you finish on the podium in Long Beach as well as the first time in your INDYCAR career of back-to-back races you won.
    Considering the pressure to accomplish two consecutive wins like this year — Texas and potentially Long Beach — and the challenge conquering Long Beach first time, what can be the most crucial things for you, Team Penske, to prevent Andretti and Honda from making a four-peat in Long Beach?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Andrew, so do I — I hold the lap record at Long Beach in 2018? Did you say that?

    Q. You ran the fastest lap.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, okay. Yeah, yeah. I didn’t think I did.
    Q. This is the fastest lap. This is the fastest lap in Long Beach history in INDYCAR.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I didn’t know that. All right. That’s cool. No, I like it. I like you’re telling me because I have no idea about that, but I guess that’s a cool stat.
    Long Beach, I have had an interesting history at this track. I remember my second race in INDYCAR. I had a pretty tough day there in turn one. I was up against Dario, and I ended up in the fence. It was a really, really tough second race at the track.
    I’ve had some really good days, and last year was almost a really, really good day. The difference makers for us is going to come down to drivability. On a street course we’ve made big inroads on the Team Chevy side for just improving drivability, improving our fuel mileage, and certainly keeping our robust power.
    Those three elements are really what we work on at Team Chevy, and the durability side is critical on the street courses. I think the improvements we’ve made this offseason, that was part of why we were better at St. Pete, and I think that will carry over to Long Beach.
    Then on the chassis side we have some changes too. I won’t delve into them too aggressively, but we’ve made changes. We’ve made the car more comfortable. I think we’ve made the car more secure where we can push and feel confident in what it’s doing.
    All of those things combined are what we’re going to need to topple Honda and Andretti and also Ganassi. Everybody. I think it’s going to take a lot to overcome all our competitors, as it’s just so tight. It’s hard to choose one or two cars. It would be easy to just look at Colton and say he is going to be the main competition.
    I don’t know that that’s the case. I think Alex will be very quick. I think Dixon. There’s a lot of competitors that we’re going to be facing. Those elements that I talked about are going to make the difference for us to be the best.

    THE MODERATOR: He was doing his homework, Josef. 2018 lap at 1:07.6.
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I had no idea.

    THE MODERATOR: Helio has you on the qualifying lap, but one lap in a race. There you go.
    Earlier Eric mentioned the new tire compound for the reds. How do you feel about it? Do you think the extra speed is worth how quickly they fall off?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I like the disparity between the compounds. I like when you really are struggling on one versus the other, and you are in a scenario where you can attack someone when they’re really starting to struggle.
    It’s tough when you are on the other end and you are being attacked and you are struggling, but I love that difference that we get with the compounds where it’s a big spread.
    I think it is larger. We saw that at St. Pete. There is a difference. I don’t know how it’s going to react at Long Beach, just like Alex. We’ll have to wait and see how the weekend plays out. I think it’s go good.
    I think the difference is always a good thing for racing, and it’s our job so figure out how to get the most out of them, and they’re a little bit softer, a little trickier to get right, but that’s our job so figure out, like I said.

    Q. Do you have to change your pit strategy to allow for the different tire compounds?
    JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We’ll get a good read on these through the weekend. We’ll start to get a feel on Friday how they work and then same thing on Saturday, and then really Sunday morning for the warmup we’ll get a really good idea on what we think is going to be a more durable tire or maybe they’re not durable at all, so we don’t know.
    As soon as we have that warmup on Sunday, everyone is going to be talking and trying to figure out what the right strategy is. I just don’t know what that’s going to be yet, so when once I drive the car, then I can give you an update.
    FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

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  • Rossi to make 100th IndyCar career start at Long Beach

    Rossi to make 100th IndyCar career start at Long Beach

    Competing in his seventh full-time season in the NTT IndyCar Series, Alexander Rossi is set to reach a milestone start. By taking the green flag in this weekend’s Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach at the Streets of Long Beach, California, the driver of the No. 27 Andretti Autosport Dallara-Honda will make his 100th career start in the IndyCar circuit.

    A native of Auburn, California, Rossi made his inaugural presence in the IndyCar Series at the start of the 2016 season. By then, he was coming off a part-time stint for Manor Marussia F1 Team, where he competed in five Grand Prix events as a reserve F1 competitor. Despite remaining as a reserve competitor for Manor entering the 2016 season, Rossi opted to compete in the IndyCar Series on a full-time basis and in the No. 98 Dallara-Honda for Andretti Herta Autosport with Curb Agajanian. 

    Making his debut in the 2016 season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg in March, Rossi finished 12th after starting 18th. Through the following four events, he recorded his first top-10 career result by finishing 10th in the Angie’s List Grand Prix of Indianapolis at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course in May.

    A week later, Rossi achieved a pinnacle moment in his racing career by winning the 100th running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and claiming his maiden IndyCar career victory. The win came after Rossi took the lead with four laps remaining while the front-runners pitted for fuel and barely had enough to coast across the finish line with the victory over teammate Carlos Muñoz, Josef Newgarden and Tony Kanaan. With the victory, Rossi became the 70th different winner of the Indy 500 and the first rookie IndyCar competitor to win the event since Hello Castroneves made the last accomplishment in 2001. He also achieved the fifth Indy 500 victory for Andretti Autosport.

    Following his Indy 500 victory, Rossi went on to finish in the top 10 in four of the remaining 10 IndyCar events of the 2016 season. A day after finishing in fifth place in the season-finale GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma at Sonoma Raceway and capping off his first full-time IndyCar campaign in 11th place in the final standings, Rossi was named the 2016 IndyCar Rookie of the Year.

    Remaining at Andretti Autosport on a new multi-year contract deal, Rossi recorded two top-five results and five top-10 results through the first 11 IndyCar scheduled events and was ranked in ninth place in the standings. He then picked up his first podium result of the season after finishing second in the Honda Indy Toronto at Exhibition Place in July before claiming another podium result in the ABC Supply 500 at Pocono Raceway in August with a third-place effort. Two races later, Rossi claimed his second IndyCar triumph at Watkins Glen International after starting on pole position for the first time in his career and leading 32 of 60 laps. He went on to conclude the season in seventh place in the final standings.

    For the 2018 IndyCar season, Rossi, who remained at Andretti Autosport for a third full-time stint, swapped numbers with teammate Marco Andretti, giving the Californian the No. 27 to sport to his Dallara-Honda. Three races into the new season, Rossi claimed his third IndyCar career win following a dominating performance from pole position in the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach in April. The early win to the season marked the first time where Rossi emerged as the points leader.

    Rossi, however, lost the points lead during the following three events, but reassumed it after finishing in third place in the first of a Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix doubleheader feature in The Raceway at Michigan’s Belle Isle. During the second Belle Isle event, however, Rossi, who dominated and was battling teammate Ryan Hunter-Reay for the win, locked up his car with seven laps remaining and plummeted to 12th place in the final running order. In addition, he dropped from first to third in the standings while being overtaken by Will Power and Scott Dixon.

    Despite the misfortune, Rossi remained in contention for the title for the remaining nine events of the schedule, where he finished on the podium four times. During this stretch, he also claimed back-to-back victories in the season at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course and at Pocono between July and August.

    Entering the finale at Sonoma, which marked Rossi’s 50th IndyCar career start, he trailed Dixon in the standings by 29 points. At the start of the finale, however, he made contact with teammate Andretti that damaged the front wing of his car and sent him to the rear of the field. He recovered to finish seventh despite running out of fuel on the final lap, but he concluded the season as the championship runner-up behind Dixon. Though he fell short in claiming his first IndyCar title, the 2018 season was a career season for Rossi, who achieved career-best results in wins (three), podiums (eight), poles (three), laps led (415), average-finishing result (5.7) and standing result (second).

    Rossi commenced the 2019 season with a fifth place result at the Streets of St. Petersburg. Three races later, he claimed his first victory of the season at the Long Beach Street Circuit, which also marked his second consecutive win at the circuit in Southern California. In a similar fashion to the previous season, Rossi remained in contention for the title as he earned another victory of the season at Road America in June along with six podium results through the following 12 scheduled events. When the season concluded at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca on September, however, Rossi, who finished sixth in the finale, settled in third place in the final standings and 33 points shy of his first IndyCar title.

    Coming off two strong seasons, the 2020 season, which was reduced to 14 scheduled events amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, was a disappointing season for Rossi, who endured a winless season for the first time in his career. Despite recording five podium results throughout the season, including two season-best runner-up results at Mid-Ohio and Indy’s Road Course event between September and October, he was not a factor for the title as he settled in ninth place in the final standings.

    Rossi endured another difficult season in 2021, where he only managed a single podium result with second place at Portland International Raceway in September along with four starts on the front row. When the season concluded, he ended up in 10th place in the final standings. 

    Through 99 previous IndyCar starts, Rossi has achieved seven victories, six poles, 25 podiums, 814 laps led and an average-finishing result of 9.8. He has finished 20th and 27th respectively during the first two IndyCar events and is ranked in 27th place in the championship standings while he continues his pursuit for his first IndyCar title.

    Rossi is set to make his 100th NTT IndyCar Series career start in the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach at the Streets of Long Beach, California, on Sunday, April 10 on NBC. The event’s coverage is scheduled to commence at 3 p.m. ET on NBC.

  • Meyer Shank Racing Set for Double Duty at the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach

    Meyer Shank Racing Set for Double Duty at the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach

    Long Beach, Calif. (4 April 2022) – Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) will return to North America’s longest-running street race this weekend, when it takes both its NTT INDYCAR SERIES and IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship programs to the coast of Southern California for the 47th Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach.

    The MSR with Curb-Agajanian Acura sports car team will compete in a 100-minute race on Saturday, a welcome sprint after tackling Florida’s two endurance classics, winning the Rolex 24 At Daytona and taking fifth in the 12 Hours of Sebring.

    MSR’s NTT INDYCAR SERIES team runs in its second street-course race of the 2022 campaign, coming off the high-speed oval race at Texas Motor Speedway after opening the season in downtown St. Petersburg, Florida.

    Meyer Shank Racing Looking for Strong IMSA Run at Acura’s Home Race

    Driver Lineup:
    Tom Blomqvist and Oliver Jarvis: No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Acura ARX-05 DPi

    Tune In:
    Saturday, April 9, 2022 on USA Network and Peacock (5-7 p.m. ET)
    SiriusXM Ch. 202

    MSR opened the WeatherTech Championship season by winning the Rolex 24 At Daytona, with Tom Blomqvist and Oliver Jarvis joined by Helio Castroneves and Simon Pagenaud. The team went on to place fifth in the grueling Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring last month and are now hoping to make up championship ground on the streets of Long Beach.

    Jarvis competed in three IMSA races at Long Beach in the DPi category. He finished fourth in 2018 and 2019, and fifth in 2021. Blomqvist made his Long Beach debut in 2019 running in the GTLM ranks which saw him finish seventh.

    MSR ran in four Prototype races at Long Beach. The team finished fifth and ninth in its debut outing in 2006. MSR drivers, John Pew and Ozz Negri made a front row start in 2014 and the team finished sixth in 2015. Last year, MSR qualified fourth in the Acura DPi, but an accident with 10 laps remaining resulted in a sixth place finish.

    MSR IndyCar regular (and sports car endurance driver) Castroneves holds the Long Beach DPi qualifying record, 1:11.332-seconds set in 2019 onboard the Acura DPi.

    Driver Quotes:

    Oliver Jarvis:
    “With Long Beach being Acura’s home race we would love to deliver their first home win, but as we have seen from the past few seasons this is a track very much suited to our competitors. With that in mind, we know it won’t be an easy task but that won’t stop us from giving everything to make that home win become a reality. Aside from great racing, Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach is such a fantastic event all round and one I look forward to every year.”

    Tom Blomqvist:
    “First off, Long Beach is a cool event and it’s cool to be sharing the paddock with INDYCAR. And it’s even more special that its Acura’s home race. It’s always a great turnout with it being right in the city center and I love street tracks. I think it’s going to be a bit of a difficult race. Obviously going into that race we are realistic with our expectations, but we have the tools and we just need to make sure we make the most out of what we have. Hopefully we can have a good result and bounce back from Sebring.”

    Meyer Shank Racing’s Pagenaud and Castroneves Both Long Beach winners

    Driver Lineup:
    Helio Castroneves: No. 06 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda
    Simon Pagenaud: No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda

    Tune in:
    Sunday, April 10, 3 p.m. ET on NBC
    SiriusXM Ch. 205

    Simon Pagenaud finished eighth in the the second round of IndyCar competition at Texas Motor Speedway in March and now looks to build on that result in Long Beach. The 2016 IndyCar champion and 2019 Indianapolis 500 winner has raced nine times at Long Beach, winning in 2016 and placing second in 2012. Pagenaud most recently finished fifth in 2021.

    Aside from his IndyCar success the street course, Pagenaud also won both of his IMSA (then ALMS) starts at the circuit, in 2009 and 2010.

    Helio Castroneves ran in four Champ Car races at Long Beach, finishing second in 2000 and raced to his first Long Beach win in 2001. Castroneves has 10 IndyCar starts in Long Beach, finishing second in 2015 and third in 2016.

    As part of his six race IndyCar season with MSR last season, Castroneves raced in Long Beach and qualified third for the season-ending race. After leading for 14-laps, Castroneves was poised for as strong result, but an uncharacteristically long green flag did not play into the team’s strategy with the Brazilian finishing 20th.

    Driver Quotes:

    Helio Castroneves:
    “We’re looking forward to the Grand Prix of Long Beach – we had great pace last year and we had great potential in the race after qualifying third. Unfortunately, strategy didn’t work out too well for us, but we learned from it. Now coming back around six months later, we are looking forward to a great result with the AutoNation / SiriusXM car. We are looking really, really strong. I think MSR might impress a lot of people.”

    Simon Pagenaud:
    “Long Beach is one of my favorite tracks. I have been very fortunate there with great success. I’m very excited to be going there with Meyer Shank Racing for the first time. They had a great weekend the last time I raced there, so I am expecting great things on the street course like St. Pete. Obviously, looking towards good execution all week long and trying to finalize the speed we have and transform it into a great result. We’ll see how we can do, but I’m really excited to be going to the west coast.”