Category: NTT Indy

NTT IndyCar news and information

  • Country Star Dierks Bentley To Headline Firestone Legends Day Concert May 28

    Country Star Dierks Bentley To Headline Firestone Legends Day Concert May 28

    Venue Moves to TCU Amphitheater at White River State Park

    INDIANAPOLIS (Wednesday, March 9, 2022) – Country music superstar Dierks Bentley will headline the Firestone Legends Day Concert on Saturday, May 28, one day before the 106th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge.

    Special guests Ashley McBryde and Dillon Carmichael will open the show, which begins at 7 p.m. (ET), with individual performances.

    Previously held on the Firestone Stage inside Turn 4 of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the concert will be held at the TCU Amphitheater in White River State Park, further expanding the celebration of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” into downtown Indianapolis.

    Tickets will be available for purchase starting at 10 a.m. (ET) Friday, March 11 at LiveNation.com. The first 500 fans to purchase a lawn ticket will pay only $25. All dates, acts and ticket prices are subject to change without notice. Ticket prices are subject to applicable fees.

    “Concerts on the days leading up to Race Day help build the tremendous energy that our community brings to the green flag,” Indianapolis Motor Speedway President J. Douglas Boles said. “Hosting the Firestone Legends Day Concert downtown will further integrate our city into the weekend and make for a great Saturday evening under the lights of downtown in a fantastic, newly renovated venue. It also allows us to make sure we will have the Indianapolis Motor Speedway properly prepared to host over 300,000 fans beginning at 6 a.m. the following morning.”

    The new venue allows fans to celebrate Legends Day presented by Firestone at both IMS and throughout downtown Indianapolis. Legends Day kicks off with the 106th Indianapolis 500 Public Drivers’ Meeting and driver autograph sessions at IMS. Gates will close early so fans can make their way downtown for the AES 500 Festival Parade and the Firestone Legends Day Concert.

    “White River State Park is excited to host the Firestone Legends Day Concert at our new TCU Amphitheater,” said Jake Oakman, executive director of White River State Park Development Commission. “The new concert venue is the perfect stage for the world-class entertainment that has long been associated with Race Weekend. White River State Park and Live Nation are looking forward to welcoming race fans from all over the world to this May tradition in downtown Indianapolis.”

    Said Leonard Hoops, president and CEO of Visit Indy: “We’re excited to bring more of the Indy 500 weekend excitement downtown, as we welcome the Firestone Legends Day Concert to the TCU Amphitheater at White River State Park in the heart of the city. Extending the footprint for May events beyond the Indianapolis Motor Speedway provides more opportunities for visitors and locals alike to get in on the action and excitement leading up to the largest single-day sporting event in the world.”

    Bentley continues to be a dominant voice for the genre with over 6.4 billion streams as his new single, “Beers On Me,” with BRELAND and HARDY races up the radio charts. Reaching a new creative high while “making music designed to challenge” (New York Times), Bentley co-wrote 10 of 13 tracks on his latest full-length release “The Mountain,” which earned him the highest debut sales of his career and became his seventh chart-topping release. Last year, Bentley surprised fans with his “Live from Telluride” FROM TELLURIDE collection that was touted as “a gift that Country music fans didn’t know they needed” (The Tennesseean).

    Bentley will celebrate his 16th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 2022. He also has created professional endeavors outside of the music with his Flag & Anthem lifestyle collection Desert Son, along with his “Dierks Bentley’s Whiskey Row” franchise hosting four locations. For more information, visit Dierks.com.

    McBryde earned a 2021 Grammy nomination for Best Country Album, making her “Never Will” the only album nominated for Country Album of the Year by the ACMs, CMAs and the Recording Academy in the same award season. The music is stadium-ready rock-and-roll with a bluegrass wink or two and country music’s storytelling heart––and McBryde, no longer new, is the music’s ordained and highly capable standard bearer.

    Since unleashing his critically acclaimed 2018 debut, “Hell On An Angel,” Carmichael has toured with some of country music’s biggest names, written a song for Travis Tritt’s latest album, racked up millions of streams on Spotify, gone viral on TikTok and even gotten engaged. He used his pandemic downtime to go back to the studio and record his latest album, “Son of A,” a collection of high-energy, feel-good country that includes the singles “Hot Beer” and “Hose Water.”

    As the Official Tire of Country Music and the Official Tire of the Indianapolis 500, Firestone has served as the presenting sponsor of Legends Day since it debuted in 2014. The partnership brings together two platforms – racing and country music – that have played significant roles in the rich history of the time-tested Firestone brand.

    The 106th Indianapolis 500 by Gainbridge is scheduled for Sunday, May 29. Race Day tickets are on sale now at IMS.com or by calling or visiting the IMS Ticket Office. General admission tickets for Legends Day presented by Firestone start at $10. This ticket does not include concert admission. IMS gates will open at 8 a.m. and will close early at 1 p.m.

  • Ed Carpenter to compete in all IndyCar oval events in 2022

    Ed Carpenter to compete in all IndyCar oval events in 2022

    The number 3 is the number of the day for racing veteran and team owner Ed Carpenter, who will be piloting the No. 33 Ed Carpenter Racing Dallara-Chevrolet in all oval events in this year’s NTT IndyCar Series season.

    Carpenter, a Butler University graduate who was born in Paris, Illinois, but grew up in Indianapolis, will be making his first IndyCar oval start of the season at Texas Motor Speedway on March 20. He will then return to Indianapolis Motor Speedway to qualify for the 106th running of the Indianapolis 500 scheduled for May 29, which will mark his 19th consecutive appearance in motorsports’ greatest spectacle event, before participating in an Iowa Speedway doubleheader feature on July 23 and 24. He will then cap off his racing tenure at Gateway’s World Wide Technology Group on August 20.

    The team took to social media to reveal Carpenter’s racing plans on March 3 (3/3) at 3:33 p.m. (E.T.) with the date marking Carpenter’s birthday as he turned 40 years of age.

    The 2022 season will mark Carpenter’s 20th consecutive season in IndyCar competition. Since making his debut at Chicagoland Speedway in September 2003 through his latest start at World Wide Technology Raceway in August 2021, Carpenter has notched three career victories, four poles, nine podiums and an average-finishing result of 14.3 in 191 career starts. His first IndyCar victory occurred at Kentucky Speedway in October 2011 followed by Auto Club Speedway in September 2012 and at Texas Motor Speedway in June 2014. Three of his four career poles occurred at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the Indianapolis 500, with his latest occurring in May 2018 as he went on to finish in second place. His best result in an IndyCar standings is 12th place in 2009.

    Following a full-time IndyCar season in 2013, Carpenter scaled back to compete only on the oval venues from 2014 through the present. This season will mark Carpenter’s first sporting a new number after spending the previous 10 seasons piloting the No. 20 entry.

    Carpenter’s team, Ed Carpenter Racing, currently fields two full-time entries. Conor Daly, who is coming off a 21st-place run at the Streets of St. Petersburg to commence the 2022 IndyCar season, is driving the No. 20 Chevrolet while Rinus VeeKay, who finished sixth at the Streets of St. Petersburg, pilots the No. 21 Chevrolet.

    Carpenter is set to make his first NTT IndyCar Series start of the season at Texas Motor Speedway on March 20 with the event scheduled for coverage at 12:30 p.m. ET on NBC.

  • INDYCAR Moves New Hybrid Powertrain Debut to 2024

    INDYCAR Moves New Hybrid Powertrain Debut to 2024

    INDIANAPOLIS (Thursday, March 3, 2022) – Due to ongoing global supply chain challenges with some hybrid system components, INDYCAR announced it has adjusted the debut of the 2.4-liter, twin-turbocharged V-6 engine with hybrid technology to the 2024 season.

    In consultation with engine partners Chevrolet and Honda, the NTT INDYCAR SERIES will continue to use the current 2.2-liter, twin-turbocharged V-6 powerplant for the 2023 season.

    “We are pleased with the pace of the technical development of the 2.4-liter, twin-turbocharged V-6 hybrid as we prepare it for competition,” said INDYCAR President Jay Frye. “We are very encouraged by the progress our team and our partners have made, but an immediate decision needed to be made to ensure we are prepared for the 2023 season utilizing our current 2.2-liter engine package.

    “Thanks to our great partners at Honda and Chevrolet for working through this challenging supply chain situation. We are going full speed ahead with the 2.4-liter hybrid engine and cannot wait to have it on track in 2024.”

    The development of the 2.4-liter, twin-turbocharged V-6 engine with hybrid technology involves cutting-edge innovations unique to INDYCAR. The new engine will give the most exciting and competitive racing series in the world a roaring and powerful 800 horsepower as a baseline. The addition of the hybrid system will give an additional boost of 100 horsepower to ultimately produce 900.

    “We are proud of the hard work and level of commitment by our engine group, along with our teams and partners, in the development of the Chevrolet 2.4-liter engine for our INDYCAR program,” said Mark Stielow, director, GM Motorsports Competition Engineering. “We were certainly excited to have it on track next season. Chevrolet remains fully committed to the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, and we look forward to debuting our future engine package in 2024.”

    “We are very excited to get the electrified era of INDYCAR SERIES racing underway,” said David Salters, president and technical director, Honda Performance Development. “We have finished development and dyno testing of our new internal combustion engine, and once the hybrid system component supply chain issues are sorted, we’ll begin track testing of the new hybrid power unit.”

    The first on-track test of the new INDYCAR SERIES 2.4-liter, twin-turbocharged V-6 will come Wednesday, March 30 and Thursday, March 31 at Sebring International Raceway. Development, testing and work to incorporate the hybrid component will continue throughout the year.

    The 2022 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season continues Sunday, March 20 for the XPEL 375 at Texas Motor Speedway. Coverage begins at 12:30 p.m. (ET) on NBC and simulstreamed on Peacock Premium. Coverage is also available from the INDYCAR Radio Network with audio available via the INDYCAR App powered by NTT DATA.

  • St. Petersburg win sets tone for McLaughlin, Penske in 2022 NTT IndyCar Series

    St. Petersburg win sets tone for McLaughlin, Penske in 2022 NTT IndyCar Series

    A dominant win for Scott McLaughlin in the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series season opener at St. Petersburg could set the tone for how this season will go for the second-year Team Penske driver, if history is any indicator.

    Starting from the pole, McLaughlin led 49 of 100 laps and took the checkered a half-second over defending series champion Alex Palou in his 18th series start after winning Rookie of the Year last season. The three-time Australian V8 Supercar champion won in his first pairing with Team Penske engineer Ben Bretzman, firing the first shot of the season on the road to the championship.

    What stands out is McLaughlin’s season-opening win comes after three-straight seasons of champions who won the season-opening event of their championship year. Last season Palou scored his first career win in the Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama on his way to winning twice more before clinching the season title. Scott Dixon won at Texas in 2020 on the way to clinching yet another title. In 2019, McLaughlin’s Team Penske teammate Josef Newgarden won at St. Peterburg on the way to his second series championship.

    McLaughlin has the odds in his favor going into 2022. He’s got a championship legacy with Penske already. He’s with one of the top teams in the garage with Penske and Chevrolet. He’s got a season under his belt, a season that saw him claim top rookie honors and show some maturity behind the wheel near the end of the season, scoring two top-10s in the last four races while finishing 12th and 11th, respectively, in the last two races.

    Primarily a road racer thanks to his years in the V8 Supercars, McLaughlin has posted strong runs on both road courses and ovals before Sunday’s win. His best rookie finish was second at Texas in the third race of the season, followed by an eighth during the second day of the Texas double-header. In the fifth race of the year he finished eighth again at the Indianapolis Grand Prix. A fourth at Gateway was followed by a ninth-place finish at the Grand Prix of Portland were all highlights of a season that would be considered as modest by most standards.

    Seeing how dominant McLaughlin and his No. 3 team performed on Sunday shows that they’re past being modest and ready to show the aggression needed to perform like he did during his Supercar career. As the youngest and newest member of the Penske IndyCar group, McLaughlin knows he needs to perform to match the championship pedigree of his teammates, Newgarden and Will Power. If Sunday’s performance is any indicator in that case, he won’t have to wait long to deliver another Team Penske championship trophy.

  • CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES – TEAM CHEVY RACE RECAP

    CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES – TEAM CHEVY RACE RECAP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    FIRESTONE GRAND PRIX OF ST. PETERSBURG
    STREETS OF ST. PETERSBURG, FL
    TEAM CHEVY RACE RECAP
    FEBRUARY 27, 2022

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN USES CHEVY POWER TO SCORE CAREER-FIRST NTT INDYCAR SERIES VICTORY
    Will Power comes to finish line in third to give Chevrolet two of top-three drivers on podium

    ST. PETERSBURG, FLA (February 27, 2022) Scott McLaughlin jubilantly jumped from his No. 3 Dex Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet in victory lane, and promptly dropped to the ground exhausted from the 100-lap season-opening race on the Streets of St. Petersburg-a very physically strenuous 1.8-mile, 14-turn temporary street course. But quickly recovered to celebrate with his wife, team and a throng of excited partners and fans.

    From the pole, McLaughlin led 49 out of the 100 laps taking the lead at the green flag and holding it until the first pit stop cycle began.

    “This unbelievable, said McLaughlin from Victory Lane. “Thank you to Roger Penske and everyone who put their faith in me… DEX Energy for jumping on board and trusting me, and Roger Penske and Tim Cindric giving me the opportunity to come here.

    “It was crazy. I really struggled those last couple laps to keep my head to save fuel and all that stuff. We did it. Chevy gave us the fuel mileage. The drivability this weekend has been a big change. We did it.”

    “What an exciting win for Scott McLaughlin from the pole,” said Rob Bucker, Engineering Program manager for Chevrolet in the NTT INDYCAR Series. “Everyone on the Chevrolet engine and engineering INDYCAR program has worked very hard during the off-season with our teams to continue to build on our 2.2 liter V6 engine. It is very rewarding to leave race one with a pole and victory and solid finishes by our Chevy drivers. Congratulations to Scott, Ben Bretzman and the entire No. 3 Chevrolet team on their first win together. Now off to Texas!”

    While the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg was a monumental step forward for McLaughlin in his INDYCAR career, its not the first success he’s had with Team Penske. In Australian Supercars, his credentials include three consecutive championships and 56 race wins.

    Joining his teammate on the podium was former champion and Indianapolis 500 winner Will Power driving the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet who took the checkered flag in third place. Today’s finish was the 86th podium finish for Power.

    Continuing his strong performance at St. Petersburg, Rinus VeeKay crossed the finish line in sixth position. VeeKay put his No. 21 Sonax Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet on the grid in fourth. The 21-year old ran in the front pack all race to put himself in position for a strong finish.

    The victory was the 96th for the Chevrolet 2.2 liter twin turbo direct V6 since the 2012 season when the Bowtie returned to the NTT INDYCAR Series. It is the 8th win in 11 races for Chevy Power at St. Pete.

    Next on the NTT INDYCAR Series schedule is Texas Motor Speedway
    on March 20, 2022.

    DRIVER QUOTES:
    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 DEX IMAGING CHEVROLET, RACE WINNER:
    “This unbelievable. Thank you to Roger Penske and everyone who put their faith in me… DEX Energy for jumping on board and trusting me, and Roger Penske and Tim Cindric giving me the opportunity to come here. I miss my mom and dad dearly and my family… I wish you guys were here.

    LATE-RACE FIGHT WITH ALEX PALOU: “It was crazy. I really struggled those last couple laps to keep my head to save fuel and all that stuff. We did it. Chevy gave us the fuel mileage. The drivability this weekend has been a big change. To win DEX Imaging’s home race is unreal. I love you Australia and New Zealand. I miss you guys and thinking of all you guys in the Queensland with all the floods at the moment. I just can’t believe this!”

    MORE ON THE RACE: “These are great fans. We have great sponsors like DEX Imaging and Chevy to help us along the way. The trust of everyone in me really kept me going, including my wife. My wife has been the absolute backbone of everything and kept the belief in me. She’s a gem.”

    YOUR PREVIOUS BEST RESULT ON A STREET COURSE WAS 11TTTH. WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE FROM ONE YEAR TO THE NEXT? “I was worried about my average so I had to come out and win! I’m just very proud. We put a lot of hard work in – not just me but all these guys on pit stop practice, engineering from Ben (Brentzman) to make me good to give me a car that I like. I’m just pleased.”

    WHAT HAS ROGER PENSKE’S SUPPORT MEAN? “He was the one who calmed me down last year. He’s the one who said that it’s a long story and not a short one. To pay back that faith and prove the trust he put in me is a very proud moment.”

    YOU WON SO MUCH IN SUPERCARS BUT DIDN’T LAST YEAR. WAS THERE DOUBT? “There’s always a little bit of doubt. But you know you can do it deep down. Everyone was asking how I was going to go at the start today, and I was like, ‘I’ve led a few races from the start. I just didn’t do rolling starts.’ It’s all about going back to what I know. I knew I could do it. It’s all about belief. To anyone out there, you can do whatever you want. You just have to have belief in yourself and get it done.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, FINISHED 3RD:
    “ Yeah, I’m really, really happy to start out this way. When I think about the day, just a really, really solid day for us. Got that yellow and then made the reds last in that middle stint. To finish on the podium, I was really, really happy with that. I didn’t expect — I expected us to be maybe in the top 10 after all of that. Great result. Happy with my performance. I couldn’t have done any more, and also with the team, we did everything that we could in the situation that we had. Really nice day and a great start to the season.”

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, FINISHED 6TH: “I’m pretty happy with the result – P6. I really struggled on the reds where the balance went the exact opposite way as what we thought. I was a little surprised but we made the best out of a bad situation. We saved a lot of fuel so good for the environment! It’s a good start to the season. I’m ready for Texas. It’s good to be back in the top-10 and back on the pace we showed last year.”

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, FINISHED 12TH: “We finished 12th today at the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. We had a great start, going from 16th to ninth on the first lap. From there, I was like ‘Oh yes, let’s get a great race in,’ but we didn’t really nail the strategy. We weren’t on the right strategy with the three-stop and got stuck back in 12th. We will give it hell in Texas.”

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, FINISHED 16TH: “It was a tough weekend on the No. 2 car. It just didn’t pan out our way. We tried a different strategy than most, and it didn’t seem like the racing gods were shining on us this weekend. There are a lot of positives. We have a lot of new people on the 2 car and I felt like everyone worked super-well together. We’ve learned some things to start this year off, so our goal is to continue to build on this first weekend of the year and get better throughout. I can’t wait for the next one at Texas.”

    FELIX ROSENQUIST, NO. 7 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, FINISHED 17TH: “The first race of the season is complete in St. Petersburg. We ended 17th and really couldn’t move up in the field. The way our strategy turned out is pretty much where we started the race. That’s what happens when you start in the back, you don’t really go anywhere unless you luck out with the strategy; which we didn’t have today. I thought the pace was pretty good, the best it was all weekend; but we couldn’t take advantage of it. Now, we will reload for Texas.”

    KYLE KIRKWOOD, NO. 14 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, FINISHED 18TH: “I’m super happy with the outcome of everything. I think this weekend there’s a lot of new moving parts going on along with myself, and everyone executed. Yeah, we were on the wrong strategy and we got hosed by a caution but that’s part of racing. We showed this entire weekend that we have pace and we showed pace in the race with the ROKiT Chevrolet. We ran right there with veteran drivers like Newgarden and Pagenaud. I was super happy with that. I was thrilled I kind of ran Newgarden down at one point so couldn’t ask for anything better than that to be honest for my first ever race. It’s just unfortunate we were on the wrong strategy but we were on the right strategy until the caution came out.”

    CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 DYNAMIC EDGE CHEVROLET, JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING, FINISHED 19TH: “What a race. It went from really struggling on the reds to boxing a little early and getting it right with the full-course yellow and coming out in 12th. A lot of guys in front me ended up having to pit a bit earlier. I was hanging in P2 and the pace was really, really good. I think I was even catching Rinus (VeeKay). I think we boxed maybe two laps early and I caught a pack I couldn’t make it through. I was on the reds. The pace was good but there was nowhere to go. With about 30 laps to go, my hands starting to fall apart and it was quite difficult to turn. It was an experience. I think we had good pace, especially on the blacks. What a race. We ran in the top-three for almost 30 laps, so that was mega.”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, FINISHED 21ST: We didn’t get the result we wanted, but honestly we had some of our best race pace we’ve had recently. We set the fastest lap of the race, so that’s a huge positive for our program. Strategy didn’t quite go our way today and we also need to qualify better. Overall, we had a lot of positives today that our result doesn’t show.”

    TATIANA CALDERON, NO. 11 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, FINISHED 24TH: “It was the toughest race physically of my career. Obviously a hundred laps with only one caution was quite hard but i think we managed to get a feeling for both tire compounds. I did a few mistakes running out of road and a few things but sometimes you have to learn the hard way but i was happy to cross the line to get a bit more information a bit more fitness for what’s coming next and to know where I need to improve as well and where can maybe help with the balance of the cars so I’m quite happy with all that information and hopefully we can come back to Long Beach and push harder.”

    DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, FINISHED 25TH: “ “It wasn’t the finish we were really looking for. We had really high hopes and expectations after our best qualifying in IndyCar so far, so I have to commend the No. 4 team for that performance. That was a great day and I was really happy with how that want. Obviously we wanted more in the race but we suffered a mechanical issue. We’ll figure out what happened, diagnose that and make sure it doesn’t happen again. It’s part of the process and part of learning how to do this better every weekend. That’s all we can ask for. We have to keep improving, take the positives from this weekend and go into Texas.”

    Scott McLaughlin, Will Power
    Post Race Press Conference Transcript
    THE MODERATOR: We are joined by Scott McLaughlin, career win No. 1 in just his 18th career start in the INDYCAR Series, the second straight year this race has been won from pole, fourth overall. We added it all up, 223 INDYCAR Series wins for Team Penske. And of all the drivers that have won a race in this series, you are the 295th different one to do so. A quick shout out, it’s Chevrolet’s 96th victory since the return to the series in 2012.
    You’ve had some time to kind of reflect on all this. What do you make of career victory No. 1, Scott?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Oh, man, just unexpected, I think. I felt like — you back yourself, but in our pre-event we said top 7, if we can come out of here with a solid top 7. Obviously the goal was changed last night, but it was just phenomenal the way the car rolled out of the truck and I felt like I could really do what I wanted to do with the car from the get-go.
    What that does for confidence as a race driver is something that just feels very special. I knew halfway through that race that it was somewhat — a bad yellow or something was really going to affect us. We knew that we were going to fight there the whole way, and I just had to keep calm and control the race myself, and I felt like we did that until the back markers made it pretty exciting, which would have been great for everybody at home but not for me.
    But it was just a phenomenal weekend. Perseverance. You just don’t give up. You don’t doubt yourself. I knew I could do it. Last night I had a great sleep because I just said to myself, I’ve done this before, let’s just — I did it with a roof over my head. Now it’s just a matter of just feeling it and seeing what I had today.
    Look, I had a great start, got into a rhythm and away we went. I’m very proud, great for Dex Imaging. It’s their home race. Team Chevy gave us awesome fuel mileage and drivability, as we’ve said all weekend.
    Yeah, I just ended up on my ass at the podium, but that’s okay. Felt a little roly-poly, but anyway, that wasn’t part of the act.
    I’ll never forget it, man.

    THE MODERATOR: You need to work on dismount.

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I couldn’t believe it, I jumped, no shit, and my legs just were jelly, bro, and when I hit the ground, I’m like, I’m done. I tried to make it as delicate as I could, and I just looked like an idiot. I looked like a wombat, man. It was bad. You guys hear of wombats? Or a kiwi. Kiwis don’t fly, that’s why they fall over when they come down from the sky. That’s what we did just then.
    THE MODERATOR: We saw you FaceTime your parents —
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, that was awesome.
    THE MODERATOR: How emotional is all this?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Oh, it’s hard. You’re quite emotional on the way in, but mom and dad always listen to the radio on the INDYCAR app. You guys can get that; it’s a great thing from the INDYCAR people and NTT.
    No, it’s certainly — yeah, they always listen. I gave them a shout-out on the way in, and then Karly, my wife, she always gets them on FaceTime whenever we have a good result and they’re not there. Yeah, we had a good chat. Mom and dad were crying. My dad had his PPG shirt on. He’s like, that’s all I got; I don’t have a Dex shirt. I’m like, it’ll come. I’ll send it to you soon. It’ll get there in six months.
    Yeah, it’s tremendous. I can’t wait, man. They’re going to come over in May. They haven’t seen me in INDYCAR at all ever. They’ve only seen me on TV and the onboard videos I send back. Mom can’t watch. Mom always has a wine and dad just sits there and yells at the TV.
    Yeah, very excited for them to come over. It’s going to be a very different perspective.

    THE MODERATOR: When is the last time you’ve seen your parents?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: January 2020. And my sister was a little bit better. We saw each other October 2020, but can’t wait to have her here, as well. She looks after all my media. I bet she’s going to be crazy down under.
    Yeah, I miss them dearly. My mom and dad, they’re the ones that got me here and made me believe in myself. My mom and dad have been infatuated with the USA for many years, and I guess that put the love of the USA and the want to come over here to the big leagues when I was a young kid, even way before my Supercars success.
    Then obviously I met just a guy named Roger Penske and we kicked it off. I’m tremendously grateful for the position my mom and dad put me in and the position Roger and Tim Cindric put me in.

    Q. How was it to control that race? It’s something that’s so familiar to you from Supercars but obviously you’ve come to a different championship and things are a lot different here. Did it feel natural to be able to control that race or was it a lot more difficult than it looked?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: The last lap and then when we got put in the traffic didn’t feel that natural because it doesn’t really happen — we have different yellow procedures and stuff. I felt like at the start I was like, oh, this feels like how it used to not long ago. But it was very nice at the start being able to control my pace, especially against Herta who was very quick, and I knew I had his pace on the reds. It was just a matter of hitting my fuel number, which we were doing from the start of the race.
    Yeah, I mean, we just got into a rhythm, and then even when the yellow flag came out and we were back in the traffic there, it was just about me just knowing that hopefully if there’s no yellows we were on the preferred strategy, which we were, and it was about bringing it home.
    For me it’s just all about just keeping calm, particularly if you’re the leader, just not making any rash decisions, make a move if you can make it, but if not, just relax and count the laps down.

    Q. You spoke about St. Petersburg being your third INDYCAR race, which I imagine might have been a big help over the course of the weekend, but what does this say about your ability to go to the tracks you’ve been to once before, and do you think you can carry this form forward?

    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think the way that I’ve worked with Ben Bretzman, my new engineer, I think we can really start working on what we need. We know what we want from a street circuit car, which we just showed that it’s going to be pretty good, so I’m excited for Long Beach. I’m heading back there for the second time.
    But I’m not kidding myself; I could quite easily be 20th next round. This 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 — I’ll celebrate this, I’ll have a few beers, don’t you worry about that, but I’ll make sure that I get back on the horse, actually back on the simulator on Wednesday and got to get ready for Texas and then get ready for what’s ahead at Long Beach and a few things. It’s going to be hard, but I’m there.

    Q. Where does this rank in terms of your career highlights? Obviously I know you’ve been super successful in Australia.
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No, I think this is top-3 moment of my life. I’m not going to rank them, but they are Bathurst — no, I can’t say that because my wife would be mad. No, top four. My wedding, my marriage; Bathurst 1000 victory; my first championship in Supercars; and then my first victory in INDYCAR. To win on both sides of the world is pretty cool. My phone is absolutely going ballistic in my pocket right now, and I can’t wait to respond to a lot of the messages.

    Q. In terms of the momentum going forward, how exciting is it to have won your first race?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, look, it’s a great monkey off the back and it puts us — a tremendous confidence booster as a team, but like I said, we’re not kidding ourselves. We’ve got to keep working, keep working harder because all the teams are going to come back at us strong. You look at Ganassi, they’re probably not amazing in qualifying but they were very fast in the race today and pushed me to no end and passed a few cars.
    Yeah, I’m not kidding myself. Just keep pushing on and we’ll be okay.

    Q. The shoey, were you planning on doing that, or was that the fans’ request?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No, I saw the Australians, and I did one on the Bathurst 1000 podium, so I’m like, oh, stuff it, I’ll give it a go. And I had beer this time, so it was nice.

    Q. I know you had no one in your family from over there, but Karly was telling me about there’s a Supercars mechanic that you have here. Could you tell me his name, his background? Was he here just to see you or was he here to race?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No he’s the same sort of thing, a guy named James, he was my No. 2 mechanic for the whole time when I was in Supercars — sorry, not the whole time but at DJR Team Penske, so we won a lot of things together, but he’s here living in the States now, chasing his dream of potentially trying some international races and that sort of stuff, so he’s got his Visa, he’s ready to go. He’s just getting interviews and whatnot. But he’s a great mechanic and someone that — he’s a big — like we get along very well. He had my tee shirt on today. He’s a big — we went through some highs and lows, man, me and that guy and that whole team. It was very cool.
    He’s the first Australian I’ve seen since October of 2020, so it was very cool to catch up with some of those boys.

    Q. Like any good Penske driver, externally we don’t see the frustration and how difficult it is, but Karly said it was really tough on you last year and I know you said — I can’t remember the exact quote, but you said Roger told you something about marathon, not a sprint, this is just part of the story. Could you expand what the last year was like for you?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, I came over three times. I had won straight back-to-back championships, and I know I’m a rookie and I wasn’t kidding myself, but at the same time it’s hard to go from the mindset of, okay, win every week and that’s all that matters, nothing less, to going, hey, I’d love a top 15. I don’t work like that. I’m a competitive bloke. I want to win. I want to get poles. I want to dominate races and not even worry about things.
    It definitely took — I did that for four years, and then coming here and was basically — it just mucks with your head, and you’ve got to be realistic about things, and I put a lot of pressure on myself, like why isn’t this happening, why am I sucking in qualifying when I’m good? I’ve done that before, I’ve proved that.
    It’s a mind game, man, and you’ve got to be on top of it. You’ve got to just believe in yourself.
    Like I said, Karly has been my absolute rock with that. She’s put the belief in me. I would be nothing without her.
    Definitely some hard times, but she’s pulled my head in, Roger’s pulled my head in, and we just got on with it. Speaking pretty candid, it’s just how it is. As a professional sportsman you go through highs and lows. You’re getting paid good money and you’re running 15th, it’s not good. For me it’s not good. I drive for the biggest motorsport team in the world. For me it wasn’t good.
    But I feel like today, this weekend, we proved that hard work, perseverance, you can get there, and I felt very proud of that.

    Q. I understand you don’t fly back until tomorrow, so there going to be a big party somewhere tonight?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Oh, you know it. Yeah. We’ll keep a lid on it, but we’ll have fun.

    Q. Scott, you didn’t get it easy from Alex here, you had to really fight for it. Does that make this win a little bit more special knowing that you’ve had to really fight someone for it instead of winning by like 25 seconds?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, look, at the start of the race I felt like I had everything. I led the start, first hung on to 1 leading the start, had to fight off Herta, he was on my outside there, and geez, it was close with me and Palou — was it, coming out of pits? It was close.
    I had all sorts of things going, caution, period, pit stop, then it was close with me and Will there, and then the battle with Palou saving fuel in the middle of the pack. I felt like we had everything, and then Alex at the end pushing me really hard. The guy in front of me backing up and didn’t really have the pace, but it’s hard with the dirty air to make moves. I just wanted to be safe.
    But yeah, it was nice. I had everything in that race, and it definitely showed what I’ve learnt in the last year.

    Q. Your first Supercars win was at Pukekohe?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, close.

    Q. What can you compare about how your first win there was or in Supercars was compared to your first win here? Similarities, differences?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Well, Pukekohe, I lived 15 minutes from that track, so it’s a little bit different, so I had a lot of friends and family. That was crazy. But sort of went in there one day, not knowing — no one knew who I was and the next day I had to have security come in and help me get out. It was crazy.
    And today it’s the same, like I’m very — it’s just surreal, man. There’s no comparison, but at the same time the relief and the — I guess the belief that you have in yourself, it just feels like it’s just surreal. I have no words, man. It’s crazy. Same sort of feeling, not at home, fun.

    Q. This is a very weird question, but since you have won I think you can answer this. It is very difficult for us to pronounce your name, McLaughlin —
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It’s hard in USA, too.

    Q. We call you a very beautiful city in Spain that is called Malaga, Malagita. So we call you Malagita. So the question is can you say hello Malagita?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It sounds pretty good. Hello, Malagita.

    Q. Looking ahead, Texas is next up. Texas was a great Shootout with Dixon there last year, obviously now was a fantastic result over the weekend. Is that going to put any other pressure on you to have another good result at Texas or it’s just business as normal now with the new engineer around you and stuff, as well?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, business as normal. Thankful that we’re going to have a test day before then, too, at Texas. We’ll be able to fine-tune some things before we go there. We’re going to have a little bit of a different downforce package from INDYCAR, as well, so will be interesting.
    Yeah, I’m fully prepped, like I said. If I’m not on the pole I’m going to start 20th, and I don’t want that to happen, so I’m going to work hard. It’s business as usual. It’s the first race; I’m not getting ahead of myself. It’s just head down, bum up, and make it happen.

    Q. Just finally as a part of that, obviously the Kiwi contingent is very set to travel in the coming months when our border restrictions ease and the influx of New Zealand fans probably around the month of May. What does that mean to you emotionally if you see a bunch of New Zealand flags say in the grandstands or around the paddock at Indy or at any other tracks across the season?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Oh, it’s huge. It makes me want to run up in front more and make the trip worthwhile, alongside Scotty. We know Scotty is always going to be there.
    Look, I really appreciate all the support that I’ve had. My phone has been going crazy, my Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, you name it, has been going crazy. Kiwis are a proud bunch and we love being the underdog, and I felt a little bit like that. I feel like we’re a little bit of the underdog still at the moment, regardless of this win. I feel like we can have a lot of fun this season, see what we’ve got, and hopefully when I see the Kiwis it’s going to be awesome and even the Australians, too.

    Q. The last three years the winner of the season opener has gone on to win the championship. Do you think you’re the championship favorite now?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No. Well, I mean, in my head I am.
    You know, let’s keep it low key. Yeah. Let’s be the underdog for a little bit longer.

    Q. Just in general, is that a lot of pressure? Are you able to kind of put that off to the side and not really think about that and just do your job?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah. For me INDYCAR — what won the championship last year was a 7.1 average race result. For me it’s just I want to finish top 10 every race, top 8 every race, and if I can do that, I know I’m going to be there or thereabouts towards the end of the season. When we can win races like we did today, that’s exactly what we’ve got to do. We’ve got to capitalize on those, but like I said, we’ve got to just not rest on this one win, like this is all about just get going and let’s keep the momentum up, and regardless when we’ve got a fourth-place car, we take a fourth place; when we’ve got a tenth-place, we take the tenth. When we can win a race, we capitalize. That’s the plan this year.

    Q. Scott, you kind of touched on this a bit, but the out lap of your final stint appeared pretty critical to collect this win. Then you had traffic at the end and Palou closing in on you. Was this the hardest final stint of your racing career?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No, the Bathurst 1000 was pretty hard, but this was a lot of what I learnt in the last year, what in and out laps, being comfortable on cold tires, studying my anti-roll bars, so I felt comfortable on the newer tires and then resetting, using my Push-to-Pass.
    I felt like last year really led me up to this moment. I wouldn’t say it was the hardest lap of my career or hardest stint, but it was probably very up and down. Probably the most up-and-down stint I’ve had in a race in my career.

    Q. You mentioned your family there and their passion for racing. Do you think we’ll see any more viral videos surface of your dad yelling at the TV?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I asked mom if she had got it. She said she was jumping up and down, too, but maybe. I can’t remember if they were watching with anyone. So it would be funny — probably won’t be able to post it on social because it’ll be swear words and stuff.

    Q. I wanted to ask about how much of a dilemma there was before the start of the races to how much — whether you should run reds or blacks, especially when you saw Will going to blacks, or was that a team thing, to just split your strategy?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No, I said I wanted to start on the reds and we decided that as a group decision, and thankfully it was the right call because everyone else around me did. I just felt like I’d be more — running into Turn 1 the first time, most amount of grip, being able to take the lead and just use the clean air. We had the best opportunity to do that, so get those out of the way, see how they hold on, which mine were holding on pretty good. I actually felt better on the red tire than I did the black tire. Yeah, I think we could have easily done the 30-odd laps if we didn’t have that yellow, and then, yeah, just soldiered on from there.

    Q. In that final stint, Palou was mentioning that when he was behind you, you were kind of like saving fuel at exactly the right spots and was able to go quick so that he couldn’t actually — in the parts where he could pass you. Was that something you had planned a long time ago or was it kind of like you were making decisions on the fly?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No, I just got told the number that I had to hit, but I also had practice — that’s everything we practiced in the simulator, as well. Like thousands and thousands of laps on the simulator just getting ready for that moment and knowing that it’s potentially going to be a two-stop race. We know how many laps the race is going to be and what our mileage is like, so it’s about preparing for that, and felt really prepared and knew exactly what I needed to do, and we spent this morning the whole warm-up basically focused on in and out lap starts, fuel saving, so I knew exactly what I had and what I needed to do. Yeah, it’s a good feeling when you can control a race like that.

    Q. We saw you sliding around quite a bit. Were there quite a lot of marbles on the track by the end there, just in that last few laps with Palou right behind you? There was a couple of times where I thought, oh, my God, the tail of his car is going to hit the wall.
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think the slides were induced by stress. Yeah, honestly the car was pretty good, but when you’re in dirty air and your car changes with the turbulent air and stuff, it’s very different, and that’s another thing just leading the race, it’s very different here with the lap traffic compared to any other series in the world, so just trying to judge all that and get that right.

    THE MODERATOR: Congratulations, Scott McLaughlin.
    THE MODERATOR: We’re joined by our third place finisher, Will Power, the Verizon 5G Team Penske’s 86th career podium. Will, you’re now two shy of tying Bobby Unser and Al Unser Jr. for eighth on the all-time list.

    WILL POWER: Podium list, wow. I didn’t even know there was a list for that.
    THE MODERATOR: There is a list for that.
    WILL POWER: What about front row starts? My list of front row starts has got to be at the top.
    THE MODERATOR: We’ll get back to you on that.
    THE MODERATOR: We’re going to beat the blue flag drum today?
    WILL POWER: I’ve been on this for 10 years. When every driver in the driver meeting says we need a blue flag rule, why isn’t there one?
    THE MODERATOR: I’ll steer you towards this: Congratulations on your podium finish. What happened on the opening lap for you there? You lost a couple spots early on.
    WILL POWER: Yeah, well, I started on blacks and I also got on the paint and it spun up when I went, which I wasn’t — I knew everyone would come back to me because the reds would go off, but unfortunately caught that yellow, so we were coming pretty good. I was pretty sure we’d be able to get past Scott, but unfortunately then I’d have to get on reds and try and maintain a reasonable pace, which I did in the second stint for a whole stint.
    I think we could have been all right today with that strategy, but caught out with the yellow. Something else I’ve been on about for a decade is closing the pits under yellow because that would have been so nice to be able to pit when it went yellow there.
    THE MODERATOR: Overall start to the season for you —
    WILL POWER: I’m happy with my result but I’m unhappy with the lack of things that get done.
    THE MODERATOR: But a good start to the season for you.
    WILL POWER: Oh, great start to the season. You’ve got to get into it, man. You’ve got to say how you feel. When you get to my age you’ll just say how you feel. You won’t be scared.

    Q. How big of a result is it for both of you in terms of the momentum going forward given that there’s a bit of a break before the next race?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, I’m really, really happy to start out this way. When I think about the day, just a really, really solid day for us. Got that yellow and then made the reds last in that middle stint. To finish on the podium, I was really, really happy with that. I didn’t expect — I expected us to be maybe in the top 10 after all of that. Great result. Happy with my performance. I couldn’t have done any more, and also with the team, we did everything that we could in the situation that we had. Really nice day and a great start to the season.

    Q. Will, you’ve obviously been coming here for a while. What did you think of the atmosphere, especially after the last couple years?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, it was great to see such a big crowd, which I expect at a lot of races now that everything is open, especially the Indy 500s. I think people have been locked up and got a real feel for what it’s like not to be able to socialize, and it’s just no fun. I think everyone is enjoying themselves, and it’s great to see fans again, great to do autographs and an autograph session and see full stands. Yep, really, really cool.

    Q. Will, two Team Penske cars on the podium, including the winner. You said a couple of weeks ago how important it is to get off to a fast start, so here’s your fast start. Elaborate.
    WILL POWER: Yeah, it was a really good day. I think we had a really fast car. The yellow was unfortunate, but still to get back to third, I was really happy with it. I think anytime you’re on the podium, anytime you have a top 5 that’s not the day you’re going to look back and go, oh, that cost me the championship. If you can keep rattling off those top 5s you’re going to be in the game. Definitely happy with the result.

    Q. Will, you were joking earlier about how long you’ve been doing this. What’s it been like watching the influx of young talent having so much success the last couple of years?
    WILL POWER: It’s great, man. It really is. In the years I’ve been in this series it’s the toughest it’s ever been, the quality of the teams and the drivers are higher than it’s ever been, and yeah, just so many good young drivers. You can tell that the field quality is really high because there’s not many yellows, even in practice. Even at Sebring we hardly had any yellows when we had the one test.
    Just the level of talent and quality of teams is at — it’s such a good product. We’ve just got to get it out to the world. It’s the best open-wheel racing product in the world.

    Q. For Will, you’re clearly in a very good mood. Is this a mental change coming into the season, or you’re just jacked up with today’s race?
    WILL POWER: Oh, no, I’m really happy with the race. I actually am more relaxed. I just find myself more relaxed the older I’ve got. I never really swear on the radio or get mad in the car. I am very sarcastic in these press conferences for fun because my brother is a comedian and we’ve spent our whole life doing this, like just saying things sarcastically just in the family. I hope no one takes it too badly.
    But they really should do something about the blue flags. (Laughter.) We’re going to start paying like Chevy drivers to play the same game —

    Q. Alex, you’re clearly now that you’re going into your third year you’re feeling at home here?
    ALEX PALOU: Yeah —
    Q. I would say a couple years ago you wouldn’t have interacted as much with a jovial Will Power like this?
    ALEX PALOU: Yeah, it’s amazing. I’m happy. I mean, Will Power.

    Q. Will, great to see a Penske 1-3 on the podium. How much work during the off-season has been done to achieve that?
    WILL POWER: A lot. A lot. We had one of our worst seasons last year and a very disappointing Indy 500. There’s been a lot of reflection and development to try and understand what that was and definitely have turned up with better cars. There’s no question. Definitely different philosophy and right in the window, and it’s showing on the track. Like from the moment I was on track on Friday, the car was fast, and really haven’t changed much at all.

    Q. Does it make a difference, the fact that you’re now a three-car team as opposed to being a four-car team? Has that impacted on it at all?
    WILL POWER: No, not really. We got some of the guys from that fourth car, which probably added a little bit of quality to the pit crews, but the pit crews were already pretty solid. Pit stops were all good.
    Not really. Penske can comfortably run four cars and not really take away from anything. It’s just a little more quiet in the engineering office now.

    Q. Will, you had mentioned getting paint on the tire at the start and a few other things, but was your car struggling at all with fuel loads at the start of both stints? It didn’t seem like you had the car that you did later on in the stints or was it a case of trying to manage the tires?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, so I started on black tires, the harder compound. The guys in front were on reds, so they were quicker for about five or six laps. I was getting a big fuel number for those left just knowing that those reds were going to come back to me, the cars in front, so I got some fuel and waited for them to go off a bit, then I went, passed a couple of cars and started to use my pace later in the stint.
    It was a pretty strategic race really. We used the pace when we had it and saved fuel when we were in other situations. Yeah, that’s why I dropped back.

    Q. Will, you started last year with a second at Barber, obviously starting this year off again strong. What do you need to do to parlay this into a championship unlike last year?
    WILL POWER: Finish really well in the double points race at Indy like we didn’t last year, and have my car start when I’m leading in Detroit. That group of points right there probably would have put me in the game. So there’s a big chunk right there.
    But honestly, it’s those days that really got us. Like we were in — we were going to be a top 5 at Indy and then the brakes went to the floor and I had no brakes and then couldn’t pit really, and then in Detroit obviously the thing didn’t start.
    But those little gremlins, those little things are the things we look back as things that really cost us, kind of things out of my control, but I also reflect and look at where I can be better, as well. If that all comes together, I really believe we can win the championship and be right there, at least a contender right until the end.
    THE MODERATOR: Will Power, you are free to go. Best of luck the rest of the season.

    About Chevrolet
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  • McLaughlin Breaks Through with First Career Victory at St. Pete

    McLaughlin Breaks Through with First Career Victory at St. Pete

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022) – Scott McLaughlin delivered on the promise he showed to Team Penske when it signed him straight from touring cars to race in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, earning his first career victory Sunday in the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding.

    NTT P1 Award winner McLaughlin drove his No. 3 DEX Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet from the pole to victory by .5095 of a second over reigning series champion Alex Palou, who applied heavy pressure to McLaughlin over the closing laps in his No. 10 NTT DATA Chip Ganassi Racing Honda as they raced among and through slower traffic.

    New Zealand native McLaughlin made his NTT INDYCAR SERIES debut at this event in 2020 after winning three straight Australian V8 Supercars championships and then raced in his first full season of open-wheel competition in 2021.

    He finished 14th in the standings, with a best finish of second, and earned series Rookie of the Year honors despite the strain of not seeing his family since 2020 due to pandemic-related global travel restrictions. McLaughlin sat in front of his winning car in Victory Lane, celebrating with his family via videoconference on his phone.

    “Thank you to Roger Penske, everyone,” McLaughlin said. “Yeah, DEX Imaging jumping on board, trusting me, and then Roger Penske and Tim Cindric giving me the opportunity to come here.

    “I miss my mom and dad dearly and my family. Wish you guys were here. What a day.”

    Will Power finished third in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, 2.461 seconds behind his winning teammate. Colton Herta finished fourth in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda, while Romain Grosjean rounded out the top five in his first start for Andretti Autosport in the No. 28 DHL Honda.

    McLaughlin became the second consecutive driver to earn his first series victory in the season opener. The driver who pulled off that feat last year – Palou, at Barber Motorsports Park – stretched McLaughlin to his limit over the last 13 laps of the 100-lap race on the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit.

    A fascinating duel between drivers on two-pit stop and three-stop strategies unfolded into a straight fight between McLaughlin and Palou – and their two-stop plans – after six-time series champion Scott Dixon made his third and final pit stop in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda on Lap 80, surrendering the lead to McLaughlin.

    McLaughlin led Palou by 2.150 seconds when Dixon pitted. It appeared only a caution period would bunch the field, as McLaughlin controlled the pace from the front. That caution never came, as this race featured an all-time event low of just one yellow-flag period, but slower traffic turned the closing laps into a scintillating dance between McLaughlin and Palou.

    With 13 laps remaining, McLaughlin approached the No. 48 Carvana Chip Ganassi Racing Honda of Jimmie Johnson, who was racing to stay on the lead lap. McLaughlin had to find a spot on the concrete barrier-lined circuit to thread the needle and pass seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Johnson, and that slight delay helped Palou – Johnson’s teammate – close to within .625 of a second.

    From there, the gap between the two lead cars ranged from three-tenths to eight-tenths of a second. It appeared on Lap 96 that Palou might get a chance to try to pass McLaughlin as both cars approached the No. 11 ROKiT AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet of rookie Tatiana Calderon. But Calderon pulled off the racing line on the front straight to let both McLaughlin and Palou scream past.

    “Oh, man, it was crazy,” McLaughlin said of Palou’s pressure. “Really struggled those last couple laps just to keep my head and then save the fuel and all that sort of stuff.

    “But we did it. Chevy gave us the fuel mileage. Drivability this weekend has been a change, and to win at DEX Imaging’s home race is unreal. Oh, my God, I’m just – love you Australia, New Zealand, miss you guys. Thinking of everyone in the Queensland floods at the moment.”

    Palou continued to close on Laps 98 and 99 but couldn’t get close enough to pass. Andretti Steinbrenner Autosport rookie Devlin DeFrancesco was right in front of the lead pair on the final lap, trying to stay on the lead lap. McLaughlin, who along with Palou was saving Push to Pass power until the final lap to conserve fuel, never let Palou challenge over the final trip around the circuit.

    “It was close,” Palou said. “It was really, really close, but I don’t think we had the pace he had today. Like he was on rails, and he knew where to go fast and where to obviously save some fuel at the end. I was just there trying to make some pressure so hopefully he made a mistake or anything, but no, he was all good.

    “Congrats to him. I’m super happy that he got his first win. Yeah, I’m happier that we got our first podium of the year.”

    McLaughlin led 49 of the 100 laps to earn the victory in his 18th career NTT INDYCAR SERIES start. It was the 223rd INDYCAR SERIES victory for Team Penske.

    Now that the box for a first victory is checked, is McLaughlin’s win in his first race aligned with Team Penske engineer Ben Bretzman a preview of a possible championship season?

    Palou parlayed his first career win last year in the season opener at Barber Motorsports Park into his first Astor Challenge Cup for Chip Ganassi Racing. And the winner of the season opener in the last three NTT INDYCAR SERIES seasons has gone on to win the title in the same year – Palou in 2021, Scott Dixon in 2020 and Josef Newgarden in 2019.

    The next NTT INDYCAR SERIES race is the XPEL 375 on Sunday, March 20 on the 1.5-mile, high-speed oval at Texas Motor Speedway. Live coverage starts at 12:30 p.m. (ET) on NBC and the INDYCAR Radio Network.

    ST. PETERSBURG, Florida – Results Sunday of the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.8-mile Streets of St. Petersburg, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

    1. (1) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    2. (10) Alex Palou, Honda, 100, Running
    3. (2) Will Power, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    4. (3) Colton Herta, Honda, 100, Running
    5. (5) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 100, Running
    6. (4) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    7. (11) Graham Rahal, Honda, 100, Running
    8. (7) Scott Dixon, Honda, 100, Running
    9. (8) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 100, Running
    10. (22) Takuma Sato, Honda, 100, Running
    11. (15) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 100, Running
    12. (16) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    13. (23) Jack Harvey, Honda, 100, Running
    14. (17) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 100, Running
    15. (6) Simon Pagenaud, Honda, 100, Running
    16. (9) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    17. (21) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    18. (12) Kyle Kirkwood, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    19. (19) Callum Ilott, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    20. (13) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 100, Running
    21. (20) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 100, Running
    22. (18) Devlin DeFrancesco, Honda, 100, Running
    23. (26) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 99, Running
    24. (25) Tatiana Calderon, Chevrolet, 97, Running
    25. (14) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 62, Mechanical
    26. (24) David Malukas, Honda, 23, Contact

    Race Statistics
    Winner’s average speed: 96.899 mph
    Time of Race: 1:51:27.3466
    Margin of victory: 0.5095 of a second
    Cautions: 1 for 8 laps
    Lead changes: 8 among 6 drivers

    Lap Leaders:
    McLaughlin 1-26
    Rossi 27-36
    Dixon 37-48
    VeeKay 49-61
    McLaughlin 62-63
    Palou 64
    Power 65
    Dixon 66-79
    McLaughlin 80-100

    NTT INDYCAR SERIES point standings: McLaughlin 54, Palou 41, Power 36, Herta 32, Grosjean 30, VeeKay 29, Rahal 26, Dixon 25, Ericsson 22, Sato 20.

  • Meyer Shank Racing Drivers 14th-15th in St. Pete Season Opener

    Meyer Shank Racing Drivers 14th-15th in St. Pete Season Opener

    ST. PETERSBURG, FL (27 February 2022) – Both Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) drivers spent time in the top five in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg before placing just outside the top 10.

    Helio Castroneves finished 14th in the No. 06 AutoNation/ SiriusXM Honda on the tight 1.8-mile street circuit, one position ahead of MSR teammate Simon Pagenaud in the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda. The teammates were separated by 0.6162-seconds at their lead-lap finish.

    Both drivers ran consistent races, placing fourth and fifth of competitors using a three pit stop strategy. Contrary to its usual form with numerous caution periods on the concrete-lined course, the race was slowed by only one full-course caution, coming out early in the event, while 24 of the 26 competitors were running at the finish.

    Castroneves started 17th, and pitted under green 10 laps into the event. He returned to pit lane during the lone caution on lap 26, and was running 22nd at the restart. From there, the four-time Indianapolis 500 winner gradually improved his position.

    As the strategies played out through the long green flag run, Castroneves came all the way up to third position before his final stop on lap 66. He returned to the fray in 20th and had improved to 14th three laps later, holding that position on the run to the checkered flag.

    Making his first IndyCar start with MSR after launching the year with the Rolex 24 At Daytona win with the team, Pagenaud made it to the Firestone Fast Six in qualifying on Saturday, starting on the outside of the third row. He was shuffled back four positions to 10th on the opening lap. Pagenaud pitted on lap 11 to shed his Firestone alternate tires, and was up to fifth at the time of the caution.

    Pagenaud improved to third when he pitted under green, dropping him to 21st. He worked back to seventh before his final stop on lap 68. He returned to the race in 15th – one position behind Castroneves – and held the position for the final 31 laps.

    The next race for the IndyCar Series will be the Xpel 375 at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday, March 20, with the race airing live on NBC at 12:30 p.m. ET.

    Driver Quotes:

    Helio Castroneves, No. 06 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda:

    “I have to give big props to Meyer Shank Racing and especially Adam (Rovazzini – MSR Competition Director). The goal was to put some points on the board and that’s exactly what we did. Obviously 14th is not where we wanted to be, however some days that’s what you get as a result. We are going to take what we learned here and use it for Long Beach – but first we have Texas and that’s where we need to collect a lot of points.”

    Simon Pagenaud, No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda:

    “Overall I think we had a lot of performance this weekend, a lot of pace over one lap. Personally, I’m disappointed with my start and dropped back a few spots. And then we opted for three stops and defended to (Josef) Newgarden and the two stop strategy actually worked better. I think it was great to get my first race in the books. There’s a lot to learn from it and a lot of potential which I’m excited about.”

  • Brabham Takes Stunning Win in Lights Return at St. Petersburg

    Brabham Takes Stunning Win in Lights Return at St. Petersburg

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Sunday, Feb. 27, 2022) – Matthew Brabham made an emphatic return to the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires series Sunday, winning the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg in dramatic fashion with a late-race pass in an Andretti Autosport-dominated race.

    Brabham capitalized on the misfortune of Andretti teammate Christian Rasmussen, who dominated the race but ran out of fuel with less than two laps to go. Brabham led just the final two laps of the 45-lap race in the No. 83 Andretti Autosport entry in his first Indy Lights start since 2015 at Long Beach.

    This was the first Indy Lights victory for Brabham since May 9, 2014 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway – a span of 2,851 days.

    “First thing’s first, absolute heartbreak for my teammate Christian,” Brabham said. “He had me in the race. I couldn’t keep up. I could just stay in range, but not enough for the push-to-pass. I can’t imagine how he’s feeling. But for me, especially after being away for so long and coming back and having success like that, it’s unbelievable. I’m speechless. I’m pretty emotional.”

    Benjamin Pedersen finished second in the No. 24 Global Race Group with HMD Motorsports entry, 2.4726 seconds behind Brabham, to tie his career-best Indy Lights result. Pedersen’s teammate Linus Lundqvist finished third in the HMD Motorsports with Dale Coyne Racing entry.

    “Right from Practice 1 we weren’t quite the fastest, so we had been going uphill all weekend,” said Pedersen, who finished fourth in the Indy Lights championship last season. “As long as we make it count on Race Day, we drove from fourth to second, it was a great ‘recovery’ points-wise this weekend. I’m looking forward to the future and going back to Barber, where I have a lot more experience and hopefully starting more momentum from there.”

    Sting Ray Robb finished fourth in the No. 2 Andretti Autosport entry, while Danial Frost rounded out the top five in the No. 68 HMD Motorsports with Dale Coyne Racing entry.

    Until everything changed on Lap 44, series rookie Rasmussen looked primed to win in his first career Indy Lights start.

    2021 Indy Pro 2000 champion Rasmussen started fifth. But thanks to a Turn 1 fracas on the opening lap when a three-wide battle for second bunched the field, he easily slid into second place. From there, he found himself chasing teammate Hunter McElrea.

    But on Lap 13, polesitter McElrea crashed from the lead in Turn 14 in the No. 27 Andretti Autosport entry. McElrea was growing his lead over Denmark’s Rasmussen, which had peaked at more than three seconds, when the rear of the car stepped out from under him in the final corner of the 1.8-mile temporary street circuit.

    McElrea made hard left-side contact with the outside wall on the frontstretch, ending his day. He was unhurt.

    Rasmussen took charge of the race from there and cemented his firm control over the field. As the end of the race neared, Rasmussen had a three-second lead over second-place Brabham.

    But a fortunate turn of events in St. Petersburg, Florida, gave Brabham, from Boca Raton, Florida, a late birthday present at his home track. He turned 28 on Friday.

    “I just got lucky,” Brabham said. “I was pushing. I was doing everything I could. I tagged the wall a few times, probably more than I should have. I’m just very lucky, and I’m so happy. I knew I was going to finish. It was just if I stuck it in the wall. Everyone was having issues out there. It was unbelievable.”

    Brabham was filled with emotion after the race, holding back tears and hugging his father, former INDYCAR SERIES driver Geoff Brabham. Matthew also is the grandson of famed three-time Formula One World Champion Sir Jack Brabham.

    Indy Lights presented by Cooper Tires will be back in action Sunday, May 1 at Barber Motorsports Park, with live coverage on Peacock Premium.

  • CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES – TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP

    CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES – TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP

    CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
    FIRESTONE GRAND PRIX OF ST. PETERSBURG
    STREETS OF ST. PETERSBURG, FL
    TEAM CHEVY QUALIFYING RECAP
    FEBRUARY 26, 2022

    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN CLAIMS CAREER-FIRST NTT P1 AWARD WITH CHEVROLET POWER
    Will Power Gives Chevy and Team Penske Front Row For First Race of the Season

    ST. PETERSBURG, FLA (February 26, 2022) – Scott McLaughlin transferred his fast time in this morning’s practice to his first ever pole in just his second season in the NTT INDYCAR Series. McLaughlin was the final car on track for the six-minute Firestone Fast Six session when time expired. His lap of 59.421 seconds bested Team Penske teammate Will Power to lock the No. 3 Dex Imaging Chevrolet into the pole starting position.

    McLaughlin’s pole is the 285th for Team Penske in INDYCAR competition, and 112th pole (earned and awarded) since Chevrolet returned to the NTT INDYCAR Series in 2012 with the 2.2 liter, V6 twin turbo direct injected engine. It was the eighth pole for Team Chevy since 2012 for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

    For the 12th time in his career, Power will start on the front row on the Streets of St. Petersburg: He has nine poles and three outside front row starts. During the Q2 Fast 12 session, he set a new track record of 59.3466 seconds.

    Rinus VeeKay, No. 21 Sonax Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet, qualified for his first ever Firestone Fast Six and secured the fourth starting spot. Two-time winner at St. Pete Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet qualified in the ninth starting position.

    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:
    SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 DEX IMAGING CHEVROLET, POLE WINNER:
    “I love qualifying. You have to put it all on the line. I’m working really well with Ben Bretzman (new race engineer). The DEX Imaging Chevy is phenomenal. Ben is a legend. We said we could do it. I’m really proud. I know Mom and Dad will be watching at home, so this is awesome. I have my in-laws here and I haven’t seen them in two years. I’m super proud for that. Chevy has done a tremendous job giving us driveability. The engine is handling so much better and I’m so confident. I’m so happy… I have a race tomorrow and can’t use too much energy!”

    YOU SAID YOU WERE TIRED OF STARTING AT THE BACK OF THE FIELD. HOW DIFFERENT WILL THE PERSPECTIVE BE TOMORROW? “I’m a competitive bloke so I hate starting at the back! At the end of the day, it’s a new thing for me. I’ll be starting from the front and leading a group to the first corner. I’m used to braking with people in front of me so I have to make sure I don’t overshoot it like an idiot! We’ll have fun. I appreciate all the fans coming out. It’s great to see so many fans and I can’t wait for tomorrow. The show is going to be big.”

    BEN BREITZMAN, ENGINEER, NO. 3 DEX IMAGING CHEVROLET:
    “It’s been an interesting offseason with a big transition for both of us. We’ve put a lot of work in, a lot of ‘How are we going to do this together and what do we need to learn together?’ I’m super proud of him. The speed has always been there, it’s how do you extract it? So far so good.”
    DID YOU THINK A POLE WAS POSSIBLE? “Honestly I wasn’t sure until I saw where we were when we unloaded. When we unloaded, all that work that we did over the offseason really came to fruition. We were quick right off the truck, and then I knew we could do something. I’m pretty excited. A lot of work went into this so I’m really proud of everybody.”

    WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, STARTING 2ND:
    “ I was very happy up until the last run. I was like P1, P1, P1, P2. But it was good. Like honestly, I feel like I got the most out of the session. I guess there’s not much I could have done. What I could have done in the last one was to fuel for just one lap and may have had a shot. But yeah, like I said, starting way ahead of last year at this track.”

    RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, STARTING 4TH: “Very happy with qualifying. P4 and first ever Firestone Fast Six
    experience-very happy and very proud with the team, and with all of my guys-they gave me a great car! We had an amazing off-season and it paid off with a great result. So, very happy and on to a great result tomorrow.”

    JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 HITACHI CHEVROLET, TEAM PENSKE, STARTING 9TH: “The car was fine. The traffic is horrible. The Hitachi was really comfy. I think it felt good from a balance standpoint. We’re fighting some issues is what I’ll say. There are a couple of things in the background that are working against us. Overall, ninth isn’t a horrible starting spot. It gives us a fighting chance for tomorrow. We just need to sort out some of these things out that we have going on. It’s a new team for us, really. Everyone is doing a great job getting along and jelling. There are just a couple of things that you wouldn’t like to have around to start out a weekend. It’s what we’re dealing with. Overall I feel really confident. Team Chevy is here supporting us and they’re doing a great job as you saw with our teammates. We’re feeling good for tomorrow to at least start our year on a positive note.”

    YOU HAVE A NEW ENGINEER WITH ERIC LEICHTLE. IT’S HARD TO START A RELATIONSHIP WITH TWO PRACTICES AND STRAIGHT INTO QUALIFYING. “This was probably the hardest offseason because we only had one test day. For Eric, it’s like trial by fire. He’s doing a great job. He’s been around us for awhile in IndyCar with the Team Chevy camp. We have a great group here. I have to remind myself that this is the first race. As much as I want to come out and knocking down the fence and being the fastest car out here every session – and I’d love to do that – it doesn’t seem like it was destined to start this year. We’re going to try and make the most out of tomorrow, hopefully get a podium and maybe sneak in a win.”

    KYLE KIRKWOOD, NO. 14 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, STARTING 12TH: “The first goal was to get to Round Two. I wanted to get in the Fast Six. I pushed as much as I could out of the car but unfortunately when you push that hard, I made a mistake just into the first corner after the timing line so I was playing catch-up from there. I was pushing my brake points further, and the car took it really well, but I caught myself out coming out of Turn Nine. I got to power where I thought maybe I could just get back on it and it just set free a little bit. I brushed the wall and after that, I wasn’t sure if anything was wrong. This car is a tank… I hit the wall pretty good and only the piece of the floor was brushed. I was super-happy with it. I think we were quickest out of the rookies, so that was the first goal but I really wanted that Fast Six. I think we have the car to do it.”

    WHAT HAS THIS WEEKEND BEEN LIKE? “It’s cool because I have a lot of experience around this track. I’m able to drive here. Every other one I have to fly to. This one feels like home to me. I have a lot of friends and family here, and I know they’ll be cheering me on. I’ve got a lot of experience here and some wins in other categories in US F2000 and IndyLights. Hopefully I can take that knowledge over to this for tomorrow.”

    DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, STARTING 14TH: “First day of qualifying with our No. 4 K-Line car. We had a great run in our Team Chevy here on the Streets of St. Petersburg Grand Prix. It’s a really fun event. The track was great. We really the nail on the head from a set-up standpoint on the Firestone blacks. We were a little free, then when we went to reds, it really came to us. We only had that one lap to get it done.

    PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 McLAREN CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, STARTING 16TH: “I had the pace for sure. The car had it. We started off the weekend not very good, but we made some great changes. The car has pace. Just note to self for next time: Don’t smash the wall halfway through the wall if you want to transfer! It’s all my mistake. I just didn’t quite judge the amount of snap I was going to get and I didn’t want to back out of it. I paid the consequences. I think tomorrow we are going to have a good race. The car is good and let’s see what we can pull off.”

    WHAT HAPPENED THE LAST TIME YOU STARTED 16TH AT DETROIT LAST YEAR? YOU WON. “That’s a great memory. But yeah, tomorrow is going to be tough with the heat. Strategy-wise, it’s going to be difficult. Luckily for us, we’ll have a new set of reds that the Fast Six won’t have. That can play into our favor and what strategy we pick out. Let’s just see where we go!”

    CALLUM ILOTT, NO. 77 DYNAMIC EDGE CHEVROLET, JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING, STARTING 19TH: “It was quite a difficult session. It’s very, very tight. We made a lot of improvements over the weekend and are getting closer. As you see, it’s a tenth here and there and you’re moving up a lot. We’re going to work on a few things. We’ll have a big meeting tonight to see what we can do. We can definitely race from there. The first race of the year will be a tough one, but let’s see what we can do.”

    CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE CHEVROLET, ED CARPENTER RACING, STARTING 20TH: “Today we had a great performance from our teammate. Rinus did a great job. I just could not find the grip I needed. The team has given me a great car. We’ve improved a lot from last year. I feel way better than I did as a driver. The race is obviously what we look forward to. Not what we wanted in qualifying for sure. And there are a lot of positives from what we’ve done from a balance standpoint and what we are going after tomorrow. The race is what matters.”

    FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 McLAREN VUSE CHEVROLET, ARROW McLAREN RACING SP, STARTING 21ST: “It was kind of a weird session. The black primary Firestones were a good step forward from practice, and felt we didn’t need any adjustments for the red alternates. We went out and the tires were ready to go straight out of the pit lane. That’s not what we are used to, I expected them to come in on the second or third lap. I just took too much out of the tires on the first lap and couldn’t complete a better lap after that. It was a good lap, but kind of weird how the tire just went away. There’s a lot of lap time left to find, but we will focus on the race. I think we have a pretty good race car, so I’m not too worried. We will push tomorrow.”

    TATIANA CALDERON, NO. 11 ROKIT CHEVROLET, AJ FOYT RACING, STARTING 25TH: “It’s been such a warm welcome. Honestly I wasn’t expecting something like this, so I’m happy. Every session we went out, I improved a lot. The team gave me a great car and I’m really happy to drive the RokIt Chevrolet IndyCar. It’s been awhile since I’ve been on a street circuit but I’ve been fortunate enough to do Monaco in Formula Two and Macau, as well. This is something different. I’m building up to it. I think we’ve done a good job particularly in qualifying. I felt like I found a ton of grip so I’m looking forward to the race and getting into a rhythm. The level of competition here is extremely high. You have champions of literally everything. You have ex-Formula One drivers, upcoming stars… there is no one who is going to give you anything. It’s 27 cars that are the most competitive ones I’ve faced in my career. I expect things to be tough but I love this kind of challenge and hope through the year we can make those jumps.”

    POST QUALIFYING TRANSCRIPT – SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN AND WILL POWER

    THE MODERATOR: We’ll get started here this afternoon after qualifying earlier today, getting set for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg tomorrow presented by RP Funding. Joined now by Will Power, who picks up his 12th front-row start here on the Streets of St. Petersburg, also now the new track record holder at 59.3466 around this 1.8-mile layout. Not pole position for you, Will, but it’s a Team Penske front row. How special is that to kick off the season?

    WILL POWER: Well, it’s just much better than last year. Last year was P20, so here’s to starting further up the front and hopefully the first corner is good. Many names went through my head who were behind me then. I’m like, there’s some potential for a bit of mayhem there.

    THE MODERATOR: Well, if it’s your teammate you might have a little discussion beforehand?
    WILL POWER: Well, he’s beside me. He’s gone. He’s good. It’s the dudes behind you you’ve got to worry about.

    THE MODERATOR: Talk about overall your day today. Happy with it?
    WILL POWER: I was very happy up until the last run. I was like P1, P1, P1, P2. But it was good. Like honestly, I feel like I got the most out of the session. I guess there’s not much I could have done. What I could have done in the last one was to fuel for just one lap and may have had a shot. But yeah, like I said, starting way ahead of last year at this track.

    Q. The speeds today with so many guys being under a minute, did everybody come in here expecting it was going to be the case? Is there any reason for it?
    WILL POWER: No, I was surprised actually. I didn’t even know what they did last year, and when they said that was the lap record, I was like, oh, okay. Yeah, I didn’t know that. That shows how far these cars and engines have come. They’re pretty fast.

    Q. The Team Penske performance, you guys got the front row lockout and I think Josef was ninth, an encouraging start for you guys?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, definitely. We had a bad year last year, so certainly came into this season determined but with a lot of work behind that, a lot of work and understanding. When you have a struggle, a year of struggle, you always come back and have a pretty close look at what you were missing.
    That’s kind of what we turned up with here. Missed out on qualifying last year, so I was very determined to make it to the Fast Six was the first thing. Well, make it to the Fast 12, honestly, and then the Six. So we got there, just one short of pole, man.
    Poles keep eluding me down to this last like five that I need. After that I don’t care about pole.

    Q. You just want 67?
    WILL POWER: No, I want 68. 68, yeah. I know it’ll be tough. A lot of good guys.

    Q. Scott only made the Fast Six once all last season. Was that surprising to you, and to see his performance today and the lap he put together, is that what you were expecting from him as a rookie last year?
    WILL POWER: I mean, man, the experience he had in the series down there in Australia, he’s had a number of years at a very high level as a professional. He knows how to put it together. It’s just a matter of him getting used to this car which he has now, and yeah, I’m expecting him to be a contender for the season.

    THE MODERATOR: And fresh off celebrating career pole No. 1, welcome in the driver of the Dex Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet, Scott McLaughlin.
    A couple questions for you guys. First of all, Scott, congratulations. A year and a half after making your NTT INDYCAR Series debut here, you come back a year and a half later and pick up your first career pole. How thrilling for you?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It’s amazing. I don’t know what other words. Pretty speechless. It’s something that you know you can do, but sometimes — obviously in Australia we had a lot of success with poles and wins and all that sort of stuff and you know you can do it, but you have a hard year like ’21 where it just didn’t click and there was a few things where you just didn’t put it together, but you know the speed is there. It’s all about taking pressure off yourself and just focusing on what you need to do, and that’s what we did today.
    Really working well with my new engineer, Ben Bretzman, who’s been fantastic for me. Jonathan Diuguid, who I used to work with, he basically helped me to this moment. He was the one engineer I worked with to this point, and Ben has picked me up and just polished me off a little bit there. I feel good.
    Yeah, it’s one. Hopefully I’d like to have more, but at the end of the day, it’s qualifying, and tomorrow is the big day, so we’ll see what we’ve got.

    THE MODERATOR: Your previous best start was fifth at the GMR Grand Prix on the Road Course at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It is INDYCAR Series pole No. 285 now for the Captain, Team Penske.
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: This guy next to me has taken a few of those. Yeah, I’ll try and help him add to those and maybe we’ll get 300.
    Q. Will, the red tires clearly have a nice peak. They’ve got a lot of speed in them for a little bit of time. How long are they going to last?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, it’s a good question because no one has done more than two laps on them. We heat cycled them and did another one or two laps. Yeah, that will be an interesting story tomorrow because I don’t even think in warmup you’ll be able to tell because the condition will be so cool and good, you won’t get a feel for is it going to go off or not.

    Q. Do you like it when you get that big delta from red to black?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, I do. I think it’s good. Yeah, I like that.

    Q. Will, when it comes to Scott, do you think that we kind of poked the bear there and that we’re going to see him a lot more winning these poles?
    WILL POWER: No, I think it’s a one-off thing. He falls off a cliff now. (Laughter.)
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Bring it on.
    WILL POWER: No, it’s not surprising. You saw it in practice last year. He just had a few issues in qualifying getting through the rounds a couple times. But the potential was there.
    He’s been at a very high level in a very competitive series for quite a few years, so he knows the game. He knows the game well. He knows the car now. You really expect him to be there every time.

    Q. Scott, how important would it be to get all three of you up there fighting for wins and a championship?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I mean, you guys asked me if I needed to step up for these two, and I feel like I’ve really worked hard over the off-season to make sure I was ready to go. It is important, and I’m right there, and it’s important that I push these guys because it’s only going to make them better and it’s only going to make me better, as well, as a team. Yeah, pumped to be able to put it together. As Will said, struggled to get through some of the rounds last year, but I feel good.

    Q. Scott, what do you put this performance down to in terms of your development and where you are in terms of the team and the car?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think it’s just a lot of putting things — like put it together this time. I feel like, like Will said, we showed some speed last year and I was just getting better and better as the car went on. I think rolling out with a car that suited me from the get-go was important.
    We worked very hard on this track with the simulator, and thankfully this simulator has been fantastic for that, and getting me to a great baseline setup that I’ve really only touched a little bit here and there just tweaking it trying to figure out what was right.
    I know what I’m driving out there and I’m able to just punch out the laps and find the time within myself, which is exactly what I did in that Q3 lap. I put together a lap that I had worked on the whole session and didn’t quite get it right; looked at a bit of Will’s data, looked at a bit of Josef’s and just put it together. Didn’t panic. And I guess experience. You can’t buy experience. I’m certainly feeling really comfortable now in the series and in the car.

    Q. Scott, the pole lap you were best known for before today was at Bathurst a couple of years ago. Could you compare and contrast how tense that lap was to how tense this lap was, the commitment differences between that lap and this lap?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, this is a minute shorter. That’s about it, because man, the intensity is crazy. Honestly, the way you’ve got to extract the speed out of both cars is pretty full on, and at Bathurst you’re right up against the wall.
    I guess one thing I’ve learnt as well as I’ve got used to these open wheel is my proximity of the walls, and I’m used to slamming the walls with my doors and whacking the mirrors off. I can’t do that, and I’ve done it plenty of times in INDYCAR and didn’t come off too good. Didn’t do it today and it worked out good.

    Q. Scott, we just talked about it with Chris, you had a bit of a different strategy there in qualification, a one-lap kind of shootout, kind of Bathurst style. Tell me about that.
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: We wanted to stay on the red tire purely because I didn’t want to change between blacks and reds. I’m still getting up to speed with the confidence going from compound to compound, so I guess I felt like it was more important for me to roll out on the same set regardless. We knew that our first set that we ran in Q1 we were going to save for last because we only did one lap on it, so it was all about just using the oldest set, do a lap, feel it out. I only did like a 60.5, then I come out and slap the 59.4 or whatever it was.
    I knew I could do it; it was just a matter of just feeling what the track was like in that Q3 and then it was like I had tires up my sleeve to do that.

    Q. About alternate start/finish lines:
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Sorry, but I think that the alternate start-finish line, I probably don’t agree with it. I think it should just be the start-finish line. I said that before; it happened at Portland a couple times, and I caught Grosjean — Romain in a peculiar spot. I feel like coming around a blind corner, everyone is trying to get a lap started. That’s the only point we can really start our lap to get a good run. It does choke up there and it’s just — you don’t see. Unless we get a flag, you don’t see.
    I’m probably a big fan of probably moving the line depending on what track we go to. That’s just my personal opinion.

    Q. They do that at Long Beach, I think, or somewhere else?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I don’t know.

    THE MODERATOR: We have an alternate at Long Beach, as well.

    Q. Scott, for you, you joked about it that you haven’t started an INDYCAR race before and usually you’re behind guys braking. Now you’re leading them and you said, I don’t want to be an idiot and overshoot it. How long has it been since — you’re an accomplished guy. I know you did a lot in Supercars, but are you going to go back and watch video? Are you going to talk to people? How do you get yourself in the frame of mind that I am starting this race?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I think it’s 12 years since I led a rolling startaway because of go-karting. It’s a standing start in Supercars. Yeah, just hopefully I’m not an idiot. I’ll come out of 2 and I’ll be all right.
    WILL POWER: Just keep the throttle down.

    Q. Just for Will, just to go on to the traffic situation, is there anything INDYCAR could do to help with traffic in these tight tracks for qualifying?
    WILL POWER: I mean, we’re splitting the field, so everyone should be able to get a clean lap. It’s up to the guys to sort it out. You know when you’re leaving the pits in a line of cars that you’re going to have to give the guy a gap. I just think it’s ridiculous when some of these guys go out and try to pass the line of cars that are all trying to get their gap to start the lap.
    Practice you’ve got the whole field, so you’ve got to try to sort it out. Sometimes it’s a bit rough, but that’s just the way it is. We don’t run on the longest tracks here. We have some short street courses, and yeah, it’s a game. Not much you can do about it. The only way you can fix that stuff is have less cars. But I don’t think anyone wants to split practice up.

    Q. When you saw or heard that Scott grabbed pole, what did you think? Were you surprised?
    WILL POWER: Very surprised.
    Well, no, I wasn’t actually. Honestly if you saw what he did in practice and then throughout qualifying, it’s clearly going to be kind of a battle — you have three people there, Herta, myself and Scott. Yep, it was a good lap, man. I don’t think there’s much left in that.

    Q. Scott, you’ve kind of touched on it a bit, but jumping on to the reds, just how committed were you and was there any close calls during that pole lap?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: The pole lap was pretty good, but probably leading up to that lap. I knew I had the speed in the car just to get through to like Q3 and Q2, so it was about learning in those laps trying to figure out where I could get better and get worse. Whatever. My words are all jumbled.
    Got to Q3 and felt like I could nail that, and yeah, it felt pretty good. I feel a lot more comfortable with the red tire now, and certainly feel like we can certainly have a good go moving forward in the season.

    Q. Wanted to ask Will if he knows where — I think it’s 12 hundredths we’re missing. They said on INDYCAR Radio that you got a bit sideways at Turn 9. Or did everyone get sideways at Turn 9?
    WILL POWER: Yeah, 9, that’s where on my first lap I lost time is out of 9. I probably lost a tenth down the back straight.
    Yeah, apart from that it was a pretty good lap. That’s the only place where I overcharged the entry a little bit and didn’t get the ideal exit. Yeah.

    Q. Scott, obviously massive congratulations on fulfilling the potential you showed last year. Do you feel that the Chevy is more drivable than it was last year, and do you think this also helps you feel more comfortable, especially on street tracks?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, I think it’s been an absolute massive step forward Chevy is taking with our drivability in particular, and it’s a lot of hard work from them and working with all the teams. So certainly feel a lot better, and we’re definitely some of the microsectors that we were slower in over the last couple of years were really good, and the drivability there is a lot nicer. To be honest, it’s starting to come into my liking a little bit not having to — yeah, I’m not going to into too much detail because there’s a Honda guy sitting next to me, but I feel a lot better, and certainly, I think, Will would say the same.

    Q. Scott, can you kind of talk us through what you and Ben worked on over the off-season as you guys sort of attempted to learn each other and see where you can grow coming into St. Pete?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Me and Ben sat down, we had like a three-, four-hour meeting, and we worked — we looked at every track throughout the year, and we looked at all my notes and the trends of my qualifying cars because I’ve always been reasonably quick in practice, and then we sort of just slowly worked on, all right, well maybe when we go qualifying we’re either adding too much front wing or we’re doing a few things that maybe we should just relax on going into qualifying. Then we went to the simulator, and thankfully Chevy has been working very hard on the simulator and got that very close, too, which has been fantastic, and I was able to really knuckle down along with Will and Josef, good baseline setup for this weekend and for the street courses and road courses, and that paid dividends when we went to that test. I felt like I had a really good baseline car, and then when I rocked up here at St. Pete, I felt really, really strong, and we have hardly touched the car since it’s rolled off the truck.
    We’ve played with things. We’ve experimented with things and we experimented with things even in that qualifying session, but we somehow always come back to what we rolled out with, and that’s just been a lot of hard work between the two of us, and my performance engineer Malcolm Finch.
    Yeah, very proud. Just iron out a few creases and working on where we can get better, and that’s what motorsport is all about and that’s why I enjoy it so much.

    Q. Knowing what he accomplished with Simon, what was your level of excitement whenever you guys figured out that he was going to be your race engineer, and where did you think he could help you improve the most?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I’ve known Ben for a long time now. He was actually the first guy that I’ve come over from Australia and worked on the simulator with to see if INDYCAR was somewhere that I wanted to go.
    So we play a lot of golf together, so I was very excited to hang out and take this partnership into more of a business professional level, and yeah, look, what he’s done with Simon is a testament to those two and the 12-year partnership that they had.
    I think he’s really invigorated with me, a new partnership, and we’re certainly working together well, and I’m excited for that.
    Jonathan Diuguid who I had, like I said, big props to him. He was the guy that really got me up to speed, and then it was all about just polishing me off. Yep, feel okay, just got to keep this going.

    Q. When was that when you first met Ben and came over and did the simulator? Do you know what year that was?
    SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: 2019.
    THE MODERATOR: Great way to start the weekend. Congratulations, Scott McLaughlin, Will Power. Thanks, guys.

    About Chevrolet
    Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 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.

  • McLaughlin Grabs First Career NTT P1 Award in Last Second at St. Pete

    McLaughlin Grabs First Career NTT P1 Award in Last Second at St. Pete

    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022) – Scott McLaughlin targeted a main goal after his rookie season in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES in 2021 – improve his qualifying performances.

    Consider that job done after just one race in 2022.

    McLaughlin earned his first career NTT P1 Award by leading the Firestone Fast Six with a lap of 59.4821 seconds Saturday afternoon in the No. 3 DEX Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet, taking the top starting spot for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding. The pole also came in his first race working with Team Penske engineer Ben Bretzman.

    “I love qualifying, and you’ve got to put it all on the line,” McLaughlin said. “I’m working really well with Ben Bretzman. The DEX Imaging Chevy, the car is just phenomenal. I’m super proud of everyone. I just feel confident, and now I’m so happy.”

    McLaughlin’s pole was part of a front-row lockout by Team Penske. Will Power – who has won the pole nine times for this event – qualified second at 59.6058 in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, losing the top spot on McLaughlin’s final trip around the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit.

    “That was two good laps I did,” Power said. “I could have done better on the first; I made a little mistake on the back straight. I think Scott got the most out of it. That was a solid lap.”

    Live coverage of the 100-lap race starts at noon (ET) Sunday on NBC, Telemundo Deportes on Universo and the INDYCAR Radio Network.

    Three-time Australian V8 Supercars McLaughlin will lead the field of 26 cars to the green flag for the first time in his open-wheel career. His best start in 2021 was fifth for the GMR Grand Prix on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, but that was his only single-digit qualifying performance on a street or road course all season.

    “I’m a competitive bloke, so I hate starting at the back,” McLaughlin said. “At the end of the day, it’s a new thing for me, starting from the front and leading a group into the first corner. I’m used to braking with people in front of me, so I’m going to have to make sure I don’t overshoot it like an idiot. I can’t wait for tomorrow. It’s going to be big.”

    Colton Herta was the leading Honda-powered driver in qualifying, as he will start third after turning a top lap of 59.7104 in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda. Rinus VeeKay qualified fourth at 59.8102 in the No. 21 SONAX Chevrolet.

    Romain Grosjean rebounded from an accident during practice Saturday morning to qualify fifth at 59.8116 in the No. 28 DHL Honda. Simon Pagenaud rounded out the Firestone Fast Six at 1 minute, .2041 of a second in the No. 60 AutoNation/Sirius XM Honda.

    In the second qualifying session, Power turned a top lap of 59.3466 to set the track record. The previous mark was 1:00.0476 by Jordan King in 2018.

    NTT INDYCAR SERIES action will start at 8:45 a.m. (ET) Sunday with a 30-minute final practice, with live coverage on Peacock Premium.

    Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding Qualifying Results

    ST. PETERSBURG, Florida – Qualifying Saturday for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.8-mile Streets of St. Petersburg circuit, with qualifying position, car number in parentheses, driver, engine, time and speed in parentheses:

    1. (3) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 59.4821 (108.940 mph)
    2. (12) Will Power, Chevrolet, 59.6058 (108.714)
    3. (26) Colton Herta, Honda, 59.7104 (108.524)
    4. (21) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 59.8102 (108.343)
    5. (28) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 59.8116 (108.340)
    6. (60) Simon Pagenaud, Honda, 1:00.2041 (107.634)
    7. (9) Scott Dixon, Honda, 59.7579 (108.438)
    8. (8) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 59.8241 (108.318)
    9. (2) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 59.8862 (108.205)
    10. (10) Alex Palou, Honda, 59.9584 (108.075)
    11. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda, 59.9870 (108.023)
    12. (14) Kyle Kirkwood, Chevrolet, 1:00.2616 (107.531)
    13. (27) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 59.9931 (108.012)
    14. (4) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 59.9521 (108.086)
    15. (30) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 1:00.0276 (107.950)
    16. (5) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 1:00.0021 (107.996)
    17. (06) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 1:00.1426 (107.744)
    18. (29) Devlin DeFrancesco, Honda, 1:00.0850 (107.847)
    19. (77) Callum Ilott, Chevrolet, 1:00.2121 (107.620)
    20. (20) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 1:00.1921 (107.655)
    21. (7) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 1:00.3918 (107.299)
    22. (51) Takuma Sato, Honda, 1:00.2930 (107.475)
    23. (45) Jack Harvey, Honda, 1:00.5333 (107.049)
    24. (18) David Malukas, Honda, 1:00.4601 (107.178)
    25. (11) Tatiana Calderon, Chevrolet, 1:00.9391 (106.336)
    26. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 1:01.0273 (106.182)