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INDYCAR GMR GRAND PRIX; RLL’s Christian Lundgaard Wins First Career Pole; Ericsson fastest in Warmup

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Chris Owens/Penske Entertainment

Editor’s Note: Keep checking this thread on Saturday for updates from the INDYCAR Morning Warm-up; Indy NTX; USF Pro 2000 and Cooper Tires USF 2000.

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (Pittsburgh Racing Now) – Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s Christian Lundgaard is on the pole position for Saturday’s GMR Grand Prix on the road course at The Indianapolis Motor Speedway.  The pole position is the first career NTT INDYCAR SERIES pole for the second-year driver.

Lundgaard’s fast-lap of 1-minute, 9.3321-seconds around the 14-turn, 2.439-mile road course in the No. 45 HyVee Honda was .0027-quicker than Arrow McLaren’s Felix Rosenqvist Chevrolet and led a resurgence of sorts for the Rahal team.  The pole position was the first for RLL since Takuma Sato’s August 2020 pole at World Wide Technology Raceway.

“Honestly, right now it feels awesome getting my first NTT P1 award, but with that said, Jack is P4 and Graham is P8. That is the best qualifying we’ve had in those two years that we’ve been teammates,” said Lundgaard. “I think it shows the progress that we’re on. It’s taken a little longer than we would have liked, but now we’ve got to finish it off tomorrow, but I’m just super happy for the team.”

“I thought I had a mega lap going and I kind of messed it up a bit in Turn 9,” said Rosenqvist. “I was just going for make or break, and didn’t make. Three thousandths, that’s always tough, but honestly I’m super happy to be P2.”

Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou, the 2021 Series Champion, will start third in the No. 10 American Legion Honda.  Palou’s teammates Marcus Ericsson will line up seventh; Scott Dixon will line up ninth and Marcus Armstrong will start 11th.

IndyCar GMR Qualifying

ERICSSON LEADS MORNING WARMUP

Chip Ganassi Racing’s Marcus Ericsson, the defending Indianapolis 500 winner, led Saturday’s warm-up for the GMR Grand Prix. Ericsson turned a fast lap of 1-minute, 10.3872-seconds in the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Honda.

Arrow McLaren’s Alexander Rossi was 2nd quick in the No. 7 Arrow Chevrolet.  Rossi was followed by Andretti Autosport teammates Colton Herta and Kyle Kirkwood were third and fourth

PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon rounded out the Top 5 with a top speed of 123.993 MPH in the No. 9 Honda.

MATTEO NANNINI WINS INDY NXT RACE; SIMPSON FINISHES THIRD; KAMINSKY 12TH

Matteo Nannini picked up the Indy NXT race Saturday, beating Louis Foster by 0.3909-seconds.  Chip Ganassi Racing development driver Kyffin Simpson finished third, much to the delight of the teams Social Media coordinator:

IndyCar

Andretti Global quick on the streets of Long Beach

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Penske Entertainment: Travis Hinkle

LONG BEACH, CA (April 18, 2026) Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood is picking up right where he left off at Long Beach.  The 2025 winner of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach was quickest in the second NTT IndyCar Series practice session at the iconic street circuit.

Kirkwood’s fast lap of 1-minute, 7.5417-seconds was 0.2333-seconds quicker than Team Penske’s David Malukas.

Saturday’s practice session was sort of similar to Friday’s session as Andretti Global and Team Penske were 1-2 on the timing chart, except Friday’s session was led by Will Power, who beat out Scott McLaughlin for the top spot.

Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou was fourth quickest on both days in the No. 10 OpenAI Honda.

Knockout style qualifying takes place at 6:30 p.m. ET with the Firestone Fast Six shifting to single car attempts.

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IndyCar

Ganassi 2026 Trading Cards to support PNC’s Grow Up Great partner DonorsChoose

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Penske Entertainment/IndyCar

INDIANAPOLIS, IN – Chip Ganassi Racing’s 2026 Trading Cards are coming out soon, and race fans can support a great cause by picking up a pack.

CGR’s 2025 trading card program raised over $20,000 for charities across the country, and proceeds from the 2026 program will benefit education nonprofit DonorsChoose, a PNC Grow Up Great® partner supporting public school and Head Start classrooms.

PNC Grow Up Great is a $500 million, bilingual early childhood education initiative that has been helping to prepare children from birth through age 5 for success in school and in life since 2004.

PNC and DonorsChoose—an education nonprofit that allows individuals to donate directly to classroom projects—have collaborated since 2017 to help teachers obtain quality resources and experiences for students in public pre-K, public charter, and Head Start classrooms. The $20 million alliance has included flash funds, match offers, DonorsChoose gift codes, and jumpstart donations to support early childhood learning.

Cards are available for pre-order now at chipganassiracing.com/cgrcards. Fans may receive autographed cards from Scott Dixon, six-time NTT IndyCar Series Champion and driver of the No. 9 PNC Bank Honda; defending IndyCar Champion and defending Indianapolis 500 winner Alex Palou, driver of the No. 10 DHL Honda; and rising star Kyffin Simpson, driver of the No. 8 Sunoco Honda.

Since 2018, Dixon has visited high-quality education centers across the country, engaging in reading and other early learning activities with thousands of preschoolers—helping to expand PNC Grow Up Great and inspire the next generation of IndyCar fans.

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IndyCar

Alex Palou and DHL Chip Ganassi Racing repeat at Barber Motorsports Park

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Penske Entertainment: Joe Skibinski

BIRMINGHAM, AL (March 29, 2026) — Alex Palou returned to victory lane Sunday, winning the Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix at Barber Motorsports Park.

Driving the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda, Palou started from pole, led 79 laps, and beat Arrow McLaren’s Christian Lundgaard by 13.2775 seconds.

The win was Palou’s second of the 2026 season and his third career victory at the picturesque 2.33-mile, 17-turn road course. It also marked a second consecutive win at Barber for Chip Ganassi Racing. The track was built by the late George Barber, who passed away in February at the age of 85.

“What an amazing car,” said Palou. “Another win here. Love this place, love the fans. What a great day. Today in the race, it was pretty good in the beginning, really good at the end, but we suffered a little bit on the used blacks (Firestone Firehawk primary tires) that we had to use.”

Lundgaard appeared poised to challenge Palou in the closing stages as pit cycles and traffic shuffled the field. Palou made his final stop first but rejoined in traffic among cars fighting to stay on the lead lap.

“Those moments you can lose the race in like nothing,” said Palou. “You can lose five, six seconds with two laps because you’re fighting with cold tires and lap cars.”

“It was coming down to I think like we were three seconds ahead of him when we pitted,” said Julian Robertson, lead engineer on the No. 10 Honda. “We had some pretty decent, once we got through the traffic, started running some decent laps. It was going to be really close.”

Lundgaard pushed to close the gap but saw his chances slip away during a slow final pit stop—more than 17 seconds—due to a right-rear issue.

“I think we had something for him (Palou),” said Lundgaard. “I don’t really know what happened (on pit road). It’s unfortunate because I was told that we would have passed him if we would have had a clean stop. At that point I really just wanted to get back past Graham (Rahal) to get back what we lost because Alex was gone.”

“He (Lundgaard) had two sets (alternate Firestone’s) because he didn’t advance to Fast Six,” explained Palou. “He had two sets of brand-new stickers. When we were on used primaries, which were not very good, he was on brand-new alternates. That’s why he was getting so close.”

Graham Rahal finished third—his best result of 2026—but could not hold off Lundgaard late. Team Penske’s David Malukas came home fourth, just 0.07 seconds behind Rahal after starting on the front row.

“It’s a good reward for the guys and gals,” said Rahal, who earned his first podium finish since August 2023 on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. “Everybody has worked so hard to get back here and heard all the noise and b.s. that we get to hear all the time. All weekend the car was in very good shape and very, very competitive and very comfortable.”

Kyle Kirkwood finished fifth in the No. 27 JM Bullion Honda for Andretti Global and now holds a two-point lead over Palou in the championship standings heading into the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach.

Strategy played a major role throughout the race. Palou started on the black sidewall Firestone Firehawk primary tires—harder and more durable but slower—while Malukas opted for the faster, quicker-wearing red sidewall alternates.

A difficult warmup session led Ganassi to adjust its approach and commit to the primary tire strategy.

“This morning with the warm-up, like, tanked,” said Robertson. “We kind of switched strategy somewhat, which meant in the middle of the race we had to put a set of used blacks on. Got pretty sketchy”.

The strategy ultimately paid off, as Palou secured the 21st win of his career and moved firmly back into the championship fight as he pursues a fourth consecutive title and a second Indianapolis 500 victory in May.

The IndyCar Series is off the next two weekends before returning for the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach on Sunday, April 19.

Barber IndyCar Results

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