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Colton Herta wins Music City Grand Prix pole position; Scott Dixon starts 2nd.

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Chris Owens/INDYCAR

NASHVILLE, TN (Pittsburgh Racing Now) – Andretti Autosport’s Colton Herta is on the pole position for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES inaugural Music City Grand Prix.  Herta was the only driver to cut a lap in the 1-minute, 13-second bracket as Honda’s claimed five of the Top six starting spots.

“What we did in the first session, on blacks (Primary Firestone Tires) set-up what we were able to do here,” said Herta, who also won the pole position at the season-opening Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.  “We were in a league of our own.”

The Music City Grand Prix pole award is named after Bryan Clauson, the USAC Sprint Car star who passed five years ago from injuries sustained in a midget-car crash in Belleville Kansas.  The Clauson family was on-hand and joined Herta on pit road afterwards (pictured above).

Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon will start second after a fast lap of 1:14:2327-seconds in the No. 9 PNC Bank Grow Up Great Honda.  The front row start is Dixon’s best qualifying effort since his pole win at the Indianapolis 500 and his 3rd front row start of 2021.

“The PNC Bank No. 9 is super-fast,” said Dixon.  “The first two runs of qualifying I was kind of taking it a little cautious just to be sure we converted.  We knew Herta was going to be fast because he was the only guy with new tires and he’s been quick all weekend.”

Dixon’s teammate Alex Palou qualified third but will start ninth after being assessed a grid penalty for an unapproved engine change following a team test last week at Portland International Raceway.

Three Rivers Karting

“There’s nothing we can do about that,” said Palou.  “We’ll just have to pass a few more cars, that’s all.”

Alexander Rossi will now start third after Palou’s penalty.  Felix Rosenqvist will start fourth and Romain Grosjean rounds out the Top 5.

Team Penske struggled in qualifying as none of the Penske cars advanced to the Fast 6. Simon Pagenaud will start eighth and Will Power will start eleventh.

Hometown favorite Josef Newgarden stuffed his Hitachi Team Penske Chevy into the wall while running sixth and trying to stay in the Top 6 in order to advance. Newgarden caused a local yellow and was penalized his fastest lap and will start 12th

Notable drivers that failed to qualify for the Fast 12 included Graham Rahal, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Helio Castroneves and Sebastian Bourdais.

Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin brushed the wall and damaged his steering. Carvana Chip Ganassi Racing Jimmie Johnson hit the wall early in the session in the same spot that Alexander Rossi hit the wall during the second practice.

Sunday’s action starts with a warmup at Noon local.  The green flag drops at 5:45 p.m. ET.

IndyCar

Team Penske and Chevrolet Dominate Day 1 of Indy 500 Qualifying

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Penske Entertainment: Walt Kuhn

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (May 18, 2024) Conspiracy theorists are having a field day after Team Penske swept the Top 3 spots in day one of PPG Presents Armed Forces Qualifying at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

The feat comes one month after the team was caught running illegal software in the warmup prior to the Long Beach Grand Prix.  An INDYCAR investigation determined that software, which allowed the push-to-pass system to be active on starts and restarts, was in use at the season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding.

Two-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES Champion posted the fastest four lap average of 233.758 mph, in the No. 12 Chevrolet.  Ironically, Power was the only Penske driver to not use the advantage in St. Petersburg.

Reigning Indy 500 winner Josef Newgarden was second-quick with a four-lap average of 233.332 in the No. 2 Chevy and Scott McLaughlin was third quick in the No. 3 Chevy with a four-lap average of 233.293 mph.  Newgarden and McLaughlin were stripped of their St. Petersburg finishes as a penalty, so Saturday was quite the redemption for the team that has had a cloud hanging over them.

“We got an early draw, which helps,” said Power of the qualifying draw where all three Penske cars went out in the first hour when ambient and track temperatures were cooler.

Chevrolet was the story of Saturday as the brand with the bow tie sweeping nine of the Top 12 spots, which are eligible for Sunday’s Top 12 qualifying runs of which the Top 6 will go for the pole position late in the day in the Firestone Fast 6.

Three Rivers Karting

The fastest Honda-powered entry was Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood who posted a four-lap average of 232.764, good for fifth on the day.

The best Chip Ganassi Racing could muster on Saturday was reigning Series champion Alex Palou who posted a four-lap average of 232.306 in the No. 10 DHL Honda.

Palou’s teammates Marcus Armstrong placed 16th in the No. 11 Ridgeline Honda with a four-lap average of 232.183. Rookie Kyffin Simpson was two spots behind in 18th after posting a 231.948 average.

Six-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES Champion Scott Dixon will start 21st with an average of 231.851 in the No. 9 PNC Bank Honda and Linus Lundqvist will start 27th in the No. 8 American Legion Be The One Honda with an average of 231.506.

Four drivers failed to make the Top 30 and will fight for the final three spots in the 33-car field in Last Chance Qualifying on Sunday including Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s Graham Rahal, who went through the same scenario last year when he failed to make the field on speed but ended up substituting for the injured Stefan Wilson.

Two of Dale Coyne’s cars also failed to make the field on speed including Nolan Siegel and Katherine Legge.

Perhaps the most surprising driver to not make the Top 30 is 2022 500 winner Marcus Ericsson, who is now driving for Andretti Global.

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IndyCar

Courtney Conquers Port Royal; Flinner Emotional Late Model Winner; Zook Zooms in LLMs

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PORT ROYAL, PA (May 18, 2024): Sprint Car fans at the Port Royal Speedway got a taste of things to come when the High Limit Sprint Car Series canceled the show set for Fonda Speedway due to unsafe track conditions. That enabled several of the High Rollers to drop down to Port Royal for a test run before the big stakes Bob Weikert Memorial coming up on Memorial Day weekend. Tyler Courtney benefited the most, charging from tenth to register a win at the Speed Palace. Joining him in victory lane was a highly emotional Colton Flinner, who scored his first Super Late Model win at the track since his father succumbed to cancer. Ryan Zook was more subdued, but just as happy, with his stellar performance in the Limited Late Model ranks.

Courtney has thrown the monkey off his back at Port Royal Speedway. “We spent the first few years getting our butts kicked here,” he said with a sly grin. Although more recent performances show that he has developed a knack for the fast but quirky half mile, the trip was all about making laps. “That was the main reason for coming here tonight. We tried to get here earlier in the year, but the weather did not cooperate. We’re glad that the weather held off and we got some laps in.”

Oh, the $5,800 he earned for the win, and two bonuses, made the long tow from Vernon, NY, worthwhile. The extras were for the hard charger award and for scoring the win from the tenth starting position.

The twenty-five lap A Main had Garrett Bard and Austin Bishop on the front row. Jake Karklin and T.J. Stutts made up row two. The third belonged to Chase Dietz and the Mayor, Dylan Cisney. Lucas Wolfe lined up beside Spencer Bayston on row four. The fifth paired Brent Marks with Courtney. The sixth row had Dallas Schott and Cory Eliason.

Further back were some familiar names, like Mike Wagner in thirteenth, Lance Dewease next to him. Logan Wagner was in seventeenth, Devon Borden in nineteenth, Danny Dietrich in twenty-first, and Mark Smith in twenty-fourth.

Bard was the leader entering turn one, and he maintained his advantage through the first seventeen laps of the contest. Bishop ran second in the early going, with Karklin, Stutts, Cisney, Wolfe, Courtney, Bayston, and Marks trailing.

While Bishop and Karklin fought over the second position, Courtney began to move forward. With a little help from a lap four caution that brought the field together, Courtney reached third by lap five and second by lap ten.

Nonetheless, Bard was running the race of his brief career in the 410 ranks. Courtney was able to close in in Bard in lapped traffic, as it was apparent that Bard’s inexperience in the more powerful 410 Sprints was beginning to show.

Courtney executed a textbook slider entering turn three to take the lead away from the former 305 Sprint National Champion on lap eighteen.

Bard continued in second through lap twenty. A caution on that round set up a restart, and Bard stumbled coming to the green, losing two positions. He got a brief reprieve, as the start was waived off. However, Bard did not get off well again. Bayston moved ahead in turn one. In the final five laps, several others passed Bard.

At the checkers, it was Courtney far ahead of Bayston, Bishop, Marks, and Bard. Stutts, Cisney, Karklin, Blane Heimbach, and Eliason completed the top ten.

Heat winners were Cisney, Bayston, Courtney, and Eliason. Dietrich scored the B Main victory. Justin Whittal was badly shaken after a very hard crash at the start of his heat race. Medical attention was provided but there was no update on his condition by the end of the program. Anthony Macri had a mechanical problem in his heat and started last in the B Main. He came up one spot short of a transfer.

Colton Flinner made bold pass on the inside of turns three and four on the last lap to garner the win in the Super Late Model feature.

“This means the world to me, I wish my Dad was here,” Flinner said choking back some tears. “I didn’t know if I could do it without him. There were times that I didn’t want to do it. There was a lot of doubt. I needed this. I needed this.”

Flinner said “this was the worst car I’ve ever had.” He explained that his power steering failed during the race, but he thought that he had some extra help fighting the wheel. Referring back to his late father, Flinner summed, “I couldn’t do it without my Dad.”

Three Rivers Karting

Veteran Gary Stuhler and Brian Bernheisel paced the field for the start of the twenty-five lapper. Matt Cosner and Trever Feathers made up row two. The next pairing was Hayes Mattern and Dylan Yoder. Shaun Jones and Jeff Rine made up row four. Then came Flinner and Dan Stone. Andrew Yoder and Matt Parks occupied row six.

Stuhler led the way to turn one, but Feathers had a full head of steam and an open line on the outside. Feathers grabbed the lead racing through turn two. Stuhler held second, ahead of Cosner, Dylan Yoder, Rine, Dillan Stake, Mattern, Stone, Jones, and Flinner.

Cosner moved into second on lap two, and there was a good three-car battle with Stuhler and Dylan Yoder for the next several laps. Cosner lost the position by drifting high in turn one following a lap eight restart. He rallied to regain second by the halfway mark, only to lose it once again on lap fifteen soon after another restart.

In the middle stage of the race, Coleby Frye was on the move. Coming from twenty-second on the grid, he raced into the top five. He was challenging for third but a caution negated a couple of his passes.

Flinner was also working his way to the front. He reached fifth by lap twenty. On the next round, he was third. His cause was aided by a caution with four to go. He got to second by lap twenty-three.

But Feathers still had several car lengths on Flinner with two to go. Flinner kept the charge going, and he got to Feathers’ back bumper entering turn one for the final time. Feathers ran the middle groove, leaving the bottom open for Flinner. He drew up to the rear quarter panel in turn two. But, entering turn three, they were nearly side by side. Flinner maintained his momentum and he came off turn four with a slight advantage. He completely passed Feathers in the final yards of the race!

After Flinner and Feathers came Dylan Yoder, Frye, and Andrew Yoder. Keith Jackson, Jones, Rick Eckert, Cosner, and Kann completed the top ten.

The preliminary wins went to Bernheisel, Rine, Cosner, and Stuhler. Eckert copped the B Main. Mattern was the fast qualifier on the night, with a time of 17.470, just ,009 off the track record.

Ryan Zook set two new track records in the Limited Late Models. His eight lap mark for the heat race win was two minutes 30.506 seconds. The twenty-lap standard was lowered to six minutes 38.443 seconds. “That’s a product of a fast track,” he said modestly. He added, “the track was a little juiced up.”

Trever Feathers was looking for some redemption after losing the Super Late Model feature on the last lap. He started the nightcap from the pole, with Justin Garman as his dance partner. Trent Brenneman and Zook were next. Then came Matt Parks and Casey Steinhoff. Lane Snook and Devin Hart presented in row four. Maddox Smith and Kenny Yoder started from row five.

Feathers raced into turn one ahead of the pack, but he left the inside lane open. Brenneman quickly took it and he pulled ahead in turn two. Brenneman appeared like he would go the distance, but Zook had other ideas.

On lap eleven, Zook powered by Brenneman in turn one, and he was never headed after that. On lap twelve, Garman also rode past Brenneman. He held second to the finish.

Brenneman crossed in third, followed by Parks and Hart. Snook, Yoder, Feathers, Steinhoff, and Tyson Mowery were the next five finishers.

Zook and Brenneman shared the heat wins. There was no B Main.

Next weekend, Port Royal Speedway will host the Bob Weikert Memorial extravaganza. Saturday will have the High Limit Sprints going for ten grand to win. The Super Late Models will also be in action. Then, Sunday, there will be $75,000 paid to the winner of the High Limit feature. The Limited Late Models will provide the support. Come to the track early and plan to stay late, as there will be plenty of activities before and after the races! There will be an Indy watch party, a cornhole tournament, live music, and more!

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IndyCar

Scott Dixon Fastest In Rain-Shortened Opening Practice For Indianapolis 500

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Penske Entertainment: Walt Kuhn

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (May 14, 2024) Six-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES Champion Scott Dixon turned the fastest-lap in Tuesday’s opening day of practice for the 108th Indianapolis 500.

Dixon’s fast lap off 229.107 mph (:39.2829-seconds) in the No. 9 PNC Bank Honda came with the aid of an aerodynamic to and happened early in the session before Mother Nature brought out the yellow flag for rain.

Marco Andretti was only 0.1218-seconds behind Dixon with a quick lap of 228.399 mph in the No. 98 MAPEI/Curb Honda.  Andretti won the 500 pole position in 2020.

Two-time Indy 500 winner Takuma Sato was third fastest at 225.551 mph in the No. 75 AMADA Honda fielded by Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing as Honda power posted the three fastest time in the shortened session.

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Pato O’Ward turned the fourth fastest lap in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet after turning a fast lap of 224.993.  Sato’s RLL teammate Christian Lundgaard rounded out the Top 5 after turning a 223.844 in the No. 45 Hy-Vee Honda.

The track was only green for 23-minutes before the rain came. 29 of the 34 entries were able to get on track.

Practice is scheduled to resume from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. ET Wednesday. PPG Presents Armed Forces Qualifying is this Saturday and Sunday, with Race Day on Sunday, May 26.

INDYCAR Practice 1 Results

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