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106th Indianapolis 500 – 5 Storylines To Watch

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Image by Walt Kuhn

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (Pittsburgh Racing Now) – The green flag drops on the 106th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge Sunday at 12:45 ET and there is no shortage of storylines to follow, which is why the 500 is ‘The Greatest Spectacle In Racing’.  Here are 5 storylines that we think you may enjoy following as the cars and stars make their way around the legendary 2.5-mile oval.

Can Helio Castroneves Win A Fifth:

  • Helio Castroneves joined the exclusive ‘Four-time 500 Winners Club’ when he took home the victory in 2021 driving for Meyer Shank Racing.  Castroneves starts 27th in the 33-car field.  Castroneves also won the 500 in 2001, 2002 and 2009.  Those wins came with Team Penske.  Castroneves can become the first ever to win 5!

Jimmie Johnson Indy 500 Rookie:

  • It’s hard to call the 7-time NASCAR Champ a rookie considering he has run more 500 mile events than anyone else in the 33-car field but he is a rookie in the 500 after running only the road and street courses in 2021.  Johnson’s sixth place finish earlier this year in his first oval start at Texas was an eye-opener for some but not 2-time Indy 500 Champion Juan Pablo Montoya, who thinks Johnson can win the race.  With a victory, Johnson would join racing legends A.J. Foyt and Mario Andretti as the only drivers to win the Indianapolis 500 and the Daytona 500.
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Can Scott Dixon Win A Second:

  • PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon drank the milk in victory lane in 2008 but the 6-time Series Champion has not made a return trip to the winners circle.  Dixon turned the fastest four-lap average for a pole winner in Indy 500 history at 234.046 mph last weekend.  It was Dixon’s fifth 500 pole, leaving him one short of Rick Mears record of 6.  Can the No. 9 PNC team translate the speed into a win? Twenty-one drivers have won the race from the pole – most recently Simon Pagenaud in 2019 and Dixon in 2008.  Dixon has led 570-laps in the 500, second only to Al Unser’s 644.

Young Guns Vs. Old Guard:

  • The starting grid is made up of a diverse group of experience and youth.  Pole sitter Scott Dixon is 41 years old but starting beside him on the front row is his teammate Alex Palou, who’s 25, and 21-year old Rinus VeeKay.  Other ‘experienced’ drivers include include winners Helio Castroneves & Tony Kanaan (47), Takuma Sato (45) as well as Jimmie Johnson (46), and Ed Carpenter (41) to name a few.  The ‘Young Guns’ also include Colton Herta (22), Pato O’Ward (23), Kyle Kirkwood (23), and others.  Will experience or youthful exuberance prevail on Sunday?

5-Ganassi Cars in Top 12:

  • All five of Chip Ganassi’s entries start in the Top 12, with Scott Dixon (1st) and Alex Palou (2nd) starting on the front row.  Marcus Ericsson and Tony Kanaan start on the second row with Ericsson starting fifth and Kanaan starting sixth.  Jimmie Johnson will start 12th after the best save of the month when his car got loose in turn 1 on his first qualifying lap.  Ganassi and Company haven’t kissed the bricks in a decade following Dario Franchitti’s third 500 win in 2012.

IndyCar

McLaughlin goes back-to-back at Barber Motorsports Park

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Penske Entertainment: Chris Owens

LEEDS, AL (April 28, 2024) Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin put an emotional week in the rear-view mirror by winning Sunday’s Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix presented by AmFirst.

McLaughlin employed a three-stop, flat-out pedal to the floor strategy while several others attempted a two-stop strategy.  McLaughlin’s move paid off with the victory, his second in-a-row at Barber.

McLaughlin, who led 58 of the 90 laps after earning the NTT P1 Award in qualifying Saturday, took the lead for the final time on Lap 76 after his final pit stop.

“Definitely one of my best drives in terms of execution and just knocking out the laps,” said McLaughlin, who had his third-place finish at the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding stripped earlier in the week for illegal push-to-pass software and using it. “Very happy we could advance to the checkered flag there and bring home a W for Team Penske and for Roger (Penske).”

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Will Power made it Team Penske 1-2 by finishing second in the No. 12 Verizon Chevrolet, 1.3194 seconds behind McLaughlin.

“It was a hard-fought 1-2 for Penske,” Power said. “We were certainly fast, but obviously a lot of strategy played into that. We were able to use our speed to come out in front again.”

Chip Ganassi Racing rookie Linus Lundqvist rounded out the podium by finishing third in the No. 8 American Legion Honda, the best finish of his young career.

“Man, it was amazing,” said Lundqvist of his sixth career start.  “I think for the first time ever I was not on the save fuel strategy. I was not the one being passed, which was nice.”

The next race for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES is the Sonsio Grand Prix on Saturday, May 11 on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, which kicks off the Month of May activities at IMS culminating in the 108th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge on Sunday, May 26 on the IMS oval.

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Scott Dixon on top of INDYCAR Championship Standings after Team Penske Penalty

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James Black - Penske Entertainment

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (April 24, 2024) Scott Dixon and the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing team are leading the NTT INDYCAR SERIES Championship standings after Team Penske was penalized for violating the series ‘push-to-pass’ parameters.

INDYCAR disqualified Josef Newgarden’s win and Scott McLaughlin’s third place finish in the season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg and docked Will Power 10-Championship points for the infractions.

Dixon’s epic win in this past Sunday’s Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach vaulted him into second position in the Championship standings, 12-points behind Newgarden.  That changed following Wednesday’s penalties.

Dixon now holds a 2-point lead over Andretti Global’s Colton Herta and a 12-point lead over teammate and reigning INDYCAR Champion Alex Palou.

Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward sits in fourth position, 15-points back, following his elevation to winner at St. Pete.  Power sits in fifth position, 20-points behind Dixon despite the 10-point reduction.

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Dixon heads into this weekend’s Children’s of Alabama Indy Grand Prix powered by AmFirst at Barber Motorsports Park having never won at the picturesque 2.3-mile, 17-turn road course in Birmingham Alabama.

“Barber has been interesting,” said Dixon, a six-time series Champion. “Second six times. Never won there. The goal was always to try and step on the top step again.”

Dixon is hoping a recent test will help him park the No. 9 Honda in victory lane.

“We had a really good test at Barber,” added Dixon. “Only probably half of the grid did, so it will be interesting to see how that applies.”

The first 75-minute practice session gets underway on Friday from 2:40 p.m. to 3:55 p.m. and will be live-streamed on Peacock.

McLaughlin is the defending race winner.

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Team Penske Penalized for St. Pete Infractions. Newgarden Stripped Of Win

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Joe Skibinski - Penske Entertainment

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (April 24, 2024) Team Penske is in hot water for violating NTT INDYCAR SERIES rules regarding push-to-pass and Josef Newgarden has been stripped of his win in the season-opening Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding.

Team Penske was in violation of the following “Push to Pass” parameters:

  • Rule 14.19.15. An indicator to enable Push to Pass will be sent via CAN communication from the timing and scoring beacon on board the Car to the team data logger. This signal must be passed on to the ECU unmodified and uninterrupted during all Road and Street Course Events.
  • Rule 14.19.16. Race Starts and any Race Restart that occurs before the lap prior to the white flag or prior to three minutes remaining in a timed Race Event will have the Push to Pass system disabled and will be enabled for a given Car once that Car reaches the alternate Start/Finish line.

The issue came to light at this past weekend’s Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach when INDYCAR officials discovered the possible violation during the morning warmup.  The Series made sure the advantage that was discovered could not be implemented during Sunday’s race.

The series then began an extensive review of data from the St. Petersburg race, which revealed that Team Penske manipulated the overtake system so that the No. 2, 3 and 12 cars had the ability to use Push to Pass on starts and restarts. According to the INDYCAR rulebook, use of overtake is not available during championship races until the car reaches the alternate start-finish line.

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It was determined that Newgarden’s No. 2 and the No. 3 of Scott McLaughlin gained a competitive advantage by using Push to Pass on restarts while the No. 12 of Will Power did not.  McLaughlin was stripped of his third-place finish and Power was docked 10-Championship points.  All three entries have been fined $25,000 and will forfeit all prize money associated with the Streets of St. Petersburg race.

The integrity of the INDYCAR SERIES championship is critical to everything we do,” said INDYCAR President Jay Frye. “While the violation went undetected at St. Petersburg, INDYCAR discovered the manipulation during Sunday’s warmup in Long Beach and immediately addressed it ensuring all cars were compliant for the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach. Beginning with this week’s race at Barber Motorsports Park, new technical inspection procedures will be in place to deter this violation.”

Team Penske issued a statement where President Tim Cindric blamed the violation on software that was not removed following a test session.

“Unfortunately, the push-to-pass software was not removed as it should have been, following recently completed hybrid testing in the Team Penske Indy cars. This software allowed for push-to-pass to be deployed during restarts at the St. Petersburg Grand Prix race, when it should not have been permitted. The No. 2 car driven by Josef Newgarden and the No. 3 car driven by Scott McLaughlin, both deployed push-to-pass on a restart, which violated INDYCAR rules. Team Penske accepts the penalties applied by INDYCAR.”

Newgarden’s disqualification handed the victory to Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward elevated PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon to the top of the Championship standings.

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