A wide range of Indy 500 aero options for teams to ponder

If the 107th Indianapolis 500 is run in similar ambient conditions to last year’s race, NTT IndyCar Series teams will have the ability to apply approximately 250 additional pounds of downforce to their cars if all the new and existing aerodynamic …

If the 107th Indianapolis 500 is run in similar ambient conditions to last year’s race, NTT IndyCar Series teams will have the ability to apply approximately 250 additional pounds of downforce to their cars if all the new and existing aerodynamic options are installed for the May 28 contest. All of the items will make their debut at this week’s Thursday-Friday Indy Open Test.

The biggest year-to-year change is found at the rear of the Dallara DW12s, which wear the sleek UAK18 bodywork that was introduced in 2018. Two downforce-adding items have been produced by Dallara, starting with new rear wing pillars which enable a valuable increase in wing angle range. The idea was originally suggested to the series by Arrow McLaren driver Alexander Rossi.

Previously limited to a maximum of two degrees of positive inclination, the new rear wing pillars make it possible to crank up to nine degrees of downforce-increasing angle into the rear wing, but for this year’s event, the series is limiting a maximum of five degrees.

Attached to the rear attenuator with a sliding mounting mechanism, the pillars (in blue) can be quickly adjusted during a pit stop with a socket on a speed-handle to increase or decrease the rear wing angle to suit the driver’s needs.

The move to the new pillars and a higher ceiling for rear wing downforce will be useful in Indy 500 practice sessions when drivers run in packs and work with their teams to refine the car’s aerodynamic balance in turbulent air, and on race day. No changes have been made to limit going in the opposite direction on wing angle for qualifying, where teams run at negative numbers — nose up — to shed downforce for the four-lap blasts.

According to A.J. Foyt Racing technical director Michael Cannon, who earned the last two Indy 500 pole positions at Chip Ganassi Racing with Scott Dixon, the new pillars will have a surprisingly large impact on the race.

“In the past, you were allowed a maximum of plus-two degrees and after that, you start putting Gurneys on to make more downforce because you were limited on wing angle and the Gurneys were a workaround to get more, but it didn’t help the cars behind,” Cannon told RACER. “So with what they’ve done here in giving us up to plus-five, we have more steps of downforce we can go, and each degree is a nice little increment.”

By giving teams three extra degrees of rear downforce to use, the reliance on wide Gurney flaps should subside, and as a result, turbulence should be reduced, which could inspire more passing attempts.

“Ever since we’ve had the aeroscreen, if you’re the leader, life’s not so bad,” Cannon said. “If you’re second, you’re starting to get some turbulent grief. And when you’re the fifth car in line, you’re losing over 20 percent of your downforce. So that’s why you’ve seen people [when the maximum was plus-two degrees] rock up during the race with full-span Gurneys on the rear wing and they’re competitive because they’re living back in misery-ville. They’re in the big vacuum.

“The guys that have the big rear wing Gurneys on have that much more grip, and when the guy in front of them that’s on a little bit less downforce has to lift, the big Gurney guy just leaves his foot in it and gets past him.

“It’s not the race-winning downforce with the big Gurney, but it’s good survival downforce. What they’ve come up with is the ability to take it to a higher angle and have more downforce while also keeping the efficiency of the car decent and reduce some of the turbulence. And it’s the turbulence coming off the cars that’s bouncing you around and making the car nervous because if you’re running behind somebody that’s got a full-span Gurney, there’s a lot of tumbling air behind there and it’s pretty messy to sit behind. So, giving us some extra range to make more downforce with the wing should help everyone to go away from those full-span Gurneys.”

The other new allowance for the Speedway is the optional use of one-inch Gurney flaps at the trailing edge of the diffusers (in blue), which is a carryover from IndyCar’s road and street course rules. Use of these Gurneys are a nice way to add downforce through the car’s underwing, and since these tall flaps aren’t sitting up high in the airstream like a Gurney affixed to a rear wing, they do not create an excessive amount of turbulence.

With the new five-degree rear wing angle maximum and the optional diffuser-exit Gurneys, teams have newfound abilities to dial up downforce in race-day configuration, but since drivers need their cars to be balanced front-to-rear in order to have confidence in its handling, teams will need to add matching levels of downforce to the front of the cars.

Race engineers will use the familiar front wing adjusters to apply more downforce, and have a new option to install a second barge board (in red) which debuted at Texas Motor Speedway and mounts to the inside of the other optional barge board, which was used last year. Each barge board increases downforce, but also increases front ride height sensitivity, so it will be interesting to see if teams opt to run with the single barge board on both sides of the car, or try double barge boards and trade the downforce gains for imperfect handling.

“If you’ve got a bunch of rear wing angle on the car, you’ve got to find a way to get balanced at the front,” Cannon noted. “So it’s great that we can have more rear wing, but you might have to do some things to balance it at the front that aren’t great, so I don’t think everybody’s going to pile on everything they can get, but it all depends on the weather because you never know what you’re going to get. But it’s nice to have a range of downforce options, even if we don’t use all of it.”

Finally, teams have the optional Gurney to install on the wing-shape infill at the outer portions of the front floor section, and in a mandatory addition for every team, stability Gurneys (in green) make their debut along the top outer edges of the sidepods and rear tire ramps.

The series will also introduce a new and taller cockpit head surround at the Open Test. The revised design was done to prevent a driver’s helmet from scaling over the back of the longstanding design in a rearward impact.

Production is ongoing, with a plan to have one for every entry as the month of May begins, so for the test, IndyCar will distribute 18 of the new safety devices (in blue) — ensuring every team has at least one — with the hope for multi-car teams to ensure each driver samples it at speed before they become mandatory for the start of official practice in just under a month.

Dreyer & Reinbold Racing and Cusick reveal Indy 500 entry livery

Many awards are handed out at the Indianapolis 500, ranging from the pit stop competition to ​Rookie of the ​Y​ear. And if the Indianapolis Motor Speedway decides to add one for the “Indy car carrying more sponsor logos than any other,” the No. 24 …

Many awards are handed out at the Indianapolis 500, ranging from the pit stop competition to ​Rookie of the ​Y​ear. And if the Indianapolis Motor Speedway decides to add one for the “Indy car carrying more sponsor logos than any other,” the No. 24 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing and Cusick Motorsports Chevy driven by Stefan Wilson is an early favorite to take home the ​​prize.

According to the team, “CareKeepers has been elevated to primary partner, while Sierra Pacific Windows returns for a third consecutive year as the co-primary partner. The two companies will be joined by a group of 18 illustrious companies supporting the effort.”

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With two of the previously-named firms positioned as the primaries, the latest revelation from DRR and Cusick adds six more partners — all new — to the Briton’s entry in ProviderScience, High Alpha, Rite-Way Thermal, Menlo Ventures, Westin Homes and Westlake Yoga.

The impressive sponsor roll is completed with and additional 13 names​​ in LOHLA SPORT, Fizzy Beez, Liberty Group, Kitchen Mart, the Law Offices of Gerald L. Marcus, CarBlip, 181 FremontResidences, a Jay Paul Company, Romak Iron Works, Agromin, Mosaic Animal CareGroup, The Thermal Club and Mr. and Mrs. James Lowes.

Altogether, the No. 24 Chevy will be adorned with 20 sponsors.

“When we founded Cusick Motorsports in 2021, we set out to make the racing industry more accessible,” Don Cusick said. “Whether you want to create incredible experiences, build meaningful relationships or create compelling marketing campaigns, we wanted to make it more accessible. When I look at our beautiful race car and the 20 fantastic companies we have with us, I couldn’t be more excited about the Indy 500, and the future.”

Ericsson seizing the moment with Ganassi

The knock on Marcus Ericsson was that he was a washed up, ride-buying Formula 1 refugee with nowhere left to go but IndyCar. In the early stages of his fifth NTT IndyCar Series season, his fourth with the Chip Ganassi Racing organization, the …

The knock on Marcus Ericsson was that he was a washed up, ride-buying Formula 1 refugee with nowhere left to go but IndyCar. In the early stages of his fifth NTT IndyCar Series season, his fourth with the Chip Ganassi Racing organization, the reigning Indianapolis 500 winner is looking a lot like the team’s best hope for the future when the ageless Scott Dixon decides to call time on his Hall of Fame career.

Leading the team this year in speed, consistency, and placement in the championship standings, the Swede has done something that seemed improbable by making another large step in his development as an IndyCar driver.

“That’s the best guy Ganassi’s got,” said one prominent rival, pointing at Ericsson prior to the race last weekend in Long Beach. “They’ve got their guy when Dixon hangs it up.”

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There was nothing to suggest the Ericsson who debuted in 2019 as a one-and-done rookie with Arrow Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, who placed 17th in the championship, would find a new gear in each subsequent season.

A move to Chip Ganassi Racing in 2020 saw Ericsson improve to 12th in the standings as new teammate Dixon cruised to the title, and it’s here where a classic Ganassi scenario has unfolded.

When 2005 Indy 500 winner Dan Wheldon joined the program in 2006, Dixon was a sponge, soaking up all manner of oval knowledge from his new teammate. Dixon went on to win the 2008 Indy 500 and become one of IndyCar’s most decorated oval drivers.

When Dario Franchitti was signed by CGR for 2009, Dixon — already a two-time IndyCar Series champion — went to school once again, learning a range of new techniques and approaches to apply going forward. The process was repeated when CART IndyCar Series veteran and 2013 Indy 500 winner Tony Kanaan arrived at CGR in 2014 as Dixon onboarded more items that improved his game; and in turn, when Felix Rosenqvist made his IndyCar debut in 2018, it was Dixon’s turn to download more than a decade of IndyCar wisdom.

Alex Palou enrolled in Dixon University in 2021 and readily credits Dixon for helping him to win the championship in his first try at CGR. And for Ericsson, who’s entered his fourth year of studies — his senior year — at Dixon U, the fruits of having the best IndyCar driver of his generation as a friend, ally, and educational resource has changed the trajectory of his life.

Scott Dixon, Marcus Ericsson and Alex Palou make a powerful triple threat for Chip Ganassi Racing, but increasingly, it’s the No. 8 at the sharp end. Motorsport Images

“Look, I’m a hard worker,” Ericsson told RACER after placing third following a fightback drive on Sunday. “I came into IndyCar five years ago with low confidence after a tough spell in F1. I had to build myself up. I was very determined to get to the top in this series, and I believed in myself, but I knew it was a journey to get there. I got the opportunity to race with Chip Ganassi Racing and Scott Dixon, who is the best in the sport, and I knew I could learn a lot from him over the years. And I’ve just been working really, really hard to put myself in a position to fight for wins and championships.”

One deficiency Ericsson targeted to improve for the new season was qualifying, where occasionally good but rarely excellent performances made his job on race days harder than desired. At St. Petersburg, he started fourth, best of the four CGR drivers, then struggled at Texas with a run to 18th in time trials, and rebounded to place the No. 8 Honda on the front row at Long Beach next to polesitter Kyle Kirkwood.

A win at St. Pete, rise from 18th to eighth at Texas, and a third in Long Beach has Ericsson holding a 15-point lead over Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward and 19 over teammate Palou entering Round 4 at Barber Motorsports Park.

“I think the last couple of years, our speed on race day has been one of the best in the field,” he said. “I am 100-percent confident in saying we’ve been qualifying too low, and that’s made life too hard for us in the race. That’s why we worked really hard this winter, as a team, me as a driver, to try everything I could to help myself to take another step in qualifying.

“Together with my engineer Brad Goldberg and the whole Ganassi group, I feel like we made progress. That’s encouraging for me, because I know if we qualify well, we can fight for podiums and wins every race. And that’s what we’ve done.”

Ericsson’s ascension within CGR where he’s become consistently fast, consistently at the finish, and often leading the team in qualifying or in the race to the checkered flag, is one of IndyCar’s most compelling stories. But with the likes of title-winning teammates Dixon and Palou under the same tent, there’s no guarantee Ericsson will remain atop the internecine pecking order.

“As a racing driver, you want to be the best in your team,” he said. “That’s in the nature of racing drivers. I have a ton of respect for my teammates. I have a great bunch of guys there that I race with every weekend and I can learn from and we work well together. Scott is the greatest driver I’ve ever raced together with and as a teammate.

“But I still want to be the top dog and I’m gonna see if I can do that. That’s what I’ve worked so hard to be and so far, we’re leading the championship. But if I relax and think I’m great and can just sit back, I’m gonna get overtaken, so I need to keep that determination, keep working hard and continue to improve.”

McLaren reveals Kanaan’s Indy 500 livery

Ahead of this week’s Open Test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and in conjunction with the team’s “Triple Crown” livery series for the 107th Indianapolis 500, Arrow McLaren has revealed the livery for its fourth entry in this year’s race – the …

Ahead of this week’s Open Test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and in conjunction with the team’s “Triple Crown” livery series for the 107th Indianapolis 500, Arrow McLaren has revealed the livery for its fourth entry in this year’s race — the No. 66 SmartStop Arrow McLaren Chevrolet for driver Tony Kanaan.

The scheme features a papaya star surrounding the seat and three black stars along the left rear wing. These elements are a nod to McLaren Racing’s Triple Crown achievement of winning the three most prestigious races in motorsport: the Monaco Grand Prix, the Indy 500 and the 24 Hours of Le Mans.   The livery series forms a part of McLaren’s 60th birthday celebrations through 2023, honoring iconic moments throughout its history and the legacy built by team founder Bruce McLaren.

Kanaan, winner of the 2013 Indy 500, announced in February that this year’s race will be his last in IndyCar, is set to make his 22nd career start at the Indy 500 with the support of SmartStop as his primary partner and long-time partner 7-Eleven.

“I’ve been eager to see this livery, and it does not disappoint. It’s one of the best-looking cars I’ve ever been in and representing the history of the Triple Crown makes it even more special,” Kanaan said. “I’m so grateful to have SmartStop and my long-time partners 7-Eleven and NTT DATA along for this ride, and I’m excited to finally take this car out on the track starting tomorrow at the Open Test.”

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H. Michael Schwartz, Chairman and CEO of, SmartStop, said: “We are thrilled to be a part of Arrow McLaren’s Triple Crown celebration and to sponsor the No. 6 SmartStop Arrow McLaren Chevrolet at the Indianapolis 500 with racing legend Tony Kanaan behind the wheel.

“SmartStop Self Storage is committed to supporting excellence, and Tony and the Arrow McLaren team exemplify the drive and determination needed to succeed at the highest level. We can’t wait to see what they will accomplish together on the track, and we are honored to be a part of this historic event.”

The No. 66 SmartStop Arrow McLaren Chevrolet will be on track for the first time at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Open Test on Thursday and Friday.

Ferrucci on Long Beach: ‘It’s great to lift everybody’s spirits’

If there was a starring performance during last weekend’s Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach that went under the radar, it was Santino Ferrucci at A.J. Foyt Racing. Having weathered a brutal start to the new NTT IndyCar Series season with his new team, …

If there was a starring performance during last weekend’s Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach that went under the radar, it was Santino Ferrucci at A.J. Foyt Racing.

Having weathered a brutal start to the new NTT IndyCar Series season with his new team, Ferrucci arrived in Long Beach with hopes for a faster car and less adversity. His wishes were realized on Saturday with a run to 18th in qualifying within the 27-car field. Considering how the opening rounds at St. Petersburg and Texas Motor Speedway went, it was an encouraging sign for the Connecticut native.

Ferrucci’s charge forward over 85 laps on Sunday to improve to 11th was another highlight for the No. 14 Chevy program, which delivered the team’s best result so far in 2023.

“I think even going back to St. Pete, we were competitive in qualifying, but we just got caught out by the red flag and we almost were going to advance until [Simon] Pagenaud put it in the wall. It went red with 600 feet to go for me to hit the timing line. And the rest of that weekend wasn’t great for us,” Ferrucci told RACER.

“Obviously, Texas, our luck wasn’t any better with the clutch failing. But things improved in Long Beach and it was kind of like the St. Pete I thought we could have had. Because we started on the alternate tires and we made the fuel number work, it ended up being a super textbook race. [Team president] Larry [Foyt] was calling the race and he’s really good at strategy. And I think we’ve proved that we can do well if things just go normally for us like it did this weekend.”

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Fighting with drivers representing Team Penske and Rahal Letterman Lanigan offered a visual indicator of where Ferrucci and the No. 14 Chevy belonged during the 85-lap race.

“One of the things that stood out was going three wide into Turn 6,” he said. “I was passing I think [Agustin] Canapino on the outside and then Pato [O’Ward] went around me on the outside. I knew I braked late and he braked like 20 feet later that I did — I was like, ‘There’s no way he makes the corner.’ And he did. Unbelievable. I was thinking to myself, ‘I know if I did that, I definitely would have hit the wall.’ No way that my car was gonna turn. But that was entertaining.

While many contenders faded with their tires, Ferrucci and the Foyt No. 14 continued to shine in Long Beach. Jake Galstad/Motorsport Images

“Honestly, the most fun I had during that race was right in the end of the second stint when everybody’s tires were going off and I kept them underneath us. I just worked my way past like three cars — I ran down [Scott] McLaughlin, and I actually thought I was gonna get him. I don’t know if I would have been able to stay ahead of him; it would have been a tough, tough battle for me, but I sure as hell would have tried to hold on to that position because it would have been big for us.”

With the recent and unexpected loss of Lucy Foyt, wife of A.J. Foyt and mother to Larry Foyt, the team was grieving throughout Long Beach. A charging drive from Ferrucci only helped to celebrate the team matriarch.

“Honestly, for all things considered, that was the best-case scenario for us to move forward and get our legs to stand on,” he said. “It’s great to lift everybody’s spirits. I know A.J. was really happy; he called the team immediately after the checkered flag came out, and I wasn’t even back in the pits yet. Because that was the first thing I was told when I got out of the car, that A.J. was really happy with the result and he watched the whole race.

“I’m happy that Larry was able to make it out after losing his mom. It was really tough for everybody, but it was a great way to cap that weekend. It definitely makes everybody happy going into the Indy test and hungry going into Barber. So now it’s all about carrying momentum.”

The RACER Mailbag, April 19

Welcome to the RACER Mailbag. Questions for any of RACER’s writers can be sent to mailbag@racer.com. Due to the high volume of questions received, we can’t guarantee that every letter will be published, but we’ll answer as many as we can. Published …

Welcome to the RACER Mailbag. Questions for any of RACER’s writers can be sent to mailbag@racer.com. Due to the high volume of questions received, we can’t guarantee that every letter will be published, but we’ll answer as many as we can. Published questions may be edited for length and clarity. Questions received after 3pm ET each Monday will appear the following week.

Q: Do IndyCar drivers use spotters around the course that will help them know when other drivers are around them? In NASCAR at Road America (and probably other road courses, as well as ovals) they have spotters positioned all around the course to help the drivers know when other cars are getting next to them. Perfect example, the pass at Long Beach where Pato O’Ward went down the inside of Scott Dixon and they made contact — would Dixon have had a spotter at that moment that could have helped? If not any idea why not? A simple “inside, inside” from a spotter could have been a huge help in that instant.

Craig C., Slinger, WI

MARSHALL PRUETT: It’s more a case of one spotter placed strategically on road and street courses, instead of multiple. And not every team uses spotters outside of the ovals.

The Dixon/Pato deal was a tough one because if you know O’Ward, he’s always going to fire his car into the gap, but even knowing that wouldn’t have prevented what happened because he cut to the inside so much later than anyone expected — including Dixon — and from so far back, it wasn’t something Scott or any other driver would have anticipated.

If Dixon had a spotter right there, and was on the radio button leading into the corner, I’m guessing they might have had time to say a word or two as Pato lunged down the inside, but this was more of a surprise than something we saw coming the entire time.

I don’t blame O’Ward for trying, but it was a risky attempt that really needed Dixon to know it was going to happen so he could have moved to the left to save the two of them from making contact. Sometimes that happens — the driver on the outside catches a last-second glimpse in their mirror and adjusts to avoid being hit. That didn’t happen here, and we got the outcome at hand.

Q: Back in 2017 (I think), I heard that the long-awaited book about the history of the Newman/Haas team was put on hold right before it went to the publisher at the request of Carl Haas’s widow. I have not seen any more information on it. Do you know anything about it, and can you check with Gordon Kirby?

Joe Mullins

MP: I spoke with a friend about it at Long Beach and was told the same hold remains in place by his widow. Prospects of seeing the book appear in print didn’t sound promising.

The Newman/Haas story would make a heck of a book, but it seems increasingly unlikely that it will ever get the chance. Motorsport Images

Q: I’ve been wondering something about the upcoming IndyCar hybrid engines for a while now, and recently I haven’t been able to get it out of my head, so I might as well ask.

Electric motors are very torquey, and we all know torque figures have a massive impact on how cars drive depending on how much torque there is and where in the rev range they hit. A lot has been made of the added power, but little talk of the added torque. Do we have an idea of how this is going to influence things? Do they expect it to be in the middle of the rev range? Do they expect to be tuning the engine to hit its power band at higher or lower RPM and having the electric motor handle the other side? Or is it expected to be a more consistent increase across the rev range?

I’m mainly curious because of Indy NXT. I worry that if the added torque comes in too low, hitting hard out of corners, we may end up in a situation where Indy NXT does not adequately train its drivers for the jump to IndyCar, not unlike how it was often said the older Lights cars didn’t sufficiently prepare them for the DW12. And if that happens we have to ask ourselves how to solve that conundrum.

PS: Last week you had a question about if TMS had a road course, and you said you didn’t know. I am happy to inform you that yes, TMS has a 2.3-mile 10-turn infield road course. The ALMS used it in 2000 and 2001, with the 2001 race being the site of the only podium ever achieved by the stylish but fragile Panoz LMP07. Whether or not it has been maintained in a usable state, however, I cannot speak to.

FormulaFox

MP: Definitely understand the training concern, but we trained Indy Lights drivers in the 1990s with flat-bottom cars that made limited downforce and had 420hp and sent them to CART where they had underwings and lots of downforce and 900-plus horsepower, and the Kanaans and Hertas and Helios and Dixons of the world did just fine when dealing with the jump to light speed.

Indy NXT and all of its previous iterations have fluctuated heavily when it comes to speed, technology, and relevance to what those kids would drive in the big series. And yet, each era has seen phenomenal talent emerge and thrive in IndyCar, so I’m not worried about a turbo motor from Chevy or Honda, which already makes prodigious torque, being aided with an extra dose of electric torque. Considering the extra weight the cars will be carrying, the ERS units won’t give drivers the explosive acceleration that made the former LMP1 Hybrids disappear out of the corners like they were dragsters.

Great note about TMS; I’d forgotten about it being part of the early days of the ALMS when half of its schedule seemed to be on crappy rovals. I’m struggling to recall the old infield section as being something the track has preserved; in walking and driving around the infield, nothing stood out as being maintained and utilized, but I could be wrong.

2023 Long Beach GP was the most successful since reunification

The Grand Prix Association of Long Beach, organizers of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, have hailed the three-day event that concluded with Kyle Kirkwood winning his first NTT IndyCar Series race as being the most successful since the series …

The Grand Prix Association of Long Beach, organizers of the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, have hailed the three-day event that concluded with Kyle Kirkwood winning his first NTT IndyCar Series race as being the most successful since the series took over as the headliner following the farewell to CART/Champ Car in 2008.

“The 2023 Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach was a resounding success!” said GPALB president Jim Michaelian, who cited a turnout of more than 192,000 attendees along with a complete sellout of reserved grandstand seats.

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The sellout event welcomed more than 192,000 fans. Richard Dole/Motorsport Images

“We were blessed with three days of perfect weather, great racing and a wide variety of activities for our fans. There was a sense of real enjoyment from the diverse crowd that gathered to enjoy all that the Grand Prix – and the City of Long Beach – had to offer.”

Along with IndyCar, IMSA’s WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, Stadium Super Trucks, vintage Formula 1 cars, and more series entertained the record-setting audience.

The 48th edition of the event was also a success within the vendor midways as the GPALB said, “preliminary concession and merchandise sales numbers reflect a substantial increase in sales as well.”

IndyCar and its drivers call out Long Beach social media abuse

Ranging from unkind words to death threats, more than 1500 comments were aimed at Callum Ilott and his loved ones on social media after he and teammate Agustin Canapino found themselves in an unfortunate on-track sequence during Sunday’s Long Beach …

Ranging from unkind words to death threats, more than 1500 comments were aimed at Callum Ilott and his loved ones on social media after he and teammate Agustin Canapino found themselves in an unfortunate on-track sequence during Sunday’s Long Beach Grand Prix.

Similar levels of online abuse were also produced after a contentious incident between Pato O’Ward and Scott Dixon, which inadvertently created the situation between Ilott and Canapino.

After losing a lap when he hit the wall and broke a wheel and flattened a tire, Ilott used the Lap 20 caution for contact between O’Ward and Dixon to stay out and unlap himself as the rest of the field dove into the pits for service. The only outlier in that scenario was Juncos Hollinger Racing rookie Canapino, who was left out and inherited the lead.

Having pitted for new tires just prior to the race returning to green, Ilott was released from the pits and emerged directly in front Canapino who led the field into Turn 1. Back on the tail end of the lead lap, but with cold tires limiting his immediate pace, the Briton held up the Argentinian and defended his position to avoid going down a lap, and it’s here where the situation began to rapidly devolve online.

Moments later, contact with the Turn 5 wall damaged Canapino’s car and he was forced to pit and seek repairs, and with an enraged fan base aiming its anger at Ilott, a steady wave of toxicity was unleashed on him which continued into Monday.

Contrasting views on the incident responsibility between Arrow McLaren’s O’Ward and Chip Ganassi Racing’s Dixon where the New Zealander blamed the Mexican for the clash and O’Ward refused to accept blame for the contretemps led to more ugliness on social media.

Early in the day, Ilott took aim at Argentinian IndyCar commentator Martin Ponte, who he believes is responsible for the torrent of hatred after blaming him for Canapino’s race-altering dramas.

By Monday evening, the NTT IndyCar Series weighed in with a message of its own in an attempt to cool matters.

Soon after, O’Ward took to social media to ask for a restoration of civility in messages crafted in English and Spanish.

IndyCar’s passionate audience has rarely strayed into the darker side of social media behavior, making the escalating nature of what’s taken place since Sunday a new experience for the series owned by Penske Entertainment.

Long Beach IndyCar victory lap with Kyle Kirkwood and Marshall Pruett

Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach race winner Kyle Kirkwood joins RACER’s Marshall Pruett for a beer and a discussion on how the Andretti Autosport driver captured his first IndyCar victory.

Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach race winner Kyle Kirkwood joins RACER’s Marshall Pruett for a beer and a discussion on how the Andretti Autosport driver captured his first IndyCar victory.

Long Beach is a fitting place to see team rebound – Michael Andretti

Andretti Autosport’s last win was earned in July with former driver Alexander Rossi in the No. 27 Honda, and after his breakthrough performance at the Acura Grand Prix at Long Beach, the car’s new pilot, Kyle Kirkwood, added to the entry’s legacy …

Andretti Autosport’s last win was earned in July with former driver Alexander Rossi in the No. 27 Honda, and after his breakthrough performance at the Acura Grand Prix at Long Beach, the car’s new pilot, Kyle Kirkwood, added to the entry’s legacy with a stellar performance that led the No. 27 to victory lane.

Andretti’s story wasn’t finished on Sunday as Romain Grosjean followed Kirkwood home in second and Colton Herta claimed fourth for the surging team. Michael Andretti was a vision of delight and contentment after his 2021 Indy Lights champion earned his maiden win, emulating the achievement of his boss from back in 1986.

“Oh, it’s huge. I know he’s going to remember this day for a long, long time. Well, forever, I think,” Andretti said of Kirkwood. “It’s always extra special to do it at places like here in Long Beach. It’s just a great event, great history, great fans. The fans are so into it. You just love doing well here.

“I won my first and very last race of my IndyCar career here. My dad I think won four times. He’s the only time an American won a Formula 1 (race) on American soil. There’s so many things we’ve been able to do here in Long Beach to make it that special for us.”

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Andretti’s first IndyCar win was produced in his third full season and 36th race. Kirkwood reached the milestone just three races into his second season and 20th race in the series.

“Honestly, the way testing went and even the first couple races, he didn’t get the chance to show exactly what he had,” Andretti said of the 22-year-old from Florida. “But we knew it, seeing it in the data, what was going on that, yeah, I’m not surprised. When we saw the first, like I said, the testing, the first couple races, it’s going to come soon, right away, so…”

With a statement-making one-two-four finish in hand, Andretti Autosport sent a reminder of what the organization can do when the majority of its entries are operating at their full potential.

“Unbelievable,” Andretti added. “We needed this bad. The way we started off the year with really fast cars, not getting any results. It’s nice to get the results we did. One-two-four is not a bad day. This is going to really help, especially rolling into Indy in a few races. This always puts an extra bounce in everybody’s step. Yeah, we’re very excited about the rest of the year.”

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