Sonoma brings championship changes for Ferrari Challenge

It was a dramatic day of racing on Saturday at Sonoma Raceway, as qualifying and race sessions for Ferrari Challenge North America yielded unpredictability across all classes. However, the respective race winners found themselves atop the podium in …

It was a dramatic day of racing on Saturday at Sonoma Raceway, as qualifying and race sessions for Ferrari Challenge North America yielded unpredictability across all classes. However, the respective race winners found themselves atop the podium in the series’ final West Coast swing of the season and with momentum heading into Sunday’s final races.

Trofeo Pirelli
Starting outside the front row, Jason McCarthy (Wide World Ferrari) lunged at the start of Saturday’s race to beat Roberto Perrina (Ferrari of Seattle) to Turn 1 and the eventual Trofeo Pirelli win. It was McCarthy’s third win of 2024 and he defended Perrina’s efforts to retake the position throughout the race. While Perrina finished runner-up, Dylan Medler (The Collection) finished third with all three drivers winding up within one second at the finish line.

In Trofeo Pirelli Am, it was Tony Davis (Continental AutoSports) continuing his mid-season momentum with his fourth win in five races. Davis started from the pole position, but faced opposition from David Musial Sr. (Ferrari of Lake Forest) even in the final corners. This was Musial’s fourth second-place finish of the season and he held off points leader, Brian Cook (Ferrari of Seattle), in third.

Coppa Shell
The race for Coppa Shell was marred with off-track incidents that ultimately resulted in Yahn Bernier (Ferrari of Seattle) and Jeffrey Nunberg (Ferrari of Central New Jersey) claiming class wins.

Bernier started the race third, but found himself in the lead after the top two cars of Rey Acosta (The Collection) and Chuck Whittal (Ferrari of Central Florida) spun simultaneously, albeit without contact, on the first lap. Meanwhile, Nunberg started from the Coppa Shell Am pole position and kept multiple cars from other classes between his competitors.

Robert McWilliams (Ferrari of Washington) and Eric Marston (Ferrari of Westlake) completed the Coppa Shell podium, while ladies Jerri Walters (Ferrari of Vancouver) and Melissa Kozyra (Ferrari of Naples) – the latter of whom held off a hard-charging points leader in Roger Monteforte (Ferrari of Central New Jersey) – finished second and third in Coppa Shell Am.

488 Challenge Evo
The 488 Challenge Evo race concluded Saturday’s turmoil, with the Coppa Shell results coming down to the final minutes.

Massimo Perrina (Ferrari of Seattle) continued his undefeated stretch of seven poles and seven wins in 2024, finishing ahead of Logan Broughton (Ferrari of Lake Forest) in second and Titus Sherlock (Wide World Ferrari) in third. It was Sherlock’s first podium and first race of the season.

In the Coppa Shell class, however, Matthew Dalton (Ferrari of Long Island) entered the race tied with Gerdas Venslovas in the point standings. While Dalton paced the field after starting from pole, Venslovas tapped Dalton to gain the lead in the final five minutes. Dalton then returned the favor on the next lap, tangling with both cars and taking both from contention, elevating Enoch Hurd (Ferrari of Atlanta) to the win. Stephen Chen (Ferrari of Houston) and Brad Evans (Ferrari of San Antonio) rounded out the class podium.

Sunday schedule
Drivers will qualify once again on Sunday morning for their second of two races at Sonoma. Coppa Shell sees the first green flag for race action at 4:35pm ET, with Trofeo Pirelli at 5:2pm and 488 Challenge concluding the weekend at 6:15 p.m.

All Ferrari Challenge races will stream live on the Ferrari YouTube channel and FerrariRaces.com.

Herta, Andretti fighting back into IndyCar championship mix

Colton Herta finds himself in a place of comfort he’s been seeking and missing in recent years. He’s latched onto the kingmaker’s formula in the No. 26 Andretti Global Honda, using consistency to propel himself to second in the NTT IndyCar Series …

Colton Herta finds himself in a place of comfort he’s been seeking and missing in recent years.

He’s latched onto the kingmaker’s formula in the No. 26 Andretti Global Honda, using consistency to propel himself to second in the NTT IndyCar Series championship with four races left to run. Eight finishes inside the top five made this possible, and with one more road course to use to his benefit—five of his eight career victories have been on road courses — he has a chance this weekend in Portland to narrow the 59-point advantage held by Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou.

His best championship output came in 2020 when he placed third; holding onto his current position and possibly improving it by one spot the focus of his world.

“We’re in a good spot,” Herta told RACER. “Obviously we want to be better, and we want to close down the gap to Alex. I think Will Power gained like 40 points on Palou at Iowa, so it’s not over yet. If we can have a good race here — and it’s basically double points at Milwaukee with two races there — we can have good two races and we’re not out of this thing.”

Herta is also wary of Team Penske’s dominance on ovals where the last three races are held.

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“This end of the year, the Penskes are going to be very strong; obviously they’re going to be fast at Milwaukee,” he said. “We saw that in testing and from what we saw in testing at Nashville, so it’s a bit of a two way thing. I have to protect from the guys behind me, but I really have to try and track down Palou.”

Beyond his return to title-fighting form as a driver, Herta’s benefitted from a reinvigorated Andretti team which has found the necessary speed to challenge—even if it’s a somewhat remote chance—for a championship against IndyCar’s two biggest juggernauts in Ganassi and Penske.

“It’s weird, you know?” Herta said. “I think there was a point in 2019 where everything was just working. The cars were super fast. This is my rookie year. [Former teammate] Alex [Rossi] won two or three races. I won two races. [Ryan] Hunter-Reay won a race. The team had five or six or seven race wins and Alex finished third in the championship, and then with the aeroscreen and whatnot [that arrived in 2020], we lost a little bit of performance, and we’ve been gaining ever since.

“And it’s not to say that we haven’t had fast race cars. We’ve had fast race cars a lot of the time, but just not consistently enough. I think this year we’ve had that. Iowa was a big Achilles heel for us. Gateway was another big Achilles heel for us, and we went well at both. Obviously we’ve been making small gains, and this year we were able to make big gains on both ends.”

Andretti confirms IndyCar test for Chadwick

Indy NXT race winner Jamie Chadwick will make her NTT IndyCar Series debut in September with a test for her Andretti Global team. The Briton is set to turn her first laps in an Indy car at Barber Motorsports Park as part of her ongoing preparation …

Indy NXT race winner Jamie Chadwick will make her NTT IndyCar Series debut in September with a test for her Andretti Global team. The Briton is set to turn her first laps in an Indy car at Barber Motorsports Park as part of her ongoing preparation for a move to IndyCar at some point in the coming years.

“I’m incredibly excited to be testing in IndyCar for the first time with Andretti Global at Barber Motorsports Park later this year,” the three-time W Series champion said. “I want to say a huge thank you to the team for this opportunity. It is for sure one I am going to relish. The NTT IndyCar Series remains my goal, so I cannot wait to learn as much as possible on that day at one of the most demanding tracks on the calendar.”

The 26-year-old is among a few strong NXT prospects within Andretti Global, including championship leader Louis Foster.

“It’s been a pleasure watching Jamie grow as a driver in our Indy NXT program,” said team owner Michael Andretti. “The work she put in during the winter after her rookie season is obvious, and we’ve been impressed with the progress she’s made. The Indy NXT field is really competitive this year and what Jamie has been able to do is a testament to the level of skill and potential she has. We believe in rewarding hard work and results and are excited to give her this opportunity. We’re all looking forward to seeing what she can do in September.”

No deal in place for Mueller with Andretti FE team, Griffiths says

Andretti Formula E team principal Roger Griffiths has moved to downplay speculation regarding Norman Nato’s future at the team. There has been speculation that Nico Mueller could be placed at the team by Porsche following his recent exit from Abt …

Andretti Formula E team principal Roger Griffiths has moved to downplay speculation regarding Norman Nato’s future at the team.

There has been speculation that Nico Mueller could be placed at the team by Porsche following his recent exit from Abt Cupra and Porsche’s longstanding link with the Swiss driver. Such a move would mean an exit for Nato, who joined the team ahead of this season to race alongside series champion Jake Dennis (pictured above leading Nato). But Griffiths has dismissed the speculation, insisting the Frenchman is contracted to the team.

“Norman is still under contract with us,” Griffiths insisted when asked by RACER about the Mueller speculation. “So yeah, until that changes, we don’t have anything to say.”

Andretti gets its powertrain from Porsche and were it to sign Mueller, it would be the second time a Porsche driver has raced for the customer team. But Griffiths says the German brand has no say in Andretti’s lineup and that the last time it fielded someone from Porsche’s roster — Andre Lotterer in Season 9 — it was at Andretti’s request in order for it to get up to speed with its new partner..

“It’s completely our decision,” he said. “With Andre, that was actually a request from us to see if Andre would be available, because we knew that he was stepping away from his factory seat and what we talked about was to help us to get us up to speed with the Porsche car and the Porsche systems. We had yet to decide where we were going with drivers for season nine (2022-23). So it all worked out really well. Driver lineup is 100 percent our decision today and tomorrow.”

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While Andretti went into the championship final doubleheader with a shot at retaining the drivers’ title with Dennis, it ultimately came up short as Porsche and Jaguar’s factory operations came to the fore. While Griffiths admits disappointment at not being able to execute a repeat, he admits he wasn’t entirely surprised with the outcome of the season.

“Obviously going in as defending champions, you always have that hope that you can do it again,” he said. It’s massively difficult to do a repeat championship. I mean, if you look across any motorsport category, there’s not too many people that are back-to-back champions. And there’s a reason,

“I think we got out the gate really well in Season 9 and took a great advantage. Jake got a really good advantage. I think we also figured out the ‘peloton-style’ racing quicker than some of the others, so we sort of carried that momentum, and that took us all the way to the championship.

“Obviously in the offseason, others did their homework around us. I think what we’ve seen generally across the board — and not just with us — is the manufacturer-backed teams have really come to the fore.”

Dennis ultimately finished seventh in the standings with one win and a further three podiums to his name, while Nato added another with third in the second Shanghai race. That combined to put Andretti fifth in the teams’ championship, behind Jaguar TCS Racing, TAG Heuer Porsche, DS Penske and Nissan, but ahead of last year’s teams’ champion Envision Racing and the much-improved NEOM McLaren and Maserati MSG Racing operations that both also reached the winner’s circle during the year.

“We’re the only independent team in the top five, so that sort of says something,” Griffiths said. “The manufacturers have had additional test days; they get an advantage there. So (it’s) not surprising (but) I think, generally, we’re a little disappointed from my perspective. I’d like to have seen one more win.”

Herta makes history with Toronto win capping dominant weekend

Game, set, match. Colton Herta led every practice and warmup session at the Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto, earned pole in qualifying, led the most laps, and survived a late red flag for a wild six-car crash to reach victory lane for the first …

Game, set, match.

Colton Herta led every practice and warmup session at the Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto, earned pole in qualifying, led the most laps, and survived a late red flag for a wild six-car crash to reach victory lane for the first time since May of 2022. His No. 26 Andretti Global Honda was simply untouchable across 85 laps of NTT IndyCar Series competition in Canada.

Herta was shadowed by Andretti teammate Kyle Kirkwood the entire way as the duo started and finished first and second on the bumpy street course.

“We’ve been knocking on the door of a win for so long,” Herta said. “Forty-one starts without a win is a long time and it’s been disappointing for us. Michael [Andretti’s] an owner that demands perfection and demands results. It feels so good. I’m so happy.”

Thanks to a caution in the closing laps after the red flag — when Team Penske’s Will Power hit teammate Scott McLaughlin and knocked him into the wall and out of the race — it was a dash to the finish line where Kirkwood trailed by 0.347s in the No. 27 Honda.

“Andretti Global deserves this win,” said Kirkwood, who told the team he would play wingman to the finish for Herta unless an easy passing opportunity presented itself. “In street courses like this, you want to salvage a 1-2, that’s for sure, and putting us at risk was just not the move today, so I played a little bit more defensive. Super happy with second place.”

Despite Andretti’s mastery of the event, there was plenty of movement behind Herta and Kirkwood as Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon charged from 15th at the start to third and the final podium spot with the No. 9 Chip Ganassi Honda. Championship leader Alex Palou was even better, climbing from 18th to fourth as the sponsor of the race locked out the top seven positions at the finish line with Marcus Armstrong giving Ganassi a 3-4-5, Meyer Shank Racing’s David Malukas earning his best yet for the team in sixth, and 2023 Toronto winner Christian Lundgaard claiming eighth in his No. 45 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda.

Ed Carpenter Racing’s Rinus VeeKay was the top Chevy representative in eighth.

Outside of the familiar early crashes in Turn 1 to open the race, the latest trip to race in Canada was relatively calm until the latter stages of the event when a caution on lap 68, a red on lap 73, and another caution on lap 77 shuffled the final standings.

The heavy toll from laps 68-77 meant just 15 of the 27 starters were able to cross under the checkered flag, and for the second time in a span of a week, an A.J. Foyt Racing car went flying and landed upside down. The pileup, which was triggered by a spinning Pato O’Ward in Turn 1 on a restart, saw Marcus Ericsson, Pietro Fittipaldi, Foyt’s Santino Ferrucci, and O’Ward’s teammate Nolan Siegel hit and destroy O’Ward’s No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevy. After crossing the track and hitting the opposite wall, Siegel was hit from behind by Toby Sowery.

All six of the drivers, including Ferrucci, who radioed his team while upside down to tell them he was fine, appeared to escape without significant injury.

Arrow McLaren’s Theo Pourchaire, who had a few scraps of his own while standing in for Alexander Rossi on short notice, was the team’s top finish on the day, motoring from 25th to 14th.

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The 85-lap race fired off with a familiar scene as cars crashed in Turn 1 as Rasmussen’s 12th-place start lasted a single corner as his left-front suspension was bent after contact with Marcus Ericsson sent Rasmussen into the outside wall. Ferrucci was also hit, taking a shot from O’Ward, which broke his front wings against the inside wall. Rasmussen was done on the sport, but Ferrucci was able to make it to the pits and receive repairs, which left him last among the 26 drivers.

Polesitter Herta and teammate Kirkwood held first and second, McLaughlin improved to third and teammate Josef Newgarden moved from seventh to fifth.

The lap five restart saw no changes up front and the green lasted until Turn 4 when the battling Scott Dixon and Agustin Canapino made contact — Canapino turned left and hit Dixon’s right-rear wheel with his left-front — and Canapino ricocheted into the outside wall. Caution No. 2.

On the lap nine restart, the race had its first clean, green lap, and the order of Herta, Kirkwood, McLaughlin, Felix Rosenqvist, Newgarden, and Romain Grosjean comprised the top six.

Lap 10 saw Power take P7 from Malukas under braking at Turn 3 while Herta pushed out to 1.0s ahead of Kirkwood.

Championship leader Alex Palou was up to P15 from P18 on lap 11 and he had Toby Sowery behind him in P16. Newcomer Hunter McElrea was in P21 and Theo Pourchaire was P24.

Rosenqvist retook P3 from McLaughlin on lap 12. McLaughlin was the only top driver to start on Firestone alternate tires.

Lap 13 and Newgarden was by McLaughlin into Turn 3 to take P4.

On lap 16 Sting Ray Robb was in the pits having an issue tended to by the crew.

A lap later, Grosjean barged inside Power at Turn 3 to claim P6.

Lap 18 and the struggling McLaughlin pitted from P5 to take primary tires. Two laps later, Herta was 1.7s clear of Kirkwood and 2.5s ahead of Rosenqvist.

Come lap 26, Christian Lundgaard pitted from P11 and Palou came in from P12. Palou on alternates jumped Lundgaard on primaries out of the pits.

Power came in for alternates the following lap.
Herta was up 1.6s on Kirkwood, 2.8s on Rosenqvist and 3.7s on Newgarden on lap 28.

Lap 30 and Ericsson relieved Graham Rahal of P8 on entry to Turn 3. Lap 32 and Rahal pitted for alternates and a new steering wheel.

Newgarden finally came in for alternates along with Grosjean on lap 33. Rosenqvist was in for alternates two laps later. Newgarden in P7 passed him entering Turn 3.

Herta and Kirkwood ducked in for alternates on lap 36. Palou took P13 from Ericsson. Dixon inherited the lead as the last frontrunner to stay out. Dixon finally pitted for alternates on lap 37 as Herta resumed his home in P1. The No. 9 emerges in P6 after starting P15.

Lap 39 and Palou was up to P11 after passing Malukas. Herta had 1.2s over Kirkwood and a sizable 4.9s on Newgarden.

Ericsson took P11 from Palou on lap 46. Kirkwood was 1.1s back from Herta and Newgarden, 3.5s in arrears.

Newgarden was drawing down the gap to Herta on lap 47 — down to 2.3s. Kirkwood cut it to 0.8s while Herta appeared to be struggling with his alternates. Ericsson demoted Marcus Armstrong from P10.

Lap 51 and Palou made his final stop and took primaries. McLaughlin pitted from P5 at the end of the lap along with O’Ward, Malukas and Grosjean. Power came in for primaries two laps later. Newgarden pitted for the same at the end of the laps. He was sent out before the left-rear was tightened, but the crew stopped him, rolled the car back, secured the wheel nut, and released him again.

Herta and Kirkwood pit for primaries on lap 54. Herta beat his teammate out as Dixon led. Newgarden resumed in P10 as Power took P6 from Rosenqvist into Turn 3.

Lap 56 saw Dixon pit as Lundqvist and Pourchaire go off in Turn 3. Both resume, but Pourchaire needed to pit for a new front tire. Lap 57 — Dixon resumed in P3 as Rosenqvist and Ericsson went sailing into the Turn 3 runoff before continuing.

At lap 58, it was Herta, Kirkwood (-0.8s), Dixon (-4.3s), McLaughlin (-6.6s), Power (-7.8s), O’Ward (-9.0s), Palou (-9.4s) and in P8, Newgarden (-13.3s).

Rosenqvist’s luck officially ran out as his car was retired on lap 65. Dixon closed to within 0.6s of Kirkwood on lap 66 before a caution came out after Kyffin Simpson crashed in Turn 8 in a near repeat of Rossi’s crash from Friday. Simpson appeared to be unhurt as he climbed from the car. The running order was Herta, Kirkwood, Dixon, McLaughlin, Power, O’Ward, Palou, Newgarden, Malukas, Armstrong, Ericsson, and Lundgaard in P12.

Herta got a healthy jump on everyone on the lap 72 restart. A huge crash followed on lap 73. O’Ward spun on his own in Turn 1, Pietro Fittipaldi hit O’Ward’s nose and went for a brief flight. As Ferrucci came through, he launched over O’Ward and Ericsson and went flying, flipped and landed upside down. Thankfully he was OK. Ericsson hit O’Ward hard and both plowed into the left-side wall. The red flag flew.

Nolan Siegel also made contact with O’Ward’s car, but both moved and Siegel shoots into the right-side wall and is lightly hit from behind by Toby Sowery. Ericsson attempted to take his battered car back to the pits but the tethered front wing slid under the front tires, making it impossible to steer, and he stopped the car at Turn 3.

With O’Ward’s exit, Palou improved to P6, Newgarden went to P7, and so on.

Lap 73 and the field rolls from pit lane with no visible issues as the red becomes a yellow. They went back to green at lap 76. P4 McLaughlin was forced into the Turn 5 wall. Caution. Newgarden gets by Malukas for P6 but has a flat tire after being hit from behind by Malukas in the stack up of cars reacting to the McLaughlin crash. Power was responsible for the hit on his teammate that ended McLaughlin’s day.

McLaughlin waited at the corner and gave Power a mocking round of applause as he passed under yellow.

Lap 80 and the restart had Herta, Kirkwood, Dixon, Power, and Palou in tow. The Andretti duo had another big lead. Power was given a drive-through for the hit on McLaughlin. He’d drop from P4 to P12.

Herta had 0.4s on Kirkwood at lap 82, 1.0s on Dixon, and new P4 man Palou 1.4s behind. Newgarden tried to take P8 from Lundgaard on lap 83, locked up into Turn 3 and resumed in P11.

Lap 85 and Herta led Kirkwood, Dixon, Palou, Armstrong, Malukas, and Lundgaard for a Honda P1-7. Rinus VeeKay was the first Chevy-powered runner in P8.

RESULTS

Herta sweeps to Toronto pole, leading all-Andretti front row

The Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto qualifying session had Andretti Global’s Colton Herta as the presumptive pole sitter after leading both practice sessions, and going into the final lap, it was a battle between the Californian and his Floridian …

The Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto qualifying session had Andretti Global’s Colton Herta as the presumptive pole sitter after leading both practice sessions, and going into the final lap, it was a battle between the Californian and his Floridian teammate Kyle Kirkwood for who would start first on Sunday.

Kirkwood took the top spot and pitted with time for one more lap to be turned, and that’s what Herta used to strike and claim his third pole of the season with the No. 26 Honda (59.5431s) ahead of Kirkwood (59.6735s) to form an all-Andretti front row. Andretti affiliate Meyer Shank Racing was third with Felix Rosenqvist in the No. 60 Honda (59.8232s), which gave the event’s sponsor the top three positions on the grid.

Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin was fourth in the No. 3 Chevy (59.9082s) to lead the Bowtie runners, ahead of Juncos Hollinger Racing’s Romain Grosjean in the No. 77 Chevy (1m00.0012s) and MSR’s Davind Malukas in the No. 66 Honda (1m00.2109s).

“This thing’s been a rocket ship all weekend, really has been the past few races,” Herta said after securing the 14th pole of his career. “Luck hasn’t turned our way this year for a win yet, and I’m hoping it’s here tomorrow. We’ve always had good results here and I hope we can we can transfer that tomorrow.”

Kirkwood was more conservative with his use of Firestone’s faster alternate tires in qualifying while Herta went for a second set to ensure he wasn’t headed.

“This is panning out very, very well for us this weekend,” Kirkwood said. “Colton’s obviously been the quickest driver all weekend long, so he’s extremely deserving of it, and I’m happy to back him up with second now and get a front row lockout for the Nos. 26 and 27.”

Rosenqvist was impressed with the consistent form of his new teammate Malukas who made sure MSR had both cars in the Fast Six.

“It’s probably one of our better qualifying results combined,” he said. “Ever since he came into the team, it’s been good; there’s internal competition. David is quick everywhere — oval, street course, road course. Every time he’s out there, he’s doing a really good job and he’s always fast. I really like to have that competition within the team. It keeps you on your toes, which is good.”

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Qualifying on the cramped 1.8-mile street circuit wasn’t without dramas as championship leader Alex Palou was penalized for blocking after making it into the Firestone Fast 12. He was relegated to P18 after the ruling, and he wasn’t alone as fellow championship contenders Pato O’Ward (third in the standings) and Scott Dixon (fourth) were on the wrong side of the Fast 12 line.

Theo Pourchaire’s first laps at Toronto after arriving in the paddock with 62 minutes to spare following an overnight flight from France were good enough to earn 26th. With nine total laps to draw from, the fact that Pourchaire wasn’t last was a testament to his capabilities.

Strong in the first and second practice sessions, Hunter McElrea made his first mistake of the weekend and threw the No. 18 Dale Coyne Racing Honda into the Turn 8 tire barrier on his opening lap and was done for the afternoon after causing a red flag.

The first half of the field opened qualifying with McElrea’s red flag with 1m06s gone from the 10-minute outing. Drivers traded the top spot during the remaining 8m54s and, once it was over, the top six moving on was led by Kirkwood, McLaughlin, Christian Rasmussen, Rosenqvist, Malukas, and Josef Newgarden.

Those who didn’t transfer were led by Marcus Armstrong, who was knocked out on the last lap, starting P13, Dixon (P15), Santino Ferrucci (P17), Nolan Siegel (P19), Toby Sowery (P21), Pietro Fittipaldi (P23), and Hunter McElrea (P25).

The Fast 12 was set by the second group’s transferring top six of Will Power, Marcus Ericsson, Herta, Agustin Canapino, Graham Rahal, and Grosjean.

Palou was in the transfer group, but a post-session ruling by IndyCar penalized him for blocking O’Ward and stripped his two fastest laps.

Leading those whose session ended, it was the surprised 2023 Toronto polesitter O’Ward (P14), defending race winner Christian Lundgaard (P16), Palou (P18), Kyffin Simpson (P20), Rinus VeeKay (P22), Linus Lundqvist (P24), Pourchaire (P26), and Sting Ray Robb (P27).

RESULTS

Wickens makes open-wheel return with Portland Formula E drive

Robert Wickens will return to the cockpit of an open-wheel racing car this weekend when he samples GEN3 Formula E machinery at the Portland E-Prix. The Canadian was paralyzed in a crash at Pocono during his maiden IndyCar campaign in 2018, but has …

Robert Wickens will return to the cockpit of an open-wheel racing car this weekend when he samples GEN3 Formula E machinery at the Portland E-Prix.

The Canadian was paralyzed in a crash at Pocono during his maiden IndyCar campaign in 2018, but has been racing Hyundai touring cars in the TCR class of the Michelin Pilot Challenge since 2022. His brief run in the Formula E car will mark the first time he has driven an open wheeler since his crash.

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“I’m ecstatic to get the chance to drive Formula E’s GEN3,” Wickens told the Formula E website. “It’s the car I’ve wanted to try since the birth of the series and I’ve never really had an opportunity yet with the career paths I’ve taken, and when I was racing in DTM.

“Formula E has always been in that elite category because of the competition there, and there’s less emphasis on the car [performance]. If there are competitive drivers there, everyone wants to be involved. It’s always been like that for me and just getting the opportunity to try the car is the main goal, initially. If that leads to further opportunities then I’ll be very happy.

“What’s amazing about Formula E is that for years it’s been making things work that people said ‘can’t be done.’ It’s always doing things that people didn’t think possible and that’s another reason it’s been high on my list of series to try. I knew I’d be welcomed here with open arms because people aren’t afraid to go against the grain here.

“On top of that, it’s an FIA World Championship – and competition at that level is something I’ve always wanted to achieve. Every kid wants to be a world champion, whether that’s in karting or at the elite level of motorsport.”

Wickens almost won on his IndyCar debut on the streets of St. Petersburg, having qualified on pole and led most of the race until a late collision with Alexander Rossi took him out of contention. He was also a two-time winner in DTM’s Norisring street race and a winner on the streets of Durban in A1 GP, and he feels Formula E’s street racing focus could play to his strengths, should he race in the category in the future.

“To race at historic circuits like Monaco, and the other groundbreaking city circuits and locations Formula E heads to, just brings the excitement,” he said. “I love street racing and it’s always been my forte and something I’ve enjoyed and excelled at.”

Wickens actually came close to a Formula E ride in the past, having been approached by an unnamed team back in 2018, although the offer came after he’d already signed his contract with Schmidt Peterson Motorsports to race in IndyCar that year.

Even for a simple demonstration run, Wickens still goes full-on into prep alongside team owner Michael Andretti. Simon Galloway/Motorsport Images

“Ironically, I almost had an opportunity, but it was just a little too late back in 2018 and I’d already signed a contract with an IndyCar team,” Wickens said. “I was offered the chance to join a team in Formula E but I couldn’t take it and my life went in a separate direction.

“To come full circle and get the chance to drive the car is incredible. Seeing how the series has grown and developed over the years is amazing, and I’ve been an avid fan – and most of the drivers here are either former colleagues from various paddocks or teammates of mine from the past. It’s been a bit of a reunion!

“One of the blessings of having an underfunded junior formula career is that you don’t have the textbook career path, so I had the fortune to jump into nearly every European junior series along the way for tests, part seasons or full seasons.

“That built me as a driver and I feel like it added more tools to my belt for when I became a full-time professional driver. Then, once I had the opportunity to come back Stateside and race in IndyCar, I didn’t feel like I was a rookie there and I just hit the ground running.”

While it didn’t quite happen six years ago, Wickens is now eyeing a move into Formula E if his run in the car this weekend goes well.

“A lot of teammates and former colleagues have told me I’d probably excel in Formula E knowing how methodical I am [in] my race approach in terms of handling the strategy and energy management,” he said. “In the sportscar world those same skills translate, and I like to think I’m one of the better ones at it, so I’m really happy to give it a shot here.

“The important thing for me is my goal to return back to the elite level of motorsport after being paralyzed in IndyCar. I didn’t really know how I would end up there or get back to that level – and I didn’t know if I would jump straight back into a top level seat or have to work my way back up.

“It seems to me it’s more likely the latter. I’ve been racing in the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge series with Hyundai for [three seasons now], and we won the championship last year in the TCR category, so we’re finally back to winning ways.

“On paper, Formula E feels [like] such a good fit for me. The stars just never aligned but hopefully they can in the future.”

Nato tops opening Portland E-Prix practice for Andretti

Norman Nato put Andretti atop of the times on home soil in the opening practice session for this weekend’s Portland E-Prix. The Frenchman set a best time of 1m09.079s, with a session-best first sector, beating both factory Jaguars to the top spot. …

Norman Nato put Andretti atop of the times on home soil in the opening practice session for this weekend’s Portland E-Prix.

The Frenchman set a best time of 1m09.079s, with a session-best first sector, beating both factory Jaguars to the top spot. It wasn’t all good news for Nato, though, after he was given a reprimand for speeding under full course yellow. As it was his third driving infringement reprimand of the season, it resulted in a 10-place grid penalty being levied for Saturday’s race.

Mitch Evans was second fastest, 0.174s behind Nato and a mere 0.033s ahead of his Jaguar TCS Racing teammate Nick Cassidy, with Antonio Felix da Costa – who found out this week that the appeal against his disqualification from the first Misano E-Prix race was unsuccessful earlier this week – in fourth for TAG Heuer Porsche.

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Nyck de Vries was a fine fifth for Mahindra Racing, 0.340s off the top spot, ahead of Abt Cupra’s Lucas di Grassi and Pascal Wehrlein in the second works Porsche. Sergio Sette Camara (ERT), Maximilian Guenther (Maserati MSG Racing) and Edoardo Mortara completed the top 10, which was covered by just over 0.5s. Mortara and de Vries, however, found themselves under investigation for a “technical infraction” at the end of the session.

Jehan Daruvala was 0.144s off that top 10, finishing the session 11th in the second Maserati, ahead of reigning champion Jake Dennis (Andretti) Sam Bird (NEOM McLaren), Nico Mueller (Abt Cupra) and the DS Penske pairing of Jean-Eric Vergne and Stoffel Vandoorne.

Jake Hughes was next up for McLaren, with ERT’s Dan Ticktum 18th, and  Caio Collet – filling in for the unwell Oliver Rowland – 19th for Nissan, two places ahead of his teammate Sacha Fenestraz. The pair were separated by Robin Frijns, with his Envision Racing stablemate Sebastien Buemi completing the field.

RESULTS

Firestone GP of Monterey, Saturday Day 2 – Qualifying recap with Kirkwood and Malukas

Qualifying is over for the eighth round of the 2024 NTT IndyCar Series season and Alex Palou has put his Chip Ganassi Racing-Honda on pole position. We spoke to his nearest challenger, Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood, who earned his best qualifying …

Qualifying is over for the eighth round of the 2024 NTT IndyCar Series season and Alex Palou has put his Chip Ganassi Racing-Honda on pole position. We spoke to his nearest challenger, Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood, who earned his best qualifying position of the year, and also caught up with David Malukas, who has returned to the series and impressed the Meyer Shank Racing team with 12th on the grid, despite still recovering from his preseason wrist injury.

RACER’s Trackside Report at the Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey is presented by Radical Motorsport. As one of the world’s most prolific sports car manufacturers, Radical Motorsport sets out to create a race-bred thrill-a-minute driving experience on the racetrack. Radical Cup North America is the continent’s premier Radical championship offering exhilarating multi-class Le Mans style racing for a fraction of the price. Click to learn more.

IndyCar engineering insight – Andretti Global on the new hybrids

This is the last race weekend in which IndyCar will run with these new lightened cars without the hybrid unit. Legendary engineer Craig Hampson, now with Andretti Global, talks us through what is to come – specifically, the complications of running …

This is the last race weekend in which IndyCar will run with these new lightened cars without the hybrid unit. Legendary engineer Craig Hampson, now with Andretti Global, talks us through what is to come — specifically, the complications of running with the hybrid system, and its knock-on effect for drivers, race engineers, strategists and data acquisition engineers.

RACER’s Trackside Report at the Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey is presented by Radical Motorsport. As one of the world’s most prolific sports car manufacturers, Radical Motorsport sets out to create a race-bred thrill-a-minute driving experience on the racetrack. Radical Cup North America is the continent’s premier Radical championship offering exhilarating multi-class Le Mans style racing for a fraction of the price. Click to learn more.