As the old saying goes, “If it wasn’t for bad luck, I’d have no luck at all,” and Andretti Global’s Colton Herta has been living that line as his last three races have gone in every direction except the one he wants. It started with a solo crash …
As the old saying goes, “If it wasn’t for bad luck, I’d have no luck at all,” and Andretti Global’s Colton Herta has been living that line as his last three races have gone in every direction except the one he wants.
It started with a solo crash during the Indianapolis 500 that left the Californian bristling in 23rd place; he was on pole the weekend after in Detroit, but cartoon anvils rained down throughout the rain—to complement the actual rain that fell—and he went from first to 19th at the finish. The newest kick to the crotch came courtesy of Team Penske’s Josef Newgarden, who punted Herta on the opening lap in Turn 1 and spun his No. 26 Honda from his second place starting spot to 26th among the 27 drivers in the Road America race.
Herta refused to give in to the adversity and got to sixth place at the finish, which was positive in one aspect, but far short of what he envisioned for the day.
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“[I’m] mad, disappointed. The team did a great job again today, but this is three weekends in a row for me where I had a really good chance of winning, and whether the last three weeks it was self-inflicted or not, for one reason or another, we’re just standing here mad again, which does not feel good,” Herta told RACER.
The lack of penalty for Newgarden also added to his sour mood after climbing from the car.
“I would think that [one was deserved]. I got dumped to the back, almost lost a lap, and then it put me in the back with those guys, and then I got dumped again on the next restart, so I was just super frustrated,” he added.
“What came out of it, which actually helped us get to the front, was all those yellows; [we] were able to get into the pits and have so much more fuel than everybody that we could overcut by six laps, and we were able to show the true pace of this [car]. Twenty-seventh, up to about I’d say 24th, then back to 27th and then back up to sixth — you have to be somewhat proud about that, but I’m just not happy at all, really.”
How does Herta plan on releasing the three weeks of frustration? How about a visit to a famous local Elkhart Lake pub tonight with friends.
“I’m gonna go to Siebkins and drink beer,” Herta said, still cracking his post-race smile.
Jamie Chadwick’s breakthrough Indy NXT pole and victory had her team owner Michael Andretti smiling wide. Charging down to pit lane after the Briton drove into victory lane for the first time in the No. 28 Andretti Global Dallara IL15-AER, Andretti …
Jamie Chadwick’s breakthrough Indy NXT pole and victory had her team owner Michael Andretti smiling wide. Charging down to pit lane after the Briton drove into victory lane for the first time in the No. 28 Andretti Global Dallara IL15-AER, Andretti was the first to greet her and share congratulations for his newest race winner.
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Chadwick, the three-time W Series champion, withstood multiple passing attempts and had to lead multiple restarts—all opportunities for other drivers to pounce—but she halted their advances and aced each return to green-flag racing. Chadwick also led every lap in a clear demonstration of her capabilities in IndyCar’s top feeder series.
“She’s been amazing,” Andretti told RACER. “She did a mega job over the winter getting stronger to drive these cars. She’s been really competitive all year. The laps she did in qualifying impressed me, but what really was impressive was how she placed the car the whole race and she was schooling some of the boys. Her restarts were great. It was a complete drive.”
Chadwick was chased home by teammate Louis Foster who won last weekend’s NXT race in Detroit and holds second in the championship.
Her win also helped move her forward—after an early season that’s had some adversity—to ninth in the standings as the Andretti drivers battle against the other powerhouse teams in NXT.
“It’s a great program,” Andretti added. “That’s why we support it. That’s why we brought Jamie in, and Louis Foster is doing an awesome job. It was a great day for the points for Louis. We love being in this series.”
Rain started to fall 10 minutes before the start of Saturday morning’s NTT IndyCar Series practice session and the skies continued to shower the Road America circuit throughout most of the 45-minute outing. Andretti Global’s Colton Herta was fastest …
Rain started to fall 10 minutes before the start of Saturday morning’s NTT IndyCar Series practice session and the skies continued to shower the Road America circuit throughout most of the 45-minute outing.
Andretti Global’s Colton Herta was fastest in the No. 26 Honda with a lap of 2m7.3027s, well shy of the 1m43.2506s he turned on Friday to run second behind Alex Palou. Team Penske’s Will Power was 1.9s behind Herta in the No. 12 Team Penske Chevy, and thanks to a late run when the rain was at its lightest, Ed Carpenter Racing’s Christian Rasmussen moved the No. 20 Chevy into third, 2.2s back from Herta.
The first red flag was required when Palou spun and got stuck in the gravel at the 35-minute mark. The next red flag was required with 27 minutes to go when Pietro Fittipaldi went firing through Canada Corner—went straight at high speed—and got his car stopped just before nosing into the barriers. Alexander Rossi nearly joined him but got his car under control. At this point, 25 drivers had ventured out.
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Rain got heavy with 24 minutes to go and most drivers pitted as some climbed out and others had covers placed over their cars. A few chose to go back out as the intensity reduced with 12 minutes left, and more continued as the rare opportunity to work on rain setups turned the session into a valuable learning opportunity. As well, many of the newer drivers in the field have limited experience driving the Dallara DW12 chassis in wet conditions, so for some like Fittipaldi, the chance to drive his Indy car in the rain was welcomed.
“It was my first time, really, in wet conditions; we had a few laps in Detroit, but it was with the safety car,” Fittipaldi told RACER. “So this was my first proper wet track in this car and it was super slippery. The more laps you do, you start getting more temp in the tires, but what was difficult here is, the longer the session went on, the wetter it got. We couldn’t really test too much because we only did like five laps. But at least for me, it was just good to get some experience in the wet.”
Rain had almost stopped with six minutes left but another red was needed to sort out Kyle Kirkwood who spun and stalled, and once he drove back to the pits and the session resumed, a flurry of activity saw the top 10 undergo a few changes behind Herta and Power. No driver turned more than 10 laps and most kept their running to six laps or less.
Saturday recap from the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix with Vasser Sullivan Lexus driver Parker Thompson and Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood from the streets of downtown Detroit.
Saturday recap from the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix with Vasser Sullivan Lexus driver Parker Thompson and Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood from the streets of downtown Detroit.
Colton Herta captured Andretti Global’s first pole position of the season and the 12th of his career with a scorching lap of 1m00.547s in the No. 26 Honda at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix. NTT IndyCar Series championship leader Alex Palou locked …
Colton Herta captured Andretti Global’s first pole position of the season and the 12th of his career with a scorching lap of 1m00.547s in the No. 26 Honda at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix. NTT IndyCar Series championship leader Alex Palou locked out the front row for Honda in the No. 10 Chip Ganassi Racing machine at Chevy’s home event (1m00.700s).
“Complete 180 and just super happy for the team,” Herta said after Sunday’s Indianapolis 500 ended with his car in the wall. “You know, they worked their tails off in the month of May and it was disappointing to say the least. To come back here for some redemption, man, it feels good.”
Palou didn’t think he had the speed to knock Herta off pole, but is confident for how the race might play out.
“Pretty happy,” he said. “The car’s been awesome since practice one yesterday and we’re able to fight during all segments in qualifying. Looking forward to tomorrow. It’s gonna be a busy, busy race, but with a fast car, everything is a little bit easier.”
New Indianapolis 500 winner Josef Newgarden was best of the Chevy camp in the No. 2 Team Penske entry (1m00.961s) in third and teammate Scott McLaughlin took fourth in the No. 3 Chevy (1m01.334s). Ganassi’s Scott Dixon, in his 100th participation in the Firestone Fast Six, was fifth in the No. 9 Honda (1m01.391s) and Andretti’s Kyle Kirkwood, who was third heading into the final minute of qualifying, spun, stalled, and was dropped to sixth after his two fastest laps were deleted for causing a red flag (1m04.293s).
“Hats off to Andretti Global. They’ve given us rocket ships this weekend. I knew it would be hard to beat Colton, which is where the mistake came from. Just a mistake,” Kirkwood said.
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Qualifying opened with Theo Pourchaire leading the first group on track, followed by McLaughlin, Newgarden, Kirkwood, Will Power, and Santino Ferrucci who all moved on.
Behind them, Christian Rasmussen (13th), Romain Grosjean (15th), Alexander Rossi (17th), Rinus VeeKay (19th), Linus Lundqvist (21st), Kyffin Simpson (23rd), and Tristan Vautier (25th) were locked into their positions.
Grosjean, angered by Ferrucci who he said blocked him, jumped out of his car and sped down to Ferrucci’s A.J. Foyt Racing team to confront his frequent protagonist, but he was already gone.
Palou led the way in the second group with Christian Lundgaard, Herta, Marcus Ericsson, Pato O’Ward, and Dixon behind. On the outside looking in, Graham Rahal (14th), Pietro Fittipaldi (16th), Agustin Canapino (18th), Marcus Armstrong (20th), Felix Rosenqvist (22nd), Sting Ray Robb (24th), Helio Castroneves (26th), and Jack Harvey (27th) were done.
Rahal was sixth and about to go forward, but O’Ward knocked him out on his last lap. Rahal will have a six-spot grid penalty—as will Simpson—for unapproved engine changes once the order is set ahead of Sunday’s 100-lap race, which goes green at 12:45 p.m. ET on the USA Network.
The Fast 12 was settled with the top six of Herta, Kirkwood, Dixon, McLaughlin, Palou, and Newgarden. Dixon bumped Pourchaire (7th) at the finish line, followed by a livid Power (8th), Ericsson (9th), Ferrucci (10th), Lundgaard (11th), and O’Ward (12th).
O’Ward, trying to make room for a charging Kirkwood behind him, stalled with 3m45s left in the session, triggering a red flag, while holding seventh—before he could put in a quick lap. He’d lose his two fastest laps and drop to 12th.
Everything Marcus Ericsson thought would happen at this point in his move from Chip Ganassi Racing to Andretti Global has been elusive. Recruited by Andretti to join its downsized and refocused three-car program, the Swede expected to be running …
Everything Marcus Ericsson thought would happen at this point in his move from Chip Ganassi Racing to Andretti Global has been elusive.
Recruited by Andretti to join its downsized and refocused three-car program, the Swede expected to be running right with teammates Colton Herta and Kyle Kirkwood in the championship, but with Herta (fifth) and Kirkwood (10th) well removed from Ericsson who sits 19th, the 2022 Indianapolis 500 winner is determined to restart his year on the streets of Detroit.
An engine problem while running strong at the first race relegated Ericsson to 23rd, and while he had a brief respite with a blast to fifth at Long Beach, the last three races have been filled with adversity or missed opportunities, capped with being crashed out of the Indy 500 on the first lap by Meyer Shank Racing’s Tom Blomqvist.
Mired in his worst championship position in ages, Ericsson has decided the best way forward is to treat Detroit like it’s the first race in a 12-race championship.
“That’s exactly the mindset,” Ericsson told RACER. “Me and my group are going into this race and onwards where we’re not gonna look at the championship points. I don’t care where we’re at so far, because we can’t change any of that, so now we’re gonna look at maximizing our performance, and if that goes good for us and means we can be in the mix towards the end, who knows what’s possible then.
“Going away after Sunday, it was obviously disappointing, and it’s frustrating. We’re all competitors, and I want to win and fight in the front. I truly believe we can do that. I am a tough competitor and I’ve got great support in the team as well. The team really believes in me.”
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Ericsson — quick on Friday until he broke his suspension against the Detroit walls, preventing him from participating in the faster closing session — looks to his teammates as a reminder of what’s possible when things start to fall in his favor.
“Colton’s had a very solid season, and Kyle as well,” he said. “I think the consistency from them, too, it’s been good to see because that’s something we talked about a lot going into the season…about being consistent from weekend to weekend. My teammates are showing that they can be consistently in the mix and we need to have that. Obviously, we would like to have a bit more highs than just consistency.
“It’s a new team still for me; I worked with the same people at Ganassi for four years and it was like I didn’t even have to say anything when I came in; they knew what I needed for the next run, next session, and so on. My race engineer Olivier [Boisson], I really, really like working with him; he’s a great engineer, a great person, and we work really well together. But it’s still early for us… We need to get to know each other more on the racetrack — as a process — so he knows what to do with the car for me and to get the most out of me and my driving.
“You know, we’re still working on that and getting better on that all the time. We had to dig really deep the qualifying week and everything we went through there at Indy. When you go through that together, you cannot have a better bonding exercise than what we had [in] the month of May. I really feel like we we’re so strong together after all that as a crew, and I think it’s gonna pay off a lot going forward.”
Tom Blomqvist had been perfect throughout his rookie runs in practice and qualifying at the Indianapolis 500, but all that changed at Turn 1 on lap one of the race when the Meyer Shank Racing driver drove the No. 66 Honda well below the track …
Tom Blomqvist had been perfect throughout his rookie runs in practice and qualifying at the Indianapolis 500, but all that changed at Turn 1 on lap one of the race when the Meyer Shank Racing driver drove the No. 66 Honda well below the track surface and onto the grass which spun his car, sent it backwards into the wall, and collected Marcus Ericsson, whose No. 28 Andretti Global Honda went for a brief flight before crashing down and hitting Blomqvist.
Both drivers got out of their cars under their own power—Ericsson was livid—and both cars appeared to be damaged beyond immediate repair.
Following them, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s Pietro Fittipaldi was attempting to slow to avoid the crashing cars, but had Arrow McLaren’s Callum Ilott—starting last after his car experienced a technical issue—fired down the inside of the No. 30 RLL Honda and made side-by-side contact with his No. 6 Chevy. Fittipaldi made light rearward contact with the wall and Ilott looked like he and his car were unscathed.
“It’s unbelievable,” Ericsson said. “I don’t know what to say.”
IndyCar reported Fittipaldi was seen by its medical team and announced he was released on lap 80.
Formula E’s rookie test at Tempelhof Airport this week was a crucial day on many fronts. For inexperienced drivers – as the name suggests – it was an opportunity to get some valuable seat time, but as the only in-season testing at all, it was a …
Formula E’s rookie test at Tempelhof Airport this week was a crucial day on many fronts.
For inexperienced drivers — as the name suggests — it was an opportunity to get some valuable seat time, but as the only in-season testing at all, it was a vital day for all teams as they ran through on- and off-track items. RACER was on the ground in Berlin to learn just what goes into a Formula E test day — and by “day” we mean only six hours spread over two sessions.
The term rookie, of course, means a driver who’s yet to do a race, but looking at the test lineup, it actually brought in a wide variety of drivers, from experienced racers from other categories to up-and-coming youngsters, seasoned testers, and those getting their first-ever experience of Formula E cars.
Andretti was a team with a mix of both, fielding its regular test and reserve driver Zane Maloney — who’s been a constant presence with the team all season — and Jak Crawford, who drove a Formula E car for the first time at the test.
“As a team we get zero in season testing — it’s not like we can go off and do stuff — so that for us means that this day is critically important,” Andretti team principal Roger Griffiths tells RACER. “We don’t come here to just let a couple of young guys have a taste of Formula E and have some fun and see how quick they are.
“We’ve got a lot of things for (Zane) to work through, particularly with the big turnaround we had over the course of the weekend from last to first (in qualifying). So we’re trying to dig deeper into that because it’s one thing to bolt it all on and go quick, but if you don’t understand why you’ve suddenly gone quick, if you find yourself in a difficult situation in the future, you don’t know which knob to turn.”
But while Maloney’s job on once side of the garage is clear, Crawford on the other side is just as vital. Griffiths says having a fresh perspective, even from a true rookie, is very important for the team — as evidenced by the team’s experienced with Maloney when he jumped in the car for the first time last year and was already outperforming last year’s champion Jake Dennis in certain areas.
“I think it’s always interesting to bring in somebody fresh and listen to what they have to say,” he says. “I remember this time last year, we put Zane in the car for the very first time and he was able to do things on certain aspects of the corners that Jake couldn’t do. He was quicker than Jake in certain aspects, and Jake had just come off a podium finish here.
“So I think it is really interesting to get a new opinion. For me, it’s the perfect combination of someone who has been in the car a few times on a few different tracks, and then having Jak in the car as a new person coming at it from a new perspective.”
For rookies, though, it can be a big step, with the biggest adjustment being to come into a much bigger team than they’re accustomed to rather than getting to grips with the car itself.
“Working with such big teams, big organizations, you take a lot of how people work on to the things that you’re doing outside,” says F2 points leader Maloney. “I think how Andretti works, for example, there’s so many people at the racetrack, some amazing engineers so you learn something from each one of them that you can take on to — for me — Formula 2.
“In terms of the driving style, (there’s) nothing. But driving a race car as fast as you can around a circuit, it doesn’t change. Going from car to car, you always try to maximize everything and every small detail. Driving every day is really the goal for us drivers, so being out here today is just a benefit.”
Reigning F1 Academy champion Marta Garcia, who tested with ERT in Berlin agrees.
“For me the driving, you cannot learn a lot from it,” she says. “Of course, when you’re driving you always learn something, but I think it’s also the environment you work with, because at the moment I’m racing in Formula Regional with Iron Dames and that’s two engineers, two drivers, and the debrief is basically just four of us and the team manager.
“Here, we did our debrief and there’s a lot of people compared to what we’re used to, so obviously you learn a lot from the feedback that they give. So I think it’s more about learning about the organization of the team, learning about all the people that they have, and I think that’s a lot that you can gain for your racing.”
Coming into such an environment might sound intimidating but NEOM McLaren’s Ugo Ugochukwu points out that it can be advantageous for a young driver to be thrust into such a setting.
“The team has a program set out that we try to complete as best we can, and within that also from a driver’s point of view, there’s so much data to look at with the engineers between each run,” he says. “There’s so much to learn, so many different people that you can get info and knowledge from, which is good.
“It’s a different experience. There’s more people involved throughout the day, more people you can get knowledge from, guiding you throughout the day. It’s something you can use to your advantage and get things from different people in their areas of expertise and gain as much knowledge as possible and try to use that while you’re on track.”
For those a little more accustomed to the Formula E environment, the test is a perfect setting to tie together what the team does away from the track with what it’s doing at it. Alice Powell has been a long-time test driver for reigning champion team Envision Racing, and her job in Berlin was to make sure that the work she’s been doing in the team’s simulator correlated with what it was doing in the real world.
“Obviously, simulators are a massive part of pretty much any racing series — certainly in single seaters — so making sure that we have the best sim possible, using the simulator to make sure that it’s as accurate to the car as possible so we can test items on the simulator, etc., is really important,” she says. “Because I’ve spent time with the team in the sim (and) I’ve driven the GEN2 car, that is the most important thing for me — to get a feel of the car, get used to the car, so when I hop back in the sim, I can be like, ‘This needs to be different, this needs to change.’
“We’ll do lots of different runs,” she adds. “We’ll do some race runs, some 300 (kilowatt) and 350 runs, so there’s a variety of things.”
Jordan King is a driver who’s held a similar role to Powell, but didn’t take part in the Berlin test — he raced on the two days beforehand for Mahindra instead, taking away his status as a rookie and consequently his ability to take part in the test.
“You end up becoming very much a vessel with the team,” he says of a tester’s job. “You’ve got set items that you want to try, or you’re running through that program. Longer term, there might be a two-year plan, a three-year plan, maybe a six-month plan, and you know you’re going through that, and you’re heading down an avenue.
“The difference between being the race driver and the test driver is that you don’t have an agenda as the test driver. You become quite impartial, and I suppose that’s where the role can be very invaluable — that you just say it as you see it, and that you’re removed slightly from what’s happening on the race team.”
While you’d think being a race driver would bring with it a huge weight of expectation, King adds that testing, being relied on by those race drivers, can bring its own pressures.
“In truth, this week I’ve felt really quite relaxed,” he says of his switch from tester to racer. “I’ve felt more pressure when I’ve done some of the test days. We’ve had two, three weeks worth of preparation, and the pressure builds as the weekend goes. But it all feels controllable, and I feel that we’ve done everything we can and I’ve controlled everything I can.
“Testing, I suppose, is a different side of the pressure. You need to get it right, but then I’m always a believer that I will put more pressure on myself than what other people will.”
Throughout the year teams had racked up a to-do list specifically for the Berlin test. There was also forward planning, too, with six races of the 16 race season to follow the weekend in the German capital.
“We had a quite a long list of items and it’s a case of something coming up during the course of the year and you’d really like to explore it a bit more, but you’re not prepared to do that on the race weekend, so you put it on the Berlin list, or the Valencia list coming out of here,” says Griffiths. “We’re gathering up test pieces, test points, through the course of the year, as the races unfold, as we learn more and more about the car, and because we’re always learning, every weekend there’s something new.
“We’re also thinking ahead. The next two races are going to be very similar to this one. Shanghai and Portland have similar circuit characteristics, and then also thinking ahead to London. While it might not be something that’s going to make you quick round Berlin, it could actually make you quick round London.”
The test will have very little bearing on next season, however. With the arrival of GEN3 Evo for the next campaign, Formula E will be getting a new car with a new aerodynamic profile, new tires and all-wheel drive, and Griffiths says learnings from this test will have a “limited” use in terms of 2024-25 preparation. But that only highlights the importance of simulation, and the Berlin test’s relation to that.
“Valencia (next year’s pre-season test) for us is going to be the real opportunity to get that first look at it,” he says. “It’s going to be simulator work to really understand. A lot of what we do is always looking at the simulator, and the simulator is only as good as the correlation back to the real world.
“So the more that we can do to compare the results we get out and simulators and the results that we get on the car — even if it’s not absolute numbers, but directionally correct — that gives us confidence that when we see the simulator showing a particular trend we’ve got, then we go to the racetrack with reasonable degree of certainty that that’s actually going to translate to how the car behaves.”
Andretti Global has extended its partnership with Porsche in Formula E by two years, with the German brand to continue supplying it through the 2025-26 season. The two aligned at the start of the GEN3 era last season, and secured the drivers’ title …
Andretti Global has extended its partnership with Porsche in Formula E by two years, with the German brand to continue supplying it through the 2025-26 season.
The two aligned at the start of the GEN3 era last season, and secured the drivers’ title with Jake Dennis, as well as three race wins and 15 podium finishes over the last season-and-a-half — all courtesy of Dennis (pictured above). The British driver remains a title contender this season, currently sitting 13 points behind Porsche factory driver Pascal Wehrlein, who tops the standings.
“It’s an exciting time to be a part of Formula E and we feel confident in our position in the series, which is due in large part to our partnership with Porsche,” said Michael Andretti. “From day one our goal has been to win races and championships, and Porsche has helped us achieve both since joining forces in Season 9. With all the success we’ve shared with the GEN3 car, I can’t wait to see what we can do together in the GEN3 Evo era.”
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With the two organizations enjoying a strong and successful partnership in Formula E over the last two years, Andretti team principal Roger Griffiths said “there was never any doubt” that the deal would be extended.
“We are very pleased to announce the extension of the Andretti and Porsche agreement to work together for the next two seasons,” he said. “There was never any doubt in our mind about who we’d want to be working with. We have had a very special relationship with Porsche Motorsport, both on and off the track, and we have seen an awful lot of success together. Hopefully, we can share more success in the future.”
Porsche’s Thomas Laudenbach added that the brand was “obviously very pleased” to renew with Andretti.
“The Andretti name is one of the most renowned in global motorsports, so the contract extension is of particular importance to us,” said Laudenbach, vice president of Porsche Motorsport. “Andretti and the Porsche factory team work together in many areas in Formula E. We drive each other to peak performances.
“The standings at the halfway mark are proof for this: both teams find themselves in the top three, and so do two of the four drivers. Plus, together we are leading the manufacturers’ trophy for Porsche.”
Members of the U.S. Congress have written a letter addressed to Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei to express “concerns with apparent anti-competitive actions” that could stop Andretti Global’s bid to enter Formula 1. Andretti has partnered with General …
Members of the U.S. Congress have written a letter addressed to Liberty Media CEO Greg Maffei to express “concerns with apparent anti-competitive actions” that could stop Andretti Global’s bid to enter Formula 1.
Andretti has partnered with General Motors on a prospective F1 team, but has so far been knocked back in its attempts to join the grid by Formula One Management (FOM). While the entry was not completely rejected, FOM stated it would only consider Andretti’s application for 2028 when GM intends to build its own power unit.
Mario Andretti had stated talks were planned between the team and FOM at this weekend’s Miami Grand Prix, but was present in Washington on Wednesday following the publication of the letter from a bipartisan group of members of Congress, led by Republican John James who represents a district in Michigan.
“FOM’s rejection appears to be driven by the current lineup of European Formula 1 race teams, many of which are affiliated with foreign automobile manufacturers that directly compete with American automotive companies like GM,” the letter reads. “It is unfair and wrong to attempt to block American companies from joining Formula 1, which could also violate American antitrust laws.”
The 12 members call for responses to three specific questions, asking:
“Under what authority does FOM proceed to reject admission of Andretti Global? What is the rational for FOM’s rejection, especially with respect to Andretti Global and its partner GM, potentially being the first American-owned and America-built race team?
“The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 outlaws unreasonable restraints on market competition to produce the best outcome for the American consumer. How does FOM’s denial of Andretti Global and GM, American-owned companies, square with Sherman Act requirements, since the decision will benefit incumbent European racing teams and their foreign automobile manufacturing affiliates?
“We understand that GM intends to re-introduce its Cadillac brand into the European market, which would support thousands of good-paying American automotive jobs, especially with Formula 1’s worldwide audience and its halo effect on its racing teams and sponsors. How much did GM’s and Andretti’s entrance into racing competition taking a portion of the racing market share and GM’s entry into the European market taking market share each play into the decision to deny admission to the Andretti Global team, given the public outcry of incumbent Formula 1 teams against a new American competitor?”
The letter requests responses by Friday, May 3, although does not appear to reference FOM’s own statement outlining its reasoning for focusing on 2028 for any Andretti Global entry.
Explaining its standing alongside the FIA in determining whether to add a new team to the grid, FOM stated in January: “The process set out in the invitation provides that both the FIA and the Commercial Rights Holder must consider an application suitable in order for a new entrant to be selected.”
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FOM also added that Andretti’s need to use a compulsory power unit supply from Renault in 2026 and 2027 before GM’s own power unit was ready “would be damaging to the prestige and standing of the Championship,” while it claimed Andretti’s brand would benefit from being in F1 more than F1’s would by accepting Andretti’s entry, and suggested an 11th team would “place an operational burden on race promoters” due to the space at certain venues.
“We would look differently on an application for the entry of a team into the 2028 Championship with a GM power unit, either as a GM works team or as a GM customer team designing all allowable components in-house. In this case there would be additional factors to consider in respect of the value that the applicant would bring to the Championship, in particular in respect of bringing a prestigious new OEM to the sport as a PU supplier.”
Formula One Management Ltd — a company registered in the UK — and Liberty Media have yet to provide a response to the letter.