Arrow McLaren shockingly releases David Malukas in IndyCar Series

Arrow McLaren announced that is has released David Malukas from his contract in the NTT IndyCar Series.

[autotag]Arrow McLaren[/autotag] made a shocking statement on Monday morning that shook the NTT IndyCar Series world. The organization announced that it has released [autotag]David Malukas[/autotag] from his contract for the remainder of the 2024 season. This comes as Malukas missed four races to start the 2024 season after sustaining a left wrist injury in early February.

Malukas’ timeline for a return remains unclear as he continues to heal from his left wrist injury. After moving over from Dale Coyne Racing, he was supposed to make his Arrow McLaren debut alongside Pato O’Ward and Alexander Rossi for the 2024 season. Instead, Callum Ilott and Théo Pourchaire have driven the entry to start the year.

Arrow McLaren is currently working on the entry’s plans for the coming months. It’s unclear if there will be one driver or several, with an opening for the Indianapolis 500 now. As for Malukas, he will continue the process toward a full recovery and hope to be back soon. The young driver has potential, and another race team should look into signing him.

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Why is Pato O’Ward so good at Barber Motorsports Park?

Arrow McLaren IndyCar driver Pato O’Ward is a bit of a savant at Barber Motorsports Park. What makes the Mexican so good on the rolling road course? Let’s ask… RACER’s Trackside Report at the Alabama Indy Grand Prix is presented by Radical …

Arrow McLaren IndyCar driver Pato O’Ward is a bit of a savant at Barber Motorsports Park. What makes the Mexican so good on the rolling road course? Let’s ask…

RACER’s Trackside Report at the Alabama Indy Grand Prix 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.

Pourchaire secures McLaren return for Barber

Theo Pourchaire’s standout debut for the Arrow McLaren team at Long Beach has been rewarded with his second IndyCar race days later at this weekend’s stop at Barber Motorsports Park. The Frenchman’s run from 22 nd to 11 th on Sunday in the No. 6 …

Theo Pourchaire’s standout debut for the Arrow McLaren team at Long Beach has been rewarded with his second IndyCar race days later at this weekend’s stop at Barber Motorsports Park.

The Frenchman’s run from 22nd to 11th on Sunday in the No. 6 Chevy as the latest stand-in for the injured David Malukas made it easy for the team to hold onto the 2023 Formula 2 champion for another outing.

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Speaking with RACER moments after finishing the 85-lap Long Beach race, Pourchaire was all smiles, but also did his best to hide the effects of all he endured in the cockpit during his IndyCar debut.

At Barber, which is one of the two most physically punishing circuits on the calendar, he’ll have an even harder time attacking the steering wheel with full force for the entire race.

“Looking at me now, my shoulders are hurting a lot, to be honest,” he told RACER. “I don’t want to move too much. You know, I feel okay. I’m quite surprised. It was really tough physically, but I was also prepared; I have a reserve role in Formula 1 as well, so I have to be ready at any time.

“IndyCar is a little bit more special because we don’t have any power steering and bumpy tracks like Long Beach makes it really difficult. But you know, I was prepared. I struggled a little bit, I have to be honest, but I will be more prepared for the future if I have another opportunity.”

IndyCar debut thrills Pourchaire: ‘The racing here is incredible’

Arrow McLaren team principal Gavin Ward and sporting director Tony Kanaan were delighted by rookie Theo Pourchaire’s debut performance in the No. 6 Chevy. Both men stood within a few feet of the Frenchman after he placed 11th on Sunday in Long Beach …

Arrow McLaren team principal Gavin Ward and sporting director Tony Kanaan were delighted by rookie Theo Pourchaire’s debut performance in the No. 6 Chevy. Both men stood within a few feet of the Frenchman after he placed 11th on Sunday in Long Beach and heaped praise on the Formula 2 champion’s clean and heady drive.

“It’s a tough spot to put him in and you can see how much he struggled to begin, but I’m impressed, man. He really did a good job,” Kanaan told RACER.

“Theo was dropped in the deep end, and you can’t be dropped in much more deeply than that,” Ward added. “There’s a lot to like about his approach. I think he’s taken the weekend at the right level of aggressiveness. He’s built up to it. He’s got better and better. Theo got all the laps in the race and got all of that learning in.”

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For Pourchaire, who wanted to race in IndyCar as he was completing his European open-wheel training, the hype matched reality across 85 laps where he improved from 22nd to 11th.

“I thought it was going to be a little bit more boring because it’s a street course, you know, so I expected the race to be like a train — everybody behind each other, because it’s tough to overtake on a street course. And in the end, I was really surprised,” he said.

“I had a really good car. That’s why I enjoyed it as well. But I didn’t do any mistakes. I drove well, I did some good overtakes. After doing my first full weekend in IndyCar, the racing here is incredible. I enjoyed it so much from practice one to the last lap of the race. It was a real pleasure. I expected IndyCar to be good, but it’s really amazing. The cars are amazing.”

Pourchaire was pleasantly surprised by the racey nature of both his car and the Long Beach street track. Josh Tons/Motorsport Images

Arrow McLaren’s Alexander Rossi was hit by teammate Pato O’Ward early in the race and suffered slight damage that slowed his outright pace. As a result, Pourchaire was able to follow and learn from Rossi — a two-time winner at Long Beach — and crossed the finish line directly behind the No. 7 Chevy.

“You know, the guys at the front, in the top 10, are really good drivers. My teammates as well — I was behind him [Rossi] and that was really good for me; I could follow him to follow his pace, and that helped me a lot to achieve a good result,” Pourchaire said. “We were the biggest mover of the race as well. Big thanks to the team; they helped me a lot. It’s amazing.”

The 20-year-old hasn’t been confirmed by the team for next weekend’s race at Barber Motorsports Park, but after his performance at Long Beach, it would be a shock if he isn’t in the No. 6 Chevy when practice begins on Friday.

McLaren left stunned by sudden lack of LBGP qualifying pace

The Arrow McLaren team had high expectations for qualifying at Long Beach after Pato O’Ward paced Friday’s practice session, but an unproductive morning session on Saturday foretold what took place while setting the grid for Sunday’s 85-lap race. …

The Arrow McLaren team had high expectations for qualifying at Long Beach after Pato O’Ward paced Friday’s practice session, but an unproductive morning session on Saturday foretold what took place while setting the grid for Sunday’s 85-lap race.

O’Ward’s teammate Alexander Rossi was the best of the Arrow McLaren trio—newcomer Theo Pourchaire wasn’t likely to feature—in 10th, and the situation worsened in qualifying when O’Ward and Rossi failed to make it into the Firestone Fast 12. Rossi topped the roster with a run to 13th, one spot ahead of a bewildered O’Ward in 14th. Pourchaire rounded out the group in 22nd.

“That was a tough one,” said Rossi, a winner in 2018 and 2019 at his home-state race. “I don’t know how we go from the some of the strength we had in practice yesterday to where we ended up today. This series is wild; you never know what you’re going to get.”

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O’Ward shared in the confusion.

“We just didn’t have the pace. I have no real explanation for that,” O’Ward said. “I thought we were going to be able to transfer, but I think we went the wrong direction in practice two and missed the window a little bit. It’s a good thing that we have a fresh set of green [tires] for the race tomorrow. It will be tough to make the climb, but if we can get things dialed in, then we can do it.”

Team principal Gavin Ward tried to find the positives among the negatives.

“These challenges become opportunities to learn and get better, and that’s what we’ll focus on,” he said. “Theo did a good job; he’s been thrown in the deep end here and he’s just been building things up. He beat everyone he realistically probably could have beaten there. We have an opportunity to learn an awful lot tomorrow, so let’s see what we can do in the race.”

Arrow McLaren staying the course with Malukas as his rehab from injury continues

Arrow McLaren would love nothing more than for David Malukas to be in the No. 6 Chevy this weekend at Long Beach. And next week at Barber Motorsports Park, and for the month of May at Indianapolis. Like his team, the irreverent 22-year-old from …

Arrow McLaren would love nothing more than for David Malukas to be in the No. 6 Chevy this weekend at Long Beach. And next week at Barber Motorsports Park, and for the month of May at Indianapolis. Like his team, the irreverent 22-year-old from Illinois is also pining to start his season. But the injuries he sustained in his left hand and wrist from a pre-season crash while mountain biking have not been sympathetic to those desires.

Given a six-week recovery period by his doctors after undergoing surgery on February 13 to repair the extensive damage, the process has reached a full eight weeks without crossing the finish line. To the frustration of Malukas, the healing just isn’t happening as swiftly as he’d hoped. Forced to miss his third race weekend of the year, Malukas finds himself in a maddening place where an established timeline to drive the No. 6 Chevy no longer exists.

“It’s taking longer than we wanted, but we’re still doing everything that we can,” Malukas told RACER at Long Beach.

Left to focus on the areas of rehabilitation that will rebuild strength in his arm while isolating the affected areas, Malukas is in a steady cycle of daily physical rehabilitation to prepare himself for an eventual return to action.

“The main goal right now is trying to do every single muscle outside of the wrist. And that’s still an area where we’re having to wait,” he said. “So we’ve been using a BFR (blood flow restriction) cuff which slightly cuts blood flow off on the hand. It’s almost like adding resistance without adding too much weight. It’s very cool. So we’ve been doing that to get bicep and tricep strength back. And obviously, there’s just all these other little muscles; it’s interesting how many muscles there are in the hand.”

He’ll continue undergoing a race-by-race evaluation by IndyCar’s medical team, and while it’s impossible to rule Malukas out from any upcoming event, the recalcitrant nature of his injury means it won’t come as a surprise if he’s sidelined for at least another month, which would encroach on his ability to compete in the Indianapolis 500.

Still, there’s optimism for his future at Arrow McLaren; as soon as Malukas is ready to climb in and attack without limitations, he’ll pick up where temporary replacements Callum Ilott and Theo Pourchaire leave off.

“That’s not a question. David is under contract. He’s our choice. He was supposed to be in the car for Race 1,” said a matter-of-fact Tony Kanaan, Arrow McLaren’s sporting director.

Malukas has a solid routine in place to manage the physical side of what’s needed to get back to racing. Handling the mental and emotional side, with the constant race-by-race hope to participate in his first race for Arrow McLaren — nearly nine months after he signed to drive for the team — has been the hardest part to handle.

“Obviously, there’s been moments up and downwards, and we wanted it to be a bit quicker, so mentally, it’s a little bit tough,” he said. “But the team has been amazing. Everybody’s super supportive and on my side, so it makes me feel a lot better.”

Tony Kanaan knows all too well what Malukas is going through. Gavin Baker/Lumen

On Arrow McLaren’s side, the Gavin Ward-led team is taking every measure that’s available to help Malukas because it wants him to join teammates Pato O’Ward and Alexander Rossi in the roster spot he was given.

Kanaan is responsible for handling Arrow McLaren’s drivers, and with the need to prepare for two eventualities at each race — where backup drivers are being put on standby for the next for the rest of April and May — he’s also charged with keeping Malukas’s mental state in the right place as they wait for his wrist and hand to mend.

“The biggest issue right now is we need to take care of David. I’ve been through this, unfortunately,” said Kanaan, whose career was paused more than once due to injury. “We need to take care of David’s head to focus on: ‘You just need to get better.’ Now, the uncertainty? Nobody — none of the doctors, nobody — knows when that’s gonna happen. The timeline, it’s something that we all are searching for.

“Because as a driver, you’re looking for the deadline, you’re looking for the last lap, you’re looking to the fastest recovery. We’re a different breed. And then when somebody explains to you that it might take longer…that is what I’m balancing with David. I said, ‘Don’t set the timeline in your head. Don’t let that affect you. Let it be clear. All you need to do right now is ask yourself what you can do to be better.’”

Over the last two months since the accident and surgery took place, Kanaan has become like a big brother to Malukas.

“We’re actually having our physio guy spending 80 percent of his time with David,” Kanaan added. “I’m going to the doctor’s appointments with him; I’m driving him there. I went to my place, got a full sim rig, put it in my truck and drove it to his house so he can have one to use. We’re doing everything we can.”

And there’s the tough reality Malukas has been presented with that Kanaan is having to handle.

It’s only natural for Malukas to feel exposed while he sits and watches other drivers pilot the car he’s meant to represent for Arrow McLaren. Malukas isn’t at risk of losing his seat, but at the same time, there’s also the potential for a strange and uncomfortable decision to make if an Ilott or a Pourchaire puts in a star performance or wins a race.

Having to watch Theo Pourchaire in the Arrow McLaren Chevrolet he should be driving brings adds to the challenge facing Malukas. Michael Levitt/Lumen

With sponsors to service and represent to the best of their ability with the No. 6 Chevy, there’s the unflinching need to always do what’s best for those who make fielding the car possible.

Kanaan cites his friend Helio Castroneves, the four-time Indy 500 winner, whose trial for tax evasion in the late 2000s made it impossible to drive; his boss Roger Penske hired an out-of-work Will Power to fill in and he was soon hired for a full-time role. Power’s been with Penske ever since and has gone on to win Indy and two championships since 2009.

“You’ve got to think about the message you’re sending to the team, right?” Kanaan said. “We’re supporting David. At the same time, I can’t leave a car without a driver. Every race car driver, the first fear when you get hurt is you want to get back into the car because you love what you do, but the first priority is because you don’t want anybody else driving it, because one race can change your life. Helio was about to go to jail, they put Power in the car, Power won the race. Luckily, Penske could run both of them (when Castroneves was done with the trial). Otherwise, Helio was gonna be out.

“This is all caused by the uncertainty of the injury. The whole explanation is, we’re behind him. But every time we put somebody in that car, it is a risk. Not that we’re gonna kick him out, but it will be a discussion. But he’s in the shop every day. He’s part of this team. You can see on social media, he’s in almost every post. There is no more we can do for him. Now, things that we can’t control are happening but we still need to run the car as best as we can.”

Kanaan closed the conversation by reiterating Arrow McLaren’s central position on the Malukas situation. The odds of seeing him race anytime soon are slim, but everyone is committed to making it come to fruition.

“If people think we’re making it a mystery with who we put in the car each time, well, not really,” he said. “We need to get ahead of the game, so we did bring Theo in two weeks ago. And Theo is in the car because Callum is racing in WEC this weekend, otherwise he would have been driving. We don’t want to keep doing these changes; we’re not testing drivers. We’re actually just filling the gap the best we can while waiting for David to come back.

“I told him, ‘Your biggest challenge will be when you think you’re ready. But we need to evaluate how ready you are. Because for you to come back too soon and run 20th is going to do you more harm. But we’re behind you.’”

Pourchaire pleased with progress after first taste of IndyCar at LBGP

Arrow McLaren newcomer Theo Pourchaire was full of smiles after completing his first outing in an IndyCar on Friday during the opening practice session at the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach. The Frenchman got his first taste of the No. 6 Dallara …

Arrow McLaren newcomer Theo Pourchaire was full of smiles after completing his first outing in an IndyCar on Friday during the opening practice session at the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach.

The Frenchman got his first taste of the No. 6 Dallara DW12-Chevrolet, the first feel for Firestone tires, and his first dance with the imposing walls that line the quick 1.9-mile street course and loved every minute of it.

“The car is great to drive,” Pourchaire told RACER after placing 21st in the 27-car field. “It’s very powerful. I’m surprised by that. The power is crazy. And it’s also very difficult physically. The steering wheel is for sure heavy, but the bumps are tough so overall, I’m happy.”

The reigning FIA Formula 2 champion got to enjoy one of Long Beach’s finest products—traffic—and lost the chance to complete a full lap at speed on Firestone’s faster alternate tires. It could limit his progress in qualifying.

“I had a little bit of traffic; I didn’t complete any laps on the alternate tire, which is not a big deal in my first session in IndyCar, so I don’t care if I am finishing 21st or P1,” he said. “The most important thing is to learn, but I didn’t get to do the last two corners [without traffic] which is not so good for tomorrow’s qualifying.

“I don’t have any feeling on the alternate in Turn 10 or the hairpin, but it’s alright. I’m happy. I’m learning lap after lap and I’m happy with the feel of the car.”

O’Ward shoots ahead in opening Long Beach GP practice

Pato O’Ward put Arrow McLaren on top in first practice for the 49th Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, heading Team Penske’s Will Power and Scott McLaughlin in a Chevrolet 1-2-3. Power was the first driver to lap the 1.968-mile 11-turn course under …

Pato O’Ward put Arrow McLaren on top in first practice for the 49th Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, heading Team Penske’s Will Power and Scott McLaughlin in a Chevrolet 1-2-3.

Power was the first driver to lap the 1.968-mile 11-turn course under 68s, with 1m07.6561s which he then lowered to a 1m07.4264s on his seventh lap. Felix Rosenqvist of Meyer Shank Racing took a strong shot at top spot but fell 0.0160s short, before Colton Herta bumped Power by 0.0047s with a 1m07.4217s effort for Andretti Global.

Teammate and defending pole- and race-winner Kyle Kirkwood suffered downshift issues in his Andretti Global Honda in the early part of the session, unable to select first gear, while McLaughlin scraped the wall exiting Turn 8 on his way to fifth fastest at the time. Power would do something similar and take a trip into the Turn 9 runoff, while Newgarden moved himself up to seventh, just behind fellow two-time champion Alex Palou who was the top Chip Ganassi Racing driver at the time.

With his 12th lap, McLaughlin bounded to the top with a 1m07.3976s, just 0.0508s ahead of Herta who took a brief trip into the Turn 8 runoff, while Ganassi’s rookie Kyffin Simpson locked up and stalled in Turn 9 runoff, obliging race control to throw a red flag, just before the checkers.

As explained here, IndyCar continues to work on its format for first practice sessions on road and street courses, so after 45 minutes of all 27 cars being allowed on track, there was a five minute break. Thirteen cars were then allowed out for 10 minutes before parking, then the other 14 took to the circuit. The exception was for rookies who were allowed to participate in both 10-minute sessions. Most teams took the gap as the natural break in which to make the switch to Firestone’s alternate tires, using the guayule-sidewalled Firestones.

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Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s Christian Lundgaard went fastest with 1m07.0855s before Pato O’Ward monstered his Arrow McLaren-Chevrolet around in 1m06.6874s, an average of more than 106mph.

His erstwhile teammate Rosenqvist jumped to second ahead of Lundgaard just before the checker fell, while Indy NXT champion and rookie Christian Rasmussen went fourth fastest in a very encouraging performance for Ed Carpenter Racing.

Out came the other half of the field for their 10 minutes, and Newgarden elected to run three laps on primaries at the start of the session. His teammates McLaughlin and Power delivered 1m06.8s to cement second and third fastest, albeit 0.1384 and 0.1553 off O’Ward’s benchmark, but a fraction ahead of Rosenqvist, Palou, Lundgaard and late improver Alexander Rossi (McLaren). Another red flew when Simpson needed a jumpstart from the Turn 9 runoff, but then Power made a late improvement to trim his deficit to O’Ward down to just 0.0937s. McLaughlin missed the chance to do the same when he went into Turn 1’s runoff.

Formula 2 champion Theo Pourchaire, substituting for the injured David Malukas, finished the session in 21st, 1.5983s off top spot, but happy that he could have done much better had he not encountered traffic while running the alternate tire compound. He turned 34 laps, more than any other driver.

Agustin Canapino excelled, clocking 11th for Juncos Hollinger Racing, while Kirkwood finally got a representative flying lap under his belt – despite a blank dashboard – and jumped to ninth spot.

RESULTS

F2 champion Pourchaire to stand in for Malukas at Long Beach

Reigning Formula 2 champion Theo Pourchaire will make his NTT IndyCar Series debut this weekend at Long Beach with Arrow McLaren as the latest stand-in for the injured David Malukas. “This is an amazing opportunity to drive with such a legendary …

Reigning Formula 2 champion Theo Pourchaire will make his NTT IndyCar Series debut this weekend at Long Beach with Arrow McLaren as the latest stand-in for the injured David Malukas.

“This is an amazing opportunity to drive with such a legendary team in a legendary motorsport series like the NTT IndyCar Series,” Pourchaire said. “I’ve watched IndyCar since I was a young kid, and the racing is incredible. I was thrilled to get the call from the team. I’m grateful [they] thought of me for this opportunity and for the team at Sauber to allow me to get on track at Long Beach. I am also sorry that the opportunity came as David continues to recover. It’s not going to be an easy task, but I’m ready for it.”

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Although a six-week recovery window was expected to have Malukas ready to race at Long Beach, the healing process has not gone as swiftly as desired following the February 13 surgery he underwent to repair wrist and hand damage suffered in a biking accident. Malukas’s return is being evaluated on a race-by-race basis.

Former Juncos Hollinger Racing driver Callum Ilott has covered all of the tests and races in the No. 6 since Malukas was hurt, but with an FIA World Endurance Championship conflict taking priority over Long Beach, Arrow McLaren brought Pourchaire in as a fallback plan if Malukas was unable to drive on the legendary Southern California street course.

The Frenchman is set to wield the No. 6 Chevy and join Pato O’Ward and Alexander Rossi in his first big opportunity since clinching the title in Formula 1’s top development series. Despite winning the 2023 F2 crown, the 20-year-old has followed a familiar path as no opportunities to race in F1 followed his achievement.

Signed as a test and reserve driver for Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber, Pourchaire’s main program is Japan’s Super Formula series, where he’s signed to compete in the nine-race championship for Itochu Enex Team Impul. With back-to-back IndyCar events as the series heads straight to Alabama for the April 26-28 Barber Motorsports Park race, Arrow McLaren could have a need to retain Pourchaire for his second consecutive outing, or bring in Ilott, if Malukas is unable drive.

“It’s a shame that David’s recovery is longer than we all originally anticipated,” said team principal Gavin Ward. “He’s been working with our team trainer very closely with what rehab and strength exercises are possible at this point, and the team’s been doing a great job in the meantime to work together through the changes they’ve had since his injury.

“Theo may be an unexpected driver in the NTT IndyCar Series paddock this season, but we’re excited to see what he can do on the track in Long Beach and are thankful for Sauber in working with us to make it happen. He has a strong résumé, especially for his young age, and he’s eager to work with us and put his driving to the test this weekend.”

Ilott takes Arrow McLaren to the top in Thermal session three

A busy night of work by the Arrow McLaren team paid off for Callum Ilott who posted the fastest lap during the two-hour test session Saturday morning at The Thermal Club. Ilott’s 1m38.778s lap was just enough to demote Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex …

A busy night of work by the Arrow McLaren team paid off for Callum Ilott who posted the fastest lap during the two-hour test session Saturday morning at The Thermal Club.

Ilott’s 1m38.778s lap was just enough to demote Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou—fastest in both Friday sessions—by a modest amount (+0.052s), and behind them, another quick driver from Friday, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s Christian Lundgaard, was further adrift (+0.287s).

“Arrow McLaren did a great job to set it up like they have,” Ilott told RACER. “We did a lot of work over overnight because there was one guy who is quite quick (Palou) that we all needed to catch. I think that was a job well done this morning.”

Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin was fourth (+0.293s), Ilott’s teammate Pato O’Ward was fifth (+0.341s), and Palou’s teammate Marcus Armstrong was sixth (+0.602s).

Beyond the pleasant mid-70s weather and lightly overcast skies, the main item of interest Saturday morning was the downtime required to fix Turn 5, which started breaking up and took quite some time to repair the crumbling surface.

“I was one lap short of that happening,” Ilott added. It was all fine after; they did a good job to repair it.”

The final test session of the event takes place from 1-3 p.m. PT on Peacock, and the day closes with qualifying starting at 5 p.m.

Full results to come