Ilott becomes first PREMA IndyCar driver

PREMA Racing has announced Callum Ilott as its first driver for its debut IndyCar season in 2025. The 25-year-old Brit joins the team off the back of 38 IndyCar starts for Juncos Hollinger Racing and Arrow McLaren, where he has scored a pair of …

PREMA Racing has announced Callum Ilott as its first driver for its debut IndyCar season in 2025. The 25-year-old Brit joins the team off the back of 38 IndyCar starts for Juncos Hollinger Racing and Arrow McLaren, where he has scored a pair of top-five finishes and a further two top-10s.

“It’s an incredible opportunity to experience IndyCar with PREMA, their first steps in the series and in the U.S.,” said Ilott. “What an amazing chance.

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“I love the racing, I love these cars and I love the team, so it’s great to be back to what they call the Italian family home. It’s going to be something special to build off, a lot of hard work but I’m excited to join the team and see what we can do together.”

While the 2025 season will be PREMA’s first in IndyCar, its first driver signing is no stranger to the team. Ilott competed in the 2017 European Formula 3 Championship with PREMA, where he took six wins en route to fourth in the championship. He also raced for the team in that year’s Macau Grand Prix, where he won the qualifying race, before finishing 15th in the main event

“We are absolutely delighted to welcome Callum back with us for this new chapter of our history,” said PREMA owner Rene Rosin. “We had a great time working with him in Formula 3, and we always kept an eye on him after that.

Ilott previously raced for PREMA in the 2017 FIA Formula 3 European Championship. James Gasperotti/Motorsport Images

“He proved to be a great fit for us in the past, and I think he will feel like picking up something he had left off. He proved his outstanding speed skills everywhere he competed. In addition, his prior IndyCar experience will be an invaluable asset. Now that the opportunity to get back together has come, we are determined to make the most out of it.”

After a spell in F1, where he was an Academy driver and subsequently test driver for Ferrari, as well as a reserve for its customer teams Haas and Alfa Romeo – with whom he also participated in three free practice sessions in Austria and Portugal across the 2020 and ’21 seasons, Ilott moved over to IndyCar.

He debuted with Juncos in Portland towards the end of the 2021 season, then spent the following two years with the team, before moving to FIA World Endurance Championship campaign with Hertz Team Jota this year.

Ilott was handed an IndyCar lifeline at the start of this year, however, competing in St. Petersburg and the Indianapolis 500 for McLaren in place of the injured David Malukas.

“We are really looking forward to welcoming Callum to our IndyCar team,” said Prema CEO Piers Phillips. “His previous experiences in the series, combined with those with PREMA, will make him a key asset as we try to merge the team’s European heritage with what it will be able to learn in the U.S.

“We know Callum as a very talented driver, but we can also see how his professionalism has matured in the series. The information and feedback he will be able to share will be extremely important, as much as his impressive racing skills.”

Opportunities knocking for Ilott in IndyCar, WEC

Another stirring drive at the Indianapolis 500 has only helped Callum Ilott’s stock value rise in the NTT IndyCar Series. Starting 15th for the Arrow McLaren team, Ilott was the first car to visit pit lane – during the parade laps – to deal with a …

Another stirring drive at the Indianapolis 500 has only helped Callum Ilott’s stock value rise in the NTT IndyCar Series.

Starting 15th for the Arrow McLaren team, Ilott was the first car to visit pit lane — during the parade laps — to deal with a failed weight jacker, and after starting from the back of the 33-car field, he spent the race going backwards and forwards on the way to finishing 11th, one spot better than in 2023 when he went from 27th to 12th for Juncos Hollinger Racing.

With an interesting free agent pool that includes 2016 Indianapolis 500 winner Alexander Rossi plus race winners Christian Lundgaard and Rinus VeeKay, Ilott is drawing plenty of attention from IndyCar teams, and in a new twist, opportunities of equal or greater size are emerging for him in the FIA World Endurance Championship.

Entering the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Ilott and his teammates at the privateer Hertz Team JOTA program are holding a prime second place in the WEC’s Hypercar championship after securing a second to open the season and a win at the most recent round with their hybrid Porsche 963.

As a result, the lifelong open-wheeler has become the big new name in international endurance racing and is being courted by major factories to join their Hypercar programs, and has IndyCar teams inquiring about his availability.

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It comes in stark contrast to where he sat nearly 10 months ago when his relationship with the Juncos Hollinger team was at an all-time low. After a season filled with disagreements with the outfit over its handling of social media attacks fired at Ilott by some of his teammate’s fans, he split with the team — despite have one more year on his contract — as the situation became untenable for the Briton.

“I think things are not just looking up career-wise, but also mentally,” Ilott told RACER. “You have to hit some lows to feel good about the position you’re in, and JOTA helped me out of that situation at the end of last year and I knew I could do a good job in that position. We’re currently P2 in the championship as a privateer team and I’m thoroughly impressed with the team. They’re thoroughly impressed with me, I hope. And that has re-ignited the competition side that maybe I’ve missed after being a reserve driver in Formula 1, and then again fighting for top 10s the last couple of years in IndyCar has helped massively.”

Ilott helped make JOTA’s privateer Porsche 963 a Hypercar winner at Spa, although his WEC success limited his IndyCar availability this season. Motorsport Images

With his WEC schedule presenting a handful of conflicts with the remaining IndyCar races, Arrow McLaren chose to sign 2023 Formula 2 champion Theo Pourchaire to complete the calendar in the No. 6 Chevy. But with Meyer Shank Racing’s recent call to park Tom Blomqvist in the No. 66 Chevy, there’s a possibility of seeing Ilott in action at some of the road and street course events left to run.

And then there’s 2025 where his services could be called upon by a few IndyCar teams who’ve inquired about a certain front-running veteran to improve their results. On the other end of the scale, Ilott, the former Ferrari Driver Academy member, will need to weigh the offers and stability presented with factory Hypercar seats in the WEC.

“Getting these opportunities in IndyCar this year was unexpected and I never know what might happen later on in the season,” he said. “It was a privilege and a bonus to race with Arrow McLaren. I think being in a good headspace and without any pressure, maybe that helped with the results. Getting integrated in a last-minute scenario was not too easy, but they were happy with the job I did and it was solid and I built a good relationship with them. Everything positive on that side and it’s nice to be back in that trusted place to do a good job. Both in Europe and the U.S.

“It’s just nice to be getting these opportunities and to be on people’s minds because I think 2022 was strong for that (with Juncos Hollinger) and 2023 seemed to slowly slip away as the year went on. But we’re back where we belong and I feel our future is in a good place.”

The downs and ups of Ilott’s wild day at Indy

Callum Ilott qualified 15th for his third Indianapolis 500. The Briton then went on to finish a career-best 11th for Arrow McLaren, but those numbers don’t speak to the wild events that took place with his No. 6 Chevy between the pace laps and …

Callum Ilott qualified 15th for his third Indianapolis 500. The Briton then went on to finish a career-best 11th for Arrow McLaren, but those numbers don’t speak to the wild events that took place with his No. 6 Chevy between the pace laps and checkered flag on Sunday.

Things went sideways for Ilott moment after pulling away from the grid to complete the four warmup laps, and it was merely the start of what the Speedway had in store for the 25-year-old.

“When you start the race, it should be pretty straightforward as it was for 32 other people, but unfortunately, when I was doing a little check of the weight jacker, it decided to creep up and get stuck on the maximum understeer side,” Ilott told RACER of becoming the latest of a few drivers to experience weight jacker issues this month.

“Clearly there was an issue there and it was something that obviously wasn’t anticipated by me or the team at the time, so I pitted and we went through power-cycling the car, ” he continued. “Then I suggested a steering wheel change, but that did not fix it. We couldn’t solve the issue, so I went back out and was catching back up to everyone to start from last. At that point, it was what we’ve got, so we just had to try and manage max understeer.”

If dealing with a car that didn’t exactly want to turn while losing a midfield starting position for being at the tail end of 32 cars wasn’t enough to handle, Ilott got to deal with the multi-car crash in Turn 1 on the first lap and did his best to avoid being included in the wall-banging affair.

“We did the start and I was very lucky to avoid that contact,” he said. “Unfortunately, I clipped Pietro [Fittipaldi] trying to go down the inside; I don’t think his spotter told him I was below him and I was trying my best to keep down low. Some people brake to avoid such things and others try and roll through them to avoid these things.

Ilott’s Arrow McLaren was jacked up from the start…but not in a good way. Michael Levitt/Motorsport Images

“Every pit stop we did from there was adding front wing to compensate for the understeer. And by the middle of the race, it was a pretty reasonable car. I couldn’t follow too closely, because as soon as I lost the downforce, I had no mechanical front grip, but I was able to sit quite nicely three car lengths back and just wait for opportunities. And then of course at the restarts as well and we tuned and tuned the car, and by the end, it was pretty pointy (oversteering) a bit more than I would have liked. But that was what was needed to stay in the pack and we fought our way through. I think I got up to P13 before a little incident with Kyle Kirkwood in the pit lane.”

Nerfed from behind by his good friend Kirkwood of the Andretti Global team nearing the race’s halfway point, Ilott’s stop took longer than desired after his No. 6 Chevy missed its marks in his pit box, and Kirkwood was given a drive-through penalty for the contact. Some blamed Ilott for the incident, and few felt the Andretti driver deserved such harsh punishment for the contretemps.

“It put me back down to last, and unfortunately for Kyle as well,” Ilott added. “I had a couple of checkups on pit lane, which meant he was right behind me. And because I was avoiding one person, I was a bit slow to get to that transition lane and then he was a bit slow to react to me. It obviously wasn’t intentional for either of us.”

Despite the frustrating start, Ilott gained confidence – and ground – as the race went on. Josh Tons/Motorsport Images

Feeling somewhat defeated early in the race as he struggled to keep pace with most rivals, Ilott’s Arrow McLaren crew provided a constant supply of encouragement. Forced to start from the back of the field for a second time, Ilott settled in for another come-from-behind march with knowledge that he could regain plenty of ground, but exactly how much — with the race half over — was unknown.

“Honestly, the first two stints, I really didn’t think I was I was gonna make it to the end,” he said. “I thought I’d be out on 105-percent rule. And the boys and girls on the Arrow McLaren stand were keeping me going. You can get pretty negative on how it might go. But it was a long race and when it was looking bleak, they kept me going. At that point, I learned a new meaning of understeer, or as Kyle Larson might call it, ‘tightness.’

“As we kept going and turning on it, the car actually ended up feeling not perfect, but a lot better than where it started. I was not massively competitive, but we definitely did great pit stops towards the end and we made big progress. I’d love to see the stats on who did the most overtakes, because I think we were in competition for that award.”

Last year, Ilott was lauded for starting 27th and improving to 12th. This year, he went one position better, but it involved going from P15 to last to P13, then back to last, and finally up to P11.

Altogether, Ilott and the No. 6 team put in a remarkable amount of work to deliver a result that flew well under the radar.

“I was just happy to get it done,” he said. “That race is never straightforward. I’m just happy with the team that that they continued to push and got me in the right direction through kind of every mishap and kept trying. All things considered, and with how disastrous it could have been at so many points, it was a really solid effort we can be proud of.”

McLaren fights through a day of Indy 500 qualifying struggles

It was a truly strange day for the team led by Gavin Ward. Kyle Larson’s first qualifying attempt was interrupted when an “engine event” – a fire in the turbo plenum – robbed power from the No. 17 Arrow McLaren/Hendrick Chevy. Callum Ilott’s strong …

It was a truly strange day for the team led by Gavin Ward.

Kyle Larson’s first qualifying attempt was interrupted when an “engine event” — a fire in the turbo plenum — robbed power from the No. 17 Arrow McLaren/Hendrick Chevy. Callum Ilott’s strong qualifying performance was disqualified when the No. 6 Chevy’s left-rear wheel offset was found to be illegal in the post-run technical inspection. Pato O’Ward’s No. 5 Chevy was due to roll out for its first qualifying attempt, but the Arrow McLaren team decided it didn’t like something with the car and kept it in the garage for more investigative work.

Alexander Rossi rolled out and fired the No. 7 Chevy into the fourth-fastest speed in the heat of the day. O’Ward made it out and, as the team declared for the second time in two hours, another “engine event” hampered one of its cars and left him with the second slowest average of the day at that point in time. Larson, with a ready and recalibrated machine at his disposal, flew to sixth. Ilott followed in suboptimal conditions but salvaged a run that placed him 18th.

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O’Ward completed his first proper run at 3:39 p.m. and flirted with being on the second row but lost speed on each of the four laps and fell to 19th.

For Arrow McLaren, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was the worst kind of roller coaster on Saturday, but it all came good in the end as Rossi (fourth), Larson (sixth) and O’Ward (10th) will run for the pole Sunday in the Fast 12, while Ilott (15th) persevered and was rewarded.

But not before Ward held his breath for what felt like hours on end.

“We feel like we made hard work for ourselves today, but at the end of the day, we were confident that we would get some good [qualifying] runs and be where we think we deserved to be,” the Canadian told RACER. “And that’s where we ended up. You always want more. This team has resilience. It’s just fun to see a team of racers come together who love to do this. This is the coolest day in motor racing.

“I can safely say that, with all my all my experience with everything I’ve seen, I don’t think it’s any better than Saturday when there’s bumping at the Speedway, and it is a chance to get to do what we love to do. Yeah, it was a little stressful at times, but you know, you’ve just got to appreciate you get to do this for a living. I love it man.”

Arrow McLaren confirms Ilott for Indy 500

Fresh off his first FIA World Endurance Championship Hypercar win at Spa-Francorchamps, Callum Ilott will look to continue his strong month of May in the No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevy as the final driver confirmed within the field of 34 entries for the …

Fresh off his first FIA World Endurance Championship Hypercar win at Spa-Francorchamps, Callum Ilott will look to continue his strong month of May in the No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevy as the final driver confirmed within the field of 34 entries for the Indianapolis 500.

The Briton, who raced from 27th to 12th for Juncos Hollinger Racing last May at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, will attempt to qualify for his third Indy 500 and get the process started on Tuesday at the opening of practice for the great American race.

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“Callum brings experience with this team and at the Indy 500 that we think is very valuable as we enter the biggest two weeks of our season,” said team principal Gavin Ward. “He and the team got along well during the first two events of the season, and we’re looking forward to carrying that over here. I’m confident that Callum and the No. 6 NTT Data Chevy team will be competing near the front of the grid during qualifying and on race day, just like the rest of our cars.”

Ilott raced for the team at St. Petersburg and The Thermal Club; the Indy 500 is his last scheduled event for Arrow McLaren as Frenchman Theo Pourchaire is set to complete the rest of the season in the No. 6 once Ilott is finished in Indy.

Ilott expected to remain in Malukas’ McLaren seat for Indy Open Test

Callum Ilott’s substitution tour with Arrow McLaren is expected to continue on Wednesday and Thursday in what would be his fifth appearance in the No. 6 Chevy. The Briton would step in again for the injured David Malukas at the two-day Indy Open …

Callum Ilott’s substitution tour with Arrow McLaren is expected to continue on Wednesday and Thursday in what would be his fifth appearance in the No. 6 Chevy.

The Briton would step in again for the injured David Malukas at the two-day Indy Open Test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway – the only pre-event test for the Indy 500 – as Malukas continues to recover from surgery to the wrist and hand injuries suffered during pre-season training in February.

Ilott would rejoin teammates Pato O’Ward, Alexander Rossi, and IndyCar rookie Kyle Larson; with rain in the forecast for both days, and no plans by IndyCar to run on Friday, it’s unclear how much action he and the other drivers in attendance will see around the 2.5-mile oval.

Having subbed for Malukas at a hybrid engine test, a group test at Barber Motorsports Park, at the first race of the year at St. Petersburg, and at the recent $1 Million Challenge at The Thermal Club, Ilott has become a familiar presence within the team.

The Indy Open Test, however, would mark Ilott’s last stand-in opportunity for the time being as the next race on the calendar on April 19-21 at Long Beach clashes with his full-season role driving for Hertz Team Jota in the FIA World Endurance Championship.

For Arrow McLaren, the obvious hope is to have Malukas back for Long Beach, which leads into a busy stretch of racing as the Barber race follows the next weekend and then the month of May at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. If Malukas is able to start his championship run at Long Beach, the disruption due to injury will be kept to a minimum thanks to the Thermal event being a non-points exhibition.

But if he’s unable to go on the Southern Californian streets and the physically grueling road course at Barber in Alabama, Arrow McLaren would need to find another driver to keep the No. 6 Chevy in motion for those races, and any hope of achieving a meaningful result in the Drivers’ championship would be lost for Malukas.

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

How the Ilott-JHR partnership ended in divorce

If the split between Juncos Hollinger Racing and Callum Ilott was treated like a divorce, the paperwork filed by both sides would cite “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the dissolution of their marriage. The change in relationship …

If the split between Juncos Hollinger Racing and Callum Ilott was treated like a divorce, the paperwork filed by both sides would cite “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the dissolution of their marriage.

The change in relationship status wouldn’t have been necessary if more care had been taken — more empathy shown — during a tumultuous season, but nonetheless, I’m convinced the termination of this relationship is what’s best for all involved.

How we got here and how they move forward requires a lot of unpacking. Having monitored the situation all season, the twists and turns that led to this unfortunate outcome were never necessary, but before we venture down that road, let’s start with the more immediate question of whether Ilott has a realistic chance of racing next season.

I called around to the IndyCar teams with known vacancies and struggled to find anything for Ilott that would be considered an upgrade from JHR. Andretti Global, which has yet to declare its intentions for its fourth entry, said it doesn’t have any openings. A.J. Foyt Racing could be a destination for Ilott, who would seemingly hold a lot of value on the Penske side of the new Penske-Foyt relationship, but the Foyts need funding to be attached to anyone who might drive its cars in 2024, and Ilott is a paid professional, not someone who brings money to a team.

The only hope I can summon for Ilott next season is with Dale Coyne Racing, and even that comes with caveats. Coyne is by no means lacking in driver options, and in the case of at least three prospective pilots, they have significant budgets to bring to the team. Ilott is tons better than any of those on Coyne’s short list, so Coyne faces a question of how competitive or how well paid he wants to be next year.

If it isn’t Coyne or Foyt, it might be IMSA, WEC, or SRO in a bridge year for Ilott, who turns 25 next week.

If only Juncos and Ilott split soon after the contentious September 10 season finale. As one team principal told me, “The timing is really unfortunate because if [Ilott] was free to have a month ago, he’d have been taken.”

And if that timing was back in summer, we might be referring to him as Andretti’s Ilott or Arrow McLaren’s Ilott or Ganassi’s Ilott. Even if the end came in early October, I’d bet Ilott would be strapping into the No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevy as Rinus VeeKay’s new stablemate. Instead, he’s entering an IndyCar driver market that’s almost barren.

If nothing materializes next season, Ilott should have better options in 2025, but that’s a long way off and a lot of things could change in the meantime.

And who will replace Ilott? I’ve been convinced for the better part of two months that Romain Grosjean is headed to JHR, and I won’t be surprised if he’s confirmed as the new driver of the No. 77 Chevy.

I first had Grosjean replacing Agustin Canapino in the No. 78, but sponsors were recently found to keep the Argentinian in the seat. Still, I continue to hear the Swiss-born Frenchman is inbound at JHR. We’ll know on Thursday, and if it isn’t Grosjean, who is represented by the same manager as Ilott, I have no idea whose name will be on the car.

The combination of Ilott and JHR held immense promise as the team made a surprise return to IndyCar after a two-year hiatus. From 2017-19, Juncos Racing generated a headline or two, but never threatened the top teams and had to rely on paying drivers at most rounds.

To ensure their new venture was unlike the last, Ricardo Juncos and new partner Brad Hollinger went searching for a driver to lead the team on its return to IndyCar in 2021 who could bring something fresh and exciting to the renamed program.

Ilott was the perfect pick to spearhead Juncos Hollinger when the revitalized team made its debut late in 2021. Jake Galstad/Motorsport Images

The single-car team, which struggled to attract championship-caliber staff in every area of the building, was fortunate to acquire Formula 2 star and Ferrari Formula 1 test driver Ilott, who was signed to run three late races as a precursor to embarking on a full-season campaign in 2022.

New to the car, tracks, and oval racing, llott was as good as advertised, especially with such a daunting learning curve to overcome. Across 16 races, he produced eight finishes between eighth and 15th for the small outfit on the way to placing 20th in the championship.

JHR expanded to two full-time entries in 2023 with 15-time Argentinian touring car champion Canapino as Ilott’s teammate. Ilott’s road racing expertise was complemented by a major rise in oval prowess where a fighting run to ninth at Texas and a 12th at the Indianapolis 500 were signs of his year-to-year growth. While Ilott didn’t love ovals as a rookie, that changed in his second season as he found his groove and was always one to watch.

Boosted by an opening charge to fifth to start the year on the streets of St. Petersburg, and another fifth to close the season on the Laguna Seca road course, Ilott improved to 16th in the standings with the No. 77 Chevy, one spot behind Graham Rahal and one ahead of new Arrow McLaren driver David Malukas.

Canapino also impressed as the open-wheel and oval rookie finished 21st in the championship in the No. 78 Chevy, and as a tandem, the JHR drivers ensured their entries would receive $915,000 Leaders Circle contracts from IndyCar for placing inside the top 22 in entrants’ points. Those are the positives to chronicle from the 2023 season.

The parting of ways, as I understand it, was in motion for weeks and mostly stems from the fallout of the social media attacks Ilott received from some of Canapino’s fans, which made for two of IndyCar’s ugliest moments of the year.

And for the sake of absolute clarity, Ilott bore no responsibility for the social media attacks.

The first, at the conclusion of April’s race at Long Beach, came when he was blamed for impeding Canapino and was also attached to the cause for his teammate’s crash, which came after Canapino briefly led the race when he inherited the lead as most of the field pitted and resumed behind his No. 78 entry. The blame for the latter came despite being uninvolved in his teammate’s meeting with the wall.

The furor raised towards Ilott, which he largely attributed to a hysterical commentator on the Latin American IndyCar feed, inspired all manner of online threats from an element of Canapino’s fan base towards the No. 77 driver and his family.

In response — more than 24 hours later — IndyCar posted a message that rebuked the aggressive online behavior. Ilott’s team followed suit with a message of its own on April 18. The race took place on April 16.

To say Ilott felt exposed and inadequately supported by his team throughout the inflamed affair would be a gross understatement, and that feeling returned a few more times before the season was over.

Being bombarded for days by his teammate’s fans on social media was troubling for the 24-year-old; JHR could have rushed to Ilott’s defense while at Long Beach, but chose to take its time, weighing in on Tuesday. It had the look of pouring a bottle of water on a house that had already burned to the ground. JHR’s bizarre handling of the situation generated more questions than answers, which undermined the strong relationship it had with its lead driver.

When it happened again, in September at Laguna Seca, JHR took the lead on trying to calm the storm, but once more, the response was late — more than 24 hours after the checkered flag — and by then, the motivation to fight for Ilott in its messaging was gone. In a half-hearted post, the team tipped its hand.

Ilott splits with Juncos Hollinger Racing

Juncos Hollinger Racing announced Thursday that it has parted company with its 2022 and ’23 NTT IndyCar Series driver Callum Ilott, effective immediately. “I want to extend my gratitude to Juncos Hollinger Racing for the opportunity to be part of …

Juncos Hollinger Racing announced Thursday that it has parted company with its  2022 and ’23 NTT IndyCar Series driver Callum Ilott, effective immediately.

“I want to extend my gratitude to Juncos Hollinger Racing for the opportunity to be part of their team. I have immense respect for the organization, and our time together has been a valuable experience,” Ilott said in a statement released by the team. “I look forward to exploring new opportunities and challenges in my racing career.”

“While it is with mixed emotions that we bid farewell to Callum Ilott, I would like to express my gratitude to Callum for all of his efforts during his time with our team, and we deeply appreciate his contributions,” Ricardo Juncos, co-owner of Juncos Hollinger Racing, said in the statement announcing the move. “We wish him the very best in his future endeavors. Callum has shown immense talent, and we have no doubt that he will continue to make his mark in the world of motorsport.”

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JHR stressed that its commitment to continue in IndyCar is unchanged, The team recently announced that Agustin Canapino, Ilott’s 2023 teammate, would return for a second season.

“Juncos Hollinger Racing is committed to its ongoing pursuit of excellence in the NTT IndyCar Series and remains focused on its goals for the 2024 season,” JHR’s statement concluded. “The team will provide updates regarding its driver lineup for the upcoming season in due course.”

Juncos reconsiders Ilott/Canapino clash at Laguna

With a bit of time and distance between the ugly events that took place within the Juncos Hollinger Racing team after drivers Callum Ilott and Agustin Canapino tangled at the Firestone Monterey Grand Prix, team co-owner Ricardo Juncos has taken a …

With a bit of time and distance between the ugly events that took place within the Juncos Hollinger Racing team after drivers Callum Ilott and Agustin Canapino tangled at the Firestone Monterey Grand Prix, team co-owner Ricardo Juncos has taken a fresh look at the situation and come to a few conclusions that are different than the ones he offered moments after the checkered flag waved.

Ilott and Canapino were given clear directives prior to the start of the 95-lap season finale: Race cleanly, which is a standard order in any multi-car team, and specific to Canapino, whose No. 78 Chevy entry was at risk of losing out on earning $910,000 in guaranteed prize money offered to those who place inside the top 22 in entrants’ points, Ilott — whose No. 77 Chevy was safe in that regard — was asked to do whatever he could to help his teammate secure a Leaders Circle contract for JHR.

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In multiple interviews to Spanish-speaking outlets, Juncos was ​initially unflinching in his support of Argentinian countryman Canapino, whose right-front wing was broken from contact with Ilott’s left-rear tire as the Englishman made a pass around the outside of Canapino in Turn 2 near the end of the race​. Juncos was also critical of Ilott, who was subjected to another torrent of online abuse from some of his teammate’s fans.

Ilott posted in-car footage immediately after the race that showed he was hit by a sliding Canapino in the No. 78 Chevy, but since then, he has remained silent on the matter, leaving Juncos as the primary voice to ​provide clarification and insights on a number of topics related to Monterey.

There are a number of ways to look at the clash between the Juncos Hollinger Racing drivers at Laguna, but Juncos is staying focused on the bigger picture. Richard Dole/Motorsport Images

Speaking from Argentina, Juncos ​a​nswered questions stemming from the heated close to JHR’s season, starting with where he and co-owner Brad Hollinger stand with Ilott for the future.

“My agreement with Callum Ilott is through ’24,” Juncos told RACER. “So like what happened last year when some other teams tr​i​ed to take him, we have a three-year agreement, so as of now, I don’t see why he will not continue.”

JHR plans to confirm its entire lineup in December, and hopes to find the funding to bring Canapino back for his sophomore season.

“The problem is obviously on the last weekend, and all these social media attacks on Callum that obviously magnif​ied the whole situation,” Juncos continued. “But it has no effect at all in my decision to continue with him.”

Among a decent number of those who blamed Ilott and went on the offensive after the race, there was a strong belief he violated an order to not pass Canapino, and was therefore at fault for the contact and damage to the No. 78 car that fell from fifth to 14th. Juncos says that order was never given to Ilott.

​”No, absolutely not,” he said. “The only comments we did to the group is that we as a team are trying to get inside the top 22 with Agustin ​because he was fighting with Andretti and some other guys to get the last Leaders Circle. Second of all, we never ever sent this notice to don’t pass each other. Actually, Agustin, through the whole year, was letting Callum go by every time and he knows he’s a rookie and Callum is the top driver, the number one driver.

“It was a shame they touched with 20 laps to go, so the only thing I sa​i​d as a team owner is you don’t want to see your cars hitting each other. We say that all the time. But we never say to Callum that you cannot pass Agustin. That’s totally false.”

With Canapino’s closest Leaders Circle rivals mired in lap 1 incidents, the No. 78 Chevy was in good standing to deliver a contract to JHR. Canapino was the star of the race — running as high as fourth — while showing front-running pace as he battled with drivers representing IndyCar’s biggest and most successful teams. In the end, he captured 21st in the entrants’ championship.

Referring to the in-car footage of the contact between his drivers, Juncos absolved Ilott of any blame, but did ask if there was a better place the overtake could have been executed.

“Obviously, if you isolate that move, it’s Agustin’s fault,” Juncos said. “But the problem is Agustin never thought that Callum is going to go outside [around Turn 2] to do the pass. He couldn’t believe that from his point of view — Callum had 22 laps to pass Agustin on the straightaway if he wants to, and Agustin was saving fuel, so there was no way he was going to hold Callum’s pace. So in his mind, the pass is gonna be easy, but then it does catch him by surprise. But if you look at the maneuver, it’s Agustin’s fault.”

Juncos also spoke to the lack of intent he saw from the in-car footage.

“Nobody tried to hit each other,” he continued. “Callum doesn’t mean to hit Agustin, and Agustin didn’t mean to hit Callum. And I never said that. If anybody sees the onboard camera, that’s very clear. The only thing I said as a team owner was we should not be risking between the two drivers who are in such a good place for the team. I expect my drivers to think about the team.”

Asked if the temperature within the team has cooled since Monterey where the No. 77 and No. 78 camps split and had limited communication in the hours following the race, Juncos said, “The team is fine​.”

Juncos thinks it’s hard for Americans to fully comprehend the fan support of Canapino in Argentina, which sometimes gets lost in translation. Joe Skibinski/Penske Entertainment

​Next, Juncos open​ed the door on a long and weaving narrative that centered on cultural differences between IndyCar’s English-speaking audience and its Spanish-speaking fans from Argentina.

It would be accurate to say the team’s late and lukewarm rebuke of those who put Ilott in their social media crosshairs was a byproduct of differing views on how online aggression should be ​p​erceived.

“Obviously, we need to talk between all the parties together, face to face,” Juncos said. “And that didn’t happen [in the days after the race] because I went right away to Argentina. So [JHR’s drivers] need to sit down and talk and explain what happened, both of them. I spoke with Callum by phone and I understand his point of view; I agree with some and then he agreed with the risk factor that I was complaining about. He apologized for that because he was the one attacking and he generated the risk for the situation where maybe both cars can be out of the race.

“And that wasn’t a necessary risk at that time of the race, in my opinion. He agrees with that. But we need to sit down and normally these things happen [between teammates] all the time with every team. I don’t know why it’s such a big deal with us.​”

Juncos reiterated a point he’s made a few times since the first attack on Ilott took place after Long Beach in April: The backlash, while undesirable and unpleasant, isn’t out of the norm for what he’s grown accustomed to seeing at home among fans of soccer, motor racing and other sports.

“Listen, the social media needs to be taken as social media​,” he said. ​”You know how much junk is on Twitter? When in Argentinian language and culture they say something in Spanish, and you translate that in English, it’s taken i​n totally the wrong way. We put the statement out to calm the waters down, and it’s been attacked even more because they say we did this in a soft way, and it was later than it should be and all that.

​”I don’t think we need to make a big deal. This happens. The drivers can have the option not to use social media, to block the comments if they’re going to be sensitive to all that.”

​Juncos points to misinterpretation as an underlying problem that’s exacerbated the issue.

“The translation is a problem because there is a passion from the 45 million people here in Argentina,” he said. “And this guy, Agustin, unfortunately, like it or not, he’s a hero here in a country where people tattoo his name on their body and give their child the name of Agustin. He’s a big deal, right? But if you let it go, it’s fine.

“And if this [contact] happened with Pato O’Ward from Mexico, it’s gonna ​have the same [reaction], right? But 20 idiots saying something bad, which obviously I’m not in favor of that at all, cannot be more powerful than all the good things that we did.

“Imagine a Brazil-Argentina soccer match, or Liverpool in England…it’s not just the Argentinian people who says these things. If a guy is ​angry for whatever reason, we should not respond because we need to be smarter than that. So that’s what we need to analyze.​”

He also recognizes that at least within IndyCar’s U.S. fan base, targeted social media hate and threats focused on a driver or team is anything but common.

“We are mixing cultures, which can be dangerous,” Juncos said. “I try to tell people here, the IndyCar fans, to be careful, because the way we act and show our passion doesn’t exist in other places​. That’s not normal and it’s hard for them to understand. This has obviously damaged us in a way. And I agree, we need to talk to IndyCar and have a plan. So we are gonna do our part, gonna listen, and try to do our bes​t to learn from this.”