Vautier stars in IndyCar return with Coyne at Detroit GP

Tristan Vautier made it look like he never left. A full eight years and nine months after his last NTT IndyCar Series start on a road or street course, the Frenchman’s impromptu drive at Detroit for Dale Coyne Racing was a revelation for those who …

Tristan Vautier made it look like he never left. A full eight years and nine months after his last NTT IndyCar Series start on a road or street course, the Frenchman’s impromptu drive at Detroit for Dale Coyne Racing was a revelation for those who didn’t know he was this good.

Starting 25th, Vautier rose as high as third on an alternate strategy with his No. 51 Honda. He’d ultimately finish 18th, one spot behind teammate Jack Harvey, after two delays while stopping to avoid other drivers’ accidents, a problematic pit stop where a rear wheel wasn’t secured, losing a lap, unlapping himself, closing the 100-lap race on fading used alternate tires, and the need to pit with four laps remaining conspired against securing a better result.

For those who did know Vautier is a complete package, his shining performance, achieved with no preparation time on a simulator or in testing, was a reminder of how the 2012 Indy Lights champion has always been overlooked for a return opportunity in the series.

“The first lap was pretty intense, especially on a track when you hit the back straight and the car starts zigzagging on you and doesn’t go in a straight line because it’s so bumpy,” Vautier told RACER. “But you’ve got to go because people are trying to run over. We tried to go at a conservative pace to protect the tire wear, but that made it scarier. We were struggling the whole weekend to make our tires work so that made it extra hard, but somehow I felt good in the car and I managed to find my marks fairly quickly and it was cool. It was very enjoyable as well. I really like driving these cars.”

At 34, the older version of Vautier demonstrated a complementary blend of speed and maturity as he ran with the lead pack when possible. He also kept the No. 51 Honda off the walls and away from his rivals’ cars — something that everyone from Josef Newgarden to Pato O’Ward were unable to do.

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“This morning, before the race, I just I told myself, ‘You have to be at the end; you’ve got to see that checker,’ and I was proud that we did,” he said. “I wanted to do my best and make an impression, so I tried to drive as smart as I can. The race was very chaotic. There was a lot of instances where I managed to avoid the chaos. There was a lot of incidents I had to avoid. It was one of those races where people just send it everywhere. I decided I will be at the end, and I was very happy about that.”

Vautier’s race nearly came to an end on lap 17 when he was sent from the pit box without a nut securing the left-rear wheel.

“It’s the first time it happened to me,” he said. “I got to the back straight and something made me not want to go full throttle; there’s something that was odd, so I started lifting and I look at the left side mirror, and I see that something is a bit off. When I got to the hairpin, I knew for sure. And it came off in Turn 6 and then, luckily, I had enough momentum to get back because the car goes into anti-stall that starts interfering and all that. Luckily, I could just roll the car all the way to pit lane. Unfortunately, that lap was so slow that we lost a lap, so then we had to un-lap ourselves and we were on the back foot.”

He won’t be available to race for Coyne this weekend in Road America—he’s off to France to support Chip Ganassi Racing and Cadillac Racing as its reserve driver at the Le Mans test day and then the 24 Hours of Le Mans—but he’s free to do more for Coyne or any other team with a need at Laguna Seca or other events afterwards.

“That’s all I want,” he said. “I have no regrets about the weekend. I feel like I did everything I could to show that I deserve a shot. I hope the phone rings. When Dale Coyne rings, he doesn’t call you for nothing, so I’ll just wait and see if the phone rings…if it’s Dale or maybe someone else.”

Dixon executes another masterclass in messy Detroit GP

It was Detroit Crash City on Sunday as most of the 27 NTT IndyCar Series drivers either hit each other, hit the walls, hit tire barriers, or hit pit equipment, and kept the pace car frustratingly busy as eight cautions and 47 laps under yellow were …

It was Detroit Crash City on Sunday as most of the 27 NTT IndyCar Series drivers either hit each other, hit the walls, hit tire barriers, or hit pit equipment, and kept the pace car frustratingly busy as eight cautions and 47 laps under yellow were required to complete the 100-lap race that was won in yet another masterful display of strategy by Scott Dixon and his No. 9 Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

Indeed, four Honda-powered drivers locked out the front of the field at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix as Dixon sipped fuel—pitting for the final time on lap 56—to do almost half the race on a single tank as caution after caution allowed the No. 9 team to put their driver’s unparalleled ability to conserve fuel to deliver their second victory of the season and record his 58th career IndyCar win.

Dixon was chased home by Andretti Global’s Marcus Ericsson, who got his season back on track, crossing the finish line just 0.8s behind in the No. 28 Honda. Dixon’s teammate and fellow New Zealander Marcus Armstrong completed the podium with the best result of his young career in third with the No. 11 Honda after doing his best to hold off Ericsson until surrendering second with two laps to go.

“I made the comment on the radio at about lap 50, I said, ‘I think we can make it with no more stops from this point if we do one now,’” Dixon said. “Obviously it was risky, but the team called it perfectly. We’re on the right strategy. Honda did a superb job is always. And we won.”

Ericsson was relieved to put a bad start to the season behind him with the run to second as he was able to push as hard as he could while Dixon was running at a slightly reduced speed to make it to the end.

“We had so much pace…one more lap and I might have been able to get the win,” Ericsson said. “Great day. I’m really happy with that.”

After Armstrong and Kirkwood, Alexander Rossi, as he’s done on a frequent basis in 2024, was the top Arrow McLaren driver home and the first for the event’s sponsor with the No. 7 Chevy.

Will Power, whose Team Penske organization was pummeled by misfortune and multiple mistakes on Sunday, persevered through being hit, hitting others, and a pair of penalties to secure a most improbable sixth.

With his win, Dixon took over the championship lead as former leader and teammate Alex Palou finally had his luck run out; he was on the way to a quality finish but got caught in Josef Newgarden’s half spin and sat helpless while waiting for Newgarden’s car to be cleared. Palou dropped to 16th at the finish. Strategy and driving errors robbed polesitter Colton Herta from turning his early dominance into a forgettable run to 19th.

Two years into IndyCar’s move of the Detroit GP from Belle Isle to is downtown home, the constant crashing, across all series at the event—from IMSA to Indy NXT—has made it clear that without a change to the layout, or a move to a different location altogether, the same destruction derby will continue to take place.

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The race got off to an ugly start as Will Power turned himself on the right-front wheel of Theo Pourchaire, and from there, a Turn 3 parking lot developed as Santino Ferrucci, Pato O’Ward, Tristan Vautier, and Linus Lundqvist all got jammed together. Power suffered rear wing damage and had to stop for repairs and he was joined by Felix Rosenqvist, who had a punctured tire.

The restart on lap four saw Kyle Kirkwood take fourth from Newgarden. Dixon also briefly relieved Christian Lundgaard of sixth, but Lundgaard took it back a few turns later. Agustin Canapino, starting 18th, was a big beneficiary of the early melee and was up to 10th.

Out front, Herta — starting from pole on primary tires — had Alex Palou on used alternates sitting within a half-second as the race moved into its eighth lap. By lap 10, Palou was struggling and surrendered second to Scott McLaughlin, Kirkwood, Lundgaard and Newgarden.

Dixon and Pourchaire went by next and dropped Palou to eighth on lap 12 as the Spaniard’s rears gave up; he pitted for fresh alternates as the team’s tire strategy appeared to be a big failure. Forced into a three-stop strategy, the championship leader returned to the race in 24th.

Lundgaard, slightly struggling on alternates, was unable to stop Newgarden from taking fourth, and on lap 16, seconds before a Ferrucci-caused wreck spinning Helio Castroneves who was then hit by Kyffin Simpson, he got into the pits to change tires as the second caution flew.

Palou and Rosenqvist took the opportunity to pit and move to primary tires for the rest of the afternoon. Inside the top 10, all remaining drivers stayed out to stick to their two-stop plan. Only Kirkwood in third and Pourchaire in sixth were on alternates.

The restart on lap 22 had Herta leading McLaughlin, Kirkwood, Newgarden, Dixon, and Pourchaire. Ferrucci was given a drive-through penalty. Rinus VeeKay took 12th from Pietro Fittipaldi at the start of lap 23. The nice surprise at this stage was Christian Rasmussen in eighth.

One lap later, his Chevrolet engine started spewing smoke from the right exhaust bank. He pitted and retired as the race ticked over to lap 25 as Herta held a 1.8s advantage over McLaughlin.

Lap 28 saw the arrival of rain drops on the bumpiest circuit on the schedule. Pourchaire pitted on lap 31 to take primaries; he’d lost sixth to Marcus Ericsson beforehand. He’d emerge in 21st. Herta had 2.8s over McLaughlin on lap 32 as Newgarden took third from Kirkwood, whose alternates were fading.

The next caution was required on lap 33 as McLaughlin spun into the tire barrier at Turn 1. His car looked mostly undamaged. The timing of the caution favored the two-stoppers, who pitted on lap 35. It left Lundgaard in the lead. Newgarden’s strong run was hindered as his fuel probe refused to open; he’d sit for a while as the refueler fought to get it open and then waited for it to fill.

With harder rain starting to fall, a number of drivers, including O’Ward and Newgarden, pitted for rain tires. Andretti kept Herta out initially, then called him in the next lap. Palou pitted from second for wets while Lundgaard stayed out.

“Let’s stay out. Let’s see where this goes,” Lundgaard said on the radio.

Kirkwood, in second, stayed out as well. The brief shower ended quickly, leaving the track wet but likely to dry in short order.

The lap 41 restart had Lundgaard, Kirkwood, Dixon, Ericsson, Grosjean, and Power in the top six. VeeKay was seventh and Palou was the first driver on wets in eighth. Canapino was ninth on alternates. Herta in 10th on down to Sting Ray Robb in 22nd were on wets. IndyCar also penalized Power three positions for failing to pack up.

Kirkwood took the lead from Lundgaard as Power and a lunging VeeKay clashed, which sent VeeKay spinning. He’d stall and the fourth caution flew.

Lundgaard and a wave of drivers including Palou, Herta and Pourchaire pitted for new or dry tires. Lundgaard hit his new right-front tire as he came to a stop in his pit box, and Newgarden also hit equipment—his left-front wheel gun and hose—which wasn’t cleared before he accelerated away. The stuck gun and hose in his right-front wheel assembly pulled the No. 2 Chevy towards the pit wall in Lundgaard’s box before it dislodged and he continued.

The lap 46 restart had Kirkwood leading Dixon, Ericsson, Rossi, Grosjean, Armstrong, Lundgaard, and Palou. Herta, trying to fire down the inside of Palou, tapped the wall, touched Tristan Vautier, and slid into the runoff area and stalled. Caution No. 5.

Lap 50 under yellow had Kirkwood, Dixon, Ericsson, Rossi, Grosjean, and Armstrong holding the top six at the halfway point. Newgarden was 12th and Herta, down a lap, was 23rd. Power, in 21st, was hit with a penalty for service in a closed pit and had to go to the back of the field.

 

The green on lap 53 saw Kirkwood tear away as Grosjean, Armstrong, Lundgaard and Lundqvist got tangled in Turn 3. It was Lundgaard firing down the inside and spearing Grosjean, who was turned around and had Lundgaard’s car climb over his side. Lundgaard reversed and left the scene; Lundqvist didn’t hit anything but got stuck in the queue. Caution No. 6.

Herta, under caution, slammed into the side of Ferrucci at the crash site.

By lap 58, 34 laps of caution had been recorded. Of those who pitted, Dixon was the best who returned in 13th. Grosjean told his team there was no reason to continue—while circulating behind the pace car—due to his championship being ruined. He was told to continue.

The lap 61 restart had Kirkwood and Ericsson up front with Rossi and Palou and O’Ward and Canapino chasing them. Pourchaire clobbered Canapino to take eighth as Newgarden was given a drive-through penalty for hitting his pit equipment. Teammate Power also served his penalty at the same time. Lundgaard was ordered to pit lane to serve a stop-and-go penalty.

Bingo! Caution No. 7 for Robb, who was nerfed into the tires as McLaughlin went down the inside. Grosjean received a drive-through penalty for receiving service in a closed pits. Pourchaire was ordered to surrender three positions for his hit on Canapino.

A huge wave of pit stops on lap 65 saw Kirkwood and the rest of the leaders make their final visit. Dixon, who’d stayed out earlier after pitting on lap 56, was promoted from 13th to first.

The lap 70 restart featured Dixon, Armstrong, Vautier, Kirkwood, Newgarden, Rossi, Palou, and Ericsson in tow. Caution No. 8!

Newgarden rushed into Turn 3, tried to get slowed to avoid hitting Kirkwood, and ended up spinning sideways after clipping Kirkwood’s left-rear. Palou had nowhere to go and came to a stop pointed at Newgarden’s sidepod. Palou would resume in 18th and Newgarden was 19th.

The lap 74 restart had Dixon leading Armstrong, Vautier, Kirkwood, Ericsson, Rossi, Power, O’Ward, Rosenqvist, and Fittipaldi in 10th. Kirkwood went by Vautier for third.

Lap 80 and Dixon was making speed and cruising at the same time up front at he held 3.3s over teammate Armstrong while stretching his fuel tank. Kirkwood was harrying Armstrong in third, 3.6s arrears from the leader.

Newgarden was into the wall with his left-rear and onto pit lane for repairs. A brutal day for the Indy 500 winner. Vautier, on worn alternates, was dropping back — to 14th on lap 85 — but kept fighting.

Ericsson took third off teammate Kirkwood as the race drew to a close.

Lap 90 and Dixon held 1.4s over Armstrong and 3.0s on Ericsson. Herta, newly unlapped, was in front of Dixon. Would he slow the leader?

Dixon finally cleared Herta on lap 95. The lead over Armstrong was 1.3s as Herta ducked into the pits to get out of the leaders’ way. Lap 98 and Ericsson took second from Armstrong, 2.3s back from Dixon. Lundgaard, who’d raced up to fifth, pitted on the last lap for a splash of fuel and returned in 11th.

Dixon held on to win his second race of the year ahead of Ericsson, Armstrong, Kirkwood, and Rossi.

RESULTS

Foster shakes up points with Detroit Indy NXT win

Louis Foster led all 45 laps to win the Detroit Grand Prix on Sunday, moving closer to the Indy NXT by Firestone championship lead after misfortune struck his two closest title rivals. Pole sitter Foster drove his No. 26 Copart/Novara Technologies …

Louis Foster led all 45 laps to win the Detroit Grand Prix on Sunday, moving closer to the Indy NXT by Firestone championship lead after misfortune struck his two closest title rivals.

Pole sitter Foster drove his No. 26 Copart/Novara Technologies car of Andretti Global to victory under caution. It was his second victory of the season and second in a row, as he won the second race of the doubleheader last month on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.

Foster’s fourth career victory helped him jump from third to second in the standings, 25 points behind leader Jacob Abel. He entered this race 44 points behind Abel.

Abel finished fifth in the No. 51 Abel Construction entry fielded by Abel Motorsports. Nolan Siegel, who entered this race second in points, 25 behind Abel, finished 18th after sitting in the pits for the first three laps of the race due to a half-shaft problem in his No. 39 HMD Motorsports car. Siegel dropped to third in points, 44 behind leader Abel.

“We’re second in points now,” Foster said. “Unfortunate for Nolan, he didn’t start the race. That’s a shame. But it’s good for us. Abel didn’t have a great race, either. We’re just continuing our pace throughout the season. Hopefully we just keep getting decent luck, not any more bad luck, and I’ll be happy.”

Two rookies from HMD Motorsports shared the podium with Foster. Caio Collet pressured Foster for nearly the entire race before ending up a career-best second with his second consecutive podium finish in the No. 18 machine. Callum Hedge earned his first podium finish with a career-best result of third in the No. 17 car.

Rookie Myles Rowe produced an inspired drive to a career-best fourth after starting 19th in the 21-car field in the No. 99 HMD Motorsports with Force Indy car.

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While Foster led every lap around the nine-turn, 1.645-mile temporary street circuit, this race was far from a parade. Foster stayed out front on three restarts despite constant pressure from Collet, and there were multiple jousts for position throughout the field.

Collet stayed within about a second of Foster for most of the race, with Foster only extending that gap to two-plus seconds before a caution flag flew on lap 39 due to a spin by the No. 7 HMD Motorsports car driven by Christian Bogle.

Brazilian rookie Collet stayed within about one-half second of Foster on the restart on lap 41 before James Roe spun in his No. 29 Topcon car fielded by Andretti Autosport on lap 42, collecting the cars of Nolan Allaer, Christian Bogle and Niels Koolen in the incident, which triggered the race-ending caution period.

“At the start, I was just managing the gap,” Foster said. “About midway through, I pulled quite a gap on him (Collet), thinking it killed his tires. But to be fair to him, he came back at me quite hard in the late stages of race. It was getting close, but I think we had enough Push to Pass to keep him off.”

One of the most spirited duels of the race also came in the closing laps, between Hedge and Rowe for third. It appeared Rowe had barged past Hedge for his first career podium finish, but that move came just after the race-ending caution period started. So, Hedge was credited with third.

The next race is the Grand Prix at Road America on Sunday, June 9. Live coverage starts at 1:05 p.m. ET on Peacock and the IndyCar Radio Network.

RESULTS

Detroit breakthrough brings a ‘huge sense of relief’ for WTRAndretti

Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque have been racing partners for four years, and have achieved much during that time. And there’s no denying the winning history of Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti in its various guises over the years – …

Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque have been racing partners for four years, and have achieved much during that time. And there’s no denying the winning history of Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti in its various guises over the years — championships, Rolex 24 At Daytona victories, Sebring wins … Wayne Taylor is one of the most successful owners in IMSA’s recent history.

There’s also no denying that 2023 was a rough year for the team. Running a single Acura ARX-06 in the first year of the new GTP formula, WTRAndretti suffered a rare winless year, although there was still a chance for a championship heading into Motul Petit Le Mans. Until the team won at Sebring with the second car it added for 2024 with Jordan Taylor, Louis Delétraz and Colton Herta, the most recent victory was at Road America in 2022. That was the last win for Ricky Taylor and Albuquerque.

Until Saturday. And not only did they win, they won it in WTR style, with a ballsy pass for the lead, courtesy of Ricky. Albuquerque had put the No. 10 in position with a fantastic start, and Ricky Taylor sealed the victory despite the apparent overwhelming strength of Porsche Penske Motorsport.

Winning the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic on the streets of downtown Detroit — and, no, the irony of Acura winning in Detroit while Cadillac took the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach this year was not lost on them — ended a 21-month drought for Taylor and Albuquerque. That meant something.

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“Filipe and I have been together for … this our fourth year,” said Ricky following the Detroit victory. “We’ve had a lot of success together and the 10 car was on a roll for our first three years together. We’ve had a really rough last year and a half. Really struggling, haven’t had a win in a long, long time, and it seemed like nothing could go our way. I think first of all everybody at [Honda Racing Corporation], Wayne Taylor Racing Andretti worked really hard to kind of put us back in the game. Street courses were not our thing. This year we haven’t been fighting really for wins outside of Sebring, and they turned it around here.

“We had we had performance in qualifying — it looked like Filipe and Jordan [Taylor] could have been fighting for a top three very easily. And then at the start of the race, starting from fourth on such a tight track, it’s so difficult to pass we thought a podium would be a bit of a win.”

This is a team and driver pairing that has gone into the finale solidly in the championship fight for the last three years, to the point that finishing a single position ahead of its championship rival would have garnered a title. And for three years they’ve missed that target. But race victories were always on the table, and always a check in the achievement column until last year. But not standing on the top step of the podium didn’t break them; it only made them more determined.

“It’s almost like in a family when you are struggling… in a family when something goes wrong, you just get more united,” said Albuquerque. “Head down; be more humble. Look at details and try to motivate each other on the bad days. So many times we would deserve to win, but things were not coming our way. Just comforting each other — never lose that faith, sticking even more together and knowing that the tables will turn and it’s just around the corner. We just never stopped believing it and I think that’s what happened.”

Albuquerque is no stranger to winning races. And while this one wasn’t one of the “big ones,” it definitely meant something, to the point that it nearly brought him to tears.

“I think this moment just made our team, our Konica Minolta 10 car just stronger. I nearly cried. I mean, it’s just a race … but it felt like almost like winning the 24 hours of Le Mans or Daytona, just because it’s so special. We’ve been suffering so much … I’m not saying unfair but it’s sometimes like we would deserve definitely some wins, but things didn’t come our way. But today came to our side and I’m just super happy that it’s out of the way and now I think it’s the relief of going forward.”

Albuquerque (left) and Ricky Taylor had to wait a long time for this one… Brett Farmer/Motorsport Images

The gap between victories shouldn’t have been that big. Long Beach in 2023 should have gone their way, but a slight miscue during the single pit stop and driver change scuttled their chances. The team learned from its mistakes and made some changes. On Saturday, the single pit stop in the 100-minute race went perfectly.

“The guys nailed the pit stop with the driver change … the driver changes aren’t about the drivers – we can only mess it up – they nailed the pitstop and all the little details went well,” explained Taylor. “Filipe had an amazing start. Without any little detail of that happening the way it did, we don’t win the race. All the tiny decisions on the systems — the set up throughout the weekend understanding all of our practice without IndyCar rubber, and how it evolved…. I can name 100 things that led to the way that the car was and what led to us getting the win.”

Those are the details that make the difference between winning or being runner-up or missing the podium entirely. And finally the No. 10 notched a victory in GTP.

“It’s a huge sense of relief. Every weekend we keep saying we just need to put it together and it’s little details at this level where it separates wins from from being off the podium,” Taylor said. “One thing we can say is we’ve always done our best we’ve never sort of given up and motivation kept increasing, like it doesn’t go down when you stop winning — it keeps going up and we wanted to win more than ever coming in here.”

Chevrolet Detroit GP Saturday recap with Thompson and Kirkwood

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.

WTR Andretti motors back to IMSA victory lane in Detroit

On a tight street course where passing was considered to be at an absolute premium, Ricky Taylor proved it was possible in scooting past Mathieu Jaminet to deliver not only the first victory for the No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti Acura …

On a tight street course where passing was considered to be at an absolute premium, Ricky Taylor proved it was possible in scooting past Mathieu Jaminet to deliver not only the first victory for the No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti Acura ARX-06 of the season, but the first GTP victory for Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque. For the team that had gone without a win in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship since 2022, claiming the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic in the first IMSA race on the downtown Detroit street circuit was an emotional occasion.

Meanwhile AO Racing’s Sebastian Priaulx and Laurin Heinrich scored their second-consecutive victory thanks in large part to every car that made it to the front of GTD PRO having an issue, starting with alternator trouble for the polesitting No. 3 Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Z06 GT3.R, Antonio Garcia pulling the car into the pits for a lengthy stop right after the race start.

No surprise for a tight, 1.654-mile, nine-turn street circuit, the 100-minute race was marked by a surfeit of contact and full-course cautions, five in total, including one with a full track blockage after Jack Aitken in the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac Racing V-Series.R hit and spun Richard Westbrook in the No. 85 JDC-Miller MotorSports Porsche 963 int he tight Turn 1. Many of the incidents affected frontrunners in both GTP and GTD, either as victims or perpetrators.

Starting fourth, Albuquerque made the first move toward the front at the green flag, getting a “buy one, get one free” as he described it by passing both Dane Cameron in the No. 7 Porsche Penske Motorsport 963, who was slowed getting passed by Sebastien Bourdais in the No. 01 Cadillac Racing V-Series.R, and then getting by Bourdais as well. But in the early stages of the race, he had nothing for Nick Tandy in the No. 6 PPM 963.

“We were happy about this weekend,” said Albuquerque. “We had more pace than in the past, in other races, so we knew we could do well. But to be honest, after what’s been happening to us, we need to be humble and we’ve got to start somewhere, so a podium would be good for us. But in the end of the day, we are racers, we go where it takes us and whatever the opportunity takes. The start was a good example of that.”

Albuquerque was gifted the lead a short time later, but Taylor would have to get it back with his pass. Although the No. 6 Porsche Penske Motorsport 963 had started on the pole courtesy of Tandy, the fact that Jaminet had the lead to lose was nothing short of remarkable and the result of a stroke of luck. Tandy had made contact with Daniel Serra in the No. 35 Conquest Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 under braking for Turn 3 and spun the Ferrari. Determined to have responsibility for the incident, the No. 6 received a drive-through penalty, handing the lead to Albuquerque.

Dropped through the field, Tandy stayed out long after most of the GTP field pitted, most of which started as soon as the window to make it to the end of the race on fuel opened. Having cycled to the lead, he put in quick laps at the front. Pitting with just over an hour left, PPM was blessed with a massive gift — a full course caution for the No. 25 BMW M Team RLL M Hybrid V8 stopped on the Jefferson Ave. straight. That allowed Mathieu Jaminet to emerge from the stop in the lead, also helped by the fact that the Porsche needed less fuel to make it to the end.

It looked like Jaminet had what he needed to keep the point, but shortly after the penultimate restart, Taylor clearly had something for him. With Taylor sticking to the back of the Porsche, Jaminet seemed to let his guard down as the pair passed a GT car on the Jefferson Ave. straight. Taylor saw his opportunity and took it, diving to the inside and taking the line away from the Porsche on the entry to Turn 3.

“The Porsche was really strong on short runs on restarts,” explained Taylor. “So the longer it went, we could kind of claw our way back. The Acura guys and the whole team has made a really strong car in the braking and that was really where we’re able to do it. I think had it not been for that one GT car, if we’d had all those restarts after and the way the race went, that was probably my last shot to get him and I’m really relieved that that we took advantage of it because it was still quite a long ways to go. You would have thought there would have been more opportunities, but with how good they were on restarts, I don’t think I would have had another chance.”

Jaminet made no attempt to hide his disappointment with finishing second in a race that he believed the team should have won.

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“I caught traffic at the wrong spot, Turn 1 and Turn 2, that gave him a shot and I underestimated how close he was,” Jaminet said “We were struggling a little bit on the brakes and it seemed to be their strength, so he used the opportunity and [Taylor] did a good move and kind of made it stop. Congrats to them. From my side, yeah, not happy with myself because this is definitely not one of my my best drives today. So something that will work on for the for the future that this doesn’t happen again.”

Bourdais and Renger van der Zande, winners in Long Beach, finished fourth in the No. 01 Cadillac V-Series.R. The No. 7 PPM 963 was fifth with Cameron and Felipe Nasr fifth in the No. 7 PPM 963, making a recovery drive after Nasr suffered a tire puncture and had to make a second call to the pits.

Cameron and Nasr extended their points lead in the GTP standings, holding 1669 points to 1599 for Bourdais and van der Zande, now in second after a tough weekend for the No. 31 Whelen Cadillac Racing squad of Pipo Derani and Jack Aitken, who finished sixth and fell from second to fourth in the points. Jaminet and Tandy sit third with 1586 points.

The AO Racing Porsche came away with the GTD PRO win. Brett Farmer/Lumen

Like the GTP-winning Acura squad, Priaulx and Heinrich started fourth with the No. 777 AO Racing Porsche 911 GT3 R, Rexy sporting a new gold tooth after the team’s win at Laguna Seca last month. However, starting with the problem for Garcia, cars in front of them struck trouble.

That include a two-for-one incident that almost cost AO the race and left them to survive to the end with a broken splitter. Heinrich was pursuing the leading pair of Nicky Catsburg in the No. 4 Corvette Z06 GT3.R and Ben Barnicoat in the No. 14 Vasser Sullivan Racing Lexus RC F GT3 when the two came to blows in Turn 3. Barnicoat dove inside the Corvette while Catsburg tried to close the door and the two cars made contact, the Corvette ending up backwards.

Heinrich had tried to go to the outside as the two combatants had moved toward the inside, but ended nosing into the Corvette.

“The Lexus and the Corvette they were going for it into the hairpin and I saw that, so I wanted to put myself in the best position I could be – A, to stay safe and, B, to capitalize on it,” explained Heinrich of the incident. “They got caught up in an incident and me being on the outside of a really sharp turn. Unfortunately, I hit the spun Corvette. It’s the characteristics of street circuit; there’s not much space to avoid.

“You had a hit, but you don’t know how the car looks from the outside. So immediately went on the radio asking how does it look on the TV images? How did the car look when I passed? At first glance it looked quite OK. But once I came back to the to the backstraight, the splitter was going up and down and touching the floor. It was horrendous inside the car at the end of the race. I couldn’t see any more, it was vibrating that bad. I could adapt quite well – we have some tools in the car with the TC, brake bias, ABS to to help this understeer which which will happen if you have splitter damage. I adapted my driving style quite well, and I think we didn’t have to compromise so much pace,” he continued.

Heinrich got away first to take the lead, pursued by Barnicoat. The Lexus hung with the Porsche for a while, despite missing the majority of the nose of the car and occasionally shedding bits of carbon fiber, but eventually faded from the fight, leaving Heinrich to drive unimpeded to the checker.

“I couldn’t be prouder of everyone on the team and just how they’ve been working this year,” said Priaulx. “It’s just amazing that we’ve had two wins with these pro guys and factory teams. We’re just a single-car team and I’m just sort of gobsmacked that we’re winning these races. And Laurin here … my teammate is actually awesome, did a mega job to get the car home with this damage that we had. He just wanted to get it round to be honest. So super proud of the guys.”

Barnicoat and Jack Hawksworth ended up second place at the checker, followed by Alex Riberas in the No. 23 Heart of Racing Aston Martin Vantage GT3 Evo he took over from Ross Gunn.

Riberas was involved in an incident of his own that left the No. 9 Pfaff Motorsports McLaren 720 S GT3 Evo in the tires in Turn 3 in the closing minutes of the race. Until that point, it looked like Marvin Kirchofer was poised to claim the first GTD PRO podium for McLaren.

Parker Thompson and Frankie Montecalvo, making a guest appearance in GTD PRO for Vasser Sullivan Racing in the absence of GTD, finished fourth in the No. 15 Lexus RC F. Bryan Sellers and Madison Snow were fifth in the No. 1 Paul Miller Racing BMW M4 GT3.

With their second victory of the season, Priaulx and Heinrich bolstered their points lead, their 1359 points 84 ahead of Barnicoat and Hawksworth. Gunn, who ran Laguna Seca without regular co-driver Riberas due to a WEC conflict, sits third at 1192. Sellers and Snow are fourth, while Catsburg and Milner are fifth ahead of teammates Garcia and Alexander Sims.

RESULTS

Pietro Fittipaldi at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix

Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing driver Pietro Fittipaldi joins RACER’s Ryan Myrehn to discuss handling disappointment at Indy, street course racing in IndyCar, and the Fittipaldi family legacy in Motor City.

Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing driver Pietro Fittipaldi joins RACER’s Ryan Myrehn to discuss handling disappointment at Indy, street course racing in IndyCar, and the Fittipaldi family legacy in Motor City.

Ferrucci apologizes for Detroit remark

Santino Ferrucci is apologizing for his fiery comments spoken to NBC after Saturday morning’s practice session at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix. The testy words were in response to on-track clashes with Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood and Colton …

Santino Ferrucci is apologizing for his fiery comments spoken to NBC after Saturday morning’s practice session at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix.

The testy words were in response to on-track clashes with Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood and Colton Herta, and a heated pit-lane exchange with Kirkwood, that included a dig at Herta, who the A.J. Foyt Racing driver referred to as Kirkwood’s “little boyfriend teammate.”

Ferrucci’s shot at Herta drew the ire of the series, which admonished the 26-year-old and “expressed its displeasure” with the Connecticut native.

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“Man, I just apologize for the comments,” Ferrucci told RACER. “I was very out of line, very out of pocket, especially in Pride Month. It’s not at all what I want to convey as myself, and I’d like to hold myself in a better light.”

Among the most combative and polarizing drivers in the series, Ferrucci isn’t afraid to go after bigger drivers and teams, but his fighting spirit also comes with a downside as he’s often shunned or ridiculed by many of his rivals.

It would be accurate to state that Ferrucci, Herta, and Kirkwood weren’t in a friendly place prior to the morning dust-up, which he says contributed to the overly harsh words and reaction to the Andretti duo. But he also says their strained relationship was by no means an excuse for his ensuing behavior.

“With all the tensions going on, after all that stuff happened, I just let my emotions get the better of me in that interview,” Ferrucci added.
“And now I just want to really apologize to the [LGBTIQA+] community, and to Colton and to Kyle for that.”

Pourchaire McLaren’s only shining star in Detroit GP qualifying

Pato O’Ward was infuriated for being sent out in the closing moments of qualifying with a brake fire. He ultimately messed up and stalled his car while trying to let a flying Kyle Kirkwood by and was relegated to starting 12th for Sunday’s Chevrolet …

Pato O’Ward was infuriated for being sent out in the closing moments of qualifying with a brake fire. He ultimately messed up and stalled his car while trying to let a flying Kyle Kirkwood by and was relegated to starting 12th for Sunday’s Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix.

Teammate Alexander Rossi was infuriated after being held up while attempting to set a fast lap—as were many drivers—and climbed from his car farther back with a frustrated 17th in the starting order.

Only NTT IndyCar Series neophyte Theo Pourchaire was happy within the Arrow McLaren team as the young Frenchman, on his debut at the bumpiest and most unforgiving track on the IndyCar calendar, led the program with a fine run to seventh.

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The reigning Formula 2 champion has never experienced a circuit like the wavy 1.6-mile course set on city streets in Motown, but that didn’t stop the 20-year-old from being McLaren’s best when it mattered on Saturday.

“In the Formula 1 calendar, you don’t have any tracks like this because all the tracks have to be really smooth for Formula 1; Formula 2 [too], but especially Formula 1,” Pourchaire told RACER. “The IndyCar [chassis] is solid. The car is very, very solid. On this type of track, it’s really good to drive. You have to fight the car every moment, even in the straight line. It feels not 100-percent under control because there are so many bumps, and cars always have one wheel in the air. It’s crazy to think about, but it’s amazing to drive. I love it.”

Barring a nose-first hit to close the second practice session, Pourchaire has been quick and under control all weekend in the No. 6 Chevy.

“It was a nice start to the weekend, yesterday in practice one, just learning the track and getting used to everything again,” he said after last driving the car at the Indy Grand Prix. “Then in practice two, we made a big step forward with the with the car setup. Overall, really happy about the performance today from practice to qualifying. I think we could have ended up in the Fast Six, but it’s good. We are making progress.”