Verstappen leads Piastri in Miami Grand Prix practice

Max Verstappen topped a busy solitary practice session at the Miami Grand Prix ahead of Sprint qualifying later today. The temporary street track around Hard Rock Stadium gripped up dramatically in the final 10 minutes in time for the drivers’ …

Max Verstappen topped a busy solitary practice session at the Miami Grand Prix ahead of Sprint qualifying later today.

The temporary street track around Hard Rock Stadium gripped up dramatically in the final 10 minutes in time for the drivers’ qualifying simulation laps, with the surface temperature rising to 127 degrees F as ambient conditions warmed in the early afternoon.

Verstappen had struggled for grip throughout the session, describing the experience as “like driving on eggshells,” but strung together a lap late on a four-lap-old set of used set tires to set the benchmark at 1m28.595s.

The front-runners rotated rapidly as the clock ticked down to zero until Oscar Piastri landed himself in second place just 0.105s behind the Dutchman.

Piastri is piloting a partially upgraded McLaren this weekend after the team rushed a major update package for Miami. Teammate Lando Norris is equipped with the full suite of new parts but struggled, ending up down in 16th.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Both drivers complained of steering problems, Piastri of a heavy wheel and Norris of power steering fault that made it harder to turn right than left. The team said the issues would be fixed before Sprint qualifying.

Carlos Sainz was the sole finishing Ferrari in third, just 0.116s off the pace, after Charles Leclerc took the sister car blue-and-red Scuderia out of the session just three laps into the hour with a clumsy spin over the curb at Turn 16.

Although the Monegasque avoided a crash with the barriers, the narrowness of the track left him unable to spin himself to face the right direction. He made several attempts at a three-point turn but burned his clutch in the process, leaving him unable to engage reverse gear and forcing and eight-minute red flag to recover the car.

A mixed session for the new-look Ferrari left Leclerc feeling blue. Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

George Russell put in a strong showing for his upgraded Mercedes in fourth at only 0.189s off the pace ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll to complete five different teams in the top five.

Sergio Perez had the pace for top spot but encountered a slow-moving Zhou Guanyu in the first sector that hampered his time, leaving him 0.273s down on his teammate in sixth and just ahead of Lewis Hamilton.

Yuki Tsunoda took his technicolor RB to eighth at 0.461s off the pace without a set of soft tires, pipping Alpine teammates Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly, who were closely matched just under 0.6s adrift.

Daniel Ricciardo was 11th in the second RB, also while keeping his softs in reserve, ahead of Haas duo Kevin Magnussen and Nico Hulkenberg.

Alex Albon was 14th for Williams ahead of Zhou, the struggling Norris and Bottas.

Logan Sargeant couldn’t find any grip on his medium tires, holding back a set of softs for later in the weekend and finishing the session 1.3s off the pace.

Fernando Alonso was 19th after sacrificing some of his session to make major setup changes to his Aston Martin. The Spaniard also kept his softs in reserve, spending most of the hour on a single set of hards, including on a long 12-lap run to close the session.

Leclerc was classified last after three laps.

Technical updates: 2024 Miami Grand Prix

McLaren has brought a substantial upgrade to the Miami Grand Prix, while Mercedes and Aston Martin also have a number of new parts. The update for McLaren includes a huge list of items, including the front wing, front suspension, front corner, floor …

McLaren has brought a substantial upgrade to the Miami Grand Prix, while Mercedes and Aston Martin also have a number of new parts.

The update for McLaren includes a huge list of items, including the front wing, front suspension, front corner, floor body, sidepod inlet, coke/engine cover, cooling louvers, rear suspension, rear corner and beam wing. On top of that there are number of mechanical components, leading to the team splitting configurations across its two drivers.

Lando Norris gets the full upgrade for the weekend in Miami, but Oscar Piastri has around half of the new parts. That is not down to a shortage of stock, but a choice the team has made to ensure it can prove the reliability and performance of the mechanical items and avoid major issues when there is just one practice session. Piastri will receive the full update in Imola.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Another team with a significant set of developments is Mercedes, where there is a new floor that includes changes to floor roof volume and floor edge detail. There is also a tweaked front wing, front suspension and more cooling options.

Aston Martin is another with multiple new parts, although all are defined as circuit specific. A revised front wing, engine cover, rear wing and beam wing still focus on performance, while there is an updated chassis scoop for driver cooling.

Red Bull has removed a support for the floor edge to save weight, while Alpine has no new parts listed but has made weight-saving reductions on both cars and brought the update introduced on Esteban Ocon’s car in China for Pierre Gasly too.

RB has introduced a new floor body and diffuser, while Haas also has an updated floor. Stake’s brought updates to the front and rear wings for balance changes for the Miami circuit, while there’s also a new front wing at Williams.

Racing on TV, May 3-5

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted. Friday, May 3 Miami practice 12:25- 1:30pm Miami practice 12:25- 1:30pm Miami Sprint qualifying 4:25-5:30pm Miami Sprint qualifying 4:25-5:30pm Saturday, May 4 Miami Sprint race 11:55am- 1:00pm Miami …

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted.


Friday, May 3

Miami
practice
12:25-
1:30pm

Miami
practice
12:25-
1:30pm

Miami
Sprint
qualifying
4:25-5:30pm

Miami
Sprint
qualifying
4:25-5:30pm

Saturday, May 4

Miami
Sprint race
11:55am-
1:00pm

Miami
Sprint race
11:55am-
1:00pm

Kansas
qualifying
12:00-
1:30pm

Kansas 2:00-4:00pm

Miami GP
qualifying
3:55-5:00pm

Miami GP
qualifying
3:55-5:00pm

Kansas
qualifying
5:00-7:00pm

Miami
race 1
5:45-6:35pm

Kansas 7:00-8:00pm
pre-race
8:00-10:30pm
race

Denver 7:00pm

Sunday, May 5

Barcelona 12:00-6:00am
(D)

Miami
race 2
10:25-
11:15am

Miami GP
pre-race
2:30-3:55pm

Miami
Grand Prix
3:30-3:55pm
pre-race
3:55-6:00pm
race

Miami
Grand Prix
2:30-3:55pm
pre-race
3:55-6:00pm
race

Kansas 2:00-3:00pm
pre-race
3:00-6:30pm
race

Denver 4:00-6:00pm
(R)

Key: SDD: Same day delay; D = delayed; R = Replay

All NTT IndyCar Series stream live on Peacock Premium.

MotoGP is now airing live on TruTV and Max’s B/R Sports Add-On. Check your streaming provider for air times

A variety of motor racing is available for streaming on demand at the following sites:

Steiner named ambassador for Miami GP

Former Haas team principal Guenther Steiner has become an ambassador for the Miami Grand Prix to try and continue Formula 1’s growth in North America. Steiner left his position at Haas over the winter after nearly a decade in charge of the team, and …

Former Haas team principal Guenther Steiner has become an ambassador for the Miami Grand Prix to try and continue Formula 1’s growth in North America.

Steiner left his position at Haas over the winter after nearly a decade in charge of the team, and has since taken on duties as a pundit and analyst within F1. As an ambassador for the race in Miami, Steiner will help promote the event both in the build-up and by making appearances during the race weekend itself, to help continue the evolution of one of the three American races on the calendar.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

“It’s one of the races which I was there from the beginning and I always like things like new things that are not different to do them different, but different to do them better,” Steiner said. “Since I’m not at Haas anymore I spoke with Tom Garfinkel [Miami GP managing partner] and his team and they said, ‘Hey, can we do something together?’ and I said, ‘Yeah, I will try and help you to send the message about the event,’ and also if there is some need I can advise them.

“I think Miami is one of these races that has come on the calendar I would say quite unexpectedly when it first came on three years ago. It was completely different, and I think it raised the bar for all the other races. I think we are people who forget very quickly, and what other people did is do things similarly, which I think is good for Formula 1 because it increase people’s interest having so many activations around.

“They always come up with new ideas how to do things, and every year there was investment to make it better, and I was quite intrigued by that. When the opportunity came I was like, ‘Yeah, sure, let’s do something together here and try to push it,’ because we still want all the race fans coming to races in the U.S. We have got three races now, which if you think of the population of 350 million is not something outrageous, but I think Miami is doing a very good job and they keep on growing.”

Miami Grand Prix president Tyler Epp says Steiner’s understanding of what the American market wants and the growth potential for F1 in the region made him the ideal addition to the race promotion team.

“Guenther has become a household name with F1 fans of all ages and is a perfect ambassador for our race,” Epp said. “He embodies the competitive spirit of the sport and has a clear vision of what F1 in America can be.

“Having someone with his experience, reputation and candor attached to our event will undoubtedly add to the excitement and elevate race weekend to a new level. Guenther understands the cultural relevance of the Formula 1 Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix and we’re excited that he has chosen Miami as the race he wants to help promote.”

Miami GP night race under consideration, though ‘very unlikely’ for 2024

The prospect of the Miami Grand Prix becoming a night race in 2024 is “very, very unlikely” according to the event’s president Tyler Epp, but is not off the table for the future. Miami has enjoyed two sellout races so far since joining the Formula 1 …

The prospect of the Miami Grand Prix becoming a night race in 2024 is “very, very unlikely” according to the event’s president Tyler Epp, but is not off the table for the future.

Miami has enjoyed two sellout races so far since joining the Formula 1 calendar in 2022, and recently announced it would be expanding its capacity to 100,000 spectators per day next year. At the latest event, the race’s managing partner and NFL Miami Dolphins CEO Tom Garfinkel hinted the prospect of becoming a night race was being explored — with Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Las Vegas all being held on Saturday nights in future — but Epp says more research of the impact of such a change still needs to be done.

“Tom and Steven (Ross, Dolphins owner) give us all the resources to have these kinds of discussions,” Epp said. “We’ve looked at it a little bit. Singapore was very helpful in terms of sharing how they do it. We’ve obviously had a discussion with Vegas — there could be some opportunities to work together. What Liberty is doing in Vegas is fantastic, and Greg (Maffei) and Renee (Wilm) get a ton of credit for that.

“I would tell you, it’s very, very unlikely for the 2024 version, but we will always look at opportunities to improve the experience if we deem as a group — and frankly, with the FIA and Formula 1 as well saying it does makes sense to look at Saturday night or a Sunday night or whatever it may be, we look at it. But for 2024, not on the docket.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Epp explains there are multiple reasons why a night race could be entertained in the future but says the priority for Miami will be the fan experience at the track itself.

“Depending on what we start to get year over year from just a weather perspective — I mean, those of you who were there, like Sunday evening is much different than Sunday afternoon. So pushing the start back just a bit into the evening could be a benefit to the fan. Depending on what Formula 1’s strategy is for their broadcast, there could be some benefit there. Again, that’s up to them. We’re there to support their initiatives on that.

“So I think we have to look at those things. But we would center our analysis from our business perspective on what works for the fan in Miami. So we’d have to do a full analysis of that, and we haven’t scratched the surface there.”

Miami GP expands capacity to 100,000

The organizers of the Miami Grand Prix have expanded the capacity for next year’s race to 100,000 per day as they see ongoing high demand for tickets. The inaugural race back in 2022 saw over 240,000 people attend but capacity was limited to try and …

The organizers of the Miami Grand Prix have expanded the capacity for next year’s race to 100,000 per day as they see ongoing high demand for tickets.

The inaugural race back in 2022 saw over 240,000 people attend but capacity was limited to try and avoid unforeseen issues as the Miami International Autodrome made its debut on the calendar. That attendance grew to 270,000 as additional grandstand and general admission numbers were provided, and a further increase will follow for 2024.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

All existing grandstands remain in place for next year with additional capacity in some popular locations including the pit straight and Turn 1 North, with tickets going on sale today (Monday) at 10am ET.

Miami Grand Prix president Tyler Epp says the increases have been planned but also reflect ongoing demand even as the race enters its third year and the novelty factor wears off.

“From the beginning, Stephen (Ross) and Tom (Garfinkel) have been incredibly supportive with all the resources we needed. But I would tell you there was never a mandate of ‘get to this number’. It was always built on ‘what can we do to ensure the fan experience for the people who are coming is the value that they paid for the ticket? Or exceeding the value they paid for the ticket?’

“So for us it’s more of an analysis of walkways, bridges, food and beverages, restroom locations, those kind of things, to make sure we have enough of those to increase capacity. It’s always great to increase capacity because we showcase the sport to more people and we’re authentically committed to building that motorsport and F1 enthusiast in the States. And the best way to do that is to engage them in our event or the event in Austin or Las Vegas to try and make sure that they experience F1 for what it is.”

With Circuit of the Americas boss Bobby Epstein warning the new US races could face tougher second and third years after initial interest, Epp says the initial Miami approach has helped avoid that.

“Respectfully to Bobby but that is not what we’re seeing! Year two we grew attendance, we were up to over 270,000 last year, we expect to grow again this year. But it’s authentic, it’s organic, and it’s done with the investment in bridges and the investment in wider walking paths and the investment in smarter back of house food and beverage experiences for people.

“We have not seen it soften. It continues to be very supported. I’ll give Tom and Stephen credit for slowing us, because if we had gone and tried to be really big in year one, then I think you risk putting ourselves as a promoter in the position where the fan experience is negative and then they’ve done it once, it wasn’t that great and they don’t come back. Not suggesting at all that’s what happened in Bobby’s case but that was our concern.

“So we were more focused identifying the value, making sure we can deliver that value and then as we can grow, we do. But the growth will not come at the expense of the fan experience for the people who are already coming.”

Epp also confirmed that the 2024 race is highly unlikely to move to become a night race – although a future switch isn’t ruled out.

Leclerc admits Ferrari inconsistency affecting his confidence

Charles Leclerc says Ferrari’s lack of consistency this season is making it tough for its drivers to have any confidence during a race. Ferrari brought a new floor to the Miami Grand Prix after a promising weekend in Azerbaijan in which Leclerc took …

Charles Leclerc says Ferrari’s lack of consistency this season is making it tough for its drivers to have any confidence during a race.

Ferrari brought a new floor to the Miami Grand Prix after a promising weekend in Azerbaijan in which Leclerc took pole for both the Grand Prix and the sprint and picked up his first podium of the season. However, he endured a tough race a week later in Miami. Leclerc crashed twice — including once in qualifying — and was limited to seventh place, with Carlos Sainz fifth after losing out to Mercedes’ George Russell in the latter stages.

“What we are lacking is consistency on the car,” Leclerc said. “It’s not even from corner to corner — in the same corner I can have a huge oversteery balance and then a huge understeery balance. Our car is so wind-affected…

“I think it’s been similar since the beginning of the season in every single races. We are going from one compound to the other, and we never know what’s going to happen on the new compound.

“It’s always an unknown, whether the car is going to react well, whether the tires are going to be in the right window. This (makes it) very difficult as a driver to gain the confidence and to adapt your driving. You go from one set to the other, and the car is completely in a different window.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

The Monaco native says the wildly varying back-to back weekends in Baku and Miami are part of a trend that makes it hard to guess how competitive Ferrari will be at any given race.

“Again, I think this is also part of consistency. We sometimes feel like we’ve done a step forward, and then you arrive in some very particular conditions — it was warmer than other races (in Miami), and now we are completely out of the right window of the tires. So we need to work on that.

“The conditions are going to be very different (for the next race in Imola) with different weather. So we’ll have some new parts on the car which will hopefully go in the right direction. We are working on that consistency, and I hope we’ll see the first progress there.”

Looking at the wider competitive picture following a Miami GP that Ferrari was second and third in a year ago, Leclerc says his team has failed to make the required progress in race trim compared to its rivals.

“It was quite different from last year. But yeah, I think most of all, Red Bull has found something in the race. The Aston Martins, we know that they have a very different car to what they had last year, and Mercedes has done a small step forward, but also last year, they were stronger in the race than they were in qualifying. I think Mercedes is less of a surprise. We are just struggling massively still in the race.”

Miami struggles a ‘reality check’ for McLaren

McLaren received a “reality check” regarding the limitations of its 2023 car and where it needs to develop through this season in Miami, says team principal Andrea Stella. An updated floor for Baku enabled McLaren to take a step forward, with Lando …

McLaren received a “reality check” regarding the limitations of its 2023 car and where it needs to develop through this season in Miami, says team principal Andrea Stella.

An updated floor for Baku enabled McLaren to take a step forward, with Lando Norris coming home ninth and best-of-the-rest behind the top four teams. But just one weekend later, both McLarens dropped out in Q1 in Miami and never had the pace to challenge for points after Norris’s car sustained floor damage on the opening lap and brake issues hindered Oscar Piastri.

“The main takeaway is that after a decent weekend in Baku from a performance point of view, we had a reality check,” Stella said. “The information we gained (in Miami) helps us understand that some development directions still need to be pursued, like improving the car in off-brakes, off-throttle. At the moment, the car just doesn’t work in this condition.

“At tracks like this, this becomes too much of a limitation. So we take away some important learnings for development. We also had a reliability issue on Oscar’s car. He needed to drive the entire race with a problem on the brake by wire… Oscar was excellent in being able to cope with it. After having locked the tires three or four times, he realized how to adapt the way he was braking to (cope with) this issue.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1388]

Stella says the race also didn’t come to McLaren after Norris was rear-ended by Nyck de Vries — costing him an estimated 0.2-0.3s of downforce — and the gamble to start both drivers on soft tires backfired with a one-stop strategy proving the best move.

“Ultimately, in the race we would have needed a good start. This was actually in place — Lando gained a few positions but then he was hit by de Vries. This meant that from potentially P13 or something, he was again finding himself at the back of the group.

“We would have needed high degradation on tires because we had allocated two hard tires, but actually the degradation wasn’t as high as expected. So one stop was possible for everyone. It was relatively easy. We would have needed some events in the race — a safety car or something — but nothing happened. So the limitations from a performance point of view could not be overcome thanks to some situational elements and we go away with no points.”

TV ratings: Kansas, Miami

Formula 1 returned to the United States for the second annual Miami Grand Prix, and averaged 1.96 million viewers for the race window (3:30-5:15pm ET), ABC/ESPN reports. Overall, the ABC live telecast averaged a 0.90 Nielsen rating and 1.646m …

Formula 1 returned to the United States for the second annual Miami Grand Prix, and averaged 1.96 million viewers for the race window (3:30-5:15pm ET), ABC/ESPN reports. Overall, the ABC live telecast averaged a 0.90 Nielsen rating and 1.646m viewers, including the 90-minute pre-race show. It was the second-largest U.S. live F1 TV audience on record, albeit slightly trailing last year’s Miami GP for the top spot all time (1.08/2.066m on ABC).

NASCAR still the way led overall, with the Cup Series race at Kansas averaging a 1.35 rating and 2.352m viewers on FS1. That’s down slightly in rating but higher in audience than last year (1.43/2.337m). However, F1 qualifying beat Cup’s equivalent, with Miami GP qualifying securing 751,000 viewers on ESPN Saturday, vs 501K tuning in for Cup qualifying on FS1.

The Craftsman Truck Series race from Kansas on Saturday night averaged an 0.43 rating and 705,000 viewers, up from last year’s 0.37/660K, while the ARCA Menards Series at race at Kansas averaged 0.25/393K, compared to a 0.26/440K last year. All these races aired on FS1.

F1 continued to lead the way in the 18-49 age demographic, averaging 625,000 viewers to 430K for Cup, 127K for Trucks and 98K for ARCA.

The final numbers for the Cup Series race at Dover that was delayed to Monday by rain were a 0.63 rating and 1.067m viewers on FS1

Can the Miami GP ever become the event it aspires to be?

“Well, we certainly had challenges coming into the race, getting all of this done in time,” Tom Garfinkel says, sitting in the plush surroundings of a permanent Paddock Club suite somewhere above the Williams garage. “We did do a lot of changes, we …

“Well, we certainly had challenges coming into the race, getting all of this done in time,” Tom Garfinkel says, sitting in the plush surroundings of a permanent Paddock Club suite somewhere above the Williams garage.

“We did do a lot of changes, we did make a big investment in things. So last year, honestly, it was just trying to pull it off. (Doing that) in less than 12 months with all the other events we had; that was a huge challenge. This year, it’s like ‘OK, we want to try to be perfect this year’. We’re not just trying to pull it off. We’re trying to get this right in every way.”

The Miami Dolphins CEO is catching his breath before the main event. It’s Sunday morning at Hard Rock Stadium, and pretty much all that’s left to do now is race. So Garfinkel can afford to relax to some degree – at this point, he’s at the mercy of the show that the 20 drivers are going to put on in a few hours’ time.

But I’ve got bad news for him: Miami isn’t perfect this year, and won’t ever be.

It’s the right attitude to have, of course, but far more successful and established races than the Miami Grand Prix also have their issues. Austin, for example, can boast enormous crowds and lower ticket prices, but has had its fair share of traffic and concessions problems. Spa-Francorchamps is legendary but getting people in and out of the venue, plus the weather, can be a huge headache.

I’m being a bit unfair only mentioning those two, because the list could include pretty much every grand prix on the calendar in some way, shape or form. If you’re in the business of bringing tens of thousands of people (as a minimum) to an event, someone’s not going to have a great time.

What Miami has shown, though, is that it is doing the most important thing it should do after year two, and that is prioritizing being the best event it can be by listening to feedback and improving, rather than being overly concerned at the bottom line immediately.

“From a business standpoint, there’s a lot of different ways of looking at making money, there’s a lot of different measures of profit,” Garfinkel says. “I would say that our focus right now is on investing in a great experience. We do have a long-term deal with Formula 1 and we’re confident this will be a profitable endeavor.

“And it’s not like we’re losing a ton of money or anything like that. At this point, we’ve got great demand, we’re trying to put on a great event. And if we do that, and we can get this kind of attendance every year and this kind of experience for people, it’s going to be profitable.”

Perhaps that much was clear by the number of discounted tickets available in the immediate lead-up to the race, although Formula 1 insists the event had around 90,000 each day and was a sell-out on Sunday. Garfinkel is coinfident that the priorities of a number of different fanbases had been accommodated.

“I think the hardcore race fans are taken care of because ultimately, the most important thing is the drivers, the cars, the competition on the track,” he says.

“So we tried to create a great circuit for racing, and we weren’t happy (after last year). F1 and the FIA didn’t ask us to or in any way demand us to change the racetrack.

Miami GP organizers place a premium on the fan experience – but they also place a premium on ticket prices, which means many fans can’t afford to go in the first place. Steven Tee/Motorsport Images

“We could have patched up a couple of things and when we could have gone racing. But we wanted it to be right, which is why we made the investment to repave it, so I think ultimately the racing people are coming here to see these drivers and these cars and the competition of the race and that’s always the most important thing.

“You can create a great environment around that. The whole week in Miami or down here around the event itself. You’re going to get more casual race fans to come out and enjoy the food and the wine and the music then whatever else is going on, and then fall in love with the racing.”

Sunday didn’t deliver a classic race, but it provided as much as action as could be hoped for in a season dominated by one team. Behind the top three there were fights for positions and overtakes right up to the flag, though it lacked the chaos or controversy that could really hook in the more casual viewer.

Beyond the immediate interest, Garfinkel wants Miami’s race to cement itself to an extent that it leads to career opportunities within F1 for locals, building on the outlook of former Dolphins executive Jason Jenkins who died last year.

“I’d like to see 15 years from now there’s some kid from Miami Gardens, who’s an engineer and a race car working in PR and F1, and it only happened because we brought this race here,” Garfinkel says.

“The impact on people’s lives here… I get a little emotional… (Jenkins) said it and lived it last year, he believes strongly that the impact that this event is going to have on people’s lives will be bigger than anything in South Florida for a long time. Those are his words. And I believe that, and I believe that’s a part of what we’re doing here.

“If you think about this to the impact of, we’re living in a society that’s more isolated than ever, even pre-pandemic, kids are growing up on their phones, and they’re communicating with each other on their phones. And there’s things called Blue Zones, which are these areas in the world where people’s life expectancy is past 100. And they do studies on these places – Harvard did the biggest study on happiness ever – and the number one thing that was correlated to happiness was social interaction and connection with other people. More than what you eat, how much you exercise, there’s actually studies that show that loneliness has the same correlation to negative impact on life expectancy as smoking.

“The reason I say all that is, what we do, whether it’s the NFL games, whether it’s this, whether it’s music, concerts, you’re bringing people together to have shared experiences, and enjoy life together. It’s just not the same thing where you’re sitting alone at home watching TV as when you come out, and you’re with people enjoying these things.

“I think the business that we’re in, not just what we do here, but the business that we’re all in, is really important. It’s just about bringing people together at a time when we have polarization and isolation and all these problems. And yeah, I think that has a big impact on people.”

It’s a noble outlook that might help Garfinkel ignore some of the external criticism of the race that appears to come more prominently from afar than actual attendees, but people still need to be able to afford those experiences. With grandstand tickets well north of $1000 even when prices were cut close to the race, wanting to be part of that shared experience comes at great cost.

That’s an area that could well be addressed after the initial outlay to simply put on the race starts to level off, while feedback is already being taken to try and improve the event for 2024.

It was clearly better this year, and the target has to be better again next, especially with Vegas on the horizon. But perfect? That’s always going to feel a long way off.