Rowe signs with HMD Motorsports for Indy NXT

Myles Rowe will take his advancement prize for winning the USF Pro 2000 presented by Cooper Tires championship to the Indy NXT by Firestone series and the defending title holders at HMD Motorsports. Rowe, 23, will drive the No. 99 Force Indy entry …

Myles Rowe will take his advancement prize for winning the USF Pro 2000 presented by Cooper Tires championship to the Indy NXT by Firestone series and the defending title holders at HMD Motorsports.

Rowe, 23, will drive the No. 99 Force Indy entry run for Penske Entertainment at HMD, which continues the tradition established this year with Ernie Francis Jr., who moves on from the No. 99 car after two seasons in NXT under Penske’s Race For Equality & Change initiative. It’s unclear where Francis Jr’s next steps in the sport will be taken.

For Rowe, who was the first driver chosen by Penske for the Force Indy opportunity, the last two seasons have been remarkable as he earned 10 victories and 19 podiums while completing his degree in film studies at New York University. With Indy NXT as his main focus, Rowe is expected to continue his rise up the American open-wheel ladder and eventually reach the NTT IndyCar Series.

“I’m super excited to announce my next step to HMD Motorsports with Force Indy and be part of their family,” Rowe said. “I am extremely excited to grow and progress with them as a team and fight for many more race wins.”

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Force Indy program director Rod Reid is happy for the Indy NXT relationship to continue.

“Force Indy is really looking forward to continuing the relationship with HMD Motorsports,” he said. “We have a season working together under our belt, and our goals in and out of the pits align.”

On the cusp of earning a second consecutive NXT championship, HMD GM Mike Maurini sees a big future for Rowe in the team owned by Henry Malukas.

“We are excited to continue our partnership with Force Indy and have Myles as part of the HMD Motorsports program in 2024,” he said. “He has been a treat to follow through the ladder programs, and we are anxious to help him continue his goals to ascend to the NTT IndyCar Series. Myles is a great talent, and we have had our eye on him for quite some time and are confident that he will have success not only in 2024 but for years to come.”

USF Pro 2000 champion Myles Rowe and Force Indy’s Rod Reid

New USF Pro 2000 presented by Cooper Tires champion Myles Rowe and Force Indy director Rod Reid join RACER’s Marshall Pruett after making history with Pabst Racing at Portland International Raceway. Or click HERE to watch on YouTube.

New USF Pro 2000 presented by Cooper Tires champion Myles Rowe and Force Indy director Rod Reid join RACER’s Marshall Pruett after making history with Pabst Racing at Portland International Raceway.

Or click HERE to watch on YouTube.

Rowe crowned 2023 USF Pro 2000 champion with third at Portland

Myles Rowe and Michael d’Orlando both achieved their goals during this afternoon’s exciting second leg of the VP Racing Fuels Grand Prix of Portland. Pabst Racing with Force Indy’s Rowe, from Brooklyn, N.Y., clinched the USF Pro 2000 Presented by …

Myles Rowe and Michael d’Orlando both achieved their goals during this afternoon’s exciting second leg of the VP Racing Fuels Grand Prix of Portland. Pabst Racing with Force Indy’s Rowe, from Brooklyn, N.Y., clinched the USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires championship – as well as a lucrative Discount Tire Driver Development Scholarship valued at $664,500 to ensure graduation to Indy NXT by Firestone in 2024 – with a well-judged third-place finish, while d’Orlando once again demonstrated his own credentials with a flag-to-flag victory for Turn 3 Motorsport.

With his accomplishment today, Rowe becomes the first African American to win a U.S. open-wheel championship.

Sandwiched between the pair was 15-year-old Nikita Johnson, who completed an exhausting but auspicious day for himself and VRD Racing by finishing hot on d’Orlando’s tail in second.

For the second straight day, d’Orlando started at the front of the pack after turning the best second-fastest lap of all drivers during yesterday’s lone qualifying session to secure yet another Cooper Tires Pole Award. He duly maintained his advantage at the start, although, incredibly, it was TJ Speed Motorsport’s Lirim Zendeli, who emerged in second following a spectacular start from sixth on the grid. Zendeli braved it out around the outside of several rivals at the initial right-handed corner at the Festival Curves before slotting into second at the ensuing left-handed Turn 2.

Saturday, in stark contrast to the mayhem which had taken place just 24 hours earlier, all 17 protagonists made it through the initial sequence of corners intact. They then proceeded to entertain an appreciative crowd throughout an all-green 30-lap race.

D’Orlando soon began to put some daylight between himself and Zendeli. The gap had grown to just over two seconds inside the first 13 laps, when Johnson took advantage of worsening oversteer on his adversary’s Tatuus IP-22 and – for the second time in a little more than half-an-hour – produced another impressive overtaking opportunity in Turn 1 to snatch second place.

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Johnson had eschewed the chance to stand on the podium following a fine drive in the preceding USF2000 Presented by Cooper Tires race, instead hopping directly into his USF Pro 2000 steed and once again putting on a show of his capabilities.

A series of consistently fast laps saw d’Orlando stretch his lead to as much as three seconds at the halfway point, although Johnson turned up the wick in the closing stages and narrowed the gap to less than one second with three laps remaining. The pressure was on, but d’Orlando managed his pace perfectly, made not the hint of a mistake and took the checkered flag a scant 0.2529s clear of Johnson for his fourth win of the season.

Rowe once again drove a sensible race, following Johnson past Zendeli on the 14th lap and then inching clear to finish third. Rowe’s result was more than enough to put the championship title beyond the reach of his main rival, DEForce Racing’s Kiko Porto, who remaining trapped behind Zendeli in fifth. Jace Denmark (Pabst Racing), also was in close attendance at the finish line.

“All of these competitors are so tough,” Rowe said. “We knew after last year and finishing second in the (USF2000) championship, especially being so close to taking it, that we had to start off strong. That’s exactly what we did. We put in the work, we persevered and we came through. It is all thanks to everyone that supports me, everyone that is out here watching and pushing me, on down to my family – my mom and my dad for putting in the blood, sweat and tears – Roger Penske and Penske Entertainment, Force Indy, Pabst Racing and Augie Pabst, Sparco, Bell Helmets, NXG and all of the crew. It wouldn’t be possible without them.

“They have really pushed me along and really given me such extraordinary support. I am just at a loss for words. It feels almost like it has been a two-year championship from trying to bounce back after last year. It took a mental strain on us all but I am just so happy to deliver this for the team. I am thrilled that we are able to enjoy it finally.”

Jack William Miller earned his third Tilton Hard Charger Award after rising from 11th on the grid to eighth for his family-run Miller Vinatieri Motorsports team.

Turn 3 Motorsport’s Peter Dempsey picked up another PFC Award as the winning team owner, and both he and d’Orlando, whose fond memories of Portland included clinching last year’s USF2000 championship, will have one more opportunity to stand on the top step of the podium when tomorrow’s season finale is set to see the green flag at 3:15pm PT.

RESULTS

Porto near perfect in Portland to keep USF Pro 2000 title hopes alive

Kiko Porto kept alive his slender hopes of snatching the 2023 USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires title with a fine drive in the first of three races that will comprise this weekend’s VP Racing Fuels Grand Prix of Portland. Brazil’s Porto, the …

Kiko Porto kept alive his slender hopes of snatching the 2023 USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires title with a fine drive in the first of three races that will comprise this weekend’s VP Racing Fuels Grand Prix of Portland. Brazil’s Porto, the 2021 USF2000 Presented by Cooper Tires champion, kept his head while others around him perhaps did not as he sped to his second victory in the last three races.

Right behind him in second place, however, was the man who already has one hand on the championship trophy, Pabst Racing with Force Indy’s Myles Rowe. The 22-year-old from Brooklyn, N.Y., now holds a commanding 52-point lead with a maximum of 66 points on the table from this weekend’s final two races of the season.

Porto’s DEForce Racing teammate Bijoy Garg secured his first ever podium finish with third.

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Michael d’Orlando looked like being the man to beat. He was second fastest in official practice, then went one better for Turn 3 Motorsport in qualifying by clinching his fourth Cooper Tires Pole Award.

Unfortunately, d’Orlando’s rollercoaster ride this year continued in a familiar vein. He was able to retain the lead following chaos at the first corner, despite opting to take to the escape road at the notorious Festival Curves chicane. Behind him there was carnage as virtually the entire field attempted to occupy the same piece of asphalt. Seven cars were eliminated from the running.

Following a red-flag stoppage to reset the field, d’Orlando once again took to the escape road. This time both he and Lirim Zendeli, who had risen from sixth on the grid to second for TJ Speed Motorsports, incurred penalties which dropped them to the back of the field.

The major beneficiary was Porto, who had qualified third and was one of the few to take a conventional line at the initial start. The Brazilian adroitly avoided all the carnage and emerged in the lead ahead of Rowe, who had started fifth and also kept his head at the start.

The pair quickly distanced themselves from the pack. Rowe on several occasions looked poised to make a challenge, but instead wisely maintained his position to inch one step closer to the championship which would earn him a Discount Tire Driver Development Scholarship valued at $664,500 to graduate to Indy NXT by Firestone in 2024.

“At the start, I just saw a bunch of cars going straight. It was kind of confusing but the team helped me to understand what was going on,” related Porto. “Myles put me in the situation where I need to win races, so I am trying to extract the maximum possible. He did a great job finishing second which meant a lot of points for him in the championship, but it is not over yet. I am going to fight with everything I have.”

Garg, who equaled his career-best starting position in fourth, held third place for virtually the entirety of the 30-lap race, finishing clear of Pabst Racing’s Jace Denmark.

Louka St-Jean (Turn 3 Motorsport) also secured a career-best finish in fifth, followed by Salvador de Alba (Exclusive Autosport), Francesco Pizzi (TJ Speed Motorsports), and Pabst Racing’s Jordan Missig, who picked up the Tilton Hard Charger Award after rising from 19th and last on the grid.

DEForce Racing’s Ernesto and David Martinez earned another PFC Award and will have two more opportunities to add to their tally in Rounds 17, which will start Saturday at 3:10pm PT and the season finale at 3:15pm on Sunday.

RESULTS

Provisional championship points after 16 of 18 rounds:
1. Myles Rowe, 358
2. Kiko Porto, 306
3. Salvador de Alba, 260
4. Michael d’Orlando, 237
5. Lirim Zendeli, 236
6. Francesco Pizzi, 232
7. Jace Denmark, 218
8. Joel Granfors, 206
9. Jonathan Browne, 196
10. Jack William Miller, 192

 

Rowe getting closer to USF Pro 2000 title with Toronto victory

USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires championship leader Myles Rowe overcame a disappointing result on Saturday to take a clear victory for Pabst Racing with Force Indy in Sunday’s Cooper Tires Grand Prix of Toronto. A fifth win of the season for …

USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires championship leader Myles Rowe overcame a disappointing result on Saturday to take a clear victory for Pabst Racing with Force Indy in Sunday’s Cooper Tires Grand Prix of Toronto. A fifth win of the season for the 22-year-old from Brooklyn, N.Y., stretches his advantage to a whopping 81 points as he chases a Discount Tire Driver Development Scholarship valued at $664,500 to graduate to INDY NXT in 2024.

Lirim Zendeli, from Bochum, Germany, finished second for TJ Speed Motorsports. Rowe’s Pabst Racing teammate Jordan Missig, from Channahon, Ill., matched his career-best result in third. Missig also set the fastest race lap for good measure.

Rowe paved the way for his triumph by starting at the head of the field after earning his fourth Cooper Tires Pole Award of the season and third in succession during qualifying on Saturday morning.

He took full advantage by leading from the start. Behind, a bold move around the outside of Turn One by teammate Jace Denmark netted the resident of Scottsdale, Ariz., second place after starting in fourth.

After an early caution following an incident in the midfield, Denmark tried to execute a similar move on Rowe under braking for Turn 3 at the end of the back straightaway. Unfortunately, Rowe slipped a little wide at the exit and made contact with Denmark’s front wing, which immediately became detached, forcing him into the pits and out of contention.

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Rowe continued unscathed, and instead soon came under pressure from Saturday’s winner – and the man who narrowly beat Rowe to last year’s USF2000 Presented by Cooper Tires championship crown – Michael d’Orlando, from Hartsdale, N.Y.

“First of all, the crowd here is amazing. I love Toronto. It is such a great city,” Rowe said. “It is such a tough race. The bumps are crazy. It is like New York City out there. I just have to give a huge thanks to God, my family, Force Indy, Pabst Racing, SimCraft, Sparco, Bell Helmets and the whole crew. They really put together such a package for us to have this kind of consistency this year. You need to have a certain kind of package to do really successful things at this level of motorsports. All these guys – Lirim, Jordan and the rest of the field – all of them are super competitive and super tough to beat. I just can’t ‘thank you’ enough to all of my partners.”

Gavin Baker Photography

The 25-lap race had started on a slightly damp track, but the pace gradually increased as the surface dried out completely. The two leaders remained in close contact until, quite suddenly, d’Orlando began to lose power shortly after the halfway mark. The Canadian-American soon slipped into the clutches of the pursuing pack, led by Zendeli who on lap 16 had found a way past d’Orlando’s Turn 3 Motorsport teammate Christian Brooks, from Santa Clarita, Calif., with a nice move at Turn 3.

The unfortunate d’Orlando eventually tumbled almost to the back of the field, cruelly ending his hopes of taking over second place in the points table.

Zendeli maintained second to the finish, some 4.4155s adrift of Rowe and narrowly ahead of Missig, who had started second and was the fastest man on track in the closing stages.

Indian-American Yuven Sundaramoorthy, from Delafield, Wis., (Exclusive Autosport) also displayed strong speed after a difficult season, claiming the Tilton Hard Charger Award after rising from 16th on the grid to eighth.

Rowe’s performance capped a tremendous day for team principal Augie Pabst, who took home another PFC Award as the winning car owner.

Five more races remain this season. A doubleheader event at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas, on August 26-27 is next, followed just one week later by a trip to the West Coast for a tripleheader finale at Portland International Raceway in Portland, Ore., on September 2-3.

RESULTS

Rowe bolsters USF Pro 2000 title prospects with Mid-Ohio win

Myles Rowe opened up a commanding early championship lead in USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires with three wins from the first four races of the season. The New Yorker was frustrated in his bid to add to that victory tally over the course of the …

Myles Rowe opened up a commanding early championship lead in USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires with three wins from the first four races of the season. The New Yorker was frustrated in his bid to add to that victory tally over the course of the next few events, but he put that behind him in emphatic style Saturday evening in the second and final race of the Cooper Tires Grand Prix of Mid-Ohio, which he led from start to finish for the Pabst Racing with Force Indy team.

Kiko Porto bounced back from an incident earlier in the day to finish a close second for DEForce Racing, while Michael d’Orlando  capped a productive weekend for Turn 3 Motorsport by finishing third.

Rowe set the tone for his success by snaring his second Cooper Tires Pole Award of the season during an intense qualifying session on Friday, which, remarkably, was concluded with the top seven drivers all recording a lap time within one tenth of a second.

The 30-lap race proved to be just as close. Rowe never put a foot wrong in the lead, but he was never able to gain any kind of breathing space over Porto, who remained seemingly glued to his gearbox after sneaking past d’Orlando on the fourth lap.

“It wasn’t a great start to the morning in Race 1, so it was important for us to come back and fix up the points for the title fight down in Portland,” said Rowe. “This was a huge boost for the team. We can go into Toronto with huge momentum.

“Kiko made it tough for me. This was one of the toughest races that I have had in the USF Pro Championships, but this is what we want because we are trying to step up to IndyCar and this is the training ground to get there. I have learned all the skills I need to do what I need to do in IndyCar.”

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Porto posted the fastest lap of the race, but even that wasn’t enough and he had to settle for second. The result represented an impressive comeback after being pushed off the track during the opening race, and allowed Porto to reclaim second place in the point standings.

The top four cars remained in extremely close formation from start to finish. D’Orlando once again displayed excellent pace while finishing third, which, allied to his second win of the season earlier in the day, enabled him to vault from 11th in the points table to sixth, only 18 points behind Porto, heading into the final seven races of the season.

Jace Denmark (Pabst Racing) ran in company with the leaders until slipping back just a little in the final few laps. He still finished fifth ahead of Reece Ushijima (Jay Howard Driver Development), Louka St-Jean (Turn 3 Motorsport), Bijoy Garg (DEForce Racing) and Joel Granfors (Exclusive Autosport).

Ushijima atoned for his error earlier in the day by claiming the Tilton Hard Charger Award after working his way from 12th on the grid to sixth.

The winning team owner, Augie Pabst, capped an excellent day by earning a second PFC Award to the trophy he won also in USF2000 Presented by Cooper Tires through the efforts of Simon Sikes.

Next on the docket for the USF Pro Championships is another double-header event, once again in conjunction with the NTT IndyCar Series, on the streets of Toronto on July 15-16.

RESULTS

Provisional championship points after 11 of 18 rounds:
1. Myles Rowe, 251
2. Kiko Porto, 187
3. Joel Granfors, 185
4. Salvador de Alba, 173
5. Francesco Pizzi, 171
6. Michael d’Orlando, 169
7. Jace Denmark, 166
8. Jonathan Browne, 152
9. Jack William Miller, 147
10. Lirim Zendeli, 142

 

What’s next for the Race For Equality & Change program?

The formation of Penske Entertainment’s Race For Equality & Change program is approaching its third anniversary. Created in the wake of George Floyd’s murder on May 25, 2020, Roger Penske and his leadership team created the RFE&C with a mission to …

The formation of Penske Entertainment’s Race For Equality & Change program is approaching its third anniversary.

Created in the wake of George Floyd’s murder on May 25, 2020, Roger Penske and his leadership team created the RFE&C with a mission to address the lack of diversity within North American open-wheel racing and to broaden the NTT IndyCar Series’ and Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s hiring and business engagement practices.

Progress has been made, without question, but where is the RFE&C headed?

It’s marquee Force Indy program, launched in 2021, introduced Myles Rowe (pictured above with Roger Penske and Rod Reid) to the USF Championships by Cooper Tires where the college student from Georgia won a race, and in his second season run by Pabst Racing, Rowe won five races and finished runner-up in the USF2000 series, validating the faith and investment demonstrated through the RFE&C.

Stepping up to the series now known as Indy NXT by Firestone, Force Indy introduced seven-time Trans-Am champion Ernie Francis Jr to the top step of the junior open-wheel ladder in 2022, and in 2023, the Floridian and the Force Indy effort have been transferred under the HMD Motorsports tent while Rowe and Pabst Racing have moved up to USF Pro 2000 where they lead the championship on the strength of three wins from six races.

Ernie Francis Jr. transitioned to open-wheel racing from Trans-Am. James Black/Penske Entertainment

Of the two Force Indy-backed drivers, Rowe has established himself as a remarkable talent on the rise while Francis Jr, a newcomer to open-wheel racing, has a slightly longer trajectory ahead in his quest to reach IndyCar. Speaking with Penske Entertainment CEO Mark Miles, plans are in place to continue with both drivers as they ascend towards the RFE&C’s most visible goal.

“The first thing I’d say is with respect to the Race For Equality & Change and Myles and Ernie, one of Roger’s initial aspirations was to find a way to get one or more diverse drivers ready to qualify for the Indy 500,” Miles told RACER. “So I can’t say that happens for one or the other next year, and I can’t say it wouldn’t. But it’s an obvious next step when they’re ready. And we’ll be excited about that.”

The next item explored with Miles was whether the RFE&C’s Force Indy program is meant to continue with new drivers after Rowe and Francis Jr reach their ultimate destinations.

“What we’ve tried to communicate about all parts of the program is that it’ll never end,” he said. “This has got to become a way of life. This is what we need to be. But as to your question, I don’t know for sure, but I can’t imagine that we won’t keep finding ways to give legs up, on a targeted basis, to where we think we can have the biggest impact and hopefully keep growing momentum.”

Under the RFE&C banner, Penske Entertainment also aligned itself with Beth Paretta’s Paretta Autosport IndyCar team in 2021, helping the women-led program to compete in its first Indy 500. After seeking and finding the sponsorship to return, Paretta completed a multi-race program last year in partnership with Ed Carpenter Racing, but the team has been absent from the grid so far this season, unable as yet to find a competitive partner to make use of the funding she’s found.

If there’s been one ongoing criticism of the RFE&C, it has been the absence of a sustained effort to identify and support women racers in the same sustained manner as Rowe and Francis Jr. As Miles reveals, there could be a new televised component to RFE&C activities to address the matter.

The RFE&C has also aligned itself with Beth Paretta’s team. Jake Galstad/Motorsport Images

“With respect to women, we’re talking with a group that is a major Hollywood studio that wants to do a reality-type competition series and we’ve talked to them half a dozen or more times,” he said. “Their concept is that they would identify young women drivers who are already quite engaged, but obviously are not yet near the top. They would have a fantastic budget and they’d work with one of our solid teams and they would conduct a series of competitions. And there’s obviously no guarantees. But if any of them show they’ve got the stuff, then that would lead to a qualifying opportunity.

“Now, you can imagine how skeptical many of us were about the idea that you could manufacture a process that would get you to the point where [IndyCar president] Jay Frye would say, yeah, they’re approved to get a license so they can try to qualify, but these people are very engaged and they have a serious budget. They’ve studied this, they know something about it in the first instance, and I think it’s if it can be done, there, they and their approach have a chance of doing it. So that could be something that would be conspicuous. And not just as an entertainment thing, but as the development of new female driving talent.”

Shifting from the off-track aspects of the RFE&C, Miles spoke to the growth Penske Entertainment has made in nearly three years with hiring, spending, and job placement within the IndyCar.

“For us, an emphasis has always been on being the right kind of organization with Penske Entertainment,” he said. “We’ve worked really hard at it, and we’re a long way from where we want to be, but more than 40 percent of our hires last year were people from diverse backgrounds. Our spending with diverse vendors and suppliers and the like is nowhere near the total that I wish it were, but it’s increased meaningfully–more than doubled a couple times since we started this.

“In Indianapolis, we’re engaged with the Urban League, 100 Black Men, and other similar organizations, and we’re doing what we can to support them. And that also opens channels for recruiting. We’re trying to develop programs with the [IndyCar] teams using our job portal with the teams where it’s more seamless so that every time they have an opening, we find a way to get in front of these organizations to present those opportunities to candidates. We’re trying to help infuse the team talent pipeline, which is foundational for us.”

IndyCar qualifying recap with Romain Grosjean and Myles Rowe

Andretti Autosport’s Romain Grosjean and USF Pro 2000 championship leader Myles Rowe join RACER’s Marshall Pruett to break down Saturday’s qualifying session at Long Beach where the Andretti team took pole and earned third.

Andretti Autosport’s Romain Grosjean and USF Pro 2000 championship leader Myles Rowe join RACER’s Marshall Pruett to break down Saturday’s qualifying session at Long Beach where the Andretti team took pole and earned third.

VIDEO: Catching up with Myles Rowe

Myles Rowe, the USF Pro 2000 presented by Cooper Tires championship leader after winning three of the four races to open the season, is our guest on the short-form Catching Up With interview show while riding a bus to the gym in Brooklyn… …

Myles Rowe, the USF Pro 2000 presented by Cooper Tires championship leader after winning three of the four races to open the season, is our guest on the short-form Catching Up With interview show while riding a bus to the gym in Brooklyn…

Rowe sweeps USF Pro 2000 weekend at Sebring

Myles Rowe consolidated his position at the top of the USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires point standings following another impressive victory this afternoon at Sebring International Raceway. Rowe, from Brooklyn. N.Y., once again made a …

Myles Rowe consolidated his position at the top of the USF Pro 2000 Presented by Cooper Tires point standings following another impressive victory this afternoon at Sebring International Raceway. Rowe, from Brooklyn. N.Y., once again made a lightning start, jumping from third to first at the first corner. Even a couple of late full-course cautions failed to interrupt his dominance as he raced to his third USF Pro 2000 victory in just four starts for Pabst Racing with Force Indy.

Rowe now holds a commanding 42-point lead in his quest to win a Discount Tires Driver Advancement Scholarship valued at $664,500 to graduate to Indy NXT in 2024.

Albanian rookie Lirim Zendeli scored his best finish of second for TJ Speed Motorsports, while Kiko Porto, from Recife, Brazil, rebounded from a mechanical problem yesterday which prevented him from even starting the race, to secure his third podium appearance for DEForce Racing.

Last year’s USF2000 Presented by Cooper Tires champion, Michael d’Orlando, from Hartsdale, N.Y., looked to have put a sequence of unfortunate circumstances behind him this morning when he posted the fastest time in qualifying to claim his first Cooper Tires Pole Award. But after being beaten away from the start by Rowe, d’Orlando’s luck once again turned sour on the second lap when he lost control over the bumps in Turn 1 and gyrated luridly in front of almost the entire field. He was miraculously able to continue, despite another quick gyration at Turn 4, and eventually fought his way back to 11th at the checkered flag.

Fellow front row qualifier Francesco Pizzi, from Rome, Italy, also had a disappointing race for TJ Speed Motorsport. Pizzi lost two positions on the opening lap and later ran out of road at the exit of Turn 1, losing several more places. He placed seventh after an eventful 15-lap race.

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Porto, after starting eighth, fought his way past Mexico’s Salvador de Alba (Exclusive Autosport) for third position on the fifth lap, where he remained until the finish.

Two late cautions set the scene for a one-lap dash to the checkered flag. Rowe made an exemplary restart at the first time of asking, but had to defend rigorously from Zendeli on the final lap, especially at Turn 3, but was not to be denied as he sped onward to the victory.

“It was the race of my life honestly,” Rowe said. “Now that it is all over, I have been trying to close out a weekend winning all of the races since I was 14. It’s been a long road to dominate a weekend and we finally did it today. I’m just ecstatic, my family is ecstatic, the team is ecstatic – I couldn’t be happier. It was also thrilling because it was so calm, cool and collected for 10 of the laps or so and then a full course caution came out when I had an almost 5s gap. Then here I am on the last lap defending three corners on the track to make sure I could hold my spot. Luckily, I kept my head down and we did it. I have to send a big thank-you to Pabst Racing, Force Indy, Penske Entertainment, Sparco, Bell, SimCraft and NXG – all of them. This wouldn’t be possible without them.”

De Alba looked set for fourth until, bizarrely, his car’s fire extinguisher suddenly discharged as he negotiated the tricky Turn 13 on the final lap. Reece Ushijima, directly behind, adeptly avoided the slowing Tatuus, whose driver was completely unsighted by a wave of foam, but behind him, Jace Denmark (Pabst Racing) from Scottsdale, Ariz., and Sweden’s Joel Granfors (Exclusive Autosport) weren’t so fortunate, making contact which dropped both of them far down the order.

Jackson Lee (Turn 3 Motorsport), from Avon, Ind., took advantage of the melee to jump from a solid 10th to record his first top-five finish, narrowly ahead of fellow Indianan Jack William Miller (Miller Vinatieri Motorsports) and Pizzi.

Lee’s avoidance also enabled him to claim the Tilton Hard Charger Award after having lined up 12th on the grid.

Augie Pabst picked up his third PFC Award of the young season as the winning car owner.

The USF Pro 2000 teams and drivers will return to action at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Grand Prix road course for another pair of races in conjunction with the NTT IndyCar Series on May 11-13.

RESULTS