IndyCar grid penalties for Andretti, MSR and RLL cars at Portland

It’s that time of the season where NTT IndyCar Series teams are making unapproved engine changes and grid penalties are the norm. Three Honda-powered drivers will receive six-position grid demotions after qualifying for the BitNile.com Grand Prix of …

It’s that time of the season where NTT IndyCar Series teams are making unapproved engine changes and grid penalties are the norm.

Three Honda-powered drivers will receive six-position grid demotions after qualifying for the BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland as a result of their teams making unapproved engine changes — only four engines are allowed to be used each year, with the need to go to a fifth, or sixth, or more, coming with grid penalties.

The trio is led by Graham Rahal in the No. 15 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing entry, Kyle Kirkwood in the No. 27 Andretti Global car, and David Malukas in the No. 66 Meyer Shank Racing entry for changes made after last weekend’s race at World Wide Technology Raceway.

Carroll hammers in flag-to-flag TA2 victory in Portland

The Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli’s Western Championship race two at Portland International Raceway remained green from start to finish, leaving competitors to rely purely on their speed and skill throughout the 51-lap event. Tim Carroll in …

The Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli’s Western Championship race two at Portland International Raceway remained green from start to finish, leaving competitors to rely purely on their speed and skill throughout the 51-lap event. Tim Carroll in the No. 46 CRDMFG.com Chevrolet Camaro faced a formidable challenge from Michael LaPaglia in the closing laps, but ultimately led from flag to flag, claiming his first-career victory in the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series. XGT competitor Chris Evans also led his class from beginning to end, dominating the event to take the overall race win.

Carroll took the green flag from the first position in the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series after laying down the class’s fastest lap in Saturday’s first race and got off to a great start, pulling out ahead of his competitors. LaPaglia (No. 31 Papini’s Garage/F.A.S.T. Auto/Howe Ford Mustang) started the race from the runner-up spot, but struggled on the first lap as the front of the field jockeyed for position, getting shuffled back to fourth by the conclusion of the first lap and dropping to fifth by lap six. Third-place starter Tim Barber (No. 33 DIG Motorsports Ford Mustang) took over second, followed by fifth-place starter Ken Sutherland (No. 68 Kallberg Racing/Wyatt Fire Chevrolet Camaro), who had moved into third, and the top-three remained the same for the next 24 laps.

While Carroll led Barber by more than three seconds, LaPaglia was fighting his way back to the front, working his way into the third position on lap 26. Behind him were Kyle Kelley (No. 80 PK+k Properties/UPRacing.com Ford Mustang) in fourth and Sutherland in fifth, but both of them soon faced mechanical issues, with Kelley retiring due to a rear-end issue on lap 31 and Sutherland forced into the paddock with a stuck throttle on lap 37. That same lap, LaPaglia was able to make the pass on Barber, taking over second and setting his sights on the leader. LaPaglia was methodical in the closing laps, reeling in Carroll and narrowing the gap from more than 2s to a mere 0.2s, but despite his best efforts, he just couldn’t complete the pass before the checkered flag waved. Carroll crossed the finish line first to earn his first-career Trans Am win, followed by LaPaglia and Barber. Newcomer Cole Moore (No. 54 Naake-Klauer Motorsports Ford Mustang) finished fourth, and Saturday’s winner Barry Boes (No. 32 Accio Data/TRB Autosport Ford Mustang) finished fifth, overcoming a crash in Sunday morning’s practice session to earn his fourth top-five finish of the year.

“I think Tim [Barber] had some good words of wisdom in the beginning,” said Carroll. “He was like, ‘Just go when it’s green,’ and we just took off from there. I was like, ‘Let’s get a couple good qualifying laps in for the first start,’ and we did that. Then I thought, ‘Alright, we’re clicking off some cars, we’ll just keep doing this a little longer.’ Then halfway through the race, I was just counting the corners, getting all the marks and stuff, and I knew these guys were coming at some point in time. Once they got there, I thought, ‘It’s time for qualifying laps again.’ Then I think we started hucking it, and Michael [LaPaglia] was getting close to me in Turns 1 and 2, and I’m like, ‘Oh man, I think that’s going to be the spot if he’s going to do it.’ But I had some extra distance into 10. I was like, ‘Oh man, he’s coming.’ But it was awesome.

“I just really want to thank all the guys that helped make this possible: Scott Barnett, his brother Bruce Barnett. His wife’s here—everybody’s here—my wife’s here. This is like the biggest weekend for all of us, and it’s just so awesome to have all the support behind us. Special thanks to Alex for the engineering from M1 Racecars, that helped us out. I’m just super pumped to be able to be a part of those guys.”

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In XGT, Chris Evans (No. 92 Central Welding Supply Ford Mustang) put on a clinic, leading every lap to earn the overall race victory and sweep his class this weekend. Second-place starter John Moore (No. 5 Central Welding Supply Ford Mustang) gave Evans a good fight in the opening laps, but used his car up early and faded throughout the race, giving Evans an insurmountable advantage to win his second race of the weekend.

“Well, luckily, John [Moore] had a little bit of trouble,” said Evans on the top step of the podium. “We talked about a strategy, about being smooth at the beginning, and it worked for five or six laps. Hats off to all these TA2 guys, especially the guys up in front. You know, I’ve got quite a little bit more car, so it’s really not a good comparison, but they drove great, and it was kind of cool watching them. I really want to thank Gary, and especially Jeff Jefferson and the crew. It was just really a great show, and I’m really thankful everybody showed up. Thank you.”

David Hampton in the No. 14 AR Motorsports Porsche Cayman GT4 CS MR was the only competitor in Sunday’s SGT race. He hit his marks from start to finish, working his way from 17th overall to 12th to claim his first-career SGT victory.

“This was really special, and I’m sorry I scared the other SGT guys away,” joked Hampton. “I thought it was a lot of fun yesterday, but apparently, they had some other issues going on. What a gas. I got to drive really hard, I got my best lap times, finally, towards the middle of the race. I couldn’t carry it on in the end. This was a lot of fun — really fun. It’s so great to see my family here; my brother showed up, my great friends. My crew is just absolutely awesome. These guys just will me to win.”

The Western Championship takes off the rest of the summer before returning to the track October 18-20 at Spring Mountain Motorsports Ranch for the Spring Mountain SpeedTour.

RESULTS

Moore runs to Portland pole in maiden Trans Am XGT start

John Moore in the No. 5 Central Welding Supply Ford Mustang earned the Pole Award in his first time qualifying in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli Western Championship’s XGT class at Portland International Raceway. He made a lap time of …

John Moore in the No. 5 Central Welding Supply Ford Mustang earned the Pole Award in his first time qualifying in the Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli Western Championship’s XGT class at Portland International Raceway. He made a lap time of 1m13.050s. Moore has two previous starts in Trans Am’s Western Championship, both in the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series. Moore was also fastest in Friday’s practice session.

Tim Barber was the quickest TA2 competitor, laying down a lap time of 1m13.767s in his No. 33 DIG Motorsports Ford Mustang. Newcomer Tim Brown in the No. 66 Brown Bros. Ford Lincoln Ford Mustang GT4 was fastest in the SGT class with a time of 1m16.569s. Steve Goldman in the No. 13 LIG Racing Chevrolet Corvette was fastest in the TA class with a 1m17.297s.

“I’m brand new to this road course stuff; I’m a circle track guy, but I am sure enjoying it,” said Moore. “I like to say, ‘Happy learned how to putt,’ because, you know, I started off 7s slow and 60 days later, I’m on the pole, so I’m figuring it out. My message to the people that know me is: hang up those circle track cars and come out here and do some road course racing, because this Trans Am Series is a ball. I have never had so much fun in a race car. I’m looking forward to getting on with it and having some more fun. My expectations for the weekend are to stay fastest and win. That’s what I want, and we’re on point to do it. I’ve got the race car, I’ve got the team, I’ve got the track, and I feel figured out in my race craft. I’m used to running in a pack, so it’s going to be a good time.”

RESULTS

Rosenqvist happy with surge to second at Portland GP

On the eve of his much-predicted departure from Arrow McLaren, Felix Rosenqvist produced his best result from his three-year tenure with the team, after passing his teammates and splitting the dominant Chip Ganassi Racing Hondas at the checkered …

On the eve of his much-predicted departure from Arrow McLaren, Felix Rosenqvist produced his best result from his three-year tenure with the team, after passing his teammates and splitting the dominant Chip Ganassi Racing Hondas at the checkered flag.

After a mechanical failure in qualifying left him in a disappointing and unrepresentative 11th on the grid, behind teammates Pato O’Ward (sixth) and Alexander Rossi (ninth), Rosenqvist was on it from the word go. Making good use of his Firestone primaries in the opening stint to climb into the top 10 and remain in touch with those running the softer alternate-compound tires, he was there ready to surge forward as his rivals’ reds wilted.

“I was really bummed yesterday after qualifying. We had something break in the steering rack, and we had to pit before we could do our lap in Q2. There was definitely more in it than our starting position showed.

“What a race. That was really good fun. It kind of went our way as well. We kind of gambled on staying out on reds, but it worked out with the yellow in the end.”

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Rosenqvist ran primary tires in his first three stints, planning to make the red stint as short as possible. This plan almost came undone when a caution was called on lap 85 for Agustin Canapino spinning and stalling in a dangerous place. Race control left the pits open until Rosenqvist could pit, which vaulted him ahead of Scott Dixon, who he had been closely tailing before the Ganassi driver made his stop. However, the timing of this obvious opportunity to stop was less than ideal since it meant Rosenqvist would have to run 26 laps on reds.

He managed to pull away from Dixon after the restart — aided by two backmarkers between them — and then managed the gap. Needing to preserve the reds did mean, however, that trying to fight leader Alex Palou over the final stint would be overambitious.

“We had to obviously save the tires a bit,” said Rosenqvist, who was replaced by Palou at Ganassi at the end of 2020, “I think it wasn’t the winning strategy, but it was enough for a podium. Really happy with the comeback we did…

“It was a pretty straight shot in a final restart, and I was on the reds, [Palou] was on the blacks. Both fairly new tires. I thought I had a shot, but honestly the blacks were kind of as good as the reds in the restarts…at least from my point of view. I just couldn’t really attack him.

“Once I realized he was pulling away, I was like, ‘I probably have to save my tires now because otherwise I risk actually falling through the field in the last five laps.’ I was just kind of managing after a couple of laps, and I think I pretty much did the optimal stint time that I could with those tires.”

IndyCar Portland GP recap with CGR strategist Mike O’Gara

RACER’s Marshall Pruett reviews the Portland Grand Prix won by new champion Alex Palou and is joined towards the end by Palou’s No. 10 Chip Ganassi Racing strategist Mike O’Gara while sharing a few new silly season nuggets before saying farewell to …

RACER’s Marshall Pruett reviews the Portland Grand Prix won by new champion Alex Palou and is joined towards the end by Palou’s No. 10 Chip Ganassi Racing strategist Mike O’Gara while sharing a few new silly season nuggets before saying farewell to Oregon and hello to Monterey.

Or click HERE to watch on YouTube.

‘It’s been an amazing season’ – Palou on his second IndyCar title

Alex Palou, who clinched his second IndyCar championship in three years with victory at Portland, said that his fifth win of the year is a result of Chip Ganassi Racing supplying him with a quick car at all tracks. Counting his dominant run at …

Alex Palou, who clinched his second IndyCar championship in three years with victory at Portland, said that his fifth win of the year is a result of Chip Ganassi Racing supplying him with a quick car at all tracks.

Counting his dominant run at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca in the 2022 finale, Palou has now won six of the last 16 IndyCar races, while Ganassi has won a further three in that period thanks to Scott Dixon (two) and Marcus Ericsson.

Palou is the first driver in 16 years to clinch an Indy car title before the series finale, and this year his only possible competitor for the crown was his six-time champion teammate Dixon. Palou’s average finish in 2023 has been 3.75.

“It’s been an amazing season,” he said after clinching Ganassi’s 15th drivers’ title in U.S. open-wheel. “We just had fast cars everywhere, and we’ve been able to maximize our results even on the bad weekends, and to finish here at Portland with a win feels amazing.

“We have one race left that we won last year, so feeling pretty confident. Obviously, yeah, clinching the championship makes you feel a little bit more relaxed.”

Regarding victory at Portland, in which he led 69 of the 110 laps, he said he felt capable of winning even before the drop of the green flag, and qualifying fifth had not been representative of the No. 10 American Legion-backed car’s ultimate pace.

“I thought we had a really, really fast car,” he said. “I would say in the Fast Six, the result we got there wasn’t what we could have achieved. I didn’t think we extracted 100 percent from it, so I knew after warmup that we could go for it and win the race.

“We didn’t really go on safe mode of just staying with the No. 9 [Dixon] because we thought we could win the race today, and we did. So happy that everything worked out.”

He went on to describe the pre-race prep: “Chip, before the race we did a meeting, and he was very aggressive on telling us that we had to win. I was like, ‘Alright, let’s win then.’ Before jumping into the car he was with me. He said, ‘Alright, let’s have a good and a clean race, just manage your position.’ I was like, ‘No, Chip, you told us to win, so I’ll go ahead, and I think we can win it.’

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“It was honestly one of those races where I knew we had everything we needed to win the race, that we had something else that could separate us from our competitors. It was true, and we were able to maximize it.”

Palou paid tribute to his strategist and Ganassi team manager Barry Wanser, who was absent this weekend, as he recovers from a serious operation.

“Honestly, he’s the director of the No. 10 car. He is managing the whole team across the four cars and even other series, but he’s the director, and he calls pretty much everything on the No. 10. He’s a very big piece on our stand, but unfortunately he couldn’t be here. Everybody is really sad that he’s not here, but I think he’s even more sad. He’s recovering well, we know that. He’s a strong guy, and hopefully he’ll be back with us very soon.”

After a second year of debate regarding his future, and with Ganassi virtually confirming that Palou will remain onboard rather than switch to Arrow McLaren, inevitably the question arose of whether he had given up on his Formula 1 dream, after testing the McLaren F1 car.

“No. I said it many times that it was not my full focus,” Palou responded. “Then when an opportunity came, I had to go for it, I felt. At the same time I know I’m not 21 or 19. I’m already 26, which is good. I’m not saying I’m old, but I mean, it’s not that I’m super young. Next year I’ll be 27. If an opportunity comes in the future, which is like really, really small chances, I’ll think about it for sure, 100 percent.

“I’m happy, honestly. As long as I keep on winning championships and races or battling for championships I think I’ll have a great career.”

Palou would not, however, confirm whether he is remaining with the team with whom he has delivered nine wins in three years.

“Obviously after Laguna I will try and speak a little bit more,” he said, “I’m going to enjoy as much as possible the win from today, the win from the championship, and then we’ll see.

“I started…my first page on the book, so that thing is going well. I mean, I don’t really have anything else to say now. There’s no news. There’s nothing else I could tell you now that is exciting or anything. But I will.”

Palou masterclass nets second IndyCar championship with Portland win

Alex Palou won his second IndyCar title in three years after a brilliant drive to victory in Portland that saw him able to cope with everything thrown at him by his Chip Ganassi Racing teammate, and hold off the Arrow McLaren Chevrolet of Felix …

Alex Palou won his second IndyCar title in three years after a brilliant drive to victory in Portland that saw him able to cope with everything thrown at him by his Chip Ganassi Racing teammate, and hold off the Arrow McLaren Chevrolet of Felix Rosenqvist to the checkered flag.

Rosenqvist was forced to make his final stop earlier than intended when he had to grab the opportunity under a late caution period. It allowed him to jump ahead of Scott Dixon, but then he had to nurse his softer compound rubber for a long final stint — a task to which he was equal.

Pato O’Ward made it a fine day for Arrow McLaren, holding off a storming drive from Josef Newgarden and Rinus VeeKay.

From the pole, Rahal gunned his Rahal Letterman Lanigan Honda from Turn 12 and easily held the lead down to Turn 1 over the Penske Chevrolet of Scott McLaughlin, while Chip Ganassi Racing’s points leader Alex Palou beat Colton Herta’s Andretti Autosport Honda into Turn 1 to claim third, with Scott Dixon in fifth.

O’Ward defended well from Will Power, who then found himself severe pressure from the Arrow McLaren Chevrolets of Alexander Rossi and Rosenqvist, the former on red tires. This pressure told on Power at the start of the third lap, when he spun off trying to fend off Rossi on his outside at Turn 4; he required a bump start, dropped to the back of the field and went a lap down. Another Penske to suffer was Newgarden who fell to 17th after going through the Turn 1 runoff, along with Kyle Kirkwood (Andretti) on the opening lap.

Romain Grosjean’s wretched second half of the season continued, sustaining damage as the pack funneled through the twists on the opening lap, and having to go to the paddock for suspension repairs.

For the restart, Rahal led McLaughlin (both on Firestone alternates) with Palou third on the harder compound primaries, Herta on alternates, Dixon and O’Ward on primaries, Rossi on reds, Rosenqvist on primaries. Marcus Ericsson, meanwhile, got past VeeKay to claim ninth.

Rahal edged away from McLaughlin into a 1.5s lead by lap 13, at which time Palou had stretched his gap over Herta to a similar margin, and the Andretti car had Dixon and the three Arrow McLarens jammed up behind him, suggesting his reds were starting to fall off. Rosenqvist’s hard tires were also starting to pay off, and he passed Rossi for seventh on lap 16.

Herta, Rossi and Ericsson gave up on the alternates and pitted for primaries on lap 18, as did Ericsson. Herta jumped Rossi in this sequence but he was brought in again to serve a drive-through penalty for speeding on pitlane.

McLaughlin pitted from second on lap 21 while sitting 2s behind Rahal, and that prompted the leader in next time by. He easily maintained track position, and although McLaughlin gained on him with his warmed tires, the Penske driver wasn’t quite close enough by the time they got back around to the pit straight to pull off a pass.

Palou, meanwhile, was making hay up front now with a clear track, extending his lead over Dixon to 4s by lap 28. Less than a second behind Dixon was O’Ward and Rosenqvist, who pitted at the end of lap 29 – Rosenqvist for more primaries, O’Ward for a set of reds. It was the No. 6 crew who got its driver out first, Rosenqvist thus vaulting O’Ward.

Palou pitted at the end of lap 31 and emerged in third on Firestone alternates, 9s ahead of the Rahal vs. McLaughlin battle. Kirkwood, who had been told to cede two positions for a blocking maneuver on VeeKay, was now running off-strategy, but had nonetheless done well to recover from his lap 1 off.

Speaking of opening lap disasters, Newgarden was well worth watching at this stage, since he had set Palou-matching times toward the end of his first stint and emerged from pitlane only just behind McLaughlin. Once his reds were up to temperature, he went hard, and passed McLaughlin for seventh and zoomed in on Rahal.

Up front, Palou took advantage of his reds to pull a 5.8s margin over Dixon by lap 36, but there it stalled and the six-time champ on primaries started chipping away at his deficit, getting it down to 3.5s on lap 41. Rosenqvist was running 2s behind Dixon but 2s ahead of O’Ward, and once Kirkwood pitted, next up was the fight between Rahal, Newgarden and McLaughlin. Close behind them were Ericsson, VeeKay and Rossi.

By lap 47, Dixon was firmly in Palou’s mirrors, the gap under 1s, and it was time for the points leader to duck in and get off his reds, leaving Dixon up front. Palou emerged from the pits right in front of Helio Castroneves and made at least two moves to defend his track position from the Meyer Shank Racing driver.

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The following lap, Newgarden pitted to shed his reds, and a lap after that, O’Ward, Rahal and McLaughlin stopped too. The latter two emerged behind Kirkwood and Newgarden, but while on cold tires, they also got zapped by Ericsson and VeeKay, while Rossi also got around McLaughlin. Two laps later, Ericsson was undone by an aggressive VeeKay maneuver which sent the 2022 Indy 500 champion off the track at Turn 7, allowing Rahal back past. Ericsson’s recovery held up Rossi enough for McLaughlin to re-pass the McLaren down the front straight. Just a little further ahead, Newgarden got around the fuel-saving Kirkwood.

Rosenqvist pitted from second at the end of lap 58 and lost only one position to Palou who had got away with a warning for his swerve in front of Castroneves. Dixon thus stopped and took on a set of reds, emerging just in front of Rosenqvist whose warm blacks weren’t enough to create an opportunity to tackle Dixon on cold but getting warmer reds.

Those reds weren’t enough to get Dixon any closer to Palou, and by lap 67 in this 110-lap race, he was the wrong side of 10s away. Five seconds behind Rosenqvist was O’Ward who had a 6s margin over Newgarden. Some 3.5s behind the lead Penske was VeeKay, Marcus Armstrong’s Ganassi car, Rahal, Ericsson and Kirkwood.

With 36 laps to go, Palou found himself losing time to Dixon as he got bottled up behind IndyCar debutant Juri Vips, and his advantage dropped to 6.5s. There it stayed, as Dixon and Rosenqvist were temporarily held up by Kirkwood who had emerged from the pits full of fuel but still desperate to hit his fuel numbers.

Palou made his final scheduled stop at the end of lap 79 and, while he had to cede track position to Sting Ray Robb of Dale Coyne Racing on exiting, he emerged ahead of Rahal who had yet to stop. It wasn’t all smooth for Ganassi in this round of stops, however, as Armstrong was sent on his way with his right rear not properly attached, costing him his potential best IndyCar finish.

Dixon and O’Ward stopped next time by, leaving Rosenqvist at the head of the field, but he was called to pitlane when Agustin Canapino spun and stalled at Turn 11 after losing it under braking for Turn 10. Race Control held off the yellow until Rosenqvist could pit, and while he came out in front of Dixon, unfortunately this early final stop meant the McLaren driver would have to run a very long final stint on reds.

For the lap 81 restart, Palou led Rosenqvist and stayed way out of attack zone, but there were three backmarkers between Rosenqvist and Dixon. One of those was Armstrong, who of course let Dixon go but then protected his tail from O’Ward for a few corners.

Two laps later, Rossi was heavily defending from Herta while trying to get past Ericsson on the back straight, but he snagged the Swede’s left-rear wheel and broke his front wing, which sent him across the grass into Turn 10 and limping to pitlane.

With a dozen laps to go, Palou’s lead had increased to 2.5s, while Rosenqvist’s priority was trying to match Dixon’s lap times while keeping his alternates alive. He was able to nurse the more fragile rubber long enough to score second, his best result since he joined Arrow McLaren, just before his probable departure from the squad.

O’Ward held off Newgarden and VeeKay to the checkered flag, while Ericsson scooped seventh after resisting Herta, who spun in pursuit and dropped to 13th at the checkers.

David Malukas climbed from 24th on the grid to claim eighth ahead of McLaughlin and Kirkwood.

RESULTS

Foster steers clear of chaos, grabs second Indy NXT win at Portland

Louis Foster converted pole position into a dominant victory at Portland, while opening lap chaos claimed Hunter McElrea, among others, leaving Christian Rasmussen with a 65-point lead with two races to go. From his fourth pole of the season, Foster …

Louis Foster converted pole position into a dominant victory at Portland, while opening lap chaos claimed Hunter McElrea, among others, leaving Christian Rasmussen with a 65-point lead with two races to go.

From his fourth pole of the season, Foster wasted no time in hitting the gas exiting Turn 12 to put some healthy distance between himself and Andretti Autosport teammate and fellow front-row starter McElrea at the drop of the green.

That left McElrea vulnerable to the second-row starters, points leader Rasmussen and HMD Motorsports teammate Kyffin Simpson. As they braked for tight Turn 1 chicane, fifth-place starter Reece Gold was knocked from behind by Victor Franzoni’s Juncos Hollinger Racing car. That sent Gold into Rasmussen, McElrea, and Simpson, and the ensuing chaos also ended the race for Jacob Abel and Josh Pierson. Rasmussen resumed by himself, but McElrea needed assistance and then headed for the pits for repairs.

The restart saw Foster leading eighth-place starter Danial Frost and Nolan Siegel who had both skipped through the mess unharmed, while behind them were Jagger Jones and Jamie Chadwick, up from 13th and 16th respectively. Rasmussen restarted ninth, and was up to sixth at the end of the first green-flag lap. He had floor damage, so was losing downforce, and he was being cautious, too, knowing that his only true title threat, McElrea, had been more seriously hobbled and was running four laps down.

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Up front, Foster seemed easily able to edge away from Frost, pushing his margin to 3.5s by lap 15. At the same time, Frost was was 2s ahead of Siegel, who had 3.5s over the battle between Jones, Christian Bogle and Rasmussen.

There was stasis until seven laps to go when Bogle’s presence forced Jones to take a defensive line at the end of the back straight. Jones then moved slightly to the right before the left hander, and struck Bogle’s front wing, damaging it and sending his own car out of control and across the grass on corner exit. He limped to the pits with a deflated tire, while Bogle tried to struggle on and defend from Rasmussen.

Nearer the front, there was a cleaner looking battle, as Frost was 5.6s behind leader Foster, but less than 0.5s ahead of Siegel. At the start of the final lap, Frost swung right to protect the inside line into Turn 1, but Siegel kept on around the outside which gave him the inside for Turn 2 and second place duly changed hands.

Thus Foster claimed his second Indy NXT win almost 8s clear of Siegel and Frost.

Almost 17s back, Bogle had no problem holding off Rasmussen, while Chadwick’s sixth is her best result of the season.

RESULTS

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.

Newgarden hops to the top in Portland final practice

In an extremely busy warmup session for the BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland, Josef Newgarden emerged quickest for Team Penske ahead of Callum Ilott’s Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet. There was little surprise that Felix Rosenqvist was quick to …

In an extremely busy warmup session for the BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland, Josef Newgarden emerged quickest for Team Penske ahead of Callum Ilott’s Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet.

There was little surprise that Felix Rosenqvist was quick to shine in this final warmup before the race, because only a car issue prevented him from contending for a top four in Saturday afternoon’s qualifying session.

It was David Malukas of Dale Coyne Racing with HMD Honda who first got below 60s, with a 59.8615s lap on Firestone alternates. His time at the top lasted less than a minute as Marcus Ericsson’s Chip Ganassi Racing Honda moved to P1 with a 59.6256s, and he was soon backed up teammate and points leader Alex Palou. Ominously for the opposition, his best time was set on the Firestone primaries.

So too was the best time from his teammate Scott Dixon, the only man who can stop Palou from claiming a second crown, and who is starting a row ahead of Palou on the grid. Dixon was fifth, ahead of Rinus VeeKay, who, as in practices one and two, was shining in the Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet.

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With under 13 minutes to go, Newgarden, who crashed out of qualifying earlier in the afternoon, bounced to the top on Firestone alternates with a 59.4533s. Teammate Will Power then joined him in the top five, while Ericsson slid through the Turn 1/2/3 chicane without harm. VeeKay jumped to third (again on alternates), and Colton Herta entered the top five (again, alternates).

Tom Blomqvist, who has had his engine changed since qualifying last, looked strong in the Meyer Shank Racing Honda, running in the top dozen for much of the session.

With under five minutes to go, Palou — now on alternates — lowered his lap time to a 59.5716s, although this was very slightly shaded by Callum Ilott of Juncos Hollinger Racing who will start tomorrow’s race from eighth. His teammate Agustin Canapino grabbed sixth on his alternates, just a breath slower than Dixon and ahead of VeeKay.

Almost all drivers completed more than 20 laps, as teams judged the degradation over the course of a stint, with a maximum of 28 by Newgarden, Power and Pato O’Ward.

The race begins at 12:30 p.m. PT time, 3:30 p.m. ET Sunday.

RESULTS