Graham Rahal, who captured his second straight road course pole position at Portland Saturday, says his race setup is even stronger than his qualifying setup. The IndyCar veteran edged last year’s pole-winner Scott McLaughlin by 0.033s, just two …
Graham Rahal, who captured his second straight road course pole position at Portland Saturday, says his race setup is even stronger than his qualifying setup.
The IndyCar veteran edged last year’s pole-winner Scott McLaughlin by 0.033s, just two races after outpacing the field on the Indianapolis road course. He’s now confident that his People Ready-backed Rahal Letterman Lanigan Honda has the inherent pace to keep him at the front all day Sunday.
“I think our race car is going to be better than our qualifying car,” he said after using fresh primary Firestones to beat the opposition who all ran the softer alternates. “I said that at Indy GP, I think we showed that, and I think here we’re in pretty good position.
“Obviously it was nice to run the blacks [primaries]. I think Firestone has done a good job here. The tire is very, very tricky though, the red and the black, frankly. There’s big deg. The peak is very, very early. I think reds after lap two are pretty well gone.
“This morning [second practice] we decided not to run as many sets as most guys. I think everybody in the field except for the RLL cars used two sets of tires this morning or some used two yesterday [first practice], one this morning. We just used one per session, and we wanted to try to keep a set, and everything worked out today. Thank God for that.
“We’re excited for tomorrow and hopefully we can get People Ready a win, and man, it would just feel good after all these years and close calls to win again.”
Rahal, who is seeking his first race victory since capturing both rounds in the Detroit double-header in 2017, is hopeful that full course cautions do not come into play and that he’ll do the majority of the leading.
“I feel the level of the driver, the talent level has increased so much,” he said. “We don’t get as many yellows anymore, so hopefully tomorrow we can have a really clean start. We can control this race and make it pretty straightforward [on] strategy.
“I think the reds are going to throw a lot of people for a twist tomorrow. Obviously the track temp and everything should be cooler tomorrow, but this afternoon [final practice] will be very interesting to see how the degradation is. This race has always been a red race…and I think we might see some different stuff this year, which is why we were keeping all those blacks, frankly, to be able to go into the race with…
“The hotter the temp, I think it’s going to kill the reds. They saturate very quickly. I think they get very hot, and it creates further problems. But tomorrow is a cooler day, too, and if you’re up front, God bless we have a good start and we can do that. When you’re in that position, I think you can try to take care of them and maintain the reds a little bit better.
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“To do this [110-lap race] in two [pit stops], you’ve got to go, what, 35, 36 laps on your reds? That’s a lot to ask. I’ve already done it this weekend on blacks, so I know the blacks can do it and do it competitively, but it’s a lot to ask of the reds, I think. Most people won’t do it, too, to be clear, but if you tried…”
Rahal, who said he “really struggled with the reds – a lot of what we had to do today was just to get the car to rotate for those specifically” was asked by RACER to explain where and why he felt the primaries were superior.
“To be honest, it’s everywhere. I don’t think the tires are that different. The reason I went to blacks was because, on the very first outing, I was P1 in group one on the blacks, and I did like a 58.30s or something, so my red pace wasn’t much quicker at all. That’s why at the end I just felt, ‘Hey, I don’t think I’m going to be able to do that again on reds,’ and so I went for the blacks.
“I think that the front tire gets really heat-saturated and it gives up. It’s like [Turns] 10, 11 – 10 you’re flying, 11, and then you get to 12 and the tire is just hot and it gives up and is pretty lazy.
“To get it to rotate, you’re doing a lot of stuff that’s not very good for the race. Like I said, I think we’ve just got to go back on that a little bit.”
Asked if there was anything particularly responsible for his new-found pace in qualifying – this was only his fifth pole in 250-plus IndyCar races – Rahal explained: “Christian [Lundgaard, teammate] came up to me and said, ‘Oh, you’re the best coach I’ve ever been around,’ and that’s what hit me, and I thought, ‘Well, I’m going to close this…book and we’re going to move on!’
“Christian has done an exceptional job of bringing in speed, and you saw last year he struggled with race craft. He could be fast, but on race day I was always confident that we could get him. He’s come back this year, and not only has he had the speed, but his race craft has been amazing. Typically he’s been able to replicate what we’ve been able to do in the past, which is to go forward on Sundays and put himself in a good spot. A lot of this comes down to just being pushed hard.
“But again, you can be pushed hard. It doesn’t mean that the result is going to happen. You can feel the pressure. You can feel that you want to go faster, you want to get a pole, but ultimately all the pieces of the puzzle have to be together, and that’s what’s kind of nice right now is it just feels like the whole organization has come together and the engineering staff has done an amazing job, the mechanics who have had their backs up against the wall and dealt with a lot the last few years have stuck with it, so they deserve it.
“A culmination of all those things is equaling some results.”
Graham Rahal took his second pole position in three races for Sunday’s BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland after grabbing a fresh set of primary tires in the Firestone Fast Six and fighting off the best Penske, Andretti and Ganassi cars. The Rahal …
Graham Rahal took his second pole position in three races for Sunday’s BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland after grabbing a fresh set of primary tires in the Firestone Fast Six and fighting off the best Penske, Andretti and Ganassi cars.
The Rahal Letterman Lanigan Honda of Rahal, which also started from pole on the Indianapolis road course last month, edged last year’s Portland polesitter Scott McLaughlin by barely more than 0.03s to claim top spot. It is the first time Rahal has scored more than one pole in a season since 2009.
McLaughlin was the only Penske driver to make it through to the Firestone Fast Six, while title contenders Scott Dixon and Alex Palou also got to the final segment of qualifying and will roll off fourth and fifth respectively.
Firestone Fast Six
McLaughlin and Colton Herta started the session with a supposed tire advantage, having put one fewer lap on their Firestone alternates, and started the session on primaries. Palou, the championship leader, went out straight away on his alternates and delivered a 58.6972s effort on his first flyer which he lowered marginally to 58.6505s next time by. He then pitted to grab a second set of reds.
Meanwhile, Rahal went fastest on a fresh set of primary tires, a 58.3195s, and McLaughlin tried and failed to usurp him, falling just 0.033s short. Herta’s third and final flyer went wrong when he lost time at Turn 7 and he wound up a further 0.1s behind.
Ganassi’s Scott Dixon nipped teammate Palou by 0.0689s to get a spot on the fourth row, while Pato O’Ward took sixth.
Q2
Callum Ilott went straight out on alternate tires, at the track where he made his IndyCar race debut two years ago. However, before he could lay down his faster second lap, out came the red flag for a hefty hit for Josef Newgarden at the exit of Turn 12, after he launched off the curbs on the outside and into the tire wall. Naturally, the two-time champion was out and will start 12th.
Red flag comes out in Round 2 of qualifying after this incident for @josefnewgarden.
The session resumed with seven minutes remaining and everyone ran one more lap on hard tires, except for Ilott, of course. Dixon, Felix Rosenqvist and McLaughlin sat at the top of the times at this stage.
Into the pits to grab alternates, the 11 remaining cars took to the track once more, but in Rosenqvist’s case, not for long, as he pitted again to report that “something” was broken.
Meanwhile, McLaughlin delivered a 58.0777s to go P1, chased by Herta, ahead of O’Ward, Palou and Dixon. Rahal just got in, and Will Power should easily have bounced him out, but the No. 12 Penske Chevy ran wide in Turn 7, so its left side wheels went into the dirt and didn’t accelerate. Even so, he fell only 0.05s short of progressing.
Ilott did a fine job to grab eighth ahead of Alexander Rossi and Marcus Ericsson.
Q1 Group 2
Palou worked down to a 58.6784s on primary tires, 0.0354s ahead of Saturday morning’s fastest man, McLaughlin. Agustin Canapino went out on alternates and delivered third fastest time. Ericsson had an off and accidentally held up Ganassi teammate Dixon, although they were fourth and fifth on the harder compound.
Once everyone grabbed the reds, Palou and McLaughlin remained up top, but Palou pushed the benchmark to 57.9651s, with O’Ward in third for Arrow McLaren ahead of Dixon, Rossi and Ericsson.
Marcus Armstrong of Ganassi and Kyle Kirkwood of Andretti Autosport just missed the cut, surprisingly, ahead of Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s IndyCar debutant Juri Vips. Canapino wound up 10th, ahead of Helio Castroneves and David Malukas.
Tom Blomqvist, IMSA champion, was 14th for Meyer Shank Racing, 0.6s off teammate Castroneves.
Q1 Group 1
With the ambient temperature at 80 degrees and track temperature nudging north of 102 degrees, the opening group took to the track with Newgarden leading the way, while several drivers making a clear effort to immediately separate themselves from the car in front, so as to lay down a decent banker lap on Firestone’s harder primary tire. The exception was Ryan Hunter-Reay who started out with the softer alternate tires on his Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet.
On his second lap, Santino Ferrucci drifted his AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet wide into the final corner, Turn 12, but got himself out of the sand and continued.
Rahal continued to show RLL’s promise here, laying down a 58.3956s lap at 121.078mph on his fourth tour, shading Rosenqvist’s Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, before everyone pitted for the reds.
Herta, Ilott and Romain Grosjean all jumped Rahal on this softer compound, then Rosenqvist produced a 57.8967s (122.121mph) to grab P1, ahead of even Herta’s improved time. Newgarden and Power got through, split by Rahal, while Ilott was a happy surprise for Juncos Hollinger Racing.
The major shock was Christian Lundgaard, who got his first lap in on reds but found traffic on his second – the faster lap – and failed to advance. Unfortunately, he was also the car who Grosjean blamed for getting in his way and preventing him advancing. Rinus VeeKay, after setting some impressive times in practice, came within 0.0165s of usurping Ilott and getting through to Q2.
RACER’s Marshall Pruett looks at the outcome of Friday’s 75-minute practice session for the NTT IndyCar Series and closes with a quick visit from Juri Vips, who ran 15th on debut for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. Or click HERE to watch on YouTube.
RACER’s Marshall Pruett looks at the outcome of Friday’s 75-minute practice session for the NTT IndyCar Series and closes with a quick visit from Juri Vips, who ran 15th on debut for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing.
Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s Christian Lundgaard topped the first practice session for the BITNILE.COM Grand Prix of Portland ahead of Kyle Kirkwood and championship leader Alex Palou. With their extra set of primaries, the rookies hit Oregon’s …
Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s Christian Lundgaard topped the first practice session for the BITNILE.COM Grand Prix of Portland ahead of Kyle Kirkwood and championship leader Alex Palou.
With their extra set of primaries, the rookies hit Oregon’s 1.964-mile 12-turn Portland International Raceway first, but 12 minutes into the session, it was last year’s fourth-place starter Christian Lundgaard who first cracked the 1-minute barrier with a 59.4934s effort. He then improved on this marginally, then significantly, getting down to 59.0588s.
Ganassi’s Marcus Armstrong and Foyt’s Benjamin Pedersen then joined him in the sub 1-minute category, before this pair were split by Rinus VeeKay (Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet).
After 18 minutes, Felix Rosenqvist set fourth fastest time, then understeered off at Turn 12, his Arrow McLaren Chevy making gentle contact with the tire barrier and bringing out the red flag. For that, he would be put in the sin bin for five minutes.
Teammate Pato O’Ward, a winner here in Portland in Indy Lights, moved up to second when action resumed four minutes later, then set a 58.9334s on his eighth lap, while Ryan Hunter-Reay – who will suffer a six-place grid drop for an early engine change – dropped his Ed Carpenter Racing Chevy at Turn 12 but found enough asphalt to get the car slowed down and resumed without a session stoppage. However, a second red flew when Santino Ferrucci ran wide out of Turn 6 and spun into Turn 7 and stalled his Foyt car there.
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With 37 minutes of the 75-minute session to go, Ganassi’s title contenders made their presence felt, with Palou – 2021 Portland winner and IndyCar champion – going top with the first 120mph lap of the session, a 58.9168s, while Scott Dixon slotted into third, 0.13s behind.
Tom Blomqvist, the IMSA champion in his second outing in the Meyer Shank Racing team, had a wild moment through the Turn 1 chicane but after knocking a sign aside, he kept it all together and continued, just before Hunter-Reay spun exiting Turn 12 onto the main straight and stalled, bringing out the third red.
Will Power did a 180 degree spin exiting Turn 2 and used the Turn 1 runoff to resume, while Indy road course pole-winner Graham Rahal emphasized RLL’s pace with sixth fastest, before Armstrong improved to third, while Devlin DeFrancesco was quickest of the Andretti Autosport Hondas.
Lundgaard was the first driver to switch to Firestone’s alternate rubber, but it was VeeKay on old primaries who climbed to P1 with a 58.8474s, then trimmed it to 58.7843s. Lundgaard made his soft compound count with a 58.1776s – 121.531mph – and Kirkwood used the reds to slot into second, 0.1470s behind him.
Palou’s first flyer on reds also put him into the 121mph bracket in third, while Rosenqvist and Alexander Rossi ensured all Arrow McLarens were in the top eight, with Romain Grosjean (Andretti) in the top six. When attempting to join his teammate, Colton Herta hit the grass out of Turn 6.
With under three minutes to go, David Malukas jumped his Dale Coyne Racing w/HMD Honda into sixth, after annoying both Josef Newgarden and Scott Dixon by slowing down.
Newgarden finished the session in 10th, but his teammates Scott McLaughlin and Will Power were 16th and 17th, although they were ahead of Dixon.
IndyCar debutant Juri Vips finished the session in 15th, 0.8441s off his pace-setting teammate Lundgaard and 0.01s ahead of Rahal. Blomqvist was focused on clocking laps – 35 – and finished around 0.75s behind MSR teammate Helio Castroneves.
The long-rumored split between Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing and its beleaguered driver Jack Harvey has been confirmed. Harvey, who joined RLL in its expanded third entry in 2022, will not contest the final three races of the season as RLL both …
The long-rumored split between Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing and its beleaguered driver Jack Harvey has been confirmed. Harvey, who joined RLL in its expanded third entry in 2022, will not contest the final three races of the season as RLL both evaluates new talent and does its best to earn one of the lucrative Leaders Circle contracts with the No. 30 Honda formerly driven by the Briton.
Conor Daly will pilot the car at the 1.25-mile World Wide Technology Raceway oval, and while only Daly has been named, RACER understands Toby Sowery and Juri Vips are strong contenders to make appearances at Portland and Monterey.
“First, I would like to thank Jack Harvey for all of his efforts on behalf of RLL for the last year and a half.,” said RLL co-owner Bobby Rahal. “He committed fully to the team but for whatever reason, we weren’t able to achieve the results that he or the team deserves and we wish him well in the future.
“We will use the final three races of the season to gauge other racing talent. I’m very pleased that Conor has agreed to join us in St. Louis. He’s been strong there and I feel that he can bring value to the team while also providing us with a strong effort. I look forward to having him with us.”
For Daly, an oval specialist, a solid run at WWTR could pull the No. 30 Honda, which sits 23rd in Entrants’ points, into the top 22 where the $910,000 Leaders Circle contracts are offered by the series.
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“It means a lot to have a chance to drive for the Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing team,” Daly said. “I’ve known Bobby ever since I was a child, our families are very close. Mike Lanigan is someone that has known my dad for a long time, and I’ve known him well too. And David Letterman is a friend of our family as well so it’s very special to have the chance to drive for this organization.
“I will obviously do the best job that I can for them to make them proud and make their partners proud and I hope to be able to deliver everything they are looking for. I’m excited for the chance to get back behind the wheel at one of my favorite tracks at World Wide Technology Raceway.”
Graham Rahal has spoken of his frustration over missing out on victory in IndyCar’s Gallagher Grand Prix on the Indy road course, after looking the class of the field throughout the race. He led 36 laps of the 85, but his dominance was greater than …
Graham Rahal has spoken of his frustration over missing out on victory in IndyCar’s Gallagher Grand Prix on the Indy road course, after looking the class of the field throughout the race.
He led 36 laps of the 85, but his dominance was greater than that statistic shows, since many of the laps he didn’t spend leading he was behind only those on an alternative strategy.
However, one of those was Scott Dixon, who went for just two scheduled stops after being spun to the back of the field on the opening lap, giving him a chance to top off with fuel, get off the Firestone primaries and run only the red sidewalled alternates for the remainder of the race, on what was very clearly a “red” day at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. When the other fast drivers made their third stops, Dixon moved back up to the head of the field with a 7s lead, and while Rahal hunted him down, he didn’t have the wherewithal to zap past the six-time champion and finished 0.5s adrift.
“I thought we did all right today,” said Rahal, who a day earlier had scored his fourth career pole position, his first in over six years. “I was worried a little last night that we didn’t have three sets of reds to use. We had a blister on the left front [on the] qualifying set. Not really sure why. It wasn’t a flat spot or anything. Unfortunately it made it so that set wasn’t usable for us today.
“I knew that the two middle stints on black, I was going to have to drive the wheels off of it just to maintain my gap. We were able to do that and actually pull a little bit more of a gap. [Dixon]…all the stints had reds, just blacks to reds. I was chasing down the best ever to do this; it’s not an easy thing.
“We got that last stint, and I knew we were going to have to make a lot of time. Catching him about 0.7s a lap. Traffic came into play. It is what it is.
“At the end of the day we have nothing to be ashamed of. I thought we laid it all on the line, did a great job as an organization this weekend. To get a podium in a year like this obviously feels good. To get a win would have been better, but that’s the way this goes.
“I thought, from what I could see gap-wise, we did the best job on blacks, by far, of anybody today. I knew when Alex [Rossi] or Christian [Lundgaard] were behind me on blacks, they weren’t anywhere near our pace. I was able to hold Christian off on reds. The guys did a great job of giving me a car I could attack with today.”
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Rahal observed that the eight-lap yellow to clear up the first lap fracas was key to Dixon’s triumph, since it meant the reduced pace – and the fact that the No. 9 crew could top him off with fuel and change his black tires for reds – meant that he could run a two-stop race.
“Aside from an eight-lap yellow that didn’t need to be eight laps, that may have had an effect on today. The reality is that’s the way that these things go,” said Rahal. “I asked the guys, ‘I don’t know why we’re not going green. This doesn’t make any sense.’ I knew when [Dixon] pitted, I was like, ‘Son of a…’ You give the guy an inch, he’s going to get a mile. He’s the best at saving fuel, going fast, doing the things he does. I did that exact strategy two years ago so I know it works.
“It was nice, though, in general, just to have a smooth day. Never really felt totally under pressure. Felt that when guys did close on me, that I could respond and pull the gap when I needed to. Never had a single brake lock today. Just a very kind of straightforward day, which was very refreshing for the year that we’ve had.”
Rahal admitted that he knew as soon as he got on Dixon’s tail that passing the Ganassi car would not be the work of a moment.
“Right away I could see he wasn’t sliding around a lot,” said Rahal, who is still seeking his first win since Detroit in 2017. “He used the tires a little. Dixie is not going to just make a mistake. I knew it was going to have to be a flawless run. Frankly, I almost had it, meaning I needed about one more car length to be closer out of Turn 13 to be able to get by. But I pulled off of [push-to-pass boost] because I wasn’t really gaining. I was kind of just holding steady.
“Because of his race pattern being so much more fuel saving, he had a lot more overtake at one stage. We were catching him at the end. He was starting to use overtake. At one point he had 60s more than me. I think at the end we ended up equal. He was using it to stay ahead of me.”
Rahal later confessed: “I certainly wanted one bad today. Frankly…to come up short, it definitely, definitely stings. He made the strategy work. He’s [incredibly] good at that.”
The Hogan family’s successful midwestern trucking business afforded Carl Hogan the opportunity to fund racing teams and join Bobby Rahal in the formation of the Rahal Hogan Racing program which won the CART IndyCar Series championship on debut in …
The Hogan family’s successful midwestern trucking business afforded Carl Hogan the opportunity to fund racing teams and join Bobby Rahal in the formation of the Rahal Hogan Racing program which won the CART IndyCar Series championship on debut in 1992.
Based in St. Louis, Missouri, Hogan Transportation continues to thrive, and with the upcoming World Wide Technologies NTT IndyCar Series race set to take place in late August on the outskirts of Hogan’s home base, the families will be reunited in competition with the return of Hogan branding, this time on the No. 15 Honda piloted by Bobby’s son Graham.
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“The Hogan family has been involved with Indy car racing off and on for over 40 years,” the family said. “Carl Hogan Sr. was a co-owner with Bobby in Rahal Hogan Racing from 1992-1995 and we’re excited to re-energize the partnership between the Rahal and Hogan families after 30 years. It feels natural for us to be the primary sponsor of Graham’s race car. The Hogan family participated in the first Indy car race in St. Louis in 1997 with Dario Franchitti and again in 1999 with Helio Castroneves. It is exciting to once again see the Hogan name on an Indy car at our home track. It will be even more special to have Graham Rahal as the driver.”
The elder Rahal, who co-owns the Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing team with David Letterman and Mike Lanigan, would go onto compete against Hogan from 1996-1999 under the Team Rahal banner. Hogan shuttered the Hogan Racing team in 2000 and passed in 2001.
“I’m very pleased to have Hogan Transportation as the primary sponsor on Graham’s car for their home race,” Rahal added. “Personally, I’ve had a relationship with the Hogan family since 1991 and, of course, they have been involved with the team over the years.
“Thinking about them being on Graham’s race car as the primary sponsor brings back so many fond memories and I can’t help but think about how much Carl Sr. would enjoy this. I have always enjoyed spending time with (Hogan’s sons) Brian, David and Carl Jr. They are good guys, a great family and great company and we are all looking forward to watching Graham in the Hogan car.”
PARTNER ANNOUNCEMENT
We're excited to have @HoganTransport as the primary sponsor on @GrahamRahal's No. 15 Honda at the St. Louis race on August 26-27!
Bobby Rahal didn’t want to hear it. Nearly two months of intensive work to find his IndyCar teams’ competitive shortcomings were starting to bear fruit, and behind the scenes, the 70-year-old was lighting a fire under Rahal Letterman Lanigan …
Bobby Rahal didn’t want to hear it.
Nearly two months of intensive work to find his IndyCar teams’ competitive shortcomings were starting to bear fruit, and behind the scenes, the 70-year-old was lighting a fire under Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s managers and chiefs and engineers and mechanics to get creative in solving its speed deficiencies.
Privately, the three-time IndyCar champion and 1986 Indianapolis 500 winner was said to be putting in an extreme number of hours to help the organization turn itself around, and not with a soft target for “as soon as possible.” He wanted it now. But in typical Rahal fashion, he didn’t want to take any credit for the newfound strength the team he co-owns with Mike Lanigan and David Letterman has demonstrated since weathering a brutal month of May.
“You need to talk to Mike Lanigan, for starters, because he’s pushed as hard as anybody to get us to where we are,” Rahal told RACER. “Give him the credit. Go talk to (new COO) Steve Eriksen, who’s been huge for us since he came onboard. Steve’s brought a lot of things managerially and perspective-wise that we needed, and we’re better off for having him. Go talk to (veteran RLL team manager) Rico (Nault), who’s been with me for longer than I can remember, because he’s been getting his hands full this entire time trying to get us moving in the right direction. There’s a lot of others, also, because they’re the ones to talk to instead of me.”
Bobby Rahal, Steve Eriksen, Ricardo Nault and David Salters of HPD — the brain trust that’s helped Rahal Letterman Lanigan go from zero to hero in the span of mere weeks. Michael Levitt/Lumen
Fresh off the team’s first win since August of 2020, RLL’s in-season efforts were rewarded by first-time IndyCar winner Christian Lundgaard, a native of Denmark whose pursuit of Formula 1 stalled and subsequent rerouting to America with RLL proved transformational for the team and the 21-year-old.
Rahal’s son Graham, who was in tears after failing to qualify for the Indy 500 in May, nearly earned pole for the July 2 race at Mid-Ohio, and put on an epic performance on Sunday in Toronto that started in 27th-place and finished in ninth.
And as his father suggested, speaking with Ricardo Nault revealed the rest of how RLL overhauled itself through fixes in engineering and internal culture.
“We felt we had the basis of a good car, but we just got lost for a while — a year and a half, really,” said Nault, the former IndyCar mechanic who ascended upwards to a leadership role many years ago. “And it just got worse. Then had a little bit of restructuring and started by trying to get some buy-in from everybody to help contribute to the process. We had a bunch of people come up with ideas on what to do and we just started pushing together a little bit more than we have in the past.”
Going through RLL’s darkest days helped the group to rediscover its fighting spirit and improve its chemistry as the men and women who comprise the entries for the Rahal’s No. 15 car, the No. 30 for Jack Harvey, and Lundgaard’s No. 45 banded together in the same quest for success.
“We were all down, and everybody had to come together to help each other,” Nault continued. “And Graham, Christian and Jack, they all work really well together to try to make the cars better; nobody holds back. Nobody’s got any secrets. If one guy learns something, he brings it to everyone and it goes around in circles so that way, it helps to elevate the whole organization.”
With Graham’s strong form at Mid-Ohio and now Lundgaard’s practically dominating performance in Toronto, RLL’s spirits are…undampened, and for good reason. Perry Nelson/Lumen
Another area under development for RLL has been with its damper program. Gains made through exhaustive efforts at Indy helped the beleaguered team to acquire more pace through its damper builds, and whether it was Rahal qualifying second on the rolling Mid-Ohio road course or Lundgaard earning pole and dominating on the wickedly bumpy Toronto street circuit, the team has erased a sizable shortcoming in a short amount of time.
“The whole team has been working our damper program for some time and we are really starting to see it pay off,” Nault said before applauding the work done by former Andretti damper specialist Mike Cicciarelli who joined RLL during the offseason.
“Mike brought a lot of new understandings and new ways to look at our damper program, which helps. He’s been a big help, and with a few tweaks, we’re going from nowhere to sitting on poles and winning races.”
Nault closed by sharing his appreciation for the mercurial Dane who, thankfully, will finally shave the awful mustache he committed to wearing until he clinched his first win. Like his driver, Lundgaard’s race engineer Ben Siegel also delivered on the immense talent and promise he’s shown since joining the team in 2022.
“Obviously, Christian is a great talent, and so is Ben — a first-time race engineer with Christian last year who is really coming into strides now,” he said. “Ben does a great job of understanding what it takes and working well with Christian to give him a car that he really likes. And to be fair, I don’t think we had the fastest car out there all weekend, but the whole team played the strategy right in qualifying, and then in the race as well. Everything just fell our way, and you need that sometimes. But this result comes from all the preparation that everyone did along the way.”
Welcome to the pantheon of first-time NTT IndyCar Series winners, Christian Lundgaard. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing scored its first win since 2020 and its young new star delivered on the promise he’s shown since making a one-off debut in 2021 …
Welcome to the pantheon of first-time NTT IndyCar Series winners, Christian Lundgaard.
Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing scored its first win since 2020 and its young new star delivered on the promise he’s shown since making a one-off debut in 2021 with a flawless and dominant run to victory lane. The Dane was in a class of his own, charging to a 11.7s win over Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou and 15.0s over Andretti Autosport’s Colton Herta as Honda-powered drivers swept the podium at the packed Honda Indy Toronto event.
The achievement was the culmination of RLL’s incredible turnaround efforts after the team got off to a slow and largely uncompetitive start to the season.
“I said it before the race that we had a car that was fast enough win, and we did it by 10 seconds,” Lundgaard said. “This team, they do deserve this. If you look at where we were at the end of last season, we were nowhere near this.”
Behind Lundgaard, it was a messy day for some and a strange one for others.
The luckiest driver in the field was undoubtedly Palou, who started 15th, charged forward, used smart race strategy applied by his team to improve more positions, but also had to save gallons of fuel to make it to the finish while taking a different line around the 1.8-mile street circuit. Why was Palou forced to alter his line? It was a necessity to avoid the major curbs and bumps due to a broken front wing caused while trying to miss the spinning car of Helio Castroneves that resulted in a meeting with the wall that broke his front wing’s attachment to the nose.
Dragging the right-front down the long straights as downforce increased, the problem progressively worsened and with only a few of the 85 laps left to go, it looked as if it might break off the No. 10 Honda’s nose altogether, but it held on — as did the last few drops of fuel — to complete a 13-position improvement and increase his championship lead.
“I don’t know how we made it with this wing,” Palou said. “The car was still handling OK, but we just had to save a ton of fuel and a ton of tires, but we made it.”
For Herta, who secured his first podium of the year, barely holding on to his position was an achievement as his engine sputtered and fell silent after crossing the finish line. Like Palou, he started deep in the pack — 14th — and went for a wild ride to third.
“Luckily we were able to save enough and we made the strategy work,” said a relieved Herta. “Some guys didn’t make it work.”
Another big mover was RLL’s Graham Rahal whose craftiness netted an improvement from 27th to ninth. A few corners away from starting the final lap, Team Penske’s Will Power and Ganassi’s Marcus Ericsson were chasing Herta hard for his position, but both disappeared from his mirrors as they had to do the most gut-wrenching thing a driver can do: pit on the last lap for a splash of fuel and surrender quality finishes.
Ericsson would emerge from the pits to take 11th and Power was a frustrated 14th.
Toronto was a race to forget for Team Penske as all three of its entries suffered from mistakes made by its drivers or on its timing stands.Josef Newgarden lost numerous positions after running long in his pit box, but recovered to take fifth. Power said he should have saved more fuel. Front-row starter Scott McLaughlin could have shadowed Lundgaard and likely finish behind him if it weren’t for a colossal strategy error that left the Penske machine out when the RLL driver and others in his vicinity stopped. Forced onto a strategy that held no hope of getting to the finish line, he pitted halfway through the final stint, gave up the lead, and resumed in 14th. Dixon and Power were also forced to make the same late stop, but they weren’t in contention for the win.
To their credit, and with help from the last-lap dramas for Power and Ericsson, Dixon climbed to fourth and McLaughlin made it to sixth at the checkered flag.
The greatest beneficiary was Palou, who started behind Dixon and Newgarden, yet finished ahead of them and increased his championship lead on his teammate from 110 points to 117, and pushed his pre-Toronto 116-point margin over the Penske driver out to 126 with seven races to go. Thanks to his fuel issue, Ericsson’s gap to Palou grew from 122 to 142 points, but he held onto fourth in the standings. Lundgaard’s big result propelled him from 10th in the championship to seventh as Power’s misfortune moved him rearwards to eighth.
Only 15 of the 27 cars finished on the lead lap, with seven drivers parked and done well before all the laps were completed. Andretti’s Romain Grosjean crashed again on his own, and Dale Coyne Racing’s David Malukas also met the wall in a late solo incident. Castroneves was hit from behind by Andretti’s Kyle Kirkwood on the restart after his teammate’s crash, and was forced to retire. Kirkwood was duly penalized.
And to start the race off with carnage, Lundgaard’s teammate Jack Harvey induced a multi-car crash that left a number of drivers fuming, including Meyer Shank Racing rookie Tom Blomqvist whose IndyCar race debut only lasted a few seconds.
“This is the last thing I wanted to happen,” Blomqvist said. “Someone hit someone… You’re at the mercy of people on the other side and I was pushed into the wall. I’m pretty furious, devastated, and gutted. To not even get one lap is frustrating.”
AS IT HAPPENED
Polesitter Christian Lundgaard got a great jump into Turn 1 and Scott Dixon climbed to P5 but behind them, a caution was required when a big pileup exiting Turn 1 saw Jack Harvey, Tom Blomqvist, Ryan Hunter-Reay, Santino Ferrucci, Benjamin Pedersen, Alexander Rossi and Graham Rahal get tangled in a track-blocking mess triggered by Harvey.
Going three-wide on corner exit, Harvey veered left into Hunter-Reay, knocking him into Blomqvist on the outside, who was sent into the wall. Hunter-Reay, Blomqvist, and the rest of the drivers were collateral damage as a result of Harvey’s move, and only Rahal — last on the grid and last to arrive on the scene — was able to select reverse and drive away using the escape road that runs behind Turns 1 and 2.
With considerable damage to the cars of Harvey, Hunter-Reay, Blomqvist and Pedersen, the four drivers were done on the spot. Ferrucci and Rossi were able to continue, but suffered body work damage, as did Rahal, who hit the back of Ferrucci’s car and stopped for a new front wing assembly. The other two would follow suit under the extended caution and resume at the back of the field.
By the flag, even this sight was hard for second place Alex Palou to see. Richard Dole/Lumen
Having burned nine laps to clear the crash, Lundgaard led the restart and behind him Kyle Kirkwood took sixth from Felix Rosenqvist. Alex Palou, starting P15, was up to P12 but lost it to Colton Herta the next lap after an unsuccessful attempt to demote Romain Grosjean from P11.
Herta took P11 from Grosjean with ease the next time around. Lundgaard started lap 13 with 2.5s over Scott McLaughlin, and behind them, Pato O’Ward was 3.5s down in P3 and Marcus Ericsson was 4.5s back in P4.
Marcus Armstrong was next on Herta’s hit list and by lap 14, he was up from a P14 start to P10. Lundgaard, on alternate tires, put another second on McLaughlin, on primaries, to push the lead out to 3.5s. Grosjean and Palou moved Armstrong back to P13, who pitted at the end of the lap to take the alternate tires off his car. Rosenqvist was in the next lap — lap 18 — for the same alternate-to-primary change. Kirkwood and Josef Newgarden arrived on lap 19 for the same swap.
Only Lundgaard and O’Ward continued lapping on alternates, but Lundgaard pitted at the end of the lap for primaries, but lost time with a long change to the left-front tire. O’Ward was in on lap 21 as the leaders, barring McLaughlin, completed their first stops. Team Penske’s call to have the Kiwi go long and try an overcut to leap past Lundgaard wasn’t looking good as the gap from P1 to the polesitter in P9 was 16.1s after 25 laps. With a pit stop taking at least 24-25s, his advantage over McLaughlin doubled.
The strategy was starting to play to McLaughlin’s favor by lap 30 thanks to Rinus VeeKay, who fought Lundgaard at every turn, and despite being faster, the RLL driver was 17.7s back. Palou finally got by Grosjean on the same lap and checked out to chase Herta in P5. The top 7, from McLaughlin to Grosjean, were still going on their first set of tires and had yet to pit.
Palou cleared Herta by lap 33; Grosjean pitted moments later. The gap from McLaughlin to Lundgaard was 17.5s. Herta followed, taking alternates as well, on lap 34. McLaughlin was in on lap 35 to take alternates. What can he do on faster tires with Lundgaard 6s up the road?
Dixon, Palou, and Will Power pitted on lap 38 and Power overtook Dixon on pit lane.
Lap 41 and Lundgaard’s lead over McLaughlin was 6.3s, 8.1s to O’Ward, and 15.5s to Kirkwood.
The second caution of the day was required on lap 42 when Grosjean fired into the wall at Turn 10, telling his crew that the steering wheel slipped out of his hands. He was running 12th at the time of his crash.
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A mess of cars stopped on lap 45 to get off of alternate tires, led by Kirkwood, Palou, Herta, and Rosenqvist, with the group hoping for plenty of caution laps to make it to the finish, and the return to green happened at the end of the lap with Lundgaard leading McLaughlin, but another caution was required when Helio Castroneves spun entering Turn 11, tried to flick the car around, and stalled.
Kirkwood was shown to have hit Castroneves, who was unable to restart his car and climbed out. While avoiding Castroneves, Palou made decent contact with the wall with his right-front wheel and wing; the wing was hanging low and questionable to last the rest of the race.
Most of the leaders, barring McLaughlin, pitted under caution on lap 49 with Lundgaard, O’Ward, Ericsson, and Power diving in for fuel and primary tires.
The lap 52 restart featured McLaughlin leading into Turn 1 and a penalty issued for Kirkwood who was ordered to pit and stop. His race was effectively over. Lundgaard passed Herta for P5 on lap 53 and the running order going into lap 54 was McLaughlin, Dixon, VeeKay, Palou, Lundgaard, and Herta.
The top three were on the faster alternate tires and needing to save fuel while those in pursuit were less affected by that need and had the more durable primary tires on their cars. VeeKay pitted from third on lap 60 and lost a ton of time waiting for the car to be lifted.
McLaughlin surrendered the lead on lap 61, taking primaries and a full tank of fuel. Palou also gave up P3 to Lundgaard and Herta was closing. Dixon was in on lap 63 for fuel only, and resumed ahead of McLaughlin in P14. Power took P4 from O’Ward with a daring move into Turn 5.
Lundgaard was leading once again with 2.4s over Palou on lap 64.
David Malukas clipped the wall with 15 laps to go and retired as Lundgaard’s lead was out to 7.0s over Palou after 74 laps. Herta was 8.3s back and had Power in his draft. Ericsson was 11.3s back in P5, Newgarden was 12.7s down in P6, and Marcus Armstrong was 14.0s arrears in P7. Dixon was up to P10 and McLaughlin was in P13.
Lap 79 and Dixon was up to P8 and McLaughlin took P11 from Rahal. Herta took a strong look at Palou under braking for Turn 3 as his front wings were wobbling more than ever as the right side dragged hard at top speed. Lap 82 and Dixon was up to P7 and McLaughlin was in P10.
Power and Ericsson pitted at the start of the last lap for fuel as Dixon got by Newgarden for P4. Lundgaard, Palou, and Herta are your podium for the Honda Indy Toronto.
Rahal Letterman Lanigan needed to make major improvements on street circuits, and with his second pole position in hand of 2023, Christian Lundgaard confirmed RLL has made big strides since it undertook sweeping changes to improve its fortunes. …
Rahal Letterman Lanigan needed to make major improvements on street circuits, and with his second pole position in hand of 2023, Christian Lundgaard confirmed RLL has made big strides since it undertook sweeping changes to improve its fortunes.
Lundgaard’s lap of 1m04.1567s in the No. 45 Honda was well clear of his rivals as the Firestone Fast Six was reconciled using dry tires on a damp track. Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin was second-fastest in the No. 3 Chevy (+0.3223s), Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward was third in the No. 5 Chevy (+0.3933s), Marcus Ericsson (+0.7524s) was fourth for Chip Ganassi Racing in the No. 8 Honda, O’Ward’s teammate Felix Rosenqvist was fifth in the No. 6 Chevy (+0.7856s), and Penske’s Will Power was sixth in the No. 12 Chevy (+0.9136s).
As he so often does, the 21-year-old Dane worked miracles for RLL and captured a surprise pole for the team owned by Bobby Rahal, Mike Lanigan, and David Letterman.
“I have a history — at least in go karts — of being fast in the rain, and I’ve only driven in the rain once with this car and we weren’t competitive, but the car today was just there and I can’t thank this team enough,” said Lundgaard, who was 18 positions ahead of his closest teammate.
“Looking at where we were on street circuits, even last year, we made progress and I can only thank the team at this point.”
Drama at the start of qualifying with the arrival of rain in the final minutes of the opening session favored those who got their best runs in early and penalized those who were waiting until the last moments to register their best time. Championship leader Alex Palou was the biggest name to suffer, but he lacked significant speed prior to the skies opening and didn’t lay blame on the changing conditions for his starting position of 15th, his worst of the season.
Kyle Kirkwood in eighth, Romain Grosjean in ninth, and Colton Herta in 14th—all contenders for pole for Andretti Autosport coming out of the morning session—missed by a lot, as did Penske’s Josef Newgarden in 11th.
Andretti Autosport will be going back to the drawing board after all the speed they had Saturday morning simply vanished by qualifying. Michael Levitt/Lumen
Dale Coyne Racing’s David Malukas was also quick in the morning session and had designs on transferring into the Fast 12, but he managed to block CGR’s Dixon on his first flying lap on alternate tires and was duly penalized by the series which left him two spots behind Palou in 17th.
The end result was a qualifying result that has some of IndyCar’s hardest chargers mired many rows behind their usual starting spots which, for racing fans, should make for 85 laps of unpredictable action starting Sunday at 1:30 p.m. ET (available only on Peacock).
AS IT HAPPENED
The first half of the field fought over the six transfer spots available in the 10-minute opening session, and with a dry track at their disposal, Kyle Kirkwood was the first to post a significant lap on Firestone’s primary tires. With the switch to the faster green-banded alternate tires, the assembly of 13 drivers were split with the top six led by Kyle Kirkwood, Rinus VeeKay, Christian Lundgaard, Will Power, Scott Dixon, and Scott McLaughlin.
Those who failed to transfer were Helio Castroneves (who starts P13), Alex Palou (P15), David Malukas — who was judged to have blocked Scott Dixon and had his two fastest laps deleted — (P17), Jack Harvey (P19), Ryan Hunter-Reay (P21), Sting Ray Robb (P23), and Benjamin Pedersen (P25).
With the second half of the field using rain tires for their 10-minute session, improving conditions in the final minute saw the top six change repeatedly and once the checkered flag waved, the transferring six were led by Romain Grosjean, Marcus Ericsson, Josef Newgarden, Felix Rosenqvist, Pato O’Ward, and Marcus Armstrong.
Spinners, visitors to the runoff areas, or wall hitters included Agustin Canapino, Colton Herta, Romain Grosjean, Tom Blomqvist, Graham Rahal—who broke his front wing against the barriers, Grosjean again, Alexander Rossi, Herta again, and Marcus Armstrong.
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Those who were finished with qualifying were headed by Colton Herta (who starts P14), Callum Ilott (P16), Agustin Canapino (P18), Tom Blomqvist (P20), Devlin DeFrancesco (P22), Santino Ferrucci (P24), Alexander Rossi—whose car was unable to drive away from the runoff (P26), and Graham Rahal (P27).
“Electrically, the car just died,” Rossi said. “Sucks. I’ve never seen that before. We should have been easily P1 and transferred.”
After a long delay due to race control’s confirmation of the results from the previous session, the Fast 12 took to the wet circuit on rain tires, but the rain was no longer falling. Each lap was decidedly faster than the last as water was evacuated from the track and it was the two who pitted for fresh rain tires at the end of the session who were rewarded, led by O’Ward, Lundgaard, Rosenqvist, McLaughlin, Ericsson — who half spun across the finish line and tagged the wall with his left-rear tire, and Will Power, who made his first Fast Six of the year.
Big surprises were led by the Andretti team which led every session up to qualifying but failed to place any of their four drivers in the Fast Six. The field was set behind the Fast Six with Dixon (P7), Kirkwood (P8), Grosjean (P9), Armstrong (P10), Newgarden (P11), and VeeKay (P12).
The track dried enough for the use of slicks to settle the pole, and with five solid minutes of lapping to complete while some sections were rather wet, the last round of qualifying became a thrilling a battle of car control.
McLaughlin was the first to lose that battle with a half spin that also turned into the blocking of Ericsson with 2m30s left on the clock. Almost every driver took a turn at the top, and on the last lap, Lundgaard flew to his second pole of the season.
McLaughlin, O’Ward, Ericsson, Rosenqvist, and Power rounded out the top six.