Hunter-Reay on broken Indy 500 suspension: ‘It was survival’

Ryan Hunter-Reay thought he was losing his mind. The 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner has been an oval expert for decades, but something felt off with his No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing/Cusick Motorsports Chevy on Sunday at the Indy 500. Starting a …

Ryan Hunter-Reay thought he was losing his mind.

The 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner has been an oval expert for decades, but something felt off with his No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing/Cusick Motorsports Chevy on Sunday at the Indy 500. Starting a supremely impressive 12th, the No. 23 Chevy soon sank like a rock.

He swore the rear of the car had a mind of its own — a devilish problem to have at 230mph — and it took a post-event inspection by the DRR mechanics to confirm Hunter-Reay’s sanity was intact.

“I had a really good start, moved up around the outside of Takuma Sato in Turn 1 and then we had the crash with [Tom] Blomquist and the rest of them — [Marcus] Ericsson — and so I was feeling pretty confident about where we were going,” Hunter-Reay told RACER. “And then on that lap 5 restart, things were super crowded on the front straight and somehow Kyle Larson got moved up and got into my left rear as I was passing him. It was a side-by-side hit mostly. We obviously weren’t trying to hit each other, but it was still a pretty significant hit.

“Right there when it happened, I didn’t think anything of it. Not until I was really loose for some reason — just crazy loose mid-corner, and it would come and go lap after lap. It was never consistent. I’m asking myself, ‘Is this some type of phantom thing going on here?’ Because when something’s wrong, it tends to stay wrong and be wrong the entire time. But this would come and go and I was beginning to wonder if I was going crazy all of a sudden.

“We pitted at one point just to check the left rear because they thought they saw some damage, but nothing jumped out, so I went back out and continued my race until the thing happened with Scott [Dixon] when I had a huge run.”

Hunter-Reay was launched into the grass and spun back onto the track on the run to Turn 3 as he attempted to pass Dixon on the inside, but Dixon moved over and the right-side contact fired the No. 23 Chevy into retirement.

“After the race, they found that the left-rear lower wishbone, where it connects to the upright, the nut had sheared off, the bolt had backed out, and there was quite a bit of travel there,” he said. “So that was definitely the reason for the wandering rear and the reason why we fell back so much. After the fact, it’s nice to know that I’m not crazy and I understand why it happened. But it was full survival mode for me out there. I was just trying not to crash. I thought maybe we need to do something with the tools.

“I started going full soft on the rear bar, full stiff on the front, then I got too much understeer. So I added front wing with that. And I thought it was just a combination of things. You’re just trying to problem solve while you’re driving at 200 miles an hour in the pack, trying to salvage the race. It’s 500 miles so I’m thinking the whole time, ‘This is this is gonna be a long 500 if it keeps up.’

“With my experience and everything, I kept calm. I told the team, ‘I’m gonna go full conservative on the tools; let’s add front wing to compensate for that and see if that helps. And we soldiered on. I was able to run with Scott and Scott ended up P3 at the end of the race. I had that big run on him and then it was ‘Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride.’”

Hunter-Reay says Dixon apologized for the contact that ended his race.

“We talked about it and he apologized and at this point, it is what it is,” he said. “I reiterated the fact that we’ve been racing each other very clean for 20 years and said he would never do that intentionally and he didn’t get a call from his spotter. I still don’t understand why when he had a huge closing rate to Will [Power], cleared Will, and why he would end up down at the white line where I was going, but it happened and I have a lot of respect for him.

“Same thing for like Helio. He and I raced wheel to wheel in the ’14 500 doing some crazy stuff, and you know, if something happened between me and Helio, I wouldn’t put him on blast right away. I wouldn’t make a big scene of it. I have too much respect for these guys. So especially the guys like Will and Helio and Dixon that I’ve been racing for the better part of 20 years. I sent him a text showing him my side of it and the gaps and everything else and he understood. Unfortunate situation.”

DRR/Cusick, Hunter-Reay bring David energy to Fast 12 Goliaths

Scott McLaughlin won his first Indianapolis 500 pole on Sunday and Kyle Larson won the hearts of IndyCar fans after becoming the fastest rookie qualifier in Speedway history on his way to securing fifth. But the biggest accomplishment this weekend …

Scott McLaughlin won his first Indianapolis 500 pole on Sunday and Kyle Larson won the hearts of IndyCar fans after becoming the fastest rookie qualifier in Speedway history on his way to securing fifth.

But the biggest accomplishment this weekend at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway was reserved for the smallest team, which only competes at the Indy 500, as Ryan Hunter-Reay cracked the Fast 12 qualifying group with his No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing/Cusick Motorsports Chevy.

The combination of the 2014 Indy 500 winner and the team owned by Dennis Reinbold and run this year in partnership with Don Cusick was formidable in time trials as Hunter-Reay out-qualified the entire Chip Ganassi Racing team, plus three of the four cars from both Andretti Global and Rahal Letterman Lanigan.

There was one giant killer in qualifying, and it was RHR and DRR.

“I can’t tell you how much it means to everybody involved in this program, how much attention to detail they put into it, the effort that goes into it,” Hunter-Reay told RACER after posting a four-lap average of 230.567 mph.

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“They’re the last to get parts, they’re the last on the assembly line to get the development done and to get in the wind tunnel and things like that. It’s a huge deal for us to get into that Fast 12. It’s really fun to be a part of that. We made the right decisions at the right time and got it where we need to get it. I’m really, really thrilled for the team on that. They should be proud of it. You could definitely win from 12th.”

Through Reinbold and Cusick, Hunter-Reay’s No. 23 Chevy is loaded with an array of small sponsors, and thanks to the infectious enthusiasm from the owners, plus the entire DRR staff, Indy 500 fans have been gifted a true David to support as they take on the Goliaths.

“I think the foundation is that passion that Dennis Reinbold has for this race,” Hunter-Reay added. “His whole year revolves around it. A lot of the crew members I’ve worked with in the past, they get together and they get to focus on this one race, and it has its advantages. It’s great to have Don Cusick on board. He’s so passionate about this program as well. It’s a great atmosphere in the team. When you get to really pull it all together, and have a great effort like that, now we’re in the top 12.

“Really proud of that, honestly. I’ve been working with not only (race engineer) Todd Bowen, who I worked with last year as my engineer, but Peter Gibbons; way overqualified. It’s phenomenal to get these names together and everybody’s got one drive. We’re the only one-off team that made it into the Fast 12 so very proud of this group.”

Hunter-Reay’s teammate Conor Daly qualified 29th in the No. 24 DRR/Cusick Chevy.

DRR, Cusick team up to field Hunter-Reay and Daly at Indy 500

Dennis Reinbold will have a pair of oval experts in Conor Daly and 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner Ryan Hunter-Reay for both of Dreyer & Reinbold Racing’s Indianapolis 500 entries and welcome a new event partner in Don Cusick to the DRR family. The …

Dennis Reinbold will have a pair of oval experts in Conor Daly and 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner Ryan Hunter-Reay for both of Dreyer & Reinbold Racing’s Indianapolis 500 entries and welcome a new event partner in Don Cusick to the DRR family.

The American duo represents the strongest lineup assembled by the Indianapolis-based team since its formation in 2000. And with the addition of Cusick Motorsports as a partner across both entries, Reinbold is happy to see their relationship, which started in 2023 by fielding a car for Stefan Wilson, expand into one that includes Daly and Hunter-Reay under the Dreyer & Reinbold-Cusick Motorsports banner.

“Don’s going to take a role on both cars as opposed to a one car with Stefan last year and we’re just all going to work together to try to generate the appropriate amount of sponsorship to apply to the two cars,” Reinbold told RACER. “This is a great group to go racing with, and we couldn’t ask for two better drivers than Ryan and Conor.”

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For Cusick, going racing for the first time without Wilson will be a bittersweet experience, especially after he was ruled out from racing last year after being injured in a post-qualifying crash caused by a rival, but he hopes the evolving relationship with DRR can include the Briton in the future.

“We’re definitely not done with Stefan,” Cusick said. “The situation with teams and available cars and engines at Indy, we talked to everybody and weren’t able to find anything that worked for us with a team that had an opening. So our thought was to keep Cusick Motorsports involved, and we felt that if we weren’t there, we might break the chain, so we wanted to continue with Dreyer & Reinbold.

“There’s no better way to make that happen than to get more involved with Dennis and his team — and if we could do a third car in the future for Stef, we’d like to do that, even if it means buying a car for it. The way I look at it is last year [with DRR] we were dating. This year’s we’re engaged, and if all continues to go well, next year, we’ll get married.”

For Hunter-Reay, who joined DRR for the first time in 2023 (pictured, top) and charged from 18th to 11th in the race while dealing with a broken front-wing adjuster, the opportunity to build on the positives and work with Daly is a source of great encouragement.

“I really enjoyed every day going to the track and working with this group and the constant feeling of enthusiasm throughout the whole garage,” said the 2012 IndyCar Series champion. “We were competitive the whole time and had a really strong effort on race day. I was eager to come back with them for 2024 and I’ll miss having Stef there, but I’ve texted with Conor and we’ll get to work on making this team the strongest it can be.”

Conor Daly is relishing an Indy 500 reset alongside Hunter-Reay. Motorsport Images

Hunter-Reay and Daly laughed at the notion of DRR-Cusick’s Indy 500 lineup being an “Ed Carpenter Racing Reunion Tour” after Daly was released by ECR in June and replaced by Hunter-Reay who was uninterested in returning after the 2023 season was completed.

Daly had a few spicy words to offer for Hunter-Reay in the aftermath of the ECR driver change, but there are no lingering issues between the IndyCar veterans as they join forces with DRR-Cusick.

“Dennis actually first called me maybe two years ago to ask about my availability, but I was returning to my former employer so it wasn’t right on the timing. But when I was free, he called and said, ‘I believe you can win this race, and we really want to work with you,’” Daly said. “And I was like, ‘Well, that’s what I want to do!’ Dennis said, ‘I don’t care what it takes, we just want you to drive for us and we don’t need you to come with any money,’ and I knew it would be silly not to take advantage of this opportunity.

“I also wanted to thank Don Cusick for getting involved with us, and being teamed up with Captain America, Mr. Ryan Hunter-Reay, is going to be really cool. Despite what I might have thought or said about him last year, it’s two Americans using Chevrolet engines in a great team with a great chance of doing something big.”

Hunter-Reay set to leave ECR better than he found it

Ryan Hunter-Reay was asked to complete the season in the No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevy and share insights on how the team might improve its cars and improve its processes. As he prepares to complete that mission for his close friend Carpenter, …

Ryan Hunter-Reay was asked to complete the season in the No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevy and share insights on how the team might improve its cars and improve its processes.

As he prepares to complete that mission for his close friend Carpenter, the 2012 IndyCar Series champion and 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner says he is not looking to return to the No. 20 or any other IndyCar entry on a season-long basis after Sunday’s Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey is run.

“I’m focusing on the 500 and some other opportunities outside of full-time IndyCar racing,” Hunter-Reay told RACER. “That’s where I’m at. The most solid thing that I’m working on is the 500, and once I get that put together, I’ll know more about where everything else falls. But nothing’s set in stone.”

Hunter-Reay had an immediate effect on young teammate Rinus VeeKay, who noticed the veteran began taking copious notes in their first post-session engineering debrief. Having filled countless notebooks with his observations of how each session or race went along with the chassis changes, track conditions, and other items to preserve for future consultation, Hunter-Reay’s record-keeping practices—something done by many seasoned drivers—stood out as something for the rapid Dutchman to adopt.

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After their first weekend together at Road America, VeeKay bought a notebook and has followed Hunter-Reay’s lead, and in kind, the 42-year-old has picked up a few things from the kid who turns 23 on Monday.

“I think I brought in a new perspective, and I highlighted areas that I think are their strengths and areas that I believe we should all work on to improve for next year,” said the driver who will start his 293rd IndyCar race on Sunday.

“We’ve certainly had lots of meetings on this and spent lots of time on improving the team in ways that are positive and should be positive moving forward. It’s been an absolute pleasure working with Rinus. He obviously has as much natural raw talent as anybody in the series.

“I think something that I take away from him is being upbeat. Optimism is really a quality trait and something that you need. For me also, coming in midseason, it’s been drinking from the firehose when everybody was already up to speed, but we’ve never stopped working on finding all the little details that we can improve and I know the team will be the better for it going into next year.”

Friday Road American recap with Ryan Hunter-Reay and Michael D’Orlando

New Ed Carpenter Racing driver Ryan Hunter-Reay and reigning USF2000 champion Michael D’Orlando join RACER’s Marshall Pruett for Friday’s trackside report from the IndyCar event at Road America. Or CLICK HERE to watch on YouTube. Presented by: …

New Ed Carpenter Racing driver Ryan Hunter-Reay and reigning USF2000 champion Michael D’Orlando join RACER’s Marshall Pruett for Friday’s trackside report from the IndyCar event at Road America.

Or CLICK HERE to watch on YouTube.

Presented by:

RACER’s IndyCar Trackside Report at Road America is presented by Skip Barber Racing School.

With multiple locations in the US, Skip Barber Racing School has developed more winning racers than any other school. Their alumni have taken the podium in all facets of motorsports including NASCAR, INDYCAR, SCCA, World Challenge and IMSA. Click to learn more.

‘There is no silver bullet’: Hunter-Reay buckles up for his rebuilding mission at ECR

Ryan Hunter-Reay heads into an adventure this weekend that’s new, old, and awkward as the replacement for Conor Daly. The IndyCar champion and Indy 500 winner also happens to be perfectly suited for the task at hand as he shoulders the …

Ryan Hunter-Reay heads into an adventure this weekend that’s new, old, and awkward as the replacement for Conor Daly.

The IndyCar champion and Indy 500 winner also happens to be perfectly suited for the task at hand as he shoulders the responsibility of starting Ed Carpenter Racing’s rebuilding process from the cockpit of the No. 20 Chevy.

The job isn’t solely his to accomplish, but he has been brought in for one reason, and one reason alone, and that’s to help his old friend Ed Carpenter to dig the team out of competitive irrelevance and find a way forward where new teammate Rinus VeeKay and whomever drives the No. 20 entry in the years ahead can give frontrunners like Team Penske and Chip Ganassi Racing fits at every race on the calendar.

But it won’t be happening in a few days at Road America, or the next round at Mid-Ohio, or in a short time period whatsoever. Mid-season rebuilds are never about today; Road America is simply the start of helping ECR to find its way out of the darkness.

“It is a tough situation,” Hunter-Reay told RACER. “I’ve been on both ends of this. I’ve been on the side where I’ve been replaced, and I’ve been the one coming in doing the replacing, once at Rocketsports on the first side, and then second, at Rahal coming in midseason at Mid-Ohio, replacing Jeff Simmons. I think what a lot of people don’t understand is these scenarios are multifaceted.

“This one came about very fast, and it was one that I was not pursuing. That was not my objective at all. Ed called me about wanting help to take the team forward. This is a scenario where you have a lot of people working within a racing organization, and there can be a number of reasons why the competitive side is not firing on all cylinders. I’ve seen it many times and been a part of it when things aren’t working. And it is a complex situation. It is not straightforward. There is no silver bullet that will fix things. It’s an arduous process to go through.

Having Hunter-Reay take over the No.20 is the first step in what the 2012 series champion and 2014 Indy 500 winner warns will be a very long process to steady the ship at Ed Carpenter Racing. Motorsport Images

“And it’s a tough situation for Conor. Conor is my friend. I have a lot of respect for him, and in no way does that have anything to do with where we are today. It’s just the intricacies of this sport that we love. It’s also cruel sport. And here we are today. It is a massive undertaking.”

Hunter-Reay enters into the rebuilding process with a big mountain to climb. In a perfect world, Friday morning’s opening practice session wouldn’t be he first time participating in an IndyCar road race, with a new team, in 18 months, but there were no other options available to expedite the process.

“I’m jumping into the most competitive racing series in the world, and I’m jumping in with no testing with a program that is new to me, a team I have never gone racing with,” he said. “The one thing that’s made it more straightforward is I know a lot of people there. I’m friends with them, obviously starting with Ed [Carpenter], [general manager] Tim Broyles, [engineering director] Matt Barnes, Peter Craik, my engineer. Jeff Grahn, my crew chief. A lot of these folks I knew and worked with at Andretti Autosport.

“I’ve got a huge undertaking here in getting up to speed. Obviously, I knew the nuances of Road America since I’ve driven a Skip Barber car, but they are no longer because it’s a new surface, so we have that thrown in the mix as well. We didn’t have the luxury of testing a Road America, which would have been nice, so we’ll start from scratch and go from there.”

If there’s one underreported aspect of Hunter-Reay’s recruitment by ECR, it’s in what he can offer outside of the car. From an operational standpoint, his 12 years as a leader within the Andretti organization will be a huge benefit to ECR as its needs go well beyond the Xs and Os of how to tune an IndyCar. It’s in the processes, approaches, and mindsets of how ECR administers its race weekends — and how it breaks down the event that just happened and game plans for the next — where the 42-year-old veteran can shape the program in significant ways.

“I’ve been spending endless hours going through their approach, how they approach a weekend, and how I have been accustomed to approaching a weekend, what I might need or may not need and the race car that they are currently that they are currently deploying on a race weekend,” he said.

“Rinus VeeKay and Conor Daly are really great racing drivers. This isn’t about, ‘Hey, go out there and get those 0.4s out of it that we need right now.’ It’s about opening up some new vantage points of potential. I’m not saying what I do is correct and what they’re doing is incorrect. It’s more that this is a new partnership, a new way of potentially going about things and hopefully, some of those conversations and some of the ways that we might tweak our approach may open up some room for progress.

As well as trying to get ECR back up to speed, Hunter-Reay will have some cobwebs of his own to clear out at Road America this weekend: it will be his first IndyCar road course race since Laguna Seca in 2021 (above). Jake Galstad/Motorsport Images

“How do we go about our qualifying sessions? What is our approach on pre-empting the track and its progression; how quickly it progresses? In IndyCar, you cannot react all the time. You can’t just react and say, ‘Okay, let’s go out there and see what the track has, see how it likes the primary ties and then adjust for alternates.’ No, you have got to preempt that change, know what to expect as the track inevitably grips up or loses grip, and you have to be two steps ahead of it so that you’re within that operating window you want to be in the session and not always reacting to it and being a step or two behind.

“These things are all scenarios that we have to be cognizant of. And there’s a million things going through my head every day, waking up in the middle of the night jotting down notes, but [also] of things that I think worked when I was at the same program for 12 years. I’m trying to do my best to also be an advocate for this team, because they have great people, and to be someone that can just bring in a fresh perspective. This isn’t, ‘Hey, Conor is out Ryan’s in, and Ryan, you fix it, go faster.’ That couldn’t be further from the truth. This is a very, very complex situation that will take time, and it’s one I take very seriously.”

As much as he doesn’t want it to be the case, Hunter-Reay knows that by coming in cold to Road America, there’s a very real chance he could end Friday at the bottom of the speed chart. For the proud winner of 18 IndyCar races, it’s a chance he’s willing to take while starting ECR’s much-needed overhaul.

“I’ve always looked at things from a realistic standpoint, and I am optimistic as I can possibly be about anything in racing, but I understand that when you look at the depth of the field, and see really top notch championship-winning and Indy 500-winning drivers down in the 20s – guys who have won numerous races down in the 20s – it could be where I start things off,” he said.

“I have prepared myself mentally for that, and that would not make me happy, but I also have to understand and I have to respect the fact that I’m jumping in after not being in the car for a year and a half while they are in the middle of the season and everybody’s in their groove, so to speak, when I’m trying to find my footing. And I have to have respect for the fact that this is a period of transition, it’s not a session of transition. So I have respect for that situation, but I have to be fair to myself as well in curbing my expectations.

“I’ve been accustomed to seeing my name up there on the happy part of the timesheets, so I have to be fair also to myself in that I’m the one that’s going to be tasked with adapting the most of anyone else out there. Everything will be new for me, but if I just keep my blinders on, and I’m sure some people will have opinions about me being there, but I’m there to work with the team and I’m there to be the best that I can for them. And that process is one step at a time. I won’t even say one session at a time. It’s one outing at a time, one lap at a time. We’ve got a whole lot to catch up on and adapt to, and it starts now.”

Hunter-Reay joins Ed Carpenter Racing IndyCar team

Ryan Hunter-Reay has been asked to help Ed Carpenter Racing in its quest to find the consistent speed and competitiveness that has been largely absent in recent years. The 2012 IndyCar Series champion and 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner steps into the …

Ryan Hunter-Reay has been asked to help Ed Carpenter Racing in its quest to find the consistent speed and competitiveness that has been largely absent in recent years. The 2012 IndyCar Series champion and 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner steps into the No. 20 ECR Chevy after the team and now former driver Conor Daly split following a disappointing run during the seven opening races of the season.

Renowned for his technical feedback and vast experience in a leading team, Hunter-Reay’s role is focused on assisting ECR’s roster of engineering talent with identifying its weaknesses and building for the future, with less of an aim being placed on achieving specific on-track results over the remainder of the calendar.

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Hunter-Reay will partner with young Dutch star Rinus VeeKay and Carpenter, who will join them in a third entry on the ovals.

“I was surprised when I got the call from Ed. He described how frustrated he was that his team has not been able to realize its potential despite their efforts, investments, as well as technical and personnel changes over the past few years and asked for my help,” Hunter-Reay said. “Ed and I are very close friends and have been for a long time. I’ve worked with the team in the past and they are a very talented group with high expectations and a committed partner in BITNILE.com.

“This will certainly be a challenge for me as well. It’s a tough situation jumping in a car in the middle of the season without any testing in what I believe to be the most competitive series in the world. Certainly, part of my motivation in saying ‘yes’ to Ed is the great challenge ahead. The last time I turned right driving an Indy car was in October of 2021 with this team at Barber. However, I remain very confident in both my driving and technical abilities and believe by working with the talented people at ECR and Team Chevy, while representing BITNILE.COM, we will make progress. I am going to do everything I can do to help the team achieve its long-term objectives”

Hunter-Reay also tested Ed Carpenter’s ride at Sonoma back in 2013, as well as at Barber in 2021. Marshall Pruett photo

Although the conclusion of the relationship between ECR and Daly is understood to be one that has more to do with interpersonal relationships than the Hoosier’s on-track results, the reset by the team with the No. 20 Chevy also created an opportunity to draft in the longstanding Andretti Autosport driver to get a handle on what the program will need to vie for routine podiums and wins when the new season begins in 2024.

“We need to improve our competitiveness and I wanted to add a fresh perspective from a driver like Ryan who has a massive amount of experience and success as well as a reputation as a team leader,” said team owner Carpenter. “I am excited to welcome Ryan to the team. We have worked together in the past as teammates and he tested for ECR at Barber Motorsports Park in October 2021, where he made an immediate impact as we were able to qualify one of our cars on the pole following that test. I am confident that his experience and technical abilities will be an asset to ECR as we move forward toward our goals as a team.”

Indy 500 recap with Ferrucci, Hunter-Reay, Ruzewski and Castroneves

The 107th Indianapolis 500 is over and RACER’s Marshall Pruett, third-place finisher Santino Ferrucci, 11th-place Ryan Hunter-Reay, Team Penske race-winning managing director Ron Ruzewski, and 15th-place Helio Castroneves share their stories from …

The 107th Indianapolis 500 is over and RACER’s Marshall Pruett, third-place finisher Santino Ferrucci, 11th-place Ryan Hunter-Reay, Team Penske race-winning managing director Ron Ruzewski, and 15th-place Helio Castroneves share their stories from the Indy 500 captured by Josef Newgarden.

Presented by:

Hunter-Reay lands Root Insurance backing for Indy 500

Root Insurance, an Ohio-based car insurance company, will serve as the primary partner for Ryan Hunter-Reay’s No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold in Sunday’s Indianapolis 500. “We are extremely excited to team up with Root and an Indy 500 champion in Ryan …

Root Insurance, an Ohio-based car insurance company, will serve as the primary partner for Ryan Hunter-Reay’s No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold in Sunday’s Indianapolis 500.

“We are extremely excited to team up with Root and an Indy 500 champion in Ryan Hunter-Reay for this year’s 500 mile race,” said Reinbold, DRR team owner.

‘We believe we have prepared outstanding cars for the 2023 Indy 500, and we would love to put Root in the most famous racing winner’s circle in the world at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.”

Root Insurance joins the 2014 Indy 500 winner for his 16th career start at the event.

“We’re thrilled to be partnering with Dreyer & Reinbold Racing to showcase Root at the Indianapolis 500,” said SVP of Business Development Jason Shapiro. “In coming to Root, I know the power of the connectivity within the automotive community and rushed to jump on the opportunity to work with DRR and have Ryan at the wheel.”

Hunter-Reay will start the 2023 Indy 500 from 18th on the grid. He is the third former Indianapolis 500 champion to drive for DRR in the team’s history along with Al Unser Jr. and Buddy Rice.

“I’m so anxious to get on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval with the Root colors in our No. 23 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Chevrolet this week,” said Hunter-Reay.

“We believe we have the partners, crew and car to win. These race cars are so well-prepared, and we learned a lot as a team this past week. I’m so ready to go when the green flag drops.”

Hunter-Reay wasting no time finding his happy place with DRR

After spending a year away from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Ryan Hunter-Reay didn’t know what to expect from his new team. The 2012 NTT IndyCar Series champion and 2014 Indy 500 winner’s last experience at IMS was with the giant Andretti …

After spending a year away from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Ryan Hunter-Reay didn’t know what to expect from his new team.

The 2012 NTT IndyCar Series champion and 2014 Indy 500 winner’s last experience at IMS was with the giant Andretti Autosport program that delivered his greatest achievements in the series, and in moving to Dreyer & Reinbold Racing, the smallest operation in IndyCar, there were questions as to how the Indy-only crew would fare against the full-time squads.

The answers were all positive for Hunter-Reay, who ended the opening day of the Indy Open Test in 14th place with the No. 23 Chevy, and his teammate Stefan Wilson, also new to DRR with the co-entry forged with Cusick Motorsports, showed the team owned by Dennis Reinbold is one to watch after securing sixth on the speed chart in the No. 24 Chevy.

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“So many unknowns,” Hunter-Reay told RACER. “I’d been with the same organization, same program for 12 years straight and it was my first day on the job with a new program. Teaming up with Stef [Wilson] again; we’ve been teammates in the past, it’s great. It’s great to get back on track. But it’s funny, my first time behind the wheel in a different car than I had been used to, and it’s all the little things – it’s the steering wheel; it’s everything in the cockpit, you’re one millimeter different and it feels like it’s several inches. So we did a lot of getting all those things sorted. I was really happy with that and feel the car was good. It was it was predictable. It was really fun.”

Wilson went through a similar process of hoping to find his new car was ready to go fast, and also enjoyed spending time with Hunter-Reay.

“There’s that anticipation, right?” Wilson said. “The cars ran really well last year, and the Dreyer & Reinbold team does such a good job on the cars and they felt like they made some gains over the winter. And you’re sort of waiting to see how does that compare, performance wise, to the cars I’ve driven in the past. How does it compare to the Andretti cars? But you never know until you get out there.

“Ryan’s someone I look up to and respect what he does and how he approaches things. So I’m looking to be a sponge and learn as much as possible from this guy.”

Like most drivers in the hot and windy afternoon session, Hunter-Reay sampled the higher downforce settings IndyCar has made available, and like the others, the heavy winds made it challenging to get a clear picture on if and how the downforce helped.

“I went up on downforce at the end to get into some messy traffic,” he said. “And I I had more bottom-side downforce than topside to what we’ve had in the past. [Team Penske’s] Josef [Newgarden] and I were talking about it. It’s tough to really pass judgment on it right now, because of just how inconsistent those conditions were. And it was hot today, right? Hot when it comes to surface track surface. And you had the wind. So at times I was super-confident then, five minutes later, and then you wonder why you just had a big moment…”