‘I wanted to win so bad… I knew we could’ – Newgarden

Team Penske’s Josef Newgarden, who won the 107th running of the Indianapolis 500, says he felt people looked at him as a “failure” until he had captured victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Newgarden sprinted past defending Indy 500 race-winner …

Team Penske’s Josef Newgarden, who won the 107th running of the Indianapolis 500, says he felt people looked at him as a “failure” until he had captured victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Newgarden sprinted past defending Indy 500 race-winner Marcus Ericsson with less than half a lap to go after the third red flag of the day left a single-lap shootout to the checkered flag. Despite the Chip Ganassi Racing driver apparently making a break at the drop of the final green, Newgarden stayed in his draft through Turn 1 and carried more momentum through the short chute onto the back straight. Ericsson swung hard left to prevent his pursuer from creeping up the inside, but he was defenseless on the long run down to Turn 3, and Newgarden stayed high and passed him long before turn-in.

Newgarden then stayed firm through Turns 3 and 4 before crossing the yard of bricks a mere 0.0974s ahead of Ericsson.

“I’m just so thankful to be here, you have no idea,” gushed Newgarden after scoring Penske’s 19th Indy 500 victory, and his own 27th IndyCar triumph. “I started out as a fan in the crowd and this place, it’s amazing regardless of where you’re sitting. It doesn’t matter if you’re a jockey in the car, or you’re working on it, or you’re part of the crowd – you’re part of this event and the energy. I love this city; I drove racing cars here when I was a kid.

“I’m just so thankful to Roger (Penske) and Tim (Cindric, his team president and strategist) and everyone at Team Penske. I just felt like everyone kept asking me why I hadn’t won this race. They look at you like you’re a failure…and I wanted to win it so bad. I knew we could, I knew we were capable and I’m so thankful to Shell, Team Chevy, everybody. I’m so glad to be here.”

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Asked what was going through his mind as he crossed the yard of bricks for the final time, Newgarden said: “Oh, just pure emotion. I was just trying to stay locked in. I was emotional the whole last 10 laps because I knew we were in a position to fight for this win at the end.

“And I knew it wasn’t going to be easy; it was going to come to some last laps shootout like it always is these days, which is exciting but stressful for us.

“I’m just thinking about all the work. I can’t talk highly enough about the team. They worked so hard all month. It takes so long to get to this point. We’re here for weeks, grinding on this thing for just this one moment. That’s what makes it so demoralizing when it doesn’t work out.

“I can tell you, we’re going to enjoy it tonight; it’s going to be amazing to win this.”

After completing his slowdown lap, Newgarden stopped his car on the yard of bricks, got out of his car, ran over to the wall, and slipped under the fence to join the wildly cheering fans.

“I’ve always wanted to go into the crowd here at Indianapolis,” said the two-time IndyCar champion. “I’ve seen people go up on the fence; I wanted to go through the fence.

“I wanted to celebrate with the people. I just thought it would be so cool to feel that energy, because I know what that energy is like on race day. This was a dream of mine – that if this was ever gonna happen, I wanted to do that.”

Regarding the last lap fight with Ericsson, Newgarden commented: “P2 with one lap to go is where you wanted to be, and it actually worked out great that I got a run on the back straight. I knew if I could just get him and clear him into (Turn) 3, then maybe we could hold on until the line.

“But he was so quick on the straights, it wasn’t guaranteed. I was just trying to do everything I could to keep him back, and it was a fight – just a big fight.

“It’s not easy to win this race; it’s the most difficult race in the world to win.”

Newgarden rises above multiple late restarts to win Indy 500

Josef Newgarden won the 107th Running of the Indianapolis 500 after pulling off a last-lap ambush on defending winner Marcus Ericsson. What had already been a chaotic final stint saved the biggest bit of drama for the final corners when Ericsson, …

Josef Newgarden won the 107th Running of the Indianapolis 500 after pulling off a last-lap ambush on defending winner Marcus Ericsson.

What had already been a chaotic final stint saved the biggest bit of drama for the final corners when Ericsson, looking to defend his lead with a single lap of green flag running after a late restart, was unable to hold off a lunge from Newgarden through Turn 2. Newgarden held firm, echoing Ericsson’s ‘dragon move’ on the exit of Turn 4 to give Roger Penske his 19th Indy 500 victory as a team owner.

Restarts figured heavily in the final stint; a chain of events that began with Arrow McLaren’s Felix Rosenqvist — who had run up front all afternoon — lost control and crashed in Turn 2 with 16 to go. Andretti Autosport’s Kyle Kirkwood also got caught up, and both were eliminated on the spot.

Once that mess was cleaned up, Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward led the field for the next restart on lap 191. That was waved off, but the next one was better… until the Mexican feinted around Ericsson to the right in Turn 1, lunged to the left, then lost control — or was squeezed, depending who you ask — and found the barriers. Adding insult to injury, a separate incident further back ended when Agustin Canapino’s broken Juncos Hollinger car sledding into the rear of O’Ward’s stationary No. 5. More red flags.

The next restart came with seven to go, and lasted just two laps before a group of cars tangled towards the back of the field. Rather than keeping the field circulating under yellows, race control opted for another red flag on lap 198: one lap behind the pace car, and one to decide whose portrait would take its place on the Borg Warner Trophy.

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AS IT HAPPENED

The drama began even before the race started, as both Helio Castroneves and Graham Rahal failed to get underway. While Meyer Shank Racing refired the four-time champion, the Dreyer & Reinbold Racing crew had to drag the No. 24, originally destined for Stefan Wilson, behind the wall to install a new battery. He would eventually rejoin but two laps down.

As Adam Driver dropped the green flag for the remaining 32 runners, Chip Ganassi Racing-Honda’s polesitter Alex Palou made a great start to lead Rinus VeeKay and Felix Rosenqvist into Turn 1, while immediately Dixon moved up to fourth chased by A.J. Foyt Racing’s Santino Ferrucci, the Arrow McLaren-Chevys of Alexander Rossi and Pato O’Ward, and a third Ganassi car of Takuma Sato. Will Power hung on around the outside of Marcus Ericsson and Tony Kanaan at Turn 3 to grab ninth.

At the start of the third lap, VeeKay drafted past Palou along the front straight to lead for Ed Carpenter Racing, but Palou was back in front on lap four, and the ECR-Chevrolet driver was lifting off down the back straight to stay close to the leader but save fuel in his draft. It was the same story in the chain of cars behind him. VeeKay returned to the front for lap 11, and on that same lap Power sent his Penske-Chevy passed Sato’s Ganassi-Honda to take eighth.

Palou was into the lead for lap 16, while on lap 19, Ferrucci and Rossi demoted Dixon who lost another place to O’Ward the following lap and then Power on lap 21. Ganassi’s 2008 Indy winner appeared to be adjusting his in-cockpit tools a lot and losing pace, to the extent he had dropped outside the top 10 by lap 23, and he reported a left-rear tire vibrating hard. In fact it was visible, shaking the rear wing on the camera slow-mo, so the team called him in on lap 26. Castroneves also came in early.

Up front, VeeKay had taken the lead once more, but on lap 28 into Turn 3 it was Palou’s American Legion colors heading the field, but he pitted at the end of lap 29, while Ferrucci also pitted from the top five. Notable by his progress was Josef Newgarden who even before these pit stops started, had clambered from 17th into the top 10.

VeeKay ducked into the pits on lap 32 and took two turns of front wing as well as fuel and tires. He emerged still behind Palou. Rosenqvist was next of the front-runners to stop, with Rossi, O’Ward and Power pitting on lap 34. They emerged still in that order, and just behind another Arrow McLaren, that of Rosenqvist, who had lost third to Ferrucci during the pit stop exchange. Like Ferrucci, Newgarden had gained a place in the stops, jumping Sato to run ninth behind Power and defending winner Ericsson.

Rosenqvist was back in front of Ferrucci on lap 39 and the other two Arrow McLarens also got around the Foyt car next time by, as VeeKay took top spot from Palou, but Ferrucci stemmed the tide and re-passed O’Ward the following lap. Power was now informed that his weightjacker wasn’t working, although he was maintaining seventh while his tires were relatively fresh. It could prove very difficult in a year when cars were struggling to make their tires last for a full stint.

Palou retook the lead on lap 48 and remained up front as the race passed quarter distance. The top three — Palou, VeeKay and Rosenqvist — had started separating themselves from the pack a little by now, Felix pulling two seconds on Rossi, who lost a place to Ferrucci on lap 56 and to O’Ward on lap 57.

Palou made his second stop at the end of lap 60, and Ferrucci joined him on pitlane, as did Dixon who had been running in 21st, and reported to his team that he had no vibration issues with his second set. VeeKay stopped on lap 64, and this time he emerged ahead of Palou, who was being chased by Ferrucci, but they were both jumped by Rosenqvist who stopped two laps later.

However, O’Ward was flying and passed not only Palou and VeeKay but on lap 70, his teammate Rosenqvist too, as the pair ran behind RC Enerson of debutant team Abel Motorsports, running not quite a lap down. The McLaren drivers seemed happy to be up front, but still able to briefly save fuel behind Enerson. Further back, the No. 2 Penske crew had jumped Newgarden ahead of Ericsson in the pit stop exchange, while just outside the top 10, local hero Conor Daly was up to 11th for Ed Carpenter Racing.

Palou lost fourth to Ferrucci on lap 76, but still the top nine were blanketed by only four seconds, while Sato’s loose car had fallen to 2.5s off the back of Ericsson.

Rosenqvist drafted past O’Ward to lead on lap 79, the pair of them planning to swap back and forth to take turns at saving fuel now that Enerson had pitted for a third time. He would retire on lap 76. However, there was no guarantee that they’d get to pick and choose when to pass, since as O’Ward took over from Rosenqvist at the front, Ferrucci passed VeeKay for third.

As Rosenqvist took the lead on lap 91 and Rossi passed Palou, Sato suddenly slowed, forcing Scott McLaughlin’s Penske and Kanaan’s McLaren to take evasive action, Kanaan putting all four wheels in the grass out of Turn 2 to pass McLaughlin. Much further back, Rahal unlapped himself from Sting Ray Robb, but the Dale Coyne Racing with RWR-Honda tried to hang on around the outside, hit some marbles and slid up the track into the wall. That was the first caution of the race.

The leaders hit pitlane at the end of lap 94, but on emerging from his pitbox, VeeKay had to tighten his steering as there were cars already in the outside lane, namely Power and Newgarden. VeeKay got sideways and slapped Palou into the left-side wall as the polesitter was accelerating hard out of his pitbox.

Rosenqvist led O’Ward, Ferrucci, Power, Newgarden, Rossi, VeeKay, Ericssson and Colton Herta (Andretti Autosport-Honda) out of the pits, but they would all be trailing the Juncos Hollinger Racing-Chevy of Callum Ilott, who had just pitted when the yellow flew. Meanwhile, Palou had been able to get back to the pits for a new nosewing assembly and emerge still on the lead lap, but now down in 28th.

Ilott was immediately passed by Rosenqvist and O’Ward, but further back with the track cleared of marbles, Ericsson surged forward on the high-line with a three-wide pass on Rossi and VeeKay to claim fifth, while another driver excelling was Newgarden, who jumped forward and into the top six as the cars fanned out three and four wide down the back straight. The big loser in this kerfuffle was Power who dropped to 16th in the space of a lap, while Herta moved into the top six by lap 110 ahead of Rossi, the falling Ilott, Daly and Kyle Kirkwood in a second Andretti car. VeeKay would soon have to serve a drive-through penalty for his pit road contact with Paloul

Kanaan was up to 11th ahead of Sato, Carpenter, Dixon (another driver to have a strong restart), McLaughlin, Power and Palou — up 11 places from the drop of the green.

Through the fourth stint, Rosenqvist and O’Ward continued the McLaren shuffle at the front of the field, just ahead of Ferrucci, Newgarden, Ericsson and Herta, but on lap 125, Rossi drafted past Herta for sixth into Turn 1, while Carpenter fell back behind Dixon, McLaughlin, Power, Palou and Romain Grosjean. However, the pace had dropped to some 208mph in order to try and make it on just two more stops, and now the Ganassi cars started moving more rapidly. In short order, Dixon passed Kanaan, Palou passed Power, and Kanaan, and Ericsson drafted past Newgarden for third on lap 130. That was because O’Ward had ducked into the pits a lap earlier.

Rosenqvist pitted from the lead at the end of lap 132, and emerged well ahead of O’Ward. Meanwhile Andretti’s hopes took a dive when Herta was sent out of the pitbox into the side of his teammate Grosjean. His time loss would be magnified, of course, by a drive-through penalty.

Ganassi’s No. 8 crew had rapidly turned around Ericsson and he had emerged in third. However, he passed Newgarden and then took the lead from compatriot Rosenqvist on lap 137. Two laps later, Newgarden, too, had passed Rosenqvist to run second in Ericsson’s wheeltracks. Half a second behind Ericsson ran Rossi who had demoted Ferrucci, while O’Ward was sixth, the No. 5 McLaren team warning him that his car was using up too much fuel. The surprise was Carpenter, who appeared to have been short-filled for he had jumped to seventh in the pit stop exchange ahead of Kirkwood, the recovering Palou and Sato.

On lap 149, out came the second caution, as Grosjean lost control out of Turn 2, sliding out of the groove and into the SAFER barrier, before bouncing across the track and into the infield grass. As the DHL car was scooped onto the flatbed, O’Ward, Carpenter, Sato, McLaughlin, VeeKay, Kanaan and Power were among those who hit pit road.

On lap 156, the green flew again, and Newgarden drafted past Ericsson into the lead, while Ferrucci passed Rossi and Rosenqvist for third, and the following lap Ferrucci was past the No. 2 Penske into second, and into Turn 1 next time by, the Foyt car went up the inside of Ericsson into the lead.

Behind Rosenqvist and Rossi, Kirkwood ran sixth ahead of Palou, Daly, Dixon, Sato, Simon Pagenaud, O’Ward and Power. Then on lap 164, Kirkwood passed the man he replaced at Andretti, Rossi, to claim fifth, and the following lap Daly drafted past Palou for seventh. On lap 166, Kirkwood moved again, getting around Rosenqvist for fourth, and on lap 167 he passed Newgarden around the outside for third. Meanwhile, Power slid wide at Turn 2, and broke a toelink on the wall.

Of those yet to make a fifth pit stop, Ferrucci blinked first and pitted on lap 169, and there was a fumble as a wheel rolled out of the Foyt No. 14 team’s pitbox. However, he received only a monetary fine and a warning. It was still a slow stop, but he was still in the hunt. He got around Newgarden and then Rosenqvist, but both of them re-passed him, as did Rossi.

Ericsson and Rosenqvist ran in lockstep, while Newgarden and Rossi squabbled over third. Yet O’Ward, who had led the early fifth-stoppers, had worked hard and emerged in third. He wasted little time in passing teammate Rosenqvist, then Ericsson. However, it wasn’t yet for the lead, as Ryan Hunter-Reay and Dreyer & Reinbold Racing led the Juncos Hollinger pair of Ilott and Agustin Canapino, having not yet made their final stop.

Then on lap 186, after Newgarden passed him at Turn 1, Rosenqvist slid up to the wall in the dirty air, smacked it hard, and slid down to the middle of the track. Ferrucci and Rossi swerved to the inside around his stricken teammate, Ferrucci went to the high side to avoid the wreck, but Kirkwood — also on the high side — was far less lucky. His left-rear wheel just clipped the McLaren and was torn off. It cleared the debris fence, yet by some miracle it fired into a gap between grandstands. However, Kirkwood’s car was spun around, flipped up and ground along the barrier, then the track, upside down. Kirkwood, mercifully, was left complaining only of sore knees, while NBC were able report that no one was injured by his errant wheel, damaging only a parked street car.

Hunter-Reay led Ilott and Canapino into the pits, leaving O’Ward heading Ericsson, Newgarden, Rossi, Ferrucci, Palou, Daly, Dixon, VeeKay and Herta for the restart with nine laps to go. However, the restart was waved off as O’Ward was adjudged to have brought the field to the green at too slow a pace.

Now with eight laps left, there were no issues with the start, but O’Ward was still a sitting duck. He clung to the inside wall, but Ericsson drafted alongside him along the front straight to and edged ahead, while Newgarden swept around the pair of them to snatch the lead. On the run down to Turn 3, O’Ward tried outside, then inside Ericsson, and was three-quarters alongside when Ericsson turned in. O’Ward’s left front hit the rumble strip, while his right-front rubbed the Ganassi car’s left rear. That pitched the No. 5 into a spin across the track and into the outside wall, where it lifted its nose but stayed right-side up. After coming to rest, his car was damaged further by Canapino, who was without steering, having been an innocent victim of a crash caused when McLaughlin ran into the back of Pagenaud, spinning the Meyer Shank car out of control.

Ericsson, having completed a great save after the contact with O’Ward, would take the restart as Newgarden’s main challenger, with Ferrucci third after passing Rossi around the outside of Turn 2 on the previous start. In fifth lay Palou ahead of Dixon, Daly, VeeKay, Herta and Sato.

A four-lap shootout never happened. Newgarden didn’t stay alongside the pitwall, and Ericsson filled the gap on the left, while Ferrucci found a gap on the right to slip into second. However, behind them, Christian Lundgaard was knocked into the wall by a wheel-to-wheel battle between Carpenter and Andretti, and the chaos claimed the second Foyt car of rookie Benjamin Pedersen, which also struck the wall and scattered debris along the front straight. Out came the third red flag.

That meant the restart would leave one warm-up lap, and then one racing lap, with Ericsson leading Newgarden, Ferrucci, Rossi.

Ericsson sprinted away as the green was called, and he looked to have too much of an edge on Newgarden, who had also dropped his pursuers. But on the run down to Turn 3, Ericsson had no way of defending, and the No. 2 Penske pulled past. Despite cool tires, he held firm on a slightly higher line, kept his momentum through the short chute and up the front straight. He beat Ericsson by 0.0974s, with Ferrucci, Palou and Rossi completing the top five ahead of Dixon, Sato, Daly, Herta and VeeKay.

RESULTS

Indy 500 Trackside: Walk & Talk with Scott McLaughlin

New Zealand’s Scott McLaughlin has become an international sensation after transitioning from the heights of the Australian Supercars series to become a race-winning contender in IndyCar. The Kiwi joins RACER’s Marshall Pruett for a walk down pit …

New Zealand’s Scott McLaughlin has become an international sensation after transitioning from the heights of the Australian Supercars series to become a race-winning contender in IndyCar. The Kiwi joins RACER’s Marshall Pruett for a walk down pit lane at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to discuss his life and career.

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Fast Friday: Ganassi tops Penske in four-lap averages

With a respectful gentleman’s agreement appearing to prevail over Indianapolis Motor Speedway as the BorgWarner turbos got boosted to 1.5-bar, IndyCar teams were able to set representative simulations of four-lap qualifying runs for the 107th …

With a respectful gentleman’s agreement appearing to prevail over Indianapolis Motor Speedway as the BorgWarner turbos got boosted to 1.5-bar, IndyCar teams were able to set representative simulations of four-lap qualifying runs for the 107th running of the Indy 500.

With under 20 minutes to go in Fast Friday practice, it was two-time winner Takuma Sato who laid down a spectacular four-lap average. Unlike his effort at the start of the day’s session, which saw him produce a 234mph opening lap and then flirt a hair’s breadth away from the Turn 2 exit wall on lap two, the No. 11 Chip Ganassi Racing-Honda stayed under control the whole time and produced a four-lap average of 233.413mph.

That left Sato 0.3mph clear of defending race-winner and teammate Marcus Ericsson, although a late attempt by Scott Dixon to join them at the top of the table ended on his third lap and he came back to the pits.

Team Penske gave further evidence that, after three poor years at the Speedway, they are back in the game seeking their 19th triumph. Josef Newgarden at 233.086mph and 2018 winner Will Power at 233.070mph occupied third and fourth spots on the four-lap averages, despite their fastest single laps being only sixth and 12th respectively.

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Ed Carpenter Racing’s Rinus VeeKay delivered the fifth best 4-lap average (232.898) ahead of the Andretti Autosport pair of Colton Herta – another late improver – and Kyle Kirkwood.

Agustin Canapino of Juncos Hollinger Racing was the fastest rookie, with a very impressive 15th-fastest four-lap average, while, as RACER reported earlier, the team is busy swapping chassis for teammate Callum Ilott after the British sophomore endured continued struggles with his original mount.

The Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing quartet of Katherine Legge, Christian Lundgaard, Graham Rahal and Jack Harvey are between P28 and P32 on the four-lap average rankings, the latter’s efforts not aided by an apparent blown engine in the dying minutes of the session. RC Enerson of Abel Motorsports propped up the field, but even his average was over 230mph.

The order in which everyone will make their first qualifying runs Saturday will be decided by Friday evening’s draw. There will be practice sessions Saturday morning, from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. local (Eastern) time, then qualifying will commence at 11:00 a.m., weather permitting. By the end of Saturday when the gun goes off, grid positions 13-30 will be locked in place, as will the 12 contestants for Sunday’s battle for pole, and the four participants for the last row of the grid.

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Newgarden confident Penske is ready to return to top form in Indy qualifying

Team Penske won the Indianapolis 500 in 2018 and 2019, but since the aeroscreen era began in 2020, the storied program has mostly been a non-factor at the NTT IndyCar Series’ biggest race. From struggling badly in 2021 to being largely absent from …

Team Penske won the Indianapolis 500 in 2018 and 2019, but since the aeroscreen era began in 2020, the storied program has mostly been a non-factor at the NTT IndyCar Series’ biggest race.

From struggling badly in 2021 to being largely absent from the lead pack last year, the most successful team in Indy 500 history hopes to find its missing mojo and play a role in deciding how the May 29 race is settled. Two-time IndyCar champion Josef Newgarden believes the team’s improved pace so far in practice is a direct result of advances it made last May, but were unable to fully unleash on the field.

“I thought we were on a much better path last year,” said Newgarden. “I think unfortunately we didn’t get to show the full potential of the work that went into last year. I really think we should have had a couple more cars in the Fast 12. Generally, not just saying that for trying to paint the picture better, but we made a lot of progress last year, and I think this year is more of an evolution of what we did last year.”

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As the “100 Days To Indy” docuseries has portrayed, Newgarden’s reached the heights of IndyCar acclaim by capturing two titles in a span of three seasons, but victory at the most important race — where he finished third in 2016 with his former team — has gone backwards of late with consecutive runs to P12 and P13 since 2021. On his 12th participation in the month of May, Newgarden makes his need to qualify well and race well incredibly clear.

“We can go back and pick apart 2022 and we can make it look a lot better, I think, if things go differently, but we can’t,” he said. “We landed where we did. Just to reiterate, I think we made a big step, and we’re just evolving within that step again this year. We obviously need a little bit more than where we were last season, and we’re going to find out this weekend if we fully get there. I feel pretty confident at the moment that we’ve done a lot of good work to get there, and we’ve just got to execute now.”

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Barber IndyCar recap with race winner Scott McLaughlin

RACER’s Marshall Pruett recaps the Barber Motorsports Park IndyCar event and then race winner Scott McLaughlin joins in to break down the key aspects of his victory for Team Penske in the No. 3 Chevy. Presented by: RACER’s IndyCar Trackside Report …

RACER’s Marshall Pruett recaps the Barber Motorsports Park IndyCar event and then race winner Scott McLaughlin joins in to break down the key aspects of his victory for Team Penske in the No. 3 Chevy.

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McLaughlin masters Penske pit strategy to win at Barber

If you’re a fan of race strategy, the Children’s of Alabama Indy GP was a thrilling affair as a battle between two- and three-stoppers played out for 90 laps on Sunday, and when it was over, Scott McLaughlin won round four of the NTT IndyCar Series …

If you’re a fan of race strategy, the Children’s of Alabama Indy GP was a thrilling affair as a battle between two- and three-stoppers played out for 90 laps on Sunday, and when it was over, Scott McLaughlin won round four of the NTT IndyCar Series season in front of a large and enthusiastic crowd.

The only caution of the day was triggered on lap 38 to retrieve the stranded No. 51 Dale Coyne Racing with Rick Ware Racing Honda driven by Sting Ray Robb. The series kept the pits open as the three-stop contingent dove in for tires and fuel while those on two-stops needed to stay out to make their strategy work. The timing didn’t necessarily harm those on two-stops, but it made life a bit easier for those on three.

The New Zealander’s victory came at the expense of polesitter Romain Grosjean—a bridesmaid once again—after the Swiss-born Frenchman led the majority of the race with his two-stop plan in the No. 28 Andretti Autosport Honda. But he succumbed to the pressure applied by the three-stopping McLaughlin late in the contest as he locked a brake and slid wide in Turn 5 on lap 72.

“It hurts,” Grosjean admitted. “The three-stop never wins in Barber, (except) today. We had an incredible car, drove really well; gave it 100 percent, but we got unlucky with that yellow. I gave it all. Congrats to Scott. He deserves to win. We got good points. Our day will come.”

Out of push-to-pass to rectify the error and hold off McLaughlin while powering out of the corner, McLaughlin fired his No. 3 Chevy down the inside of Grosjean on the run to Turn 6 and captured a lead he never surrendered.

“The team advanced me to victory lane,” McLaughlin said. “We had great fuel (mileage). I’m really pumped about it. I’m glad to get a win here. We had a hell of a strategy here today.”

Penske’s Will Power secured third, his first podium of the season, as his team’s gamble to start the race on the faster but less durable Firestone alternate tires paid off with a 1-3 finish; Josef Newgarden, the third member of the Penske trio, had an array of challenges that left him down in 15th.

“It was an extremely good day,” Power said of the call to do an extra stop, which allowed him and the other three-stoppers to go flat out for the entire race.

“It was super fast when we were in clean air. We’re on another championship run. I was able to push the whole way.”

Despite Newgarden’s distant run — “This one got away pretty badly,” he said — Penske’s strategy gamble made all the difference in how the race was settled.

Just off the podium, Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward was never a serious threat for the win, but his consistent effort was good enough for fourth in the No. 5 Chevy.

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Chip Ganassi Racing was strong on Saturday, placing Alex Palou in second and Scott Dixon fifth to start the race, but both fell backwards on Sunday as Palou dropped to fifth and Dixon came home in seventh. The only positive, and it was modest, was generated by Ganassi’s championship leader Marcus Ericsson, whose low start of 13th was improved to 10th, which ensured he retained the lead in the Drivers’ standings, but by just three points over O’Ward.

Between the Ganassi duo was Christian Lundgaard, who delivered Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s most competitive run of the season on the way to securing sixth in the No. 45 Honda.

Elsewhere, Ganassi’s Marcus Armstrong used a three-stop run to overcome his qualifying penalty and leap from 26th to 11th. Long Beach winner Kyle Kirkwood started and finished 12th on a decidedly average day, and Juncos Hollinger Racing’s Callum Ilott started 15th, fell back, then charged to earn 13th.

Among the final movers, Rinus VeeKay started ninth and finished 16th for Ed Carpenter Racing, and A.J. Foyt Racing’s Santino Ferrucci went in the opposite direction from starting last due to a problem that kept him from posting a lap in qualifying to placing 20th.

Arrow McLaren’s Felix Rosenqvist was the most resilient driver on the day after making contact with Newgarden on the opening lap that sent his No. 6 Chevy spinning. Relegated to the bottom of the field, he worked a three-stop strategy to all it was worth and recovered to take ninth.

Strategy races can be incredibly boring, and for long stretches of the Alabama GP, there wasn’t much excitement to offer, but once the final stops were completed, the showdown between McLaughlin, Grosjean, and Power made for a fun sprint to the checkered flag.

The party resumes in two weeks at the Indianapolis Grand Prix.

As it happened

The opening lap of the race featured a charging Pato O’Ward who tried to take P2 from Alex Palou, but Palou held firm and stayed close to polesitter Romain Grosjean’s gearbox. Felix Rosenqvist was hit in Turn 2 and spun, falling to the back.

Behind them, Rinus VeeKay was up to P7 from P9 and Colton Herta improved from P14 to P9 by lap 4. All three Penske drivers started on the slower primary tires, and as such, Scott McLaughlin fell prey to Scott Dixon who took P4 from him. Jack Harvey, who started P24, is P27 and last.

Lap 8 and Grosjean has pulled a 1.2s lead over Palou. O’Ward is 2.2s back in third. Championship leader Marcus Ericsson has not improved from his P13 starting position by lap 10.

Josef Newgarden is the first to pit on lap 14 to trade primaries for alternates as he commits to a three-stop strategy. Alexander Rossi pits from P8 the next lap to do the same. Up front, it’s a procession as Grosjean leads Palou by 0.9s on lap 15; O’Ward is 1.8s arrears.

McLaughlin pits at the end of lap 15 to do the same swap to alternates and he’s joined by teammate Will Power as all three Penske drivers commit to three stops. P18-21 are held by Newgarden, McLaughlin, Rossi, and Power after their stops.

The initial pit cycle and drop to the rear of the field for the Penske contingent was overcome in short order with qualifying-like laps clawing time back — a theme throughout the day. Gavin Baker/Lumen

Lap 20 and Grosjean holds 1.3s over Palou and 1.8s over O’Ward; Dixon is 2.7s back in P4, VeeKay is 7.0s behind in P5, and the best driver among them on primaries is Christian Lundgaard in P7, 8.2s behind Grosjean. Lundgaard takes P6 from Herta on lap 21, whose alternates are suffering.

VeeKay is next on Lundgaard’s hit list, taking P5 on Lap 22; Kyle Kirkwood does the same to Herta, relieving his teammate of P7. Ericsson is next to pass Herta, claiming P8 on lap 23. Herta’s in a bad way.

Grosjean’s in control on lap 25 with 1.5s on Palou and 2.5s on O’Ward. They’re holding station and saving fuel to make a two-stop strategy work. Behind them, Kirkwood and Ericsson demote VeeKay, improving to P6 and P7. Herta’s down to P10 after Simon Pagenaud executed a pass.

Lap 26 and Newgarden is already up to P10 and is just 17s behind Grosjean. Impressive, but will it be enough to overcome an extra pit stop?

Lap 28 and Herta pits for primaries; he’ll have to stretch before or after his next and last stop. Newgarden’s up to P8. Lap 29 and Lundgaard’s in, taking alternates. VeeKay pits as well, taking primaries.

Lap 30 and O’Ward and Dixon pit for primaries and exit nose to tail. Grosjean and Palou are in at the end of lap 30 and a long stop for Palou gives Grosjean a big gap. O’Ward takes the spot off of Palou, putting his hot tires to good use. Lundgaard fires his car through the final corner to demote Dixon; the Ganassi cars are losing out at the start of the second stint.

Lap 34 and the leaders are the three-stoppers with Newgarden, McLaughlin, Rossi, Power, and Rosenqvist holding the top five. Grosjean is next, first of the two-stoppers, in sixth, 15.3s behind Newgarden. O’Ward is 2.2s behind Grosjean, separated by David Malukas, who is also on three stops.

Malukas takes P6 from Grosjean and Grosjean is 22.2s back from Newgarden. Lap 37 and the racy McLaughlin takes the lead from Newgarden, who pits for alternates.

Lap 38 and Sting Ray Robb’s car is stalled on the side of the road. It’s a flurry of activity as McLaughlin, Rossi, Power, Rosenqvist, and Malukas pit before the series threw the caution.

The jumbled group of drivers had Grosjean leading McLaughlin, O’Ward, Palou, and Lundgaard as they went back to green on lap 43. Lundgaard passes Palou for P4. Lap 44 and Power takes P8 from Rossi.

Halfway point at Lap 45 and Grosjean has 0.5s over McLaughlin, 2.5s over O’Ward, 3.3s over Lundgaard, and 4.1s over Palou. Championship leader Ericsson is P12. Lap 48 and Castroneves is off the track for the third time this weekend.

Grosjean and McLaughlin are pushing out from the others; they’re separated by 0.9s on Lap 52, but O’Ward, in third, is 6.7s down and Lundgaard is 7.6s back in P4. Lap 54 and O’Ward is 7.5s arrears.

Lap 60 and Grosjean’s 2.6s up on McLaughlin while O’Ward is 11.1s behind.

Having been dominant seemingly all weekend, the two-stopper just didn’t allow Romain Grosjean to stretch his legs as he had in qualifying. Instead he wound up mired in the weeds of tire and fuel saving. Richard Dole/Lumen

Grosjean pits at the end of lap 60 as does O’Ward as both take primaries. Lap 62 and Palou and Dixon and Kirkwood pit for primaries; Dixon charged by Newgarden, who was holding up the pack, just before pitting and Newgarden lost a few more positions as a result.

Lap 63 and McLaughlin leads Grosjean by 27.5s, and he’s in to take primaries. McLaughlin takes the lead on cold tires. Unbelievable effort by McLaughlin to draw down the gap before pitting. Grosjean retakes the lead in the final corner as they lightly bang wheels. Masterful move by the new leader.

Lap 66 and Power pits from the lead for his third stop. The rest of the three-stoppers should clear the path for Grosjean and McLaughlin to reclaim first and second.

Grosjean’s got no margin of comfort as McLaughlin is just 0.3s behind while saving fuel as we reach lap 70. He’s also out of push-to-pass as McLaughlin has 29s left to use.

Lap 72 and Grosjean runs wide into Turn 5 and hands the lead to McLaughlin, who used some push-to-pass to ensure he motored by entering Turn 6. Lap 80 and Grosjean’s comfortable hold on P2 is gone as Power is 2.0s behind, having cut it from 10.0s sec.

Power tried his best but didn’t have enough to get past Grosjean; McLaughlin has his fourth career IndyCar win with a 1.7s gap to Grosjean and 3.2s over Power as Penske takes is second win of the year and Chevy takes its second as well.

RESULTS

Friday Barber IndyCar recap with Scott McLaughlin

Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin and RACER’s Marshall Pruett discuss the opening practice session at Barber Motorsports Park which the Kiwi led in his No. 3 Chevy. Presented by: RACER’s IndyCar Trackside Report at Barber Motorsports Park is presented …

Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin and RACER’s Marshall Pruett discuss the opening practice session at Barber Motorsports Park which the Kiwi led in his No. 3 Chevy.

Presented by:

Late block strips Wallace from chance of Talladega win

Bubba Wallace took responsibility for the crash between himself and Ryan Blaney on the last lap of Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway, ending a potential duel for the win between the two friends. “I pulled a late block – close, close, close …

Bubba Wallace took responsibility for the crash between himself and Ryan Blaney on the last lap of Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway, ending a potential duel for the win between the two friends.

“I pulled a late block – close, close, close block — and just that sent us around,” Wallace said. “Not the No. 12’s (Blaney) fault, just I honestly thought that he would leave me high and dry coming back around and so just hate it, hate it for my team. That’s how it goes.

“So that was our best, by far, plate race that we’ve ever done, so hat’s off to the No. 23 group, Freddie on top of the roof. Just a great day for us, just a crap result, so…hate it. I caused that one and man, I just thought it’d play out a little bit different — obviously not getting wrecked, but I thought the move would happen coming off through the trioval.”

Wallace’s 23XI Racing Toyota led the field at the white flag with an assist from Blaney. The two surged in the outside lane around Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski, who led the inside lane.

“The way we were shoving and pushing, we were kind of getting each other out of whack and sort of moving the momentum forward,” Wallace said. “And then when I got the move, it was, you know, OK, cool, and it was all about defending, and you can’t let your guard down for one second, or you end up in (the infield care center).”

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After making the pass for the lead, going into Turn 1, Wallace and Blaney simultaneously moved to the bottom. Blaney, however, still had a run and started moving to the outside, which Wallace chased. The two touched, and Wallace spun to the left, bounced off Keselowski, and spun back into the pack.

“It’s hard to block in these cars,” Blaney said. “I felt like he kind of triple-moved on me; can’t really do that. You block the middle, block the bottom, block the top and I’m there. It’s a shame he got turned, but I don’t know what else I could do besides slam on the brakes and you can’t do that.

“I’m not blaming anybody; it’s just hard racing. As the leader, I would have done the same thing. You’re trying to block and maintain the lead. But as second, I’ve got to take every run I can get and keep my momentum, so it’s just one of those things.”

Busch drove through as the seas parted. He was the leader and winner as the caution came out and ended the race. Blaney finished second.

“I’m mad we didn’t win,” Blaney said of his thoughts after the crash. “That’s the thing that went through my head first.”

The Penske driver said he and Wallace would talk about what happened. He said it “stinks” when there is contact between friends, but doesn’t race Wallace any differently than the rest of the field.

As the race wound down, Wallace was glad to see Blaney around him in the draft.

“Oh, when I saw the No. 12, I was pumped,” said Wallace. “We work well together, obviously, every speedway race, and that’s just the way it goes. Not the No. 12’s fault at all.”

For Blaney, his winless streak goes to 56 races. He led a race-high 47 laps Sunday at Talladega.

When asked if he thinks about what more he can do to win a race, Blaney said, “Every single day.”

Blaney admits his confidence has taken a hit

Ryan Blaney has not won a NASCAR Cup Series points race in 55 starts. It is the second longest in the series behind Brad Keselowski (70), dating back to late 2021 in the summer race at Daytona International Speedway. The Team Penske driver is well …

Ryan Blaney has not won a NASCAR Cup Series points race in 55 starts. It is the second longest in the series behind Brad Keselowski (70), dating back to late 2021 in the summer race at Daytona International Speedway.

The Team Penske driver is well aware. Choosing to not focus on it goes deeper than not being concerned about the drought.

“It can definitely eat away at your confidence,” Blaney said Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway, where he is a two-time winner. “Confidence is a big deal in this thing, and it’s easy to lose it when you’re not performing or not winning. It makes you think, ‘Can I still do this? Can I be competitive at this level? Am I doing everything I can?’

“That definitely can eat at you, but I try not to think about that. I’m not the most confident person to begin with, so I try not to get it any lower than what it is on a normal basis.”

Not a confident person? Chalk one up for the honest tab.

“I could definitely be more confident. It’s just been that way the whole time,” he explained. “My dad (Dave Blaney) is the same way. We’re the same people — very self-critical. I think there’s a fine line between confidence and ego, and I don’t ever want to get to the ego level, so I stay low on the confidence scale.”

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Blaney celebrated a win last year, but it was in the All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway where he and the No. 12 team took home the $1 million prize, the trophy, and bragging rights…but no points.

When the regular season was decided in Daytona, that nearly cost him. Blaney and Martin Truex Jr. went down to the wire for the final playoff spot as the Penske driver was the only non-winner in the postseason.

“Honestly, the only time I think about it is when y’all ask me about it,” he said. “Or when the fans are like, ‘When are you going to win again? I’ve been putting money on you.’ Yeah, I’d like to win. We’re trying like hell. It’s not like we’re sitting here happy with fifth.

“I don’t sit around every night and stew about it, I just try to figure out how to win the next one.”

In his last 55 starts, Blaney has 27 top-10 finishes and three runner-up efforts (fall Talladega 2022; Phoenix finale 2022; Phoenix spring 2023). In that stretch, he has led 771 laps.

“Our group can do it; we won a championship last year with Joey (Logano) on their side, and this team is plenty capable,” said Blaney. “It’s just a matter of putting everything together.”