Sunday, May 16, 2021

GMR Grand Prix Nets Another First-Time Winner In An INDYCAR Season That Doesn't Disappoint

GMR Grand Prix 2021 Podium where (L to R) Romain Grosjean - P2, Rinus VeeKay - P1, and Alex Palou - P3 click champagne Magnums in celebration. Image Credit: Chris Owens via NICS (2021)


GMR Grand Prix Nets Another First-Time Winner In An INDYCAR Season That Doesn't Disappoint

The day began with a very target-rich six drivers qualifying in the top 10 positions without having a win in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES to have a third first-time winner in five races to begin this 2021 season.

In a professional racing series, especially one that is as competitive as this North American series, this seems almost unfathomable. This NTT INDYCAR SERIES race event featured something that hasn't happened since 2013 - A driver capturing their maiden Pole Position - Rookie Romain Grosjean, Dale Coyne Racing With Rick Ware - and a driver notching their first series race win - Sophomore driver Rinus Veekay, Ed Carpenter Racing.


NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference - Post GMR Grand Prix
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - Saturday, May 15, 2021

Rinus VeeKay - Driver, Ed Carpenter Racing - Winner of the GMR Grand Prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: We are joined here in the Dex Imaging Media Center by our race winner, driver of the No. 21 Chevy for Ed Carpenter Racing. Welcome, Rinus. Congratulations.

RINUS VEEKAY: Thank you very much.

THE MODERATOR: You are now the third new winner of the year. You started off with a broken finger during testing, and now you are winner and in Victory Lane. Tell us about your day and how excited you are.

RINUS VEEKAY: It was an amazing day. To start with this morning, we started in the warmup fastest lap time. Of course, doesn't say too much, but the car felt amazing, very good on the long run, even though we only did blacks. But then we went to the reds, learned from last year because we had many races here, that the reds were very good in the long run, and yeah, just start was great, had a great ability to pass other cars, and strategy was amazing by the team. So everything was just on it.

Amazing day, and definitely one I will remember for the rest of my life.

THE MODERATOR: We have been joined by race steward Arie Luyendyk here in the media center, close friend of Rinus's family. A couple more nuggets about today's win. Rinus has now won at all four levels of the Road to Indy and now in INDYCAR. The last team win was in Iowa July 10th of 2016 with Josef Newgarden and you've now become the sixth youngest winner in history at age 20 years, eight months and three days. Yes, we look that kind of stuff up.

We will take some questions from here in the media center and then we'll go to Zoom.

Q. Kate mentioned you're the first driver to win on all four levels of the Road to Indy. What has it meant to you to have that defined path and the scholarships to make it to INDYCAR, from U.S. F2000 to INDYCAR?

RINUS VEEKAY: It's amazing. Of course my first-ever test in U.S. F2000 in that new car was here. That was the Chris Griffis test in 2016. So yeah, just amazing to have so much experience on this track in a long time and go through all the ladder systems and win races and know how to race here.

It was an awesome race, and just feels amazing, and I'm very grateful for what the Road to Indy has done to me.

Q. Your first top 5 was here in this race last July, your first pole was here in October, your first podium was here in October, and now your first victory is here today. This has got to be your favorite road course, right, favorite course?

RINUS VEEKAY: Oh, yeah, I like this track, especially when you have a good car. It's always more fun.

But yeah, just -- you know, this is a track that really suits me. Got to be quick, but you can also attack and pass, and there's many, many opportunities to move forward. That's exactly what I could do today, so I'm very happy. Really have to thank the team. I'm very grateful for all the sponsors and very excited to start driving with Dale Coyne next week.

Rinus VeeKay, competing in his 19th race, earned his first victory by prevailing in the GMR Grand Prix on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. VeeKay, who started seventh in the No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek Chevrolet, won by 4.9510 seconds over pole winner Romain Grosjean. Image Credit: Walt Kuhn via NICS (2021). 

Q. And also the heritage of this race team is so deeply rooted in this facility with Ed Carpenter and Tony George and the fact that for years they've been chasing victories, came close to winning Indy 500s. They've won Indy 500 poles. Now here you give the team their first victory at the speedway on the road course. How do you process all that?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, it's crazy. It's just great for the team. Everyone is so happy. They were already like super motivated, but I'm pretty sure now for the 500 everyone is just going to be next-level motivated. I know we have a good 500 car, good oval car, and yeah, I think we can really, really do well, and I'm just excited to get going.

I also want to thank my private sponsors, JUMBO and Basic-Fit. They've made everything possible for me, and of course Ed Carpenter Racing. They are the greatest team out there.

Q. And also last year you became the fastest teenager in Indy 500 history. I guess next week the next goal is to become the fastest 20-year old in Indy 500 history?

RINUS VEEKAY: That's my goal. Yeah, we're working on it. I feel super confident. First race win is there, and it takes a lot of pressure off, to be honest. Now I can just drive the 500, and yeah. You know, I don't have to show that I can win because I've done it.

Now it's just going to be focusing on the best possible result, and yeah, I want to thank Ed Carpenter Racing for everything they've done for me so far, and yeah, Chevy for the great engines. Indy 500 coming up, lots of power, lots of speed. I'm sure we'll be good.

Q. When did you see today that victory was possible? Was it basically beating -- when Romain was coming out of the pit stop and you were ahead of him? Was that when it became very clear to you?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yes, definitely. It felt like I could drive away from him. I heard I had a very, very nice gap to him, so I kind of took it easy, tried to save a little bit of tires, even though it was hard to keep them going, but yeah, we got there, saved some fuel at the end, and everything was awesome, like perfect down to the millimeter for the team. Yeah, very happy with them.

I don't know how many times in a row they have given me a great strategy.

Q. There was a little bit of drizzle off and on it seemed like today. How much jeopardy was there out there on the track, or what was the sense of this thing could go to rain?

RINUS VEEKAY: I wasn't really sure. I just tried to get the best laps down as possible. I could see the rain on the aeroscreen, but it didn't seem like it would give a big impact. So kind of took it a little easy on the brake zones, but yeah, corner grip felt just how it should be.

No, I'm very happy it stayed dry at least. But the race is over and I'm very happy with it.

Q. Romain basically pointed out you were born after he first started racing. Obviously Arie -- was Arie a big-time idol growing up? Give us a little background on how far you've come so fast.

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, Arie was a big idol of me. Still is. His dad made my dad's gearboxes in Formula 4, so a long family connection, and it's great how fast I've been able to -- well, first make that step to racing in the U.S. and then move up throughout the ladder system to win my first INDYCAR race.

Q. If my memory serves me right, in 2016 you were introduced as the first confirmed driver for the new U.S. F2000 car in 2017. Does it almost feel right that your first victory came here, where you were first introduced to the American motorsports market?

RINUS VEEKAY: Oh, definitely. Well, I would take a win anywhere, to be honest, but this is one of the best places to do it. Yeah, I'm just super grateful for all the opportunities I've had. I've won a race in an INDYCAR.

Q. I know you've talked a lot about the excitement of moving to Speedway, making this town your home. Does that make this win and being able to have fans around here and interact with your fans like I know you really enjoy doing, does that make this win any sweeter than a first win would have been anywhere else?

RINUS VEEKAY: Oh, yeah, it's definitely an awesome way to win. We had our first real driver parade and driver intro. It was awesome to just greet the fans before the race and see everyone super excited. It's definitely more surreal to win when there's fans around.

I live in -- like right next door, so every day I wake up, open the curtains and I see the grandstands of the racetrack. Definitely the closest I get to a home race. Also for the team, and yeah, just the perfect day on the perfect place on earth.

Q. I know we've said that this team has been waiting for a win now for nearly five years. Could you sense how much this meant not only to Ed but the folks in the crew around you, many of which have been around here since 2016 and even a good time before that?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, it means a lot to the team. Everyone knew at the team that they could win a race, that we could win a race. But we just had to show it. Today was finally the day, and everyone in the world can see that Ed Carpenter Racing with Rinus VeeKay are race winners.

Q. Ed told me post-race that he felt like this was maybe your first real complete race of your INDYCAR career now for about a year and a half. What did you feel like you put together to be able to come through with a mistake-free, clean, perfect race?

RINUS VEEKAY: Well, I think pace was really, really big today. We had awesome pace, which really helped make the strategy work. Passing was easy because of the pace.

Every time someone came in my path I could attack and go for it, and yeah, that really put a few cars between me and Romain at the end, which gave me a lot of comfort.

Yeah, definitely a nice way to win with a little bit of margin, and I could kind of breathe at the end, so that was very nice.

Q. Now you've won this one; how about we take the one after this, as well? Maybe win that one, as well?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, I'm very keen to try to sweep the month of May. That's of course my goal. Yeah, the mentality and everyone's confidence is super high at the team, so I think we can definitely go for that win. We've had an awesome car last year, and Ed Carpenter Racing has showed the last few years that they have the car to win the 500.

Yeah, very excited to go drive with Bitcoin during the Indy 500 on the car, and yeah, very excited to try to win the race.

Q. The move you made to split the middle on Jimmie Johnson and Alex Palou there seemed like it was pretty pivotal. Could you take us through that, why it was important to make that move there, and did you have any concerns that you might not get through?


RINUS VEEKAY: Well, I saw they were coming out of pit lane, but I knew they were teammates, so they have cold tires. I had just kind of the peak on my tires on the reds, so I knew I had to get by and kind of get a gap.

Alex defended on the back straight. Jimmie drove the normal line. There was just about one car width space between them and I went for it. I knew there were a lot of marbles on track, so didn't want to get the tires too dirty, so I stuck it between there, and I know Jimmie is a smart driver, same for Alex, and yeah, kind of hoped they would see me, and they did. I was very happy that I could stick that move, and definitely gave me a big adrenaline kick.

Q. Moves like that, it seems like you're getting a reputation for being that kind of risk taker and having that kind of daring in your game. Do you like having that reputation?

RINUS VEEKAY: Oh, yeah, definitely, as long as it's clean, which it is. I like passing. As spectacular as possible would be nice. No, it's very nice, and I'm very, very happy that I've got the car to do it with. Definitely makes passing a whole lot easier.

Q. They were talking to the broadcast about your parents being over here and how they've been living with you in Speedway and I guess you're coming over here to live in the motor home the next couple weeks and they're going to stay in your place. What's that been like with the living arrangements at your place and what it's like having them here for the whole month?

RINUS VEEKAY: It's great to have them over. Of course it's big to have them here. It's a lot to take in, but also they were worked as hard as me to get where we are now, so it's great that they can, yeah, just get in, like soak in this whole experience with me, and yeah, it's awesome to win when they are here. I am very much looking forward to dinner, and especially the dessert. No, it's amazing to have them here, and I love them, so it's amazing.

THE MODERATOR: When Alex Palou won at Barber he allowed himself a "bad food" kind of dinner and he was going to seek some fried chicken. What is it you'll be seeking tonight?

RINUS VEEKAY: Cheesecake. Oh, yeah. I told them on the radio, it's a deal I have with my trainer, when I get a podium I can eat a cheesecake, so I'm very excited, and I think I kind of deserve one.

THE MODERATOR: Like a piece of cheesecake or a whole cheesecake?

RINUS VEEKAY: I see him do this, so I think it's a whole one, but I will just go for a piece before I -- yeah, well, have a little bit worse night.

Q. After St. Pete's race, a lot of drivers had some complaints about the physical conditions after the race, and today we had a long stint with green flag. Do you think that the physical conditions today was something to complain, also, or not?

RINUS VEEKAY: No, actually not. You know, I wanted the race to end earlier, but I had a different reason.

But no, physically I felt good. I think St. Petersburg was the hardest race with the temperatures.

I live together with my personal trainer; we wake up every day to prepare for days like this, and this really shows how much it pays off. Very happy with it, and for me, the harder the better.

Dutch pride is all over Rinus' helmet. First are the bands/fess of color from The Netherlands flag from bottom Blue, middle White and top Red. the real capper, however, is the color of Dutch royalty and that would be Orange. Rinus knows that if it ain't Dutch, it ain't much! Image Credit: Chris Jones via NICS (2021) 

Q. You're the first Dutch winner in INDYCAR. I was wondering what does it mean to you, and do you think your success is going to help further popularize INDYCAR in the Netherlands?

RINUS VEEKAY: Oh, definitely, I think so. It's big to win. Of course I kind of had to show that I could win. That was kind of a pressure. But now that I've done it, I think I would like to continue doing it, but yeah, Dutch fans love Dutch success, so I think because of this, more fans are going to follow me. I've showed that I can win, and yeah, I can do it more often. Very happy and very happy that so many Dutch people are following me already.

Q. I think Arie Luyendyk is in the room with you there if I'm correct. Has he said anything to you or any interactions?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, I talked to him and I was very happy for me. I got many, many thumbs up, so yeah. Great day for the Dutch people.

Q. I want to ask you, through the first five races, four of the five winners have been in the INDYCAR youth movement, so to say. Can you talk about how successful the younger drivers have been so far? I know it's a short sample size, but four of the five racers have been in that Indy youth movement.

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, it's crazy. I'm the third new winner, third new INDYCAR winner of 2021. I thought last year was crazy. This year is crazier.

But I'm very happy. It's really showed how high the level is, and new generation is coming, so just very happy and, yeah, great podium, too, with Alex, who has become a good friend of mine, and Romain, who of course brings a huge, huge audience from F1 over to INDYCAR.

Q. Rinus, we've talked about Arie a few times today, but can you expand upon what he's done for your career to get you to this point and where do you think he's been the most beneficial or what he's taught you the most that's helped you be a winner now?

RINUS VEEKAY: Well, Arie has been around for a very long time. I actually met him at the Indy 500 in 2016 here in Indianapolis at the Union Jack's Pub in a meet-and-greet.

No, it's great to have Arie here, and yeah, he has given me a lot of tips but also very good guidance about watch out for any rule changes and him being an official or steward, he gives me good tips and many reminders that really help me out. Yeah, just little, little tips and a lot of good atmosphere he gives to me so I can win the race.

Q. I'm curious what goes through a driver's mindset when you take over the lead, final stint, and do the nerves go up, heart rate go up? Do you have to play games in your head? Do you feel any vibration around the track? Does anything in the mindset change from the previous stints?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, I knew I could win the race, so didn't want to think too much about it. I kind of wandered off sometimes about, okay, you're going to be a race winner. Oh, I'm not. I just want to kind to take it easy. But yeah, just big goal was don't make mistakes. I had a good, comfortable gap, and yeah, I knew the tires were going to go a little bit there at the end, so wanted to do everything to kind of save the rears, but yeah, did everything I could, and yeah, very grateful for everyone around helping me, especially the team Ed Carpenter Racing.

Q. How confident are you going into the latter part of the month of May and if you are able to win the 500 do you want VeeKay or van Kalmthout on the trophy?

RINUS VEEKAY: Let's do both.

I am very, very excited to get going for the 500. Yeah, Ed Carpenter Racing makes very, very good Indy 500 cars, and everyone is super motivated. It's the biggest race of the year for them. But to finish off the Indy Grand Prix just before with a win is a big, big confidence boost for everyone at the team.

Q. You had said on the race broadcast that your family had sacrificed everything to get you up here. Aside from this win, is there one key moment in your journey that stands out the most?

RINUS VEEKAY: It's this one, yeah, definitely. I've never cried when I won a race, but I have done today. So did my parents. Yeah, it's just amazing.

Their lives have evolved around me for a very long time to make this possible for me, and I'm extremely grateful. Yeah, I've finally done it. It just feels surreal.

I think I will kind of get the feeling more once I wake up tomorrow morning, but no, it's just great that they can be here and enjoy this moment with me.

Q. How much momentum does this give you going into next week for testing and then obviously for qualifying at the weekend?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, this is definitely a very good way to end up the streak of road courses, and now getting into oval mode. Yeah, it's definitely going to be big for the team.

Everyone is going to be super motivated. They know we can win the race. We already knew, but now we did, and I think everyone will be -- yeah, will be just giving it their all. I knew they always do, but yeah, we can win the Indy 500, and I'll do everything I can to make it happen.

Q. What milk have you decided to go for if you win the 500?

RINUS VEEKAY: I decided to go for whole milk. I actually wanted buttermilk, but that wasn't an option. I saw the photo of Simon pouring milk on his face, and I think the whole milk gives the nice thick layer of milk, which I like.

Q. At Laguna Seca when I interviewed you for Indy Lights, you said something to me. You said that you wanted to be the next Max Verstappen of INDYCAR. You've already gotten Rookie of the Year and you had your first race win now, and I want to know do you think you're getting closer to that performance level that he has, but also the orange army?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, definitely. I could already see many VeeKay fans here, but I think this is definitely a big step forward. Yeah, I kind of proved myself today, so I think Dutch people are always very proud of their countrymen, and yeah, I think this is the best thing I could do today to get the Dutch army bigger than ever.

Q. I think you're the first driver to win at every level of the Road to Indy and then in INDYCAR, as well. Just wondered kind of your reflections on the Road to Indy and how much that's helped you to get into the position you are today because obviously the scholarship system is not common around the world, it's something quite -- at least relatively unique to America in the stature that it is. I wonder your kind of reflections on that?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, it's definitely unique that there's a scholarship system. It really prepares you. You're always driving before the INDYCAR in the same weekends, and you see the INDYCARs going and you can see the races in real life but you can also race on the tracks you're going to race in an INDYCAR. I have done many passes, many laps on this track before in all sorts of cars, and it definitely prepared me. I knew everything that could happen in every corner, every scenario, just because of the Road to Indy. So very grateful that I had the opportunity to do that and be successful in the Road to Indy, and yeah, show that if you can win the Road to Indy, you can win an INDYCAR race.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, Rinus, for joining us today. Congratulations on your first career INDYCAR win and I'd like to give a special thanks to all the international media that joined us today.

RINUS VEEKAY: Thank you very much. See you at the next one.


NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference - Post GMR Grand Prix
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA - Saturday, May 15, 2021

Romain Grosjean - Pole Sitter - P2 Podium
Alex Palou - Started P4 - P3 Podium

Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Dex Imaging Media Center. I'm Kate Davis, director of communications for INDYCAR.

We are joined by our second- and third-place finishers. Our rookie, Grosjean, driver of the No. 51 Nurtec ODT Honda, and our third-place finisher, Alex Palou, driver of the American Legion Honda for Chip Ganassi Racing.

Gentlemen, welcome to the media center. Romain, welcome back to the media center. I know you didn't get the win, but from where you were six months ago, to have a pole and a podium in INDYCAR, tell me how you're feeling today.

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, it's not a bad day. I think we're kind of disappointed to be second but also super happy, and I was telling the team, look, guys, that's a great day. You can't be disappointed being second. That's fantastic.

We've had a strong car all weekend. We were leading the race quite easily in the first stint. We got a bit unlucky with traffic and back markers. I think that cost us a chance to go for the win, but also Rinus was quite fast on a different strategy. The right one, I guess.

But we've done great work, and sitting second in my third race starting in INDYCAR, it's pretty big. It is a tough championship. There's super good talent here, super fast drivers.

Yesterday I felt amazing in qually. This morning in the warmup we didn't get quite it right and we made some changes for the race, and that worked well.

Yeah, I think I did a pretty good job at the first rolling start leading the field, kept myself first through the first corner and then the restart felt a little bit more natural to me, so that was good, as well, and the car was very, very nice.

I still think there is a few areas we can work and improve. That's what we're going to do. Obviously everyone is going to be busy the next two weeks for the 500, but it's a great way to start the month of May for Dale Coyne Racing by RWR and a great way for me to give the car to Pietro Fittipaldi, the 51 car, and for him to have a good month of May.

THE MODERATOR: We'll go now to Alex Palou. Podium finish for you today. You won the race at Barber, trail your teammate in second place in the overall standings by 13 points. How are you feeling today?

First time that a Ganassi Racing car sported an American Legion sponsored livery. Spaniard Alex Palou gave this new sponsor some very decent camera time with his P3 Podium finish. Image Credit: Walt Kuhn  via NICS (2021)

ALEX PALOU: Yeah, hello, everybody, and first of all, congrats to my whole team and to Romain. I know it's tough, but I think I did too good of a job last year giving him a really good car this year.

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: I've changed everything.

ALEX PALOU: I guess so.

But yeah, I mean, I'm really happy. We started the weekend with one in free practice, which was going to be a really tough weekend, but we recovered, so super happy. I was super happy yesterday being in the Fast Six without feeling super, super good and comfortable with the car, and today we made some progress during the warmup.

I think the race was pretty good. We had some issues with some lap cars that made things really exciting. I think we didn't maybe do the perfect strategy with the red tires, the black tires, but we are on the podium, we started P4, and it was a good day for us, for the No. 10 and the American Legion car. I'm happy that this is the first race for them with us, and we got a podium. So it's good.

Q. Romain, I would think every time you go out in an INDYCAR right now, you're learning something. What did you learn about I guess the series today and the competitive nature of it, and did VeeKay kind of come out of nowhere or could you feel him stalking you?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: So what I learned from Barber Race 1 was that from lap 1 to lap 85 or 100, wherever we're going, you need to push every lap. In Formula 1 normally you do the race start, you push a few laps and then things settle down and you manage the fuel and your tires, you look at the gap; whereas here, different strategy, yellows, pit closing and so on, there could always be someone coming a little bit out of the blue.

Rinus was super fast in pre-practice 1 as well as in the warmup in the cooler conditions. So I knew he was going to be good. He didn't quite make it to Fast Six, meaning he had some more red tires available for the race, and he started on black. Yeah, I guess when I was catching the slower car, he pitted early from the blacks and then got on reds and gets him freer, and yeah, I knew they were under different strategy, and it was going to be tough.

We were a little bit less competitive on the blacks today, and also on the last stint I got stuck behind Sebastien Bourdais, which is a super good driver. He was on a new tire, I was on old reds and I couldn't pass him for a long time until he actually locked up and went straight into Turn 1. I kind of killed my tires and I could see Rinus about four, five seconds ahead and didn't get a chance to come back to him.

So yeah, I mean, that's what I learned, you just have to push all the way. Even when you have seven- or eight-second lead on the first stint doesn't mean you're going to win the race.

Q. Romain, to try to elaborate a little bit on that, how aware were you of where Rinus was on the track when you were leaving the pits on your final pit stop, because it did look like if you beat him out of the pits before he got by you, you'd be the leader?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, I wasn't well aware of where he was. I think he still came out with a good lead and also I was behind two cars leaving the pit lane back markers. So it was a tough day in terms of overtaking people. I know it's a really good track with a really good straight line, but when the lap cars are using their Push-to-Pass, it's hard to get by, and then obviously you're going to push harder on your tires and get a bit of a harder time, and you just can't really do the pace you want.

I knew Rinus was on the last -- before the last pit stop, he passed me; I was on black, he was on red. I asked the team is he on the same strategy, and they told me yes, and therefore I knew I had to kind of try to stay close on the blacks from him, but couldn't quite do it.

On the last stint, as I said, I was stuck behind the No. 14, which was going fast, but too fast for me to pass him and just too slow to catch Rinus, so a bit in between.

Q. Alex, you represented the American Legion today and that's an organization that means a lot to this facility, especially Memorial Day and all that. What were your thoughts being able to have their colors on your car today?

ALEX PALOU: I mean, it's crazy. As a kid you always want to represent big brands, big organizations, and it's amazing that I have the opportunity to represent the American Legion here in Indy. They were telling me that that represents like more than a million people, so it's great. I think they are going to be really happy that on the first race we were able to be here on the podium, and it's amazing that they were here with us, so hopefully we can keep on doing great results for them.

Q. Also you and Rinus were both rookies last year, and you had a fairly consistent rookie season, Rinus was either spectacularly great or spectacularly bad. How do you kind of see the fact that now this kid is in Victory Lane, too?

ALEX PALOU: Yeah, I'm super happy for him. I'm really good friends with him, and to be honest, as Romain said, he's been super strong through FP1, FP2, qualifyings, and I don't why he didn't really get into Fast Six, and I was like super slow compared to him. But that gave him an advantage today with two sticker sets of red tires.

But he did an amazing job. I think he's going to keep being up there. He's been really consistent this year, but hopefully he doesn't do it too often.

Q. Wanted to ask you to elaborate on your success so far because you're only a few races into your INDYCAR career and you're already on a podium. What's fueled your ability to pick up the series so quickly?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: I don't know. I feel like it's a race car that I like driving. It feels like it's something quite similar to the GP2 that I drove back in 2011 and cars that I've always been competitive with. Yeah, I've got a really good group of people around me starting with all the engineers at Dale Coyne Racing. Ed Jones, my teammate, really helping me a lot. And then to be fair, Honda and Firestone have been a great help, as well, trying to get me up to speed and explaining to me what to do, what not to do. So I think that's how I could get it quite quickly.

As a rookie I'm lucky to do some extra days of testing, which is always great. And also, you know, those 10 years in Formula 1, I've had to adapt to some very different cars, very competitive and very terrible cars, and I think you actually -- I'm not going to name the terrible ones.

ALEX PALOU: No, I don't think you need to.

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: But you actually learn to adapt and to change your driving style. I think sometimes I need to understand a little bit more how to go fast in INDYCAR, but yeah, so far it's been really -- everyone has been really helpful, and I'm loving it.

Q. Romain, I'm wondering how personally you're feeling. I heard the crowd cheering you after the race. You had a big smile on your face. You seemed to be pumping your arms. You seemed very happy and pleased and energized. How were you feeling through these three races you've run so far?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, you know, when you get a pole position and a second position in the race, you can't not be happy. If we do racing it's obviously because we are racing fans but also very competitive, and we want to go out in the front, we want to fight for good position, to drink champagne on the podium and bring a nice trophy home.

Funny how life works its way around making an overnight success out of a driver who simply paid his dues in a series where it is hard to break out from a set cast system. Bravo for Romain Grosjean and Dale Coyne Racing for sticking their collective necks out on an honest chance to display what they have. Image Credit: Chris Jones via NICS (2021)

I'm very happy. The first two races we had some good pace but we had a few technical issues that kind of slowed us down, but generally I love driving the car. Even at the warmup this morning my engineer said, you can pit to do some setup changes; I'm like, no, I'm not pitting, I'm just happy being out there and pushing and learning on the tires.

I'm having a great time. The whole atmosphere between the drivers, we're here with Alex and we're joking and having fun, it is super competitive on track, but as soon as you remove your helmet, there is like a good friendship between the drivers, which you surprisingly don't find anywhere else. I love that part, and I'm having a blast of a time.

Q. When is the last time you've enjoyed coming to work this much?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Oh, I'll say 2013. When you weren't born.

ALEX PALOU: I was.

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Rinus wasn't born when I started racing.

ALEX PALOU: When did you start racing?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: 1999.

ALEX PALOU: I was two years old.

Q. Romain, I just wondered how important it was for you today to be out front and for the pole lap, as well, yesterday to sort of -- was it important for you to prove to people that you can still do this and that you can still be competing at the front, or was that something you're really not too bothered about and it's more thinking about yourself and what you're doing on your own?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, you know, I don't think I need to prove to anyone what I can do. If somebody doubt that, well, they should look a little bit of my career and what I've done and what I could even do in the last few years with the car under my hands. So it's more for me to enjoy racing as I love it and to, yeah, fight for good position with people that are passionate about it, into a great atmosphere, but also very professional.

I'm here for myself. I knew it was going to be a challenging year for my family with me being away quite a bit and traveling, and with the time difference not being able to talk to them as much as I would love to, but they can also see how happy I am, how much I'm enjoying the moment, and the fans are giving me back also so much through social media, through the grandstands today, the fans cheering for me. It's just incredible to live, and I'm very grateful.

Q. You mentioned traffic being quite important in the race today in terms of how it all played out. I wondered if you could elaborate on that a little bit. There was two kind of incidents with Takuma Sato and wondered if you were happy with how he raced you today and if you were happy with how those things played out?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, I think every series is different, and you've got blue flags issued everywhere. In Formula 1 I was shown the blue flags quite a bit over the last few years and it was terrible for us. The leader complained that it wasn't good enough.

Here today obviously I wish it was on more often because I was the guy that was chasing them, but it's the rule that INDYCAR uses. Is there room for improvement? Probably. Is there a perfect solution? No. But definitively I think traffic cost us the win today.

Q. Following up on the point about Sato, was it also part of the problem the fact there were so many marbles off line? The braking zones for Turn 1 and Turn 7 looked like you daren't go off line?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: There were a bit of marbles but I don't think that was kind of the biggest issue. I think the fact that the back marker can use the Push-to-Pass to defend from the leader, that's a bit more annoying because you use your Push-to-Pass, you should actually use it to fight Alex or Rinus today and you don't want to use it using the gun.

We were also a bit short in sixth gear. I think the wind changed a bit direction, so I was actually hitting a limiter which didn't make my life easier to overtake the guys. But you know, with Takuma it was a bit on the limit I would say. With another car, as well. And if you lose three seconds over two laps and another time a couple of seconds passing a guy that's five seconds, then that would have been more than enough to keep Rinus behind us. But it's the same for everyone.

Q. Alex, I was going to ask you, obviously you ran two sets of blacks at the end there, right, in the last two stints?

ALEX PALOU: Yeah, we did. Well, three stints. All those stints we did were on black tires except for the beginning that we started on reds. Yeah.

Q. Did you feel that if you had been on reds you could have kept Rinus behind you? I know you got accidentally tripped up a little bit about your teammate --

ALEX PALOU: It's tough to say. Now that we're done, I would say, yeah, 100 percent we should have gone on the reds, but yesterday when we did the Fast Six we were lacking a lot of pace on the used reds, so that's why we said, man, these tires for us, they don't really work. I think we were like five or six stints from Romain, so we said, if we play the same game --

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: I was fast.

ALEX PALOU: Yeah, you were fast. They were super fast -- but yeah, to be honest, they run quicker than me on the sticker reds, so if we played the same game as them tomorrow, like today on the race, we know that we are not going to go faster. So we tried different stuff. We didn't lose, we just lost some track time, which was fine, but it was too exciting with Newgarden coming with the with you reds and lap cars and I was with the blacks and I was like, oh, my God, no, but it worked out at the end.

Q. I believe Olivier was on the radio with you during the race apprising you of the gaps. How has the chemistry developed between the two of you through the first three races you've done in INDYCAR?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Very good. From the beginning when I was home this Christmas, Olivier came because he lives not far -- well, he's not far in France from where I live. He came home and we had three hours' chat, something like that, over lunch. You know French like to do long lunch. That was good, and I could tell that something was happening.

He's an incredible engineer. He's so calm on the radio. It's incredible. Even yesterday when we did pole position, it was like, that's pole position. I shouted and I said, Hey, mate, it's pole position! And during the race he's the same. I'm sometimes a bit the opposite, so I think we balance each other.

This morning in the warmup I wasn't quite competitive and not so happy with the car, so I gave him the key and I said, look, do what you think we should do for the race, and it didn't work too bad.

Q. Romain, how much momentum does this give you going into -- obviously you're going to miss the 500, but going to Detroit the next time out for yourself?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, every track is a new challenge. Indy GP, I knew it was probably the closest from the track that I've been racing over the last 10 years, so I could tell I was going to feel confident here.

Also the Honda simulator, it's a brilliant tool, so I was on first the morning doing some laps here. I'm going to have a session again before Detroit to practice there, but I've heard it's quite bumpy.

ALEX PALOU: That's what they say.

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, that's what they say. Have you lost teeth yet?

ALEX PALOU: It's my first time, as well, because we didn't run last year.

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Oh, yeah. So it's going to be quite an interesting weekend. I loved St. Pete. I don't think we were as competitive as we were on the road course. We're going to do some -- we're going to keep working, do some great work on the simulator. I'm also going to have a test in Road America before we go there, so that's going to be nice to have an extra day in the car just to keep learning about it and keep finding a few things here and there.

Q. Alex, obviously you've had a great start to the season, winning in Barber and then your podium here. Again kind of on the momentum side of things, you're only a couple of points behind Scott. How much confidence does that give you going into the rest of the month and the 500 but also the fact that you're kind of up there with Scott and the team, you've really kind of hit the ground running this season?

ALEX PALOU: Yeah, I mean, it's super early still, and you can see that one race can change the standings a lot. Winning a race means a lot here in INDYCAR. But yeah, we did a good start so far. We are one-two in the championship. That means Chip Ganassi and all the crew, they did an amazing job during the preseason and during the races. We didn't start like super smooth if you think about like we had some issues at St. Pete, we didn't have super clean races at Texas, but we're still here, we're still fighting, and that's a good thing.

Yeah, hopefully we can keep it going the month of May. I think it's going to be awesome. I had a good month of May until I crashed last year. I'm not going to do that again. I love the place. I love the race. I know that with experience I have this year, running the race last year and also Texas, the two races, yeah, I'm feeling super confident, and now especially coming out of a podium, I'm going to be pretty excited.

The best of days was had by three members of the new guard proving, as Chip Ganassi said on giving an answer to a question about "Golden Era" times in IndyCar, we are living in the golden era of IndyCar. Image Credit: Chris Jones via NICS (2021)

Q. Alex, the move where Rinus split you and Jimmie down the middle there seemed to be a pivotal one for him. Could you give us your perspective on what you saw there, and when he got by you did you think that was probably a good pathway for him to victory?

ALEX PALOU: Man, that was close. That was close, but that was a good move by him. We were on the out lap on black tires and he was, I think, like six laps already with the reds, so it was like, man, I cannot -- I knew I couldn't brake as late as him. Yeah, that was exciting. He was there in between Jimmie and I, so I just gave him enough room so he could fit there, and I was covering the inside. That's all I could do I thought at that moment. But yeah, there was nothing really I could do. When you're on the out lap on the blacks and he's already with the reds, you cannot do anything.

Q. Romain, I know you're just fresh from the race, but the first half of this one you were pulling away. If you could go back and do it all over again, what would you have done differently?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Blue flags. Honestly, that's the only thing we could have done differently today. We can gain a couple of seconds on pit stops and so on. Still feel like we can improve a bit there. But today we were leading the pack by a good margin, meaning I was going to be the first one to hit traffic, and we hit it quite hard.

Really having that was the only thing that I would have changed today, putting away cars that were lapped cars out of my way.

Q. Romain, I've got a question for you slightly a little bit off tangent, but you're a driver that's experienced driver aids in Formula 1 and INDYCAR. Push-to-Pass versus DRS, how do the two compare in terms of what you can do as a driver?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: If I'm being honest, I prefer Push-to-Pass because you can use it on different places and try to be clever about it. With the DRS it's just when you're within a second you press the button, you open it and it's a few spots and it's unlimited, whereas the Push-to-Pass, you want to use it on key moments of the race, and that's more down to the driver to do it.

You know, and also the overtaking normally a little bit more done later with Push-to-Pass, whereas the DRS the difference of speed between cars is huge and you can tell that sometimes the car just even comes back on the racing line before the braking zone.

Q. For the Dale Coyne team, it's a smaller team when you're competing against the powerhouses like Andretti, Ganassi and Penske. How much has this weekend done for the team?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: It's been a great weekend for the team. Everyone has been working super nicely. We've had a good car from the start here. Fine-tune it, because here a couple of hundredths of a lap can mean position going into segment 2 or 3 or Fast Six, so we just need to -- you just need to be spot on, so in that aspect it's been a great weekend I think for the confidence of everyone has been boosted, and as I say, I relied a lot on the engineers to do the best job they could, and they've done great.
[ht: FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports]

So, this leaves open the question - will the next race, the greatest spectacle in racing, The 104th Running Of The Indianapolis 500 have a first-time winner? Given the way this season is playing out, the chances are better than an even shot. 

... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: Rinus VeeKay, Ed Carpenter Racing, Chevrolet Racing, GMR Grand Prix, NTT INDYCAR SERIES, Romain Grosjean, Alex Palou, Honda Racing, The EDJE

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

MSR Racing Is "All In" On The Month Of May With Both INDYCAR & IMSA

Mike Shank, team principle, as he sits in the pitlane race control box at Texas Motor Speedway during Race 2 calling shots for British driver Jack Harvey. Image Credit: Jake Galstad via MSR (2021)

MSR Racing Is "All In" On The Month Of May With Both INDYCAR & IMSA

Mike Shank, Jack Harvey, Dane Cameron, Olivier Pla, and in spirit, three-time INDY500 winning Helio Castroneves (a second car driver for MSR in the 105th running of the Indianapolis 500) sat down for a Media Conference ZOOM Call in anticipation of racing events scheduled for the month of May.

Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) is set for a big weekend of competition as both its INDYCAR and IMSA programs are on track for the GMR Grand Prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course (Saturday, 2:30pm ET, NBC) and for the Acura Sports Car Challenge at Mid-Ohio (Sunday, 2:30pm ET, NBCSN). 

INDYCAR
No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda - Jack Harvey

IMSA
No. 60 Acura ARX-05 DPi - Dane Cameron & Olivier Pla


Zoom Media Interview - Meyer Shank Racing - Start At 0:53 seconds
Mike Shank, Jack Harvey, Dane Cameron, & Olivier Pla
Monday, May 10, 2:00pm ET

Road course competition highlights the opening rounds of May activity in two major professional racing series, and given the past tagline for Meyer Shank Racing as being the little team that could, May will make this tag history due to its inadequacy and understatement. Follow this by a two-car effort in the 104th running of the Indianapolis 500 with drivers Jack Harvey and career stand-out Helio Castroneves.

MSR will kick off its big weekend of competition at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the GMR Grand Prix on Saturday. Jack Harvey will return to the site of his first-ever INDYCAR podium finish (2019) and front row start (2020) and look to continue on his strong run at the 2.534-mile road course this weekend. 

Harvey raced the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda through both dry and wet conditions to collect his first career INDYCAR podium with a third place result in 2019. The following season, Harvey scored his first-ever INDYCAR front row start at the IMS Road Course, but as Harvey was once again on his way to score a second podium finish, an unfortunately timed yellow tampered with the team’s strategy and Harvey finished 17th. 

"The team has been doing a tremendous job the first few races," said Jack Harvey in a recent interview. "Knowing that we have a really strong pace at the IMS road course, of course helps, but we’ll go into the race weekend just like any other and try to keep going for podium finishes." This season has two first-time winners in four races, will Jack make it 3 in 5? Image Credit: Jake Gilstad via MSR (2021)

The fifth-year INDYCAR driver is coming off of big momentum from a fourth place finish in St. Petersburg and a strong seventh place at Texas Motor Speedway. 

MSR also heads to Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course this weekend with the hometown advantage for Sunday’s the Acura Sports Car Challenge Presented by the TLX Type S.

Dane Cameron and Olivier Pla will take on the 2.258-mile Ohio circuit in the No. 60 Acura ARX-05 DPi.  Not only excited to compete on home soil, MSR is hoping to represent Acura well as the manufacturer headlines the event weekend. 

The team is coming off of a podium finish at Sebring International Raceway in March. Having conquered two rough and tough endurance events, MSR now heads into the first sprint race of the IMSA season. 

Although MSR will make its debut at Mid-Ohio with the Acura ARX-05 DPi, the team certainly doesn’t lack experience at it’s home track with some very good results. Representing Acura at its home event, MSR is hoping to come out of it with a victory. The team has prepared for the event weekend with a single day test which saw Pla turn his first official laps around the course as he plans to make his debut at Mid-Ohio this weekend. 

The MSR month of May ends with The Greatest Spectacle in Racing - Thirty-three drivers…200 laps…500 miles. Tune in LIVE on NBC Sports Gold and NBCSN at 1 pm, Sunday and also enjoy the world-renowned U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds who will perform the pre-race flyover for the 104th Indianapolis 500 on Sunday also. You don’t want to miss that. The green flag is scheduled for 2:30pm ET. 

... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: Mike Shank, Jack Harvey, Dane Cameron, Olivier Pla, Helio Castroneves, NTT INDYCAR SERIES, Weathertech, IMSA, Mid-Ohio, AutoNation, SiriusXM, Honda, Meyer Shank Racing, MSR, The EDJE 

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

A New Age Begins As Robert Wickens Gets Behind The Controls Of A Real IMSA Racecar

 
Robert Wickens captures a P3 Podium position along side of P1 Will Power and P2 Scott Dixon at the 2018 INDYCAR Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Robert will be looking forward to a day where he, again, will be sipping the podium champagne, sooner than later. Image Credit: Shawn Gritzmacher via NICS (2018)

A New Age Begins As Robert Wickens Gets Behind The Controls Of A Real IMSA Racecar

Hat's off to IMSA, Bryan Herta Autosport, Hyundai, and the specially prepared No. 54 Michelin Pilot Challenge Veloster N TCR control-outfitted for 28 year old Michael Johnson. Michael was the first and only paralyzed driver licensed by INDYCAR, before making the switch to sportscar racing beginning in 2016 - so, this "track day" is a serious thing for Robert Wickens.

A time was set-up to give Robert this first return opportunity on the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course race track after going through a regime of rehabilitation for nearly 1,000 days since his debilitating INDYCAR accident at Pocono Raceway on August 19, 2018.

In Robert Wickens way of thinking, there was very little doubt this day would come in the racecar life he continues to pursue with admirable passion.

In review, Canadian Wickens’ stellar NTT INDYCAR SERIES 2018 debut season featured a pole position, and four podium finishes in addition to the Indy 500 Rookie of the Year title. Having transitioned back to North America from Europe where he was a Formula One test and reserve driver, Wickens’ INDYCAR career looked set for championship contention. After Pocono, however, Wickens suffered a thoracic spinal fracture, spinal cord injury, neck fracture, tibia and fibula fractures to both legs, fractures in both hands, a fractured right forearm, fractured elbow, a concussion, four fractured ribs and a pulmonary contusion in the incident.

Through his relentless regimen of rehabilitation and therapy, Wickens has become a trailblazer in developing new technology and treatment methods for the spinal cord injury community.

Tuesday, halfway through a full day test, Robert Wickens sat down for a ZOOM Call with motorsports media to share his thoughts and reflections for all who have followed his productive exploits.


Robert Wickens ZOOM Call Media Interview Transcript

Moderator:
It's been a long wait for you to get here, but how did it feel to get back in and feel a race car on a racetrack?

Robert Wickens:
It's been great. I mean, honestly, first off, thanks for coming everybody. It's been an amazing day so far. I mean, the weather hasn't been super kind to us. It was a little damp to begin with. It rained overnight and it's been changeable all day, but, nevertheless, it's been just a blast and I honestly can't thank Bryan Herta Autosport, Hyundai, and Michael Johnson (enough). It's not everyday that someone can lend you a race car to go take an item off your bucket list. So, it's been a great day so far.

Moderator:
How many laps did you run so far and what are the plans for the rest of the day for you? Are you done for the day? Are you getting back in?

Robert Wickens:
Yeah, to be honest, I wish I had a proper number for you on how many laps I've done, but I would say I'm around 25ish laps for the morning. Yeah, it's been, been a lot of fun and I hope to get back in the afternoon. I haven't really had a chance to talk with the team again. So, I just got out of the car and had a bite to eat and then been up here. So, we're gonna see what we can do. I know it's raining a little bit again right now, but, you know, I've always liked racing in the rain as well, so it should be, it should be good fun.

Question:
Hey, Robbie, welcome back. I know it's been quite a journey for you to get here but you promised us when this journey began that you would get back in a race car and today you lived up on that promise. So in many ways, how fulfilled do you feel about today?

Robert Wickens:
I mean, I feel there was a lot of emotions. I think once I was able to put my visor down and get back on a racetrack again, you know, the whole week up leading to this, it wasn't so much nerves. There was a lot of excitement and anticipation for this. And then once I put a suit on again and started putting in the earpieces, balaclava, the helmet, it just all went out the window and it was just like business as usual. Once I got back out on track, it was a slightly different story. You know, obviously the hand controls that Michael Johnson uses and the Hyundai Veloster is brand new for me. So learning that on a wet track, it wasn't without its difficulties, but we took it step by step and slowly chipped away at getting quicker and quicker.

Question:
And how are the hand controls? Because you've been trained as a race driver to do certain things, especially at a track like Mid-Ohio that you're familiar with, to now all of a sudden reeducate yourself to use your hands instead of what you were able to do before.

Robert Wickens:
Yeah, I think that that's the hard thing with accessibility is, you know, there's no textbook on it. It's not like the gas is on the right and the brake's on the left like every car, almost in existence. You know, with this, there's been a lot of people in the past that have raced with disabilities. You know, you have Billy Monger, you have Alex Zanardi, you have Michael Johnson here in the IMSA Pilot series. They all have different systems and they're all very successful at what they're doing. Michael's system here is, there's a ring on the front of the steering wheel that you push for throttle. And then there's another ring on the backside of the steering wheel that you pull in for brake, which I think is a great system. Having everything within fingers reach on the steering wheel has been pretty good so far. But yeah, like you said, it's a really steep learning curve and there's been a lot of mental focus, I guess, goes into it, trying to program in, you know, preplan what I'm doing with my hands before I get to the next corner. It's slowly starting to take shape where I'm having to think less and less about it.

Question:
Back to your day job, you work a lot with the young kids over at Arrow McLaren. One of them did pretty well on Sunday. What's your reaction to what Pato was able to do? Finally got his first victory.

Arrow McLaren SP driver Pato O'Ward notches his first win in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES after showing his pace in several races over the past full year. Doughnuts are fun when one is only twenty-one and in possession of a first-ever win - this only happens once. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2021) 

Robert Wickens:
I mean, with, with Pato is a long time coming. I think he's had three, maybe four second-places so far in his IndyCar career. And he's been so close so many times. I see a lot of myself in him in terms of he's doing so many things, right. And it's in an IndyCar, especially in any professional form of motorsport, you have to do the little things well, and it's the things that go unnoticed to the visual eye. You know, like your in-laps, your out-laps, stopping on the marks in the pit stops, your attention to detail. That's what wins you races at an elite level. It's never, as we say in the Arrow McLaren SP camp, you know, you have to do the not so sexy stuff well. Which is basically those in-laps and out-laps and those little parts of the game that can make the difference.

Question:
Robbie, congrats, man. That's awesome. So what are the plans here? I mean, moving forward, is this going to turn into something that is more full-time?

Robert Wickens:
I mean, I wish I could give you guys a bit more insight, but at the moment there's, there's no real prospects. It's just a great opportunity that, that Bryan Herta and Hyundai were able to present me with this track day. And I jumped on the opportunity, you know, I've been wanting to drive a race car for a long time now. And to finally tick that box is massive in my recovery and my journey back. Who knows what the future will bring, but I don't want to get too far ahead of myself. And I just want to take today for really what it is.

Question:
All right. So for not pushing the future too much, I have to ask, you know, with what Hyundai and Bryan Herta Autosport have done here, plus what you had mentioned off the top, what we've seen the likes of Zanardi, Billy Monger, Michael Johnson do here, could something like the Indy 500 now be in the cards?

Robert Wickens:
I mean, I was never really ruling it out to begin with. I mean, I think the biggest thing for me is, the hardest thing of my injury was, I felt like I was just hitting the peak of my career and my abilities when this happened. We're creeping up on three years now since the accident. And I feel like I'm not utilizing those prime years of my career. I would love nothing more than to get back at an elite level. And sure. I mean, selfishly, I would love to get back to IndyCar to close that chapter of my life on my own terms. You know, I think everyone can kind of relate, you know, if for whatever reasons, if something happens that you weren't really planning, sometimes it leaves a bad taste in your mouth. I would love nothing more ideally, you know, to win an IndyCar race and then maybe move on. But, you know, I think right now, there's so much to figure out. I mean, I think at the early stages of my recovery, I really wanted to return to IndyCar. I'm not saying I don't now, but understanding what goes into accessibility. And I think making an IndyCar competitive with hand controls would be a massive undertaking. One that maybe with the current IndyCar regulations wouldn't be entirely feasible. So, you know, but never say never. There's a lot of great teams out there, and I honestly think crazier things have happened in the past, but for the time being, I'm just going to keep doing what I'm doing, focusing on my rehab and hopefully, finally in due time, the right opportunity will come.

Question:
I realize you don't want to mess up Michael Johnson's setups at all. But how easy is it to kind of like tailor and customize those hand controls for yourself? For example, if you wanted to make the brakes less sensitive or more sensitive or the throttle response, is it easy to address?

Robert Wickens:
Ah, I'm still learning the system myself, but honestly I think, there's definitely, probably some tunability. I know with the hand control system that Michael Johnson uses in the Veloster, there's like a hydraulic big booster, like brake booster to help generate the pressure on the brake. And there's a tuning aspect to that for if I want the brake more sensitive or not so sensitive. And, Stephen Simpson, who is Michael Johnson's co-driver or other driver not co-driver, but a teammate. There it is. He does a great job of shaking down the car. So he was actually first in today and set up the brakes with what he believes Michael would have liked for me to try. You know, and then once the track started to dry out a little bit, we were talking a little bit and we changed the brakes a little bit again, once, you know, the track was getting a bit grippier and stuff like that. He's been a great asset today with getting me up to speed along with Michael himself. I've been bouncing a lot of ideas and a lot of questions off of him and it's been a really good day, but I think in terms of customization, I'm, I'm new to the IMSA world, but I believe the system is entirely homologated. So I think you can't really do a whole lot of customizations without homologating a new system.


Question:
As far as feel is concerned, obviously, a lot of drivers will say there's not just the visual or the feel through the steering while also feeling through your backside as well. Do you get still get those same sensations that you did before you accident and how difficult is it for you to kind of like switch to like a front wheel drive car?

Robert Wickens:
Yeah, I mean, in terms of transitioning to front wheel drive, it's been entirely seamless. If I didn't know it was front wheel drive, I probably wouldn't have found out for a long time until I had an understeer on exit that was a bit unique in the rain. I was like, 'Oh yeah, there's the front wheel drive.' But honestly, the Hyundai Veloster, it's an amazing little car, you know, I didn't really know what to expect. I've heard great things of, like a TCR car and the series itself, but it's a lot of fun to drive. It's very well balanced in the rain so far. It's been, yeah, it's been a pleasure to get up to speed with it, but in terms of sensation, there's definitely been moments that I've been maybe caught off guard by something, but it's more so what I'm doing with the brake pedal, you know, as most of, you know, braking is like 90 percent of motorsport. And, you know, I've had some like slight oversteer sliding moments that were related to the brake that I didn't realize I was maybe braking as much as I was and had a small oversteer from that. But it wasn't really, I think I'm having some pretty good sensation. I'm able to slide the car around and stuff like that. And I'm feeling kind of a bit what the car is doing, which, you know, obviously my first time back in a race car, you always wonder what that sensation is going to be like, but so far it seems to be there.

Question:
Robert, a few of us got to actually watch you today and stuff, and it seemed like every lap you took, you seemed a little smoother, a little smoother. Did it feel like that in the car? And did you get to the point where you had a little bit of a, I don't know, for want of another term, a thrill factor?

Robert Wickens:
Yeah, for sure. I mean, there was one stage there where it really started to dry out, when we were able to put slicks on for a few laps and it took a while to get them warmed up and get them going. Cause it was really like half wet, half dry conditions. But you can't, I mean, I did a lap that I pit right after it. Cause I was just like, I feel like if I don't like take a breather here, I might take things a little too far. So it's been a lot of fun so far, but it's been such a big learning curve and the cool thing is I've been able to drive this car and almost every condition here at Mid-Ohio. It's been, we started the day in pretty heavy rain conditions and then it's been a constant evolution and drying out throughout the day. So yeah, I've been able to experience kind of full wet and intermediate crossover to dry. It's like it's been a fun little day so far.

Question:
I was going to say in your mind when you're thinking, well, of course there's going to be a little bit of rain today. You know what I mean? Your first time back in a race car, et cetera, it's almost like they're putting you through it. I was talking with Bryan during a break there and what is the sensation that you need to get to? Like you were talking about the braking, for example, it seemed like you got smoother as the session went, but what is that sensation you've really got to get to where you feel, for want of another term competent again?

Robert Wickens:
Oh man, that's a loaded question. You know, I mean, ultimately, there really isn't one aspect to it. You know, I want to keep looking at the telemetry, try to look at onboards, but between the other drivers here at this track day and, and to improve myself slowly. I mean, I haven't had a chance really, to look at the data from my last run to see how I can improve to go forward. But I'm sure, like I touched on at the beginning, braking's probably one of the low hanging fruits of trying to find lap time right now. But I'm at the stage right now in my progression in this car today that I need to see that telemetry. I need some coaching basically on, on how to get the most out of this Veloster.

Question:
Hey, real quick, one more quickie, watching you pull out and stuff. Can you go through the procedure? You've got a clutch, you got a clutch lever, right? You have shift paddles, right? You gotta go through the procedure of just getting going so people can understand what you're doing there.

Robert Wickens:
Yeah. So, uh, it's a bit busy. So basically we have a lever to the right of the cockpit. That's the clutch. So normally obviously people have a pedal clutch, mine's a hand operated clutch. So I need to pull in the clutch select first gear and then use the throttle on the steering wheel to leave like you normally would. All while trying to not hit mechanics and other things as I drive off. So you know, I think honestly, that's one of the more complicated things is when the car is stationary. I think once you're moving, it's pretty seamless. But, you have, you need one more set of hands, I think to leave smoothly.

Question:
Hi there. Thanks so much for the time again today, Robbie. I know you mentioned that you felt like an IndyCar return might be a little bit farther off or just more complicated to put together, given regulations and everything right now. What would you feel like a realistic timeline would be if you got an opportunity from the right team in IMSA to make a comeback. I mean, would you with the right amount of testing feel potentially comfortable trying to put something together for next year? Is that something that you're even focused on right now?

Robert Wickens:
I mean, absolutely. I mean, I've not been shy to admit that I want to return to an elite category again and to continue my journey and my career. I mean, no one has a crystal ball, but first and foremost, I think getting up and running comes with finance. Unfortunately, that's the motorsports world. That's what we live in. It doesn't matter if that's IndyCar, if it's Formula E, if it's IMSA, you know, I think getting up and running with the hand controls, I would like to make some small, personal changes to hand controls to better suit maybe what I would want. But, you know, I think at the end of the day, first and foremost, finances is the first hurdle and once we can get up and running, then we kinda have the whole world at our disposal. But at the moment, it's pretty tough to get started.

Question:
What kind of timeline brought this together? I mean, was this something that has been in the works with Bryan and his team for a while now? Is it something that kind of came together last minute? How long have you known that this could be a possibility?

Robert Wickens:
I would say a bit of both. Bryan approached me a few months ago and basically we were just chatting and he asked if I'd ever want to drive a race car again. I said, 'Of course.' And then that was kind of it for a little bit. And then things started to slowly come together one step at a time. And then he was able to let me know that Hyundai was doing a track day here at Mid-Ohio. And there was an opportunity for me to drive Michael Johnson's Veloster and it was kind of the perfect opportunity, just great timing, really, you know. IMSA's here in a couple of weeks and, you know, they're doing their program to get things ready for the upcoming race and I'm just kinda hanging out in the background and just having fun.

Robert Wickens crosses the Yard of Bricks during the 2018 INDYCAR Grand Prix as he posts a P3 Podium finish in his rookie season at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Image Credit: Walter Kuhn via NICS (2018)

Question:
One last one, I know you took part in the IndyCar iRacing Challenge last spring, when we had the pause for the series due to the pandemic and you had a pretty, pretty solid success in that first race. I know a sim race and actually driving the car is very different, but maybe kind of take me through what you had to check off between April of last year and now to get to the point where you were either ready or cleared, or comfortable actually getting back in a race car.

Robert Wickens:
Yeah. I mean, I think first and foremost, you know, I have to get a lot of thanks to Simcraft, because they were able to provide me with a simulator at home, which was really the first step on this road back. I was able to compete again, like you said, even though it was virtual, I was able to kind of feel that competition again and to improve. And not only that we were able to evolve the hand controls to something that I'm very comfortable with on a simulator at home. The irony is that's not what I'm driving here today in the Veloster, but nevertheless, just getting more used to using your hands, you know, was massive for me. So yeah, it's been, it's been amazing, but yeah, just it's been, been a blast.
In addition to the IndyCar iRacing series, you also did made some appearances in the IMSA iRacing Pro Series last year. Were you in the one that we had at Mid-Ohio?

Robert Wickens:
No, I did Road America, I did Watkins and I believe, VIR.

Moderator:
Okay. I was going to ask you if it was helpful for today.

Robert Wickens:
So, I'm also doing Road Atlanta this Thursday. So I'm making my IMSA virtual comeback.

Moderator:
You heard it here first folks.

Question:
Thanks for joining us. Really appreciate it. I just wondered, you know, you kind of, as a driver coming up through, you're kind of trained not to feel any emotion when you're behind the wheel, and that's kind of like a prerequisite of being able to battle against your rivals. I just wonder kind of what you felt today on the first lap going into Turn 1. If you let yourself kind of have a moment there, or if there was any kind of a real feeling of realization of what you'd actually achieved just by testing today in itself.

Robert Wickens:
To be honest, there wasn't. You know, there was so much going through my head on, like, what I'm doing with my hands that I really don't think I thought of a single emotion apart from making sure I was pulling the right thing to stop the car. You know, I think that was the priority. I mean, as you guys know, Mid-Ohio Turn 1's a pretty daunting corner. So, going up to that the first time in the wet with an entire system that I've never used before, it was definitely daunting. But I definitely, I took baby steps and took it nice and slow, you know, I didn't want to be the hero on lap one. And yeah, I think, we progressed nicely throughout the morning and I'm looking forward to getting back in the car here in a little bit.

Question:
Hey Robbie, it's great to see you back in the car. What surprised you the most in getting back behind the wheel today?

Robert Wickens:
I think the thing that surprised me the most was how mighty that Hyundai Veloster is. Honestly, it's a really fun car. And just to have the opportunity, I was really happy that I got a run in on slicks at the end, before I took my lunch break here to come up and speak to you friendly people. But yeah, it's the fact that, you know, in the rain, it was very well balanced. Mid-Ohio Is not an easy track here in the wet. It's very slippery, very low grip and no room for error anywhere. But it handled it well, you know, the brakes are strong, the cornering speed, everything. I was very blown away by actually how quick this car is. I'm not trying to discredit what it was, but, you know, I was very pleasantly surprised with how much of a real race car it is.

Question:
You mentioned there's still a lot to figure out moving forward into the future, but what are the long-term goals that you're looking at now that you've gotten this chance to get behind the wheel?

Robert Wickens:
Yeah, I mean, I think long-term goals for me, haven't changed. I want to return to an elite level of motorsport again. It's been really since day zero of my recovery and we're still chipping away. This is a massive step in my journey back, but that's really all that is here today. Unfortunately, there's nothing really in the pipeline, because of that, but you know, I'm going to keep doing what I can keep working hard and I believe that hard work always pays off. And I believe I deserve to still race at a high level and at an elite level. And hopefully that can come true sometime soon.

Question:
You mentioned the recovery and the road you've taken to get to this point. What's been the toughest part of that recovery?

Robert Wickens:
There's been many, there's been many tough times. I mean, I think, something that a lot of people, try not to talk about, but the mental health aspect of a recovery like this is extremely daunting. That's been really one of the biggest struggles. I think a lot of people can put in the manual work and then to try and get better and get stronger, but to do it day in and day out and keep a positive outlook, it's extremely, extremely tough. And, you know, then there's the whole different world of emotions that come through, you know, then you go through different phases of your recovery and it's the mental aspect has been hands down the hardest thing of this recovery. And I've had a great support system. I have a lovely partner with my wife that has always had my back and has always been there for me. But then even from family, from friends, from colleagues, you know, I'm so fortunate to have such a great surrounding around me within the motorsports community that I really, I feel sometimes I don't know how I got so lucky to have such a great support system around me.

Question:
Hey, Robbie, just want to throw one more in. You were talking about your support system to be able to have Sam Schmidt involved. I mean, nobody can relate to what you're going through any better than Sam Schmidt. And how important of a role has he had in helping you through this mental aspect of it.

Robert Wickens:
You know, Sam was very good for us at the beginning of the injury. You know, obviously he had experienced everything there is with, with paralysis. So at the beginning of all this, he was able to answer a lot of questions that we had, he was able to help us when we were discussing what would be the best rehab facility to try to go to. So just to have that person to bounce questions and names of doctors and this, like, he's just very well connected within the industry. Yeah, I mean, I think in that stages, he was definitely very helpful.

Question:
Thank you. Great to see it back, Robbie. And I just have one question. Everybody else asked pretty much the questions that I would ask. You mentioned Formula E . Have you been in touch with anybody at Formula E? You know, your old pal Toto Wolff. Mercedes has got a team in that series, maybe the regulations, particularly, as far your situation are a little different. In any event, have you talked to anybody there about possibly getting involved?

Robert Wickens:
You know, I mean, yeah. Luckily I was able to end my relationship with Mercedes on very good terms. And Toto has been a regular person that I've been able to lean on throughout my recovery. Whether it be him coming to visit me when I was in the hospital still in Indianapolis to just kind of monthly or bi-monthly phone calls to check in, to see how everyone's doing. You know, he's such a great person. With that being said, there, there is no formal discussions with any Formula E teams. I mean, I would love the opportunity, but you know, right now at the moment, I think that that's a great championship, especially for accessibility given the advances in the technology that they have at their disposal there.

Question:
Hey, Robbie just wanted to follow up. So, you know, support systems on at any point, did you ever talk with like Alex Zanardi after say the 24 hours of Daytona or even, or even going longer for that, for that matter?

Robert Wickens:
I have actually. Yeah. I mean the whole support system in motorsports is phenomenal. You know, the amount of drivers that reached out to me and have talked to me, I'm sure a lot of sports are the same, but it's been amazing. And Alex was one of the first people to reach out to me. Once I was ready to take phone calls and you know, we immediately started talking shop and talking about what I needed to go racing again. And he gave me a lot of very good feedback on his experiences. Same with Billy. And not even that, like Trevor Carlin, who is the team boss for Billy, I was able to pick his brain on more of a technical aspect of what Billy used. But then, you know, every injury has its own kind of unique fix. So a lot of the things that they were using actually wouldn't work for me for example, but it's still very interesting to hear what they did and how they fixed or got around their problems.

Moderator:
I'm not seeing any additional questions and I understand the weather has improved there at Mid-Ohio. So we'll go ahead and let you get back in the car here for a little bit more, and we'll be eager to hear what that sounds like. We'll keep an eye on your socials for a final update once you're done for the day, but we really do appreciate your time to join us today, Robbie.
[ht: IMSA Communications]

Does anyone doubt the competitive resolve of this Canadian? 

We are "all in" on a Robert Wickens path/focus template in the pursuit of dreams in this finite process, yet unscripted treasure, of living life.

... notes from The EDJE


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TAGS: Robert Wickens, IMSA, Michelin Pilot Challenge, Hyundai, Veloster, Bryan Herta Autosport, The EDJE