"Less Is More" Describes The Intrigue In The 2022 NTT INDYCAR SERIES
Championship Season
Yes! House Of Penske driver Will Power won a second series season championship
in his stellar professional open-wheel racing career.
Many, including
Will himself, attributes the application of a different attitude he decided to
bring to the work process and the track each event weekend during the course
of a 17 race season that just concluded at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca in
the Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey. This overarching template in his professional approach could be
labelled ... Less Is More.
For example, take the results found at the Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey ... after he smoked the field in the three round Knockout Qualifications format and landed a record-setting 68th NTT P1 Pole Award - Chip Ganassi Racing's Alex Palou wins the
race followed by Penske Racing's Josef Newgarden who started P25 and is P2
... Will Power finishes P3, he didn't have to win at all costs and captures his 2nd NTT INDYCAR SERIES
Championship with only one win in 17 races, but always finishing and
finishing high - Less Is More.
It became a talking-point throughout this season that Will seemed to be
sporting a less intense, less critical, less abrasive presence (to himself) as he would
pursue his duties as one of three very expert drivers racing open-wheel cars for Team Penske. Power's House Of Penske teammates are second year driver and 2021 Indianapolis 500 as well as NTT INDYCAR
SERIES Rookie of the Year New Zealand born Scott McLaughlin and American
born two-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion, claiming titles in 2017 his
first season with Team Penske and again in 2019 Josef Newgarden.
In the post-race interview, Will probably summed it up best when he answered
this query:
Q. I wanted to ask when you decided to go to this playing the long game
thing, were they fully behind you doing that, or were there days when Dave
or Robby or Ron were like, s--- we could have won that race?
WILL POWER:
"Look, you're never disappointed. Looking from a championship perspective,
every time you get a podium, that's not the day you're looking back on it.
You're looking back on the day you finished 19th like at Road America.
They're the days that lose championships. Top threes don't. We got a lot
of them this year. Anytime I got a top four, I was pretty happy.
But in the past I would have been really pissed off. When your teammates
are winning, that was a big change. It's like, I don't care. I'm going to
weather their storm while they're having a good run, and just -- that in
itself was a mental change. It's like, I'm not getting pissed off with a
top four, where before I would have been, just after the race, just
seething."
- Less Is More.
Throughout the season, especially just beyond the halfway point, the story
wasn't how many multiple times a driver won the NTT P1 Pole Award position to start the
race(s) in an event weekend, no, the story was far from this occurrence, since there wasn't a repeat
pole winner through the first nine race events in a seventeen race season. No repeat P1 Pole Award in 9 race events -
Less Is More.
Speaking of competitiveness, especially given the NTT INDYCAR SERIES racing
platform formula applied for potentials of equal performance, Will Power noted in the following exchange:
Q. When you look at it today and just using Dixon as the example as someone
who qualifies midfield and you're just further up the road, again, it's that
same thing, the series is so equal, people look at it and go, he's midfield
but it's thousands of seconds separating you guys in qualifying.
WILL POWER:
It is. When we were at Portland, It was like seven tenths covered 20
cars. Seven tenths covering 20 cars. You're never going to see that in
something like Formula 1. Never. It's the ultimate driver's series. It's
the ultimate driver's series." - Less Is More.
In this post Portland driver's ranking by points, it is interesting to note that the driver that will not have a mathematical chance at winning the season championship is the reigning 2021 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Champion Alex Palou. At the time he was going to compete in the last race of the season, he had contract commitments with two teams, his current contract with Chip Ganassi Racing and Arrow McLaren SP. At the end of the season, Alex is hoping to be in a position where Less Is More. UPDATE - Alex Palou agrees to remain at Chip Ganassi Racing driving the No. 10 Honda-Dallara for the 2023 season with the added provision that he is free to participate in a Formula 1 driver's test outside of his NTT INDYCAR SERIES obligations - Less Became More. Image Credit: NCIS (2022) |
Take this example of the competition between teams.
Before the last race of
the 2022 season in Monterey, California, a very proper and kind mutual
admiration society broke out in a ZOOM Call between the top operations
managers of the two teams that had drivers that were mathematically viable
to win the 2022 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Championship.
To be clear, Penske
Racing's Tim Cindric and Chip Ganassi Racing's (CGR) Mike Hull had a lot of
professional clout at stake in the then upcoming challenge to close out the
season. Will Power led the points chase at the time with a tied 20 point
margin over two drivers, his teammate Josef Newgarden and CGR 6 time NTT
INDYCAR Champion Scott Dixon. The other two drivers in contention in order
are CGR's and winner of INDYCAR's biggest event prize, the 106th Indianapolis
500, Marcus Ericsson at 39 points behind and another Team Penske teammate second season
driver Scott McLaughlin at 41 points to overcome.
Again, a lot of
professional clout to manage.
<<< Pre-Finale ZOOM Call Press Conference >>>
The most interesting part of the conversation Tim and Mike shared with each
other was found in the following exchange:
Q. Because of what's at stake here, the respect level, the rivalry, is it
a situation where the two of you can be friendly but you can't really be
friends until maybe your careers are over?
MIKE HULL:
My career is closer than Tim's into being over, I'll say that
(smiling).
TIM CINDRIC:
If we don't win on Sunday, Mike, I might call you for a job
(laughter).
MIKE HULL: Or vice versa. Maybe I'll think about a second career.
Tim and I had a go at each other a few years at Edmonton. That taught
me something. It taught me that I was too intense. Since that time I've
learned that the respect comes in the results.
Tim, I hope I don't have to call you up. I've got your number. I hope
you don't see a call from me Sunday afternoon at 4:00 (smiling).
I'm just thankful and looking forward to this thing. I never thought
I'd be lucky enough to be in a position to be able to say that.
I know you're the same. You grew up around motor racing. I did, too, in
different decades. We're now in the same decade together and this is a
lot of fun.
ENDS
With all that was on the line, both needed their drivers to win the race, an impossibility, but
in the end these two giants in racing didn't have to call one another for a
job - they just split the difference.
Mike Hull took the race win with the
reigning 2021 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Champion Alex Palou, and while Tim
Cindric didn't win the race, he placed two drivers on the podium with Josef
Newgarden at P2 and Will Power at P3 thereby secures the 2022 NTT INDYCAR
SERIES Season Championship, with 16 points to spare, and will take home the
Astor Cup for the second time - Less Is More.
Think about the NTT INDYCAR SERIES sanctioning body itself.
This was a year
that was able to see many high points. All broadcasts and live
streaming were carried exclusively through NBC Universal broadcast properties.
The growing popularity of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES was reflected in the
most-watched season in six years on television, with viewership up 5 percent
over 2021. The season averaged a Total Audience Delivery of 1.30 million
viewers across NBC, USA Network, Peacock and NBC Sports digital platforms, the
best in NBC Sports history.
Half of the season’s 16 races on television delivered more than 1 million
viewers, the highest mark since 2008. A record 14 of 17 races were on NBC
network television in 2022, and selected series races also were televised by
Telemundo Deportes on Universo.
This was the most streamed INDYCAR season on record as well, with exponential
growth compared to 2021. A series race, the Honda Indy Toronto, was streamed
exclusively for the first time, and the Indianapolis 500 presented by
Gainbridge was the most streamed INDYCAR SERIES race ever.
Having a single corporate broadcast/streaming partner with many recognizable
portals allowed fans to find a presentation of an INDYCAR event featured on
most any weekend during the season as opposed to having to look up which
broadcast partner might be carrying content ... so access was assumptively
simple as being at one's controller or fingertips - Less Is More.
Lastly, there was a grand event venue success though the focus on sponsorship
and promotion by a primary sponsor to the race weekend.
Perhaps the biggest success story of the 2022 schedule was the
revitalization of INDYCAR racing at Iowa Speedway after a one-year COVID
Protocol hiatus. The Hy-Vee INDYCAR Race Weekend featured a doubleheader for
the NTT INDYCAR SERIES and a single event for Indy Lights on the fast oval.
A successful promotion with enthusiastic title partner Hy-Vee, which
included four concerts with country and pop music superstars at the track,
resulted in big crowds despite stifling summer heat.
A single stand-out
sponsor based upon the marketing of high-turnover consumer goods, that took control of all of the
trappings of an INDYCAR event weekend, beyond being just a title sponsor, delivered
measurable results -
Less Is More.
[ht:
WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, Penske Entertainment, NCIS, The
Comeback]
Another 2023 @IndyCar schedule nugget...
— Nathan Brown (@By_NathanBrown) September 19, 2022
According to multiple sources, the series plans to hold its open two-day preseason test Feb. 2-3 at The Thermal Club in southern California.
Venue includes multiple track layouts around 2 miles & sits 40 minutes east of Palm Springs.
Looking forward to next season, are we seeing additional opportunities to
implement a lesser path so as to deliver more and more benefits to the
drivers, teams, sponsors and the overall series sanctioning body?
With the
announcement that the NTT INDYCAR SERIES plans on holding a test at Southern
California's premiere private racing facility in the Coachella Valley town of
Thermal - The Thermal Club, utilized by MotoAmerica, BMW, Truspeed Autosport, GMG Motorsports, various driver development operations, and of course ... just plain motorsports enthusiast who would rather drive a car than drive a ball (as in golf).
A pre-season test by INDYCAR on "Private Pavements" located at a private racing facility as opposed to a recognized event track raced during a championship season - Less Is More.
... notes from
The EDJE
FEATURED ARTICLE >>>
TAGS: NTT INDYCAR SERIES, 2022, WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, Will Power, Roger Penske, Team Penske, House Of Penske, Chip Ganassi Racing, Mike Hull, Tim Cindric, The Thermal Club, The EDJE
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