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| David Malukas - The Unser INDYCAR Open Test at Phoenix Raceway - Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2026) |
David Malukas Tops Day One At Phoenix As Penske Era Kicks Off With A
Bang
Edmund Jenks - Motorsports Journal: Every track has a different
feel or personality, giving visual cues and so on. How does Phoenix strike
you, given you got the mountain on one side and then obviously the stands
coming into three and four? How does it all feel to you, and what's your
impression on the whole thing?
David Malukas arrived at Phoenix Raceway on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, and
promptly turned the Unser INDYCAR Open Test into his personal welcome party
for the Team Penske era. Slotted into the No. 12 Verizon Chevrolet - freshly
vacated by Will Power - he dropped a 172.605 mph lap that topped the timing
screens, edging teammate Josef Newgarden for a clean 1-2 Penske punch on day
one of the two-day shakedown.
At the end of the day, Malukas led Penske teammate Newgarden and the man he
replaced, now driving for Andretti Global, Will Power. Andretti's Kyle
Kirkwood and Ganassi's Alex Palou round out the top five; strong showing for
MSR 6th and 7th with New Zealander Marcus Armstrong and Swede Felix
Rosenqvist.
The Chicago native stepped to the microphone sounding like a man who'd just
discovered a new favorite toy. Phoenix, he declared, feels eerily akin to
Gateway ... those mismatched ends of the track, turns one-two demanding one
setup flavor while three-four beg for another, forcing quick swaps via
weight jacker and the cockpit arsenal in the razor-thin window down the back
straight. Wind played its usual desert games, subtle but present, keeping
the ADHD brain stimulated as he described it with a laugh - every lap a
chess move, tweaking, counter-tweaking, chasing grip that never quite
settles the same way twice.
He loves it here already. The sheer velocity through one and two pinned him
back initially - "Man, I don't know how Josef's doing that" - until he
leaned harder, trusted the downforce, and watched the car devour speed like
it was nothing. One of his favorite tracks to drive, full stop; racing it
will be another beast entirely, no long runs logged today, but hopes run
high that the Good Ranchers 250 in March will deliver the pack racing goods.
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| Unser INDYCAR Open Test at Phoenix Raceway End of Day 1 News Conference - Kyle Kirkwood | David Malukas |
Post Test Transcript - NTT INDYCAR - Phoenix Raceway
DAVID MALUKAS: Well, surprisingly, watching it on TV, it seems a lot
longer than what it is. You see the beautiful mountains and things.
I think I saw that once I pulled in, but once you're on track, it feels so
fast-paced to me. I didn't even notice that you have the hills and everything
going on because you just have to be so focused on what's in front.
I don't know. The track just feels very short, very quick. There's a lot going
on. Again, having that difference between one, two, three, and four, there's
so, so, so busy.
I love it. It's amazing. I think that's why it's one of my favorites so far
for ovals. Yeah, I think the characteristic would be busy. That would be its
characteristic for me.
Edmund Jenks - Motorsports Journal: Also, a comment was made
earlier about pit lane and how in some ways it might be challenging,
especially with the rise towards the end and so on. What is your reaction of
pit lane and where you're set up?
DAVID MALUKAS: I mean, there was talks. I can see the concerns over
it. It's just going to be, again, a question mark for now until we can see
what marbling is going to happen.
Is there going to be quite a lot of marbling once you get down into pit lane,
especially with the pit commitment and pit out. We're going to have to see how
that plays out.
So far of a whole day of running, and it doesn't seem like there wasn't that
much marbling, but a race is a different beast in its own. I think a lot of
these questions will get answered once we get closer to race weekend.
ENDS
Settling into Penske has been seamless bliss. Chemistry with the crew
clicks; the car looks beautiful, feels right; every pit in-and-out draws a
grin he can't suppress. Teammates Newgarden and Scott McLaughlin? Gold.
Driving styles align close enough that data swaps carry real weight—Josef's
change today becomes tomorrow's known quantity for all three cars, tripling
test efficiency in tire-limited days. The engineering depth hits different
too: smart people everywhere, everyone grinding 110%, all feeding into one
perfectly tuned machine. Best environment he's known, hands down.
Test days mean running plans over outright glory, but topping the sheet?
Feels good, confidence boost undeniable. Newgarden's oval mastery provided
instant reference—pushing limits he didn't know existed. Interaction with
Penske's NASCAR contingent looms too; they've run this place plenty, data
exchange on the horizon despite the different machinery.
Phoenix's quirks - sandblasted surface, potential Goodyear marbles, wind
shifts—add unknowns for race day, but Malukas isn't fazed. Momentum matters
early in '26: back-to-back-to-back opens the calendar, building rhythm fast,
keeping fresh eyes on the sport instead of the usual mid-season lull. New
team, new ride, but the core IndyCar feel remains familiar—minuscule tweaks,
same driver game.
Day one closed with Malukas smiling widest, lap record in pocket, Penske
humming. Tomorrow brings more laps, more learning, more proof that this move
might just be the spark the championship chase needed. The desert oval
listened; the new No. 12 answered loudest.
... notes from
The EDJE
TAGS:
#IndyCar, #UnserOpenTest, #PhoenixRaceway, #DavidMalukas, #TeamPenske,
#172605MPH, #PenskeEra, #ShortOvalChess, #GatewayVibes, #IndyCarTesting,
#Penske1-2, #Newgarden, #WillPower, #ShortOvalSpeed
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