Showing posts with label #PhoenixRaceway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #PhoenixRaceway. Show all posts

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Unser IndyCar Open Test Wraps-Up With Rossi Leading The Charge At Phoenix

Unser Open Test on Day 2 has Sting Ray Robb No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet leading Andretti Global Honda drivers Kyle Kirkwood No. 27 and Will Power No. 26 through the T2 complex at the East end of the track. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2026)

Unser IndyCar Open Test Wraps-Up With Rossi Leading The Charge At Phoenix

The Unser INDYCAR Open Test concluded on February 18, 2026, at Phoenix Raceway, delivering two days of valuable track time as the NTT INDYCAR SERIES prepares for its return to the historic 1-mile oval after an eight-year absence.

Alexander Rossi dominated the second and final day, sweeping both sessions in the No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Java House Chevrolet and setting the outright fastest lap of the test at 174.542 mph during the rain-interrupted afternoon run.

Ed Carpenter Racing's Alexander Rossi and Christian Rasmussen share some pit time after setting a strong Day 2 mark at the top of the speed charts - they unloaded Wednesday the strongest and continued to keep Chevrolet at the top of the overall charts as Rossi ended the two days fastest over all. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2026)

Rossi, the 2016 Indianapolis 500 winner whose last oval victory came at Pocono in 2018, expressed satisfaction with the program's progress, highlighting strong setups from teammate Christian Rasmussen and a solid baseline for the upcoming Good Ranchers 250 on March 7.

Ed Carpenter Racing placed two cars in the top four overall, with Rasmussen securing fourth at 173.924 mph, reinforcing the team's oval competitiveness heading into the early-season swing.

Unser Open Test - Combined Overall Results

Josef Newgarden claimed second on the combined charts for Team Penske with a 174.362 mph effort in the No. 2 XPEL Chevrolet, while reigning four-time champion Alex Palou rounded out the top three at 174.220 mph in the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

David Malukas continued his impressive start with Team Penske, posting 173.759 mph to land fifth overall and showing strong form after leading day one.

Only two teams were able to have a full-team-showing in the Top 10 positions - Ed Carpenter Racing and Andretti Global - Not Team Penske, Not Chip Ganassi Racing, Not Arrow McLaren, Not Meyer Shank Racing.

Rookie Mick Schumacher made notable strides in his oval education, topping the rookie category with 171.096 mph in the No. 47 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Honda and jumping more than 7 mph from his day-one best.

The test saw one incident when Marcus Ericsson spun and contacted the SAFER barrier in Turn 4 during the afternoon session, but the 2022 Indy 500 winner emerged unhurt from his No. 28 Andretti Global Honda.

A total of 4,853 laps were completed by the 25 drivers across both days, with Will Power turning the most at 259 laps as he integrates into Andretti Global following his long tenure at Team Penske.


Felix Rosenqvist, finishing seventh in the final session for Meyer Shank Racing, described the track as fun yet challenging, with low grip, wind sensitivity, and distinct corner characteristics that demand consistent setups amid variable conditions.

Rosenqvist noted significant tire degradation potential, up to two seconds from new to old rubber, and predicted multi-line racing could emerge later in the race as strategies diverge and rubber builds in the upper groove.

Nolan Siegel enjoyed his first Phoenix experience in the No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, calling the track unique with contrasting ends and praising the test for allowing experimentation and data-sharing across the team's three cars.

Siegel expressed high confidence in Arrow McLaren's short-oval pace, crediting off-season developments and the rare extended running for building momentum ahead of the March 1 season opener at St. Petersburg and the quick return to Phoenix.

Drivers emphasized the track's flow, the commitment required in Turns 3 and 4, and the excitement of blending INDYCAR with NASCAR fans during the shared weekend, while acknowledging uncertainties around weather, the new wider right-front Firestone tire, and the second lane's development in race conditions.

The test provided crucial preparation for a venue steeped in INDYCAR history, setting the stage for what promises to be a compelling oval battle when the series returns in hotter March weather for the Good Ranchers 250.

... notes from The EDJE





TAGS: #UnserOpenTest, #PhoenixRaceway, #INDYCAR2026, #AlexanderRossi, #EdCarpenterRacing, #GoodRanchers250, #MickSchumacher, #FelixRosenqvist, #NolanSiegel, #TeamPenske, #ChipGanassiRacing, #MotorsportsJournal

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Rookies Find Their Feet At Phoenix: Day One Unser Open Test Wrap

Conor Daly & Jessie Punch interview Cail Collet, No. 4 AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet - Image Credit: NICS Video (2026)

Rookies Find Their Feet At Phoenix: Day One Unser Open Test Wrap

Day one of testing at Phoenix Raceway wrapped with the full 2026 IndyCar grid laid bare, rookies included, under the Arizona sun that shifts and plays tricks just like the wind does on these short ovals.

Conor Daly, riding shotgun in the broadcast booth with Jessie Punch, framed it plainly: a classic rookie day. Laps piled high, experience chased hard, no one rewriting the record books ... and that's exactly the point. This Unser Open Test isn't about fireworks; it's about stacking knowledge brick by brick before the real battles ignite.

The three newcomers - Mick Schumacher, Dennis Hauger, Cail Collet - each carved their own path through the session. 

Dennis Hauger, fresh off a dominant Indy NXT campaign, looked every bit the expected pace-setter among the rookies, marveling at the grip monster these high-downforce cars become on sticker tires. "Oh, there's some grip here," he said, the kind of understated awe that comes when a driver realizes the machine can take more than intuition first allows. He kept building, noted a few gremlins to sort, and eyed tomorrow for more baseline work in a field so tight that 17th was only a tenth or so off top-eight territory.

Cail Collet, settling into the AJ Foyt fold alongside the oval-savvy Santino Ferrucci, admitted to the inevitable greenhorn moment: a push too far on fresh rubber, misjudging the extra bite, clipping the apron in turn three or four and spinning into the wall. Lesson delivered the hard way, but he took it in stride - praising Ferrucci's openness with tips (even if ignoring the one about tire pressures and sun glare in turns three-four cost him dearly). Focus tomorrow: traffic runs, dirty air, placing the car right behind others. The steps from quali trim to race long-runs loom large, and he's hungry to log the data, watch the videos, shadow the veterans.

TAP Image To Launch Video Presentation

Mick Schumacher, ever analytical and quick to push back on the "rookie" label - he's raced too long, claimed too many starts elsewhere to wear it comfortably - treated the day as championship business from the jump. He stacked laps, more than most, dialing in the peculiarities of Phoenix: the flat-ish banking that tilts the car outward unexpectedly, the hooked feel in turn three, the wind gusts that shove or suck the aero balance corner to corner. The biggest adjustment? Learning to relax in the seat with a pad for consistency over long stints ... counter to years of tensing up to feel the car precisely. Firestone tires feel worlds apart from Pirelli or Michelin; mastering their window is the immediate homework. Teammate Graham Rahal's counsel rang true: every oval tells its own story, and Phoenix whispered its secrets in differences from Homestead or Sebring.

Beyond the new blood, the timesheet told familiar tales with fresh twists. Team Penske's machines hummed fast as anticipated, but Josef Newgarden, short-oval royalty, found himself shaded by new teammate David Malukas at day's end, while old wingman Will Power lurked close in the Andretti entry. McLaren's squad stayed quiet, potential still holstered; Graham Rahal Hall's push to 11th hinted at progress on a program that has historically wrestled these bullrings.

The field? Razor-close. Top 20 within half a second. Margins microscopic. Rust shaken off, new Firestones waiting for day two.

... notes from The EDJE





TAGS: #IndyCar, #PhoenixRaceway, #UnserOpenTest, #RookieDay, #DennisHauger, #Kyle, #MickSchumacher, #TeamPenske, #ShortOvalGrip, #IndyCarTesting, @IndyCarOnFOX

David Malukas Tops Day One At Phoenix As Penske Era Kicks Off With A Bang

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

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.

Unser INDYCAR Open Test at Phoenix Raceway End of Day 1 News Conference - Kyle Kirkwood | David Malukas

Post Test Transcript - NTT INDYCAR - Phoenix Raceway

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: 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

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Phoenix Raceway Pre-Unser Open Test Press Conference Unfolds With Palou And O'Ward

First of the 2026 on-site open test press conference with Pato O'Ward and INDYCAR series Champion Alex Palou at Phoenix Raceway. Drivers share a laugh about events about the tire test held at Sebring a week earlier. Image Credit: NICS ZOOM Call Video (2026)

Phoenix Raceway Pre-Unser Open Test Press Conference Unfolds With Palou And O'Ward

As the sun rose over Phoenix Raceway on a crisp February morning in 2026, and the paddock buzzed with the familiar hum of anticipation that only a season-opener test can generate. Here, in the desert air still carrying a hint of winter chill, two of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES' brightest stars - four-time reigning champion Alex Palou in the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda and the ever-competitive Pato O'Ward piloting the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet - stepped to the microphones. 

The moderator set the scene plainly: Phoenix was back on the calendar, a throwback oval welcoming most of the field to virgin territory, and the Unser Open Test was the first real chance to shake out the cobwebs before the green flags flew in earnest. Palou, fresh off a season of utter dominance with eight victories in 2025, spoke with the quiet confidence of a man chasing history. A four-peat would place him in rare company, only Sébastien Bourdais having achieved the feat in the modern era. Yet for all the laurels, he admitted the workload ahead felt endless - Sebring the week prior, Phoenix now, and no real pause until May. The Chip Ganassi team had poured hours into preparations over the winter, aiming to replicate or perhaps even eclipse the magic of the previous year. This test, especially on an unfamiliar oval, represented starting from scratch, but Palou welcomed the luxury of multi-day running rarely afforded on ovals outside Indianapolis. Confidence in the car, the ability to attack rather than merely survive the laps - that was the true measure of success he sought.

Pato O'Ward - The Unser INDYCAR Open Test at Phoenix Raceway - Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2026)

O'Ward, entering his seventh full season and armed with nine career wins including two last year, approached the 1-mile tri-oval with the curiosity of a newcomer. Only a handful of veterans - Power, Newgarden, Rossi, Dixon - had turned laps here in anger, and the last INDYCAR visit dated back to 2018. He likened the layout to a blend of Gateway and Iowa, old-school and fast, and hoped the test could coax a proper second lane into life for the race to come. Sebring's times? Dismissed with a laugh; that was tire development and experimentation, not outright speed. What mattered now was building comfort, finding a setup that allowed aggressive running without the car dictating terms. Ovals demand trust - if the machine isn't planted, the delta between control and chaos widens dramatically. 

Both drivers agreed the test's value lay not in headline lap times but in feel and foundation. Palou emphasized subtle adjustments and the freedom to experiment without the pressure of a race weekend's limited laps and identical fuel loads. O'Ward echoed the sentiment: a solid base here could carry forward, even if NASCAR rubber, weather shifts, or race-day dynamics later scrambled the picture. Phoenix before the Indianapolis 500 offered another oval outing early, but neither saw it as direct preparation for the Brickyard - Indy, they noted, remains its own unpredictable beast, defying easy translation from other tracks.

The No. 10 Honda piloted by reining NTT INDYCAR SERIES Champion blisters by at around 170 miles per hour on the tight banked turns of Phoenix Raceway. Image Credit: Matt Fravervia NICS (2026)

Conversation drifted to lighter matters: the new FOX commercials drawing praise (Palou singled out Will Power's spot as a standout), the grueling early-season stretch demanding no radical changes to conditioning regimens, and the visual spectacle INDYCARs might provide to crossover NASCAR fans during the shared weekend. Track limits drew a firm line - unlike NASCAR's apron exploits, INDYCAR would enforce boundaries strictly, and Palou, after a track walk, deemed the rough outer edges a recipe for disaster rather than daring passes.

Firestone's tweaked right-front tire, wider for better following and second-lane grip, came under discussion as a welcome evolution for short-oval racing. Palou referenced prior testing by veterans like Dixon and Rossi, crediting it as a step toward multi-groove action. The session underscored a mature approach from both stars: gone were the days of treating every test lap like qualifying. Now, plans guided the process - team strategy over raw bravado - though the inner drive to demonstrate speed never fully receded.

FOX Sports promotional commercial (click-image) shows Alex Palou rushing through a grocery store check-out line passing by a magazine stand featuring a magazine cover with Pato O'Ward on the face hinting that O'Ward may be getting more attention and press than the three-time and reining NTT INDYCAR SERIES Champion himself. Image Credit: NTT INDYCAR SERIES and Chip Ganassi Racing (2026)

As the press conference wrapped and the first day of the two-day Unser Open Test was engaged, the timing screens told their own story by dusk. David Malukas led a Team Penske 1-2, but Palou slotted solidly fifth overall with a best of 21.0088 seconds at 171.357 mph, clocked on his 48th of 55 laps - a clean, confident marker amid the Honda contingent's strong showing.

O'Ward, meanwhile, ended the day 16th of 25 drivers at 21.2509 seconds and 169.405 mph on his 19th of a busier 98 laps, a cautious tally that spoke to methodical exploration rather than early fireworks. The sense lingered that Phoenix 2026 would test more than setups. For Palou, it was another chapter in a quest for immortality; for O'Ward, a fresh proving ground to harness his talent on ovals that define the series' soul. The cars would roll out again tomorrow, and in the desert heat, the real answers would emerge ... not in words, but in the howl of engines and the lines carved into the blacktop.

... notes from The EDJE








TAGS: #IndyCar, #UnserOpenTest, #PhoenixRaceway, #AlexPalou, #PatoOWard, #NTTIndyCarSeries, #FourPeatChase, #OvalTesting, #2026Season, TheEDJE, #MotorsportsJournal, #IndyCarOnFOX, #INDYCAR

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

NTT INDTCAR’s 2026 Hybrid Season: Western Focus And The Push For A 20-Race Calendar

Pato O'Ward leads teammate Christian Lundgaard and eventual 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Champion Alex Palou through Turn 1 at The Thermal Club in the season's  second race of the first full season utilizing a hybrid power formula. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2025)

IndyCar’s 2026 Hybrid Season: Western Focus And The Push For A 20-Race Calendar

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES has unveiled its 2026 schedule, marking the second full season of its hybrid power era, blending electric and combustion engines in a formula that has intensified competition since its 2024 Mid-Season introduction. The 17-race calendar, spanning from St. Petersburg’s streets to Laguna Seca’s finale, mixes ovals, road courses, and street circuits. While the schedule highlights a Western focus, with key races in Phoenix (oval), Long Beach (temporary street circuit), and Laguna Seca (established road course), it sidesteps ambitions for Mexico City’s Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez and the talk of reigniting the Gold Coast of Australia, leaving international expansion on hold for another year.

2026 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Schedule: Following a 2025 season with 27% viewership growth on FOX Sports, averaging 1.36M viewers and crowned by Álex Palou’s historic three-peat, IndyCar’s 17-race 2026 calendar promises dynamic racing. “Our growth is industry-leading and will accelerate with FOX Sports and new venues,” said Penske Entertainment CEO Mark Miles. “We can’t wait for 2026.” Graphic Credit: Penske Entertainment (2025)

The Western region gains prominence with three pivotal races. Phoenix Raceway opens the Western swing on March 7, a Saturday slot to avoid clashing with NASCAR, where the hybrid-powered Dallara chassis will tackle the one-mile oval. On April 19, Long Beach’s street circuit follows, its tight corners and waterfront straight leveraging the hybrid system’s energy recovery for strategic overtakes. The season concludes on September 6 at Laguna Seca, a track restored as the championship-deciding venue, signaling INDYCAR’s intent to reconnect with West Coast fans and capitalize on the region’s racing prominence and heritage.

WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca’s return as the season finale replaces Nashville Superspeedway. This shift prioritizes the 2.238-mile road course’s challenging layout over Nashville's urban street spectacle once-removed, from a temporary street course to 2024's change to the oval course, located roughly 40 miles East outside of the city. 

The WeatherTech Raceway's elevation changes and iconic Corkscrew will test drivers like Álex Palou, the defending - and now 4-time / with a 3-peat - champion, as they navigate the hybrid system’s regenerative capabilities. This Western trio - Phoenix, Long Beach, and Laguna Seca - aims to draw crowds and boost INDYCAR’s visibility in a key market, reinforcing the series’ commitment to its coastal fanbase after two years of absence from Monterey.


Despite the schedule’s strengths, 17 races feel insufficient compared to other motorsport series. NASCAR’s Cup Series runs 36 races, Formula 1 schedules 24, and IMSA exceeds a dozen. INDYCAR’s calendar, though varied with additions like Arlington’s street circuit (March 13-15), Toronto GP venue change about 20 miles North to the Streets of Markham, Ontario, Canada (August 14-16) and Milwaukee’s doubleheader (August 28-30), lacks the depth to match its rivals’ intensity. The hybrid formula, with its complex battery management and push-to-pass tactics, calls for a broader stage to showcase driver skill and team strategy, ensuring the series remains competitive in a crowded motorsport landscape.

To reach elite status, we at Motorsports Journal believe INDYCAR should expand to 20 races, adding depth without exhausting teams. Reinstating Iowa Speedway’s short oval in the summer could highlight the hybrid system’s efficiency, fitting neatly without overlapping local events like the Iowa State Fair. A return to The Thermal Club’s 3.67-mile road course in March would tighten the early-season schedule, offering a California-based test of speed and strategy. These additions, possibly replacing less distinctive ovals, would create a more robust championship while maintaining balance.

Expanding to 20 races would benefit teams, broadcasters, and fans. Engineers would gain more data to refine hybrid setups, FOX Sports’ coverage through 2030 would have more content, and fans would have more opportunities to engage, potentially growing the series’ audience. The Western focus already sets the stage, with Phoenix and Long Beach drawing diverse viewers early on in the season. Additional races, perhaps in the Midwest or Pacific Northwest/West Coast of Canada in addition to Portland, Oregon, could further diversify the schedule, creating a championship that tests endurance and skill across varied landscapes.

As INDYCAR prepares for 2026, its hybrid era holds immense potential. The Western emphasis, anchored by Phoenix, Long Beach, and Laguna Seca, is a strategic move, but a 20-race schedule would elevate the series to new heights. More races mean more chances for drivers to shine, fans to rally, and legacies to form. INDYCAR’s hybrid engine is ready - now it just needs many more roads of competition to prove its change in formula worth.

... notes from The EDJE

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TAGS: #IndyCar2026, #HybridRacing, #WesternFocus, #PhoenixRaceway, #LongBeachGP, #LagunaSeca, #20RaceSeason, #AlexPalou, #NTTIndyCar, #FOXSports, #RacingSchedule, #Motorsport, TheEDJE