Showing posts with label IndyLights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IndyLights. Show all posts

Sunday, September 4, 2022

NTT INDYCAR SERIES Rookie Of The Year Conversations With Lundgaard, Malukas, & IndyLights Lunqvist In Tow

Linus Lundqvist, David Malukas, & Christian Lundgaard pictured here (L to R) as they were coming through the Eurpoean training ground series in Portugal (2016). Image Credit: NTT INDYCAR SERIES and Penske Entertainment via ZOOM Call (2022)

NTT INDYCAR SERIES Rookie Of The Year Conversations With Lundgaard, Malukas, & IndyLights Lunqvist In Tow

With two races left to be run at Portland and Laguna Seca (both very different dedicated road courses), the NTT INDYCAR SERIES finds itself with the most competitive championship points race given the points system that has been at play for the last 20 years. This level of competitiveness has further trickled down to the entry level drivers who are also in a tight points gathering championship primarily waged between Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing's Christian Lundgaard and DALE COYNE RACING W/ HMD MOTORSPORTS' David Malukas.

As we look into the coming challenge at the short road course at Portland International Raceway, the NTT INDYCAR SERIES held an interactive digital press conference via ZOOM Call with these two contenders for Rookie Of The Year and a competitive friend of theirs who happens to be leading the IndyLights feeders racing series points championship where the spoils include a scholarship funding for a seat within the NTT INDYCAR SERIES for 2023 - HMD MOTORSPORTS W/ DALE COYNE's Linus Lundqvist.

NTT INDYCAR SERIES Moderator David Furst commences ZOOM Call press conference between the gathered online motorsports press and Swedish born Christian Lundgaard, American David Malukas, and Linus Lundqvist who also ahils from Sweeden [click image to launch ZOOM Call video]Image Credit: NTT INDYCAR SERIES and Penske Entertainment via ZOOM Call (2022)

NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference - Wednesday, August 31, 2022
Christian Lundgaard | David Malukas | Linus Lundqvist
Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: Welcome, everyone. This weekend the penultimate round of the 2022 INDYCAR SERIES championship. Both series head to Portland International Raceway for the Grand Prix of Portland. We have a group of INDYCAR's next generation today.

One leads the Rookie of the Year standings with six top 10s and a second on the IMS road course this summer, great to have Christian Lundgaard.

Meanwhile the other driver, just 11 points behind in the Rookie of the Year battle, third closest rookie battle in the last 10 years, coming off an incredibly impressive second-place finish, it's David Malukas.

Our third guest is competing in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES next season. Got a shot at clinching the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires championship this Sunday. He's up by 108 points or more, we welcome in Linus Lundqvist.

To all three, thanks for doing this today. Should be a lot of fun.

Let's start with Christian. Two races remain, coming off the test at Laguna Seca Monday. How do you feel heading into the final two races?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: Yeah, looking at the test at Laguna, I wasn't as comfortable as Graham. We never really seemed to have the pace that we wanted to have. Looking at the whole season, I think we've been more comfortable on street circuits and road courses that we have on ovals for different reasons. We didn't have a very good race in St. Louis. Again, Graham seemed to have the pace. The car seemed to be quite edgy there.

We need to make the most of it. David is on our tail. We got the last the last two races and have to score the maximum points we can. I'm sure we will have a good end to the season.

THE MODERATOR: David, pretty clear your genuine excitement about a podium at World Wide Technology Raceway afterwards. How much momentum has that given yourself and the team as you head to the final two?

DAVID MALUKAS: I feel like ever since the month of May came around, I feel like that's when we kind of flipped a switch, starting getting a lot better with the car, strategy, the racing, continued to go forward.

After getting podium, having a really good race there and at Gateway, I think it's only helped it that much more.

We also had a really good test at Laguna on Monday. I don't know. I feel like this West Coast swing might be good for us. It's been so tight. The field is just so strong. It's like we're going to still have to be at 110% if we want to get anything done.

THE MODERATOR: I have a picture I'm going to try to share.

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I know what this is (smiling).

DAVID MALUKAS: I have a feeling.

THE MODERATOR: Does this look familiar?

DAVID MALUKAS: The guy in the middle is pretty good looking.

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: It's Portugal.

THE MODERATOR: How did that weekend go? What's the story behind this? Obviously you have a friendship that has lasted. Tell me the year.

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: 2016.

DAVID MALUKAS: 2016.

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: Actually, as you can see, me and Rasmus Lindh were in the same team. What was the team called?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, we kind of had like a BN Racing deal. We were stationed inside the Ricardo tent.

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I can't remember how this weekend went.

DAVID MALUKAS: I can't really remember much. I just, yeah, remember we had a good time. That was it. We were good buds back in the day.

There's another picture somewhere of him throwing me in the air.

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: That was the last race of the European championship. I remember that.

THE MODERATOR: Good you have these memories that go back many years. Would you call it a friendship?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I wouldn't say we've become enemies, for sure.

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah. Let's just say, like, when I heard that Christian Lundgaard was going into the INDYCAR SERIES, I was like god dammit, that's going to be really tough (laughter).

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I know your mom is a big fan. You said that to me earlier this season. I remember you told me your mom was a big fan of me, she was following all the European races.

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, she follows all the stuff. She's a big Newgarden fan. I don't know if you'll be able to beat that (smiling).

THE MODERATOR: Linus, congratulations on a very dominant Indy Lights season. Five wins, eight podiums, six poles. You took over the points lead at Barber and never looked back. What will it take to wrap up the championship on Sunday?

LINUS LUNDQVIST: Yeah, we've had a great season. Obviously looking forward to the West Coast races now. Obviously we have a good margin. But we're still here to win a couple more races, what we enjoy doing. That's definitely the target. It seems to be the best way to try to win the championship as well, is to win races.

We'll see. Obviously you look a little bit at the points. Obviously you play it on the safe side. We'll see how it goes.

I think Portland was a strong track for us last year. David got double pole, because I got double seconds unfortunately. We'll see what we can do this year.

THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.

<<< Questions Asked By Motorsports Journal's Edmund Jenks >>>

Q. We're going into the final two races of the season. As many as six or eight people going for a championship.

THE MODERATOR: Seven are mathematically alive.

Q. You have the season card and the rookie card. Given that, team dynamics, do you see the team helping your direct effort over the last two races given how they've treated you the whole beginning of the season?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I mean, I think the team has treated me well. I mean, we got a podium at the GP, so it can't be that bad, for sure.

I mean, we've had our ups and downs. I think as a team we struggled in the beginning of the season. We weren't as strong as we were hoping to be. We bounced back.

I think, like David said earlier, kind of as May came, the month of May, after the 500 I think we sort of took a step forward, improved the second half of the season.

Obviously Gateway wasn't our best of weekends. But I think up until then we had a really good sort of streak going. We were moving in the right direction. Road America, Mid-Ohio, we were moving forward. We came to the GP and we were there. Even Iowa we had a pretty good weekend. Didn't qualify as well. Had an issue on the car the Sunday race, which was a bit unfortunate, didn't score any points.

The team has treated me well. They've given me the opportunity, all the tools I need to sort myself out. As a team I think we'll all hope for the last two weekends to have as good a package as we've had at the later GPs.

Q. I guess what I'm asking, given the way they treat you on the track, do you expect to have softer elbows on the track being thrown at you in order to maybe aid you in the rookie championship?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I don't think they're going to make it any harder on me than necessary, for sure. Obviously the easy answer is qualify ahead of them and just stay ahead of them. That's the easy solution.

No, I think Graham was extremely strong at the Laguna test on Monday. I need to find some time there. But overall I think both drivers have been helpful to me on and off track. I don't think there's been any scramble there. I know that me and Graham had contact earlier in the season. But no hard feelings. It happens. Obviously it's not preferred from the team's perspective. We moved on, we learned from it.

Q. David, how do you feel with Taku, his ability to throw elbows?

DAVID MALUKAS: Taku has been so much help to me this entire season. Going into these last two, nothing is really going to change. I'm trying to get as much information from him as possible.

Setup-wise our cars are actually quite similar so we can share each other's data and work off of each other.

On track, any time I go around him, he knows what he's doing. He's tough to get around, especially on the ovals. I was struggling in that move on Gateway. He really forced me to go wide in three and four. I was holding onto my breath.

It's all still friendly play. The only time we had a bit of a mishap was Texas. I was still doing rookie mistakes. Came out of the pits and stalled. That was the time he came in. I completely ruined his race. He didn't really like that.

We moved on from that. I was like, Just take your pit box away from me, it's all going to be okay. We have a really good friendship with each other. For my rookie season, having him as a teammate has probably been the best decision.

Q. Linus, I know it's kind of hard to look forward, what do you see going forward as it relates to INDYCAR, the challenges you see going forward?

LINUS LUNDQVIST: I mean, the big challenge right now is just getting a seat in INDYCAR, to be honest. There's not a lot of 'em out there. We'll see what we can do.

Obviously the target is to be with these guys next year full-time. Hopefully we can make that happen. We'll see. I know that the best thing I can do for myself is to continue to try to do well and wrap up a couple more wins at the end of the season and we'll see what happens.

Q. Have there been a couple of overtures coming your way?

LINUS LUNDQVIST: Yeah, I mean, I've had talks with literally every team on the grid since May I think. But obviously it's so competitive out there, just to get a seat opening. We're doing my best. We're doing our best to put myself in one of the big cars.
ENDS

<<< Additional Questions Asked By Motorsports Journal's Edmund Jenks >>>

Q. Christian, how was your impression of Laguna Seca?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I think pretty much both drivers here can agree with me that the track itself is amazing. I think the elevation the track has is awesome. It's a tough track to master, I would say. I think even though every corner looks simple, it's tough. I think that's what kind of caught me off guard. Pretty much everyone at the test at least went off a couple times. I think I was one of the drivers that went off the most.

We were just trying to find the limits, all these kind of things that we want to do. I think the track itself is cool. I was a bit surprised how low grip the track actually is. I feel there is a very small margin for error in terms of I'd say grip. I'd say the car feels like it has a lot of lateral grip. When you go a half percent further, it just gives up. For me, that was tough to sort of master and understand earlier in the day.

I feel like that put me on sort of the back foot early in the day. I think all of us would have liked to have run earlier in the day. We were a little tire limited, all of us.

It was a good day. I think we learnt a lot. I learned a lot. Now I feel more comfortable coming into the race for sure. Full focus on Portland now.

Q. David, same question?

DAVID MALUKAS: I mean, I love Laguna. To me it reminds me a lot of go-karting, a slow and rhythmic track. If you make a small mistake in turn three, I feel like the rest of the lap you're going to try to be catch up for it, make more mistakes, all around lose that lap.

It's a very tough track. Like I said, it's all about rhythm, knowing where that limit is, trying so hard. The limit is such a fine line of going overboard or being under. You have to stay within that line.

It's a tough track, as Christian says. In qualifying it's going to be interesting because you're obviously going to try to find the most amount of time you can. One little mistake, that's it. Also the way with alternate timelines, people setting it up. You have less laps, because setting it up you gain that much more time. It's a tough track, but a lot of fun, one of my favorites on the schedule.

Q. Linus, you have two races there. How do you like closing out your season there twice?

LINUS LUNDQVIST: I say I'll enjoy closing out at Laguna more than last year as we did at Mid-Ohio. Nothing against Mid-Ohio, but I just think Laguna is a better venue.

Excited. Laguna was a little bit of a tricky one for us last year. We finished on the podium in both races, but we were playing catch-up to Andretti. We'll see if we can change that around. Hopefully we can have a good run at Portland and go to Laguna with a little bit less pressure, just enjoy it.
ENDS

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Q. Christian, Rookie of the Year is something that is maybe not so much a thing in Europe, outside of America. Was that something that was a surprise to you, how many questions you get about this?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I mean, sort of internally there's always a rookie championship no matter what series you're racing in. But, like you said, I don't think it's a big topic in Europe. For sure the team has pushed me further and further to understand how much it actually means.

But yeah, again, obviously coming into INDYCAR, I hoped to be in a better position at this point in the season than we are. You can only hope for the best. I think we've had our ups and downs, we've had good weekends, some worse ones.

You only get one shot at the rookie championship. You have to make the best of it. I think that's what's important about it, at this point now I know I'll be here next year. I mean, I know anyway I'm not going to get another shot at it, but I also know I need to learn as much as possible this year going into next year, but at the same time I want to end it on a high.

I mean, unfortunately David is pushing me extremely hard with his pace. I think it's going to be a tight battle at the end.

Q. David, would you say it was always a focus of yours from the start of the season? Is it similar to Rahal that Dale Coyne have been pushing you on to achieve that?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, it's always been in the back of my head. It wasn't kind of my main goal. My main goal was to enjoy the INDYCAR experience and learn as much as possible. Dale was in my ear every day, We need this rookie, go and get it (smiling). He was pushing me and driving me forward.

Lundgaard definitely has been pushing us 100%, especially after the IMS performance. I was like, Man, how am I supposed to get a podium? That's going to be tough.

Part of the push in Gateway was having that in mind. Yeah, like I said, Dale is always in my ear that we really need it. A lot of pushing going on. In Gateway we succeeded under the pressure. Hopefully we can carry that into the last two rounds.

Q. David and Christian, let's say you're both challenging for the win at either Portland or Laguna, and you have one of the four or five guys going for the championship, they decide to mix it up with you, what do you do?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: Keep fighting.

Q. Can you explain a little bit more about that?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I mean, yes, they've got a championship, but so do we. I mean, I wouldn't say I would unnecessarily help anyone if it doesn't help my own case. If it's going to help me...

We are racing drivers, we want to win. If they're racing for a championship, I mean, anyone in the race is there to take points away from each other.

I mean, I wouldn't say I'd try to help anyone.

Q. David?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, I mean, even though I know people are in the championship run, once you go on track, you're focused on your own deal unless there's some teammate stuff maybe going on.

It's always in the back of your head that you know everybody is in a championship fight. At Gateway, being in the front running going against Power and Newgarden, McLaughlin, you know they all have a chance at the championship, you make sure you have very committed passes. You don't want to make things go south for you and them.

I mean, if anything, if that's situation happens in the last two races, we're going to make sure to be careful and make committed moves. It's in both drivers' heads we're fighting for our own championships and everybody is going to take it safe.

Q. I'm not going to mention names, but one of the contenders gives you a really hard time, maybe there's some contact, do you look to avenge that contact? I'm specifically speaking about the contenders left. What do you do if they are the aggressors to you?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I mean, I think personally, there are drivers on the grids that is harder than others to race against, for sure. But I think what I like about INDYCAR is that it's extremely tough and hard racing but very respectful.

I mean, me and Simon had a bit of wheel banging in Mid-Ohio, but there were no hard feelings. It's racing. It is what it is.

If someone punches me off the track, what better am I if I do the same to him? I want to race clean, help my own case, make sure I get the best result that we can. Obviously doesn't help if you're being pushed off the track.

I mean, I wouldn't say I'm looking for vengeance in any way. Yeah, I think that's it honestly.

Q. David?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, no, personally I get all the revenge, get like a TV series about it, dramatize it a bit (laughter).

No, I mean, you don't want to have bad blood. If something happens on track, you don't want to have that in the back of your mind going into your next race or next session.

Yeah, I don't know, it's a tough situation to try to let go of something that you know that truly wasn't your fault, they messed you up, your race.

I always talk to the person after the fact, make sure we're on good terms before we go back on track, hear their side of the story, kind of connect.

If INDYCAR starts doing, like, shows, I can dramatize some stuff. Maybe me and Lundgaard can put fists up, do some rolling around. When the camera cuts, we'll shake hands, go have coffee (smiling).

THE MODERATOR: Linus, explain a little bit about the race team that you're with this year and how much they have done to put you in a great position to win a championship, what they brought to the table in the last couple years.

LINUS LUNDQVIST: Yeah, I mean, it goes for every driver. I mean, we get the luxury of being the front figure of everything. Obviously you have the whole team behind you. You wouldn't be able to even come to the race without them.

Obviously HMD the last two years I'd say have been one of the top teams together with Andretti. Obviously that was the goal from the end of last year to sort of come back and try to fight for the title. The target was to go with HMD because we thought that's where the potential was.

I think it's proven right so far at least. It's cool to see them expanding as well. It was a little bit of a question mark when David moved up to the INDYCAR, what's going to happen to the Lights car. They only expanded, added more engineers, put more effort in than last year.

It's cool to see them expanding both on the Lights side but also to INDYCAR with the partnership with Dale Coyne. It's a good energy with the team right now.

Q. David, you've been fighting against Linus in Indy Lights last year, also in the same team with him. Did this Indy Lights season work out with the way you expected it to be, with him completely dominating the competition?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, he's being intimidated (laughter).

Yeah, going into it, I'm a little bit biased, but I definitely saw that all of HMD Motorsports to dominate. I'm not surprised that Linus took it and ran with it, kept running with it. An impressive season for him.

When he said he was going to be racing for us next year, I knew that, Okay, yeah, he's got a really good opportunity at it. He's done an amazing job to make sure it's clear-cut and center. He deserves to be in the Indy Lights championship and be in INDYCAR.

Q. Linus, in 2018 you spent a whole year in British F3 driving against Jamie Chadwick. Earlier today we reported she's going to test an Indy Lights car with Andretti. Do you think she would be a good fit? Can you reflect on the differences between those cars?

LINUS LUNDQVIST: Yeah, I was happy to see that she's doing a test. Obviously we kept in touch a little bit. She's been doing very well in the W series.

It will be interesting to see how she does over here. Like you said, I raced against her in 2018. She raced for the same team as I did in 2017, when she did F3 and I was in F4. I've seen her a little bit. Obviously that's some years ago.

I'm not the same driver as I was in 2018. I'm sure she's not. Excited to see what she can do and what she thinks of the Lights car. It is a big difference from the regional car to the Lights car.

In 2020 when I did the Formula Regional Americas, it was probably the biggest step of my career going into the Lights car just how the car drives, how you have to drive it to extract lap time.

Multiple times in pre-season, a couple of tests, in theory in my head I did close to the perfect lap, and I was 5/10ths or 6/10ths off David. Look at his onboard, it's oversteer, understeer, he deals with it. Mine was calm, hitting the apex. That's not how you extract lap time out of a Lights car.

It took a little bit of time to get used to, but super rewarding when you do do it. It will be interesting to see how she can adapt to it.

Q. David, obviously you dominated in Portland last year. What do you think you can take from Indy Lights to the INDYCAR race in Portland?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, we had a lot of success last year in Indy Lights. Completely different car, different team. It's all going to be very different with the setup.

I know I have the ability to go around Portland and do some quick times. All I know is, yeah, just turn one, yeah, the fingers crossed. If we make turn one, it's always going to be swell from there.

Q. Lean on Taku for a bit of information for that as well?

DAVID MALUKAS: With Taku's help, it's been more on ovals. Also at the Laguna test we were talking. I'm always trying to get as much information from him as possible.

I have a really good veteran teammate, I think probably one of the best for me, for my rookie season. I'm trying to get the most out of it. He definitely keeps some things to himself. I have to look at videos and data to try to find it.

Yeah, I definitely will ask him a lot of questions.

Q. Christian, what are your expectations going into Portland?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: Going into the last two races of the season, I don't think the sort of expectations have changed, I wouldn't say. We go into every event pretty much the same. We want to do the best we can and extract as much time as we can from the car.

We didn't test at Portland. I know (indiscernible) tested both tracks, which was actually pretty interesting to see. But I think our Sebring test earlier this season just before Toronto helped us more. We're on the right track. We just need to keep improving. I think we're in the right direction.

Having Graham and Jack here, I know Jack has been successful here, I know he's been extremely fast, hasn't quite got the result that he deserved. I think as a team we're looking quite strong.

Graham looked at a pretty comfortable podium last year until some strategy that didn't work out. He's been there. I don't think we're going to be struggling. I think we're going to be in the better end of the field.

Q. Christian, this is a relatively new circuit to you. How much extra preparation have you put in?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I think it's pretty much the same preparation as every track you go to. I mean, looking at Indy GP last year, the one race I did, I basically showed up on Friday and drove practice. That's pretty much it.

You try to look at certain issues to see if you can find some onboards, videos, do as much preparation as you can do. Speak to engineers, see what they have of experience at the track. Speak to my teammates, Jack and Graham.

Like I said before, they've both been quite successful here in terms of sheer pace. They haven't got the result that I think they deserve.

As a package, I think we will be there. For me, I enjoy coming to new tracks. I enjoy the challenge of going out there pretty much blind. We saw Nashville, I'd never been at Nashville, and we were real quick straightaway. The most I can hope for is that the car is in a decent window and we can fine tune it from there, be at the better end of the field.

LINUS LUNDQVIST: As long as we're ahead of David, we're fine (smiling).

Q. Can you tell us how many years you are contracted for?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I can't tell you, but I'll be here for a bit (smiling).

Q. David, how much of a relief was it to get that first series podium?

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, no, it felt really good. It's just because we knew it was possible at that point for a couple of races until then. We knew if we put everything together, we can finally get it. We got very close in a few different circuits, things didn't really go our way. With the amount of races counting down... I also knew Gateway was going to be our best chance to do it. The Dale Coyne car on ovals is an absolute beast, quick.

We were going around Penskes on the outside at the end. It proved we had a really good car. I knew that was our best chance to finally get it. I feel like that's one of my goals completed for the end of this season.

Now it's just going to be, yeah, making sure I finish in front of Christian (smiling).

THE MODERATOR: Did you tape Bus Bros or is it going to happen?

DAVID MALUKAS: No, it's going to happen. They said it on Twitter. I was freaking out, accepted it. They haven't said anything since. I don't know if they're going to go into my motorhome and wake me up. I don't know how it works. We'll see.

THE MODERATOR: Be ready for anything is probably the best advice.

----
----

THE MODERATOR: Linus, a strategy question for you. How much of the team, you, will be thinking about points, making sure you get what you need to clinch at Portland, or do you race your own race and whatever happens...

LINUS LUNDQVIST: This is usually the case where I go for a win and the team says, Don't worry, you're fine. Big picture, look at the points.

But, I mean, the best and the safest way is qualify up front and try to run away with it. That's going to be the plan. Score the most points, it's the safest way of doing it.

DAVID MALUKAS: I'd say take it easy this race, you're still in the points running, then you get it on the final race, you get everybody. It's much cooler. Not as cool if you already get it and go to the final race (smiling).

LINUS LUNDQVIST: So now you know, if Portland doesn't go well, race one at Laguna doesn't go well, now you know why (laughter).

Q. It's your first year for both in INDYCAR. You have some races to improve. In what aspects do you think you have improved more and in what aspects do you think you have to improve in the last two races?

CHRISTIAN LUNDGAARD: I'd sort of say me and David are in this battle now. I'd say he has the advantage having been to most of the tracks, done ovals before in junior categories. For me to come out here and just drive around in the big car straightaway, for me, I wouldn't say I struggled mentally, but it's obviously a tough task to come in and be expected to perform.

I think there's been a few events this year where I've told my strategists to give me more information because we can be 6/10ths off the pace compared to my teammates. I don't know where the pace is.

These things we've kind of learned as a team, moved in that direction of helping me as much as possible early in the weekend. The pace has been there. Obviously we didn't need it in Nashville, which was nice. Seemed to be able to sort that out.

For the last two races of the season, now I have a test at Laguna under my belt, I've never been to Portland. Now sitting here hearing that David has had a successful couple of races around here, for me, I need to be on the top of my game going into this weekend, be sure that together with the team we have the best package.

I think for me the ovals are still where we need to improve. Personally I think I'm quite comfortable with street circuits and road courses. I've done that pretty much the whole of my car career. Ovals is still different.

I think this is what has been tough this season. You only got one shot at it, at the rookie championship. You need to perform at your best and limit retirements. I think we've got the most out of it, but I'm sure there's a lot to learn. I think the whole winter we'll look into things to improve.

Q. And David, in what aspects do you think you have to improve more during the season? In what aspects do you think you can improve during the last two races?

DAVID MALUKAS: I mean, the whole improvement has been with I'd say race strategy and pit stops. That's kind of been the whole season. I feel like that's the same goal going into these last two races.

All that stuff is new to me. Although I've come through the feeder series, you don't do pit stops, strategies, fuel saving, tire saving. You don't really do much of that. All of that was very new to me. At the beginning of the season I was definitely very lost with all of it.

I've managed to learn how to figure out how to do all these things, just following veterans like Power. He passed me on track. Man, I got passed again. Wait, this is actually really good. I can follow Power's line, where he does these fuel saving.

From these moments I've managed to learn, learn how I can use all the tools I have from me, the team, Honda, how I can use those to help me as a driver.

Q. Linus this is your second year in Indy Lights. In terms of your performances and your training style, what impact has this had?

LINUS LUNDQVIST: Yeah, a second year always helps because you kind of hit the ground running when the season starts again instead of starting from scratch.

But honestly, looking back at last year, I'm actually pretty proud of the season that we had. We were fast and good enough to challenge for the title, I don't know, with three races to go until we had the tire blowout at Gateway.

This year everything that we did last year we just did a little bit better. It was more natural to me, the driving style of the Lights car, how the team operates, the people within the team.

I'd just say that we turned everything up a notch. I'm working with the same people, engineers, mechanics. We knew each other very well. We knew our strengths and weaknesses. We kind of just worked on that, yeah, became a better package all the way around.

THE MODERATOR: The great story about these three is they're success stories up and down. Thank you.
[FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports]

POST PORTLAND:

In the contest for series Rookie of the Year honors, the coveted award will go to one of two Honda drivers.  Rahal Letterman Lanigan driver Christian Lundgaard leads with 293 points heading to Laguna Seca.  But fellow Honda racer David Malukas is only five points back, driving for Dale Coyne Racing with HMD.

Do not miss the finale of both the NTT INDYCAR SERIES & IndyLights Championships as well as the unicorn title "Rookie Of The Year" held during the Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey weekend at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca September 9-11, 2022.

Television coverage of Sunday’s Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey starts at 3 p.m. EDT on NBC.  Complete, flag-to-flag race coverage also will be available on NBC Peacock, the INDYCAR Radio Network, and SiriusXM INDYCAR Nation (Channel 160). 

... notes from The EDJE


FEATURED ARTICLE >>>







TAGS: Linus Lundqvist, David Malukas, Christian Lundgaard, NTT INDYCAR SERIES, INDYLights, RLL, Rahal Leterman Lanigan Racing, Dale Coyne, HMD Motorsports, Rookie Of The Year, Championship, The EDJE

Saturday, August 8, 2015

Mazda Road To INDY Works - 7 IndyLights Drivers Test @RaceSonoma

IndyLights start Race 1 at Mid-Ohio. Image Credit: Bret Kelly via VICS

Mazda Road To INDY Works - 7 IndyLights Drivers Test @RaceSonoma

Many racing series are in play for people who wish to develop their skills as a competitive driver but none have the promise of transition that is infused within American open-wheel racing's Mazda Road To INDY program (USF2000, Pro Mazda, and IndyLights).

According to Rule 6.2.3 of the 2015 Verizon IndyCar Series rulebook, teams are allocated two additional team test days in the testing year window for the purpose of testing a current IndyLights driver. On-track time may be split with a team driver (one IndyLights driver and one team driver), but a team driver may not use more than 50 percent of the available track time.

Seven IndyLights Presented by Cooper Tires drivers, including the top three in the championship standings, will share a test day in Verizon IndyCar Series cars with Verizon IndyCar Series drivers Aug. 13 on the 2.385-mile, 12-turn Sonoma Raceway road course in Sonoma, Calif.

Verizon IndyCar Series teams and drivers testing, with IndyLights drivers testing in parentheses, are:

• Andretti Autosport - Marco Andretti (Matthew Brabham)
• Chip Ganassi Racing Teams - Scott Dixon (Sean Rayhall)
• KVSH Racing - Sebastien Bourdais (Ryan Phinny)
• Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing - Graham Rahal (Ed Jones)
• Schmidt Peterson Motorsports - Ryan Briscoe (Jack Harvey)
• Team Penske - Juan Pablo Montoya, Will Power (Spencer Pigot, Nelson Piquet Jr.)

Brabham drove an Andretti Autosport Indy car July 1 at an Iowa Speedway test alongside Andretti, and other IndyLights drivers periodically test in a Verizon IndyCar Series car. But this is the first large-scale in-season test day.

"This is exactly what we've wanted to have happen with the program," said Dan Andersen, owner and CEO of Andersen Promotions, which operates IndyLights under INDYCAR sanctioning. "We appreciate INDYCAR enabling this with its testing regulations and to encourage it. To see these drivers getting this opportunity is rewarding for them and exciting for us. It's what the program is all about; we want to see them make it to the Verizon IndyCar Series."

Indy Lights is the third and final step on the Mazda Road to Indy driver and team development ladder. The IndyLights champion is awarded a $750,000 scholarship toward the Verizon IndyCar Series with three guaranteed races, including the Indianapolis 500, in 2016.

Harvey, who drives for Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, takes a six-point lead over Pigot (Juncos Racing) and an 18-point lead over Jones (Carlin) into the championship-deciding doubleheader race weekend Sept. 11-13 at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in Monterey, Calif.

"The test could be valuable for next year," said Harvey, the Englishman in his second season with SPM. "I could show (a Verizon IndyCar Series team) that they could trust me with their car, I can be fast and provide the proper feedback."

Added Pigot, 21, of Orlando, Fla., who won the 2014 Pro Mazda Presented by Cooper Tires championship: "It's something that I've been working toward for quite a few years and climbing the Mazda Road to Indy has prepared me for it. I'm excited to get behind the wheel. Winning the IndyLights championship is the No. 1 goal through the middle of September, and obviously the goal is to move up to IndyCar next year. This (test) could help my chances for next year."

Sam Schmidt, who co-owns the team that operates a four-car IndyLights program and a two-car Verizon IndyCar Series program, said the goals of the test day are to make the No. 5 Indy car driven by Briscoe competitive for the Aug. 30 GoPro Grand Prix of Sonoma to keep it in the top 10 of entrant points and give Harvey "a taste" of driving the Honda-powered machine.

"We're hoping he (Harvey) can win the championship, which would lead to the scholarship and moving up next year in some capacity," said Schmidt, who has seven IndyLights championships as a team owner. "It's always good to start that process as early as possible.

"It's one of the incentives that INDYCAR built into the program and hopefully it will expand with other IndyCar teams."

Graham Rahal leads Marco Andretti, Justin Wilson, and Simon Pagenaud through the Keyhole turn at Mid-Ohio. American open-wheel royal family members Graham and Marco are just two of the drivers who will share instruction time with IndyLights drivers during a test at Sonoma Raceway. Other drivers include 3-Time champion Scott Dixon, 4-Time champion Sebastien Bourdais, Ryan Briscoe, 1999 champion Juan Pablo Montoya, and 2014 champion Will Power. Image Credit: Chris Jones via VICS

TRANSCRIPT - 8/6/2015

Media Teleconference with Dan Andersen, Jack Harvey and Spencer PigotPART #1 >>>

THE MODERATOR: Welcome, everyone, to today's INDYCAR media teleconference.

We're pleased to be joined today by Dan Andersen, the owner and CEO of Andersen Promotions, which oversees the Mazda Road to Indy, and two of the championship contenders from the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires, Jack Harvey of Schmidt Peterson Motorsports and Spencer Pigot of Juncos Racing.

Gentlemen, welcome to today's call.

Dan, it's been a great year for all three Mazda Road to Indy series with exciting races in the Cooper Tires USF2000, and the Pro Mazda Championship Presented by Cooper Tires, as well as the Indy Lights. We see young racers who aim to join the Verizon IndyCar Series in the future. From your perspective, how has the 2015 season been for the Mazda Road to Indy?

DAN ANDERSEN: As always, the young talented drivers we have put on a great show. I don't know how many people on the call have observed our races. Hopefully all of them. But they put on a great show. The training is pretty deep, not just what we try to provide as a series, but the training that they obtain by racing each other.

The best young drivers are here. If you're going to get better, you have to race against the best. If you're running at the front of one of these series, you're doing a good job. They've, again, proved that with the racing they put on this year. We're pretty satisfied with that.

THE MODERATOR: Obviously the goal of the Mazda Road to Indy is to move the drivers up the ranks. Next week some of the drivers from Indy Lights have a chance to sample IndyCars for the first time, joining the Verizon IndyCar Series for a test day.

DAN ANDERSEN: Yeah, it's pretty exciting. It's one of the things that we all wanted to do. Our series has partners with Mazda and Cooper. Andersen Promotions, Mazda and Cooper, this is what we're all about. We're all about training the young kids and getting them ready for an IndyCar seat eventually.

This is the culmination of that. Seven drivers, I believe, are on tap next week. They'll get their laps. They'll get the exposure from this, the experience from this. Hopefully they'll demonstrate the training that they've learned and they'll convince these IndyCar teams to give them a shot. That's our whole reason for being. It is what we're all about at the Mazda Road to Indy. Exciting week for us next week.


Nelson Piquet, Jr. celebrates his win with Formula E team owner at the inaugural FIA Formula E race held on a modified track used for the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach. Piquet went on to win the 2015 Formula E championship and will participate as one of the seven driver Mazda Road to INDY test with IndyCar teams and drivers at Sonoma Raceway. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2015)

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by two of the drivers who will be at Sonoma next week. They happen to be the two point leaders in IndyLights. Jack Harvey drives the No. 42 car for Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, and he leads the championship by six points over Spencer Pigot.

Jack, you have to be excited about the chance to get into an IndyCar next week and share SPM's Honda with Ryan Briscoe.

JACK HARVEY: Yeah. 'Excitement' is an understatement for everyone going into the test. The opportunity we've been given from Dan and everybody involved that's on the Mazda Road to Indy program and IndyCar, it's what I've been working for since I was nine years old in go-karts.

More than excited. I don't really have the words to explain just how much I'm looking forward to it. I think Dan summed it up pretty well a second ago. We're all trying to give a good account, show why we should be on the IndyCar grid next year, and hopefully I will be, hopefully Spencer will be.

I think we've had some good races this year. I think that's the level of driver that we get in Indy Lights, across the whole Mazda Road to Indy program.

Could be an invaluable test. Hopefully it's the start of a new chapter for all the guys who are going to it next week.

THE MODERATOR: Spencer, you're actually from Florida, so a young American. You'll be joining one of the best teams in all of motorsports in Team Penske, have a chance to help Juan Pablo Montoya and Will Power as the seek to win the Verizon IndyCar Series championship. How did the opportunity to drive for that team come about?

SPENCER PIGOT: Like Jack said, just very excited to be a part of it, one of the drivers that was chosen.

It came about really, I got a phone call from Tim Cindric. I've known Tim for a few years now from when his son was racing USF2000, got a very surprise phone call if I'd be interested in driving one of their IndyCars. Obviously I was very surprised and almost speechless when he called.

I said, Absolutely, I would love to. Yeah, very surprised this test has come about, but also very excited and can't wait to get behind an IndyCar for the first time.

THE MODERATOR: We'll take questions for our guests.

Q. Spencer and Jack, talk a little bit about looking up on your way up. Do you get any inspiration from Sage Karam?  What do you feel like you learn most from the IndyCar veterans that are in IndyCar?

SPENCER PIGOT: Yeah, for me I've definitely been watching IndyCar racing ever since I can remember, have always had my favorite drivers and ones I look up to. As I've gotten closer and closer to IndyCar, there's definitely some guys that you really watch. Year after year they're always at the front, Scott Dixon, Will Power, they're always winning races. It's something as young drivers, it's what we want to do. We want to be in the Verizon IndyCar Series for many years and be competitive and win races and championships.

So for me climbing up the Mazda Road to Indy, definitely always been looking up to guys like that to hopefully race against and have similar careers that they've had.

JACK HARVEY: Well, I think the interesting thing is if we use Gabby Chaves as an example. We raced all last season. We drew on points last season. I think the main thing he was able to progress from Indy Lights into IndyCar. That's where we're all lucky at the Mazda Road to Indy program: if you can keep winning, making the step, whatever that step is, is actually possible.

Think that's the biggest thing drivers can ask for at the moment. I think that's the main point.

All you're looking for as a driver, if you can go out and do the job on track, you just get the opportunity to progress. I think we're all pretty lucky at the moment that it seems like it's a genuine possibility to do that.

I think Gabby is a guy I look at and would like to try and follow what he's done in this off-season by following the natural order of things and just stepping up into IndyCar.

I think people like Josef, people like Sage, they've all done it. Whatever happens, I'd like to see the champion of Indy Lights continue to progress. I think Dan and everybody at Mazda, everybody at IndyCar have given us a great opportunity to do that. I feel like it's certainly a possibility.

Q. Do you feel mostly you have to learn it on your own or does some of that help really give you a kick?  You really can't get it from anybody else?

JACK HARVEY: Well, the thing is that the drivers are quite open a little bit, and they're happy to help you, but not enough where they're giving away all their secrets. Ultimately they don't want you to beat them.

The thing about racing, it's a really unique sport where, yes, it's a team sport, you have the team, but it's also an individual sport in many ways where the driver is the guy who sometimes is accountable.

I think it strikes that balance between having to learn on your own but also having the ability to pool experience and resource from other people.

For sure, some of it is self learning, just experiencing something, if it's good, doing it again, if it's not good, trying something different. Then actually being able to speak to people that have done it before so you don't make the same mistake. I think there's probably a healthy balance there.

SPENCER PIGOT: I think there's people out there that you form relationships with. For me it's Josef Newgarden has been kind of a role model for me, being part of the Rising Star Racing program has been good. I can always bounce ideas off him getting advice on different tracks, different corners.

You're always going to get a little bit of help, like Jack said, from those guys. At the end of the day they all know we're all gunning for IndyCar seats and we're going to be hopefully competing against them one day so they can't let all their tricks out.

Q. Jack and Spencer, you have been in championship battles going into the last race of the season before. What can you take from being in those that you can transfer going into Mazda Raceway in a few weeks?

SPENCER PIGOT: You're leading the championship, so why don't you go first (laughter).

JACK HARVEY: I've been lucky up to this point, whether it's been in go-kart, single-seater cars, I've been fighting for championships basically since I started racing.

This year in many ways there's nothing particularly new. I think what you take from the experience is the highs and the lows and just keep continuing to work on them. We obviously saw Mid-Ohio was a tough weekend, but we still came out leading. Those are the main points.

Looking in that regard, the team has won multiple championships, they've been battling to win the championship since Indy Lights started. I feel like there's a lot of knowledge and experience for me to bring to the table, but also they're bringing to the table themselves. I think not panicking, staying focused and relaxed.

What was good enough last week isn't going to be good enough next week. Continuing to raise the bar all the way to the end of the year is going to be key and essential. So I think a lot of my experience before, knowing what to do, knowing what not to do, is going to come in handy because I've had a lot of experience in this situation.

SPENCER PIGOT: Yeah, I think when you get to this level, you're racing Indy Lights, there's guys from all over the world racing against you. A lot of them have won championships in many different categories. Like Jack said, I've been in the position to fight for championships for quite a few years now in karting and up through the ranks, through the Mazda Road to Indy. Sometimes it works out for you, sometimes it doesn't.

Every season's different. You're racing against different guys. The tracks are different, the cars are different. It's hard to really compare two seasons to each other.

In this situation I know to just stay calm and focus on the job at hand, not really worry about anyone else, but the team and I are going to go into the weekend focusing on us and how we can get the most out of the car and the most out of my driving. We'll just let the results kind of go from there.

I think if we're very quick in practice, we unload well, we'll have a real shot at winning it. That was always the goal coming into this year, to have a good shot at winning the championship at Mazda Raceway. We achieved that first goal, so now we're going to go out and do our best when we get to the track. Whatever happens happens. Nonetheless, it's been a great season. I've learnt a lot. Looking forward to one last challenge.


Part-time IndyLights campaign driver Sean Rayhall has a good outing at Mid-Ohio with Race 1 starting at P12 and ending at P5 & Race 2 starting at P4 and ending at P1. He earned a test with Target Chip Ganassi's Scott Dixon who sits at P3 in the IndyCar season points chase with only 2 races left. Image Credit: Chris Jones via VICS

Media Teleconference with Dan Andersen, Jack Harvey and Spencer Pigot - PART #2 >>>

Questions from Edmund Jenks - Motorsports Journal:

BEGIN
Q. Dan, I understand that seven Indy Lights drivers will be testing. Will they also be driving at Sonoma in the race?

DAN ANDERSEN: They'll be driving in the Indy Lights race, most of them. Matthew Brabham is testing with Andretti, and he at this point does not have an entry at Mazda Raceway. I think Ryan Phinny and Nelson Piquet, Jr., are also drivers that have driven at Indy Lights but do not have current entries into the race. I believe the other four are all entered into the race.

Q. Maybe I'm getting confused. Are any of them going to be driving in the season finale in Sonoma for IndyCar?

DAN ANDERSEN: Not as far as I know, no. Maybe Spencer and Jack can comment on that. I'm not aware of those arrangements, no.

Q. Your name has come up as a potential replacement for Derrick Walker, given his resignation. Have you given any thought to a direction like that?  I know your plate is rather full running three series. Is this something that has been kicked around in discussions with you?

DAN ANDERSEN: I'm flattered that my name would even come up. No, my plate is full. I actually admire the job Derrick Walker has done. He's worked very well for us.

As for Dan Andersen, no, I think I've got quite a bit going on. I'm not sure I would be the right guy for the job anyway. I'm flattered my name has come up. Thank you.

Q. Jack, have you ever gotten into a seat of a Dallara IndyCar?

JACK HARVEY: No. This test at Sonoma will be my first time.

Q. And Spencer?

SPENCER PIGOT: No. This will be the first time for me, as well.

Q. Jack, what will your impressions be of stepping up to more horsepower, greater downforce and so on?  What do you anticipate?

JACK HARVEY: I mean, that's a good question because anticipation is a funny thing. I've spoken to the team quite a lot. The horsepower is going to be something to anticipate. The first three or four laps will feel quite fast. It's quite a significant increase in performance from the engine, stepping up from Indy Lights into IndyCar.

I think that's going to be one thing especially at Sonoma. Turn seven is pretty slow. You're going to be stepping on the pedal quite hard on the exit. That's going to probably take one or two laps to get used to.

Honestly, it's just a natural steppingstone. If you went from USF2000 and jumped into an IndyCar, it would be quite a performance gain. Because I've done these steps before, I think I know what to expect after looking at some data, working with the team this week. Then there's going to be a ton of surprises, I'm sure. Plenty of things I didn't anticipate that will come up, you know, across the morning when I'm testing.

I've done some good prep with the team on some things to anticipate quickly, then the other things I just have to learn as I go. That's almost the enjoyment of getting into a new car, such a performance car as the IndyCar.

Q. Spencer, what have you heard and what is your level of anticipation?  What are your biggest concerns?

SPENCER PIGOT: Yeah, like Jack said, there's only so much preparation and things that people can tell you to expect before you just have to go out there and feel it for yourself.

I mean, I've been talking to a lot with the guys at Team Penske, looking at video. The biggest thing they say is the horsepower is going to be a big difference. Also these new aero kits are creating a significant amount of downforce. The steering is very heavy. I think physically it's going to be a tougher car to drive.

I've been training a lot recently to help get ready for it. Just really excited to get in an IndyCar for the first time. I've climbed up the Mazda Road to Indy, and each year the cars get bigger and faster. I think it's going to be that logical progression that we've been talking about. It's going to seem really, really quick I think for the first few laps, then similar to the first time I drove the IL-15, it seemed really fast the first five or ten laps, then you get used to it and it becomes almost the normal speed after a while.

You know, just doing as much preparation as I can, but still there's going to be a lot of unknowns that I'll have to figure out the way to approach them when I get there.

Q. Being with Penske, there are four very high-level drivers driving for the team. Have you had a chance to talk with any of the drivers?

SPENCER PIGOT: Yeah, I mean, Team Penske is an incredible team. They have some of the best people, some of the best drivers out there as well. Very fortunate to be able to learn from them in Sonoma and try and take full advantage of that opportunity.

I've been able to talk to Will Power a little bit. He was at the shop when I was down there a couple weeks ago in Charlotte. He's the driver I'll be sharing the car with, as well. Yeah, I've been able to talk to him a bit. Just trying to ask lots of questions and get as much from them as I can.

Q. Mid-Ohio was kind of different because there was a driver there not throughout the whole year, Sean Rayhall. How was it driving with a bit of an unknown entity?  He drove a couple races before. But one who is not there for the whole season, how is that?

SPENCER PIGOT: I think you have guys that you respect and you know they're going to do a very good job and be fast. I think that's the case with Sean. I've known him for a long time. We raced go-karts together when I was 11, 12 years old. I've known him for a long time. He's been doing really well in sports cars and prototypes. He's done a few races with us this year, so he wasn't really an unknown.

It's good to have that competition coming in kind of unexpectedly, having him pop up a few weekends, having guys like Nelson Piquet come in, just forces you to push harder, raise the bar. There's no issues having Sean or Nelson in the championship because they haven't been there for a while. They're obviously very experienced and smart drivers. It's great when they come onboard.

Q. Jack, your impression?

JACK HARVEY: I think Sean has shown how good he is as a driver in multiple series and categories. I think Spencer summed it up pretty well.

For as much as he's an unknown, he's got a little bit of experience. This year he won at Indy road course, he's been fast every time he's been in the car. Without repeating what Spencer said, it's nice to get these other people coming in every now and again because you don't know what to expect. It leaves everybody up to their own game and work a little bit harder.

He's a driver who deserves a test next week as much as any of us do, and also to be on the grid again next year in some capacity. Think he's a really nice guy. Got a lot of time for him. Respect him a lot as a driver. Just hoping me and him will be racing in the future together again soon.
ENDS


American driver Spencer  Pigot (foreground) and Kyle  Kaiser of IndyLights team Juncos Racing as they prepare to take to the track at Mid-Ohio. Image Credit: John D Cote via roadtoindy.net


Media Teleconference with Dan Andersen, Jack Harvey and Spencer PigotPART #3 >>>

Q. Dan, right now currently we have some successful drivers from Europe in Indy Lights. What do you think in the near future?  More Europeans are coming over. What is your feeling about that?

DAN ANDERSEN: Well, I think we've got a pretty good program for drivers from all over the world to look at and see if it fits what their goals are.

The Mazda Road to Indy is unique in the world. We've said this before, but it bears saying again. There's nothing like this clearly defined ladder with scholarships at every level, prize money on the weekends. We are in great venues. In my opinion, it's a great training ground for a Verizon IndyCar Series ride.

So the drivers in Europe are taking a harder look at us because of the situation over there, the undefined ladder, what series to go to to advance your career. When you win it, there's really no prize. Some people have won major championships and not had any opportunity at the highest level. I think we're seeing a bit more interest from Europe and Asia and South America to our series.

If you want to have a career in racing, this is a place where you have a very good shot at making it work.

Q. Dan, obviously it's been a while since there's been any kind of testing program in place between IndyCar and Indy Lights. Walk through what it took to get this done and whether it was your idea or IndyCar's idea.

DAN ANDERSEN: As a former Indy Lights team owner back I guess in 2006 through maybe 2008 or 2009, Andersen Racing had a team. We ran JR Hildebrand and Mario Romancini and several other drivers. There I was partners with Bobby Rahal in my Indy Lights team. I think Bobby tested JR Hildebrand and Andrew Prendeville. We benefited from that as a team. We used that to attract drivers that we had this testing program. Then for whatever reason it went away.

When IndyCar approached me to get involved in Indy Lights on a promoter side, I brought it up and said that this is something that would be very beneficial for Indy Lights teams to have this.

What we have right now and what's happening next week I think is the first step. We'd like to expand it. We'd actually like to enhance it for teams that participate in IndyCar and Indy Lights. That's my goal, to get more IndyCar teams to join the Indy Lights series and train their mechanics, train their engineers, train their drivers.

We're hoping that IndyCar can take this test program that's in place now for the benefit of Indy Lights drivers and enhance it a bit for a greater benefit for Indy Lights teams.

I guess that's a long answer to your question. But, yes, it was an idea that was originally IndyCar's back in the mid 2000s and we resurrected it when we took over Indy Lights.

Q. What are you planning to get out of this test next week?  How long before we see you in an IndyCar?

SPENCER PIGOT: I think for me, the experience of driving an IndyCar is going to be something I've always looked forward to. It's going to be an amazing experience to just feel what an IndyCar has. It's something that I'm really looking forward to. But also take advantage of learning as much as I can from the team and the drivers I'll be with there. Team Penske is obviously one of the best teams in IndyCar. Will Power and Montoya are two of the best drivers.

They've got great engineers and mechanics. Just looking for what they have to say about different topics, how I can improve my driving there at the test, and things that might help me at Mazda Raceway or any time in the future. Looking forward to that.

As far as when you'll see me in an IndyCar again, I'm not really sure. A lot depends on how this Indy Lights championship goes. It's going to be an interesting off-season I think. Obviously the goal would be to move up to IndyCar, but lots of things have to fall into place for that to happen. We'll see. I can't really give you a fair answer for that one.

Q. Because there are still some limitations as Dan said in how much testing IndyCar teams can do, how important is it for you to have a good showing in this test to impress some of the IndyCar teams and how do you avoid putting that extra pressure on yourself that day?

JACK HARVEY: I think for different reasons, testing is limited in IndyCar. I think for all of us to get an opportunity to drive one in the first place should help us along the way in trying to get another test sorted.

I mean, teams, when they do get an opportunity to test, are probably not going to want to put a stone-cold rookie in the car. Hopefully this is a good opportunity for us all just to go out there, get some good testing under you're belt, do some good laps, give good feedback, try to help the team out. If you do a good job, I'm sure there will be more tests to come.

Spencer said it really well in his earlier answer. Ultimately what we're all trying to achieve next week is the start of a new path for us trying to promote ourselves into IndyCar. Doing a morning at Sonoma is probably the best opportunity I've ever had to work towards being a professional driver.

Without trying to put any pressure on ourselves, it's a pressure-filled sport. There's always pressure whether you're just going out there to test or going to race. You always have an objective which we're trying to achieve every time.

What it could mean for the future?  It could mean a lot of things for the future. It could promote you into a testing role with the team. It could help get you a race seat for teams. For all of us to go out, give a good account of ourselves, work with the team well, make it visible we are doing that, might inspire the team to come onboard and give you a test and an opportunity, too.

Testing next week is going to be important. There's no two ways about that. At the end of the day there's not many people in the world that get to say they've driven an IndyCar. I think all seven guys can consider ourselves very, very lucky that however the season ends for everybody, we'll still have driven an IndyCar, which is one of the things I wanted to achieve when I set out in go-karts. It could just lead to greater things in the future.

Q. Spencer, anything to add to that?

SPENCER PIGOT: No. I mean, I think Jack was pretty accurate for me as well. Obviously you always want to do well and drive the car quickly. At the end of the day there's a specific role for us here at this test, and that's to help the teams out. The main goal for the teams is to test and get ready for their season finale.

There's no real pressure on me to go out and try to perform and try and be the quickest all the time, do this or that. It's just simply helping them get more track time for their full-time drivers and getting an experience of driving an IndyCar for the first time, which is a dream come true.

Hopefully it will lead to more opportunities in IndyCar, whichever team it may be. But there's no pressure to perform and be the quickest. Just want to go in and learn and help them out as much as I can.

Q. Dan, looking ahead to the finale weekend at Mazda Raceway, how excited are you to have that standalone showcase event and how important is it for the Mazda Road to Indy for you to have that event?

DAN ANDERSEN: I think it's pretty exciting. Mazda Raceway is a fantastic venue, iconic venue. The drivers are looking forward to it, the teams are looking forward to it. It's a beautiful area to host our finale. With Mazda as one of the key partners as what we're doing here, it's certainly appropriate.

It's challenging on the promoter's side. In IndyCar things that come easy and naturally are a bit more challenging. We're bringing a lot more IndyCar staff to Mazda Raceway than we intended to. We want to make sure this is a championship finale and the competition is fierce and make sure we have all our I's dotted and our T's crossed. Logistically challenging for my staff but we love it. We'd like to see some IndyCar drivers do some cameos. They're have been some drivers that have expressed interest in that. There's still some car. We'd like to see some IndyCar drivers jump in an Indy Lights car and have some fun. We hope that happens. We're not saying that's going to happen, but it will be fun.

Last year's finale, all three series came down to the last race. Very exciting. I expect the same thing this year. Real good contests going on at all three levels.

THE MODERATOR: As we have no further questions, we'll thank everybody for their time and wish the drivers best of luck next week when they test at Sonoma Raceway.
(ht: FastScripts by ASAP Sports)

British race team Carlin's United Arab Emirates driver Ed Jones negotiates Turn 4 at the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach. Jones currently sits at P3 in the IndyLights season points championship. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2015)

The list of Verizon IndyCar Series drivers testing at the venue that will host the championship-deciding race includes six of the 10 drivers mathematically eligible for the title. The 85-lap, high-stakes race carries double points, with 100 awarded to the winner, 80 for second, 70 for third, etc., along with the regular four bonus points over three categories (Verizon P1 Award winner, leading a lap, leading the most laps).

Montoya holds a nine-point advantage over Rahal entering the penultimate race of the season Aug. 23 at Pocono Raceway. Dixon, who won last August at Sonoma Raceway, is 34 points out of first place.

"INDYCAR is doing a good job to promote the ladder series, and the rules that allow IndyCar drivers a test day with an IndyLights driver is an example," Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing team manager Ricardo Nault said. "We'll be splitting the day with Ed Jones, not only per the rules, but to give him the opportunity to help us develop the car and give him some time driving.

"Being second in the championship, we want to put our best foot forward and give it our best chance. We'd be behind if we didn't go there. We have to maximize every opportunity."

An additional car at the test will be driven by Mikhail Aleshin, who will use the day as a refresher in the No. 77 Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda. It will be Aleshin's first time behind the wheel of an Indy car since he sustained a concussion, chest injuries, fractured ribs and a broken shoulder in an August 2014 practice crash at Auto Club Speedway. SPM has named Aleshin as a third team entry for Sonoma along with Briscoe and James Jakes.

(ht: Verizon IndyCar Series)

... notes from The EDJE





TAGS: Mazda Road To INDY, Matthew Brabham, Sean Rayhall, Ryan Phinny, Ed Jones, Jack Harvey, Spencer Pigot, Nelson Piquet Jr., @RaceSonoma, IndyLights, The EDJE, Andretti Autosport, Marco Andretti, Chip Ganassi Racing Teams, Scott Dixon, KVSH Racing, Sebastien Bourdais, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, Graham Rahal, Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, Ryan Briscoe, Team Penske, Juan Pablo Montoya, Will Power,

Sunday, May 10, 2015

At GP Of INDY It's Rayhall vs. Rahal ('RAyHALl') ... Is There An Echo In Here?

Fans walk the frontstretch during the post-race track invasion at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via VICS

At GP Of INDY It's Rayhall vs. Rahal ('RAyHALl') ... Is There An Echo In Here?

At the Indianapolis Motor Speedway (IMS) during the final day of competition during the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, the only name heard, it seemed, was the sound made by the last name of a one-time Indy 500 winner (1986) - Bobby Rahal. In this case the name heard belonged to two different drivers in separate open-wheel series, although sounding the same, was spelled in two different ways.

Fans observe on track road course action on the mounds at IMS. Image Credit: Dana Garrett via VICS

The first session of the day belonged to a first-time driver in new IndyLights Series (that features a new Dallara racing platform powered by Mazda that looks like disturbingly like the ChampCar DP01 - down to the louvers in the sidepod) by the last name of Rayhall ... Sean Rayhall (8Star Motorsports).

Sean Rayhall leading IndyLights Race 2 at IMS. Image Credit: Tim Holle via VICS

He began the two race event by qualifying third and finishing second in Race 1 where he received a Podium trophy. on this final day of the event weekend, he began Race 2 in P2 along side of season series points leader and polesetter Ed Jones ... drafted his way down the front straight to put on a clean pass in Turn 1 and young Rayhall was never seriously challenged after the second GREEN Flag flew for the balance of the 35 lap race.

Sean Rayhall wins the IndyLights Race 2 at IMS. Image Credit: Doug Mathews via VICS

Post Race Quote:

Sean Rayhall  (#8 Bass Egg and Edvisors-8Star Motorsports): "In my head, that was longer than the six hours I've driven in endurance races! Jack was probably faster than me, but I was trying to save my tires for the end in case he got close. The restart had me nervous but I used a little trick I picked up driving Late Model (stock) cars to keep him back. After that, the only thing that was going through my head was to keep hitting my marks. I never expected this. Racing against guys like Max, RC, Ed, these guys have been doing open-wheel racing for the last five or six years, while I've done endurance racing. I'm inexperienced compared to them; it was an honor yesterday just to be on the podium with them so to be able to win, I'm just blown away. In the end, it's another race car. It's a switch in your head; you go from one to another, you drive different styles and push in different ways but you get to a point where you can flip it on and flip it off."

Sean Rayhall leading IndyLights Race 2 at IMS. Image Credit: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography

He improved all event weekend long at the IMS infield road course where he posted a P5 in Practice 1, a P6 in Practice 2, A P3 in Qualifications, A Podium P2 in Race 1, a P1 in Practice 3, and brought home the Podium hardware in Race 2 with the winner's trophy and bragging rights for next year if he is still driving IndyLights.

P1 Rayhall, P2 Enerson, P3 Chilton at IMS Race 2. Image Credit: IndyLights

As reported by IndyCar:

Rayhall crossed the finish line 4.9438 seconds ahead of RC Enerson (Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian). Max Chilton (Carlin) finished third. After seven of 16 races, Ed Jones (Carlin) holds the provisional points lead (176), 14 ahead of Jack Harvey (Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian).

After only two races, Sean Rayhall (8Star Motorsports) has P11 in the points (81) out of 14 drivers with points.


Which brings us to the main event of the weekend, the fifth race of the Verizon IndyCar Series - Grand Prix of Indianapolis, and the other Rahal ... Graham Rahal.

This excerpted and edited from The Columbus Dispatch -

IndyCar: Graham Rahal trying to make the best of slower car
By: Tim May - Friday May 8, 2015 10:44 PM

Coming off a stirring run to a second-place finish in the previous IndyCar race, Graham Rahal spoke of renewed momentum for the Rahal Letterman Lanigan race team headed into Saturday’s second Grand Prix of Indianapolis.

He stuck with the momentum on Friday, but after qualifying he wasn’t happy. Neither were most of the other 11 drivers in the 25-car field who are using Honda engines and aerodynamic devices.

Chevrolet drivers smoked them. Team Penske’s Will Power led the way, taking the pole for the race on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The “fast six” final qualifying was all Chevy; the top 12 who advanced to second-round qualifying included just one Honda, Jack Hawksworth from the Foyt Racing team, who wound up 11th.

It was like taking a “knife to a gun fight,” said Rahal, who will start 17th.

This year, IndyCar moved from stock bodies for all of the cars to aero kits (the downforce-inducing wings and pods on the cars) designed and produced by the two engine manufacturers in the series. If a team uses Honda engines it also uses the Honda aero kit. The same with Chevy.

Through the first four races and headed into the fifth, all on road or street courses, Chevy aero kits routinely have produced the faster times.

“It’s demoralizing,” Rahal said. “There’s nothing we can do; it’s out of our control. Our team has done the best job, I think, of driving the Honda all year (he’s eighth in points, up from 19th last season), but we’ve got to get the cars better.”

The Chevy drivers know there is a disparity. There is a chance of rain for the race today, which could close that gap.

“If it’s wet, absolutely,” Power said. Honda has “a lot of good drivers in their camp. Right now, they just don’t have their aero kits side of things together. … I hope they bridge that gap. It is more competitive when it’s an even playing field, which it isn’t right now.”
[Reference]


The race was run and it wasn't wet ... just a little messy at first, and fast (only one Full Course YELLOW Flag).

Seven cars were visibly involved in the Turn One incident, at race start, when the pack funneled down into the sharp first corner. Others got banged and bent. Third place starter, Helio Castroneves/No.3 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, rear-ended second place starter, Scott Dixon/No.9 Target Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet. At least two cars stalled and had to be started – Jack Hawksworth/No.41 ABC Supply AJ Foyt and Josef Newgarden/No.21 Century 21 CFH Racing Chevrolet. Everyone else continued, eventually, but some had to pit for repairs. Image Credit: Eric Schwarzkopf

From IndyCar - ANGIE’S LIST GRAND PRIX OF INDIANAPOLIS RACE RUNNING:

Lap 1: GREEN flag at 3:49 p.m. 1-Power leads the field into Turn 1. FULL COURSE CAUTION, contact in Turn 1 involving 9-Dixon, 3-Castroneves, 41-Hawksworth, 5-Hinchcliffe and 21-Newgarden. 3-Castroneves and 5-Hinchcliffe keep going. 9-Dixon, 41-Hawksworth and 21-Newgarden are stopped in Turn 1, assisted by the Holmatro Safety Team, restarted and return to the field.

Lap 2: Pits are open. Pitting are: 25-Wilson (replace front wing), 83-Kimball, 5-Hinchcliffe, 3-Castroneves, 7-Jakes, 9-Dixon (replace front and rear wings), 21-Newgarden (replace rear wing), 18-Huertas, 41-Hawksworth (replace front wing).

Lap 4: GREEN flag. 1-Power leads 22-Pagenaud. 15-Rahal has advanced 11 positions from the start to sixth place.

A photo posted by Edmund Jenks (@the_edje) on

This excerpted and edited from NBC Sports Motorsports Talk -

Graham Rahal bridesmaid again in Grand Prix of Indianapolis
By: Daniel McFadin - May 9, 2015, 7:14 PM EDT

It never rained and Rahal didn’t require its services. Thanks to a Lap 1, Turn 1 crash involving Helio Castroneves, Scott Dixon, Jack Hawksworth and Josef Newgarden, Rahal was able to go from 17th to sixth before he made it to Turn 5 on the opening lap.

“I said I’ll go as far left as they can, I’ll have a great angle to cut to the apex,” Rahal said of his plan for the first turn. “Worst comes to worse I’ll do the shortcut. It’ll be fine. Sure enough it worked perfect. I saw smoke everywhere. Next thing I know I see (Scott Dixon). I got (JR) Hildebrand into four. That definitely went our way.”

Then a strategy of pitting a lap later than the leaders put Rahal into the top three and within reasonable distance of Power. He led nine laps during green flag pit stops, but afterward was never able to make up full deficit due to lapped cars.

“I feel good about it. We’ve come away from finishing first by like three seconds combined,” Rahal said. “This tiny little one car team is fighting with Penske and that feels pretty good.”

It should feel good, though finishing second is undoubtedly getting old.

Still, Rahal, now fifth in points with his single-car team, has multiple podiums in a season for the first time since the 2011 campaign when Rahal notched three with Chip Ganassi Racing.
[Reference]

Angie's List #GPofINDY Podium (middle - Will Power P1, right - Graham Rahal P2, left - Juan Pablo Montoya P3) - This is Will Power’s first victory this season and 25th of his career, which ties him with Gordon Johncock for 15th place on the all-time list. It comes in Power’s 144th career start. Power is the fifth different winner in as many races in the 2015 Verizon IndyCar Series season (following Juan Pablo Montoya, James Hinchcliffe, Scott Dixon and Josef Newgarden). The #GPofINDY race featured six different leaders (Will Power, Graham Rahal, Charlie Kimball, Scott Dixon, James Hinchcliffe and James Jakes). None of the six led a lap in the inaugural 2014 Angie’s List Grand Prix of Indianapolis. Graham Rahal finished second for the second straight race, tying his season-best finish. Image Credit: Eric Schwarzkopf via FB

This Verizon IndyCar Series season now has had 5 races with the last two showing great promise for the rest of 2015. Some complaints about the lack of Mushroom Busting or Trailing Turbulence which reduces an ease in passing with one of the most vocal drivers in the on-air post race comments being Sebastien Bourdais (starting P7 and finished P4).

Don't tell this to Graham Rahal (race's most improved 15 positions - started P17 - Finished P2) or, Helio Castroneves (started P3, booted Dixon in Turn 1, dropped back to P23 or P24 on Lap 10 pitstop, finished P6), or for that matter, the Verizon IndyCar Series PR department who is boasting 192 passes for position on the track, 11 lead changes and six leaders in the 82-lap race.

Podium Press Conference >>>

No matter how it's spelled (Rayhall / Rahal) it all sounds the same and that "RAyHALl" sound heard throughout the paddocks, for most all of the day, Saturday, is the sound the of success few other names have at the 2nd annual Grand Prix of Indianapolis.

What a way to start the "Month Of May" at IMS. Next up ... practice for the 99th running of the Indianapolis 500 will begin May 11 (racecontrol.indycar.com).

Qualifications will be May 16 - ABC @ 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm ET and May 17 - ABC @ 1:00 pm - 3:00pm ET - includes V E R I Z O N  I N D Y C A R  S E R I E S – Q U A L I F Y I N G – F A S T 9 (racecontrol.indycar.com).

Coors Light Carb Day will be May 22 (racecontrol.indycar.com).

The INDY 500 race will be May 24 and televised at 12:00pm ET on ABC Networks and racecontrol.indycar.com.

... notes from The EDJE


TAGS: Sean Rayhall, Graham Rahal, Grand Prix of Indianapolis, Month of May, 8Star Motorsports, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, IndyLights, IndyCar, Will Power, Juan Pablo Montoya, RC Enerson, Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, Curb-Agajanian, Max Chilton, Carlin, The EDJE, Verizon IndyCar Series, Indianapolis Motor Speedway,