Showing posts with label Rinus Veekay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rinus Veekay. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2025

Firestone Grand Prix Of St. Petersburg: New Pairings Set Stage In NTT INDYCAR SERIES Opener



Firestone Grand Prix Of St. Petersburg: New Pairings Set Stage In NTT INDYCAR SERIES Opener

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES roared to life on March 02, 2025, with the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, kicking off a 17-race season filled with anticipation. The Motorsports Journal team spotlighted several intriguing driver-team combinations poised to disrupt the established order, bringing fresh dynamics to a grid dominated by titans like Team Penske, Chip Ganassi Racing, and Andretti Global. As the streets of St. Petersburg came alive with the sound of engines, these pairings hinted at a season of surprises.

Key Driver-Team Pairings to Watch in 2025

Alexander Rossi now carries his veteran savvy to Ed Carpenter Racing, marking his latest chapter under Chevrolet power after stints with Andretti Global and Arrow McLaren. Known for his 2016 Indianapolis 500 triumph, Rossi’s ability to adapt to new machinery and team cultures positions him as a driver to watch. His experience could prove pivotal, especially when the series rolls into Indy in May.

Christian Lundgaard stepping into Rossi’s former seat at Arrow McLaren, arrives with a point to prove. The Danish driver flashed potential during his Rookie of the Year campaign with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing but struggled to convert starts into podiums. With Arrow McLaren’s resources and Chevrolet backing, Lundgaard might finally unlock the consistency needed to challenge the frontrunners.

Rinus VeeKay trades Ed Carpenter Racing for Dale Coyne Racing, stepping into a lead role at a team hungry for results. The Dutchman’s occasional brilliance—highlighted by a win at Indianapolis in 2021—has yet to translate into sustained success. If Dale Coyne Racing can harness VeeKay’s raw speed, 2025 could mark his breakout year.

Callum Ilott returns to INDYCAR with PREMA Racing, a powerhouse stepping into the series for the first time. With 38 starts and five top-10 finishes from his earlier tenure, Ilott brings a knack for guiding new teams, honed during his time with Juncos Hollinger Racing. PREMA’s pedigree in junior formulas suggests they could hit the ground running, and Ilott’s steady hand might steer them toward early success.

David Malukas joins AJ Foyt Racing alongside Santino Ferrucci, eager to rewrite a career narrative interrupted by misfortune. A rising star in INDY NXT, Malukas saw his Arrow McLaren opportunity slip away last year after a wrist injury from a bicycle accident sidelined him. Now healthy and paired with a team looking to climb the standings, he aims to showcase the talent that once marked him as a future star.

These drivers, each with a blend of untapped potential and fierce determination, entered St. Petersburg ready to challenge the status quo. Could they upset the dominance of Penske, Ganassi, and Andretti? The season opener offered the first clues.


Scott Dixon, Alex Palou and Josef Newgarden - Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg - Image Credit: Chris Owens via Penske Entertainment (2025)

Race Recap: Drama Unfolds in St. Petersburg

The Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg wasted no time delivering chaos. On the opening lap, a Turn 3 pileup set the tone: Arrow McLaren’s rookie Nolan Siegel collided with Team Penske’s Will Power, whose car then collected Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s debutant Louis Foster. The incident underscored the tight margins of street-circuit racing and left teams scrambling to adjust strategies.

While the top nine cars - led by the likes of Team Penske's pole-sitter Scott McLaughlin, Meyer Shank Racing's teammates Felix Rosenqvist, and Marcus Armstrong - opted to stay out during the ensuing caution, a group including Herta, Newgarden, Dixon, Alex Palou, Kyle Kirkwood, Rinus VeeKay, and Marcus Ericsson dove into the pits. Swapping their mandatory soft-compound Firestone tires for the harder primary compound, these drivers banked on early stops to gain track position later. The split strategies hinted at a tactical chess match unfolding across the 100-lap race.

For the spotlighted pairings, the opener provided a mixed bag. Rossi’s experience with Ed Carpenter Racing kept him in contention among the leaders, while Lundgaard navigated the chaos at Arrow McLaren with a steady debut. VeeKay’s early pit call at Dale Coyne Racing showed promise, though he’d need to claw back positions. Ilott and PREMA Racing avoided the Turn 3 mess, quietly building momentum, while Malukas at AJ Foyt Racing fought to stay in the midfield pack, shaking off rust from his time away.

As the checkered flag loomed, the race tested these new alliances under pressure. All the while, established teams asserted their early dominance - Penske’s Newgarden and Ganassi’s Dixon looked poised for strong finishes - the fresh pairings offered glimpses of what might come. The St. Petersburg streets, unforgiving as ever, served notice: 2025 could be a season where new names will have trouble rising to the fore.

Despite early shake-ups and strategic plays, the established stars prevailed. Chip Ganassi Racing's Alex Palou, after 138 days since his 2024 season Championship victory, kicked off the season with another dominant win - setting the stage for an unprecedented fourth season championship in the title march of three-time and two-time defending series champion Alex Palou.

His Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Scott Dixon followed in P2 with a last lap pass due to Josef Newgarden's car was falling short of fuel, while Team Penske’s teammates Josef Newgarden and pole-sitter Scott McLaughlin finished P3 and P4, respectively.

Andretti Global drivers Kyle Kirkwood and Marcus Ericsson rounded out the top six, solidifying their team’s competitive standing early in the season.

Key Driver-Team Pairings Opening Race Finishes

P8 - Christian Lundgaard - No. 7 Arrow Mclaren Chevrolet
P9 - Rinus VeeKay - No. 18 Dale Coyne Racing Honda
P10 - Alexander Rossi - No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet
P13 - David Malukas - No. 4 AJ Foyt Chevrolet
P19 - Callum Ilott - No. 90 PREMA Racing Chevrolet


While these established young challengers with new teams showed promise, the season opener proved that the established frontrunners remain the teams to beat. With 16 races still to go, will this new wave of talent find their breakthrough moment? Stay tuned.

... notes from The EDJE




Post Script:
The numbers are in for FOX’s first INDYCAR Series broadcast, and the audience who watched Alex Palou and Josef Newgarden battle for victory was measured at 1.417 million viewers, a steep increase from last year’s race. Using the previous St. Petersburg race as a guide, the live 2024 broadcast with previous network partner on NBC generated an audience of 974,700 combined viewers using the TAD (Total Audience Delivery) metric that includes live streaming. FOX does not use TAD.

In the move to FOX, INDYCAR received an audience increase of 442,300 viewers, and according to the broadcaster, this ranks as the most-watched INDYCAR race on network television (outside the Indy 500) in 14 years. Minus streaming info, FOX Sports also reported Friday’s airing of opening practice on its FOX Sports 1 cable channel had 95,000 viewers. The strong viewership signals a promising start for INDYCAR’s new broadcast era, amplifying the spotlight on both its established stars and rising talents.

The next NTT INDYCAR SERIES race is The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix on Sunday, March 23 at Thermal, California (3 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio Network).



TAGS: NTT, INDYCAR SERIES, Firestone Grand Prix Of St. Petersburg, FOX Sports, Christian Lundgaard, Rinus VeeKay, Alexander Rossi, David Malukas, Callum Ilott, The EDJE

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

FIRST Full Season In The Hybrid Technology Era Of The NTT INDYCAR SERIES

Chip Ganassi Racing's then two-time champion Alex Palou leads the field out in his Green & White No. 10 Dallara Honda on the first lap of the second and final Heat of the made for TV The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge non-points paying race in Coachella Valley near Indio. He went on to win the race, money, and eventually his third series season championship. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks - Motorsports Journal (2024)

FIRST Full Season In The Hybrid Technology Era Of The NTT INDYCAR SERIES

The 2025 season will feature 27 full time competitors from 11 different teams with the usual mash-up of drivers changing teams and past drivers with INDYCAR experience being able to rejoin the field.

One of the early notable races for points will be the addition of The THERMAL Club. the two previous years had the special private road track be a pre-season test bed followed with the next year having a non-points paying contest designed for TV "Heats" format race, including a large purse for the drivers to compete for. 

The race scheduled for the weekend starting Friday, March 21 through March 23, 2025, is the second race of the season after the tradition of Saint Petersburg, Florida. One has to assume that this too, will be a "Heats" format race - not the best look for an open wheel series on a dedicated road track.

Sometimes, what's best, it is good to preview official communications portals in order to get a gage on this upcoming season and the challenges that will confront the 27 driver field this season. As usual, the two lead dogs in terms of teams will again be Chip Ganassi Racing with Scott Dixon, Alex Palou and Kyffin Simpson versus Team Penske with Will Power, Josef Newgarden, and Scott McLaughlin.

NTT INDYCAR Preview - Inside Line: What’s Under the Radar at St. Pete?

Today’s question NTT INDYCAR Preview: What is something under the radar to keep an eye on this weekend in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES season opener, the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding (noon ET Sunday, FOX, FOX Deportes, INDYCAR Radio Network)?

Curt Cavin: I keep asking myself, who is the next big thing in this series? In a season-opening race with loads of faces in new places, I keep coming back to Christian Lundgaard joining Arrow McLaren. I’m not ready to say the 23-year Dane can win Sunday’s race, but he has a street circuit victory in this series – in Toronto in 2023 – and has raced well in St. Petersburg (two top-11 finishes with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing). In this season opener, Lundgaard will drive for an organization that has excelled in St. Petersburg the past two years. Pato O’Ward finished second in 2023 and won last year’s race; Alexander Rossi finished fourth and sixth, respectively.

Eric Smith: I feel like I’ve been on the Scott Dixon storyline all offseason, and I’d be remiss if I stopped entering the 2025 season opener. Remarkably, Dixon has reached victory lane 58 times at 28 different tracks but is 0-for-20 on the streets of St. Petersburg. However, the six-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion has four podium finishes in his last eight starts on this track, and his seventh-place finish last season continued his streak of finishing eighth or better every year since 2016. Also, among the last seven victories for Dixon, four have come on city streets (Toronto 2022, Nashville 2023, Long Beach 2024, Detroit 2024). The Chip Ganassi Racing driver boasted a series-leading 3.0 average finish on street tracks last season. Add it up, and I think he’s primed to earn his fourth season-opening victory, joining 2003 and again in 2008 at Homestead-Miami Speedway to go along with 2020 at Texas Motor Speedway. He won three of his six championships in those seasons.

Paul Kelly: There are two “under the radar” stories I’m watching this weekend, mainly due to competition tweaks and how they will affect team’s strategies. One is the switch in Firestone’s weekend tire allotment at each event, as each team will get an additional set of Firestone Firehawk alternate-compound tires and one less set of Firestone Firehawk primary-compound tires, with five sets each. This may force teams to manage their tires more carefully over the weekend, especially at circuits where the primaries show an advantage. But the main “down low” story I’m watching is the ability for cars to restart on track – and now in the pits – without the AMR INDYCAR Safety Team due to the new hybrid units. There was only one street course race last season after the hybrid debuted in July at Mid-Ohio, at Toronto, so we really haven’t seen how fewer yellows at fraught, bumpy street circuits like St. Pete will change team’s fuel and tire strategies. But there is almost one certainty: The onboard starters will create more green flag action, something everyone wants.
ENDS

On a full season basis, here are the thoughts of two longtime paddock cruisers with their view upon what to expect - IndyStar's Nathan Brown and Joey Barnes, Founder - Motorsports Tribune. 

The Inside Line - Nathan Brown and Joey Barnes

In this episode of The Inside Line, Nathan Brown and Joey Barnes roll through each of the 11 full-time IndyCar teams on the grid in 2025 and ask their biggest questions facing them this season.

We at Motorsports Journal have a tremendous level of hope for a few mixes that have presented themselves with regards to teams and drivers combining to maybe shake things up.

Alexander Rossi - moving from Andretti Global to Arrow McLaren and now with his first year driving for long term owner/driver Ed Carpenter for Chevrolet. This mix can prove to be one of the biggest sleepers, especially at the INDY500.

Christian Lundgaard - stepping into the seat left vacant when Rossi decided to move on from Arrow McLaren. It was a shame that his promise didn't fully show itself when he was a Rookie Of The Year with RLL, but there were serious flashes of top-flight light.

Rinus Veekay - while losing a seat at Ed Carpenter Racing, Rinus lands as the primary driver at Dale Coyne Racing. More flashes of INDYCAR Rookie Of The Year verve left unrealized may get a magic vision for this Dutch talent.

Callum Ilott - a driver who left the series after 38 races yet managed 5 top 10s is returning with a first time NTT INDYCAR SERIES team with PREMA Racing. He has experience with teams efforts that are new to a series. His first exposure was driving a second car for then new Juncos Hollinger Racing. PREMA is new to INDYCAR, but not new as a racing organization. This F1 

David Malukas - this INDY NXT standout blew his grand chance last year to be with a top team when he landed a seat with Arrow McLaren, but broke his wrist in a bicycle accident and could not race until it healed. Arrow McLaren released him just after he was cleared and for 2025, he will be a teammate on AJ Foyt - Santino Ferrucci. Will he pop-up and deliver his hidden promise?

These drivers are all the hidden promises within a field of excellent standout drivers of accomplishment - will they break on through? The first race of a 17 event season begins this weekend with the new broadcast partner FOX Sports.


Christian Lundgaard's Arrow McLaren as it flashes by while testing at Sebring, Florida.
Image Credit: Chris Owens via NICS (2025)

As commented when someone on FB/META asked "Who is your pick to win St. Pete this weekend?" Motorsports Journal responded "Just throwin' a dart here - Arrow McLaren driver Christian Lundgaard."

... notes from The EDJE

FEATURED SYNDICATION - click image >>>








TAGS: 2025, NTT, INDYCAR SERIES, Championship, IndyStar, Joey Barnes, Nathan Brown, Will Buxton, Christian Lundgaard, Alexander Rossi, David Malukas, Callum Ilott, Rinus Veekay, The EDJE

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

NTT INDYCAR SERIES' Best Shown At Firestone Grand Prix Of St Petersburg 2020 Finale

 

Scott Dixon & Family celebrate the achievement of a 6th NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Championship with team owner Chip Ganassi of Chip Ganassi Racing on the podium at Saint Petersburg, Florida. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2020) 

NTT INDYCAR SERIES' Best Shown At Firestone Grand Prix Of St Petersburg 2020 Finale

At Saint Petersburg, Florida, here in a rare (why?) late October 2020 season-ending NTT INDYCAR SERIES race, a race that was thrown about every kind of challenge to overcome, from extreme build-up of rubber trackside marbles, to rain drops on the front straight, off track slides and sidepod rubs, witnessed a driver that did everything he had to do to win the race from P8 in order to best the season points leader who started at P11. It was not to be. Team Penske's Josef Newgarden took a 32 point deficit into this Finale but by winning and having Scott Dixon finish on the podium next to him at P3, he was still 16 points behind to finish at position two for the season. What he needed was to have some of these challenges, or a team miscue, force Dixon to finish P10 or worse.

All Hail To Chip Ganassi Racing's Scott Dixon - for achieving his sixth season championship - most of all time given the modern era - and only one behind AJ Foyt at seven championships which were completed before Scott Dixon was born in the far away island nation of New Zealand some 40 years ago!

This race was the first time the IndyCar season's final race was held at a temporary street course (why?) and this venue served up a classic whose ending wasn't settled until the last lap. Sure, many complain that a street course remains, pretty much, a nose to tail train where the only changes that can happen on the track are actually on pit lane, a Yellow Flag ... or so, or weather changing the whole nature of the racing surface - a nose to tail affair for sure. 

Let Sunday, October 25th, 2020 show that this wasn't a template that would rule this day, starting with the person who took the pole position at St. Pete for the 9th time in 12 races he's entered at this venue off of Tampa Bay, Team Penske's Will Power. The template was thrown out from behind the 60 pound Aeroscreen window when, after the field performed a clean start, Power missed a shift on lap 5 which had him be passed by Andretti Autosport's Alexander Rossi and Colton Herta.

RACER's MARSHALL PRUETT: St Petersburg reflections >>>

NTT IndyCar Series Media Conference
2020 Manufacturer's Trophy - Honda - Ted Klaus

ZOOM Call - Edmund Jenks - FROM Transcript:

Q. What challenges did the new Aeroscreen bring? Obviously you overcame them much more strongly. You still had to deal with the Aeroscreen in a way like any other manufacturer would. How did that work out for you guys? What were the big challenges? 

TED KLAUS: That's a great question. It was a big kind of change in the off-season. Really I would say the teams that embraced the driving simulator more holistically and were able to trust those results without a lot of track time were the teams that rolled off the trailers well. 

You can see as the season evolved, the teams that were kind of catching up to those Aeroscreen balance issues, it changed the aerodynamics for the surrounding cars, not so much for your car. It changed the way the car transferred load, especially during cornering. The cars don't just accelerate, brake, and corner, they do a lot of braking and cornering and accelerating and cornering. It really did upset things. And some teams really struggled with it. 

Combined with less testing, less of kind of an iterative loop to confirm your assumptions, boy, you have to hand it to Chip Ganassi Racing. They rolled off the truck fast and early. Scott got it done. 

You have to hand it to Penske and Josef at the end of the season coming back. Andretti as well. In the middle, Rahal marching along, really I think quite consistent and maybe we're looking for a breakout year next year from Rahal. I certainly hope so. 

Q. What are the bigger challenges going forward in 2021? Do you see more two-race weekends? How does that affect you? 

TED KLAUS: I really hope for the fans that INDYCAR continues to look at the length of the races in conjunction with the TV package. You saw with the first Harvest GP race, a fantastic race broke out because we were able to just kind of get on with it, really turn 'em loose without having fuel- saving mode. That's one thought for competition. 

I think for us, it's so many small little things. We'll be entering our 10th year with this engine. It's a lot of attention to detail. Also you got to hit the reset button. You've got to forget everything you did this year, get hungry again. You can't let your mind say that it's the 10th year. You have to assume there's incremental increases in everything we do. 

Finally the drivers need to drive us. We need to open up our ears and listen to Scott Dixon and Graham Rahal and Alexander Rossi and Colton Herta, Alex Palou, Jack Harvey, all these drivers. Let them drive us and our priorities for next year. Those are some thoughts as we go forward. And David Salters is going to be my successor. He is no stranger to racing. He's going to listen our teams and he's going to drive HPD to bring the power to them.
ENDS

Ed Carpenter Racing's Rinus Veekay from The Netherlands lands Rookie Of The Year for this health event truncated 14 race 2020 season. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2020)


NTT IndyCar Series Media Conference
2020 Rookie Of The Year, Rinus Veekay & Firestone Grand Prix Of St Petersburg 2020 Finale Winner, Josef Newgarden

THE MODERATOR: We've been joined by our new 2020 Rookie of the Year, Rinus VeeKay. Lots of news for you today. It was announced you have a new deal for next year staying where you are. And with taking the green flag, you became the Rookie of the Year. Talk to us about your day today.

RINUS VEEKAY: Yeah, first of all, very happy with my achievements for getting the Rookie of the Year. Also very happy to stay with ECR next year. Great team, really a team that helps me to get better and better, prepare throughout all the season.

Yeah, today was tough. We started with really good speed at the start. Yellow kind of threw me, the first one. Got into the pack, yeah, tangled up early, unavoidable. It happens. It's a street course. I'm not the only one that had a rough day.

We had the speed. I know we will be good at the season opener next year.

THE MODERATOR: We'll go ahead and take questions from the media for Rinus.

Q. Do you think you could have won? At one point you had the undercut on Josef towards the start of the race. If things had gone your way, do you think you had the pace to win that today and that was a lost victory or would it have been tough coming with the undercut towards the end of the race?

RINUS VEEKAY: It's never easy. Everything has to go into your favor. The way it looked pace-wise, I was kind of saving a little bit of tires. It was looking very good.

Then, yeah, after that first caution, went downhill pretty quick anyway. If that didn't happen, I think the podium was still possible, even having to go through the pack. We really had the speed.

It was tough, but I think, yeah, my second podium could have been a fact today. Going to have to wait a few months until I can do it over.

Q. The news this morning that you'll be returning to Ed Carpenter. Have you spoken to any other teams? Could you give us a little bit of background about the decision you made to stay with Ed?

RINUS VEEKAY: Yes, I'm very happy to stay with ECR. Everyone kind of agrees that the way we work together was great this year. Everyone agreed to keep going for another season. Everyone was happy with how we're doing. I think I have a really good team of guys surrounding me. I'm very happy about this year. I think we can, yeah, go for even more podiums and hopefully win this next season.

Team Penske's Josef Newgarden at P1 podium position for the race and P2 for the season, sprays champagne on Chip Ganassi's Scott Dixon who at P3 podium position wins his 6th NTT INDYCAR SERIES 2020 season championship. Image Credit Chris Owens via NICS (2020)


THE MODERATOR: We've been joined by our race winner, Josef Newgarden, and second place finisher in the championship. A few fun facts about Josef before we get started. It is his fourth win of 2020. He also became the third straight back-to-back winner at St. Pete, having won last year's race as well. Sebastien Bourdais did that in '17 and '18. Juan Pablo Montoya did that in '15 and '16.

Tell us about your day, Josef, the mixed emotions you must be feeling.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, it's very bittersweet the way this all wrapped up. I was a little bit somber coming into this weekend, to be honest with you, I think just because of the fact that we knew we didn't control our own destiny. We knew going into the weekend that we didn't have control over it. The only thing we could do was to take care of what we could control and try to win the race. If you win the race, it gives you the best opportunity to maybe win the championship.

It's tough. It's tough to get to this point, to look at the year, some of the things we've come back from, certainly how close we got, then to fall short. At the end of the day we did. We fell short. Just wasn't good enough.

I think all we can do is shake our competitor's hand, tell Scott great job, tell his team great job, and come back next year and hit him harder. That's all we can really focus on at this point. That's what I'm going to focus on.

Proud of what we did today. It was a really hard race. Tough to get right at the end with all the cautions. The tires were very tricky to drive after the warmup and the caution laps. Happy to get a win out of here. So proud of my team. They were just on it all year. I don't think I would change one thing that we did. I don't see how we could change one thing that we did. They were perfect all season in my eyes. Just short.

I guess a decent way to go into the off-season with another victory and to hold our head up high.

THE MODERATOR: Rinus, we'll let you go before we continue with questions for Josef. Congratulations on your Rookie of the Year.

RINUS VEEKAY: Thank you very much.

THE MODERATOR: We'll continue with questions for Josef.

Q. Lap 79, pass for the lead. You pick off two guys on the restart. How cool was that? What do you recall of that? How much did you realize once you were in the lead, all of a sudden you looked in your rearview mirror and there's Scott in third, you go, Man, that ain't going to be enough?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I wasn't really looking back most of the race, to be honest with you. I did see him there at the end. I could see he was in the mirrors and lurking. I knew they were pitting when we would pit, which is the smart thing to do. They just shadowed us all day, which is really the smart play.

We couldn't control them. We knew that. We knew that going into the weekend. It's the most disheartening thing, you can't control the outcome. All you can control is winning the race, hoping that something falls your way. We didn't have a lot fall our way this year. I was hoping today may be the day.

Like I said, I was looking forward most of the day. All we could do was control what we were doing, where our car was, trying to win the race. That's all I focused on. Once we got to the lead and made the pass, I was pretty happy. Just hoping things shook out for us, just trying to finish off and keep in the lead till the end.

Q. From your viewpoint, the pass for the lead on the restart, take us through that.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It was really tricky today. I mean, I would be surprised if it wasn't noticeable on TV how difficult it was on those restarts. There was a lot of pickup. The tires were extremely cold. We were struggling with the pace car to go quick enough was part of the problem. We couldn't keep temperature in the tires and brakes. Trying to get going again with all the pickup on the tires was really tough.

I knew on that restart Herta was one of the worst to get going with tire warmup. He seemed to struggle the most of anybody almost. I saw Palou kind of go for a pass on him. I knew on the inside it was going to be really tough to pull that off.

I tried to position my car in the middle of them, just wait for an opportunity for them to open the door slightly. That door just kind of half opened. I kept my line very tight to try to squeeze both of them, try to be a bit smoother on throttle, try to get the most out of it on cold tires. It wall really all I could do. It was just enough to get around those guys on the outside. After that I was just trying to hold everybody back.

Q. You end the season with four victories. That's tied for the most of any driver this year. How important is that to you?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I'm really proud of it, for sure. I'm glad to get another win. I hate to harp on the past. I don't want to be in the business of making excuses. I think we could have won six or seven races this year, to be honest with you. On one hand I'm really proud. I think we've had phenomenal racecars. Team Chevy has given us pretty much everything you can ask for. Great engine performance, great partnerships as always. I've always had good races with Hitachi on the car. I don't know why that is. They seem to be a good luck charm specifically for us this year.

I'm disappointed. We could have won six or seven. I don't know that I would change much about what we did this year. I don't know that I'd ask our team to do much different. We sit down and analyze everything, I don't know that we missed steps very often. We got bit a couple times being in the wrong place, wrong time. As far as our decision making, I was really proud of pretty much what we did all year.

Q. I know you mentioned about specific points in your race. I was curious to know if at any point was the team telling you where Scott was? How did you wrap your head around that? How did you maintain focus on the race?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: No, didn't get much info. Wasn't important, to be honest with you. Again, we couldn't control that. We just had to focus on winning the race. That's all I worked on.

I just looked forward, sort of knew the situation around me. Was more intimate with what was going on in front, directly in front of me. That's all I focused on. I wasn't really told where Scott was, what they were doing. I could see them setting up in the pits every time I came in. I noticed that. Figured they would do that. If it was on the flip side, we would do the same thing. If we were behind them in the race, we pretty much would mirror them if we were in their shoes.

I honestly wasn't focused on them because it didn't matter. Anything I was doing compared to them just didn't matter. We had to win. Scott wasn't the guy we were racing. We were focused on the other competitors.

Q. At any point were you worried about the competitors at all because that pass you made for the lead on Alex, it was pretty tight?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, it was very tight. I mean, I can't express enough how difficult it was on the restarts. It was like being on ice for like two laps. Let alone just the first corner, it was like that the entire two laps just to get going.

We were tiptoeing it. I was trying to be a little bit more ginger than those guys on the throttle, keep the car pinched on the apex in turn one as they pushed two-wide. I was on the clean stuff a little bit better. Gave me a better drive on the outside.

Even then I was wide myself in the next corner and about went into the wall. It was just tough, tight corners. I knew for us, we had to go for the win. It was our only chance to win the championship. I wasn't trying to be overly aggressive but I was being aggressive as I possibly could to win the race.

Q. Do you attribute any of the incidents today from what you could tell to tough racing in a season finale with guys going all out? What contributed most to all the on-track incidents we saw today?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Just hard racing. St. Pete, end of the year, first street course of the year. I think everyone was trying to make the most of it. That's part of it.

The other part of it was just the difficulty on restarts. The tires were so cold, they were susceptible to pickup in a really bad way this year for whatever reason. I think it made it hard for us. In some ways it made it exciting for all the racing.

That whole combination of being the only street course of the year, last race of the season, people were going for it. It was in tough conditions that they were doing it.

Q. You mentioned this felt bittersweet for you. How would you characterize what the last 10, 15 laps felt like knowing you were leading the race, have a good chance to win, also knowing that Dixon was right there?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I was just pushing. I was hustling the car, driving as hard as I could, trying to enjoy myself. I really enjoyed the race conditions, love driving a full race. It's my favorite part of the weekend.

I was pushing as hard as possible, trying to go as fast as I could, enjoying that process. I love that. It's my last chance at it for this year until we get back going again next year.

Just doing what we always do, keeping the rhythm, try to finish the race. I'll let the team tell me what happened when we're done.

Q. Your mindset going into the off-season now, is it easier for you knowing you couldn't have really done anything different this year or does that make it more difficult for you from a mental aspect?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I'm torn. I'm so torn with this season. On one hand, like I said, I take pride in the fact that I don't think we did much wrong this year. I really don't. If you look back at it, the one thing that I could nitpick is maybe we should have been on it a little better in a couple qualifying sessions. Yesterday would have been a key example of that where we may have miss stepped in quallie trim or didn't capitalize.

As far as race day, the decision making we did for a complete season, we finished every lap. We had the potential to win six or seven races on merit, in my opinion. It just didn't pan out.

A lot of the days where we should have been on the podium or should have won a race, they didn't fall our way. I'm extremely proud of that fact, that I don't think we would have done much different. When we analyze the whole year, we're not going to point to this mistake or that mistake. There just was not a lot of them, really any at all. It almost makes it that much harder.

You look at the gap that we were at five races to go, 117 back. You look at how much we clawed back for the season finale, to be beat by so little, that's what makes it bittersweet.

On the one hand I'm happy about a hard performance, but sad about the way the whole thing turned out.

Q. Was it important for you to go down swinging, to do everything you could do?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Hell, yeah. Yeah. Look, I show up to win every race, like any of these guys. If you don't have that mindset, I don't know what you're doing here. I'll always preach that.

We went for the win today. Yeah, maybe there's some days you'll say we don't be as risky on strategy, we might pull back a bit on that approach. We gave it everything we had. We tried to win the race. That was our only focus.

Whether we win the championship or not, we want to have a great race day, we want to represent our partners and win the race. That's what we did. We showcased Chevrolet, showed we had the best engine this weekend. Showed off Hitachi, our beautiful car. At the end of the day we won the race but it wasn't enough for the championship. That's okay. You're going to get that.

We shook our competitor's hand, told them good job, will come back next year.

Q. Is it fair to say or categorize this victory, the big bold move for the lead, would it be fair to categorize those as characteristics of you, who you are as a person and race car driver?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don't know. I definitely put my heart out there today. I think people saw that I'll do everything I can to put us in a position to win races or win championships. I've done that ever since I've started driving an INDYCAR. I think if there's anything to say about our performance today, you can definitely draw that.

I've tended to be more measured I think over the last couple years of my career. Specifically at Team Penske I think my approach has been more letting things come to us using our inherent speed and skill sets of our people to maximize the race better than other people.

Whereas today, you know, the only way to win this race was to just win it. You couldn't rest on just letting it come to you. I mean, you had to go and take it. The only way we're going to win this championship was to go and take the win. I certainly took that approach from my driving style today. I put it all out there. I knew we had to take a victory.

Once you get to that point and you're in the lead trying to win the race, fate wasn't in our hand. We just had to wait for something to come our way. Unfortunately it just didn't today.

THE MODERATOR: We'll let Josef go. Thank you, Josef, for joining us. I know it's tough with the situation. Congratulations on your win and we'll see you here again in March. Maybe you can make it three back-to-back-to-back wins.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Cheers. Thank you, everyone, for covering our series. I know it's been a hard year. Appreciate all the effort even with the difficulty. We'll see you guys back here next year. Hopefully it's a little bit more normal. Enjoy your off-season.
ENDS

Championship winning Scott Dixon secures his 6th title - the most championships by any driver in the modern era. One more championship will tie him with AJ Foyt's 40 year old mark at seven championships - set before New Zealander Scott Dixon was born. Painting Image: Bill Patterson via FB Page (2020)


NTT IndyCar Series Media Conference
2020 NTT INDYCAR SERIES Championship Winner, Scott Dixon - his 6th career championship

THE MODERATOR: We have our 2020 NTT INDYCAR Series champion who has joined us, Scott Dixon. It is his sixth title. He beat Josef by 537 points to 521 points. Another fun fact for everyone is that he is the first 40-year-old since 1993 when Nigel Mansell won the championship. With being 40 years old, 3 months, and 3 days, he beat A.J. Foyt for a sixth title who was 40 years old, 8 months, and 23 days. That's a lot to take in there, but congratulations, Scott. Wonderful day for you. Tell us how you're feeling right now with your title.

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, thank you so much. It was definitely stressful I guess four, five, six weeks. I think at one stage we had about a 117-point lead. It definitely started to dwindle away.

I could see some concern on Chip's face and some others. I don't know what they were so worried about (smiling). We just had a smooth day. That's all we had to do. Obviously the hardest thing about today was just the restarts. The pace car speed was pretty slow. It was hard to build temperature. That's the only thing I was really worried about, getting collected or making a small mistake. Seemed most of the others did.

I've got to thank everybody at Chip Ganassi Racing for such a tremendous season. Normally we start off a bit slow but we came out of the gate strong as a team on the first four, which was huge. Had many a podium throughout the season. Just so happy for everybody, our partners, PNC, NTT, Huski Chocolate, everybody that's involved. NTT, so proud of them, to pull up and be such a big part of our series.

I'm over the moon. Six sounds a lot better than five, so I'm definitely over the moon.

THE MODERATOR: We'll start with questions from the media.

Q. We all know this hasn't been your best track, haven't won here before. What was it like having something like this to celebrate here in St. Pete?

SCOTT DIXON: Totally right. That's what I was thinking. We've led races here, are we going to have another bad luck situation. I was really bummed in qualifying because I felt like the car had speed. We just couldn't turn it on quick enough. We had brake problems all day. Once I hit this morning on track, the car was just fantastic once we pledged every part on the car that was to the brakes.

I love this track. I love obviously what Kim and Kevin do here, the mayor, everybody embraces the race here. It makes a huge difference. It feels really cool to finally celebrate something here. We have a lot of memories here, some of them not so great. It's nice to be in this situation to celebrate, celebrate it with loved ones, my family here today, the girls. The team and crew probably later. That's what it's all about. For me it's just the people that make this possible. This journey that we've been on for so long now, 19 years with this team, this is a great way to top it off.

THE MODERATOR: It is the 13th Chip Ganassi Racing championship, two of the last three have been with you. We'll continue with questions.

Q. When you're in a position like you were in today, you played it very smart by basically shadowing Josef Newgarden. Was that pretty much the strategy you formulated before the race?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, we were going to stretch the windows, the Honda engine was just getting such good fuel mileage. I think they were pitting short a little bit just to try to catch that caution that they needed to, or at least one that wasn't going to ruin both of our days.

We did talk about if I saw Josef pit, should I follow him. The team were like, We'll monitor it and we can call you in. As you saw, he'd pit, the next stop we'd go in. It's a bit tense for that lap, because a caution can happen, especially when it's so aggressive with people coming in and out of the pits. We saw plenty of mistakes made coming out of the pits onto the track. That cost guys that were doing very well today.

It was a pretty hairy race. The pace car speed, it was pretty slow. It was very hard to build the tire temp. I've never used first gear so much on this track in my life. You usually normally just use it for pit lane. A lot of restarts in first gear. It was very sketchy, really was a position for myself to make many mistakes today.

Q. How nervous were you on restarts, not so much that you might make a mistake, but somebody around you would?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, we definitely had some great people around me I think. Askew for a lot of it, VeeKay, then Bourdais. I knew I could trust these people, they weren't going to throw it in. Some of the other guys can get a little bit aggressive. I definitely gave some others a little bit more room.

I think the closest situation I had was Harvey, he ran me basically to the wall. I had nowhere to go. We actually touched a little bit coming through six. Luckily enough it wasn't enough to damage the front wing. That was the most stressful part of the whole day. Once we got running, the pace was very good. We could just kind of maintain. The restarts were very sketchy.

Q. With three kids you can complete the collection, each one has a championship. How important was that for you?

SCOTT DIXON: It's definitely a bummer that Kit is not here. He doesn't travel super well. He's a busy boy that is definitely crawling everywhere now, pulling himself up. I'm sure in the next week or two he's going to be walking. He's only nine months and maybe a week or two. He's pretty full on.

It just gives us more fuel to try to come back and repeat, get another championship where he can be in the pictures.

Q. I have to say I realize the smart thing was to shadow Josef. If Josef had lapsed onto a three-stop strategy at any point, would you have done that as well? Yesterday you said the tires were holding on pretty well, that made it less likely you'd need a three-stop strategy. Would you have shadowed him to that extent?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, I think we would have. Definitely depending on the start, if we were in front, we were going to kind of delay it by a lap. Sometimes we were talking about dealing with situations if he does pit, I should just follow him into the pits because the team doesn't have enough time to call it.

We also had the other cars, then they would switch to a two, cover him if they needed to, back him up so he didn't have a clear run with clear air there.

We tried to cover it as a team I think very well with all the options and make sure that we could cover it. How that works out, half the time you're never sure. Once we saw they started on blacks, we knew they were really going to go hard for a two-stopper. That's the way it played out.

Probably the stint we struggled the most on was actually on reds, and it was only because we didn't have enough fronts on the car. It was basically like a dragster, had limited gear grip, I just couldn't turn it. We would have gone to that extent to cover them.

Q. If you had started nearer the front, do you think you had the car to win the race?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, I do. We definitely had a major problem yesterday with the brakes. Normally we run 55 to 57%. I was having to run up to 63, 64% on the brake bias, still locking rears. We didn't know what to do between the practice session and qualifying. We changed a small part of the braking system, but it didn't do anything. Last night we changed everything for the warmup, it was like night and day.

I actually braked deeper into turn one with full tanks and used tires than I did in qualifying just because we were struggling so much. I was really happy with the car. We didn't run reds in the warmup so we didn't know how much the balance was going to shift. We probably could have put some front wing in for the start of it.

Catching up with an old friend where each time comes through a series of different circumstances - Scott Dixon poses with the Astor Cup. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski via NICS (2020)

Q. A question about Chip actually. Any words of encouragement from him leading into the weekend or any words from him Saturday evening at all you could tell us about?

SCOTT DIXON: I think all of his meetings are pretty similar. It always ends with: Do the obvious things right.

He always goes into visualize yourself getting three, two, and one. Visualize yourself getting that checkered flag first. Visualize the pit stops going smoothly. He's always has great words of encouragement.

Honestly today I can't remember what he told me. I think he said before I got in the car, he just said, Don't worry, just do what you do. That's what we did today. We covered the bases we needed to. He's been such a big part of my life from when I joined that place in 2002. I've learnt so much through his leadership, him and Mike and everything that they've done.

The biggest thing with Chip is that he's with you through the tough times. You don't see that too often. He's the first guy when I destroyed two cars in four laps, he'd be the one that's there like, Man, are you okay? We'll get another car, don't worry about it. We'll get another car.

I'm like, No, I want to go home (smiling).

He's a team leader. You can see why he's been so successful.

Q. You talked a lot about the restarts, trying to get the tires into a good window to work with. I noticed you weren't conservative at all on the restarts. Take me through your strategy.

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, what I noticed, especially early on, if you're too conservative, you got kind of marched offline, you were going to be in major trouble. We saw that a couple of times with Herta. I think Josef got into that situation, and a couple others, maybe Pato on one of the restarts. It was like ice.

I think the best restart was obviously when Josef had control of the field and we sped the cars up a little bit. Which I understand why the INDYCAR Series does it, sometimes to make sure we just don't let these laps fall away.

Trying to get brakes cooled, I struggled a lot with that on the race. We didn't run rear snorkels on the car because that pace you don't really need it. Once you slow down, there's no air getting into the rear brakes. My rear brakes were cooked the whole time, which makes it hard actually to build up temperature, one, in the brakes, but also to try to get that tire to come in. The pedal started to go long several times. We started to get into some pretty big red zones on the rear calipers, which then the pedal just wants to go to the bulkhead.

The strategy was to be confidently aggressive. I think we had to make sure we didn't let it slip. I think if you got caught offline, especially on some of those restarts, the train was going to come by. I was very lucky to be able to place the car where I needed to in some of those situations.

The one that raced us hardest was probably Harvey. That almost went a bit pear shaped, a bit the wrong way. Luckily we came out of it okay. Yeah, I think when you start to change the way you race, you fall into a lot of situations that don't go very nicely.

Q. I know with your awesome start, needing to just kind of hold on and be conservative to clinch things today, how much did this whole season feel like a war filled with small battles, you had to conceptualize how to attack one at a time?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, I think it's weird. Like you see how championships go up and down. Honestly, as a team we didn't really change anything. Some people think a bit of complacency. I think you do start to overanalyze things a little bit. I think we had a bit of a curve ball I think at Mid-Ohio, which was tough for us. We think it was something that was out of our control in qualifying one and qualifying two was fine, I come to push the envelope too much and made mistake myself, which I try to pride myself on not making those mistakes, but I definitely made that mistake.

I think every season is full of ups and downs. It's the first time I've ever led a championship from start to finish. You do have some different pressures, where you have people saying, It's all done, it's sewn up. You don't want to fall into that situation, but then you start to believe some of those things. We've seen how quickly it transforms and how quickly it can change, especially with the likes of Team Penske and Josef. He's a two-time champion and a hell of a competitor.

Yeah, I guess every weekend is its own battle. It's very easy to slip into a bit of a rut. You lose a bit of confidence as a driver, the team loses a bit of confidence if there's been a mistake on pit road or strategy-wise. You have to snap out of it. That's the hardest thing to do.

I truly believe years like '04 and '05 where we were just sucking really bad, those are the years I learnt the most. It's all about the amazing people around all of us. We work well as a team. Even Dario and what he brings to the team, to help with Felix for my teammates, Marcus and Felix, it's been a huge year for all of us. It's really knowing how to manage those moments when you're pretty down.

Q. How tough was this week given these last couple weeks? You mentioned having to not only formulate your own plan for your car but also having to try to figure out a strategy to mirror or shadow another driver.

SCOTT DIXON: I think once we got out of Indy road course, the Harvest GP, that was when we could really understand what we needed to do. Obviously race one was a huge kick. We just wanted to stop the bleeding for race two. You don't want it to get too close.

Obviously today, look, both of us moved from I think Josef was 8 and I came from 11 to first and third. That's what can happen. I could have been easily in a situation where on a restart you get knocked out, you go all the way to the back.

It's easy to kind of say, We're just doing the same thing. The team is analyzing obviously how the year's going and how it's coming down to the championship fight. But you feel super vulnerable like we did for the Harvest GP just on the black tires. We just had no pace. We couldn't figure it out. We didn't know why. That's the most horrible situation.

For us I think last year I had the best average of qualifying for the whole year for any driver. This year was horrendous for all three of us. There's definitely some areas for improvement.

I guess the short answer is you don't really know how to structure the championship apart from going to win every race every time you go to a weekend till you get to the last one, then you know what you need to manage.

Q. I've just got a message from your mum here. She's been texting me like no tomorrow. We know what your mum's like. Your mum and sister want to say they're extremely proud of you. Your mum said, I helped create you, which I'm sure you'd understand.

SCOTT DIXON: Pretty valid quote there, yeah (laughter).

Q. Your sisters have been going pretty goo-goo watching the race. Monday morning in New Zealand. You're one of the only drivers that's actually led a championship run from race one right through to this final race. All the different situations that you've been in over the years, what is it like being chased as opposed to being the chaser?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, I don't know. I guess it's holiday in New Zealand, too, right? Everybody has the day off. Everybody can have a beer, which is cool. I'll definitely be speaking to mum a little bit later, and dad and my sisters.

Yeah, I don't know. I've never really done it before. When we had the runaway portion, we're like, This is great, this is great. When you start to see it dwindle... I've been part of those on the other side. I've been part of those situations I think with Helio, I think maybe 2013 we had a deficit of almost a hundred points or 83 I think, something I remember. And to claw it back and win it that way, it felt tremendous. The tiebreaker we had with Montoya in '15 was crazy as well.

I got to say it feels pretty nice to lead and know that you don't have to go through all these weird and crazy scenarios to pull it off. You just got to have a clean race. But, yeah, there were definitely points through the year that you slip into issues like I did at Mid-Ohio, and came up short. You lose a boatload of points.

Again, it's nothing you change, nothing you do different. It's crazy. You see it from so many different sides. You're like, They're choking. Honestly you're doing nothing different.

Short answer, it feels great to lead from start to finish. Hope we can do it again next year.

Q. Obviously it's a team game. Those boys in the pit lane led by Blair, another New Zealander, what is it like for them in this situation? You get into the car, get into your race mode. Some of it's out of your control, some within your control. For them there's a lot of pressure in pit lane, isn't there?

SCOTT DIXON: There is. Those pressures come in different situations, especially when you come in under caution. Everybody is packed together. That's when things can go wrong really quickly.

I think for us today it was very smooth as always. They're the best on pit road year after year. Their record is almost untouched as far as pit road time, which that's why we have a lot of great championship fights, is because of them.

But yeah, I don't know, each person deals with it differently. Emma gets very stressed. She's the one that I'll wake up in the middle of the night on these weekends, it's 3:00 in the morning, she's on her phone texting people. I'm like, You need to go to bed, it's way too early.

You see that with some of the crew guys as well. Boys and girls. You can see it in their face, just their demeanor. That's what's so important because you see how much it means to them, how much it means to myself and everybody involved. That's what I think is so amazing about this team, is that everybody here gives 110% every day.

Q. You won this in the middle of the pandemic. It was a late start to the season. What was sort of the biggest challenge navigating through this?

SCOTT DIXON: There were so many. I feel bad in saying everybody -- there's people much worse off than myself. I feel extremely lucky and privileged to do what I do. I feel very lucky to be a part of the NTT INDYCAR Series.

To try to do what Roger did through this period of time and run the Indianapolis 500 with no fans, it's definitely a year that none of us are ever going to forget. That's an obvious thing. Hopefully the majority of everybody have been safe and healthy. That's the main thing.

I think for me, I don't know, it's been very strange weekends. Things I think we have done will carry through. I remember going to Texas, we flew 6:00 in the morning. You're there all day, practice, qualifying, race, fly home at 2:00 in the morning. We were lucky enough to win that race. Celebrating in Victory Circle by yourself. So many bizarre ups and downs.

I truly feel so lucky to do what I do. I guess health is everything. As long as everybody that you can help or be in a situation to cater to, I think that's what this is about. That's what these moments are about.

Q. Did you have any trepidation about starting the season at all or were you ready to go when they said 'go'?

SCOTT DIXON: I think the problem was, right, nobody had been through something like this. Sometimes in some situations there was no right or wrong answer. I think we got here in March, everybody was here in the pits, everybody had done their prep. You should just run the race, no big deal. Then you see the severity of it.

I think the protocols is what really changed I think the formula for the year. We have a lot of thanks I think for NASCAR. They really paved the way. They laid out the protocols, how everything should be structured, how the testing should be done, how the pit crews and drivers, everybody should be separated, the travel protocols. A lot of effort went into that. A lot of people don't see it. I think that's what enabled us.

Then obviously to have somebody like Roger, I think the timing in a lot of ways with the purchase of the NTT INDYCAR Series and also the Speedway I think really pulled us through. I don't know in which direction it would have gone had it not been him at the helm.

Q. You've said it's a team effort this year, you don't like to attribute any one area being any more important than the other. If we break down the two key changes you made in the off-season, it was the staff coming in from the Ford GT program, also Mike Cannon as well. Can you talk about how important those two moves were in the off-season to the success you've had this year.

SCOTT DIXON: I think it was big. The Ford GT situation, I wouldn't say we lost, they just moved to a different program through that four years. We went from two cars, three cars, four cars. We bounced around a little bit.

This year was the first year in the off-season we thought we had a lot of depth. All these teams have a lot of different programs, whether it's wind tunnels to shaker rigs to simulation, DIL, driver and loop simulations. You need a lot of manpower. A lot of our engineers, race engineers, were having to cover all those bases. They would leave a race, go straight to the simulation or the wind tunnel or whatever. It's very hard to juggle.

The biggest thing is just processing the information. This year it felt really good. I felt like we analyzed a lot at the start of the off-season to see where we faltered, what areas we really needed to improve on. Some of those we got right, some we didn't improve on. We got to try to understand why that is.

Cannon I think brought a totally different dynamic to the team. Once you're in the ecosystem, it's like when you have an Apple phone, a Mac, you try to move off to an android or PC, nobody can kind of work it for a while.

I think he brought in a lot of different views of basically saying why do you do this. A lot of questions, a lot of questioning yourself, what he had previously done for many years at different places.

Not to say that we weren't doing a good job, but it's nice to have a different perspective, get asked why a lot of times, whereas we would just keep going down that tunnel we were in.

Both of those I think attributes to a lot of performance in different areas. But there's still some shortcomings we need to really focus on.

Q. We had Josef earlier. He said he thought maybe he could have won six or seven races this year. He didn't want to take anything away from your title, was very quick to congratulate you. He said he felt he's had a lot of misfortune this year. How good do you think you've been driving-wise this year to beat Josef at the top of his game?

SCOTT DIXON: I think it was still average. I think we in some situations definitely worked well as a team, got the most out of it. I think qualifying across the board for all three of us was definitely a bit of a hindrance for us. One really big swing I think was our performance at Indy, which a lot of that you got to attribute to HPD and Honda as well. I think as a team that process was really good. I felt good in the car. It was one of those situations.

But, yeah, I think every year there's so many different situations that you could have been like, Yeah, we should have won that race, we could have turned it around. There's so many misses that I've had throughout my career that that's part of racing unfortunately. There's championships I've lost so closely. '09, '07, you thought were in the bag, they just weren't, just didn't go your way.

You do need luck. You need some of those years where the momentum is with you. A win is a win, man. You got to take it. This team definitely deserved it this year.

Q. Before this season started you said you felt adaptability was your main area of growth in this series since you started. Do you think your adaptability is what helped you this year when you had the Aeroscreen, a bizarre calendar, all that sort of stuff?

SCOTT DIXON: I think I heard most of that, adaptability throughout the season. The line is getting a bit weird.

Yeah, I think that's every year. Whether it's weather conditions to the situation with the Aeroscreen changing the balance of the car quite a lot, to the different tracks, different tires. It evolves all the time.

The hardest part is that we don't have a lot of testing these days. If you look at the races we go to, you maybe get 45 minutes to an hour practice, straight into the qualifying, then into the race. Definitely been one of those years where you need to roll off the track well or adapt very quickly. I think this team is very good at adapting. When you look at the different iterations, whether it's the engine programs to the aero kits to different chassis and things like that, that's when this team really does well and dominates.

I think not just me, but it's the tools and the people that I have around me that help me specifically with the racing, but the team as a whole I think is very good at adaptation.

Q. What is preparation for next year? When might preparation for next year start?

SCOTT DIXON: Sorry, you cut out there.

Q. What is preparation for next year going to look like?

SCOTT DIXON: Yeah, preparation starts actually this coming week. We start testing at the Speedway I think on Wednesday and Thursday. I think I'm just doing Thursday, then the following week we're at Barber Motorsports Park, having a week off, then straight into Laguna Seca test, then a Sebring 12-hour week as well. It's definitely a busy time.

I'm not sure, I always question why we test so early. I'd rather test in February when we're getting ready for the season. Weather conditions, the window we have for being able to test, I think our blackout window starts maybe middle of February. Not a lot of tracks we can test at that situation with the team.

Our preparation will start obviously this week and next week with a lot of conversation, basically trying to figure out where we can make ourselves better. That's where it always starts. We're going to start analyzing the season on stats, qualifying situations, performance laps throughout the season.

You really got to dig deep I think now with the competition at the level it's at to really focus on what you need to beat in all these great teams and driver combinations.

It will start very quickly, very aggressively.

THE MODERATOR: Thanks, Scott, for joining us. Appreciate it. Congratulations.
ENDS
[ht: FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports]

NBC has revealed slightly improved TV viewer numbers for the 2020 NTT IndyCar Series, across NBC, NBCSN, USA Network and NBC Sports digital platforms.

Excluding both this year’s Indianapolis 500 – rescheduled from May to August for the first time ever – and the Friday afternoon round of the Harvest Grand Prix earlier this month, which aired on USA Network – the remaining 12 races (six on NBC, six on NBCSN) averaged a Total Audience Delivery (TAD) of 664,000 viewers, up two percent on 2019 (15 races, 649,000).
[ht: David Malsher - Motorsport.com]

IndyCar's best just keeps getting better - crowds or no crowds, the racing on the track is still the most competitive form of high-risk open-wheel challenge available in the world today. 

All hail the new Aeroscreened platform, temporary street course, permanent road course, small oval and super speedway venues NTT INDYCAR SERIES - can not wait to attend races in the opened up 2021 racing season.

... notes from The EDJE




TAGS: NTT INDYCAR SERIES, 2020 Season Finale, Firestone Grand Prix Of St Petersburg, HPD, Honda Racing, Scott Dixon, Rinus Veekay, Josef Newgarden, Ted Klaus, Bill Patterson, The EDJE