Wednesday, July 13, 2022

Team Penske's Will Power Gives Preview Impressions On Honda Indy Toronto After Two Year Absence

Will Power immerses himself during the winning tradition splash in the Belle Isle Scott Fountain waters at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix .  Image Credit: James Black via Penske Entertainment (2022)

Team Penske's Will Power Gives Preview Impressions On Honda Indy Toronto After Two Year Absence

While Team Penske has had all three of its drivers - Scott McLaughlin, Josef Newgarden, Will Power - score wins this 2022 season (the first season in the post COVID-19 protocol era of protocols and shut downs), it is Will Power that has risen above the deepest challenges to score enough points to be sitting P2 in the season championship points race. 

Chip Ganassi Racing's (CGR) INDY 500 winner Marcus Ericsson sits at P1 just 20 points ahead of Will with 321 points and Penske teammate Josef Newgarden is a mere 14 points behind Will in P3. What is further enlightening as to how competitive this season has been, Chip Ganassi Racing's Alex Palou (recently signed under contest by CGR to McLaren Racing's Formula 1 team for 2023) trails Newgarden by one (1) point with the P5 points driver, Arrow McLaren SP's Pato O'Ward chases at another 30 points behind Palou.


OTHER Pre-Toronto Race Factoids:

Race weekend: Friday, July 15 - Sunday, July 17

Track: Streets of Toronto’s Exhibition Place, an 11-turn, 1.786-mile temporary street course

Race distance: 85 laps / 151.81 miles

Push-to-pass parameters: 200 seconds of total time with a maximum time of 20 seconds per activation.

Firestone tire allotment: Seven sets primary, four sets alternate. Teams must use one set of primary and one new set of alternate tires in the race.

Twitter: @HondaIndy, @IndyCar, #IndyTO, #IndyCar

Event website: www.HondaIndy.com

INDYCAR website: www.INDYCAR.com

2019 race winner (most recent event): Simon Pagenaud (No. 22 DXC Technology Team Penske Chevrolet)

2019 NTT P1 Award winner (most recent event): Simon Pagenaud (No. 22 DXC Technology Team Penske Chevrolet), 58.4293 seconds, 110.041 mph

Qualifying record: Gil de Ferran, 57.143 seconds, 110.565 mph, July 17, 1999 (Note: Josef Newgarden set a qualifying mark of 58.4129 seconds, 110.072 mph, for the current layout in 2019.)

There have been six different winners in nine NTT INDYCAR SERIES races in the 2022 season. Scott McLaughlin (Streets of St. Petersburg, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course), Josef Newgarden (Texas Motor Speedway, Streets of Long Beach and Road America), Pato O’Ward (Barber Motorsports Park), Colton Herta (Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course-1), Marcus Ericsson (Indianapolis 500) and Will Power (Raceway at Belle Isle Park) have all won in 2022. The record for most different winners in a season is 11 in 2000, 2001 and 2014.

There have been six different winners in the last 10 NTT INDYCAR SERIES races (Colton Herta, Scott McLaughlin, Josef Newgarden, Pato O’Ward, Marcus Ericsson and Will Power). The only repeat winners in that stretch are Newgarden (Texas 2022, Long Beach 2022 and Road America 2022) and McLaughlin (St. Petersburg 2022 and Mid-Ohio 2022).

There have been nine different NTT P1 Award winners in 2022. Scott McLaughlin (Streets of St. Petersburg), Felix Rosenqvist (Texas Motor Speedway), Colton Herta (Streets of Long Beach), Rinus VeeKay (Barber Motorsports Park), Will Power (Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course-1), Scott Dixon (Indianapolis 500), Josef Newgarden (Raceway at Belle Isle Park), Alexander Rossi (Road America) and Pato O’Ward (Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course) have won pole positions in 2022. The modern-day record for most different pole winners to start a season is 10 set in 1952. The record for most pole winners in a season is 12 set in the 1999 CART season.

The Honda Indy Toronto will be the 36th INDYCAR SERIES race held on the streets of Toronto’s Exhibition Place. The race returns after a two-year absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Simon Pagenaud won the last time the race was held, in 2019.

Scott Dixon and Will Power are tied as winningest active INDYCAR SERIES drivers at Toronto with three victories apiece (Power won in 2007, 2010 and 2016, and Dixon won both races in 2013 and the 2018 race). Michael Andretti has the most wins at the track with seven. Dixon and Power, along with previous race winners Josef Newgarden (2015 and 2017) and Simon Pagenaud (2019), are entered this year.

Will Power, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, met with the media via Zoom conference to preview the NTT INDYCAR SERIES race July 17 in Toronto. Power, who advanced 18 spots from his starting position (P21 - 24 spots if one counts from the position he was left in - P27 - after his first lap spin) to finish third July 3 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, is a three-time winner and two-time pole sitter on the 1.78-mile, 11-turn Toronto street circuit.

CHEVROLET Racing/NTT INDYCAR SERIES ZOOM Call

Full transcript:

HOW MUCH ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO GOING BACK TO TORONTO?

“Yeah, very much so. I love the city there, and the track is very unique. Really isn't a track that we go to that's like that. It's near impossible to get a good balance in the car, so it's a lot of compromise. Feel like it's a real driver's track. It's pretty hard.”

LOOKING BACK AT YOUR MID-OHIO DRIVE – A CHAMPIOSHIP-SAVING DRIVE MAYBE. HOW BIG WAS THAT WEEKEND FOR YOU?

“It was a very good recovery. I would say we had a car that, I feel like, could definitely challenge for pole. It was unfortunate what happened. Our fault. We weren't on top of that. We should have been. Obviously, the strategy and the car was great in the race. Yep, did not expect to make it all the way back to third, but I knew our car was strong. With yellows and restarts, good pit stop sequence, we were able to make our way all the way up to a podium. I was hoping at the beginning of that day for a top 10. I said that a few times this year, like at Detroit, like at Barber, but we've made it much further. Definitely showing my race craft ability with all these bad qualifyings, which I haven't been able to do for most of my career because I've always qualified right up at the front. Plus, you learn when you're back there, as well, when you're in the mix of stuff.”

YOUR TEAMMATES HAVE WON MULTIPLE RACES. WHAT DO YOU SEE THE REASON FOR WHY THE ENTIRE TEAM IS BETTER?

“The tire changed a little bit. Basically, the Firestone tires that we were running last year had sat around a lot, so the tire was obviously hardening over time. I think the tire's simply better this year, which brought our cars into a better place for where we live. We also did a lot of development in the off-season. I actually feel like last year we had bad luck. I wouldn't call it luck, but just strange things happened when we had cars in position to win and such. Yeah, last year wasn't as bad as it looked on performance. It was just one of those years that was just a little bit messy and things didn't flow our way. Newgarden should have won Road America. I should have won in Detroit. We should have challenging for the win in Laguna. It's just races like that that kind of made it look worse. Yes, we're certainly firing on all cylinders this year.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE ALEX PALOU, MCLAREN, CHIP GANASSI SITUATION?

“I've heard rumors around the paddock of exactly what's transpiring right now. Yeah, it's kind of good for the series really to have a bit of action in the paddock. Yeah, obviously I don't know the details of everything that has gone on there. Yeah, it's going to be interesting to see how that whole things plays out.”

DOESN’T IT ALSO CREATE A HUGE DISTRACTION ON THAT TEAM AS THEY’RE TRYING TO BATTLE FOR A CHAMPIONSHIP?

“Well, I think that's been a distraction all year for those guys because this whole thing has been going on behind the scenes. Yeah, not ideal if you're fighting for a championship within a team. Definitely not ideal.”

HAVE YOU EVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS BEFORE IN YOUR CAREER IN INDYCAR?

“I have not seen this in INDYCAR. I mean, this sort of thing goes on obviously all the time, various businesses. It's just one of those things where it's going to come down to the wording in the contract simply.”

HOW DISTRACTING CAN CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS BE FOR A DRIVER MID-SEASON?

“It can make some drivers perform better and some perform worse. Yeah, some need that sort of pressure to bring the best out of them, and some don't do well under those situations. Ideally, I think you want everything settled and you want pretty good vibes in the team. But it totally depends on the individual.”

THERE’S BEEN NINE DIFFERENT POLE SITTERS SO FAR. WHY DO YOU THINK QUALIFYING HAS BEEN SO UP IN THE AIR THIS SEASON?

“Simply because it's so competitive. There is no one that is dominating, no one stands out. You can try to pick the polesitter for this weekend. You simply couldn't. Even the drivers, you couldn't pick who might be on pole, which to me is a great thing.”

WHICH DRIVE WAS MORE IMPRESSIVE FOR YOU – MID-OHIO OR DETROIT?

“I think Mid-Ohio, coming from the very back, having spun, to get to the podium was definitely, yep. Tires weren't a big deal there. Like reds and blacks were pretty similar over a stint. Yeah, that's a great job from the team overall with strategy and staying in the game, and also for me to keep my head, slowly chip away at it.”

YOUR TEAM HAS WON SIX OF THE NINE RACES. CAN YOU DESCRIBE THE CONFIDENCE YOU GUYS ARE WALKING IN WITH EVERY WEEK?

“I've always had that confidence being in that team, that you will turn up to a weekend with a chance to win. That's always kind of been my feeling. Like, I never walked into a weekend thinking, Man, we've got no chance. When you start having good runs on the board, you're right there in the points, it does give you confidence. You're obviously feeling good about the situation. You're not feeling like you have to do anything desperate, you're just having to execute. You're sitting in that sweet spot of performance.”

YOU SAID AFTER MID-OHIO THAT YOUR PARENTS HAVE NEVER BEEN HERE FOR A WIN. IS THAT LEGITIMATE OTHER THAN THE TIME YOU WON THE CHAMPIONSHIP IN ’14?

“Yeah, my mother was at the championship when I won in '14. But, yes, my parents haven't been to a race for years. I can't remember the last time my dad came. Might be 2009 or something. No? '11 was the last time my dad came to a race. Yeah, they haven't really seen much of on-track action. My brother has come twice. '18 when I won the 500, then on to Detroit when I won Detroit. I have two other brothers as well that have never been to a race.”

Current pre-race Honda Indy Toronto race season championship top six driver points. Image Credit: Penske Entertainment - indycar.com (2022)

YOU’RE IN THE TITLE FIGHT WITH EIGHT RACES LEFT. ANY DISCUSSIONS OF THEM COMING OVER HERE, BEING HERE BY MONTERREY?

“No, they won't come. I don't know that for sure. My wife might surprise me. I doubt it. I doubt I'll see my parents. I doubt it, yeah. I don't think they'll come.”

A LOT OF ROOKIES AT TORONTO THIS WEEKEND. THIS WILL BE YOUR 14TH START. IS THAT AN ADVANTAGE OR DOES THE AEROSCREEN KIND OF NEGATE EVERYTHING?

“I think it will be different. The tire's probably a little different. It's so tight these years. The little tiny things do make a big difference. Yeah, the field is so good now, there's so many good drivers, it really doesn't matter if someone has been there or not because they seem to get up to speed so quickly. Yeah, you can't feel like you ever have an advantage in this game.”

THERE’S A GOOD SHOT WE COULD BE COMING TO INDY IN A COUPLE WEEKS AND YOU THREE PENSKE GUYS ARE FIGHTHING FOR A TITLE. IS IT A TOUGH ACT TO BALANCE WORKING WITH A TEAMMATE, FIGHTING THAT SAME TEAMMATE FOR A CHAMPIONSHIP?

“It is a very tough balance. To me, the most awkward thing about motorsport is that you have a teammate, and you're absolutely compared off your teammates, you have the same equipment. Very tough balance. But Penske, I don't think Penske would ever allow it to get to the point where we're having big issues with each other on track. We understand that. We understand that it's about the team and not about the drivers. You never put yourself first. You work hard, you work together off the track. Obviously we're kind of separate teams on the track. I have to say with both Scott and Josef, it's been very good as far as the information that we share. Like, they are both super quick. It has helped me a lot. That's to me an advantage.”

IT SEEMS LIKE STREET COURSES COULD GO EITHER WAY AS FAR AS QUALIFYING POSITION. TORONTO SEEMS TO FAVOR STARTING POSITION MORE. IS STARTING POSITION GOING TO MEAN A LOT THIS WEEKEND?

“It looks like that way just reviewing the race. I've thought that a few times this year. Obviously tracks I feel like are tough to pass. We've actually made some hay. Like who knows, it could be a straightforward race, it can be pretty green, not much chance to make passes. But INDYCAR at the moment is so competitive that who knows. Like, at the end of the day you can never give up. Don't be too down in the mouth if you don't qualify well. But it matters, though. Qualifying up front, if you execute well, you're certainly going to finish up front.”

WHAT MAKES TORONTO SO DIFFICULT, AND WHY IS THAT THAT THE GUYS THAT ARE CHAMPIONS OF THE SPORT ALWAYS SEEM TO PERFORM WELL THERE?

“The track is just difficult because there's so many different levels of grip. Like, you never feel in the track, on top of the track, it's sliding. The car never handles well. It's kind of difficult to tell your engineer what to do because there's so much compromise. Maybe it's a track that it's easy to make a mistake on. That's why maybe veterans or people being around a bit longer don't end up making mistakes. That might be the reason that you've seen champions win.”

YOU TALKED ABOUT HOW YOUNG GUYS CAN SHOW UP AT TRACKS AND BE ON THEIR A GAME. IS PART OF THAT BECAUSE OF SIM WORK – THEY’RE MORE PREPARED?

“Definitely simulator work. You know the braking points, you know the gears, you know the track. You don't know the track condition. But, yeah, that's a pretty big chunk of time you cut off trying to understand where a track goes by being on a sim the week before. That is a big, big help. Obviously video these days, so much on-board footage, there's so much information to take in before you get there. You turn up, you're going out first session knowing the track.”

MID-OHIO 2022 RACE 09 HIGHLIGHTS - Will Power's Drive Of The Year

A LOT OF DRIVERS PERFORM WORSE AFTER A MISTAKE, BUT YOU SHOWED THE OPPOSITE AT MID-OHIO. DO YOU THINK MISTAKES CAN MAKE YOU MORE POWERFUL ON TRACK?

“Yeah, honestly after I spun, I just gathered it up and didn't really reflect on it, and just started passing people. Obviously it's not even on your mind when you get to that point. Then you just start progressing, doing your job. I think that's the only mentality you can have. I think the mistake people might make, I've made in the past, you get desperate. Oh, my God, I'm at the back, I made a mistake. That is right there, the mindset, that will make you have a worse race. I wasn't even upset or mad. It's like, OK, how do I keep going? Don't stall the car. Got right back into it. Didn't even think about it. The sooner you can get over that stuff, the better. You can't be thinking about it three laps later. You have to keep chipping away. Still at that point in your mind every single point matters, so every position does matter. Maybe that's your bad day that you spun. It's your bad day. But every point matters here. That's kind of the mentality I had at Indy when I went back to pretty much last in the first stint. I was like, This is double points, every position I get matters at the end of the year. That was the mentality. You're not going to win every race, so it's just getting the most out of every situation. That's really what I have been doing this year.”

WERE YOU SATISFIED ABOUT THAT PERFORMANCE? YOU WERE FRUSTRATED ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED?

“I was extremely happy about the finish. I was very, very happy with third. I couldn't honestly believe that I made it to third. I was really, really happy. Just felt great for the team. It was a weekend that we had a lot of potential to win. But, like I said, you can't win them all. You do have bad races. If you can come back from a mistake, that's even better. Yeah, I was very, very happy with that day. Very happy.”

DO YOU SEE AUSTRALIA FOSTERING NEW TALENT TOWARD SINGLE-SEATER RACING, PARTICULARLY IN NORTH AMERICA?

“Yeah, I was really happy to see Hunter McElrea doing so good. I think he's a super fast driver. Has definitely, definitely the potential to get to INDYCAR and do well. But, yeah, I don't know what's going on down in Australia so much these days. I haven't been back there for a long time. I have to say, though, I'm sure Drive to Survive is helping just open-wheel motorsports in general. Like, I think go-karting is more popular now. I think all those series. I think it's great. It's giving open-wheel racing relevance. People understand the cars now. When they see an INDYCAR, they can identify, Oh, yeah, that's just like a Formula 1 car. I think having Scott (McLaughlin) come over and do really well from Supercars, I think kids would see that and go, Maybe I want to go that route. If you do some Supercar driving, doesn't mean you can't come and race open-wheels. You've seen how well Scott adapted pretty quickly. Yeah, I would love to see more Australians over here. I think now Roger has taken the series over, the ladder system will get stronger. You already see there's more Indy Lights cars. Hopefully more again next year. That's what it needs, is a very good ladder system with three categories before INDYCAR. If you start doing more than that, it starts watering the three down. I hope that we can get three strong series together, massive fields. Yeah, it helps that ladder system.”

THERE’S A LOT OF NEW ZEALANDERS AND AUSTRALIANS THAT GO ON TO DEVELOPMENT SERIES WITH SUPERCARS. WHAT MCLAUGHLIN HAS DONE HELPS.

“What you have to look at, too, look at the past champions of Indy Lights. Not even champions, but guys that have competed first and second. Look at Pato O'Ward and Colton Herta. Those guys are testing Formula 1 right now. Who was last year's champion? Kirkwood. I mean, if you go through that ladder system, you win on each rung of those ladders, you get money to go to the next series. There's nothing like that anywhere else in the world. It's a good place to go, it really is. It's not as expensive as Europe. You are guaranteed to continue if you win. I think that's a pretty good deal.”

THE CANADIAN FAN BASE LOKING FORWARD TO A RACE THERE. I’M SURE THAT WILLMAKE THE RAE THAT MUCH MORE EXCITING FOR YOU AS A DRIVER.

“Yeah, I think speaking to Kevin Savoree, he said ticket sales are really good. I think we'll get a massive crowd. Always do. I think the Canadian fans are some of the best in the world. They love their sport. A real party atmosphere. Nothing better than racing in front of a big crowd. I expect it to be a pretty good event.”

ZOOM Call - Edmund Jenks

HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT ABOUT TEAMING UP WITH YOUR BROTHER AND HAVING HIM GIVE HIS SHOWS SURROUNDING INDYCAR VENUES?

“No, obviously really enjoy him coming over because we share a similar sense of humor. Obviously enjoy his company massively. No, I've often thought about what we could do together after INDYCAR, on the comedy side of stuff because obviously he has a lot of contacts in Australia. Maybe we can do some sort of TV show or something. Yeah, haven't ever really thought about him. He has talked about coming to the U.S. and doing gigs. I think he'd just have to follow what his management puts in place for him. Yeah, no, I would love him to live over here. That would be cool. I think he's going to at some point pretty soon.”

Damien Power With Will Power - Comedy Promo

TORONTO HAS VARYING GRIPS AND IT’S HARD TO PASS. IS THAT TROUBLE IF YOU DON’T START IN THE FIRST THIRD OF THE FIELD?

“Yeah, these days if you get in the top six, you're pretty happy. You know you can do a lot from there. God, man, it's so hard to predict the races. Like, it could go green. It could be a very straightforward race. I don't think Toronto is all that difficult to pass. There are places to pass. You can pass. What's happened is the field is so tough now, everyone is about the same speed in the race. That's what makes it hard to pass. It's not necessarily the track. I think Firestone has done a good job of making a big difference between blacks and reds. There's another way that you can just switch up strategy and just be on a different tire than everyone else, different to the conventional strategies. Yeah, based on the three races I've had this year where I've come from way back, you would stress less about qualifying badly, just knowing if you keep your head you can definitely make hay. The points situation also changes the way you race a bit. You're not in this 'I have nothing to lose' sort of mentality, so you do race a little differently because of that, as well.”

SEEING YOU ON TRACK THIS YEAR – VERY MATURE, A LOT OF FUN. YOURE’ JUST MAKING IT ROUGHER FOR EVERYONE ELSE.

“Everyone makes it tougher on each other. It's a great group, great series. There's nothing like it in the world, honestly. The disciplines you have to do, the competition, the different nationalities, it's a pretty unique series.”

ANY CONCERN ON YOUR PART OR THE TEAM’S PART ON CHEVY RELIABILITY GOING FORWARD?

“Yeah, obviously always concerned when you see that. I will say that all the Chevys are switching out engines because they're all up on mileage for this race. They are all on new engines. (Indiscernible) Indy 500 race engines. Chevy obviously does a big investigation into what happened. Usually a failure creates -- it doesn't happen twice, put it that way. I don't know the findings of their investigation. I know one of them was not a Chevy issue.”

THE TEAM COMFORTABLE WITH THE SWAP-PUT, JUST FEELING NO ISSUES?

“No. No. I think we're all pretty comfortable. We've had this engine for a long time. It's been pretty reliable. Sometimes oddball things happen. They take care of it.”

HOW MUCH DO YOU SEE THE AEROSCREEN AFFECTING THE RACING IN TORONTO?

“Yeah, it definitely changed the car a lot because it moves the weight further forward. But I've actually found at Toronto, as the weight has gone forward, it's really helped. On those really slippery cement patches, the actual weight downforce matters, so you get more weight force on the front tires, and it actually helps turn the car. That was a big problem when the car had really rearward weight, that the front tires would not work over that cement. Obviously at some point, when you have high grip, that weight matters laterally. But the grip is so low that the lateral -- the actual weight downforce is more than the actual lateral force. So, yeah, it's interesting. To me it actually helped at that specific track, at Toronto.”

YOU’VE BEEN STRONG THIS YEAR. WHAT DO YOU FEEL YOU AND TEAM PENSKE NEED TO DO TO BE EVEN STRONGER?

“For me personally is to qualify better. It's not always been about pace. Last week it was just strategy and the lack of communication that got us. I actually feel like we would have definitely made it through to the Fast Six and potentially had a pole. Yeah, the last couple, Road America being P2 in practice, then not converting that in qualifying, that's the sort of thing we've got to be on top of. I've just had a messy year of qualifying as far as being in the wrong place on track or not getting a big enough gap to the car in front, or simply not performing, not being fast enough. I've had all those situations. That's the area I need to improve on for the next half of this season. I think that will put me in a really good position, if I do.”

DO YOU FEEL THE COMPETITION LEVEL IS AT AN ALL-TIME HIGH?

“Yeah, definitely the all-time high as far as driver talent, the quality of teams. Yeah, it hasn't been this tough ever. Yeah, three big teams now, four big teams: Penske, McLaren, Andretti, Ganassi. You add Shank into that. I don't think there's a series more competitive around the world than this.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THE WHOLE TEST SITUATION WITH COLTON HERTA AND FORMULA 1?

“Yeah, man, I wish there was Zak Brown around when I was that age, when I first got to INDYCAR, because I know I would have got a chance in Formula 1. It's cool to see that because I know how that feels. I know how awesome that would be for Colton. I really hope, if he goes there, he does really well. But, yeah, I mean, a great opportunity. I think it's just so fantastic to have a team like McLaren and Zak Brown in INDYCAR. I think it's great for the series. It's good for the young guys here obviously. I think it's great what Zak Brown is doing, I do. Cool to see.”

DO YOU THINK MCLAREN, ARROW MCLAREN SP HAS AN ADVANTAGE CORNERING YOUNG TALENT BECUASE HE CAN DANGLE THIS F1 RIDE TO JOINING THE TEAM?

“Yes, absolutely. That would be 100% why Palou would want to go there. I don't blame him honestly. I mean, I would be the same. If you had a chance to go and race in F1, as big as F1 is now, yeah, you would want to go there. It's pretty cool. You think about the reach that McLaren has, Formula E, Formula 1, sports car. Man, it's a pretty good place, pretty good organization to be involved with.”

HOW FAR OFF DO YOU THINK ARROW MCLAREN SP IS TO JOINING THE PENSKES AND GANASSIS AT THE VERY ELITE LEVEL OF INDYCAR?

“They're right there. They're right there. It will be interesting. Obviously they've had young drivers, so it takes a while for the young guys to understand exactly what you need as far as development goes. But adding Rossi to the team, there's a guy with a lot of experience. I think that's kind of what it needed. Yeah, they're there, man. They're very, very strong. They're a very good team.”

WITH HALF THE FIELD NEVER BEING IN TORONTO, DOES THAT GIVE YOU A CONFIDENCE BOOST BECAUSE YOU HAVE BEEN THERE BEFORE AND DONE WELL?

“No, no. Basically with simulators and video and everything, it doesn't really give you an advantage any more. I think people turn up, they pretty much know the track. Yeah, it's anyone's guess who will be the quickest there and what the top 10 would be, honestly.”
ENDS

Honda INDY Toronto Exhibition race track front straight looking toward right-handed Turn 1 with downtown Toronto's iconic CN Tower, the world’s tallest free standing structure for 32 years from 1975–2007, and The Princes' Gates, designed by the architectural firm of Chapman and Oxley and were officially opened by H.R.H. Edward, Prince of Wales on 30 August 1927, on the occasion of his visit to Canada to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee (60th) anniversary of Confederation, in the background. Image Credit: Toronto Grand Prix Tourist - A Toronto Blog (2022)

At-track schedule (all times local - ET):

Friday, July 15

2:30-3:45 p.m. - NTT INDYCAR SERIES Practice 1, Peacock Premium/INDYCAR Live!

Saturday, July 16

10-11 a.m. - NTT INDYCAR SERIES Practice 2 (45 minutes limited guarantee), Peacock Premium/INDYCAR Live!

2-3:15 p.m. - Qualifying for NTT P1 Award (Three rounds of knockout qualifying), Peacock Premium/INDYCAR Live!

Sunday, July 17

10:55-11:25 a.m. - NTT INDYCAR SERIES Final Practice, Peacock Premium/INDYCAR Live!

3 p.m. - Peacock Premium/SportsNet 360 on air

3:23 p.m. - The Honda Indy Toronto "Drivers, start your engines"

3:30 p.m. - The Honda Indy Toronto (85 laps, 151.81 miles), Peacock Premium/SportsNet 360 (Live)

... notes from The EDJE


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TAGS: Chevrolet Racing, Team Penske, Will Power, Damien Power, Hondy Indy Toronto, The EDJE

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Shared Ride & Drive In A Corvette C8 Defined American Supercar On Public Roads

The belle of the ball during the MPG Drive Day 2022 - the Corvette C8 in front of the iconic Ferris Wheel at Calamigos Ranch Event Center. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2022)

Shared Ride & Drive In A Corvette C8 Defined American Supercar On Public Roads

The Motor Press Guild hosts many events and meetings throughout the year. Yes! These last couple of years have had their share of protocol challenges, but to have an opportunity to drive many types of cars on everyday roads as opposed to Tracks or Autocross set environments, allows one to judge and share a special experience in drivetime that few other events can hold.

On June 7th, 2022, the Motor Press Guild (MPG) held a long delayed get-together that was originally titled Droptops & Dirt and combined it with the multi-year delayed annual awards meeting that was formally known as "The Dean Batchelor Awards" that now goes by the recognition name of "Excellence In Automotive Journalism MPG Awards" The driving experience meeting was typically held in the Spring and the awards recognition event was normally held as a 2-Fer AWARDS & Holiday Season event around mid-December.

Welcome to the views of longtime friend, colleague, and rounded Motor Culture raconteur Lou Leto on the MPG Drive Day twisty roads of the Malibu mountains in the Corvette C8: 

Corvette C8 Exterior color is listed as Sebring Orange Tintcoat. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2022)

BEGIN
Handling was excellent in any of the modes that were available at the turn of a knurled selector knob.

And the modes were uniquely felt and heard, as the magnetic shocks changed stiffness and the exhaust note increased with more performance oriented selections. The default Touring mode was efficient. The Track mode the most stiff, of course. Got to be a performance guy to drive in Track mode all the time.

Drive Day Loop Guide for some time on public surface streets. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2022)

As I felt both as a passenger and then behind the wheel, with the available torque of this naturally aspirated engine, this was a second-and-third gear vehicle through the short straights and radical turns. This is no different than my experience at most road race race tracks; third is always the "sweetheart gear."  Paddle shifts are very responsive and quick. The different modes will increased holding a gear longer and at higher revs prior to an upshift while in Drive. Could really squirt the car forward in literal leaps, then the brakes hauled it down quickly and without fade time and time again.

Corvette C8 Interior color is listed as Sky Cool Grey. A really great re-imagining of the 1950's push button automatic transmission has been engineered by GM for this sportscar. This system uses a combination of actions depending on the function needed. Corvette's first push-button shifter - Park is at the top, with a pull switch for Reverse behind it, a button for Neutral behind that, and then another pull switch for Drive behind that. Below Drive is another button for Manual shifting mode. Image Credit: Mid Engine Corvette Forum (2022)

The cockpit makes one feel a bit separated (isolated); more like a capsule, and the engine behind is so very quiet, even in higher performance exhaust modes. The digital dash offers much info, and forward sight is awarded with the small fender peaks (like a C3 'Vette) for cornering reference. Handing is solid and neutral. Vehicle feels lighter and smaller than it is. Until you look in the side mirrors and see the wide rear fenders, and then wonder if the car will clear the the narrow roads hugging the jutting rock-filled corners on the mountain side. The other side is the severe drop-offs without guard rails...   

Rear Camera Mirror is a General Motors safety technology that replaces the traditional rear-view mirror with high-resolution video streaming to a display in the rear-view mirror, thereby improving on the traditional inside rearview mirror by providing a wider, less obstructed field of view. - Display: the in-mirror 1280 by 240-pixel TFT-LCD display with 171 pixels per inch. One may observe that the glass protecting the display catches a diffusive reflection that compromises or distracts from the possibility of a best image presentation for the driver (look at edges of mirror image). Image Credit: Corvette Forum (2022)



The inside rearview mirror is a camera, and the imaging appears as is too... remote and off contrast. I guess that with this much power and handing, that rear view is non-important. Just nail it and go to the opening an eighth mile ahead that comes up in one heartbeat. I did use it for backing up. Works as well as my MINI or the Sheriff's "blind-spot special" Explorers that I drive to the car wash..   

Ferrari Dino 246 GTS - The Dino line was created in honor of Enzo Ferrari’s son Alfredo Ferrari who was championing the V6 engine before his untimely death. The series began with a number of 206 sport prototypes and eventually the 246 road cars. Over 1200 examples were produced over a two year period between 1972 to 1974. Image Credit: Super Cars (2022)
 
The Corvette is a bit too quiet for me. I long for the days [driving] in my Dino 246 GT when I could hear (and feel) the chain driven cams whirring, the three huge dual throat Webers sucking hard for A/F mixture, and the other mechanical sounds at 7,000 RPM+ contributing to the symphony.   

** Activate Video Asset With Left-Click **

My reality check that I am struggling with: do I want one with this size, power (and cost) as my intended everyday driver?  At my age, my car-centric evil mind says YES. My other mental gremlins are sneakily questioning; is a 2014-2016 mid-engine naturally-aspirated flat six-powered Porsche Cayman S a better (sized, power, carrying space ) daily driver choice? Rest assured, either will be bright red...
ENDS

Let's be clear, people meeting - in formal association - with like-minded folks is both affirming in cultural values and civil pursuits. We must never loose sight of how important it is to commune with Humanity on these many levels of town and country - in motion.

Thank you Lou Leto for sharing both the day, and these written reflections on our two rides in this American Supercar together - for each, one a ride and the other a drive - at MPG's Drive Day held in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area in from Malibu on Kanan Road from Calamigos Ranch Event Center ... truly captured the day.

... notes from The EDJE 


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TAGS: Corvette C8, American Supercar, Ride & Drive Reflections, Calamigos Ranch. Motor Press Guild, MPG, Lou Leto, The EDJE

Monday, June 13, 2022

J-New Re-Enters Championship Picture Winning The Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America


Josef Newgarden takes the win on a Road Course and takes home the $1,000,000 prize put forward by The PeopleReady Force for Good Challenge. By posting a win on at least once this season on the three types of tracks that comprise the NTT INDYCAR SERIES schedule – road course, street circuit and oval – a Driver will share $500,000 with their team and donate $500,000 to that driver and team’s chosen charity. Newgarden, who previously won this season on the Texas Motor Speedway oval and the Long Beach street circuit, has chosen two charities to split the $500,000 portion – SeriousFun Children’s Network and Wags and Walks Nashville. Image Credit: Penske Entertainment via FB/META (2022)

J-New Re-Enters Championship Picture Winning The Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America

Team Penske's Josef Newgarden takes the win at the Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America presented by AMR making this his 22nd career INDYCAR victory and his second at Road America - all behind the wheel of a Chevrolet-powered car.

This win moves Josef Newgarden to P3 in the season points race from P5 - leapfrogging over Pato O'Ward and Alex Palou respectively.

P2 - Marcus Ericsson and takes over the season points lead from Will Power who, with his altercation aided finish at P19, is P2 in the season challenge.

P3 - Pole sitter Alexander Rossi survives to be on the Podium but remains in play for the championship at P7.

This race marks the end of the first half of the 2022 season where not one driver has repeated as the NTT P1 Pole Award winner - NTT P1 Pole Award Winner for the Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America presented by AMR, Alexander Rossi, Andretti Autosport Honda - 7th career and first pole in 3 years - 8th new NTT P1 Pole Award winner in 8 races this season.

Pre-Race Top Six NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Championship Points Standings 

Post-Race Top Six NTT INDYCAR SERIES Season Championship Points Standings 

This excerpted and edited from NTT INDYCAR SERIES - 

FIFTH GEAR: SONSIO GP AT ROAD AMERICA PRESENTED BY AMR
By Curt Cavin | Published: Jun 13, 2022

The number of interesting aspects to the Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America presented by AMR were almost too numerous to count and are the foundation of today’s Fifth Gear.
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Let’s get right to it.

Newgarden Again Dominates Road America
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Two-time series champion Newgarden won this race by 3.37 seconds over Indy 500 winner Marcus Ericsson (No. 8 Huski Chocolate Chip Ganassi Racing Honda) as Ericsson passed Andretti Autosport’s Alexander Rossi (No. 27 NAPA AUTO PARTS/AutoNation Honda) on the final restart. Rossi was bidding for his first race win since 2019, coincidentally at Road America.

Newgarden pushed his season win total to three races and is third in the standings, only 32 points out of the lead as the season approaches its official midpoint. Newgarden won for the 23rd time in his NTT INDYCAR SERIES career, tying him with Tommy Milton for 19th place on the sport’s all-time list. The next win pulls him alongside Ralph DePalma and Bobby Rahal. Two more ties him with Gordon Johncock.
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Standings Shakeup at the Top

With series leader Will Power having two moments of trouble and finishing 19th, Ericsson regained the points lead for the second time this season. The Swede’s margin over Power is 27 points.

Eight of the top 10 positions in the standings changed hands this weekend, but what should concern the title hopefuls is Newgarden moved up two positions. He stands to gain more in the weeks ahead.

Newgarden is the defending champion of the race at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, where he has won twice overall. He also has two career wins at Toronto’s Exhibition Place – site of the Honda Indy Toronto on July 17 – and could be in line to sweep the Iowa Speedway doubleheader sponsored by Hy-Vee on July 23-24 as he has won three races at the short oval track. Two races after that comes the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 presented by Axalta and Valvoline, an event Newgarden has won three times, including the past two.

Ericsson has become a legitimate threat to win the championship. He has finished fourth, first, seventh and second in the past four races.
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Two title contenders took big points hits Sunday, gaining only five points each. Pato O’Ward (No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet) finished 26th when his car had a mechanical failure nine laps from the finish. Chip Ganassi Racing’s Alex Palou (No. 10 The American Legion Honda) got back on track after early contact with Ericsson – more on that in the next item – but still finished last in the 27-car field.
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Team Battles Highlight Road America

Ericsson found himself amid a dustup with Palou, his Ganassi teammate, in Turn 5 on the race’s fourth lap. Their slight wheel contact led to Palou driving into the gravel trap with damage, something the reigning series champion wasn’t happy about.
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Although replays suggested Ericsson simply capitalized on an opening to gain a position, Palou’s comments added spice to the race and provided intrigue for how they work together moving forward.

Michael Andretti’s team had some hotly contested racing between Romain Grosjean (No. 28 UniFirst/DHL Honda) and Colton Herta (No. 26 Gainbridge Honda), but it lacked the comments delivered by Palou. However, it was fun to see three Andretti drivers dueling in the final laps, with Rossi holding off Grosjean for third place, with Herta giving the team three finishers in the top five.

Andretti Autosport is a team to watch in the second half of the season. Rossi has strung together three straight top-five finishes to climb to seventh in the standings, and Herta, who won the GMR Grand Prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, will be the defending champion of the season-ending Firestone Grand Prix of Monterey at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca (Sept. 11).
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More Competitive Racing

Sunday’s race featured another large dose of thrilling action, particularly behind Newgarden and Rossi, who combined to lead 42 of the 55 laps – and more given that all the other laps led were by drivers who were out of pit sequence.

The exchanges mid-pack were tremendous, especially with so many different fuel strategies in play. The result were 226 total on-track passes, just off last year’s series record 231 at this track. For position, there were 191 passes, just off last year’s record of 194.

The action came on the heels of a similar race at The Raceway at Belle Isle Park, where there were a circuit-record 280 total on-track passes, with 148 of them for position. Fifty-nine passes were in the top 10, with 23 in the top five. INDYCAR president Jay Frye called those “big numbers for a street course.”

Several drivers had noteworthy runs, including Felix Rosenqvist (No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren SP) who continued to impress with his fourth consecutive top-10 finish. He led seven laps en route to finishing sixth. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing had one of its best races with Graham Rahal (No. 15 Fifth Third Bank Honda) finishing eighth, rookie Christian Lundgaard (No. 30 Fleet Cost & Care Honda) 10th and Jack Harvey (No. 45 Hy-Vee Honda) 13th.

Simona De Silvestro (No. 16 Paretta Autosport Chevrolet) achieved her goal of completing all 55 laps. She finished 21st in a competitive 27-car field. She will compete at Mid-Ohio and in the Nashville street race on Aug. 7.

Up Next: Second Half of Season Begins

After five consecutive on-track weekends, the NTT INDYCAR SERIES now takes a two-weekend break before the second half of the season gets rolling with the Mid-Ohio race on July 3.

Newgarden won last year’s race after leading 73 of the 80 laps. Ericsson and Palou finished second and third, respectively, with Scott Dixon (No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda) fourth. Dixon has won a track-record six races at the track, most recently in 2019.

The Mid-Ohio race will be the ninth of 17 events scheduled for this season. There is still a variety of races to come, with four held on permanent road courses, three on ovals and two street races. The season ends Sept. 11 at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca.


NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference
Press Conference - Sunday, June 12, 2022
P2 Marcus Ericsson / P3 Alexander Rossi

THE MODERATOR: Second and third place have arrived, Marcus Ericsson finishing second, as well as Alexander Rossi finishing third. Marcus' third podium of the season, seventh career podium. Alexander Rossi, second straight podium finish after also finishing there last week at Belle Isle, third straight top five, 27th career podium.

Marcus, primarily the restart there at the end, being able to pass Rossi, how difficult, how satisfying?

MARCUS ERICSSON: Yeah, it was a really good race for us. We were strong all weekend. Already on Friday the car felt good. Had a good qualifying yesterday. Was my best qualifying of the year with P4.

I think the race was pretty straightforward. Pretty good from our side. Obviously a lot of cautions that got you out of rhythm. Yeah, car felt good.

Got some opportunities there in the end to try and get a better position. Alex had a bit of a slide out of the last corner so I got a run on him and managed to get by.

Overall good day. P2 is a really good result for the championship, back in the lead. Super happy. The team did a really good job on pit stop strategy, so really thankful to the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Honda Ganassi crew.

THE MODERATOR: 27-point lead over Will Power as you take the lead in the overall standings.

Alex, your thoughts on another podium finish for you?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Yeah, probably a little disappointing when you start on pole and can't convert. It was generally a good day I think. I think Josef had a little bit better pace than us. I think we were the second best car. Pretty aggressive on the restart there to try and do something. Just kind of overstepped a little bit. That's what allowed Marcus to get by.

Ultimately I don't know that we would have been able to win. Got held up with Scott McLaughlin a little bit coming into the pits when we were trying to leave on the first sequence. With the lap cars, Josef was the first to get to him. From there on it was trying to close the gap that got started there.

A little disappointing, but all in all I think it was a very positive weekend for us for obvious reasons A good run of races, look forward to going to Mid-Ohio.

THE MODERATOR: Almost two shots at Josef there. Can you talk about those.

ALEXANDER ROSSI: He went pretty early on the first one. I went with him on the second and actually got too close.

Yeah, he executed well. It was my mistake, which allowed Marcus to get by. You got to try in those situations to go for the win.

THE MODERATOR: Questions.

Q. Marcus, Alex said basically tried to win going into turn five. What was that move like from your perspective? Talk us through that situation.

MARCUS ERICSSON: Yeah, from inside the car, the door was open there. I went for the move. Alongside him at the apex, made the corner. From my side he turns into me from the outside lane. You hate to see your teammate retire from a contact with you. That's the last thing you want to do.

I don't see I did anything wrong. It was a fully race move. Might have been early in the race, but this race is a track-position race. If you get an opportunity, you need to go for it.

As I said, there was nothing wrong with that move. That was clear on the TV pictures.

Q. Is this sweeter knowing that the championship leader had a bit of an issue early in the race as well?

MARCUS ERICSSON: Yeah, I haven't even looked. Obviously a lot of cautions and stuff. I knew you had to try to capitalize on that. We lost the lead last weekend, but it was nice to get that back and get P2.

Coming into the small break we have now with some good confidence. We're in a good position for the second half.

Q. (No microphone.)

MARCUS ERICSSON: Yeah, I would like to stop that (laughter).

I think, no, yesterday was the eighth different polesitter in eight races I think, if I'm correct. I think that says a lot about INDYCAR at the moment. It's the most competitive series in the world. We have 27 cars this weekend. I think that's incredible. Out of those 27 cars, it feels like at least 15 of them cars can win the race if they have their day.

It's really fun to be part of that. Yeah, I think it's going to be tough all year. Miss a little bit one weekend, you're P10 or P15. It means you need to be on top of things all the time.

Last weekend was a good example. A bit off on strategy, didn't work our way. We managed to finish seventh. That's the results we need to if we want to win the championship.

Q. (No microphone.)

MARCUS ERICSSON: Like I said, from inside the car it was clear. I was alongside him at the apex. I was surprised that we hit at the middle of the corner. Like I said, I made the corner, didn't go up on the curb. It was not like I was oversteering or anything like that. I was surprised to get the hit there.

I don't know what more to say. I only saw it once on the TV. It looked like a good move to me. Again, I hate to see my teammate retire from a contact with my car, but I don't feel that was on me. I feel like it was more on his side there.

Q. (Question regarding the issue in the pits with Scott McLoughlin.)

ALEXANDER ROSSI: I honestly don't remember. I think Brian was telling me to wait. There's nothing you can do about it. That's just an unfortunate sequence that happens. I think it certainly cost us the lead there.

That being said, I do think Josef had a really strong car today so I don't know necessarily that we would have been able to beat him. Maybe, I don't know.

But it's neither here nor there. That's just part of the way it works. Ultimately it's good to avoid contact and lose a little bit of time.

Q. Marcus, you're back in the points lead, up 25 over Will Power. You get two weeks off. How do you feel the rest of the points race is going to shape out for you?

MARCUS ERICSSON: It's going to be tough all the way. Like we talked about, it's so competitive in the series at the moment. Any given weekend can be a new winner. It's hard to be even in the top 10 if you don't get everything right.

I think it's going to be a tough season, a long season. We put ourselves in a really good position now, leading. So we just got to keep doing what we've been doing. The last 12 months we were the top scorer in the championship. I think that says something about where we've been performing since Detroit actually last year, it was actually 12 months ago today.

Yeah, I think we're in a strong position, but it's going to require a lot of hard work, keep doing what we've been doing.

Q. You're all teammates, but do you feel you're the lead Ganassi car at the moment?

MARCUS ERICSSON: I think we're all equal, to be honest. We have Scott Dixon, which is a legend, one of the best ever. Obviously Alex, Jimmie.

The cool thing with Ganassi is we all get treated the same way. (Indiscernible) enough to continue. Yeah, that's how I see it.

Q. Marcus, how beneficial is this result for you given you're back in the lead in the championship going into the break?

MARCUS ERICSSON: Yeah, it's very big. I think we had a decent day in Detroit, but obviously it's never nice to lose the lead. So that was one of the goals going to Road America, to regain that lead.

Obviously Will and Pato and Alex, I think all three of them had bad days. That's good for us, since they were the closest ones in the championship going in.

But, yeah, like we said, it's going to swing a couple more times. It's a matter of being consistent now, bringing home the results. Today P2 was definitely a very good result for us with the way the race played out.

Q. Alex, what went through your mind when you saw Josef in front of you after that pit stop? Do you think you had the pace to chase him down or you lost the race on that move?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: I think through the subsequent three stints we were catching him. The last stint we were coming pretty hard at him. It was going to be really hard to pass him, I think.

But, yes, I think that certainly cost us a lot of time, A, because we lost the lead but 'B' he was the first to hit the lap traffic. It's always a little bit easier for the first car to get through the lap car as you come up on them.

Ultimately, yeah. But again, I don't want to take anything away from the pace and performance that he had all day. Like, we were a little bit off on the balance to start, and it took us a little bit to get it back in the window. Then the pace was good.

But, yes, it didn't help. I don't know ultimately what the end result, if it would have been any different.

Q. Alex, is there anything that you or the team can do to get over that proverbial hump that you're kind of stuck behind the last few weeks?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: I don't know. Is there anything I'm stuck behind?

Q. Is there a hump.

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Sorry, it's breaking up.

THE MODERATOR: Are you over the hump?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Are we over the hump? Well, I am 30, so... I guess (laughter). It's not awesome.

Yeah, I mean, I think you get a little bit of confidence as results come. Yeah, I mean, I guess we're still looking for a win.

But, yeah, I mean, it's certainly been a lot different these past couple races than it has been for the races preceding that. That's a good thing.

There's still areas we can improve and need to be better. We'll certainly look at that and analyze that going into Mid-Ohio.

Q. Definitely have to be looking forward to the break until the beginning of July.

MARCUS ERICSSON: I want to go racing again (smiling). I love what we're doing. It's fun that it's been so hectic the last few weeks.

But I think for sure for all the crews and everyone, it's good to get a bit of a break here before the second half. Also personally it's been pretty full on since the 500 win a couple weeks ago, so it's definitely going to be good to sort of get a couple days off, recharge, then refocus again for the rest of the season.

THE MODERATOR: We'll go ahead and let you guys go. Congratulations. We'll see you at Mid-Ohio in just a few weeks' time.
[ht: FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports]


NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference
Press Conference - Sunday, June 12, 2022
P1 - Josef Newgarden

THE MODERATOR: Congratulations, Josef Newgarden. The second win here at Road America. Third win of the season, 23rd of your career. Now ties the great Tommy Milton for 19th on the all-time list. Most importantly today the People Ready Force For Good Challenge, $1 million. Half goes to your favorite charity. A spectacular day.

Tell us about it a little bit.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It was a great day. Great, great day. Felt really good going into it. Felt like we had a car to win today. It was just about executing.

My team really put me in position on that first stop. Rossi was not going to be easy to beat today. I felt like he was very strong. I felt like we were a little bit better than him, but he was by no means going to be simple to go by.

That first stop is really what set the tone for us. Once we got in position, it was about getting through the lap markers, the alternate strategy quicker than him, building a gap, maintaining it. I felt like our PPG car was hooked up and had it from Team Chevy on the power side pretty much as always this year.

Really comfy. To be able to win this million bucks, give half of it to charity, is very cool. Very, very cool. I'm sure our recipients are going to be thrilled with that.

THE MODERATOR: On the Zoom joining us are your friends that are going to be the recipients.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Fantastic.

THE MODERATOR: Kathryn Hurley is the founder of the Nashville chapter of Wags & Walks.

Kathryn, say hello.

KATHRYN HURLEY: Hi.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Kathryn.

KATHRYN HURLEY: Hi. We are absolutely thrilled. Congratulations, Josef. I mean, you know what we're going to do this year with all the dogs here in Nashville. That was bigger than me winning the Super Bowl for the Detroit Lions. We are absolutely so, so thrilled.

It's going to impact literally thousands of dogs here in Nashville and allow us to build an amazing adoption center. Congratulations to you, Ashley and your little one at home.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Thank you.

For people don't know, our dog Axel was adopted through Wags & Walks. Kathryn really started the charge in Nashville. Wags & Walks started in L.A. Kathryn started the Nashville chapter for it. They've been doing an amazing job. They work with a lot of great people in Nashville. They save all sorts of dogs. All sorts. You should hear some of these heartbreaking stories that these guys through to find these dogs homes. We need more of that.

We're very happy to be able to get some money to this group because they've done a lot for us and for a lot of people in Nashville. Very thrilled.

Thank you, Kathryn, for all your work.

KATHRYN HURLEY: Thank you so much. Congratulations again.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you for joining us. By the way, the $10,000 for each and every race continues through the rest of the season. You may not be done.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We'll work on it more.

KATHRYN HURLEY: The good news continues.

THE MODERATOR: Blake Maher is the CEO from the (indiscernible).

BLAKE MAHER: Congratulations, Josef, on a big win for you and your whole team. Couldn't be more grateful for the win today and all you do for SeriousFun, a true champion for us.

(Loss of audio.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We want to help these groups as much as we can. To have something like this challenge I think fires you up more competitively, that you want to get it done for them. You know it's just a bonus and a plus for these two groups.

Yeah, not quite as emotional. I just know how impactful it is, so I get really competitive and want to make it happen.

THE MODERATOR: Tremendous day. So congratulations many times over.

Questions.

Q. What type of dog is Axel?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: He's a mutt. He has a lot of different breeds. He's a smart little fellow. Cute, adorable. 30 pounds. He's a lot of things. He's got Shepard in him. All sorts of stuff. I couldn't even tell you.

Q. You said on the TV interview you had forgotten about the $1 million prize. How can you forget about something like that?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I do forget about it at points. Like, I didn't think about it coming into this weekend. I totally forgot that that was a thing. There's a point you get reminded about it. You're like, Oh, yeah, that's right.

But for me, it's not something you really dwell on because it doesn't matter ultimately at the end of the day. I'm not going to try to win this race because this is on the line. You never approach any race that way.

I want to win the race because I want to win the race. It's a great little bonus. It's not a little bonus, that's a big bonus. It's just one of those things that kind of comes with it.

It's not motivating for me that I have to do something extra because of this. I'm putting my best effort forward every weekend. I know if we can just focus on our job, get the job done, at times I get reminded, This is also going to come with it. That's very, very cool obviously.

THE MODERATOR: Blake, do you have anything else to say? We lost you there.

BLAKE MAHER: Josef, I just wanted to make sure you heard our congratulations. We're so excited for you and the team. Thank you for being a champion for SeriousFun, whether you're at camp, welcoming kids to the racetrack, your ping-pong tournament. This, of course, is such a huge feather in your cap. We're so proud to work with you and thankful for all you do for all the kids at the camps around the world.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Thank you, Blake. We're so fortunate to have people like you and SeriousFun Children's Network. Keep up the great work as always.

BLAKE MAHER: Hope to see you soon. Take care.

THE MODERATOR: Blake, thanks. You've been a great friend for INDYCAR in the past and for years to come.

More questions.

Q. It seemed like the first pit stop was the key to the race. You were able to beat Rossi out. From that point on it seemed like every time...

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It was going to be that point or another point. Truthfully I was hoping for an all green start, no cautions, because I felt that's where we could find the exposure in Rossi's game.

I was kind of biding my time but felt like I had the straight speed advantage with him. I felt like my Chevy was much quicker than him on the straights. I was going to wait for an opportunity.

All the yellows really took away that potential. We were running most of the laps under caution, so the reds weren't going to drop off as much. We needed to make the difference somewhere else. We came in right on his tail. I made sure, Look, I'm going to give my team ample opportunity, get as close as I can to Rossi on the pits.

If it wasn't going to happen on the pit stop, it was going to be an out lap or a back end of a stint (indiscernible). The pit stop is what ended up being the pivotal point for us. If that wasn't the point, I think we could have made that point somewhere else today.

Q. Pit selection seemed to work in your favor. I believe you were the last pit out.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, yeah. We were first out, if you will, first box, which always helps. You got a clear out. You don't have to worry about typically a lot of the mess going on in the middle or wherever you're located at.

It does pay to start up front.

(Loss of audio.)

Q. Obviously the difference on a late restart this year versus last year was considerable. Can you forget that stuff?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don't really think about it. If you want to talk about last year, it's not anything anyone did wrong. It's a part that failed that I think was a $50 part. No one has ever seen it fail. It's not like it was a prep issue.

I couldn't have affected anything. I or the team couldn't have affected anything to make it different. Had no thought about it. I was just focused on today.

The thing I focus on is we're in position. You don't have many opportunities to be in position to close. I just want to close. That's where my head was at today, yep.

Q. With the two late restarts there at the very end, were you surprised on both cases how much you were able to gap Rossi going up the hill with the green flag there?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Not after watching him. I kind of knew where the strength and weakness was. I felt like we had a good advantage on him in certain areas. We tried to exploit that as best as possible.

It was two really good starts, great attack mode from Team Chevy. All of that contributes to being able to push the gap. I was hopeful we could do that, but I can't say I was surprised. I felt like we had that potential. I knew if we just do our job, we can do that, and was happy to see it kind of come to fruition.

Q. You get a good cut of it the bonus. After buying some baby stuff for the newborn, what is the first dumb thing you're going to buy with the money?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don't know. I don't know. Probably a bunch of McDonald's. Probably over a hundred dollars worth of McDonald's at least. That's probably stop one. After that, I don't know. We'll have to see.

Q. Will had a line in the interview that it's hard to get wins except for Josef, he's got multiple. How hard is it to win now compared to earlier in your career? What do they mean now?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It's extremely difficult. It's hard to win a pole. Hard to win a race. The landscape is not constant these days. I think 10 years ago you used to have sort of consistent trends. When a team would find a performance edge, they would typically carry that edge across the entire year.

Whereas now I think people find these little edges on each other like every weekend. It's going up and down all the time.

You see a McLaren strong at one track, Andretti strong at another, Ganassi pops up, ECR pops up, we're in the mix. Then a Shank pops up. It's never ending.

We say every year it's the closest competition we ever had. Somehow it keeps getting tighter. It must be just the development of this car has really hit a fine point. You're just constantly tuning little things now, millimeters of changes.

The driving style is getting tighter, with simulators, all this stuff you can analyze. It's impossible to hide something from the competition.

Yeah, it is very difficult to win these races consistently. To be able to put multiple on the board, it's a job well done to everybody in the 2 group.

Q. Three wins is like what drivers are looking for, if you want to win the championship, you have to win three races. Do you feel like you've got the momentum in the championship or is that still with Marcus after the 500 win?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It's been a little bit too up and down for us. Kind of feast or famine. I think we genuinely had the potential for four or five wins up to this point. So we've done three of the potential five, let's say. The other ones that we weren't winning, we were finishing too far back.

We've got to up our consistency. It's a little abnormal for us. I feel like we're a fairly consistent group. So I'm not going to lose sleep on why that was happening. Sometimes you get in these little micro trends where we didn't have the consistency we needed.

Number one, we need to clean that up. We need to win a couple more races before the year is out because of the way the first part of the season went. We definitely have wins on the board. But definitely more than wins, consistency is going to rule the day this year, for sure.

Q. (No microphone.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I mean, I felt good coming into the season. I felt good about last year. I remember we were getting hounded, up to this point last year we were getting hounded on why we hadn't won a race.

For me it was funny because I'm like, You guys must not be inside our internal network and seeing. We're just totally fine, totally fine. There's not a problem with the team. We're where we need to be. Just wasn't clicking off for some reason.

I felt that way going into this season and I feel that way now. I think we're in a good spot. We have to clean up the consistency. For one reason or another that didn't happen up to this point. I know if we keep doing our normal thing, that will come.

We just need to keep on a good track here till the finish. Feel very positive about our group. I mean, we don't have anything negative going on. Honestly, there's nothing that I could be complaining about. We got a really strong team, everything is in a good place, great partnerships with Tammy Chevy and everyone else. Yeah, feel good about it.

Q. (Question about the late caution.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I mean, I think I cooked my stuff a little bit too much on that second stint. I was aggressive with traffic. That's where I think I got the gap, was I was more aggressive than he was cutting through either a lap marker or an alternate strategy. So that ripped a really nice gap for us.

After that it was more just trying to manage it. I kept watching my gap to him. I was trying to study where he was strong and where I was weak. I just kind of focused on tire management after that point.

I could tell he was very good in the beginning through 75% of the stint. I think we had the edge in the last 25%. Look, we have a good gap here, got more overtake, let's just try to manage tires. That was my game plan as I got to middle to finish. I think that worked well for us.

I was surprised. We didn't get to see what was going to happen in the first stint because of all the yellows. That's where I thought I was going to find the exposure for him. I was a little bit worried, we missed that opportunity, but let's see what happens on the primaries. It worked out. I think we had a fast car all around.

Q. Can you explain how restarts work here.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, typically in INDYCAR now the rule is there's a restart zone that's designated. Typically it's around the final corner, sometimes sort of encompassing the entire final corner, sometimes it's a bit more.

In our case, it's kind of 13 to 14, that lead-up into 14 is the restart zone. So the procedure for us is the pace car lets us get temperature, does a pretty quick lap, then slows us down. By the time we get to the carrousel, packs us up. As we get to turn 12, he tries to get away. We let him get away to where we can start 13 to 14. That's our process.

Q. (No microphone.)

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Rossi was as tight as he could be to me when I got on the gas. He definitely wasn't getting jacked up, to use your words. It's just the point. INDYCAR sort of designates the restart area or zone that you can start in. We know that. That's what I did today.

Q. From our point of view once you got the lead, it seemed like you were pretty comfortable. Was it that comfortable to you? Anything you think you could have done better?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I would say it was only fairly comfortable today. I didn't feel like we were lights out better than anybody. But I felt like we were just as good. I felt we were kind of toe-to-toe with Rossi today. It was just about managing the tires the best.

I think raw pace on the primaries, we were probably similar. It was a matter of when you wanted to push them.

Yeah, what can we learn? There's always a lot of little stuff. We're going to go back and analyze the sectors, look at straights versus corners, mechanical changes that we made. We're going to analyze all of it and see where we can optimize for next year.

At this point the broad strokes are very good for this track, these conditions. Now that I'm also saying that, we're going to come back next year and it's going to be a completely new challenge, they're going to resurface this place. We are still going to analyze and learn what we can from this season, but pretty open book next year.

Q. This track could be quite a bit different. Do you think that's a good thing? Do you think it needs it or rather it stay like it is?

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I'm indifferent. If it's up to me...

(Loss of audio.)
[ht ; FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports]

Next up???

Mid-Ohio - The Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio Presented by the All-New 2023 Civic Type R on Sunday, July 3 (noon ET, NBC, Peacock Premium, INDYCAR Radio Network).

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TAGS: Josef Newgarden, The PeopleReady Force for Good Challenge, 1 Million Dollars, Marcus Ericsson, Will Power, Team Penske, Chevrolet-Powered, Road America, Halfway, Sonsio Grand Prix at Road America presented by AMR, The EDJE

Saturday, June 11, 2022

A Mature And Focused Drive By Will Power Delivers 100th Chevy INDYCAR Win

Will Power celebrates his third win at the park setting (41 career wins/5th all-time) in the fountain at Belle Isle, a street course race track that come to its end after 30 years of history and service. Image Credit: Penske Entertainment (2022)

A Mature And Focused Drive By Will Power Delivers 100th Chevy INDYCAR Win

While not qualifying well, as is the Will Power template at this parkland concrete "winterized" track, Team Penske set out a strategy that worked perfectly here during this, the last running of the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear at Belle Isle, Detroit.

After an appreciated 30 year run, the Detroit city fathers and Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix Inc. have decided to bring this Grand Prix challenge back to the streets through a temporary downtown circuit that will be slower, be shorter, have fewer turns, but will bring racing engine sounds bouncing off of the glass enclosed skyscrapers that make up the city of Detroit landscape.

Detroit Belle Isle Grand Prix Inc. informed the Detroit City Council panel that they wished to move the event off from the island park and  into the city's downtown. Under the Grand Prix's proposal, the race will be held on Detroit streets from 2023 through 2025. The 2023 race track is proposed to run on Jefferson and Atwater, essentially between Rivard and Bates, and have it proceed past the monument to Joe Louis. The track will be counter-clockwise, 10-Turns, 1.7 miles (shorter than Belle Isle’s clockwise, 14-Turn, 2.3-mile circuit). The racetrack will include dual pit lane and a U-turn at the Joe Louis fist in the heart of downtown. Image Credit: The Detroit News (2021)


NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference - Sunday, June 5, 2022
Will Power - Post Race Press Conference

THE MODERATOR - INTRODUCTION: Congratulations to Will Power. Win number three at the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear. Now ties with Scott Dixon and Helio Castroneves for most wins on the island, wrapping up the island era as we head to the streets of Detroit next year.

First win of the season. 41st career win. Fifth all time. Now one behind Michael Andretti for fourth all time. Sixth different winner this year. You also take over the points lead, you're three up on Marcus Ericsson.

THE MODERATOR: How did you do all that on reds at the end? How difficult was that? How satisfying at the end of the day?

WILL POWER: Yeah, obviously very satisfying. Redemption from last year. Yeah, the last stint, it was good because it had such a gap. On the out lap, it was really nice. You can do a bit of damage on the cold tires. I was really cognizant of not slipping the tire too much. Then just got in a rhythm and drove it really straight, really straight. Can be very quick that way. Just a certain way you can drive when tires are like that.

The fact that the track had rubbered so much looked after them. They never, like, dropped and I was like, Oh, my God. I just looked after them in case there was a battle at the end. If I had to go hard at the end, I think I could have.

THE MODERATOR: Getting Chevrolet's 100th win in their backyard. How proud are you to get number 100 for these guys?

WILL POWER: Yeah, great. I think I've got 26 of those 100. That's what they said. Yeah, very cool to have a partner like Chevy. I've been with them since 2012. Yeah, we've certainly had a lot of fun together. Won a championship, won an Indy 500, and a ride in the game this year again.

I cannot thank them enough. They work really hard. Certainly improved over last year. Better drivability, better engine all around.

Yeah, really proud to get the hundredth.

THE MODERATOR: Another championship for them when it's all said and done.

WILL POWER: That would be amazing. That's the goal.

THE MODERATOR: Questions.

Q. Facetiously, do y'all's mirrors have 'objects closer than they appear' on them? How close did Alexander Rossi look there on the last lap especially?

WILL POWER: Yeah, that was the first glimpse I got, I think. I had it on my dash where I can see the time behind and in front. I was getting updated every lap.

We held the gap, the same gap for a while. When I got stuck behind Harvey, I just kind of managed that gap. Yeah, the lap car in INDYCAR is a real deal and it's a problem (laughter).

Jimmie Johnson, when you follow him, he's amazing. Like, he's as fast as you ever see him go when you're coming, trying to get past him. I'm not joking. He actually drives really well then.

Q. Were you in that zone again today? What is that like?

WILL POWER: It's hard to get to that place. I used to be there a lot often when I was younger. But, yeah, it's just one of those zones where everything's clicking so well, you're 100% in the middle, it's that flow state. You can't make a mistake. You don't make a mistake. Just so much space there to play with it, you could say, like manipulate it, play with it.

Hard to explain. But I would get in that state for qualifying often, pump out some pretty ridiculous laps. That was today. That was the race for me. In a really good spot.

Q. Were you surprised there were no cautions today?

WILL POWER: Yes, I was surprised. But then, you know, we have races like that. Such a good field, like there's no bad drivers. There's no drivers that shouldn't be there. I mean, they're all good. It doesn't surprise me it was a mistake-free race.

As you've seen, what is it, seven races, six different winners? That's just the norm for INDYCAR now. The Fast Six is a different group every time, differ polesitter. There's no series like this in the world.

If you were to compare this to Formula 1, there's really two guys that are going to battle it out in Formula 1 right now. You're comparing to the best, biggest series in the world.

In INDYCAR try guess who will win the next race or who will be on pole, win the championship. Just try guess. You couldn't. It's impossible. I mean, there's so many good guys.

We need to get it out there. This product is so good. The racing is so good. It's so unpredictable. A different winner every week. The racing is great.

Q. Could you go into detail what you did with the reds. Some drivers started complaining about them going away after two, three laps. You kept them on for 20.

WILL POWER: Yeah, no, we were aware of that. I think the fact the track rubbered up is why we left it till the last stint. We had a good gap, so you could come out, you didn't have to battle someone on your out lap, and you could look after them, slowly get them up to temp without slipping them too much, then drive the car real straight.

Yeah, I was very aware of all that. Then aware of the time behind. I kept keeping the same gap for quite a while. We're pretty good here if nothing happens. Coming up on a group of cars was a bit of a worry. You get the turbulent air, this car moves around more.

I never feel like I'm going to win until the very last maybe two laps or something because, as you know, last year, I think I'm going to win this. No, you're not. There's been a few of them over the last few years of my career.

Until you cross the checkered, till you get that, you're not home.

Q. You mentioned a mental shift, maybe how you're approaching races differently. Have you done something differently or maybe the different place you feel you're in this year compared to the last couple?

WILL POWER: Yes, I am definitely, as far as in the race goes, I certainly perfected that sort of mental place you need to be in, decision making and such. But that was there last year. It's just that I had a lot of unfortunate things happen last year that really put me out of contention in some big races, in some races where I was top three for sure. It wasn't obvious.

It looks like a big change, but it's not a big change. I've had years of this. I'm so experienced at it, so I know it so well. I understand the game so well. I'm just executing as you should at my experience level. You're getting everything right, like all the details.

Obviously qualifying, hmm, a bit disappointed with that. I never qualify well here. I was 19th last year, so... I race well. Yeah, yeah.

Q. You mentioned you feel like you're racing the best you ever have in your career. Is that due to that mental approach? How do you feel you're different than you were in '14 when you won a championship?

WILL POWER: When I used to qualify on pole very often and start the very front very often, you're not racing in the pack very often. Now rarely am I right at the front for qualifying. Sometimes. No one is consistently at the front anymore. It's just too tough. So you're racing around other cars, you get very good at that, too. You get very good at restarts, good at judging where you should be. That's something I missed out early on in my career because I was so fast, I was in the front, I was always leading.

So, yeah, obviously fast. INDYCAR rules, as they are, rewards often qualifying badly. That's no joke, it does. You can really go off the guys in front of you. That's not always the case, but it's the beauty of INDYCAR, you can come from 16th and win, you can come from 19th at Barber and finish fourth. Did I get on the podium there?

THE MODERATOR: Fourth.

WILL POWER: Actually, you're having a lot of fun doing that, yeah.

Q. Do you feel like you're having the most fun you've ever had in your career?

WILL POWER: I'm not disappointed with bad results anymore. It is what it is. That's one thing that has changed with me. I really don't care. I don't have to put anything more up on the board. I could stop right now. I don't have to. So I haven't got that pressure. I just don't care anymore. I'm just enjoying it.

I massively care about my craft. I want to do it absolutely properly. But I don't care for a bad result because it is a part of the game. That's one thing that has changed me because I've learnt that's not fair. Yes, it is. I'm extremely lucky to be doing what I'm doing, just extremely lucky, just fortunate that I'm in this position to race cars and get paid for it. It's insane. Compared to what you could be doing... It can always be worse, no matter. It just can. Just lucky.

Q. How physical was the event this afternoon?

WILL POWER: Wasn't physical for me. I was just fine. Yeah, I didn't find it physical at all.

Q. In terms of the continuity you have going into the rest of the season, how much confidence does that give you going into Road America and beyond?

WILL POWER: It's different every weekend. But we have been really strong at pretty much everywhere except Indy this year.

Yeah, yep, I think the team, the engine is really good. I think the team is good. It has been. Everything is just flying nicely for us now.

Yeah, we want to be competitive for the rest of the year. We want to be in the championship hunt. That's the goal.

THE MODERATOR: This attitude you have about not finishing well, not caring, does any of that play into being a dad?

WILL POWER: Honestly, I just think it's just getting older. You know you're not going to be around. Once you've been on this earth for 40 years, Well, that went pretty quick. So the next 20 of being able to do stuff is going to go real fast. So who cares. Enjoy it. Enjoy it. That's it. It gets faster and faster. It's ridiculous, the years. I couldn't remember my last win last year. Somebody asked me when was the win last year. I couldn't remember.

THE MODERATOR: Being a dad is part of that, though.

WILL POWER: Absolutely. Best thing ever. I want four of them. Wife doesn't. I love it, man. She does the hard yards. I don't really do the hard yards. I just get to enjoy the kid.

Q. After the start of the season you had, how important was it to get back up with the championship standings after what happened at Indy?

WILL POWER: I was really happy in Indy to finish 15th, just starting how I did. Falling back to 30th. I just said in my head, Just keep digging. Every point matters. That's kind of what I've been doing. Every point matters.

I finished 15th. That's not bad. A couple legit championship contenders had bad days. We're still in it. We were only 24 behind after that. Had a good day there, be looking real good.

You're going to have that all year, these ups and downs. The straighter you can keep that line, the better it is.

Q. Coming up to Road America, you've had wins, podiums. How happy are you that's the next venue INDYCAR is heading to?

WILL POWER: Yeah, I'm looking forward to it. I'm looking forward to a bunch of these races coming up. Doesn't mean you're going to have a good day. Yeah, know the track, all the tracks. Yeah, going to do all the work necessary to be competitive.

Q. Going through the field like you did, you were only one of nine drivers to start on the black tires. How much fun was it being able to go around everyone on the reds?

WILL POWER: That was fun. I have to thank my engineer. He did a great job. He put a setup on that was all him. It was all his setup. In warmup I said, Yeah, I think this thing is real good.

I was very focused on getting all the guys on plaques, which was two. I got Kirkwood and I got Dixon. After that just picked them off. Got to Newgarden. Oh, we're actually in the lead here. Then, Let's go. Took off.

Q. Were you ever worried about having a repeat of what happened with Josef after a late yellow?

WILL POWER: That was a possibility. That was the risk we took. We started 16th. If that was happening, I was going to be happy to hang on to a top five or something, get good points.

Didn't get the yellow. Looked after the reds. It paid off. It was a risk worth taking.


Q. How did it feel to finally be able to go in the fountain this time?

WILL POWER: Getting in the fountain was really rewarding. I can't believe it actually happened because I knew it was the last race, what are the chances. I lost the chance last year. I thought the chance of it happening again is pretty slim, especially after qualifying.

You can never give up. Never give up.

Q. Did you hear us rooting for you?

WILL POWER: Yeah.

Q. We were shouting, Take a swim.

WILL POWER: Well, I took a swim.

Q. After all the shenanigans of last year, did you go into this year at the start of the season having this race a little more important than others on the calendar?

WILL POWER: It was a race on my mind, no question. I wanted to get that one, yep. Not that you were able to do any more work for this race because it was so close after the 500, you're exhausted. You get to do the simulator.

Yeah, it's funny how things work out. That's why you don't sweat it on the bad days because they do come back. You just relax and let it come to you. It feels like it's the way life rolls. Never is perfect. It just isn't. It's not built for humans to have perfection.

Q. How soon after the race last year were you starting to think about this race this year?

WILL POWER: I think in the off-season I'll, like, flag a race in my head, I want to win that race. Often it happens. It's crazy, but it does. I know it's just planting that seed in your subconscious. Just unfolds as it should, yeah.

I can't remember if I was thinking of this one in the off-season. Maybe.

Q. Earlier you talked about turbulence passing cars. Am I crazy to ask you being held up by Jack Harvey, did that help?

WILL POWER: Yeah, that was hurting the car. I was aware of that. He ain't going to give me any help. But I knew I could get Ferrucci to help me out. He was pretty good at the beginning of the race. Ferrucci backed off, which opened it up for Harvey a little bit to pull the gap.

I was thinking if I could get Santino to let Jack go, let us both go, he's going to take off and give us more of an air gap, and that happened.

Q. (No microphone.)

WILL POWER: The blue flag means zero in this series. It's ridiculous they even put it out. We've been pushing, all the drivers, have been pushing. Should mean something. At least with 25% of the race to go it should mean something.

Q. You mentioned you feel like you were in a similar mental place last year and this year. Is there a specific time in the recent past where you feel you changed your approach to racing?

WILL POWER: If you go back and look at let's say the last two years, you will find that there are some pretty ridiculous things that have happened that were out of my control. Like I can't really -- I don't know why they happened. Is it an attitude? Is it a vibe you give off? Some of the mistakes we made like in pits or things have gone wrong? I don't know.

You get more relaxed as you get older. Yeah, there's not a massive shift mentally. I mean, yes, certainly this year -- let's just leave it. I'll tell you after I retire (laughter). I don't give much away.

Q. You signed a new two-year deal starting this year. You mentioned not knowing how much longer you're going to be doing this. Any sort of freedom when you enter a contract knowing this might be potentially the last couple years?

WILL POWER: I'd say there's freedom in not caring -- not having to add to anything you've done. That's the feeling I have. I could stop now and be satisfied with what I've done.

Yeah, anything else you add on to that is a bonus. There's freedom. You don't have the pressure of I'm only two years into my career and I have to try to make a living out of it. You know what I mean?

It doesn't matter. I could stop now and it would be okay. But I'm still performing at a really high level, probably better than I ever have. So just enjoying that. Trying to extract the most out of it is the enjoying part of it.

Q. On the strategy you did today, at the beginning the blacks seemed to work better. I would like to know what were the rationals for you leaving the reds till the end? Was it decided before the race or on the fly?

WILL POWER: It was talked about before the race but it was decided on the fly because the further we went, the more rubber went down and the more chance that the reds would last. That was the thinking behind that. That was the reason.

The later you did it, the better chance you were going to have to holding onto them.

Q. It was a green flag race but we have McLoughlin speeding, coming back to the race. Any fears after yellow flag coming?

WILL POWER: There was definitely fear of a yellow at the end because that would have been really tough. Yeah, it didn't happen, so... I was pretty surprised to have a full green race here.

Q. How good does it feel winning Detroit this year knowing what happened to you last year? Of all those tracks we have ahead on the championship, which is the track you feel most excited to race? Which do you feel it's going to help you for fighting the championship this year?

WILL POWER: Yeah, I was really excited to obviously win this race after last year. Had my eye on it for quite a while.

And the tracks coming up? They're all good. I mean, it's so hard to know where you'll be strong or where you'll be weak because the series is so tough now. Everyone is so good. It's very mixed up week after week. You just got to try to be consistent.

I don't see any tracks -- well, I would say Indy road course I'm usually pretty good. Can be hit-or-miss sometimes. Yeah, all the tracks, looking forward to them all coming up. I have won at most of them, but some I won a long time ago.

THE MODERATOR: The People Ready Force For Good Challenge, $10,000 split today amongst you and the team, your favorite charity, which I believe is Speedway Children's Charities, is that correct?

WILL POWER: Yes. Speedway? It should be Charlotte.

THE MODERATOR: Tell us a little bit about that, the charity.

WILL POWER: Why I picked that charity?

THE MODERATOR: Exactly.

WILL POWER: I really have a lot of empathy for kids after I had my own kid. I want to help them in any way I possibly can. That's why I chose that charity.

THE MODERATOR: The name again?

WILL POWER: Actually, yeah, the Speedway Children's Charity. I believe so. I told them to get a charity that was for kids, and they told me there was a Speedway charity.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you.
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TAGS: Detroit Grand Prix, Will Power, Chevrolet, Team Penske, Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear, The EDJE