IndyCar Reintroduces Push-To-Pass: Good For Action Or Folly?

IndyCar reintroduced push-to-pass last weekend at Toronto.  Was this a good move or not?  Well, I was skeptical about reintroducing a somewhat contrived way of promoting overtaking.  After all, during the Grand Prix of Alabama at Barber Motorsports Park, there was plenty of passing at a course where historically it has been difficult to overtake.  At Toronto, since there was no indicator on the broadcast of when push-to-pass was being used, it was difficult to determine the overall effect.  We did hear toward the end of the race that Ryan Hunter-Reay had enough of his 100 seconds of push-to-pass time allotment remaining to use it on the main straight for the remainder of the race, effectively making it push-to-defend in his case.  Unfortunately the race ended under caution with Hunter-Reay at the front, so we never saw what was to happen in his case.  I’d say the final verdict is out for now, but my opinion is that it’s not needed and its reintroduction was a mistake.  We’ll see what happens next week at Edmonton.  I’d rather see at least 25% more horsepower which would make the race outcomes more dependent upon driver skill.

I’m eager to hear what Robin Miller or a couple of top drivers have to say…

Fast Friday Results – Marco Sets Fastest Lap of May at IMS

Marco Andretti turned the fastest time at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on the final practice day before Pole Day.  His speed of 227.540 mph (39.5535 lap time) put his Chevrolet powered Andretti Autosport #26 on the top of the sheet ahead of the Ryan Briscoe’s Team Penske#2 by a scant 0.1229 seconds.  Four of Marco’s Andretti Autosport teammates are also in the top ten.

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Marco Andretti of Andretti Autosport

The top ten:

  1. Marco Andretti, 227.540
  2. Ryan Briscoe, 226.835
  3. Helio Castroneves, 226.716
  4. Ryan Hunter-Reay, 226.400
  5. Scott Dixon, 226.224
  6. James Hinchcliffe, 225.874
  7. Ana Beatriz, 225.653
  8. JR Hildebrand, 225.571
  9. Dario Franchitti, 225.370
  10. Tony Kanaan, 225.322

Current IZOD IndyCar points leader Will Power was in 11th, rookie Josef Newgarden was 13th, and SoCal’s Charlie Kimball was 14th.

The last time someone named Andretti was on pole at the Indy 500 was in 1987, and his name was Mario.  Incidentally, that was also the year Marco was born.

Fast Friday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway!

I’ll be paying extra attention to IZOD IndyCar action throughout the summer because IndyCar is the only major professional racing series to have multiple races in SoCal.  First was the Annual Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach, also thought of by many as the ‘Monaco of the US’.  And we are also fortunate in SoCal to have the season finale at Auto Club Speedway in September.

Today is Fast Friday at IMS, the last day of practice before Pole Day.  You can watch and listen to the action live at IZOD IndyCar Series Race Control.  So far Ryan Hunter-Reay is topping the time sheets, and SoCal’s own Charlie Kimball is 25th.  Come on Charlie!

More later…

Power Takes Grand Prix of Long Beach

The set up for the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach IndyCar race – ultimately won by Will Power – promised something interesting.  All Chevy-powered cars were penalized 10 spots from qualifying due to unauthorized – but evidently necessary – engine changes.  IndyCar rules mandate a 10 spot penalty for an unauthorized engine swap.  Chevrolet’s decision was prompted by the failure of James Hinchcliffe’s engine during a practice session at Infineon prior to the start of Long Beach festivities.  Apparently, the replacement engines are the same spec, and there has been speculation that fuel detonation (AKA knocking) was the problem.

With that backdrop, Parnelli Jones gave that famous command for the drivers to start their engines.  The excitement started shortly after the green flag as Josef Newgarden attempted an outside pass on pole-sitter Dario Franchitti at Turn 1, clipped Dario’s right front, and slid into the tire barriers.  Full course yellow before lap 1 complete!  On the restart, Justin Wilson made a successful Turn 1 pass on Franchitti, which began Dario’s slide over the next several laps.  Simon Pagenaud, Takuma Sato, and Scott Dixon passed Franchitti in succession while Justin Wilson was simply running away from the field.

On lap 20, Sebastien Bourdais, former four time Champ Car Champion skidded into the Turn 9 tire barriers after having moved up 5 positions from his last row starting spot.  Wilson took the opportunity to dive into the pits and changed from red to black tires.  Franchitti had a horrible restart on lap 23, and Sato took the lead.  Shortly after the restart, EJ Viso tangled with Alex Tagliani, causing Tagliani to pit for an extended repair.  Viso was later penalized with a drive thru penalty.  Later on lap 23, Marco Andretti hit the Turn 8 tire wall in a violent crash that brought out another full course yellow.  Marco had been making a run on Graham Rahal, and as Rahal moved right slightly to defend, Andretti’s left front tagged Rahal’s right rear.  The resulting collision launched Andretti into an airborne 360 degree spin – taking out Rahal’s rear wing – before slamming into the barriers.  While the cars circled under yellow, Bourdais rejoined the race and Dixon left it.  Dixon’s car simply quit on the approach to Turn 8, not far from where Andretti and Rahal collided.

The top 5 on the lap 30 restart were Briscoe, Franchitti, Castroneves, Wilson, & Pagenaud.  Even though Dario was struggling thru the first third of the race, he was still near the front.    Dario, Helio, & Will Power pitted on lap 34, leaving Pagenaud in the lead with Kanaan in second and Wilson third on lap 35.   By lap 40, Power was pushing James Jakes hard for fifth place, and on lap 41, he completed a Turn 1 pass.  Pagenaud was in first and Wilson second as Kanaan pitted.

With 40 laps to go, Pagenaud was still in the lead, but needed to save some fuel.  Wilson was still hanging on in second on his blacks; Sato was third.  Will Power had managed to fight his way to fourth from twelfth.  Rubens Barrichello was all the way up to seventh, and JR Hildebrand was eighth but struggling with handling issues.  Conway’s car just quit – the second Honda to simply give it up.  Pagenaud pitted from the lead with 37 to go; Sato moved up to take the lead once again with Wilson right behind in second.  One lap later, Power took second from Wilson with a Turn 1 pass.  At this point, Charlie Kimball was hanging on in fourth as the top Ganassi car, and Barrichello was right behind him in fifth.

Viso had been holding up Castroneves, who was desperate to get past him.  In a crazy incident between Turns 7 & 8 Helio ended up accidentally chopping his teammate Ryan Briscoe while trying to get past Viso.  Amazingly, there was only minor contact, and all three managed to get thru Turn 8 relatively unscathed – and with Helio ahead of Viso.

Wilson pitted with 33 to go, and Power came in two laps later leaving Sato in first, followed by Hildebrand, Hunter-Reay, and Hinchcliffe.  With 30 to go, Sato made his last stop, leaving Hunter-Reay in first and Hildebrand in second.  Within the next three laps, Hunter-Reay, Hildebrand, Briscoe, and Hinchcliffe all pitted.  Now the top four were Pagenaud, Kanaan, Sato, and Power.  The question remained: of all the fast runners, who had to conserve fuel, and who could make it to the end?

With 20 to go, the top five were Pagenaud, Power, Sato, Jakes, and Wilson – Power having gotten by Sato on lap 26.  From this point, Wilson began slipping back, his tires going away; he was passed by Barrichello (for fourth) then Hildebrand (for fifth).

Pagenaud pitted from the lead with 16 laps to go, promoting Power to the top spot.  He came back out into fourth between Rubens and JR and was charging hard.  By now Hunter-Reay, Kimball, Wilson, and Hinchcliffe were running in a tight pack for sixth thru ninth.  Pagenaud took third from Barrichello with 11 laps remaining.  The final ten would be exciting – still, who was okay on fuel?

With eight to go, Will Power had about a 5 second gap to Takuma Sato in second, but Simon Pagenaud was charging fast.  One lap later, Barrichello, who last pitted on the same lap as Power, came in for a splash of fuel.  How could Power make it seven more laps?  Pagenaud passed Sato for second with six to go at Turn 1.  With 5 to go, he was about 5 seconds behind Power, who seemed to be conserving fuel, and charging very hard.

Kanaan was pushing Hildebrand very hard for sixth; he took a run at Turn 8 but backed out as the two nearly touched.  Finally at Turn 1 with three laps to go, Kanaan took the spot.  Power got the call to put the pedal down; could he keep Pagenaud behind him?

On the final lap, Hunter-Reay spun Sato from third at Turn 6.  What a shame; after such a great run, Sato would lose a podium spot.  Later at the Turn 11 hairpin, Helio punted Rubens into a spin that caused a major conflagration involving those two plus Wilson and Servia – blocking the entire turn!

In the end, Will Power was able to hold off Simon Pagenaud for the win, and James Hinchcliffe took the final podium spot.  Hunter-Reay and Castroneves  were both penalized for their final lap transgressions – small consolation to their victims.  Congratulations to Will Power and Team Penske.

The big story lines for the 38th running of the Grand Prix of Long Beach were:

  • Will Power wins from twelfth after the IndyCar mandated ten spot grid penalty; he was also able to run a hard 31 laps from his last stop while others needed fuel
  • Franchitti finished two laps down at fifteenth after starting on pole; neither Target Ganassi cars were competitive beyond the midpoint of the race
  • Honda could not manage a win even though all Chevrolet powered cars were penalized 10 grid places
  • Team Penske is 3 for 3 so far this season
  • Andretti getting airborne and crashing hard after hitting Rahal’s right rear with his left front

Can’t wait until next year…

 

 

Grand Prix of Long Beach Indy Car Race Just Over 1 Hour Away…

Ryan Briscoe won the Firestone Fast Six yesterday while setting the track record in his Hitachi #2 car.  Unfortunately, he’ll take a ten spot grid penalty along with all other Chevy-powered cars because of a decision by Chevrolet to change all engines after James Hinchcliffe had a major engine problem in a practice session before the Long Beach weekend.  He’ll start at eleventh alongside his Penske teammate Will Power at twelfth.

The penalties leave Dario Franchitti in his #10 Target Ganassi car on the front row along with rookie Josef Newgarden in the #67 Sarah Fisher Harman racing car.  Justin Wilson (#18) and Simon Pagenaud (#77) will start in row two.  Scott Dixon (#9) and Takuma Sato (#15) will share row three.

Having so many of the fast drivers starting from the middle of the grid should make for an exciting IZOD IndyCar race today at the Long Beach street course.

IndyCar Qualifying – GP of Long Beach

Gallery

This gallery contains 19 photos.

Pictures from IZOD IndyCar series qualifying at Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach… Results of Firestone Fast 6: Ryan Briscoe Will Power Ryan Hunter-Reay Dario Franchitti E.J. Viso James Hinchcliffe However all Chevy-powered cars take 10 spot grid penalty for … Continue reading

Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach Broadcast Schedule

Tequila Patrón American Le Mans Series

Television Broadcast: Saturday, April 14, 4:30 PM PT ESPN2
Live Streaming: Saturday, April 14, 4:15 PM PT  ESPN3
Live Qualifying: Friday, April 13, 5:00 PM PT  ESPN3

IZOD IndyCar Series

Television Broadcast: Sunday, April 15, 12:30 PM PT NBC Sports Network

Pirelli World Challenge

Live Streaming: Sunday, April 15, 4:15 PM PT World Challenge TV

Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach is here!

The 38th Annual Grand Prix of Long Beach – often referred to as America’s Monaco – is next weekend. American LeMans Series, IndyCar, Pirelli World Challenge, and the Toyota Celebrity Race will be taking to the streets of Long Beach in sunny Southern California.  The ALMS race, featuring great competition in the GT class from Porsche, BMW, Corvette, Ferrari, and for the first time years, Dodge Viper, is next Saturday at 4:30 PM PT. IndyCar takes to the streets on Sunday at 1:15 PM PT.

IndyCarWill Power will be eager to continue his success on street and road courses.  In the Grand Prix of Alabama at Barber Motorsports Park, Power made a fantastic charge from 9th to win the event.  Helio Castroneves took the first race in St. Petersburg.  Penske is on a roll.

ALMS – In the Sebring opener, which featured a somewhat confusing grid of ALMS and WEC entries, Joey Hand, Dirk Mueller, & Jonathan Summerton brought the RLL BMW M3 home first in GT.  Jan Magnussen, Antonio Garcia, & Jordan Taylor came in second in their Corvette C-6 ZR1.