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CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Romain Grosjean INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

ROMAIN GROSJEAN, No. 77 Juncos-Hollinger Racing Chevrolet:

THE MODERATOR: We are joined by Romain Grosjean. Tell us about the transition to the new team. How is it going, and are you looking forward to 2024 here?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, the transition is going well. Everyone has been very welcoming in the team. Already spent the day yesterday, some time in December with everyone, and it’s been great. That’s very cool, and excited for the season for sure.

A lot to discover, a lot to understand, a lot to know where we are, but the good thing is that we got a couple of tests before we go to St. Pete’s that should help us get started.

Q. Seems like this team is moving forward. We saw a lot of progress out of them over the last two years. Talk about the relationship moving forward, both you looking for your first win, this team is on the growth, moving up, had some great runs last year, and then talk about some places where you know in your head you want to improve coming up in 2024?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, I think it may be early to speak about wins. For sure we’re going to try to do everything we can, but we also have to be realistic that we are, as you said, up and coming. The team has been doing really good for the last few years, but it’s still a three-year-old team.

So a lot to do, but I think everyone is very motivated and very aware of what we can achieve and what we cannot achieve. That’s good.

Places to improve, the Indy 500 for sure. At least try to see the checkered flag would be a good start.

Q. You’re in a new team now. How does joining a new team in the INDYCAR Series help you in your direction for the new season?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, it’s the third one in four years, so I’m getting used to it. Obviously it’s always a challenge. It’s always positive. There’s always things we need to adapt. But as I say, everyone is super open minded.

I’m excited to see what we can do together. I’m realistic of where we are and what we need to do. But it’s INDYCAR, and everything can happen on track. We’ll make sure that we seize every opportunity that we can.

Q. When you look back at the last two years, how do you judge what happened? Obviously I would imagine you’re disappointed in how things played out, and then obviously going to a new team, you’re obviously excited about that, but the last two years, how can you analyze what happened both on and off the track for you?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, I think we tried and we had a lot of belief that we could fight for the championship, and we did not achieve that. I had an amazing time with some great characters over the last two years, made a lot of good friends.

But right now I’m more interested in focusing on 2024 and seeing what we can do with Juncos Hollinger Racing than moaning about the past. As I said, a lot of good friends up there, a lot of good times, a lot of good positions, podiums. It just didn’t play out our way. But the next chapter is the important one.

Q. Obviously you had a very successful time at Dale Coyne (Racing) when you came into INDYCAR and enjoyed working inside that team. I guess Juncos is maybe a similar size to Dale Coyne when you were there. Wondered if there was anything that you enjoy about working in a team like this. Obviously in Formula 1 you were working in much bigger atmospheres. I guess the chance to work in smaller teams means you can be more hands on and enjoy the experience more than in previous teams?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: I think it’s positive working in both small teams and big teams. For sure small team is more family based small type of feeling. I really enjoy the Latin American, Latin type of relation that we have, that I’m closed to friends in Switzerland, where with Ricardo and everyone in the team, that’s for sure.

There’s also a lot of beauty about being in a bigger team. They are the ones selected by the manufacturer to do all the hybrid tests so they have got a lot more knowledge than we do on all of that. They are more research on certain things.

But I’m definitely excited about what we have coming and very happy with everyone that I’ve met and everyone I’m going to work with.

Q. You were talking about the relationship in Latin American style that you have with people like Ricardo (Juncos). I would like to ask you about your new teammate Agustin Canapino. How did you get on with him in the first days and can you give any assessment on his rookie season in 2023 and what can you bring together as a team?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, sure. I think the team has been very welcoming. Agustin, as well. We’ve had a great time at the factory together. I know he’s excited to work with me. I’m excited to work with him, as well.

I think he’s got an incredible background in touring car, and there’s definitely a lot of things that I can learn from him on that side and that driving style that he can bring into single seater, and I think for him it’s also important to have for 20 years or something like that, and has got a lot of experience.

I have a very good relationship. I’m looking forward to working with him. I think we’re both at a time in our life that is all about working together and working well for the team, so that’s going to be exciting. His first year in INDYCAR, there was some very impressive performances. There was some that were less good, but also you have to remember that INDYCAR has got so little test that when you come as a rookie, it’s not that easy.

Q. Do you think he has been progressing throughout the season? At the end of the season in 2023 Juncos-Hollinger Racing was fairly close to being in the top 10. Do you think you can raise even more that benchmark?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Well, we’re definitely going to try to be in the top 10 at first and then see if we can do top 5 and even more. But step by step, we know where we are and we know where we want to go.

Q. When did you say your first test in a Juncos-Hollinger car is going to be?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: It’s going to be Homestead-Miami between the Roar and the Rolex, so I think it’s 22, 23 and 24. It’s going to be a day and a half somewhere in that week.

Q. I know the last two years at Andretti, it was easy to kind of gauge what success was going to look like. It was going to look like poles and wins and podiums and things like that. You mentioned wins may be too soon to expect at a team that’s still just three years old. When we get to the end of this 2024 season, what would you at this point call a successful year in your first year with JHR?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: It’s the same question, and to be honest with you, I didn’t think of it. I don’t have an answer. I think we have to see where we start in St. Pete, in Thermal, and then see where we can move from there. I think success would be to improve and get better race after race, and see what we can do, see if we can get a decent Indy 500. That’s a big race in the year.

It’s not easy, and the team is like, okay, we need to rely on you in the Indy 500, and I’m like, I’m going to be fair with you, I don’t know what a good car is. I can’t tell you. We have to learn together.

I think, yes, it’s difficult to exactly — as I say, top 10 and top 5 would be awesome, try to be somewhere near that in the driver’s championship by the end of the year and see what we can do, but definitely try to get every opportunity we can.

Q. Because a lot of the smaller teams didn’t get a chance to do any of the hybrid testing, were you a little bit relieved when INDYCAR delayed that until the middle of the season?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yes. I think for us, it was tricky. It was an advantage for some that was pretty significant, and when we were doing the drivers’ meeting early in December, the guys were asking a question about the hybrid, and I had no idea what they were talking about. Definitely kind of happy that it’s been postponed.

It’s also going to allow us to start with a known concept on the car and move from there and see when the hybrid comes in, and hopefully by then we do have a lot more knowledge on it.

Q. Also on the IMS road course, you’ve been successful with two different teams, so obviously it’s driver feel that you have for that course. Is it beyond the realm of possibility to expect you to have a really good performance, both in qualifying and in the race on the IMS road course?

ROMAIN GROSJEAN: Yeah, I don’t know. I think the team looked really good in Portland and Laguna Seca last year. So that’s going to be good. We’re going to try to bring that for sure to a lot of different racetracks.

Finding time to go testing on road courses is not easy. The weather obviously in the winter is impossible, and then the season starts. It’s definitely something I’m trying to put a lot of effort on because I think it’s important that we find the right package for the road course, but too early to say anything.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Scott McLaughlin INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, No. 3 Team Penske Chevrolet:

THE MODERATOR: Continuing on, joining us, Scott McLaughlin, driver of the No. 3 Team Penske Chevrolet beginning his fourth full-time season now in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, finishing a career-best third in the championship last year with a win last at Barber Motorsports Park, along with four podiums from there on.

That’s in the past, though, right? Rearview mirror. It’s on to 2024 and even bigger goals for you.

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Yeah, for sure. 2024 is exciting. I think I’ve said a number of times today, I feel like my off-track side is sorted in terms of I’ve got my Visa now, I’ve bought a house, got a second dog. Everything is sorted on that side, and I can finally at the start of the season focus on racing in some ways.

I’m excited to hit the ground running hopefully at St. Pete, a place that I love. I feel like we really finished the year strong last year and it is going to be important to start the year strong with the changes throughout the season.

I’m really excited throughout the year and feel really comfortable with where I’m at.

Q. You said a second dog?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: We bought a golden retriever puppy. The dogs are getting along really well, which is fantastic. The dog, Chase is five, and, yeah, he took her under his wing pretty well. Good stuff. Big steps.

Q. (No microphone.)

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: That never really bothered me from that point of view. I always feel like I’m pretty loose when it comes to having a bit of fun outside the track. When I put my helmet on and I need to get ready, I know when I’m ready.

Yeah, I felt like we had our best year last year leading the three of us, and I felt really good with my process. It was just a matter of putting together things a little bit earlier on in the season and winning races when we probably should have.

There was a couple of races we kind of let go as well. But, yeah, I’m super excited for the year. I feel very comfortable with where I’m at with the team. Nothing is going to change on my team as far as I know, which is nice to go into the season ready to go.

Q. (No microphone.)

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Oh, huge. It was awesome to be in Phoenix with Ryan (Blaney). We’re very close. I play a lot of golf, but hang out outside of golf courses and race tracks together. It was awesome being a part of that, and like you said, certainly puts a bit of fire in my belly to get it done and come back here stronger and hopefully do the same for myself this year.

Q. You mentioned after Laguna Seca, you were really happy with being able to say you were the highest-finishing Team Penske driver in the championship. That was a big thing for you coming into that weekend. I know you won a couple of races in 2022. Was it two or three? I can’t remember.

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Three, yeah.

Q. Maybe kind of a two-part question. First, did you come into last year feeling like you had a legitimate shot at winning a championship? And regardless of that answer, how much better prepared do you feel like you are to potentially do that this year?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: I think ever since I won my first race, I knew that every year after that, every year I come into the sport now, I’m going to have a legitimate shot, knowing that the tools I have at hand and where I am in my development as an IndyCar driver.

Yeah, I never come out and say I’m going to win the championship. I don’t. I know that I’ve got the tools to. I feel like I’m in the best possible spot I’ve ever been for a long time, but even probably better than last year.

But it’s the same for everyone. Everyone comes in and says the same thing, that they feel better and whatever. It’s just a matter of doing your talking on the track. I feel comfortable. I knew what we could do last year. I knew that I could beat Will and Josef in the championship, and especially when I had an opportunity to.

It was a matter of me and Ben coming together and working out exactly what I wanted, and we had a really strong stretch. That was what really made it happen.

I think we can certainly do that — with the championship side, we can have a really good run and put ourselves in position to hopefully finish off the year in a position that we are in contention for the championship.

Q. You hear through stick and ball sports, even I’m sure in super cars, rising up through the ranks, rising up through the grid is one thing, but to get that next little bit, the top of the game, is one of the most difficult steps. You’re pretty much there. Have you seen that in IndyCar? Is it tougher than you thought it was? What are your thoughts to get that next little bit to be a champion in the sport?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: It’s like weight loss, right? You lose a heap, and the last little bit you want to lose is the hardest part. I’m going through that at the moment.

The same thing with this sport. The hardest thing here is you just know you’re competing with the world’s best drivers in some ways. It’s so competitive, the margins are so tight, but you’re trying to get that last little bit.

Sometimes that last little bit in the sport is a little bit of luck, whether it’s like yellows or certain things. You might have the fastest car and certainly places like Nashville and other places, road course that’s we’ve been to throughout the year, we had a really good opportunity to win, but the yellow didn’t fall our way, or fuel strategy didn’t work our way or whatnot, and you find yourself fifth or sixth in a race that you could easily have been maybe the top step of the podium.

I think that’s — what Alex did last season was incredible. His season was fantastic, and it’s a credit to him and his team. We all strive for one of those seasons, and there’s no doubt that it can be done because he did it. But it is hard to find that last little bit. Somehow, some way, you find it. You’ve just got to keep working.

Q. You mentioned about having your Visa now and you feel like your life off track is sort of — how big personally is that? I know your wife’s a citizen, but to have that all squared away just personally coming into this year. I know sometimes that can be a distraction. How rewarding, I guess, is that for you?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: It’s nice because you feel like you’re building actually the American dream in some ways. Last year my Visa was sorted, I had a green card and everything was sorted, but I was going through trying to buy a house with Karly and I didn’t have a credit score, so the whole credit thing was crazy. So that was like a stress thing.

It’s just nice. I love this place. I love the people. I love the places we go, the racing, and I can certainly see myself being here for the rest of my life. Yeah, it’s nice to have that, like you said, off-track sorted. Not that it’s going to reinvent my wheel, but it’s a nice feeling.

It’s just really cool.

Q. A lot of talk today about former drivers and what their roles are with various teams. I recall your first go at Texas when you got out of the car, Rick Mears came up to you. That was a personal moment. I won’t ask about what he said. But talk a little bit about how he has influenced your career both professionally and personally.

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Yeah, huge amount. Rick’s basically my eye in the sky in some ways. He’s not my spotter, but he certainly watches everything with a keen interest and where I’m positioning the car. He’s one of the first people that always comments about my driving when I come back in from an oval.

It has been more so his help has been on ovals to accelerate that phase, and that’s been amazing for me, particularly at Indy, but short ovals as well, I just find myself picking up the phone and ringing him, which I’ve had the privilege to, which is an amazing feeling.

But, yeah, trying to use him the right way has been really enjoyable to do. But also, at the end of the day, I’ve really leaned on Josef and Will as well. Josef helped me a lot with short ovals last year and Will from a qualifying perspective as well.

Like I said, we’ve got really good camaraderie, whether it’s Rick (Mears), whether it’s the three of us as well, it’s a really cool team, and it’s certainly helped me accelerate to the point where I am today.

Q. First of all, Scott, you’re comfortable in the U.S., but we’re still going to call you a New Zealander.

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Please, I’m still going to call myself a New Zealander.

Q. Looking at the comment you made before and the fact that the Thirsty-threes are all back together again, the consistency inside the team for you, having people like Finchy there alongside you doing strategy, is that important rather than having a change around in team members?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Look, like I said, as far as I’m concerned, it’s the same. It hasn’t been finalized just yet, but I know for a fact that Ben’s going to be my engineer and whatnot, and Malcolm is — it’s fantastic to have that same core group. We get along very well.

It’s no secret that we play a lot of golf and hang out outside of the track, but that’s how we work together. We have this pretty seamless sort of feeling between all three of us, and it’s a nice feeling knowing that they’re in your corner.

Malcolm’s been with me since I came to America. He’s a super good guy and super smart guy. Lucky to have the pair of them. But at the same time, our car and the 12 car and the 2 car, we all — it’s a very good group and a lot of motivation in the group this year to go bigger in ’24 and hopefully bring the Astor Cup back.

Q. You’ve been around the surroundings before in terms of a chase for the championship and categories you’ve driven in previously. Last year you got to be in the IndyCar Series. Having now done that within this series, is that going to make you smarter come the last quarter of the season, like you’re aware of the situations that come into hand?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: I definitely think having the experience of trying to win a championship and being in a position to have that pressure, have the TV, have the media talking all about it, it definitely is a nice thing compared to someone who hasn’t been in that position before. I think that helps.

But by the time everything, honestly, shakes out in INDYCAR, you’re hard pressed to find a point at the end of the season where a reigning champ or someone that hasn’t won the championship or the 500 isn’t involved in winning the championship, which is a testament to how good they are and how good the category is.

Yeah, I feel — I wouldn’t say it’s an advantage, but it definitely probably settles me down mentally knowing what to expect, I guess.

Q. Finally, you’re back in Indianapolis for this content day that the season’s doing. It’s actually still quite a long time until the start of the season, but being back in Indianapolis, is that one place down on the corner of 16th and Georgetown that says come visit me in May, do you feel the vibe of the Indy 500 lurking in the background because you’re back in the city and knowing that it’s not really that far away?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: Yeah, it’s awesome. Every time you fly in basically, you fly over the track. So it’s pretty cool. It reminds me a lot of Bathurst where you sort of come over the hill on the road there and see the Mount Panorama sign for the first time. Same sort of vibe, same sort of goose bump feeling.

That’s a big focus for us this year to be better at Indy, particularly on my car. Yeah, that’s the next goal for sure.

Q. It’s kind of crazy to think that you’re entering year four. It’s kind of gone by pretty quick. Your transition into IndyCars has been nothing short of stellar. I’m just kind of curious, third place in the championship last year, this transition that you’re kind of going into, do you look at this and think that maybe there’s a specific area, whether it’s strategy management or applying data, driving lines, whatever it might be? Maybe tools in the cockpit. Is there something that you kind of look at that maybe you’re trying to just get that extra little oomph to seal this transition completely, if that makes sense?

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: I guess the first oval win is the next thing for me, to finish off everything. But I think from a comfort, pace feeling perspective, I feel really at home. I certainly don’t feel like the new kid anymore, and I feel more like an open wheel driver than a touring car driver now.

Yeah, it’s very small. I was talking about the margins before, like the margins move up now, like there are a few little areas, a kink in my armor that I need to figure out that I’ll keep to myself, but I feel like we’re in a really good spot for the start of the season.

Q. Obviously the hybrid getting introduced middle of the season going to impact the championship in some form or fashion. I guess I’m just kind of curious your thoughts on maybe how you feel that’s going to really shake out how this year might play out for the eventually champion.

SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN: I think it puts a bit of emphasis on knowing what you have at the start of the season. Obviously going into the start, we know the package. We know where we’re at, even setup-wise and whatnot. After the 500, it all sort of happens.

I think the category has done the right thing from a competitive standpoint. It does suck for everyone that we haven’t been able to get the parts and whatnot in time, but I think doing the right thing to keep our world-renowned competitiveness in the category, and I think it’s going to make an exciting sort of finish to the year about who can combat the changes the most.

That’s what the championship and building the championship is all about is combatting the change. Things aren’t the same from St. Pete to Nashville, and they never are. We need to combat that, whether that is adding a hybrid or whatever it is. That’s all part about building a solid championship campaign and working with your guys and girls and making sure you can get at the front quicker than the rest of them.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: David Malukas INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

DAVID MALUKAS, No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet:

THE MODERATOR: Continuing on with the afternoon session here at the NTT IndyCar Series Content Days with David Malukas, now driving the No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, beginning his third season in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, with the podium of six top tens in 2023. Getting used to the new look for you?

DAVID MALUKAS: I like it. I’m glowing. Anywhere I go, it’s just papaya. You can see it in your peripheral vision. It actually changes the way you see things.

Like you know when you were a kid and everything seemed a little bit brighter, I feel like putting the papaya on, I have that same brightness back.

Q. Looking ahead to 2024, what are the expectations? What’s the hope?

DAVID MALUKAS: Oh, expectations, hope, I mean, now with Arrow McLaren, we are going for the top: podiums, wins. They are very competitive, and it’s the team to do it. That is going to be — my goals will coincide with that.

Q. Your transition has been what? How would you describe it?

DAVID MALUKAS: Whatever the word for as smooth as possible would be. That would be how well it’s been. It’s been great.

As soon as we came in, met everybody. Everybody is treating me like family. Actually a lot of the people there too, I have known since go-karting, so I have a lot of history with them too.

It’s been very cool, learning a lot. They have a lot of resources that I’m trying to use to the most of my capabilities.

(Tony Kanaan) is there to help me and assist on that, and we’ve also done a little bit of testing. I’m already getting to know everybody.

Q. You’re a lot of fun on social media. Arrow McLaren does awesome stuff on social media. Talk about how that’s going to help grow your brand, grow yourself as well. And secondly, when do these conversations kind of start? I go back to like when Palou started talking to Ganassi, he was like, oh. Like when you started talking to McLaren, when this became a realization, how excited were you? You probably couldn’t tell a lot of people at the time. Talk about the relationship and how social media is going to be great for you guys and how it all came about, what your first initial thoughts were.

DAVID MALUKAS: It kind of all happened quickly after Nashville is when everything got done. So for those months until Laguna I had to kind of keep it in.

I actually enjoyed it. I had a good time because keeping it in wasn’t too hard. I’d go online and see all these like, oh, this person is going over here, because I’d also know where the other drivers were going, and I’m giggling in the back like, hoo-hoo, you don’t know.

But going into Arrow McLaren, one of the big deals has been from their socials. They do a fantastic job with promotion and promoting the drivers. Going into it, of course, that was one of the big factors. For my brand and for me personally, it’s going to help exponentially.

Q. I don’t know if you follow college football, but Jim Harbaugh likes to say who’s got it better than us? Nobody. Could that same phrase be used for you?

DAVID MALUKAS: Hey, I mean, I guess you could, yeah. That’s a good phrase. I like it.

Q. Just as far as to be so early in your career to be on a team like this, just the opportunities that it presents for you.

DAVID MALUKAS: It is a great opportunity. Like I said, they have a lot of resources; also have really good teammates of Pato and Rossi. Being 22, I still have some time to learn, and it is the perfect place to make sure that for my skills and to get the maximum out of my potential, this is the place to be.

Q. Going into this year one, I know this in the past has sometimes been a team for other drivers that have come on, a tough car to really get a chance to master year one in. What is your — like what are you aiming for this year? Do you feel like year one and such a big opportunity, is this something that you feel like you have to hit on right away, or do you feel like there’s some leeway for you to be able to get adjusted to this team and how it operates and the setup of the car?

DAVID MALUKAS: I think it’s a bit similar in between that line. Going from Arrow McLaren’s side, they’re competitive. They want to be up front, they want to get wins, they want to get podiums, and they want to compete with the best and be the best.

Going into this season those will also be my goals. Going into it, yes, of course, I will be new, and it will take time to adjust. We have had a lot of testing, and I think by the time this season starts, we should be where we want to be.

Q. David, nice exciting move for you going to Arrow McLaren. Obviously it’s a team with a few more resources than you’re used to. What’s sort of the biggest change you’ve seen moving up to Arrow McLaren so far?

DAVID MALUKAS: The biggest change is there’s a lot of people and a lot of people I need to meet, a lot of names that I still need to get down. But that’s been the biggest change, is trying to get used to the different environment, something that I’m not used to.

But all in all, it’s been a good change, and I’m very excited to get comfortable with it.

Q. I’ve got two questions, the first one being you go to Dale Coyne (Racing), Chicago-based team, Chicago native, you’re able to kind of hang out there, learn the nuances that you needed to become an IndyCar driver. I guess I’m just curious moving to Indy, getting closer to Arrow McLaren, what are maybe some new habits in your approach that you’re taking that maybe you didn’t have that have been built over this off-season?

DAVID MALUKAS: There’s been a lot of new changes coming here with the move and just being all around just a different team.

Habits-wise, it’s just trying to get into the shop as much as possible. I want to be there for the guys. I want to already start building relationships, building that chemistry before the season starts, and just trying to get in and help and be with the content crew, get to know everybody from my side looking at onboards and different — anything that I can just to make sure that, by the time the season starts, I will be as ready as I can be so we can get those performances going as soon as possible.

Q. I get the not-so-fun question to ask, is it’s been pretty well broadcast originally where Alex Palou was supposed to go in the seat you ultimately landed in. I guess I’m just kind of curious, just kind of knowing that, do you have any extra motivation to maybe prove something as it relates to him in particular, knowing that that was maybe the original plan before everything kind of pivoted?

DAVID MALUKAS: I don’t really see it that way. I just more look at it as I have signed a deal with Arrow McLaren, and they are confident in me, and I am confident in myself to get the results.

Yeah, we’ll just focus on getting the results that we need.

Q. You spoke about victories. You spoke about podium. But I need to know about the internal cues or the internal fight on qualifications between Alex, Pato, and you. This year will be very interesting, you know.

DAVID MALUKAS: I mean, for sure we’re going to be very competitive, but at the same time, we are teammates, and we’re going to help each other. At the end of the day, we want to see Arrow McLaren as a whole succeed.

Of course we’re going to have our own little competition, but that is a part of racing and very important to have those type of teammates to where you can all better each other.

Q. This is my last question. You will have new personal, new stuff to your car. How was the first contact, the first conversations?

DAVID MALUKAS: Can you elaborate?

Q. About the stuff on your car. The strategy, engineers, all the personal stuff on your car.

DAVID MALUKAS: Like I said, I’ve been trying my best to get to know everybody. With all these different tests, we’ve been swapping out everybody, different engineers, different mechanics, which has been good from my side because I’ve been able to get to know everybody and work on that chemistry and build on those relationships.

Overall, everybody that I’ve met — the engineers, mechanics, whoever it may be — everybody’s been incredible and awesome, and I very much love this team.

Q. I want to ask you about something that has been announced a few weeks ago. It’s the introduction of the hybrid power unit will be delayed after Indy 500. How much can this change affect your season in two different aspects? Firstly, in the performance that you made, you will make, in these first races with the old car and the performance that you’ve made in the — when this new change is applied. Also to prepare the season in specific for you, as it’s your first season with McLaren, you start with a different car than you will finish the season.

DAVID MALUKAS: With the whole hybrid deal, I think, when it does come along, yeah, maybe it could be a little bit of a performance boost from my side just because I’ve had some of that testing involved. But from my side, it’s more just getting laps under my belt and helping me overall.

It will be a little bit different going into the start of the season now not having the hybrid, and I think from my side that’s what I’m most intrigued about, seeing the differences between what a hybrid car feels like and what one doesn’t.

I will also be able to get already kind of a feedback of how the Arrow McLaren car and the setup is going to react between the two, so when the hybrid does come in later in the season, it will be something that I’ll have kind of that extra step to get to know it.

Q. Speaking of another thing that it has commented in the last weeks, it’s that Honda can leave IndyCar in 2025. What’s your thoughts about it? If you had the opportunity to speak with new customers that are interested in IndyCar, in doing a promo, a program with IndyCar, what do you say? What would you say to convince them?

DAVID MALUKAS: Sorry, to convince who?

Q. To convince some new manufacturers to enter into IndyCar, some new brands.

DAVID MALUKAS: Yeah, IndyCar, it’s a special sport. I think we have something very special, and I think we should do the best that we possibly can to let it be known and to show everybody.

I don’t think it would be very hard to convince another manufacturer to come in and to add more competition. I think overall it would help.

But from my side, I’m very happy with Chevy, and I’m excited to get the season going.

Q. Have you had a chance to sit down with your dad and your mom? You’ve made this long journey, and here you are now as an IndyCar driver that’s being paid to drive for one of the top teams.

DAVID MALUKAS: Of course. I had a conversation with my parents and they were very happy, but at the same time, it was interesting. It was a bit weird because it was almost like I was also doing another meeting. They were just like, well, if you stay with us, we could do this, this, this.

It was kind of weird because it’s my parents, but at the same time, we’re having a conversation about business. So it was weird, but it was interesting.

No, of course, from the whole side, everybody is very happy and excited. Yeah, it’s cool. My dad can achieve his dream of having HMD in the Ladder Series, and I get to achieve my dream of being an INDYCAR driver.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Will Power INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

WILL POWER, No. 12 Team Penske Chevrolet:

THE MODERATOR: Kicking off the afternoon session here day one of NTT INDYCAR Series content days at the JW Marriott in Indianapolis. We are led off by Will Power, driver of the No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske Chevrolet; enters his 20th season in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, two-time series champion. Of course the 2018 winner of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge, 41 career wins, and of course the series record 70 NTT P1 Awards, and I’m just glad that the neck injury you posted on social media —

WILL POWER: It’s feeling a lot better. It was just a brief injury.

THE MODERATOR: That’s good to hear.

WILL POWER: You should not try to squat 300. That’s big.

THE MODERATOR: How does 2024 look for you?

WILL POWER: Yeah, I think we’ve made improvements on the team front. Disappointed with 2023. Very determined to turn up in ’24 with simply better performances.

I would say going to ’23 was not a very good situation and the preparation wasn’t normal, and that kind of continued into the year a bit. Yeah, turning up ready to go.

Q. If you look ahead to 2024, strong out of the gates; consistency, obviously that was a big factor in your second championship, as well.

WILL POWER: Yeah, it does matter. It does. It really does. It puts you in that non-defensive mindset if you get the points early.

But it doesn’t necessarily have to play out like that, either. Every season has a different flow. Sometimes consistency matters, and sometimes you really have to win races to win a championship. You kind of get that feel as we take off.

The field is so tough and so strong and so close, yeah, you have to — it’s very hard to dominate. As we saw last year, someone did, like really dominated. That’s a tough level right there.

Q. When we talked after Laguna Seca you talked about reflecting on 2023 and how tough it was for you from a personal standpoint with everything going on in the background with Liz and her health. I don’t want to pry too much, but have things gone on this off-season that puts you in a better ability to be more focused on racing and not so much worried or anxious or focusing on things off track?

WILL POWER: Yeah, it does, yeah. Liz is doing a lot better. It’s actually about a year now since that happened. Yeah, she’s actually back, started working out a little bit. Way, way better from where she was.

Yeah, not having that stress, the constant thought in the back of your mind of what’s going on there frees up a bit of space. You can get back to the sort of normal routine of preparing for a season and working during the season.

Q. One of the toughest parts of that, was that just the mental load you were having to carry, where racing just couldn’t be your sole focus?

WILL POWER: Yeah, exactly, yeah. Those distractions really take away — you just cannot compete at a high level if you’re not 100 percent in on that thing, which is racing. If you’re not 100 percent in, you’re going to struggle in this field. It’s too tough. Depth is too strong.

You need to have everything going for you if you’re going to win in this series.

Q. We don’t know a debut date yet on the hybrid, but supposed to come at some point after the 500, so it’s probably somewhere around the halfway point in the series. As someone who’s put a lot of miles in the car testing that for the series and Chevy and Team Penske, how do you imagine that could factor into a championship hunt when you have some different rules and regulations splitting up this championship in 2024?

WILL POWER: It will be very interesting. There’s no question that it’s going to be a factor in the championship, how the car — obviously the weight distribution changes, the weight of the car goes up. You have this hybrid system that you have to use as efficiently as possible.

So there will be, yeah — people will be learning through those races on how to extract the most out of the system, which is a good thing. It’ll make for a very interesting championship. Very interesting.

Q. You were among the workhorses of the hybrid testing, so all those laps and all those miles that you did, how would you assess where it started and where it’s at right now?

WILL POWER: Yeah, I mean, I’ve done quite a few test days where you just run all day, two days, and no problems. No problems at all. I think it’s a bit of everything, a little bit of supply issue and so on.

To me, they’ve got to be able to — I think INDYCAR wants it to be absolutely bulletproof when it’s introduced, so I think they made the right decision there.

The testing has been good. The system has worked really well. I think the way it’s packaged and everything is really good. It just needs a little bit more time. That’s all. It just needs a little bit more time, and I think they want to introduce it with absolutely zero chance of problems, and that’s the smart way to do it.

Q. Now, one of the unintended benefits that comes with not having the hybrid is they lighten the car, so now you should be able to go faster because of the lighter car before the hybrid is put on. You always being a driver who loves speed, how important will that be for you?

WILL POWER: Oh, yeah, I love the fact that it’s lighter. It will make for a much nicer car. Well, a nicer car. Anytime you’re knocking weight out, it’s good.

Yeah, I don’t think it’ll be a big difference. It’s not like we’re knocking 100 pounds out of it. But it will be — it won’t be slower.

Q. But with the hybrid development, wasn’t there concern because of the added weight, even with the extra horsepower, it could be slower?

WILL POWER: It would depend on the track. Obviously track with long straights and all that, you’re going to get benefit from the horsepower.

Yeah, I think there’s a lot of potential in that hybrid. I reckon it’ll be started pretty conservatively, so if the lap times happen to be slower, that’s the reason. But eventually they’ll be faster because you don’t want to — you want to ease into it. I don’t think you just want to go, yeah, this thing will give 150 horsepower, bang, let’s go do it.

It’s still a hit, like it really — it jumps out of the corner when you’re using the hybrid. And you’re only using a third of what it’s capable of.

Q. Finally, a lot of people focus on race strategy, and Rick Mears told me the other day, the best race strategy is a fast race car. I guess in many ways is that your best strategy, the fastest car?

WILL POWER: Oh, it makes things so much easier. As you can see, if you’re just a little bit outside the window, you just struggle to even get in the top 10. Yeah, when you have that slight advantage, you just have a bit — you’re right in the window, just eases everything off of it.

You’re not making those little mistakes trying to make up for time. You’re just able to nail all your braking points and apexes and everything comes together nicely.

Q. Question with the hybrid engine. I know you’ve done a lot of testing, and you make it sound like it’s really easy. Do you feel that some of the younger drivers or the rookies are going to have a harder time adjusting to that change, or…

WILL POWER: I think it’s an easy — honestly, it’s hardly changed anything. The car pretty much behaves the same, and they’ve given you the ability just to push a button out of a corner and that’s it. I think it’s auto-regen, so you’re not holding the paddle or anything like that. It’s pretty straightforward.

I think it’ll be a pretty — it’ll be more about extracting the most out of the system, where you deploy it, all those strategies which kind of makes it a — it’s up to the teams to do the simulations and understand where to do that and where to regen, all that sort of stuff.

So yeah, I think it’s pretty straightforward. It’s not that complicated. Pretty straightforward.

Q. So it won’t take a couple races to get the hang of it?

WILL POWER: I mean, yeah, you’re just pressing a button. That’s the long and short of it. All the simulations will be saying out of this corner is where you should be hitting the button, and that’s what will happen.

Maybe in the races, slightly different strategies, maybe hitting a different spot to pass or something like that.

But yeah, I think it’ll be good.

Q. I’m curious your thoughts, you’ve been with Penske a while now. Do you feel since you’ve been there the morale at that team, with Team Penske, is as high as it’s ever been? I know you’ve got two straight Cup Series championships; you won the championship a few years ago; Josef just won the 500. Do you feel that yourself?

WILL POWER: Yeah, I do. It has changed quite a bit since I started there. Obviously the process has changed, the competition changes, and you evolve with it, and Penske is very good at being ahead of the curve on that stuff.

It’s a good tight-knit team. And I wouldn’t say as far as the number of people that work within the team, it’s not like a — it’s run lean but very efficiently, so everyone works very well together.

But yeah, winning two Cup championships back-to-back is very big. The 500 Championship last year, 500 this year in INDYCAR. So, yeah, the team certainly is firing on all cylinders. It’s pretty cool to be a part of it.

Q. It’s already ridiculously difficult to win an INDYCAR championship; when you introduce a hybrid and it creates that required adaptability mid-season that we’re going to get this year, how much more difficult or how much more weight does that put on maybe or how much does this championship stand out, or will the eventual champion stand out compared maybe to other years?

WILL POWER: Yeah, like I said, I think it certainly will be — it’s definitely going to be a factor in the championship. Like what engine does it — what manufacturer does it complement the most, is it the Chevy or the Honda, because it’s going to hit in a certain power range.

Yeah, it’s hard to say how that will all play out, because it’s not like you’re going back to the same tracks. It’s sort of — yeah, it will play a factor in the championship. I don’t know how. I think it’ll be about adapting because it’s difficult to say what the struggles will be until you’re in the situation.

Q. Once upon a time, anybody could get maybe one, possibly two bad finishes and be right there at the end for the title hunt. You’ve got Dixon only had one finish outside the top 10 last year; Palou didn’t have a single finish lower than eighth. Can you make a mistake in this championship?

WILL POWER: When someone doesn’t have a lower finishing place than eighth and wins, what, four or five? Five wins, nothing outside the top eight, man, that is — what was the average finishing position for him? My God, you’re just sitting at such a high level there.

That’s why I said, like that is — yeah, people say he wrapped it up with one to go or he was almost done with two to go. He probably could have — he was on his way to winning the last race. He had taken off the lead in that thing obviously with a lot of mayhem.

But that’s a championship to remember in this field. That is a very, very impressive run. Very strong.

I couldn’t see anyone beating that — there’s no one sitting back going, if I just finish this race — like everyone is just going, this dude just absolutely mopped the floor, like he nailed it. But very strong.

Q. Does that kind of reset how you attack a championship in the sense that you just can’t have mistakes when guys are on that kind of level?

WILL POWER: Yeah, it’s not having mistakes plus winning races, not just finishing — you can’t just be top 5 every time. You’ve got to win races. Yeah, that’s one tough team and competitor right there. It just resets the bar in this series, which is a very high bar already, which is pretty cool. Pretty cool to see.

Q. You had a very long off-season but also did a lot of the hybrid testing, as well. How important is it to be able to take a step back from driving and testing and all that kind of good stuff and be at home away from everything and just recharge away from the shop, away from personnel, texts, social media and everything and just be a dad and be Will Power?

WILL POWER: That is important, to completely just disconnect from everything because of all the connectivity we have now.

Yeah, that’s great for two or three weeks, but then you want to get back to the job at hand and go hard again. That’s what it requires anyway, to be competitive.

Q. What is the most valuable advice Roger Penske has given to you that has left you thinking deeply as a person or racer?

WILL POWER: He often says to me before the race, just finish. He never really says go out there and win. Which is good advice. Just go out there, just be careful on — yeah, there’s many things Roger has told me. But when he talks, you listen.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Ed Carpenter INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

ED CARPENTER, No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet:

THE MODERATOR: Wrapping up this morning’s session here at the Content Day 2024 with Ed Carpenter, back in the No. 20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet, beginning his 22nd year in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, another oval program as he splits time with the 2023 Indy NXT by Firestone champion and Christian Rasmussen. How is your Content Day going?

ED CARPENTER: It seems quiet this year. It seems very quiet today.

THE MODERATOR: Looking ahead to the year, how is the team right now?

ED CARPENTER: It’s exciting, I think. Christian, it’s fun bringing a rookie along. There’s definitely challenges that come with it, but the excitement that you get out of a rookie driver getting his first opportunity is fun.

He and Rinus have really bonded pretty quickly, which is good to see, and Rinus has taken his more veteran leadership role pretty seriously.

But the two of them have really off the track bonded well. We haven’t had them on the track together yet, so I’m excited for that.

But these off-seasons can be long, but as we get to this time of year everything can happen fast, but I think things are going very well.

Q. Tell us about the new sponsorship. And I know obviously IMS is your favorite track, but if I’m not mistaken, Milwaukee is probably 2. Talk about going back to that track later in the fall for a double-header.

ED CARPENTER: Yeah, I think Milwaukee has always been a great venue. Everyone was sad when it didn’t work out the last time, so it’s great to get another opportunity to make it a great event.

I think we’ve learned a lot of things as a series and as teams since we last raced there that will hopefully make it a more successful event, so that’s great that it’s back.

Sad to see Texas go, but that’s the way things go.

Obviously, yeah, we’ve got some new colors that we’re showing here. There will be more announced later in detail, but GuyCare, just kind of a men-specific health clinic, they launched their flagship station in Utah this week. There will be a lot more happening around that and targeted around our schedule the rest of the year, so there will be more to come on that soon, but still within the RiskOn International, Todd Ault family of businesses that have supported us the past couple years, so thankful for that, and looking forward to more announcements with it.

Q. This off-season, outside of bringing Christian into the fold, Rinus taking on more of a leadership role, can you tell us anything more about trying to build up that team around those guys that I know is going to be a big focus for you guys from engineering and other departments within —

ED CARPENTER: Yeah, we haven’t had a ton of change. It’s hard right now to make drastic changes in our series. The personnel from mechanics to engineers, I’m proud of the fact that we’re able to keep people. I think we do a really good job with that. It’s hard to get people to move. Sometimes it’s restrictive. So there hasn’t been a ton of change.

But last year was a challenging year without a doubt. We had our struggles. I did feel like as the year went on and we got into the end of the year, our direction and focus was better.

We’ve been able to carry that on and kind of start over in a lot of the things where we felt like we were wrong. But again, you never know how good all those efforts are until we get on track.

The nature of the off-season, we’ve had one track day since the season ended, so there’s been very little room for validation of the work other than that one day. So excited to be getting on track here later in the month.

Q. That was the test with Christian shortly after Laguna?

ED CARPENTER: Yeah, Christian and Oliver were both in the car.

Q. Several of the drivers that have come in so far this morning, I think most of them were involved in some sort of a dinner last night with Penske Entertainment leadership talking about the future of the series. I don’t know if you were present at that dinner, but from that or other talks that you’ve had with folks in the last couple weeks and months during the off-season that I know has been a little up and down for the series, there seems to be a lot of positivity from drivers that we’ve spoken to so far despite some of the things that have gone on. What is your perspective on where the series is and where it’s headed over this next couple months.

ED CARPENTER: It’s definitely been a different off-season. The cadence has been different. Obviously with a big change coming and being delayed from what was anticipated, I think that’s always a challenge, and it’s easy to be frustrated.

But at the same time, you have to focus on where we’re going and how we’re going to get there.

It’s definitely been a group effort from INDYCAR and Chevrolet and the manufacturers to the teams and a lot of the communication that’s gone on.

I think within the challenges, I think it’s been getting better and better, working collectively for what those solutions are to make sure we’re putting on the best racing possible.

I think we’re all excited to get to the hybrid era when that day comes, and coming up with the best way to get there so when it does come that it is what it’s supposed to be and not sacrificing the show for the fans and the teams.

Q. Do you have any plans still to run a third car at Indianapolis?

ED CARPENTER: Yeah, it’s announced we’re running three at Indy. Myself, Rinus, and Christian will all be at the Indy 500.

Q. You just indicated that understandably you’re not satisfied with how last year turned out for ECR. Can you elaborate on what you guys have been working on over the winter to try and turn that situation around?

ED CARPENTER: I mean, never going to get into total details of what we’ve been working on, but I think there’s always an evolution and progress with what you’re developing as a team and around the engineering.

I would say some of the targets that we were aiming for last year weren’t necessarily on point, so just refocusing — I wouldn’t say we’ve totally reinvented anything, just improving the process of our simulation and everything else that gets us to a better spot.

It’s easy to try to start over when things don’t go well, but my experience over my 22 years is, one, it’s never one big thing, and, two, it’s just getting all the details correct, and we didn’t do a good enough job with that, especially early last year. I do feel like we were turning a corner at the end of last year.

Excited to carry that momentum and get started, and confident that we’re going to be in a stronger spot.

Q. I remember after Rinus’s rookie race in Texas, you famously said he needed to work a little bit on his sponginess. Going back to Christian versus Rinus, can you compare them? How are they in the way they approach this? Are there any similarities?

ED CARPENTER: I would say there’s a lot of similarities. They’re the same age now, so Christian’s rookie year, he’s older, so I would say — this isn’t a knock on Rinus whatsoever, but Christian is a little more mature than when we got Rinus just by nature of he’s the same age that Rinus currently is.

But from what we’ve seen so far in the car and the simulator, their styles are very similar. I think they’ll be the most complementary duo that we’ve had or as a pairing to Rinus in his time with the team, so that’s exciting.

Q. Just curious on a couple of things. You talked about Rinus’s leadership. I’m just curious where that maturity has grown into the fact — do you look at him taking that leadership role because of the way he maybe took a step forward with Ryan being his teammate the last half of the year? Is it a de facto? Is it experience?

ED CARPENTER: I think it’s all of the above. He gets more and more of his own experience. I’m sure there definitely was an effect from Ryan, just learning from a great teammate, a veteran teammate, a champion, an Indy 500 winner, being around that, seeing how he approaches it, and just getting older. His married now. Your life changes as you get older. Your perspective changes.

I think it’s all of those things.

Q. With Ryan coming in last year to kind of validate a few things, how significant was that for you guys to get pointed in the right direction for this off-season?

ED CARPENTER: It was helpful. I think he did everything that we asked him to do. And I never viewed it as a silver bullet or a quick fix, but Ryan is definitely someone that I trust and our team holds in high regard, and he came in and did a good job and definitely brought his experience to give us his opinion on where things were and continue evaluating that and getting back to where we want to be.

Q. The last one is with the hybrid but also with the fact that — your team in particular, with your team trying to find itself to get back into a competitive nature at the front of the field again, also while trying to figure out ways to go through this hybrid development, what’s the challenge there for you? How much percentage do you put towards focusing on the hybrid versus also trying to focus on some of those details, and how difficult is it to work on those details when a new power plant could also change the way the car feels, balance, et cetera?

ED CARPENTER: Yeah, you have to do both. We don’t have any first-hand experience yet with the hybrid system. We are able to test some of it in simulation, so we are getting some experience in being able to learn at least in the virtual world kind of what’s changing, but until we can fully get that on track, you don’t have anything to compare and validate your simulation to.

You’re doing the best you can. Obviously we know the areas we need to focus from last year for things mostly being the same to start the year. Obviously there’s still a lot of new components that are going to be on the car in preparation for the hybrid, but we won’t fully know how that’s all going to change until we do get the hybrid on track.

We get some information from Chevrolet and the series, from those that have been doing the testing, but that’s all secondhand at this point.

Looking forward to getting firsthand knowledge to really dive into that and understand what the differences are and what we’re going to need to be trying to achieve.

Q. What’s your take on the Million Dollar Challenge?

ED CARPENTER: Are we talking Thermal?

Q. The Thermal Club.

ED CARPENTER: It’s interesting. To start with, I think everyone questioned what it was going to be like going there for the open test last year, and I think at the end of the day it exceeded our expectations.

This is going to be a new type of format for us to try, so I think it’s important — INDYCAR racing has always been an innovative sport going back to the very beginning, and you look around other sports and leagues, and everyone is doing something all the time to try to be innovative and create new excitement.

I think this is going to be a unique experiment, and it’s hard to really say what I think or how it’s going to go until we get into it, but I know it’s going to be a good experience from having been there last year.

But it’s definitely going to be a little odd going to a race event that doesn’t have points, so I think it’ll change the approach or what you’re ultimately able to accomplish over that weekend. But I’m sure it’s going to be fun.

Q. Is it odd that you have a no-points race after the season starts as opposed to an exhibition in preseason?

ED CARPENTER: I mean, I think if — I don’t know that it matters all that much, to be honest. At the end of the day, early in the season, you’re less focused on points just naturally than you are as the season winds on, so I’m sure once we get there, it’s going to feel more like a race than an exhibition just because we’re all competitors, and at the end of the day there’s a lot on the line with the challenge.

I do think it’s going to be important to go there and be strong quickly by the way the format is laid out. I don’t think it’ll be the easiest place to overtake. So speed and qualifying is going to be vastly important to give yourself a chance to be a factor in the final of the event.

Q. You’ve been around 22 years now; who do you think is the face of the future of the series?

ED CARPENTER: I mean, I think it’s hard to pick one. I think there’s a ton of amazing young talent. I think you look across the majority of the teams, and there’s a bright future. The competition in the series is so high across teams and drivers.

But obviously I think Pato and Alex Palou are probably highest on the list. The Josefs of the world are pretty established now, but he’s going to be around for a long time to go, so I think the future is in great hands.

Q. Maybe it’s a good thing we don’t just have one face?

ED CARPENTER: Yeah, I think that’s always a great thing.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

ARCA Menards Series West Well Represented at Daytona Pre-race Practice

TEMPERANCE, Mich. (January 10, 2024) – The west coast will be well represented with five of the top nine drivers in the 2023 ARCA Menards Series West headed at the upcoming ARCA Menards Series pre-race practice sessions at Daytona International Speedway.

Reigning ARCA Menards Series West champion Sean Hingorani will take part in the two-day practice as part of ARCA’s Road to Daytona initiative. Hingorani, from Newport Beach, California, was the dominant force in the West Series in 2023; he won four times, earned two General Tire Pole Awards, and claimed the championship by a whopping 36 points over Tyler Reif.

Reif will join Hingorani in the Road to Daytona program. Reif won the West Series’ season-opener at Phoenix Raceway last season on his way to a runner-up finish in the overall series standings.

Reif’s older brother Tanner, who won two West races in 2022 and finished fifth in the final standings in 2023, will also join in the activities set for Friday and Saturday, January 12 and 13. The elder Reif brother will be sharing the Cook Racing Technologies ride with Indycar veteran – and grandson of 1967 Daytona 500 winner Mario Andretti – Marco Andretti.

Kyle Keller, who finished eighth in the final 2023 West standings, will also make the trek to Daytona for his first laps at the World Center of Racing. Keller will be in an entry fielded by the new Keller-Kennealy Motorsports Driver Development team with which he will contend for the 2024 ARCA Menards Series West championship.

Takuma Koga, from Nagoya, Japan, will also attend the Pre-race Practice, driving one of Andy Hillenburg’s entries. Koga has made 113 career West starts, with four career top-five finishes, including two in 2022, and 24 career top-ten finishes. He finished among the top ten four times in 2023; he finished ninth in the overall series standings.

The five West Series regulars will be joined by 67 other drivers in the two days of practice, scheduled for Friday and Saturday, January 12 and 13. Sunday, January 14 will be reserved in case of inclement weather.

The 2024 ARCA Menards Series season kicks off at Daytona with practice on Thursday, February 15, General Tire Pole Qualifying on Friday, February 16, and the 61st Annual Daytona ARCA 200 set for 1:30 pm ET on Saturday, February 17. The race will be televised live on FS1 and broadcast nationwide on select affiliates of the MRN Radio Network. Live timing & scoring for all on track sessions is available at ARCARacing.com.

About ARCA 

The Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA), founded in 1953 by John and Mildred Marcum in Toledo, Ohio, and acquired by NASCAR in April 2018, is the leading grassroots stock car sanctioning body in the United States. Bridging the gap between NASCAR’s top three national touring series and weekly racing all across the country, the organization administers more than 100 events annually, including the ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East, ARCA Menards Series West, plus weekly racing at Toledo and Flat Rock Speedways.  For more information about ARCA visit www.arcaracing.com, or follow ARCA on Facebook (@ARCARacing) and Twitter (@ARCA_Racing). 

Renowned Race Car Driver Ryan Eversley to Race SRO GT4 for Precision Racing L.A.

Veteran professional racer also hired to key leadership role focusing on driver development for Precision Racing L.A. and L.A. Honda World Racing

LOS ANGELES, Calif. – Southern California-based Precision Racing L.A. and their sister team L.A. Honda World Racing announced they have hired professional race car driver Ryan Eversley as head of driver and racing business development. Eversley will also race the full 2024 Pirelli GT4 America series for Precision Racing L.A. in the Toyota GT4 Supra.

As a former factory driver, highly accomplished racing champion, and well-respected figure in the racing community, Eversley is a rare talent bringing a unique blend of skill and leadership to the organization. Eversley will play a pivotal role in recruiting, guiding, growing, and mentoring both Precision Racing L.A. and L.A. Honda World Touring Car drivers, and the operations for each team.

“Over the past four years, I have been fortunate to work with Ryan and see his diversity in professional racing. Ryan has many talents way beyond being a fast racer which is a rarity in motorsport. His years of racing experience, immense energy, and commitment to support both individual and team success will undoubtedly contribute to our organization’s growth. Having the opportunity to bring Ryan on full-time will make all those who race with us exceptional racers,” said Mario Biundo, owner of L.A. Honda World Racing and Precision Racing L.A.

Ryan will also bring a wealth of success on the track to the team. Eversley’s impressive accomplishments include podiums at the Rolex 24, Petit Lemans, numerous IMSA wins and Pirelli World Challenge Champion. No matter the race car, Eversley’s history for success is compelling.

Beyond the track, Ryan is a popular public figure, well-known for his ability to connect with the racing community around the globe. He also co-hosts the popular television series and podcast “Dinner with Racers” dedicated to long-form, unstructured conversations between hosts and guests, allowing for unique and entertaining stories in a road-trip format.

“My passion for racing started as a kid. I always wanted to follow in my father’s footsteps in racing and spent as much time at the racetrack with him as I could. That passion, fueled by hard-work, dedication, and an incredible racing community has been the driving force of my career for two decades. To now have the opportunity to coach and mentor, as well as race, for an organization I deeply respect is surreal. I’m grateful for every experience that has led me here,” said Ryan Eversley.

Ryan’s new role begins immediately. Preparations for the 2024 season are already in the midst as the upcoming SRO season quickly approaches. Eversley will kick off the race season at Sonoma Raceway April 5th – 7th, 2024.

About L.A. Honda World Racing

L.A. Honda World Racing is a professional racing team based in Southern California and participates in IMSA and SRO racing series exclusively racing touring cars built by Honda Performance Development. They are also a factory authorized Honda dealer for American Honda Motor Co. www.LAHondaWorldRacing.com

About Precision Racing L.A.

Powered by L.A. Honda World Racing, Precision Racing L.A. is an in-house pro racing team based in Los Angeles, California. With years of experience in SRO and IMSA competitions, Precision Racing L.A. delivers the most professional experience, demonstration in attention to detail, and an endless pursuit to achieve the top step of the podium. www.precisionracingla.com

Corey Heim returns for partial Xfinity campaign with Sam Hunt Racing in 2024

Photo by Kirk Schroll for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Corey Heim will run a partial NASCAR Xfinity Series stint with Sam Hunt Racing for the second time in his career for the 2024 season.

The news comes as the 21-year-old Heim from Marietta, Georgia, is coming off his first full-time campaign in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with TRICON Garage, where he achieved three victories, clinched the 2023 Truck Series regular-season championship, made the Championship 4 round and finished in third place in the 2023 driver’s standings. He also made his first four career starts in the Xfinity circuit with Sam Hunt Racing throughout the 2023 campaign, where he recorded two top-15 results.

“I can’t wait to join Sam Hunt Racing again in 2024,” Heim said. “I saw improvement throughout every start I made with [Sam Hunt Racing] in 2023 from top to bottom, including in myself as a driver. That’s really what I’m looking for in a partnership — the constant push to be better, and I know SHR will continue to make that their goal in 2024. It really excites me as a driver to be part of a group like this. I’m looking forward to building this year together and contending for wins.”

Heim, a former Rookie-of-the-Year recipient in both the CARS Super Late Model and Late Model Stock Car Tour regions along with being a nine-time winner in the ARCA Menards Series, made his inaugural presence within NASCAR’s top three national touring series in 2021 when he competed in three Truck Series events for Kyle Busch Motorsports. The following season, he scored his first career victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway, his home track, and would achieve another victory at World Wide Technology Raceway. Despite competing in 16 of the 23-race schedule in 2022, Heim achieved the Truck Series Rookie-of-the-Year title.

This past season, Heim became a full-time competitor in the Truck Series for the first time in his career as he joined forces with the newly rebranded TRICON Garage while remaining as a Toyota Racing Development competitor. Despite being absent at World Wide Technology Raceway in June due to an illness, Heim generated his strongest season to date with three victories, four poles, 12 top-five results, 19 top-10 results, 611 laps led and an average-finishing result of 6.8 in 22 starts, all en route to making the Playoffs and settling in third place in the final standings. He is set to return for a second full-time Truck Series campaign and championship bid with TRICON Garage this upcoming season.

During the previous season, Heim’s first Xfinity Series career start with Sam Hunt Racing occurred at Dover Motor Speedway in April. He would then achieve his first top-10 career result in the series at Darlington Raceway in May by finishing 10th before returning for Pocono Raceway in July and at Darlington in September, where he finished 15th in the latter event.

Heim’s first Xfinity start of the 2024 season will be at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in early March as he will pilot Sam Hunt Racing’s No. 26 Toyota GR Supra. The remainder of his part-time Xfinity schedule along with Sam Hunt Racing’s full driver lineup for the 2024 season remains to be determined.

“Everyone at Sam Hunt Racing is excited to have Corey back with us at an expanded capacity in 2024,” Sam Hunt, owner of Sam Hunt Racing, added. “Corey is a young man that I’ve been a vocal believer in for years now, and I know he will be a driver that can grow into a staple of our Xfinity Series program. He embraces and believes in our group, and he is willing to put the work in to grow with us and compete at the highest level possible.”

Corey Heim’s first Xfinity Series start of the season with Sam Hunt Racing is set to occur at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 2. The event’s broadcast time is slated to occur at 5 p.m. ET on FS1.

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Alexander Rossi INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

ALEXANDER ROSSI, No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet:

THE MODERATOR: Joined now by the driver of the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, entering his ninth season in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, seven career NTT P1 awards, eight career wins, and adds a wedding ring in the off-season to his Indy 500 ring from a few years ago. Welcome to Content Day. How is it going so far?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: It’s going. It’s going. My suit fits, so that’s win No. 1. It’s way better than last year. We’re getting there.

THE MODERATOR: 2024, looking forward to it?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Yes, I am. These off-seasons are tough just because it’s a long time from when we raced last. But we’re now in 2024, so that’s a step in the right direction. Yeah, St. Pete is around the corner at this point.

Q. Just give us your thoughts; obviously you’ve got a new teammate, the team has some momentum coming off 2023. What are the expectations for 2024?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Expectations are high. I think that we kind of had the new team, new car added dynamic last year. That whole thing is behind us.

I think the team has grown and gelled really well together over the whole season last year, and to have another off-season of continuing to work together and get better is a positive.

I think that we were competitive last year, especially the 5 car was really strong in all events, and so I think that taking that positivity and just expanding on it and building on it should set us up really well for what should be a fantastic year.

Q. Obviously with the arrival of David Malukas to the team, what do you think he brings to the organization?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: First of all, we welcome him with arms wide open. It’s pretty cool to have him on the team. He’s very exuberant. He matches Pato’s personality pretty well in terms of his youthful excitement.

We haven’t — despite there being — we’ve had some hybrid testing and stuff. We haven’t, because it’s one driver per day, we haven’t really worked together much, but we’ve done some content stuff together, and we’ve been in the shop at the same time, and he’s a really lovely kid. I think he’s a great addition to the organization.

Obviously we’re getting to the point where we’re getting close to being together on track as a group. But at the moment it’s still getting to know each other from an off-track standpoint.

I think what he’s done so far in his career is pretty good, and he’s going to be ready to take a pretty big step here in 2024.

Q. In terms of ’24, we’re returning to Milwaukee this year. How excited are you about that?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: I mean, it’s always great to add events to the calendar, right, and obviously Milwaukee has a great history in the series. I’ve never been there, so I don’t really know. But yes, it’s cool to add a new track. It’s always great for a driver to go to a place you’ve never been before and kind of experience it for the first time.

Q. We talked about the schedule with a bunch of guys. As mentioned, Milwaukee, you’ve got an All-Star Race coming up. What are some races this season that you’re looking forward to the most, and what are some races that you think, we had something there last year, I can’t wait to get back there?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: I think obviously the 500 goes without saying. I think Thermal is going to be a really exciting event. It’s pretty cool that INDYCAR is doing like a prize money race and obviously having the Thermal Club members involved there and the format of the event and having it be kind of an elimination round to get to the final, a proper made-for-TV event is really exciting, so I’m looking forward to that and seeing how it all goes and winning a bunch of money; obviously that’s cool.

You mentioned Milwaukee.

Like I said, it’s great to add an event to the calendar. I haven’t really thought about that. I’m just thinking about St. Pete, honestly. That’s probably the other one, the first one of the race.

Q. Are you a one-race-at-a-time guy? How do you keep that focus week in and week out as you draw closer?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: It’s pretty easy, honestly. You have to take it one race at a time in a lot of ways just because it’s so — each race is so unique, and that’s what makes this championship so special is that every time you show up at a track like what you did the previous week doesn’t really necessarily translate.

Yes, you always have an eye to the 500. You’re always thinking about ideas and ways and the team is always developing the car in the off-season specifically for the 500 because it’s a whole different car.

Aside from that, it’s one event at a time, at least for me.

Q. As you’ve had a few months here to reflect on last year, finishing ninth in the championship and not where you want to be, what do you feel like boiled down to just not finishing where you guys wanted to be over the course of a 17-race season?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: It’s not one thing. I’ve been stuck in like a ninth purgatory for now four years. It’s really annoying. Yeah, I think we were pretty good on Sundays. We were really, really poor by a lot of standards on Saturday. We didn’t qualify well at all.

That’s been the sole focus this off-season is to figure out what we need to do different, what I need to do different in order to make sure that — to be competitive and to win these races, you have to start in the top 6. Yes, obviously there’s instances where you can win and not, but to be competitive in a championship you’ve got to start in the top 6, and I think our average qualifying was like 10th. That’s really the main reason in my mind why we ended up finishing ninth was just because we weren’t starting high enough forward on Sundays.

Q. Is there any type of track that you guys are still working on as a team? I know there’s always work to be done, but in years past before you joined the team, as McLaren was coming into the fold, Pato would typically tell us one type of track they felt really comfortable at and some things they were still working on, do you feel like that’s coming together and you guys have struck a solid balance there?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: That’s hard to say. Obviously I don’t really — it’s hard for me to judge last year and how they were relative to how they should have been or how we should have been. I think superspeedways we were very strong. We expected to be strong. I think the short ovals we expected to be stronger than we were, so that was kind of the disappointment, I think, was our performances at Iowa and Gateway.

I think a big focus for the team in terms of just making a step is certainly on the street course performance. Not that it was bad, but there’s certainly teams that had a pace advantage on us that we need to close the gap to.

But it’s an ever-moving target every single year. Even if we were good at superspeedways last year, you’ve got to take a step to still be good this year. It’s all of them really.

But yeah, I would say that street courses and the short ovals are probably the biggest areas where we felt we were missing last year.

Q. As we’ve gone through this long off-season, I know the series has seen some setbacks between the continued delay of the hybrid and some things fans have grown frustrated with. As you have potentially met with some series executives or talked to folks this off-season about where the series is going, from a long-term perspective, what would you tell fans about the direction of where things are going and what are you confident about?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: It’s a good question. I actually had dinner with — me and some other drivers had dinner with Penske Corp last night and were able to ask questions and get answers to questions.

I think the big message is everything that the fans are saying, like none of that is news to any of us or any of the people that are in charge of the series or the future of the series.

But obviously they are not going to give you a play-by-play and a step-by-step as to how they are tackling challenges and preparing for the future and doing things.

You’ve got to trust the process. We all do. But ultimately the people that are running the ship and in charge of the direction are the right people to be doing that.

I think there’s a lot of positive news that’s going to be coming over the next three to five months that people are going to be very excited about. There was obviously great news yesterday with INDYCAR returning to iRacing, which is fantastic.

I think there’s been some negativity towards the end of the year in 2023. There’s going to be quite a few positive announcements that are coming to start the year in 2024. That’s the way life works. It goes up and down.

Ultimately there’s going to be an evolution and progression of the car this year with the hybrid coming on board, and the fact that that’s delayed, if people have a problem with that, then that’s fine. But ultimately there’s a really good direction that the series is heading, and I think people are going to be excited about it.

Q. You’re pretty much a student of racing and you showed your versatility by driving in everything, including the Baja 1000 and some sports car races. Have you found yourself paying a little more attention to Kyle Larson and some of his efforts, especially toward the end of the NASCAR championship last year since he is going to be your teammate here at Indy this year?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: No, but — no, I don’t think so. In terms of watching races, no. But in terms of — I was with him in Charlotte when he was on the sim. He was at the track — I forget what test it was, but he was at the track — oh, it was the hybrid test.

I was driving when he was doing his ROP, so spent some time with him there. He’s going to be a fantastic addition. He’s going to be up to speed right away. He’s going to be a challenger to win the thing. I don’t need to watch him race to know that.

Q. But you as a fellow racer, do you sometimes — how impressed are you about his versatility? He’s at the Chili Bowl this weekend —

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Oh, he’s phenomenal. I’ve said for a long time, he’s one of the best in the world. That doesn’t come easily in what he’s accomplished in his career. It’s pretty much second to none.

Q. There’s a lot of former drivers that are up and down pit lane working in various capacities. You have one of them with Tony Kanaan. What’s it going to be like having him as a little bit of an advisor this year for the entire team?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Yeah, I think he’s more than an advisor. That was kind of his role last year, and he was so good at advising that he got promoted. He’s a very integral part of Arrow McLaren and the management group. He brings a lot of information in terms of — he’s seen teams operate at their best, he’s seen teams operate really at their worst. He knows kind of signs of good and bad, and he’s able to help give guidance from that experience to all of us, whether that’s us as drivers, whether that’s to engineers, mechanics, to Gavin, to Brian, relaying stuff back to Zach. He’s a really key part of the organization.

He also brings a huge amount of enthusiasm to the team.

With him, Pato and David, it takes a lot of load off of me from that standpoint.

Q. Obviously looking at your first season, it was a decent season, but now you’ve got that first season at Arrow McLaren under your belt. Do you think winning races is achievable or matching Pato’s form is achievable for you?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Oh, yeah, for sure. It’s hard to win races in this series, but yeah, it’s 100 percent achievable. You just have to — when you have the opportunity and you have the car to do it, you’ve got to get it done. That’s really what it comes down to. You’re not going to be the best car every single weekend, but the weekends that you are the best, you need to figure out a way to finish it off.

That’s kind of been a big team focus this off-season, as I already mentioned for me specifically on the 7 car. We’ve got to make a step in qualifying.

But assuming that that all goes according to plan, then yes, I think we’ll definitely be much improved on how 2023 was.

Q. Following up on Nathan’s question in kind of a two-part way, how did that dinner that you had last night change your perspective on the bigger picture stuff and put you in a different frame of mind? They say it’s about trusting the process and they know what fans are saying, but how do you convey that message when obviously not all of the fans will be in those high-level meetings and be able to hear what you guys hear that assuages your concerns?

ALEXANDER ROSSI: Yeah, it’s a good question. I don’t know that I necessarily have the answer to it. But let’s use an example of Apple. Like their stock prices have plummeted in the past couple of months. Are consumers, people that are not on the board who are investing in the company expecting executives to give them an explanation as to how they’re going to rectify it and what their solution is going forward and why X, Y and Z happened?

No. Because INDYCAR prides itself on being so fan centric, I think obviously there’s a lot of good that comes from that, but then there’s also, for lack of a better word, a small amount of entitlement that comes from that and expecting that just because we’re such an open book with everything that we do, that doesn’t mean that there’s things that go on behind the scenes that need to be kind of worked on and improved and kept under wraps until it’s ready to be kind of laid out for the world.

That’s the way most businesses and organizations work, so I don’t think that should be a surprise for people, that when a bad news situation comes out, there’s not an immediate rectification response as to what the solution is because maybe that solution hasn’t been created yet, but that doesn’t mean it’s not being worked on in the background.

I think that the people that are in charge, the people at Penske Corp, the people at IMS, the people at INDYCAR, they all have the same love and passion for the sport that we do, and so they’re not going to allow things to just fall by the wayside. They may have a different approach and way of problem solving and going about addressing issues, but it’s still with the goal in mind of growing the series, keeping the Indy 500 as the greatest single day sporting event in the world, and making sure that the on-track product we have is better than anything else, and I don’t think that there’s anything historically, especially over the past nine years that I’ve been involved in this series, that should have anyone be casting doubt on that because from year to year, it has grown, it has improved.

As I said, in the next couple months, I think there’s going to be some things that come out that people are really excited about.

About Chevrolet
Founded in 1911 in Detroit, Chevrolet is now one of the world’s largest car brands, available in 79 countries with more than 3.2 million cars and trucks sold in 2020. Chevrolet models include electric and fuel-efficient vehicles that feature engaging performance, design that makes the heart beat, passive and active safety features and easy-to-use technology, all at a value. More information on Chevrolet models can be found at www.chevrolet.com.

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES: Josef Newgarden INDYCAR Content Days Media Availability Transcript

CHEVROLET IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
INDYCAR CONTENT DAYS MEDIA AVAILABILITY TRANSCRIPT
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
January 10, 2024

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, driver of the No. 2 Team Penske Chevrolet:
THE MODERATOR: Welcome to the start of Content Days for the NTT INDYCAR Series looking ahead to the 2024 season which will be here before you know it. Leading off with the current and reigning Indianapolis 500 champion, Josef Newgarden. We’re with the driver of the No. 2 Team Penske Chevrolet, beginning his 13th season in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, 29 career wins and counting.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Good morning. Feeling really good. Excited to be here. Excited to get going again. We’re always busy. It’s funny, people always ask us what we’re doing after the season finale. They just assume we’re sitting around waiting until March, but on the team side we’ve been very busy and personally it’s been very busy. I’m ready for the full thing. I can’t wait to get to St. Pete and really get into the flow. Should be exciting.

Q. I know last night you had a chance to spend time with some executives. What are some of the things they talked about with the drivers and people for 2024? What are some of the things that you feel positive about, maybe some areas that you see that need some work?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Genuinely I feel really positive about a lot of things. It’s been probably a tougher off-season for cadence and news, but I really think 2024 can be another great step for us in the INDYCAR Series.

We have so many positive things going on, so I’m kind of excited about the season finally getting here and getting into the swing of it. It helps when we get back to the track because we just have a great racing product, too.

I think it’s easy to forget about it sometimes when we leave the track, but when we’re in racing, it’s easy to talk about our competition level, and I think that the level of racing that we have in this series.
It was a good check-in last night. I think the Penske Entertainment folks are trying to do a good job of staying engaged with everybody in the series so that we’re understanding where they’re going and where the plan is.

But there is a lot of good things on the horizon. Nothing that I’m going to get into specifically. Obviously the hybrid is probably the most exciting component of this year, so we’re all still in full prep for that, trying to understand exactly how we’re going to tackle that post-Indianapolis. I think that’s probably the No. 1 topic right now.

Q. How taxing have these last four years been since your last championship? We’ve talked on and off about winning, being so close, you have three years in a row of being runner-up in the championship. I know you’re someone who cares about this as much as anyone and puts as much work into all of this in the off-season, in season to accomplish what you’ve done in the last decade. Can you tell us a little bit about the process of feeling like you needed to pare stuff down and recenter and refocus yourself going into 2024?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I think what I’m talking about is really just life. I think we all go through it at different stages. I’m at a different stage now in my career than when I was a rookie in 2012. I’m fortunate enough to be at this stage in my career. I’m most thankful to just have had all this time in INDYCAR. It’s going to be my 13th year.

I feel very different than 13 years ago when I first started, and I’m trying to understand what’s probably best for me at this stage in my career, and I think getting back to some simplicity would be good for me.

It happens in life where everything can become complicated, regardless of what business you’re in or what facet of life, if you want to start a family. Everybody in this room, we all can become too busy or too clouded maybe with ambitions, and I think for me, that was probably true in some respects.

So I’m trying to just find clarity on what is most important to me objective-wise, so I’ve gone through that process a little bit.

This sounds probably more grand than it is. It’s simple things I would say have been taking place to try and implement some simplicity. But I’m excited. I think it’ll bring me back to the core of what I do, and just happy to be here.

I want to go racing again and do a great job. Those three years finishing runner-up in the championship were tough. Those were very crushing. I would like to change the cycle on that for the future.

Q. Looking at the schedule this year, thought about you immediately. Two new races at Milwaukee. Obviously you’re the oval master. Then St. Louis under the lights this year. Talk about the oval side of the schedule coming up this season, which is obviously a strong point.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, always excited for new challenges. Milwaukee was great when we had it on the schedule. I’m excited to go back there. It’ll be interesting to see how different it is.

What’s it been, nearly eight, nine years since we’ve been there? So it should be different in some respects. The car is going to be different.

I think Gateway under the lights for me is just a joy. Everybody is going to be happy about that. Should be a phenomenal race. The aero package is going to be different, so that’s going to change the whole sort of look and feel of that.

I like it. I like change. There’s a lot of exciting things that are going to be happening throughout the year. Some of these tracks and events are going to be different. When the hybrid comes online middle of the year, that’s going to add a whole new dynamic, which I personally think is exciting.

When you show up to go racing, you know that certain things are going to be put in front of you challenge-wise. I think that’s going to be a challenge for everybody. I think for us, we’ve got to figure out how to maximize the beginning of the season, and then when there’s a change, how are we going to maximize the rest of it. That’s going to be pretty cool.

Yeah, the ovals will be no doubt a highlight probably, but I want to be good everywhere. I think that’s probably the most important thing I would say is we’ve got to be strong everywhere if we want to win the championship.

Q. I know you’re as competitive as they come. You’re now a two-time champion, Indy 500 champion, Long Beach winner. What drives Josef Newgarden now? What’s the next goal you’re trying to eclipse? When you get out of bed in the morning, what keeps that drive going for you?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: You know, when it comes to racing, it’s still — for me, it’s still the bottom line numbers. What’s the ultimate results. I care about that stuff.
I think everybody that’s in here does.

I don’t know how you can be in racing and not care about just finding success every weekend you’re at the track. That’s why I show up. I know it’s why our team shows up.
You talk to Roger Penske, he’s more motivated than anybody to win the 20th Indy 500. That’s an unbelievable statement when you really think about it.

I’m the same way. I’m so thankful we were able to win an Indy 500 last year, but I’m thinking about the next one. How do we get a second one, and if we’re lucky enough to get a second one, how do we get a third, and if we can get a third, how do we get a fourth. It’s a never-ending process of trying to stack success on to one another. That’s what motivates me.

The tough part about it, and I think the easy way to stay motivated, is it’s always changing. Just because we were successful one year and we figured out a formula to win the 500 last year, that does not guarantee the same formula next season, and we see that time and time again. There’s always a different challenge in front of us, and we’re going to have to find a new way and a new path, so that also motivates me. I enjoy the new challenge that we’re always coming up against.

This year is still a little bit of an unknown. We’ll see what happens.

Q. Since you’ve been with Team Penske, obviously you guys didn’t win the INDYCAR Championship last year, but you won the 500, Will won the championship the year before, and you look at the NASCAR side, Joey and Ryan the last two years won the championship. Is the morale around Team Penske and the culture in general as good as it’s ever been since you’ve been there?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, no doubt. I don’t know what it was like pre-my time, but I think the collaboration has never been greater in our team across the board. We’re really trying to leverage every person, every position that we have across motorsports to elevate the whole thing.

It was really great to see Ryan seal the championship this year. I think that is going to be a big catalyst for him as an individual, but it’s also a continuing catalyst for our team.
That’s a big deal. They went back-to-back in the NASCAR championship, which is not easy to do.

On our side, we won the Indianapolis 500, which had been a thorn for the last three, four years. You think about that, too, we go — at Team Penske we go three or four years without finding Victory Lane, and that’s deemed unacceptable.

There’s just a standard that we definitely live by, and you’ve got to love it. You’ve got to love living by that standard if you’re here, and I think pretty much everybody does.
But yeah, the morale and the excitement — I’ve never seen it better. I don’t think it was ever bad, but I’ve definitely never seen it better.

Q. Tough question for you to answer, but we’re at the start of a season, and it’s a reflective time in some respects, too. You’ve stacked wins here incredibly over the last seven years, and you’re kind of at the cusp of top 10 in all time — right ahead of you now, two wins more is Helio, Dario, PT. You’re starting to get in pretty tough air. Do you ever take a moment and say, how has this happened so quickly, and wow? Do you ever have those kind of moments?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Probably more so than ever last year. The 500 I think takes you back. It really does. For me personally, it was just a moment of reflection when you’re able to — I could get emotional thinking about that race. How could you not? It’s just this peak that seems impossible, especially when you’ve been living and breathing it for 12 years and it not happening.

That has set me back more than anything in my career.

As far as the rest of it, I don’t think people like my answer, but it’s just not good enough. Roger always says, and I love when he says this, he says, good enough is not good enough, and that’s kind of how I feel about our results. We need to do a little bit better.

Q. They changed his parking spot at Indy to 19 almost immediately after the checkered flag, that he’s now got to get 20. Is that what you’re talking about? It’s just like it’s what’s next is next?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: 20 is on the board. That’s what we’re looking at right now. When you go to the shop and we talk about it, we’re thinking about Indianapolis first, and it’s everything else right behind it, absolutely.

Q. What do you need to work on as a driver to be better in ’24 than you were in ’23?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, great question. Yeah, everything. I don’t think it’ll come down to one or two ingredients. We know where we fell short probably as a group. Me personally, I think I was also layered into some of that. The weaknesses on the road and street courses, there’s always things that you can be doing better, and certainly for me qualifying is probably going to be the No. 1 thing on my board that needs to improve.

I think it goes deeper than just at the track, though. It’s where are you at from a preparation standpoint. I’m really looking at that a lot this off-season and what I’m going to be bringing into each weekend that we go to.

So just my own personal process even before I show up and start working with the team, I think those are all areas I can be better at.

And I guess just to round it back up, it’s not going to be one thing. It’s always a combination of a lot of little things that you’ve just got to improve and be a bit better than last year. I’m looking at everything. The personal side is big, and I think as a team, too, we’re working really hard to just be better in all areas that we weren’t last year.

Q. I wanted to ask about the Million Dollar Challenge. What do you make of it? The timing of it is kind of puzzling because it’s not an exhibition preseason thing. What do you make of that?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, the event at Thermal, correct? I’ve got to say I’m kind of excited about it. We were talking about it last night, too. This is one of the things we were chatting about.

You see this across the board in motorsports, whether it’s the event at the Coliseum that NASCAR put on or it’s these other trials. I think for us, it’ll be a great exhibition race. In a lot of ways it’s made for TV, which is in a lot of ways great.

I think not everybody lives in Palm Springs, California, but this is one of these events that can be just a net positive. Let’s run it; let’s see how it goes. There’s no guarantee it’ll be perfect or well-received, but there’s also a possibility that it’s super well-received.

I think it’s an exciting event. Obviously, there’s a lot of money to be won, which is motivating for everybody.

But I think more than anything, there’s just the motivation that you want to be top of the pack. Even some speed at Thermal matters everywhere else, so I think for us it’s going to be important to be fast there, and let’s see how it goes. I think it’ll be a fun challenge, really fun challenge for everybody, and we’ll see how it’s received.

Q. Do you worry about how hard people are going to be racing that early in the season? You don’t want to tear up equipment at a non-points race.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: No, not at all, as far as my concern for it.

You have to understand, every event you show up to, you have to be putting in the maximum effort without going over the limit. That is our challenge every single time.
What are we going to do when we go to Indianapolis in April to test? You’re going to be putting the car to the limit, and of course you don’t want to wreck the car, but that’s always the challenge we have. I think that’s a little bit irrelevant. At Thermal you can push the car to the limit. It is our job to do that and try and find performance and win a race.

Accidents happen, too; if we get into an accident, we’ll work with it going into the next race. That’s not abnormal to what we do.

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