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CHEVROLET NTT INDYCAR SERIES – XPEL 375 AT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY ACE RECAP WITH RECAP

CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES
XPEL 375
TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
JUSTIN, TEXAS
TEAM CHEVY RACE POST RACE RECAP WITH TRANSCRIPT
MARCH 20, 2022

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 PPG TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, MADE LAST CORNER, LAST LAP PASS ON TEAMMATE SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN TO CAPTURE HIS 2ND WIN IN THE XPEL 375 AT TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY.
CHEVROLET HAS CAPTURED TWO WINS, AND FOUR PODIUMS IN THE FIRST TWO RACES
TODAY’S VICTORY ON THE 1.5-MILE OVAL IS NEWGARDEN’S 21ST CAREER WIN AND THE 600TH WIN FOR ROGER PENSKE AND TEAM PENSKE
ALSO IS THE 97TH VICTORY SINCE 2012 FOR THE CHEVY 2.2 LITER V6 TWIN TURBO DIRECT INJECTED ENGINE

FT. WORTH (MARCH 20,2022) – A lap and a half from the checkered flag, Josef Newgarden, No. 2 PPG Team Penske Chevrolet, was behind his teammate, race leader and St. Petersburg winner Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet, and had about decided to stay where he was, and take the second-place finish.

But, as if commanded, the opportunity opened up for Newgarden to dare to take the highline around McLaughlin, knowing there was a risk of the resin that had bitten several other drivers earlier in the race could be his demise.

Coming out of turn four Newgarden completed the pass of McLaughlin for the win at the checkered by .0669 seconds to score the 21st win of his career, his second at Texas Motor Speedway and the 97th for Chevrolet since 2012.

“Unbelievable (to have the) PPG car in victory lane,” said a jubilant Newgarden from Victory Lane. “Also, our XPEL car. How about Scott (McLaughlin)? I think he led like 95 percent of the laps. I hate doing that to a teammate, but I was going for it just like he was. We were driving hard. Man, I was loose. I was driving things sideways off of three and four every lap. I was trying to get a run, but Team Chevy what an unbelievable job right? We showed up, got the pole, got the win for Team Chevy’s camp, and just so pleased for everybody. It was so good to drive this PPG car again with Team Chevy.”

Two races into the 17-race 2022 NTT INDYCAR Series schedule, Chevrolet powered drivers have scored two wins, four podiums, four top-fives and six top-10 finishes.

“Congratulations to Josef Newgarden on his exciting win,” said Rob Buckner, Chevrolet Racing Engineering Program Manager for INDYCAR. “Great day again for Scott McLaughlin as well. I am so proud of the work that has been put in by the Chevrolet engineering group with our technical partners and teams that is giving us a strong start to the 2022 INDYCAR Series. It is awesome to help Team Penske capture its 600th win as an organization. What a tremendous achievement. Now we get ready for Long Beach but it is great to head to race three with momentum for all of our teams and drivers.”

With his second-place finish after leading 186 laps, McLaughlin leaves Texas with a 28 point lead in the standings.

Team Penske’s Will Power just missed another podium with a strong fourth-place finish, and heads to Long Beach second in points to give Team Chevy the three of the top-four finishers in today’s 248-lap exciting race.

Rinus VeeKayf battled for the lead around the two-thirds point of the race, and brought his No. 21 Sonax Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet, finished in 10th position.

Two Chevrolet drivers were forced to retire early from the race. Kyle Kirkwood driving the No. 14 Rokit AJ Foyt Chevrolet, was involved in a single-car incident on lap 113 making hard contact with the outside wall. He was checked and released at the infield care center and scored 25th in the final order.

Pole winner Felix Rosenqvist, No. 7 Vuse Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet, retired from the race on lap 138 with a non-engine related mechanical problem. He is credited with the 21st finishing position

Other Chevy powered drivers finished as follows:
ED CARPENTER, NO. 33 ALZAMEND ED CARPENTER RACING, .
, FINISHED 13th
JR HILDEBRAND, NO. 11 ROKIT AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 14th
PATO O’WARD, NO.5 ARROW MCLAREN SP RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 15th
CALLUM ILLOT, NO. 77 JUNCOS HOLLINGER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 16th
DALTON KELLET, NO. 4 K-LINE AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 17th
CONOR DALY, NO. 20 BITNILE ED CARPENTER RACING CHEVROLET, FINISHED 18th

Next for Team Chevy in the NTT INDYCAR Series is the Streets of Long Beach on April 10, 2022.

Scott McLaughlin
Josef Newgarden
Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: We welcome in Scott McLaughlin, who almost went back to back. What happened at the end?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Looking back at it, if I would have thought about it in my head, which I already have done a million times, my car was tightening up, especially in traffic. It probably wasn’t handling exactly how it had at the start earlier in the race. I was sort of maxed out on my tools. I was trying to control the traffic, couldn’t catch the traffic too much. At the end the traffic checked up into me.
I knew there were going to be dramas in three and four. I struggled with my turns at three and four. I guess I wasn’t prepared to take the risk on the outside at 3-4, which looking back at it I should have. My teammate Josef, obviously Josef chose to. Once he was on the outside of me, I can’t do anything.
Yeah, look, I’m gutted. I’ll reevaluate everything over the next few days. But it’s funny, like last year I was fist pumping and jumping out of the car finishing second. I’m like today, It sucks. That’s how it is. That’s how we’re growing. I’ll learn from this, get better.
Yeah, I probably just need to expand, maybe risk a little bit more when I need, to try different lines. I’ll learn for the big one coming up in May.
One thing is great, 600 wins for the captain. Literally if anyone else beat me, I would be pissed. I’m kind of pissed now, but you know what I mean. 600 wins for the team. We led a lot of laps, extended the championship lead.
Yeah, I’m a race driver. I want to win. It definitely hurts.

THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. How do you feel the conditions were as the race went on?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Look, obviously the first stint went for a long time. I actually battled with the vibration on the run. We still had pretty good speed. I managed to pull away.
But definitely the wind, the conditions, changed towards the end of the race. Very gusty off turn two, which made it quite loose. A lot of push, quite tight through 3-4.
Maybe my car wasn’t quite set up for the gustier conditions, but all in all I think we had a really solid race car today. We were right there, thereabouts, throughout the whole race. I passed Dixon into one, a few others into one, able to demand track position when we needed to, that’s what we needed to do: get the right track positions at the right time.

Q. A little more in detail. When you’re coming around out of three, going into four, you know he is where he is, was there any possible thing you could have done to close the line without it being risky?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: No. Like I said, I was battling already on the exit of three and four. It would have been risky for me, for both of us, if I had moved. I mean, when I got told that he’s in the second lane, I was like, Oh, here we go (laughter).
Looking back at it, I was just too tentative. At the end of the day I’ll learn from that. I just didn’t want to go out the last corner, hit the fence, not have either of us win, because I quite easily could have taken Josef out.
It is what it is. At the end of the day it’s one of those days when you look back at the end of the year, championship-wise it might work out very good.

Q. (No microphone.)
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, around when I was sort of like the leader, I had a good lead, I was sort of lapping him a little bit. He was fast. He was doing some really good moves. I saw him pass a guy on the outside in one, a few others.
J.J., we hang out a bit. He’s certainly coming strong. I’m sure he feels a lot more confident on the ovals. He’s going to be good at Indy. I’m really excited for him. He’s in a good car. I’m excited for what’s ahead.
For INDYCAR itself it’s exciting, a guy like that, with so much talent. There’s not many people in America who don’t know who Jimmie Johnson is. If he’s going to compete at the front of the Indy 500, hopefully just behind me, we’re good (smiling). I’ll lead him across the bricks at the end of the race, no dramas. Tuck in, mate, it’s good prize money.

THE MODERATOR: Probably that many people globally who don’t know who Jimmie is.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Everywhere has NASCAR on television knows who J.J. is. I flipped out when I got his mobile number. It was pretty cool.

Q. (No microphone.)
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I don’t know, maybe.

THE MODERATOR: Obviously Josef has his cowboy hat on.
JIMMIE JOHNSON: Head it much bigger now.

THE MODERATOR: Three laps led, but the most important ones.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Was it three? I thought I only got one.
THE MODERATOR: Generally your thoughts coming up on Scott there on the last lap, what was going through your mind?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It was a race of patience, for sure, for us at least. We tried to manage all the way throughout. We had a lot of adversities to work through. We had a right front that was coming apart on the first stint. We got through that. It actually worked out pretty well. We cycled up to second. Scott was way up the road, started closing the gap. Obviously had the big yellow in the middle.
Kind of the final restart, I just got my doors blown off by everybody. There was a ton of fuel to save at that point. Seemed like no one was worried about doing that right away. I must have went back to sixth or seventh. Kind of methodically got back forward.
At the end I was like Scott is going to be hard to beat with traffic. He’s been strong this whole time. He was strong last year, strong at the test. I thought if we just had clear running, we would have a great fight. We probably would have been dicing back and forth the entire time.
It gets so difficult when you have cars that are about to go a lap down, fighting each other. Scott is trying to manage that. Hurts me to be able to close up on end.
At the end I literally conceded with two laps to go. It’s just not going to happen. I literally almost lost it off four pushing hard to go ahead close. He did a good job. He was in position. He’s in position, he’s going to win this rails, bring it home.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: You could have held on for one more corner.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I could have kept that mindset. But that mindset changed as soon as I got to corner three (laughter). The traffic just presented a great opportunity to really, I don’t want to say the words, but get after it, try to do something to win this race.
I went high side. If I hit the fence, I hit the fence. Scott is still the winner, it will be a great day for the team. I was so pumped. I’ve never been so excited. I got on the radio like in the middle of 3-4, I was like, No way.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: One thing that was cool, almost like one of the old Penske races when they used de Ferran and Castroneves used to run across the line? At the end of the day it was kind of cool.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Much more old school. You might have had something like that even if there was no traffic to deal with, just Scott and me.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: The restarts, whoever led…
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I think you would have had a finish like that where it was real close. With two cars battling, you could really do a lot.
The drag race down the frontstretch was big today. Because of headwind versus yesterday, you could get such a big run off of four. It would have been an exciting finish the other way around, but it worked out the way it did today.
THE MODERATOR: Questions, please.
Q. What did you learn today that will help you out for the next time you run into a situation like this on an oval? Can you think of another race in your career where you had a lead position and then you lost at the end?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I lost the championship on the last lap in 2017. That is very similar, but not as hectic.
What would I do different? Probably take the high line. Like I said, I didn’t risk that today. I think, yeah, should I have? Yeah, probably. That’s an experience thing that I’ll learn and come back with, maybe think about that for next year.
Like I said to you guys before, I was pushing out of three. I didn’t have the confidence to run that line, that groove behind those cars. Once he was up there, like I had nothing. I mean, it is what it is. I’ll learn from it.
Yeah, that’s INDYCAR racing, oval racing. It’s why we love it. I think today’s package, I had a lot of fun out there regardless. Passing. When we ended up having the fuel race, I slipped back to fourth, had to work my way back to second, almost the lead. That was fun. It’s what I remember watching when I was a kid.
I certainly hope we continue to build with this package and get this better. Once you have a bit of two lanes through this track, it’s going to be a lot of fun and we’ll have races like we did today.
Q. Do you think racing in daytime played a factor seeing more passing than you had been in the past?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It wasn’t the daytime running, it’s the changes to the aerodynamic package. We were running quite a bit more downforce than last year. The wind direction was different today than normal. Normally we’re getting a tailwind down the frontstretch. Today we had a headwind. It aids the passing.
I think the session they ran yesterday cleaned up a little bit of the second lane. It really did. I wouldn’t have been able to do what I did in three and four last year. There’s just no way. I would have hit the fence for sure.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: They almost need to do that not only here but everywhere. No one’s going to run the slower lane. People don’t do that. We’re focused. Like Gateway, I’m sure Iowa. I agree with Josef. I think extra downforce was helpful.
Personally I like a night race. I think prime time is always awesome. But we don’t make those decisions. Our boss does, this bloke.
Q. One year on now at Texas, how is racing on an oval now compared to coming in as a rookie?
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: It’s awesome. I enjoy oval racing. I wouldn’t say I prefer it. I love just INDYCAR racing. Like I said yesterday, INDYCAR racing is oval racing. I love it. I enjoy it. I learn off this car last year, Simon, some really good teachers that got me comfortable on the ovals, where I want the setup, where I want to go. I feel now I’m going a little bit my way with the step, which I think is helping the team overall.
Yeah, look, I love it. I love it. I can’t way for more of it, can’t wait for May. As a team we’re going to have a very strong race car. Very exciting.
Q. Your thoughts on the captain picking up win 600?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: The captain is so true to his word. He gave me $600 in pit lane, in cash. We’re going to In-N-Out is what we’re going to do.
Q. (No microphone.)
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: There you go, she said it.
It’s funny. I was answering the question in pit lane. I wasn’t suggesting that.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: That sounds like a fun time. You, too?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: You guys should just go if we don’t make it. Send us photos. We were literally talking about it before the race in the trailer. I think we were just getting to the 400 point, 2017. You had just joined the team like a year before or something.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yes.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I came in in ’17, they ripped from 400 to 500 to 600. Amazing.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I said to Roger, let’s celebrate at 500. A testament to the team globally. The super car we had down under, NASCAR series. The best thing about it, everyone is a part of it, whether you’re on the NASCAR side, the INDYCAR side, the sports car side, back in the day the super car side. Whenever somebody wins, there’s an award for the whole organization. That’s what super cool about it. Happy for everyone at home. Hopefully I’m here for 700. We get 700, we’re going all right. Have like five kids.
THE MODERATOR: Scott, we’ll cut you loose on that.
SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Thank you.
THE MODERATOR: Questions for Josef.
Q. In 2012, 2013, your first and second year of INDYCAR on an oval, would you in his situation have done the same thing?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Oh, yeah. I mean, look, Scott didn’t do anything wrong. I took a risk. I mean, I took a big risk there at the end. I just held it in 3-4 to see if it would work. If it didn’t work, it was going to be on me that I took a risk and I didn’t work out.
I made that in a very split-second decision. I’m serious when I say I was pretty much conceding with a lap and a half to go. It was going to be what it was going to be. I wasn’t in position correctly for the final stint.
I just went for it. He didn’t do anything wrong, up on traffic, getting loose. I was a little stronger than him at the end for sure. It would be unwise, it actually shows his wisdom. It would have been very unwise for him to take a flyer and go high side without knowing what’s going to happen. He won the first race, leading the championship. That would have been silly for him to do that decision.
For me it was a risk but I think it was somewhat calculated. I saw people going up there toward the beginning and middle of the race. I took a calculated risk and it worked out.
Q. How much (indiscernible) help you?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It helps tremendously. I have been here a lot more than he has. This is my 11th appearance at Texas. I have a lot more to draw from experience-wise. I’ve seen these situations a lot more than he has. From that standpoint, it’s an unfair advantage for me experience-wise on what to do or not do.
Q. New team for you. New engineer. You had an average finish at St. Pete. You’re the two-time champion. You’re kind of protective of all these new people, make sure you’re the leader. What does this do to win in race two with a team for the most part that is pretty much brand-new?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: High turnover on the 2 car.
It’s big. We’ve got a lot of people on that car that are just learning. I should temper that. We have people that have experience, too, that are bringing a lot to the table and trying to rally this new crew that we’re working together with.
There’s a chemistry that you just have to build. Unfortunately I think for some of the people on the team that are new, less experienced in their roles, you can’t accelerate experience, you just can’t. You can try and talk about it. You can try and spend a lot of time, to develop it away from the track. You can’t replace going to the track and doing the job. The experience is what matters. You have to go through these times together.
Getting a win so early is just going to help the overall morale. It’s going to help the confidence of everyone on the team.
St. Pete was so incredibly disappointing to me. We had a great test going into it. I felt fantastic heading into the weekend. A lot of hurdles that weekend on the track. It wasn’t a good weekend.
I tell everybody, These things happen. It’s not what we wanted, but it’s okay. We’re going to see this at times, so let’s just stay on our plan, keep moving forward, it will eventually get there.
Some of these times, even if you don’t feel confident in the way things are going to come together, you have to stay positive because you’re in the situation together. You’re kind of with a brotherhood there almost. You have each other’s backs. You have to lift each other up.
I’ve been trying to do that from my side. But it takes everybody. It’s not just me that is going to make the difference. You have to make everyone believe that. When they all do it, that’s what really accelerates the program.
Q. You’re in more of a leadership role. Would you describe it as a little bit different? Do you relish it?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don’t like saying that I am. It’s inevitable, right? This is my 11th year in INDYCAR. Of course I’m in more of a senior position, I would say, from an experience, observative standpoint. I’ve seen a lot more than some of these people on the team.
Doesn’t matter that I don’t have an engineering degree, but I’ve been in the trenches working on this stuff with other people and knowing where we’ve been, how we got to where we have gotten to in 2021 or 2022.
That inherently gives you more of a senior leadership role, I would say. But I don’t think we try and operate that way. Everyone is a leader in the team. You got to get buy-in from everybody. Can’t be just one person holding the torch. We all have to believe that and pick each other up.
That’s more of the discussions we’ve had in the off-season, is getting everyone to buy into the program. A team effort. When you have the whole group feeling that way, that’s when magic happens.
Q. Every driver dreams of winning a race in the fashion that you won today. How big of an adrenaline rush was it?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’m telling you, I was yelling. I was on the radio way before the line, which I don’t normally do that. You don’t do that. You stay in the race. I was just so pumped up that, one, the car was sticking, I wasn’t flying towards the fence. But I’ve never had a race end that way. I’ve never been in a position to capitalize on that type of victory.
I was really excited. Still really am. That’s one of the coolest wins, probably the coolest win I’ve ever had in the 2 car. Hopefully we have more of those. Yeah, really, really neat to be a part of that.
Q. You had a competitor who ran his first oval race today and finished sixth. Jimmie Johnson.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Did Jimmie finish sixth?
Q. He was fifth with a few laps to go.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: That’s legit. Hard to finish sixth at Texas. It’s hard. Like, that’s really good.
Q. You could say he’s a legit contender for an Indy 500. To add another guy like that into the mix, along with Scott McLaughlin, that race seems to get more difficult competitive-wise every year.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, look, not to take away from Jimmie, but it has been a steep learning curve. He’s had to unlearn an entire career of operating procedures. The INDYCAR is so removed from what a stockcar is. For him to be able to get on top of that so quickly, it makes sense it’s going better here at Texas, it’s closer to what he’s used to procedurally. I don’t want to act too surprised because he is a seven-time champ, incredible worker and teammate.
Man, that’s really good, though. First INDYCAR oval race, sixth at Texas. These cars are hard to drive. The way that we draft, the way the groove works for us, you can’t go up a lane or two like in a stockcar. They’re scrubbing the car before he gets there. I need to watch this race back, see how he got there. I’m sure he’ll be a huge threat at Indy then. Great news.
Q. Winning in your engineer’s second race as an engineer, tell us about that. Remarkable stuff.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, look, I don’t think you can discount the tall order that Eric has in front of him. I mean, he’s a very smart individual, really great person, good personality, total team player.
Eric has never engineered a car like this. Not even anything close to this. He hasn’t been in an engineering position like this in, I don’t know, eight years. That position was very, very different than the position he’s in now.
He’s had a lot to learn, a lot. He is just trying to soak up information from everybody. He’s been leaning on Dave, Ben, all the other engineers. They have done a great job of trying to inject as much knowledge into Eric as quickly as possible.
The same point I was making before, you can’t force this stuff. You can give Eric a binder with every piece of information he would ever need, he could read the thing three times over before the season starts. Until he does it, he’s never really going to understand it, he’s not going to get good at that instinctual ability he has to have.
He has a super tall order in front of him. He’s staying positive. A day like today is very validating for a person like Eric. I’m really happy for him. I’m happy for our group. It’s only one race, let’s not get too excited, but this is a good boost for everybody. Eric is doing a tremendous job of being a team player for all of us.
Q. (No microphone.)
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: We haven’t divvied out the amounts yet. It’s a gift. Clean and clear. Don’t have to pay taxes on this. What am I talking about? I should gloat more about this $600.
We haven’t divvied it out. But we’re going to get burgers. I should give him one.
THE MODERATOR: $10,000 to your favorite charity. What is your favorite charity?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I’m splitting it between (indiscernible) Network, who I have done a lot of work with, and Wags and Walks out of Nashville. Wags and Walks is a rescue organization, they started in L.A., actually where we got our dog. They do a really great job. Growing, but they’re really small. I hope this is going to help. That’s my plan, split it between those two.
THE MODERATOR: Thank you.

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Newgarden Delivers Win No. 600 for Team Penske in Texas Photo Finish

FORT WORTH, Texas (Sunday, March 20, 2022) – It’s not often a driver is paid a cash bonus in Victory Lane, but this was no ordinary win for Josef Newgarden and Team Penske on Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway.

Newgarden rocketed his No. 2 PPG Team Penske Chevrolet past the No. 3 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet of teammate Scott McLaughlin on the outside of Turn 4 on the final lap and won a drag race to the checkered flag, hanging on for victory by .0669 of a second in the first oval race of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES season.

The win was Team Penske’s 600th across all racing disciplines, and team owner Roger Penske was ecstatic to lay six crisp $100 bills on Newgarden’s palm in Victory Lane as a special bonus. Newgarden led just three of the 248 laps, while a dominant McLaughlin led 186 trips around the high-banked, 1.5-mile oval.

“Unbelievable,” Newgarden said. “I think Scott led 95 percent of the laps. I hate doing that to a teammate, but I was going for it, just like he was.

“Man, I was loose; I was driving the thing sideways off (Turns) 3 and 4. I was trying to get a win. I’m just so pleased for everybody. Last lap, last corner – that’s what it’s all about at Texas.”

Marcus Ericsson finished third in the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Chip Ganassi Racing Honda, 1.3537 seconds behind Newgarden. It was Ericsson’s career-best finish on an oval.

Will Power finished fourth in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, as Penske drivers earned three of the top four spots in the race. Team Penske also has won both races this season, as series points leader McLaughlin triumphed Feb. 27 in the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding.

Six-time series champion and five-time Texas winner Scott Dixon finished fifth in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson achieved a career-best finish with ease by placing sixth in his first NTT INDYCAR SERIES oval race after starting 18th in the No. 48 Carvana Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. Johnson’s previous best finish was 17th last year as a rookie, when he only raced on road and street courses.

“I hoped to qualify in the top 10 and race in the top 10,” Johnson said. “Missed the qualifying mark a bit, but once we hit the halfway point of the race, I really could sense and feel the car. It became second nature, and off I went. We knew going oval racing would help, and today got us into the competitive mix.”

McLaughlin, who started second next to pole sitter Felix Rosenqvist, grabbed the lead on Lap 206 when rookie Callum Ilott pitted from the lead after trying to stretch fuel well beyond the normal pit cycles in his No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet. McLaughlin put himself into position to inherit the lead a lap earlier by passing Rinus VeeKay’s No. 21 SONAX Chevrolet for second in Turn 1.

Newgarden, who started seventh, drove to second and pulled to within .462 of a second of McLaughlin with 25 laps to go. McLaughlin expanded that lead to .914 of a second with five laps remaining as both drivers diced through lapped traffic.

New Zealand native McLaughlin tried to manage the gap between his car and the slower cars ahead of Ilott and fellow rookie David Malukas as the final laps ticked down, and Newgarden pounced. The gap between the top two was .315 of a second at the white flag.

As McLaughlin slowed slightly with Malukas’ car ahead, Newgarden moved up half a lane in Turns 3 and 4 and pulled outside of and even with McLaughlin exiting Turn 4. The slingshot-like whip around the final corner gave Newgarden the momentum he needed to win the drag race to the finish line.

“I was livid in the car because we had all this traffic and it wasn’t helping me, and then right when I needed it to help me, it helped me,” Newgarden said. “Literally last corner, last lap, the traffic helped me out.”

Said McLaughlin: “Second is a great day, but unfortunately, we made a little lapse and at the end of the day lost. If you’re going to lose to anyone, your teammate is the guy you want to lose it to. Gutted I couldn’t get it done for XPEL and Chevy. But at the end of the day, we’re there, and I learned a lot in the race that going to help us going in May to the Speedway.

“But I’m gutted. It still hurt. It’s how it is. But I’m pretty proud of how we’re running. My car wasn’t probably as good as it had been in traffic as it had been the whole race. I knew I was building push, I was building tightness. Once he (Newgarden) got on the outside there, I couldn’t come up above the line. I was stuck. I thought about going outside on Malukas there, but I was worried I would push up into the gray and into the fence. You’re damned if you do, damned if you don’t.”

Newgarden averaged 165.467 mph in a race slowed by four cautions for 52 laps.

Two-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Newgarden also gained a leg up on the PeopleReady Force for Good Challenge with his victory. The challenge offered by the industrial staffing giant is a bonus of $1 million to be awarded to the first NTT INDYCAR SERIES driver who can win on all three unique styles of tracks – street circuits, road courses and ovals – this season. The reward, if earned, will be divided, with $500,000 shared by the driver and his team and $500,000 presented to their chosen charity.

PeopleReady is offering an additional $10,000 to the winner of every race this season, also to be split with their selected charity. Newgarden is splitting his award from today’s race with SeriousFun Childrens Network and Wags & Walks Nashville.

XPEL 375 Race Results

FORT WORTH, Texas – Results Sunday of the XPEL 375 NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 1.5-mile Texas Motor Speedway, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

  1. (7) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 248, Running
  2. (2) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 248, Running
  3. (14) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 248, Running
  4. (4) Will Power, Chevrolet, 248, Running
  5. (5) Scott Dixon, Honda, 248, Running
  6. (18) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 248, Running
  7. (11) Alex Palou, Honda, 248, Running
  8. (15) Simon Pagenaud, Honda, 248, Running
  9. (27) Santino Ferrucci, Honda, 248, Running
  10. (8) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 248, Running
  11. (19) David Malukas, Honda, 248, Running
  12. (9) Colton Herta, Honda, 247, Running
  13. (21) Ed Carpenter, Chevrolet, 247, Running
  14. (25) JR Hildebrand, Chevrolet, 247, Running
  15. (10) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 247, Running
  16. (20) Callum Ilott, Chevrolet, 247, Running
  17. (22) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 246, Running
  18. (16) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 245, Running
  19. (24) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 233, Contact
  20. (3) Takuma Sato, Honda, 140, Contact
  21. (1) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 138, Mechanical
  22. (26) Graham Rahal, Honda, 128, Contact
  23. (6) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 128, Contact
  24. (17) Devlin DeFrancesco, Honda, 128, Contact
  25. (23) Kyle Kirkwood, Chevrolet, 113, Contact
  26. (13) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 103, Mechanical
  27. (12) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 11, Mechanical

Race Statistics
Winner’s average speed: 165.467 mph
Time of Race: 2:09:29.7270
Margin of victory: 0.0669 of a second
Cautions: 4 for 52
Lead changes: 15 among 12 drivers

Lap Leaders:
McLaughlin 1 – 56
Sato 57 – 61
Castroneves 62
Kirkwood 63 – 67
Hildebrand 68
McLaughlin 69 – 149
Newgarden 150 – 151
McLaughlin 152 – 158
VeeKay 159 – 163
Power 164 – 183
Ericsson 184 – 193
Carpenter 194 – 197
Malukas 198 – 200
Ilott 201 – 205
McLaughlin 206 – 247
Newgarden 248

PeopleReady Force For Good Challenge ($10,000 charitable donation): Josef Newgarden

NTT INDYCAR SERIES Point Standings: McLaughlin 97, Power 69, Palou 67, Newgarden 65, Ericsson 58, Dixon 55, Herta 50, VeeKay 50, Pagenaud 39, Johnson 35.

Newgarden captures thrilling last lap victory over McLaughlin at Texas

Photo by Chris Owens (Penske Entertainment).

In what appeared to be a dominant victory within grasp for Scott McLaughlin for the second consecutive time into a new season of racing, teammate Josef Newgarden spoiled the party as he overtook McLaughlin with a daring pass on the outside lane on the final lane and with the finish in sight to win the XPEL 375 at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday, March 20.

The 31-year-old Newgarden from Hendersonville, Tennessee, led a total of three of 248-scheduled laps compared to McLaughlin’s 186, but benefitted with the last lap pass and lapped traffic that briefly stalled McLaughlin’s progress to become the second winner of the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series season.

With on-track qualifying occurring on Saturday that determined the starting lineup, Felix Rosenqvist captured the pole position after posting a pole-winning, two-lap average of 221.110 mph. Joining him on the front row was Scott McLaughlin, who earned his maiden IndyCar victory at the Streets of St. Petersburg, Florida, in February and posted a two-lap average at 221.096 mph.

Prior to the event, Santino Ferrucci replaced Jack Harvey in the No. 45 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Dallara-Honda after Harvey did not receive medical clearance to compete following a practice accident on Saturday.

When the green flag waved and the race commenced, Rosenqvist maintained a steady advantage for nearly a full lap until McLaughlin used the outside lane to lead the first lap by a hair. 

As the field fanned out and jostled for positions early, McLaughlin was out in front followed by Rosenqvist, Will Power, Takuma Sato and Helio Castroneves, who was being pressured by Colton Herta for more.

Through the first 10 laps of the event, McLaughlin was leading by two-tenths of a second over Rosenqvist while Sato, Power and Herta were in the top five. Castroneves was in sixth followed by Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden, Marcus Ericsson and Rinus Veekay. By then, Alexander Rossi, who was in 12th place, was penalized for jumping the start when he pulled his No. 27 Andretti Autosport Dallara-Honda out of line prior to the start.

Two laps later, the first caution of the event flew when Rossi fell off the pace due to a mechanical issue and was creeping to pit road below the apron.

Four laps later, the race restarted under green. At the start, McLaughlin retained the lead ahead of Rosenqvist and Sato as the field settled in a long single-file line.

By Lap 25, McLaughlin was leading by nearly three-tenths of a second over Rosenqvist followed by Sato, Herta and Power while Castroneves, Dixon, Pato O’Ward, Ericsson and rookie Kyle Kirkwood were in the top 10. Meanwhile, Newgarden was back in 11th, Alex Palou was in 13th ahead of Romain Grosjean and Simon Pagenaud and Jimmie Johnson was in 20th ahead of Graham Rahal.

Through the first 50 laps of the event, McLaughlin stabilized his advantage to nearly two seconds over Rosenqvist while Sato, Herta, Power, Castroneves, Dixon, O’Ward, Kirkwood and Newgarden were scored in the top 10.

Nearly five laps later, pit stops under green commenced as Rinus VeeKay pitted followed by Marcus Ericsson and the leader McLaughlin. During the pit stops, David Malukas stalled his car while trying to exit his pit stall and nearly collided with Sato, which cost the two-time Indianapolis 500 champion from Japan time on pit road. 

By Lap 75 and with the pit stop cycle under green complete, McLaughlin was back in the lead by more than 12 seconds over his Team Penske teammate Newgarden while Arrow McLaren SP’s O’Ward and Rosenqvist battled for third place. Behind, Herta for Andretti Autosport was in fifth ahead of Ericsson, Dixon, Power, VeeKay and Castroneves. Meanwhile, Conor Daly was penalized for pit speed violation.

On Lap 99, the caution flew when Sato slipped in the marbles and made light contact against the outside wall in Turn 1 as a result of making earlier contact with Devlin DeFrancesco’s No. 29 Andretti Steinbrenner Autosport Dallara-Honda entering the turn. By then, McLaughlin had his advantage of nearly 12 seconds over teammate Newgarden reduced to half.

Under caution, the leaders pitted and McLaughlin retained the lead ahead of teammates Newgarden and Power along with Dixon and Ericsson. During the pit stops, O’Ward hit his left-front tire changer while teammate Rosenqvist overshot his pit stall and endured a slow pit stop, which cost him time and positions. In addition, Romain Grosjean retired due to a mechanical issue to his No. 28 Andretti Autosport Dallara-Honda.

When the race restarted on Lap 113, McLaughlin retained the lead ahead of teammates Newgarden and Power as the field scrambled for positions. 

Just then, the caution returned when Kyle Kirkwood, who was battling DeFrancesco on the outside lane through Turns 3 and 4, got loose, spun and backed his No. 14 AJ Foyt Dallara-Chevrolet against the outside wall, which ended his day with a wrecked race car.

With the race surpassing its halfway mark under caution on Lap 124, McLaughlin was out in front ahead of teammates Newgarden and Power along with Dixon, Ericsson, VeeKay, Herta, Alex Palou, Pagenaud and Graham Rahal, who started at the rear of the field. 

When the race restarted under green on Lap 127, McLaughlin retained the lead ahead of teammates Newgarden, Power and the field. Not long after, however, the caution returned for a multi-car wreck that involved DeFrancesco, Graham Rahal and Helio Castroneves in Turn 3. During the caution period, Rosenqvist’s strong start to the weekend ended on a low note after he retired due to a mechanical issue to his No. 7 Arrow McLaren SP Dallara-Chevrolet

With the event reaching the final 100 scheduled laps, the race restarted under green. At the start, McLaughlin maintained a steady lead until Newgarden assumed the top spot a lap later. Behind, Rinus VeeKay charged his way towards the front as he moved into the top four before moving into third place ahead of Power.

Shortly after, the battle for the lead ignited as McLaughlin reassumed the lead while VeeKay joined the battle and overtook Newgarden for the runner-up spot. 

On Lap 159, VeeKay moved his No. 21 Ed Carpenter Racing Dallara-Chevrolet to the top spot. Five laps later, however, Power muscled his No. 12 Team Penske Dallara-Chevrolet to the lead as Scott Dixon was in third place.

With less than 50 laps remaining and pit stops under green occurring for a majority of the field, David Malukas, who has yet to pit, was leading followed by Callum Ilott. Behind, VeeKay, who pitted, was in third ahead of McLaughlin and Newgarden. 

On Lap 206, McLaughlin cycled back to the lead after Ilott pitted while Newgarden, VeeKay, Ericsson and Power were in the top five. Behind, Pagenaud was in sixth while Jimmie Johnson was up in seventh place ahead of teammates Scott Dixon and Alex Palou.

With 30 laps remaining, McLaughlin was leading by nearly a second over teammate Newgarden while Ericsson was in third place. Power was in fourth ahead of VeeKay while Pagenaud, Johnson, Dixon, Palou and Santino Ferrucci were in the top 10. 

Ten laps later, McLaughlin continued to lead by more than two-tenths of a second over teammate Newgarden while Ericsson remained in the final podium spot in third place. While Power and Pagenaud settled in fourth and fifth, Johnson was up in sixth place. 

Down to the final 10 laps of the event, McLaughlin was leading by four-tenths of a second over teammate Newgarden amid lapped traffic followed by Ericsson while Power and Johnson were in the top five. Pagenaud, Dixon and Palou were in sixth, seventh and eighth while VeeKay was back in ninth ahead of Ferrucci. 

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, McLaughlin, who continued to navigate his way through lapped traffic, stabilized his advantage to three-tenths of a second over teammate Newgarden, who was trying to reduce the gap between himself and his Penske teammate. Then with McLaughlin mired behind some more lapped cars, this allowed Newgarden to narrow the deficit and gain a huge run to the outside of teammate McLaughlin through Turn 3. With both Penske teammates dead even approaching the finish line, Newgarden muscled ahead and stole the show and the win by 0.0669 seconds over McLaughlin.

The victory was Newgarden’s first of the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series season, second at Texas and the 21st of his career. With the victory, Newgarden also rewarded the 600th overall motorsports win for Team Penske as he ignites his bid for his third IndyCar title.

“Oh my gosh!” Newgarden exclaimed on NBC. “I was fuming in the car. We had all this traffic and it wasn’t helping me. And then right when I needed it to help me, it helped me literally last corner, last lap. The traffic helped me out. Unbelievable. I hate doing that to a teammate, but I was going for it just like he was. We were driving hard. Man, I was loose. I was driving things sideways off in [Turns] 3 and 4 every lap I was trying to get a run, but Team Chevy, what an unbelievable job. Just so pleased for everybody. It was so good to drive this PPG car again with Team Chevy. That’s what it’s all about at Texas. I hope we come back [to Texas]. Let’s come back!”

McLaughlin, who led a race-high 186 of 248 laps, settled in second place as he fell short in his bid to claim back-to-back IndyCar victories. Despite the result, McLaughlin made a trip to Victory Lane to congratulate teammate Newgarden on the win.

“Second’s a great day,” McLaughlin said. “Unfortunately, we led a lot of laps and at the end of the day, we lost it though. If you’re gonna lose to anyone, your teammate is a great guy to lose it to. Congrats to Josef and the PPG team. Gutted I couldn’t get it done for XPEL and Chevy but at the end of the day, with the air, I learned a lot [from] this race. I’m gutted. It’s how it is, but I’m pretty proud of how we’re running.”

Ericsson came home in a strong third place for his fifth top-three career result in IndyCar competition while Will Power and Scott Dixon finished in the top five.

Meanwhile, Jimmie Johnson achieved his maiden top-10 result in IndyCar competition after methodically racing his way to a career-best sixth-place result in his maiden IndyCar oval event and at a track where he won at seven times in NASCAR.

“I had hoped to qualify in the top 10 and race in the top 10,” Johnson said. “Once we hit the halfway point in the race, I really could sense and feel the car, and it became second nature, and off I went. I’m just very thankful for the support that I have from Chip Ganassi Racing, my teammates, team members, fantastic support from Carvana. We knew going oval racing would help, and today got us in a competitive mix. When I was racing with [Dixon] at the end, I thought that was pretty cool and pretty fun. We had a little trouble with our telemetry and didn’t know how much fuel I had saved, so I had to really go into conserve mode at the end and couldn’t fight for that top five, but what a special day. Just very thankful.”

Teammate Palou finished seventh while Pagenaud, Ferrucci and VeeKay completed the top 10.

With his runner-up result, Scott McLaughlin continues to lead the points standings by 28 points over teammate Will Power, 30 over Alex Palou, 32 over teammate Josef Newgarden, 39 over Marcus Ericsson and 42 over Scott Dixon.

Results.

1. Josef Newgarden, three laps led

2. Scott McLaughlin, 186 laps led

3. Marcus Ericsson, 10 laps led

4. Will Power, 20 laps led

5. Scott Dixon

6. Jimmie Johnson

7. Alex Palou

8. Simon Pagenaud

9. Santino Ferrucci

10. Rinus VeeKay, five laps led 

11. David Malukas, three laps led

12. Colton Herta, one lap down

13. Ed Carpenter, one lap down

14. JR Hildebrand, one lap down

15. Pato O’Ward, one lap down

16. Callum Ilott, one lap down

17. Dalton Kellett, two laps down

18. Conor Daly, three laps down

19. Christian Lundgaard – OUT, Accident

20. Takuma Sato – OUT, Accident

21. Felix Rosenqvist – OUT, Halfshaft

22. Graham Rahal – OUT, Accident

23. Helio Castroneves – OUT, Accident

24. Devlin DeFrancesco – OUT, Accident

25. Kyle Kirkwood – OUT, Accident

26. Romain Grosjean – OUT, Engine

27. Alexander Rossi – OUT, Battery

Next on the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series schedule is the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach at the Streets of Long Beach, California, which will occur on April 10 at 3 p.m. ET on NBC.

Pagenaud Charges to Eighth in Texas

#60: Simon Pagenaud, Meyer Shank Racing Honda

Castroneves’ race end early after mid-race incident

FORT WORTH, Texas (20 March 2022) – Simon Pagenaud made a clean charge through the field en route to scoring an eighth-place finish to lead the Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) effort in Sunday’s incident-filled XPEL 375 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Pagenaud was in reach of a podium finish through the closing stages of the race after battling forward from his 15th place starting position. It was the best result of the MSR campaign for the Frenchman in the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda, who finished 15th in the NTT INDYCAR Series opener at St. Petersburg.

It was a short day for MSR teammate Helio Castroneves, who was collected in a three-car incident on a restart midway through the race driving the No. 06 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda shortly.

After a long green-flag stretch during the opening stages of the 248-lap event, three consecutive incidents prevented the field from running a full green-flag lap from lap 99 through lap 149.

Pagenaud started the race in 15th, and moved up to 12th following the first round of green-flag pit stops on lap 62. Pagenaud was up to ninth during the extended caution sequence. Once racing went back to green for the final 99 circuits, Pagenaud charged to fifth before slowing slightly in the final circuits to finish eighth.

The NTT INDYCAR SERIES next moves to the streets of Long Beach, Calif., for the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach on Sunday, April 10 which will also see MSR’s IMSA program competing the same weekend.

Driver Quotes:

Simon Pagenaud:

“It was an awesome race and I feel like the whole team had such a great performance on all levels. I’m really happy about my driving and my restarts and it was a really, really good day for everyone. At the end the car got really loose, there was more wind and I just couldn’t hold on to fifth position. Overall it was really fun out there – there were a lot of passes and a lot of dicing with the competition. I was really proud to bring the AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda to eighth place. This was a really good foundation for the rest of the season and especially for the Indy 500. From here we are going to go up and we look forward to Long Beach.”

Helio Castroneves:

“I had no idea what happened. It went three-wide and I made sure to give space to Graham [Rahal]. Then I saw him spinning out and I had nowhere to go. We got the worst of it. Whatever happened is unnecessary. We still had half of the race, 100 laps, to go, and it’s unnecessary to take a risk like that. If it was 10 laps, 15 laps to go, I understand, but half of the race is frustrating. We were just taking it easy, we were just taking our pace. Obviously, the car was really good, and we knew exactly what we needed to do. It’s a shame that happens. I’m not happy, obviously, but we’ll move on to the next race at Long Beach.”

Leclerc leads a 1-2 finish for Ferrari in 2022 Bahrain Grand Prix

Charles Leclerc and Ferrari commenced the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship season with an emphatic statement after both captured a dominant victory in the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix at Bahrain International Circuit on Sunday, March 20.

The 24-year-old Leclerc from Monte Carlo, Monaco, who qualified on pole position on Saturday, took off with the lead at the start, led all but two of the 57-scheduled laps and benefitted from three strong, strategic pit stops to remain ahead of his front-runners en route to a victory over teammate Carlos Sainz Jr. under caution as Ferrari captured a 1-2 finish to commence their bid for this year’s championship battle. 

The victory at Bahrian was the third of Leclerc’s Formula One career and first since winning the Italian Grand Prix in September 2019. In addition, Ferrari captured its first Grand Prix victory since the 2019 Singapore Grand Prix in September with Sebastian Vettel.

“It feel amazing,” Leclerc said. “It really feels amazing. After all the hard work, to do the pole yesterday felt good, but I had to finish the business today and to have a race win, especially with a one, two [finish] for the team, it feels absolutely incredible.”

“A victory’s always very, very special,” Leclerc added. “I definitely feel much grown as a driver compared to my victory in 2019. Here today, everything felt a bit more under control and it felt nice. Obviously, there were some tense moments on track with Max [Verstappen] after the first stop, with the Safety Car restart after that, but everything was managed well. It’s great.”

“So happy,” Mattia Binotto, Team Principal of Scuderia Ferrari, added. “I think we’re not expecting or hoping for such a good result at the end. It’s great to be here, to win and finally, a one, two [finish]. I think it has been, overall, a great team effort, great team result. Everyone worked very well. Both drivers did a fantastic race.”

Behind, Sainz, who qualified in third place, commenced his eighth full-time season in F1 competition by tying his career-best result of second place.

“I think it’s a great day for the team,” Sainz said. “It’s a massive day. I just need to say congratulations to everyone, to everyone back at the factory because you cannot imagine how much hard work there’s behind these results. These last two years, there’s been a lot of struggles, a lot of suffering and suddenly, to come back with a one, two, it’s something huge for Italy, for Ferrari. Great day. Time to celebrate and then, time to get our heads down and keep going.”

Rounding out the podium was Sir Lewis Hamilton as the seven-time F1 champion, who never contended for the victory but settled quietly near the top five, settled in third place for his 183rd career podium in Formula One competition.

“Honestly, I’m generally quite happy with today, given the struggle that we’ve had in the forms we’ve had,” Hamilton said. “I’m positive. I had a pretty decent lap in the end. I’m excited. I know it’s a long, long season. It’s easy to get down when you know that you can’t compete for wins, but just proud of the team. Proud of us all keeping our heads down. I know that this is the best team. We will huddle together, unite and fix whatever problems we have, and be back in the fight with these guys.”

While Ferrari celebrated their strong start to the season, Red Bull Racing, the reigning champions, were left disappointed after both Max Verstappen and Sergio “Checo” Perez retired late due to late fuel pump issue. Verstappen, the reigning champion, retired on Lap 54 of 57 after he fell off the pace due to his mechanical issues while running in second place, thus retiring in 19th place. Meanwhile, Perez, who had third place locked up on the final lap, spun through the first turn and just in front of Hamilton as he was unable to continue. With his late issues, Perez settled in 18th place as both competitors failed to record points for Red Bull Racing one race into the new season and in their bids to defend the drivers’ championship.

George Russell, Hamilton’s new full-time Mercedes teammate, came home in fourth place while Kevin Magnussen finished fifth in his return to Formula One competition following a one-year absence, thus scoring the first points for the Haas F1 Team since the Eifel Grand Prix in October 2020 with former F1 competitor Romain Grosjean.

Valtteri Bottas earned a strong sixth-place result in his first event with Alfa Romeo F1 Team Orlen followed by Esteban Ocon, Yuki Tsunoda and Fernando Alonso. Rookie Guanyu Zhou for Alfa Romeo completed the top-10 points-paying results by capturing his maiden point in F1 with a 10th-place result.

The first competitor to finish outside of the points was Mick Schumacher, who rallied from an early spin following contact with Ocon, in 11th place followed by Lance Stroll, Alexander Albon, Daniel Ricciardo and Lando Norris. Nicholas Latifi finished 16th while Nico Hülkenberg, who filled in as an interim competitor for Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel after Vettel tested positive for COVID-19, settled in 17th place.

Pierre Gasly settled in 20th place, dead last, following a late overheating issue to his AlphaTauri-RBPT under the final 15 laps.

Results:

1. Charles Leclerc, 26 points, 55 laps led

2. Carlos Sainz Jr., 18 points, two laps led

3. Lewis Hamilton, 15 points

4. George Russell, 12 points

5. Kevin Magnussen, 10 points

6. Valtteri Bottas, eight points

7. Esteban Ocon, six points

8. Yuki Tsunoda, four points

9. Fernando Alonso, two points

10. Guanyu Zhou, one point

11. Mick Schumacher

12. Lance Stroll

13. Alexander Albon

14. Daniel Ricciardo

15. Lando Norris

16. Nicholas Latifi

17. Nico Hülkenberg

18. Sergio Perez – Retired

19. Max Verstappen – Retired

20. Pierre Gasly – Retired

Following the first event of the 2022 F1 season, Charles Leclerc leads the drivers’ standings by eight points over teammate Carlos Sainz Jr., 11 over Lewis Hamilton, 14 over George Russell, 16 over Kevin Magnussen and 18 over Valtteri Bottas. 

In addition, Ferrari leads the constructors’ standings by 17 points over Mercedes, 34 over Haas Ferrari, 35 over Alfa Romeo Ferrari and 36 over Alpine Renault.

Next on the 2022 Formula One schedule is Jeddah Corniche Circuit for the second running of the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, which will occur on Sunday, March 27.

Wright Rebounds from Early Race Challenge for Top-Ten Sebring Finish

SEBRING, Fla., (March 20, 2022) – The Twelve Hours of Sebring on Saturday was a character-building race for Wright Motorsports. The Ohio-based team managed to rebound from an early-race setback to earn a top-ten finish in the No. 16 1st Phorm Porsche 911 GT3 R. After twelve punishing hours at the Sebring, Florida raceway, drivers Ryan Hardwick, Jan Heylen, and Zacharie Robichon brought the car home in tenth-place.

“Today was a hard race for our team, but the attitude of everyone on this organization shows what a quality group we have,” said Team Owner John Wright. “No matter how perfect you prepare or execute, things still happen that are out of your control. Everyone on our team immediately pulled together and got to work, never uttering a complaint. We got to work right away and never gave up on gaining back our lost ground. I’m proud of each and every one of them. The Porsche is a great machine that had the speed, and luck just wasn’t on our side today.”

Wright Motorsports entered the Twelve Hours of Sebring race week with high energy and high hopes, eager to keep the momentum gained from the team’s Rolex 24 At Daytona race win in January. The IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship GTD points leaders looked strong in each of the four practice sessions, and the consistent performance carried over into the qualifying session. After an impressive qualifying display on Friday morning, Zacharie Robichon and the No. 16 Wright Motorsports Porsche earned a first-place starting position for Saturday’s big race.

Less than 15 minutes after taking the green flag on Saturday morning, Robichon radioed to the team that something was wrong while running in second place. Less than a handful of laps later the issue in the left rear corner of the car revealed itself, and the car temporarily left the competition to undergo repairs in the garage.

After expert services from the crew, the No. 16 1st Phorm Porsche returned to the fight about 40 minutes later, running 18 laps down. Robichon stayed behind the wheel to finish his stint, and then Ryan Hardwick took over for the next run, joining the race in 16th position. Echoing his co-driver’s thoughts, Hardwick said the current setup was challenging, using his analysis of the car to provide the engineers in the pit box with insight for the next set of changes in future pit stops. Jan Heylen took command of the Porsche in the fourth hour, taking advantage of the first full-course caution to receive a pass around procedure and regain a lost lap back.

The afternoon hours continued on as temperatures continued to climb, reaching a peak of 92 degrees Fahrenheit. With each stop, the engineers in the pit box used driver feedback to perfect the car’s setup, allowing them to put in consistent lap times and focus forward. As the race progressed, the majority of the field had one issue or another, bringing out a series of full-course cautions and race retirements. After the early race setback, the Wright Motorsports team enjoyed a relatively clean and drama-free run, utilizing each full-course caution to play the strategy and gain back a lost lap to climb back up through the field.

Around the halfway point, the team cracked back into the top ten in the GTD class, gaining back four of the 18 lost laps. In the end, the team’s rebound brought them a tenth-place result, holding third in the GTD championship standings leaving the second round. The IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship next competes at the Long Beach Grand Prix street circuit in California, April 9. The one-hour, forty-minute event will be the first sprint race of the 2022 season and will host only three of the five WeatherTech classes. For more information, visit wrightmotorsports.com.

Ryan Hardwick
I’ve often heard that championships are won on your bad days. Well, our team finally had one of those days today at Sebring. The mechanical issue we had at the onset of the race was unfortunate, but our team never lost faith and they never backed down. Thanks to our dedicated team of mechanics we got our car back on track in quick order and clawed our way back into the top 10 by the end of the race. We are leaving Sebring sitting in the top three in overall championship points, and we will take that. I’m looking forward to getting the sprint races started with Jan and the team in a few weeks in Long Beach!

Jan Heylen
It was not the day we were hoping for, but there’s days like this in racing. It doesn’t make it any easier though. It takes so much preparation to come here and so much time and effort from everyone involved in our team. To be out of the race on lap four is tough, but we had a good comeback. The guys did an amazing job replacing a differential in such a short amount of time. To come back in tenth place is still good points for the championship. Races like this win or lose a championship, and it was an amazing team effort to come back from where we were to tenth place. A big thank you to all the team and I’m looking forward to Long Beach for some redemption.

Zacharie Robichon
It was not where we wanted to finish. Considering it was such a tremendous team effort, to still be able to finish in the top ten after missing the entire first hour is such a testament to the team. It was one of those things that is just a freak incident. Who knows what caused it and what we could have done. The team diagnosed it and got the car fixed. We lost some laps, but we never gave up. We had eleven hours to show our grit and determination and that’s what we did. We came back from sixteenth to tenth and it showed our team effort. Winning is easy but losing is much harder. We showed we can make the most of when we’re on our back foot, and ultimately, that’s what can win the team a championship.

Porsche Carrera Cup North America Presented by the Cayman Islands
The Wright Motorsports Porsche Carrera Cup North America Presented by the Cayman Islands effort kicked off the season at Sebring International Raceway this weekend, with Varun Choksey, Hutton McKenna, and John Goetz driving. The trio raced in a pair of 40-minute races in support of the WeatherTech series. Goetz earned Wright Motorsports the first Cup podium of the year, finishing in third-place in race two. Choksey had a positive Wright debut, finishing seventh in his second race. McKenna also put in a strong effort over the weekend, finishing 13th in the competitive Pro class. The next race event for the Porsche Carrera Cup will be the Grand Prix of Long Beach, April 6-9.

1st Phorm
1st Phorm is a sports nutrition company based in St. Louis, MO. In 2009, CEO Andy Frisella and his business partner Chris Klein started the brand, and since then, it has become the fastest growing supplement company in the world. 1st Phorm has set the standards in the industry for quality and helping people reach their goals. This new racing partnership is not their first time in the exotic car scene either. 1st Phorm has been the title sponsor for the Gold Rush Rally for six years running. With over a million followers across social media, 1st Phorm has amassed a huge cult-like following known as, “The Legion of Boom.” They stand for a movement in the fitness world. To turn it back to what it was meant to be. Helping others improve their lives, to be a good human… and to drop the excuses and do the work. 1st Phorm is a winning brand and they don’t expect anything less when it comes to their race team. For additional info: www.1stphorm.com

Mountain Motorsports
Mountain Motorsports is a group of motorcycle and powersports dealerships with multiple locations in the southeastern United States. The company was founded by lifelong friends Ryan Hardwick and Justin Price when they opened their first location as a single-line Honda dealership in Sevierville, Tennessee in 1999. The company has since grown into one of the largest retailers of motorcycle and powersports vehicles in the nation, spanning nine dealership locations representing eleven of the industry’s most well-known brands. For additional info: www.mountainmotorsports.com

Una Vida Tequila
Una Vida translates to One Life. That is how this brand started. By people who want to live their “One Life” to the absolute fullest and to their highest potential. A group of guys from the Midwest who love great quality tequila, and want their One Life to have meaning and impact others.

One Life, One Tequila is our CORE BELIEF. We’re building the only tequila brand you will ever need to drink. Una Vida is bigger than just tequila we’re also building a culture of people who want to live their life to their utmost potential.

Our story begins and continues to grow bottle by bottle. It’s a life mission for us to create a community of people who all raise a glass knowing they’re living their ONE LIFE! For more information, visit unavidatequila.com

Wright Motorsports
Wright Motorsports is the premier Porsche race engineering facility in Ohio and a multi-series and international racing team known for superb car preparation, expert race strategy, and driver development. Located in Batavia, Ohio, it is owned and directed by John Wright, a certified Porsche factory-trained technician. As a crew chief John Wright has played a key role in winning eight driver and seven team championships in World Challenge, IMSA (ALMS) and the Grand-Am Rolex Series. Wright Motorsports won the team championship in Porsche GT3 Cup USA in 2012, 2013, and 2015, and went on to win the Pirelli World Challenge Overall, Sprint, Team, and Manufacturer’s titles in 2017. In 2020, the team captured the GT World Challenge America Am championship. In 2021, Wright Motorsports had a wildly successful season, capturing nine championships across their five racing efforts.

Victory for Sean Creech Motorsport at Sebring

Veteran Florida team takes its first victory in the 12-hour endurance classic

SEBRING, Fla. (19 March 2022) – Sean Creech has competed at Sebring for nearly 30 years, and never tasted the fruits of victory – until Saturday, when his Sean Creech Motorsport (SCM) team battled hard in tricky conditions to capture its first WeatherTech SportsCar Championship win at the 70th Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Presented by Advance Auto Parts.

Drivers Lance Willsey, João Barbosa and Malthe Jakobsen combined to put the No. 33 SCM Exelixis Ligier JS P320 into the lead for 144 of 331 laps, overcoming early issues and an occasionally problematic clutch to earn the victory – the third Sebring 12-hour win for Barbosa but the first for Willsey and Jakobsen (in his first try).

Willsey took the wheel for qualifying, placing the No. 33 in seventh position on the 17-turn, 3.74-mile mixed concrete and asphalt racing surface.

There was action right from the drop of the green as several cars made contact, either with each other or the tire wall. Willsey made an impressive save in the race’s first hour when the back end of the Ligier spun around in the entrance of Turn 17 but avoided the wall and was quickly back underway. Driving a double stint to start the race, Willsey handed the car to Barbosa just after the two-hour mark a lap behind the leaders – and experiencing the first clutch issue that would follow them through the race.

Given the number of relatively minor incidents, it was impressive that the race remained under green, but an incident involving several cars near the three-hour mark packed up the field. Barbosa took advantage of the extended yellow to pit for fuel and tires, heading out on track ahead of the safety car and back on the lead lap.

Despite ambient temperatures hovering in the low 80s, Barbosa completed a double stint, with Jakobsen jumping in for his first race stint at Sebring. The Danish youngster wasted no time gunning for the front, making the pass for second and taking advantage of an off by the leader to take the lead with eight hours remaining and holding that lead throughout his double stint.

Willsey returned to the fray with seven hours remaining and fought through the challenge that the extreme heat presented to keep the car in contention, ducking into pit lane in fourth position.

“I’ve been doing this for 20, 25 years, and that was some of the toughest conditions I’ve been in,” said Willsey. “With the heat and humidity and no ventilation in the car, it was tough. In my first stint, the drink bottle wasn’t working, and with no yellows for over two hours, it was just attack, attack, attack. But this was just the antithesis of Daytona, where 32 degrees actually felt good. This was the hardest thing I’ve ever done!”

With Willsey’s stints complete, the final hours were contested by two drivers who, on paper, could not have been more different – the veteran Barbosa with two Sebring wins and the rookie Jakobsen seeing the legendary track for the first time.

Barbosa jumped in for his single stint, once again quickly putting the car back on the lead lap. Jakobsen jumped back in, heading out in third position – but that was not the plan for the 18-year-old phenom. He quickly reeled in second position, then put an impressive move on the No. 74 LMP3 in Turns One and Two to take over the lead. After two stints for Jakobsen, Barbosa headed back out, only briefly losing the lead as the clock reached the 10-hour mark. He fended off all attacks, coming into pit lane with 55 minutes remaining for the change to Jakobsen. The young Dane did not disappoint, waiting until the No. 30 Ligier made its final pit stop to take back the top spot. Jakobsen continued to build on that lead, taking the checkered flag clear by over 48 seconds.

During that final stint, Jakobsen set the fast LMP3 class time of the race, with a lap at 1:56.878. The team led a total of 144 of 331 laps.

“This is my first time here, so I don’t know why I’m so quick, but it worked out today!” said Jakobsen. “I did a lot of simulator work and Joao was great about telling me all the small tricks. The car was great, and the driver and crew work was outstanding. Lance did a great job to stay out of all the early trouble, and Joao made up so much time, getting us back on the lead lap. When I jumped in the car, I was always in the top five and could work from there. I took it a bit easy early in that last stint, but when they let me push, the car was so good. It was so good to win here, especially on my first try!”

“This is a big deal,” said Willsey. “Quality class and extremely competitive so to win this year means a lot. I’m grateful to have these co-drivers, and a great crew. Fuel and tires for 12 hours and we’re in the winner’s circle!”

“This was such a tremendous effort from the entire team,” said Barbosa. “The car ran so well. We had a slight clutch issue but the team has done such a great job with the car that we were able to deal with that. Everything went according to plan, the team made all the right calls. This is one of the coolest races in the world to win, especially on a tricky day like today. It was flawless work by the crew and the drivers. I can’t say enough about the job that Malthe has done – he’s only 18 years old, but he has a very bright future ahead of him. Lance did a great job in his stints, and we brought the car home without a scratch. We have great partners, with Focal One and Alta Equipment, supporting us and I’m glad they were here to celebrate!”

“It is special to finally win this race,” said Creech. “I’ve been here so many times and haven’t won it! We’ve been second at Daytona two years in a row and we just needed to get that last step. This is a tough place to survive but we did it today. It’s a great start to the season, to come away from the first points race with the lead. We have great drivers and an awesome crew that did a great job with the car. Now, we’ll go back to the shop, go through everything, do some testing, and get ready for Mid-Ohio!”

SCM would like to thank their partners for the continued support, including Exelixis, Alta Equipment and Focal One.

Next up for Sean Creech Motorsport will be the first sprint race of the year, the two hour and 40-minute Mid-Ohio Sports Car Challenge at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. The race will be broadcast live in the U.S. on PeacockTV and USA Network, while international viewers can watch via IMSA.tv. IMSA Radio will also be available at IMSA.com.

DGR ARCA Menards Series East Race Recap: Five Flags Speedway

Saturday, March 19
Track: Five Flags Speedway, half-mile oval
Race: 2 of 7
Event: Pensacola 200 (200 laps, 100 miles)

Taylor Gray, No. 17 Ford Performance Fusion
Start: 2nd
Finish: 3rd

  • Securing the quickest time in the lone practice session, Taylor Gray qualified second for the Pensacola 200, lining up on the front-row for his second consecutive ARCA Menards Series East event this season.
  • Lap 28 saw Gray set up race leader Leland Honeyman for a pass exiting turn four, taking the lead before a wreck on the next lap would bring the field under yellow. On the subsequent restart, the Ford Performance Fusion would get a strong jump, and hold on to the lead for the next 65 laps.
  • Following a small track bar and air pressure adjustment during the scheduled break on lap 75, the Artesia, NM native would develop a loose condition that eventually cost him the lead as the race approached the halfway mark.
  • Despite sliding back to fifth, a restart on lap 127 would see Gray quickly move back up the order, settling into second-place by lap 135.
  • The 16-year-old was steady on the heels of the race leader for the ensuing long green-flag run. However, a flurry of cautions with less than 30 laps remaining culminated in a restart violation on lap 188. The penalty ultimately dropped the No. 17 to fourth, and with only 10 laps remaining, Gray was forced to settle for a third-place finish at 5 Flags Speedway.

Next event: Dover 125 at Dover Motor Speedway in Dover, Delaware on April 29th at 5:30 p.m. ET with the ARCA Menards Series East.

Herbst Rebounds to Score Fourth-Place Finish at Atlanta

Monster Energy Driver Erases Two-Lap Deficit to Earn Second Top-Five of 2022

Date: Saturday, March 19
Event: Nalley Cars 250 (Round 5 of 33)
Series: NASCAR Xfinity Series
Location: Atlanta Motor Speedway (1.54-mile oval)
Format: 163 laps, broken into three stages (40 laps/40 laps/83 laps)
Start/Finish: 24th / 4th (Running, completed 172 of 172 laps)
Point Standing: 9th (128 points, 95 out of first)
Note: Race extended nine laps past its scheduled 163-lap distance due to a green-white-checkered finish.
Race Winner: Ty Gibbs of Joe Gibbs Racing (Toyota)
Stage 1 Winner: Josh Berry of JR Motorsports (Chevrolet)
Stage 2 Winner: AJ Allmendinger of Kaulig Racing (Chevrolet)

Overview:

Riley Herbst and the No. 98 Monster Energy team showed their speed and strength after going from two laps down to finish fourth in the Nalley Cars 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Tire pressure issues forced the team to pit before the green flag. Despite being forced to start at the rear, Herbst worked his way up 13th by the conclusion of first stage and into the top-10 just a few laps into the second stage. Rising water temperatures in the second stage forced the team to give up their top-10 spot to pit under green and check the engine. Herbst returned to the field two laps down in 38th. Crew chief Richard Boswell’s strategy was key in getting Herbst back on the lead lap with less than 50 laps to go. After successfully avoiding a wreck with 10 laps to go, Herbst was running sixth. As the race went into double overtime, Herbst earned his second top-five of the 2022 season.

Riley Herbst, driver of the No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing:

“It’s more disgust to be honest with you. I mean, this is a top-five race team week in and week out. We got lucky and got another top-five finish, which we needed. We didn’t get any stage points, so that hurt us, but we worked hard so we’re proud of that, but we’ve got to clean some things up if we want to go win races.”

Notes:

● Ty Gibbs won the Nalley Cars 250 to score his sixth career Xfinity Series victory, his first at Atlanta and his second of the season. His margin over second-place Austin Hill was .178 of a second.

● There were 10 caution periods for a total of 56 laps.

● Twenty-nine of the 38 drivers in the Nalley Cars 250 finished on the lead lap.

● Noah Gragson remains the championship leader after Atlanta with a 19-point advantage over second-place Ty Gibbs.

Next Up:

The next event on the Xfinity Series schedule is the Pit Boss 250 on Saturday, March 26 at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas. The race starts at 4:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by FS1 and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Cadillac sweeps DPi podium in Twelve Hours of Sebring

No. 02 Cadillac Accessories Cadillac DPi-V.R races to victory in 70th annual event

SEBRING, Fla. (March 19, 2022) – The No. 01 V-Performance Cadillac DPi-V.R was quick as lightning in qualifications for the in the 70th Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring. The No. 02 Cadillac Accessories Cadillac DPi-V stole the thunder in the endurance race.
Led by the winning Cadillac Racing entry fielded by Chip Ganassi Racing, Cadillac swept the podium for the second time and won for the fourth time in the six 12-hour races on the 3.741-mile, 17-turn Sebring International Raceway in the DPi era.

The No. 5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi-V.R – the 2021 race winner – co-driven by Tristan Vautier, Richard Westbrook and Loic Duval, finished second. The No. 31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R, co-driven by Pipo Derani, Tristan Nunez and Mike Conway, placed third.

“We have tremendous teams that work with us and today was an awesome performance by Cadillac,” said Rory Harvey, Vice President (Global) Cadillac. “It is exciting times for us overall, and to be able to get a clean sweep is awesome. We went into today with strong ambitions and the teams delivered.”

Alex Lynn, Earl Bamber and Neel Jani overcame drive-thru penalties, contact and the draining Central Florida humidity to earn the victory after starting fourth. Bamber overtook Westbrook in the No. 5 Cadillac with 45 minutes left, and after the top three Cadillacs pitted for the final time, Bamber held off the challenges on the 3.741-mile, 17-turn Sebring International Raceway course to win by 6.471 seconds.

“It comes down to the drivers. Those guys have to push the buttons and make it happen. They’re the ultimate quarterbacks for the team and we try to give them the tools they need to win races and today they did that,” said team principal Chip Ganassi of the first-year IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship entry.

The JDC-Miller MotorSports No. 5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi-V.R earned its second podium finish in as many races this season. The No. 31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R was also in contention throughout the race that covered 351 laps. Mike Conway, whose father passed away early Friday, laid down the quickest race lap at 1 minute, 47.018 seconds on Lap 126.

“It would have been nice to win this one,” Conway said. “It was hard. the first few stints, thinking of him out there. I was just trying to do him proud.”

The No. 01 V-Performance Academy Cadillac DPi-V.R, which started from the pole after Sebastien Bourdais recorded a qualifying lap-record time of 1 minute, 45.116 seconds, experienced a gearbox issue early on and finished several laps down.

“We took the No. 01 to the garage and changed the gearbox after having downshifting problems. We tried a number of counter measures in the pits to correct, but later realized we needed to change the whole gearbox to eliminate the issue,” Chip Ganassi Racing team manager Steve Eriksen said.

The No. 48 Ally Cadillac DPi-V.R, which pitted from the lead on Lap 253, developed a left-front brake rotor issue and had to pit early on Lap 280 (2 hours, 9 minutes left in the race) and fell out of contention.

Next up for Cadillac Racing teams is the IMSA Sportscar Grand Prix of Long Beach on the 1.968-mile street course. Practice and qualifying are on April 8, with the 100-minute race April 9. The No. 31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R was the 2021 race winner.

Cadillac Racing results:

No. 02 Cadillac Accessories Cadillac DPi-V.R (Chip Ganassi Racing)
Earl Bamber, Alex Lynn, Neel Jani
Finish: First. Start: Fourth
Earl Bamber: “Chip Ganassi Racing and Cadillac was amazing this weekend. We had such a good lead and I managed to throw it away twice. I’m just exhausted. To everyone from the team and Cadillac, thank you. I’m just so happy to get the first win for the 02. Thank you to Alex and Neel, who came in and did a great job.”

Alex Lynn: “It was a great race to be honest. First, thanks to everyone on the 02 team. The car was flying all week and yeah, we got the strategy right there at the end. It was a fantastic result to win and thank you to the whole team. We were driving an amazing car today. It made our job behind the wheel that much easier, if it could ever be called easy. It’s a big result for us in the championship and it’s an iconic race, the 12 Hours. With Ganassi winning it once before, it’s a huge result for us as a team.”

Neel Jani: “I had 30 laps before the race, but it couldn’t have been better. Two weeks ago I didn’t know I would be here. I’m hugely thankful to Cadillac and Chip Ganassi Racing to call me up and ask me to drive. We made it happen. We had a fantastic car and that made it easier for me. To drive that car is fantastic. My teammates did a fantastic job and the whole team welcomed me. That’s why it works. I know now why I miss prototypes. It’s where I belong and what I like. I loved every minute this weekend.”

No. 5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi-V.R (JDC-Miller MotorSports)
Tristan Vautier, Richard Westbrook, Loic Duval
Finish: Second. Start: 10th overall, seventh in class

Tristan Vautier: “We gave it a good go. Man, I drove my heart out in the last stint. I thought I had him (Bamber) for a while, but a couple of bad breaks catching GT cars in Turns 3, 4 and 5. We had the pace. I think we can be proud of what we achieved. We’re the smallest team here. Two amazing solid races at Daytona and Sebring. The team did an amazing job again, and just thankful to Cadillac and JDC-Miller MotorSports. I feels good to know I left it all on the racetrack.”

Loic Duval: “It’s always difficult when you’re leading like an hour before the end and all the traffic. I think we drove the best we could and Ganassi deserved the win. I think we can be proud when you know the budget of our operation compared to the big boys and fight against them. Two podiums. We can be proud of that.”

Richard Westbrook: “All you can ask is for us to be in the hunt. We were in the hunt for the whole 12 hours. We had some issues with the cooling in the car, so we could only single stint at the end. I found myself in the lead with an hour to go and I got (held up) by a GTD car in Turn 16. Do I try to overtake him on the outside in Turn 16? Second is really a good result. We’ve won a podium in both races. Everyone should be proud. Great day for Cadillac and a great day for JDC.”

No. 31 Whelen Engineering Cadillac DPi-V.R (Action Express Racing)
Pipo Derani, Tristan Nunez, Mike Conway
Finish: Third. Start: Second

Pipo Derani: “It was a tough day at the office, but it was a good points day. Unfortunately, we couldn’t win. We didn’t get a yellow at the end so we could try to catch the front runners. It was a Cadillac 1-2-3 (finish). We’ll take the points. It’s a long championship. I wanted my fourth (Sebring 12-Hour) win, but I will have to wait a little longer.”

Tristan Nunez: “It was a long, hot day. It was a tough one from start to finish. The heat did not help with that. We had a great car all race. We just had a couple of bad luck moments throughout the race that affected us from taking the win. But no doubt, a podium is good. It was a Cadillac sweep. So, it’s good for the brand. Now we move onto Long Beach.”

Mike Conway: “We were up there all day. We were going for the win, but we came up short at the end. It was a great job by the whole team. The car was really solid all day long. I think we had the car to win. But it just didn’t quite work out.”

No. 48 Ally Cadillac DPi-V.R (Action Express Racing)
Mike Rockenfeller, Kamui Kobayashi, Jose Maria Lopez
Finish: Sixth. Start: Fifth

Mike Rockenfeller: “We knew we had an issue earlier in the day because we could see a lot of smoke coming out of our brakes. When I was in the car, I was thinking about it. I hit the brakes in Turn 7 and the front left rotor completely exploded. I was happy not to lose the car even though I went off. The race was over. It’s a shame because I think we had a chance, with a clean race, to fight for a podium or a victory.”

Kamui Kobayashi: “We had a competitive Ally Cadillac throughout the race and then Mike had the brake issue. It put us down a few laps, but the team performed well, and we were competitive. It was tough to just jump in the car this morning and then run the race. But we showed good pace and teamwork, but it just wasn’t our day. Congratulations to the 31 guys on their podium.”

Jose Maria Lopez: “It was very hot today. Every time I was in the car, I was able to find speed, be quick in the car and have that feeling that we had the pace to fight at the end. Unfortunately, we had a brake failure. That’s endurance racing. It can be tough sometimes”

No. 01 V-Performance Academy Cadillac DPi-V.R (Chip Ganassi Racing)
Renger van der Zande, Sebastien Bourdais, Ryan Hunter-Reay
Finish: 35th overall, seventh in class Start: First

About Cadillac
A leading luxury auto brand since 1902, Cadillac is growing globally, driven by an expanding product portfolio that features distinctive design and technology. More information on Cadillac appears at www.cadillac.com. Cadillac’s media website with information, images and video can be found at media.cadillac.com.