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Team Penske NASCAR Xfinity Race Report – IMS Road Course

Team Penske NASCAR Xfinity Race Report
Track: Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course
Race: Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard
Date: August 14, 2021


No. 22 PPG Ford Mustang – Austin Cindric
Start: 2nd
Stage 1: 4th
Stage 2: 18th
Finish: 1st
Status: Running
Laps Completed: 62/62
Laps Led: 29
Driver Point Standings (ahead of second): 1st (+82)

Notes:

  • Austin Cindric scored a memorable win Saturday afternoon at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course. The driver of the No. 22 PPG Ford won the 18th Annual Pennzoil 150 at the Brickyard, his 13th career victory in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Cindric racked up his fifth win of the 2021 season and claimed his 14th top-five in 21 starts. He won for the first time in four starts at Indy (two on the oval, two on the road course) and is now tied with Marcos Ambrose and AJ Allmendinger for the most road course wins in the Xfinity Series (five). Cindric remains the leader in the series driver standings, stretching his lead to 82 points ahead of Allmendinger.
  • Cindric qualified second on Saturday morning and maintained the position during the opening laps of the race before taking the lead from Justin Haley on lap 15. Two laps later the second caution was displayed and Cindric pitted for four tires, fuel, and tape. A handful of cars followed Cindric to pit road, and the different pit strategies among the field put Cindric 10th in line for the restart on lap 18. He sliced his way through traffic over the final two laps of Stage 1 to finish fourth when the segment concluded on lap 20.
  • Crew chief Brian Wilson kept Cindric on the track during the stage caution and he restarted second when the race went green on lap 23. He promptly took the lead and led the next nine laps, stretching his advantage to 2.4 seconds before the fourth caution waved on lap 30. Cindric was shoved out of line on the restart, falling to fourth. Wilson called his driver to pit road from the third position on lap 37 for four fresh tires and fuel. Cindric was credited with an 18th-place finish when Stage 2 ended on lap 40.
  • Once again Wilson made the call to stay out during the stage caution, lining up second when the race went green on lap 43. Cindric grabbed the lead on lap 45 and never looking back, holding firm to the top spot over the final 18 laps. He was never seriously challenged down the stretch and officially scored his first Indianapolis victory by two seconds over Allmendinger.
  • Cindric will be back in action tomorrow at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course behind the wheel of the No. 33 MoneyLion Ford Mustang. He will be making his seventh start of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season in the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard. Live race coverage will begin at 1:00 p.m. ET on NBC and the NBC Sports App.

Quote: “First of all, I’ve got to thank Roger Penske for every opportunity I’ve had in my career, every opportunity he’s given you race fans to enjoy this beautiful weekend. I’m so proud of be part of this Penske family and thanks to PPG, Ford and everybody that has put so much into my career. Obviously, this racetrack is so much deeper than just that with my family history and what this place means to me. I can’t put into words what it means to win at Indianapolis. I’m proud to be here, proud to drive for Roger and proud to win at the Speedway.”

Monster Energy Racing: Riley Herbst Indianapolis NXS Race Report

Herbst Finishes Eighth at Indianapolis
Monster Energy Driver Rebounds from Incident to Score Seventh Top-10 of Season
Date: Aug. 14, 2021

Event: Indianapolis 150 at the Brickyard (Round 21 of 33)
Series: NASCAR Xfinity Series
Location: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (2.439-mile, 14-turn road course)
Format: 62 laps, broken into three stages (20 laps/20 laps/22 laps)
Start/Finish: 6th / 8th (Running, completed 62 of 62 laps)
Point Standing: 11th (489 points, 407 out of first)
Race Winner: Austin Cindric of Team Penske (Ford)
Stage 1 Winner: Justin Haley of Kaulig Racing (Chevrolet)
Stage 2 Winner: A.J. Allmendinger of Kaulig Racing (Chevrolet)

Overview:

Riley Herbst and the No. 98 Monster Energy team rebounded from a mid-race incident to finish eighth in the Indianapolis 150 at the Brickyard. Herbst started sixth in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and climbed to fourth after a lap-five restart. An opportunity arose when the caution flag came out again on lap 17 – just five laps before the end of the stage. Crew chief Richard Boswell opted to keep Herbst out on the track when the leaders pitted, allowing Herbst to inherit the lead on the ensuing restart. With only two laps to go in the stage when the race went back green, Herbst was in contention for the stage win until being passed on the final lap by Justin Haley. But Herbst’s runner-up result in the stage earned him nine valuable bonus points. The No. 98 team pitted during the break for four tires and fuel before trouble came at the start of the second stage. Herbst was moving his way up through the field after restarting 21st when he was hit by another car that had gone off track. Herbst continued to pass cars despite damage to the left-front corner of his Monster Energy Ford Mustang, along with damage to the rear of his car. Herbst made it up to 12th before the lap-30 caution. The team pitted to fix the damage and restarted the race in 24th. Herbst continued to pass cars, and a strategy call to stay out again when the leaders pitted ended up in Herbst’s favor as the caution came out with two to go in the second stage. Herbst finished ninth in the penultimate stage to gain two bonus points. When the race restarted on lap 44, Herbst was 16th. He made quick work of the drivers in front of him, rising to 13th in three laps. In the final few tours around the 2.439-mile, 14-turn road course, Herbst continued his drive toward the front, passing five more cars to earn his seventh top-10 of the season and gain enough points to put his name above the cutline in the NASCAR Xfinity Series playoffs standings.

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

“It feels really good to be above the playoff cutline after the day we had at Indy. Our Monster Energy Ford Mustang was fast and it’s been that way all season. Glad we could showcase it at Indy and, hopefully, we’ll take that speed over to Michigan next weekend. These next few tracks have been good to us, so we just have to put the races together to get the success.”

Notes:

● Herbst finished second in Stage 1 to earn nine bonus points and ninth in Stage 2 to earn an additional two bonus points.

● Austin Cindric won the Indianapolis 150 at the Brickyard to score his 13th career Xfinity Series victory, his series-leading fifth of the season and his first at Indianapolis. His margin over second-place A.J. Allmendinger was 2.108 seconds.

● There were five caution periods for a total of 15 laps.

● Twenty-three of the 36 drivers in the Indianapolis 150 at the Brickyard finished on the lead lap.

● Cindric remains the championship leader after Indianapolis with an 82-point advantage over second-place Allmendinger.

Next Up:

The next event on the Xfinity Series schedule is the New Holland 250 on Saturday, Aug. 21 at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn. The race starts at 3:30 p.m. EDT with live coverage provided by NBCSN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

How can I make gambling my full-time income?

Photo by Amanda Jones on Unsplash

Almost every second person who visits an online casino site wonders, “How to win a casino?”. It is impossible to give any exact figures. Still, when playing very much depends on the player’s own luck. But the fact is that everyone can win. And the practice of large gambling establishments, including industry veterans and newer venues along the lines of PlayAmo casino, clearly demonstrates that to become a winner and add to the list of lucky people can even those users who play at the casino relatively recently. How to achieve this and what do you need to know about making money from gambling?

Ways to access poker and blackjack

Poker and blackjack are card games that help develop certain qualities such as observation, self-control, anticipation, and even the ability to influence others. It is played in more or less closed rooms with limited access, called casinos. However, this principle has evolved over time and now it is possible to play any of these games by going to digital platforms. These are still known as virtual casinos. Applications are also being developed to provide better access to poker, blackjack, and other card and money games. They work much like platforms, the only difference being that you can play without a connection.

Some interests in online blackjack and poker

Online games offer the same advantages as games played in physical or so-called traditional casinos. You can wager there, collect your winnings and become a regular by simply creating an account.

Online gaming platforms also have other significant advantages. You have access to information about the rules of the games and you can compete with many more people from all walks of life and at all levels. You also don’t have to travel to play, and you’re sure to find opponents to compete against whenever you want. The payment methods are secure and the methods for withdrawing your winnings are well thought out.

PlayAmo is one of those gaming platforms where you can take advantage of a variety of promotions as well as prompt and uninterrupted online support. 

Some basic principles of poker and blackjack

Poker and blackjack may seem similar and yet they are not. While there are different variations to these games, the basic rules remain virtually unchanged. They follow different rules and there are enough websites and documentation to learn how to play both. Still, we can already remember that:

  • it takes 2 to 10 players to play poker while for blackjack the number of players is 7;
  • one consists in forming given combinations of 5 cards to have a good hand, and the other consists rather in having a hand made up of two cards whose sum of the values is less than or equal to 21;
  • one requires bluffing skills and nerves of steel (poker) and the other requires more math skills and attention (blackjack). This means that, although both are card and money games, they do not follow the same principles.

Cindric tames the Indianapolis Road Course for fifth Xfinity win of 2021

Photo by Simon Scoggins for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Scoring the biggest victory of his racing career, Austin Cindric took the lead at the start of the final stage and went on to beat AJ Allmendinger to win the second annual Pennzoil 150 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Saturday, August 14. The victory was Cindric’s fifth of this year’s Xfinity Series season and it served as a double victory sweep of the day at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course for team owner Roger Penske and Team Penske after Will Power won the IndyCar event earlier.

Qualifying occurred on Saturday, August 14, and AJ Allmendinger claimed the top-starting spot with a pole-winning speed at 97.744 mph. Joining on the front row was Austin Cindric, the regular-season points leader. 

Prior to the event, a number of competitors, including Landon Cassill, Kyle Weatherman, rookie Sam Mayer and Austin Dillon dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments to their respective machines. Ryan Sieg and JJ Yeley also dropped to the rear of the field due to both missing driver introductions.

When the green flag waved and the race started, Allmendinger jumped ahead with an early advantage over Austin Cindric. His race, however, got off to a rocky start when he overshot the first turn, which allowed Justin Haley to move into the lead while Allmendinger fell back to third behind Cindric. 

While the field battled through the long straightaway in Turns 5 and 6, a series of carnages ensued behind as Harrison Burton, teammate Brandon Jones, Kevin Harvick, Alex Labbe, Josh Bilicki, Brandon Brown and Preston Pardus all wrecked after getting into the orange turtle bumps in Turn 6. Ahead of the carnage, Allmendinger slipped off the track in Turn 12, which dropped him from the top five to the top 10.

Shortly after, the first caution of the event flew due to Preston Pardus stalling in Turn 7 after being involved in the early multi-car carnage. At the time of caution, Haley was still leading as he led the first lap followed by Austin Cindric, rookie Ty Gibbs, Justin Allgaier and teammate Noah Gragson. 

When the race restarted on the fourth lap, Haley and Cindric battled dead even for the lead until Haley cleared Cindric for the lead entering the first two turns. Behind, Justin Allgaier made his way into third place followed by Gibbs, Riley Herbst and Gragson as the field stacked up entering Turn 7. 

By the fifth lap, Haley was leading by nearly seven-tenths of a second over Cindric, with Allgaier, Gibbs and Herbst in the top five. Myatt Snider moved up to sixth followed by Gragson, Allmendinger, Daniel Hemric and Will Rodgers. By then, Sage Karam, a part-time IndyCar Series competitor who was making his NASCAR debut in Jordan Anderson Racing’s No. 31 Chevrolet, was in 11th while Jeb Burton was in 16th. 

At the Lap 10 mark, Haley continued to lead by nearly a second over Cindric while Gibbs, Allgaier and Herbst retained their spots in the top five. Allmendinger, meanwhile, moved up to sixth followed by Gragson, Snider, Hemric and Karam. Behind, Chase Elliott, who filled in the No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet in place of Michael Annett, was up in 15th behind Andy Lally while Harrison Burton was mired back in 30th.

A lap later, Ryan Sieg fell to the rear of the field following a pair of on-track spins.

On Lap 14, Cindric, who gained a draft through the frontstretch, made his move to the inside of Haley to take the lead in Turn 1. Despite being pressured by Haley, Cindric managed to maintain the lead through Turns 4 through 7. Behind, Rodgers spun while running near the top 10, but the race continued to run under green.

A lap later, however, the caution flew due to debris on the frontstretch that came off of Sieg’s No. 39 Ford Mustang, which also had a flat left-rear tire. Under caution, a majority of the field led by Cindric pitted while the rest led by Herbst remained on the track.

With two laps remaining in the first stage, the field restarted under green. At the start, Herbst jumped ahead of Karam and the field to lead for one full lap through the 14-turn circuit. The following lap, Haley made his way up to second place and went to work on Herbst for the lead. By Turn 12, Haley reassumed the lead.

After reclaiming the lead, Haley went on to claim the first stage victory on Lap 20, which marked his fourth stage victory of the season. Herbst settled in second followed by Jeb Burton, Cindric, Karam, Gragson, Jeremy Clements, Tommy Joe Martins, Elliott and Gibbs.

Under the stage break, few led by Herbst pitted while the rest led by Haley remained on the track.

The second stage started on Lap 23. At the start, Cindric and Gragson put Haley in a three-wide situation entering the first turn before Cindric emerged with the top spot through the first two turns. Through Turns 5 and 6, contact from teammate Hemric sent Gibbs spinning. At the same time, Kris Wright caught major air after running over the curbs. Then afterwards, Chase Elliott spun in Turn 7. Despite the trio of on-track incidents, the race continued under green.

Two laps later, Cindric was leading by more than a second over Gragson while Haley, Allgaier and Clements were in the top five. By then, Gibbs pitted under green. Not long after, Hemric also pitted to address a flat tire following contact with Gibbs.

On Lap 29, the caution flew due to Austin Hill stalling on the track. Under caution, some like Herbst, Kyle Weatherman, James Davison, Harrison Burton and Hemric pitted while the rest led by Cindric remained on the track.

With eight laps remaining in the second stage, the race restarted. At the start, Gragson emerged with the lead through the first turn while Allmendinger moved up to second over Cindric. By Turn 7, however, Allmendinger carved his way back into the lead. Five turns later, teammate Haley moved up to second as Gragson and Cindric fell back to third and fourth.

When the field returned to the start/finish line, Allmendinger, who lost the lead following the first turn on the opening lap, was leading by nearly half a second over teammate Haley followed by Gragson, Cindric and Sam Mayer. Behind, Austin Dillon spun in Turn 1, but the race continued under green.

Another two laps later, Allmendinger continued to lead by seven-tenths of a second over teammate Haley, with Gragson, Cindric and Mayer were in the top five. 

Two laps later, names like Cindric, Snider, Rodgers, Mayer, Elliott, Spencer Pumpelly, Karam and Austin Dillon pitted under green. During the process, Mayer, who was exiting pit road, drew the caution when fire came out of his No. 24 Toyota Supra, which eliminated him from contention near the pit road exit. During the caution, Allgaier, who was trying to pit prior to pit road closing, was ruled to have pitted too soon after he failed to enter pit road prior to its closure.

The on-track mechanical issue for Rodgers was enough to have the second stage scheduled on Lap 40 conclude under caution as Allmendinger, the race leader, claimed his seventh stage victory of the season. Teammate Haley settled in second followed by Gragson, Gibbs, Andy Lally, Jeb Burton, Hemric, Clements, Herbst and Josh Williams.

Under the stage break, some led by Allmendinger pitted while the rest led by Gibbs remained on the track. Prior to the restart, Allgaier was sent to the rear of the field following his pit road misfortune for pitting while the pits were closed.

With 19 laps remaining, the final stage commenced. At the start, Gibbs launched ahead and led the field through the first pair of turns while Cindric moved up to second ahead of Harrison Burton and the field.

A lap later, Cindric passed Gibbs entering the fourth turn to take the lead. Behind, Mayer, who was having a strong run in the making, spun and hit the tire barriers in Turn 6 following contact with teammate Elliott. Despite the incident, the race continued to run under green as Mayer pulled the No. 8 JR Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro out of the racing course.

Back on the track, Cindric was leading by more than a second over Myatt Snider while Allmendinger moved up to third ahead of Elliott and Gibbs. Behind, Austin Dillon was up in sixth followed by Haley, Harrison Burton, Gragson and Spencer Pumpelly.

Down to the final 10 laps of the event, Cindric was leading by more than four seconds over Allmendinger while Elliott, Haley and Snider were in the top five. Gibbs was in sixth followed by Austin Dillon, Gragson, Herbst and Harrison Burton. Behind, Spencer Pumpelly spun in Turn 1 while competing in the top 15, but the race continued under green.

With five laps remaining, Cindric remained as the leader by more than three seconds over Allmendinger while Elliott, Haley and Snider continued to run in the top five. Meanwhile, Gibbs, who was running in the top five but was told was three laps short on fuel, pitted under green.

Down to the final two laps, Cindric stabilized his advantage to more than three seconds over Allmendinger while Haley moved up to third ahead of Elliott. Meanwhile, Gragson was in fifth ahead of Austin Dillon, Snider, Herbst, Harrison Burton and Andy Lally.

When the final lap of the event started, Cindric was leading by less than three seconds over Allmendinger. Behind, Haley and Elliott were more than nine and 10 seconds behind.

Through the 14-turn road course, Cindric was able to have enough horsepower and muscle to race back to the frontstretch and cross the finish line with the victory by more than two seconds over Allmendinger.

In addition to claiming his first victory at Indianapolis and the fifth of this year’s Xfinity season, Cindric notched his 13th career win in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and his fifth on a road course event as he continues his pursuit to a second consecutive Xfinity title before moving up to the Cup Series in 2022.

“Unbelievable,” Cindric said on NBCSN. “First of all, I gotta thank [team owner] Roger Penske for every opportunity I’ve had in my career, every opportunity he’s given you race fans to enjoy this beautiful weekend with three race series. How awesome is this facility now, guys?! It’s amazing! I’m so proud to be a part of this Penske family. Obviously, this race track is so much deeper than just that. My family history. What this place means to me, I can’t even put into words what it means to win at Indianapolis.”

Behind, Allmendinger came home in second place while teammate Haley finished in third place.

“Kaulig Racing needed a better driver today, quite honestly,” Allmendinger said. “I messed up way too much early, got us off track today. It’s tough, sometimes, with these road courses and the Xfinity Series with the way these stages lined up…We had a really fast Hyperice Chevy. I was awful today.”

“I’m really proud of the third place [result],” Haley said. “I think me and AJ had the best cars today. Everyone on this LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet team did a great job. Proud of Kaulig Racing for second and third…This is my third trip at Indy, my hometown, and my third top five [result], so I’m pretty proud of that that we could come and run pretty good in our hometown.”

Elliott, who reportedly did not have enough fuel to finish, crossed the finish line in fourth while teammate Gragson completed the top five.

Austin Dillon, Snider, Herbst, Harrison Burton and Andy Lally finished in the top 10.

There were eight lead changes for five different leaders. The race featured five cautions for 15 laps. 

With his victory, Austin Cindric continues to lead the regular-season standings by 82 points over AJ Allmendinger.

Results.

1. Austin Cindric, 29 laps led

2. AJ Allmendinger, eight laps led, Stage 2 winner

3. Justin Haley, 18 laps led, Stage 1 winner

4. Chase Elliott

5. Noah Gragson

6. Austin Dillon

7. Myatt Snider

8. Riley Herbst, three laps led

9. Harrison Burton

10. Andy Lally

11. Justin Allgaier

12. Daniel Hemric

13. Alex Labbe

14. Jeremy Clements

15. Josh Williams

16. Kyle Weatherman

17. Landon Cassill

18. James Davison

19. Ty Gibbs, four laps led

20. Jade Buford

21. Tommy Joe Martins

22. JJ Yeley

23. Jeb Burton

24. Spencer Pumpelly – OUT, Ignition

25. Josh Bilicki, two laps down

26. Sage Karam – OUT, Electrical

27. Sam Mayer – OUT, Accident

28. Will Rodgers – OUT, Brakes

29. Austin Hill – OUT, Steering box

30. Kris Wright – OUT, Accident

31. Brett Moffitt – OUT, Axle

32. Ryan Sieg – OUT, Suspension

33. Kevin Harvick – OUT, Power steering

34. Brandon Brown – OUT, Accident

35. Preston Pardus – OUT, Accident

36. Brandon Jones – OUT, Accident

Next on the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule is the series’ return to Michigan International Speedway following a one-year absence. The event will occur on Saturday, August 21, at 3:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN.

RCR Post Race Report – Indianapolis 150 at the Brickyard

Myatt Snider and the No. 2 Louisiana Hot Sauce Chevrolet Team Record Seventh-Place Finish at Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course

Finish: 7th
Start: 8th
Points: 13th

“Today was a great day for our No. 2 team at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course. The Richard Childress Racing guys put together an awesome Louisiana Hot Sauce Chevrolet Camaro, and we had a lot of speed throughout the entire race, but especially in the last stage. We just needed a little more longevity out of the car. I tried to baby it as much as I could and be easy on the throttle pedal, but we still lost a little bit of drive and ended up crossing the finish line in seventh. It’s a good sign that we were able to keep up with the No. 22 for a while since he ended up winning the race. Just really proud of all the hard work these guys continue to put in each and every week. We will keep building on this momentum and be in a really good spot to start the playoffs next month.” -Myatt Snider

Toyota Racing – NXS Indianapolis Post-Race Report – 08.14.21

BURTON BATTLES BACK FOR TOP-10 RUN AT INDY
Harrison Burton drives through the field after early race contact

INDIANAPOLIS (August 14, 2021) – Harrison Burton (ninth) led Toyota with a top-10 finish in the Pennzoil 150 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course on Saturday evening.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR Xfinity Series
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course
Race 21 of 33 – 151.2 miles, 62 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS
1st, Austin Cindric*
2nd, AJ Allmendinger*
3rd, Justin Haley*
4th, Chase Elliott*
5th, Noah Gragson*
9th, HARRISON BURTON
12th, DANIEL HEMRIC
18th, JAMES DAVISON
19th, TY GIBBS
28th, WILL RODGERS
29th, AUSTIN HILL
30th, KRIS WRIGHT
36th, BRANDON JONES
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

HARRISON BURTON, No. 20 DEX Imaging Toyota Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 9th

How did you make it back to the top-10 after the first lap contact?

“I don’t know. I’m just really lucky that the things that were broken – well everything is bent – but everything that was broken, we could fix and be at least halfway competitive after that. When we have a fast DEX Imaging Supra and it goes out the window on lap one, it’s frustrating, but the way our team rallied today is really commendable. I’m really proud of our guys for their attention to detail and ability to get us right so that we could finish ninth. When I was about three feet in the air – or however high I was – and you would have said I would finish ninth today, I would have taken it. Just thankful for my race team. I will have to look and see what happened to see what I could have done differently. It’s frustrating, but exciting at the same time. I’m proud of our team and ready to go to Michigan.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for more than 60 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands plus our 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota has created a tremendous value chain and directly employs more than 47,000 in North America. The company has contributed world-class design, engineering, and assembly of more than 40 million cars and trucks at our 14 manufacturing plants, 15 including our joint venture in Alabama that begins production in 2021.

Through its Start Your Impossible campaign, Toyota highlights the way it partners with community, civic, academic and governmental organizations to address our society’s most pressing mobility challenges. We believe that when people are free to move, anything is possible. For more information about Toyota, visit www.toyotanewsroom.com.

Sixth Place Finish for Meyer Shank Racing at Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course

Harvey finishes sixth while Castroneves finishes 21st

Indianapolis, Ind. (14 August 2021) – Meyer Shank Racing (MSR) made its return to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway since taking home the coveted Indianapolis 500 victory in May.

With two yellows late in the 85-lap Big Machine Spiked Coolers Grand Prix to spice up the pace of the race, Jack Harvey brought home a sixth place finish while Helio Castroneves finished 21st on Saturday.

As a part of NASCAR’s Brickyard weekend, MSR took to the two-day race weekend back at the yard of bricks. With Harvey starting seventh and Castroneves 23rd, the MSR drivers diced through though the initial laps, each advancing from their starting positions.

Harvey showed pace early on in the No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda, never dropping outside of the top ten. Starting on Firestone primary tires, it was the team’s strategy call to run the rest of the race on alternates.

Castroneves opted for a similar strategy in the No. 06 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda and made his first pit stop to swap tire compounds on lap 11. Once on alternate tires, Castroneves tried to manage rear grip throughout his stint as he made several moves to race up the field. The four-time Indy 500 winning brought the No. 06 Honda up to P11 by lap 62.

It was a fast race to the finish with 68 laps of green flag running until the first of two yellow flags was deployed with 18 laps to go. Harvey and Castroneves restarted from P6 and P20, respectively.

It was a quick restart before the field went back to yellow with just nine laps to go. Unfortunately while running 18th Castroneves was caught out by a car that spun ahead which left the Brazilian to take a detour in the grass and lose five positions.

It was a six lap sprint to the finish for the field following the second restart. Harvey fought off oncoming competition to finish sixth – his second best finish at the IMS road course (third in 2019). Castroneves made up two additional position in the closing laps to finish 21st.

Meyer Shank Racing will return to INDYCAR action next weekend as the series heads to World Wide Technology Raceway for its first oval race since the Indianapolis 500. Harvey will lead the charge for MSR at WWRT and Castroneves will return to action at Portland International Raceway.

Meyer Shank Racing Driver Quotes:

Jack Harvey, No. 60 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda: “It was a pretty exciting race. We had a good pace from the start and really carried that on throughout the race. It was just a weird sequence a couple of times when we were trying to get around (Alex) Rossi. It might have been that Rossi’s tires were burning off quicker than ours were and we ended up having to spend a lot of overtake just to try and get by him – and in the end weren’t able to. So then we were light on overtake for the rest of the race. The team did really well today. These kinds of performances are what I knew we were capable of all year. There’s a lot of performance and a lot of potential in this team, we all know that, and it’s nice to have a day where you realize that.”

Helio Castroneves, No. 06 AutoNation / SiriusXM Honda: “We started conservative and kept it going. The MSR team did a great job, our SiriusXM / AutoNation Honda was improving, but unfortunately we were in 20th position most of the time. We probably would have made up a lot of positions, but we got caught up in the 21 car getting spun in front of me and I had to avoid it and lost some positions. But again, another learning process and we just got to keep it going and I’m looking forward to Portland.”

CHEVROLET RACING NTT INDYCAR SERIES – ROAD COURSE AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY WILL POWER PUTS CHEVY IN VICTORY LANE

CHEVROLET RACING NTT INDYCAR SERIES
THE BIG MACHINE SPIKED COOLERS GRAND PRIX
THE ROAD COURSE AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
TEAM CHEVY RACE RECAP
AUGUST 14, 2021

WILL POWER TAKES CHEVY TO VICTORY LANE AT IMS ROAD COURSE.

INDIANAPOLIS (Aug. 14, 2021) – Will Power turned a front row starting position into a win. The former NTT INDYCAR Series champion and Indianapolis 500 winner led 56 of the 85-laps of The Big Machine Coolers Grand Prix on the Road Course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It is the fifth win of the season for Team Chevy in INDYCAR.

It is Power’s 5th win on the technical 2.439-mile, 14-turn road course that incorporates Turns 1 and 2 and the front stretch of the famed oval. It is his 40th career win and the ninth victory for Chevrolet on the IMS Road Course.

Pole Winner Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP, finished fifth and vaulted himself back to second in points, just 21 points out of the lead with four races to go.

Two-time champion Josef Newgarden finished eighth to give Chevrolet drivers three of top-eight. He was the biggest mover of the race, starting 20th and driving forward to eighth. He remains fourth in the standings, just 55 points out of the lead.

The Big Machine Spiked Coolers Grand Prix is part of an historic triple-header weekend on the Road Course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. In addition to the NTT INDYCAR Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the NASCAR Cup Series will each take a turn on the track.

Romain Grojean and Colton Herta completed the podium for the race that was slowed twice by caution for five laps.

TEAM CHEVY FINISHING RESULTS:
WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – Race Winner
PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET – Finished 5th
JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 XPEL TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – Finished 8th
CONOR DALY, NO. 20 U.S. AIR FORCE CHEVROLET – Finished 11th
FELIX ROSENQVIST, NO. 7 VUSE ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET – Finished 13th
SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS, NO. 14 ROKiT AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET – Finished 15th
SIMON PAGENAUD, NO. 22 MENARDS TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – Finished 16th
MAX CHILTON, NO. 59 GALLAGHER CARLIN CHEVROLET – Finished 20th
SCOTT MCLAUGHLIN, NO. 3 CARSHOP TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET – Finished 23rd
RINUS VEEKAY, NO. 21 SONAX/AUTOGEEK CHEVROLET – Finished 24th
DALTON KELLETT, NO. 4 K-LINE INSULATORS AJ FOYT RACING CHEVROLET – Finished 26th
RC ENERSON, NO. 75 TOP GUN RACING CHEVROLET – Finished 28th

Next on the schedule is Bommarito Automotive Group 500 at World Wide Technology Raceway just east of St. Louis, Missouri on August 21, 2021

Chevrolet IndyCar V6 Year-By-Year Results since 2012
2021 ­– 4 wins, 5 poles in 11 races
Wins – Pato O’Ward (Texas2, Detroit2); Rinus VeeKay (Indy RC1); Josef Newgarden (Mid-Ohio). Pole – Pato O’Ward (Barber Motorsports Park, Detroit1); Josef Newgarden (Detroit2, Road America, Mid-Ohio).
2020 – 7 wins, 11 poles in 14 races
Wins – Simon Pagenaud (Iowa1); Josef Newgarden (Iowa2, St. Louis2, Indy RC2, St. Petersburg); Will Power (Mid-Ohio1, Indy RC3, St. Petersburg). Poles – Josef Newgarden (Texas, Road America1, Iowa2), Will Power (Indianapolis road course, St. Louis1, Mid-Ohio1, Indy RC3; St. Petersburg), Pato O’Ward (Road America2), Conor Daly (Iowa1), Rinus VeeKay (Indy road course October)
2019 – 9 wins, 9 poles in 17 races
Driver/owner championship (Josef Newgarden/Roger Penske); Indianapolis 500 win (Simon Pagenaud)
2018 – 6 wins, 9 poles in 17 races
Indianapolis 500 win (Will Power)
2017 – 10 wins, 11 poles in 17 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Josef Newgarden/Roger Penske)
2016 – 14 wins, 13 poles in 16 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Simon Pagenaud/Roger Penske)
2015 – 10 wins, 16 poles in 16 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Scott Dixon/Chip Ganassi);
Indianapolis 500 win (Juan Pablo Montoya). First manufacturer to capture all titles since Chevrolet returned to INDYCAR in 2012
2014 – 12 wins, 14 poles in 18 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Will Power/Roger Penske)
2013 – 10 wins, 11 poles in 19 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; Indianapolis 500 win (Tony Kanaan)
2012 – 11 wins, 10 poles in 15 races
Engine Manufacturer Championship; driver/owner titles (Ryan Hunter-Reay/Michael Andretti)
Total – 94 wins, 105 earned poles in 161 races

DRIVER QUOTES:

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, RACE WINNER:

ON WINNING AT IMS ROAD COURSE: “ I can’t begin to tell you what it means to win these days. When you are in your 40s and still kicking butt-it’s awesome. You can’t doubt yourself, you just have to keep digging. I wan’t feeing safe until there was literally one to go. The misfortunes we’ve had at times have been a struggle it’s a tough series. There are many many components that have to right. Everyone has to do their job perfectly and that’s what we did today. Winning is important for Roger Penske, especially here. Very very happy.”

HOW BADLY DID THIS RACE TEAM NEED THIS MOMENT?
“We needed it as a group. I can’t tell you how good these (crew) guys have been this year; flawless on pits stops. They’ve given me the car and we’ve just had some bad luck and obviously I’ve made some mistakes as well. I’m stoked to get the Verizon 5G car in Victory Lane because we’ve haven’t done that ever. I’d been thinking about that coming into this weekend. Can’t thank Chevy enough for the engine and all the work those guys have done. What a relief. When the yellow came and another one … but we had a really good car. It was tough to get by lapped traffic but the car was solid up front.”

WHAT WAS THE DIFFERENCE TODAY?
“I was very focused coming in here today. I did a lot of homework for this race. We weren’t quite strong in the May race and just put it all together. I was aggressive at the start to hold that position and held off Pato (O’Ward) on the blacks, so a very good day.”

YOU BRING ROGER PENSKE HIS FIERST WIN AT INDIANAPOLIS SINCE HE HAS OWNED THIS FACILITY. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?
“That’s awesome. Roger has had a rough year as far as the team goes. I’m really happy for the whole group. Because it’s not for lack of effort. They worked really hard during the Month of May and we were all scratching our heads at the end. I’ve been here six times now (five for road course wins, one Indy 500 win) in this Victory Lane; pretty special place for me. This win goes to the whole group; they deserve it more than me.”

PATO O’WARD, NO. 5 ARROW MCLAREN SP CHEVROLET, FINISHED 5TH:
“I think this is the start of a momentum that we wanted. I think Gateway next week is going to be great for us. And today, we didn’t have it. I’m glad we didn’t finish on the podium because I don’t think we deserve it.”

REALLY? WHY IS THAT?
“Because we just didn’t have the pace. Everyone in front of us was better than us. And, it’s tough to drive your nuts off for a 5th, especially when you start up front. You want to stay there when you start there.”

HOW COOL WAS IT TO HANG OUT WITH DANIEL SUAREZ, YOUR MATE FROM BACK HOME. HE WAS HERE AND WATCHING YOU. HOW COOL WAS IT TO HANG OUT WITH HIM TODAY?
“It’s so great. I haven’t seen him in so long and it was really, really nice to see him. And I hope I can have him at like more races or something because Daniel and I started at the same go-Kart track in Monterrey, Mexico. He was always running older than me because he was quite a bit older. Not much, but I’m assuming he’s probably got five or six years on me. But a great guy. Great family. I’ve always really enjoyed having him around.”

WHERE ARE YOU GOING TO FIND YOUR SPOT TO WATCH THE XFINITY RACE?
“Probably on TV because I’m tired.”

JOSEF NEWGARDEN, NO. 2 XPEL TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, FINISHED 8TH: “Not the result we were dreaming of starting 20th, but ended up a good points day. I had to avoid some chaos at the beginning. I got sideswiped by two or three cars so just worked to save our car. That put us further back a little just trying to avoid people. Then got cleared so we could march forward and finally got in the top-10, and ended up eighth. It was a good day for points, Xpel and Team Chevy. If we had started a little farther forward, we had a better car. But was pretty good for us. Pretty happy. See you next week.”

PRESS CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5g TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET
THE MODERATOR: Will Power has joined us, the champion of the Big Machine Spiked Coolers Grand Prix. First win of the season, fifth now on the IMS road course, 40th career win as the NTT INDYCAR Series has now picked up their ninth different winner this season. 11 different winners is the modern day record. One other stat I’ll throw your way: This is your sixth total win here at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway between the oval and the road course, and that means now you tie Kyle Busch for most wins ever.
WILL POWER: Let’s hope he doesn’t win this weekend. (Laughter.)
THE MODERATOR: Obviously the difference for you, having clean air. That was big for you today, wasn’t it?
WILL POWER: It was, yeah. Once we got out in clean air, we were going. I don’t think anyone had a better car than us.
So back markers certainly make it tough in this series, and it’s a simple fix. You simply give those guys their lap back when it goes yellow and they won’t fight you. You don’t even have to mandate a blue. Jay? Jay Frye? Is he here?

THE MODERATOR: He’s not here.
WILL POWER: I’ve mentioned that to him from time to time.

THE MODERATOR: It was almost a 10-second advantage there, but whittled away as you had —
WILL POWER: Hinchcliffe.

THE MODERATOR: Hinch in front of you, and Herta —
WILL POWER: Yeah, I think he needed some coverage for his sponsor, so he was like, I need to be last but leading.

THE MODERATOR: Obviously getting off the schneid, as they call it, getting a win this season, how big is this for you?
WILL POWER: Oh, man, it’s a big relief. I think it’s great for the team, especially the guys on my car. They’ve been working hard. They’ve been flawless this year. They’ve really done the job, and I haven’t — if we’d had that sort of performance in the pits and just prep and all that last year, we probably would have won a lot more races.
Yeah, very happy for those guys, and just happy to be in Victory Lane, man. You always start to wonder when is the next one coming. It always comes down to doing your homework, working hard and putting it together, staying focused.
THE MODERATOR: This 40th win, by the way, breaks a tie with Al Unser Sr. for fifth on the all-time NTT INDYCAR Series list.

Q. What is it like, obviously you said relieved to win, but to have that car on a day like day and just basically be in control, those are rare moments. What’s it like in the cockpit, et cetera?
WILL POWER: It’s just great when you get in that zone where you’re just seeing the tenths grow behind you because you have it on your dash, you can see, and you just start getting a little nitpicking, like little tiny details and slowly pulling away. It’s a great feeling. It’s right in my zone, right in my wheelhouse when I’m like that. That was another day like that for me.
Yeah, love it. It’s my life. Like I just love competing, but it’s just winning is absolutely what makes me happy. I’m very moody when I haven’t won for a while; just ask my wife.

Q. Seems like every time you do something really good, you carve a deeper niche into INDYCAR racing history. What does that mean to you?
WILL POWER: Yeah, I mean, you look at the stats for sure when you’re up there, and you’re aware. I’m aware how far I am off Mario for all-time poles and I’m aware where I sit now in the all-time win list. I know that Michael Andretti is on 42, and that’s a pretty — Mario Andretti I think I can catch on poles, which can be very tough these days, but man, I was very close to getting another one yesterday, and Michael is 42 on wins. Two heroes of mine and two absolute legends of the sport, and just blows my mind that I have a name close to them in the record books. Crazy. That was some serious name dropping, but my name is there. It’s crazy. Who would have thought?

Q. With your off-track performance, you may be a duo with your brother in stand-up.
WILL POWER: No, stand-up is way harder than it looks. I may give it a go, but much harder than it looks.

Q. Race drivers have superstitions; when you see a late-race caution this year, did you have any superstitions today like what happened earlier, like Detroit and things?
WILL POWER: Oh, no, you just — you certainly have those thoughts because it just blows my mind some of the things that can go wrong at such a critical time, but all I was thinking about is I’m getting this bloody restart; there’s no way I’m giving this win up. So you know, I just focus hard on where I’m going to go and play a bit of a game to make sure I get a bit of a jump.

Q. After you won this race last year you were talking about how you want to drive well into your 40s, you feel like you’re at your peak. You signed the contract extension right before the season starts and then things just kind of tailed off –.
WILL POWER: I know.

Q. You said you don’t ever know when that next one is going to come, but did thoughts creep into your mind a little bit this year?
WILL POWER: It was such a weird slump for me because normally when I’m not winning it’s not because of lack of pace, but there have been times this year where it’s been a struggle to get the pace, the car right. I start digging a lot deeper and trying to understand like what is going on, why am I not fast? I couldn’t just lose it all in a year.
So yeah, you just start going back to your old ways of doing stuff when you were super quick, and yeah, you can’t leave anything on the table. Yep, weird slump. I have to say it’s the first sort of slump I’ve had as far as performance has gone in my career, where — I wouldn’t say it’s exactly a lack of pace. It was doing mistakes in qualifying, which is very unusual for me. I’d usually really put it together.
Last year I put it together the best I ever had putting laps together, like zero mistakes and was so good at just getting it done, and this year I’ve been on laps that will get me through each round and then I’ll make a little mistake or something will go wrong, I’ll get traffic. All that is so important to control, and I wasn’t.
Q. So when you dug into it, what did you find? Was it just technique? Was it mental prep?
WILL POWER: Well, it’s things — it’s a bit of mental prep and it’s also last week when you have three laps to do your lap, and on a street course it can go yellow pretty easy, and that’s exactly what happened. I was on a lap and I aborted it, and next lap I started which would have got me through, Josef went in the wall and went yellow. I should know that. I should know that you cannot ever be out of that top six. Every lap you’ve got to update yourself into the top six, and it’s just not being on the game, on the ball. You should know that. It cost me a potential chance to be in the Fast Six.
It’s little details. I came in here and it’s like, I am not — every lap counts, simply, until I feel comfortable again, and that’s what I did.
Q. Speaking of last week, you had a couple of incidents in the race with teammates. Was it a difficult week from that perspective?
WILL POWER: Well, it was, yeah. Certainly the incident with McLaughlin was not good, and yeah, I didn’t see Roger after the race a good hour there and said, I need to win a race before I speak to him again, so fortunately I came here and did that.

Q. Speculation was there was a chat with Roger after last week’s race.
WILL POWER: I didn’t see him, no. I kind of saw Tim and it was like, yeah, I’ve got to go.

Q. Will you go see Roger now?
WILL POWER: I explained myself the best I could to Tim what happened and then went to my bus and didn’t come back. I wasn’t avoiding him, I just didn’t go see him.

Q. Obviously there’s some frustration being behind Hinchcliffe during that time. How were you able to keep in check and under wraps and be able to focus on running?
WILL POWER: Well, I actually thought, the way I caught him, I thought, we could probably get past him no problem. When I got to him and I saw he was using Push-to-Pass to keep me behind, I’m like, it’s just insane that we have this in INDYCAR. Even the second-place guy doesn’t like it, and the third-place guy because if I get past him then they’ve got to work to get past him. It just ruins races. I don’t even think the guys that are trying to stay on the lead lap like it because they don’t want to be a pain in the ass. They would like to get out of the way, and it’s such a simple fix. Just bloody give them their lap back if it goes yellow. Give anyone who’s a lap down their lap back. Give them one simple fix. It just blows my mind that we are at such a competitive series, you have nine different winners already, and no one consistently gets on pole, and it’s just a different pole sitter every week, and yet you’ve got to come around and fight someone who’s the last guy? I mean, there’s no series in the world that does that.
And we’ve asked for this. They’ve got to do something. They need to change it. They should change it. There’s a simple fix. It’s just — it pisses me off, man. Like just crazy that you’re racing someone who’s a lap down, it’s insane, or going a lap down. It’s too competitive to do that. Everyone works too hard, spends way too much money to be racing some guy that’s a lap down that’s having a bad day.
Anyway, it was a good day to win, though. (Laughter.) I just thought I’d get that point across when I can.

Q. When you came in the pit at the end, it also happened to be when James pitted, and for a moment it looked like you had a little bit of a —
WILL POWER: It was in second gear. I stalled and then I re-clutched and let go and fortunately it started.

Q. And I think we heard you over the radio say something like, oh, Christ, when you realized you were behind Hinch.
WILL POWER: Yeah, when he was pitting, that’s when I’m like, we are going to be behind this dude. I was kind of relieved when the yellow came, like thank God he’s gone, but yeah, I don’t reckon he wants to do that. I don’t reckon he’d like to do it, it’s just the rule and he can fight to stay on the lead lap. It’s just a bad rule.Q. We tried this format last year, only no fans were allowed. This year fans are here and everybody is here. What do you think of it so far?
WILL POWER: Oh, I think it’s cool to really the top-level motorsports in the U.S. to bring them together as a double-header. But the fans see both — you see a lot of fans with NASCAR shirts on, a lot of fans of INDYCAR, and they’re all mixed in. I think it’s really — only Roger would come up with that. What a great idea.

Q. We’ve seen drivers, too, hang out in the garages, so they’re as curious as maybe the fans are.
WILL POWER: Yeah, actually I saw — that’s the first time I’ve ever seen the NASCAR Penske Cup drivers in our transporter, and they were like, wow, this is amazing, all joined together, because their trucks all join together. We’re like, we’ve got to upgrade. It’s going to cost Roger money, this.

Q. An expensive weekend perhaps?
WILL POWER: It’s like, yeah, we need what these guys have. They’ll say, well, we can have what we have as long as you give us the paycheck you get.

Q. I wanted to ask about whether there was any difference in the Chevrolet and Honda performance today or whether the speed down the straight was more governed by which tires you were on and how much momentum you could take off that great kind of sweeping last corner.
WILL POWER: Yeah, I think — well, the tires made the biggest difference. I think the manufacturers are so close right now. You only see a difference when you’ve got some really slow corners where I think Honda has a little bit more torque, but as far as just power level, they’re very close, very close. Yeah, you don’t really see a performance difference in engines at all.

Q. And also, I don’t want to say it was easy. Obviously it wasn’t easy. But how easy was it for you to keep like 75 —
WILL POWER: (Answers phone.) It’s Alex Rossi, sorry. Thanks, man.
ALEXANDER ROSSI: I’m happy for you. I’m also glad I’m going home, so have fun with that.
WILL POWER: Please tell me you didn’t have another bad race.
ALEXANDER ROSSI: No, I finished fourth.
WILL POWER: I was like, man, if you had another bad race, I was going to be like — I broke the spell, though, dude. I spoke the spell. You’ve got to win now. Hey, I’ve got to get back to press conference. Thanks, man.
Sorry, David. I had to answer. Rossi and I have been just having the most horrible time, so I’m glad I broke the spell.
THE MODERATOR: Whatever you brought to the table you should take to Rossi next weekend.
WILL POWER: No, I want to win, so screw him.
THE MODERATOR: This is like the 800-pound gorilla off your shoulder; you finally got a win this year.
WILL POWER: Man, I am absolutely going hard when I go to sleep tonight, like just going to sleep. That’s what I do. That’s a big night for me. Definitely going back, good food, green tea with the peppermint in it, just go to sleep. It’s an awesome night. How people do it differently, they go out and absolutely get slaughtered, but yeah. Conor Daly, Scott McLaughlin — no.

Q. I think you should bring back the ice bath, Will.
WILL POWER: Yeah, I’ve got it there. I’ve got to get my bus driver to get it ready, man.

Q. To go back to the Hinch thing, I wanted to ask you sort of a post-race interpretation about that again because I know when you were on the radio and just after the race things can be quite heated and you get caught up in the moment, there’s a lot of adrenaline going on. But do you think there was a predetermined move from Andretti to slow you down? Do you think it was all planned and that’s what they were trying to do, or do you feel like it was happenstance, circumstance that that’s just how the race played out?
WILL POWER: Yeah, I mean, obviously Andretti wouldn’t be telling him to get out of the way. I think if it was a Chevy engine, whoever — if it was someone at Chevy, probably would. Hinch was just fast enough for me not to get close enough to kind of have a run when I did. He’d use Push-to-Pass.
You know, you can’t blame the driver. It’s the team that would be telling him stay on the lead lap in case it goes yellow, which it did, and it’s just a really bad rule. I wish I could come on the radio and say, look, if Hinch lets me go, I will let him go when it goes yellow. He can have that position back. That’s literally what you’d be doing is all they’d have to do is just give him the lap back. It would just stop it completely.
You have a gentlemen’s agreement amongst drivers, hey, if the leader comes up on you, you let him go; you’re getting your lap back anyway. And second place and third place.

Q. Will, looking forward to next week, how excited are you now to get this off your back and head to the next track? And two, does this win smooth over things between you and Roger?
WILL POWER: Smooth? I don’t even know if there needs to be any smoothing. Like I said, I never spoke to him. Roger loves when you win, let me tell you. He loves when you win. It would hopefully — yeah, Roger has been around so long, he’s had teammates take each other out, he’s had everything thrown at him over his 50-plus years in motorsports. I don’t think it was a huge surprise to him. Yeah, just bad call from me to do that in that situation.
But yeah, teammates, we’re all good. We have no problem. No problem. Scott — we all talked, and yep, all good. I’ll go see Roger after this, now I feel confident that I’ll be okay. I’m just making a bit of a joke of it because it kind of is funny.

Q. I’m glad you can laugh about it.
WILL POWER: Yeah, I laugh about everything now. Once you’re 40 you don’t care. It’s like, you’re going to be dead soon anyway.

Q. Names like Mario and Michael, I think you’re probably okay.
WILL POWER: Yeah, this 40 years to get to here went really fast, so I’m sure the next 20 to 40 is going to go even faster. Going to be dead soon, so it doesn’t matter. Say what you want, do what you want. That’s the best way.

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.

Power Extends Reign as King of IMS Road with First Win of Year

INDIANAPOLIS (Saturday, Aug. 14, 2021) – Will Power finally got his first victory of the 2021 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season on a track he has mastered like no other.

Power drove the No. 12 Verizon 5G Team Penske Chevrolet to victory in the Big Machine Spiked Coolers Grand Prix on Saturday on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, his fifth career win on the 14-turn, 2.439-mile layout that debuted in 2014.

It was the 40th career INDYCAR SERIES victory for Power, who broke a tie with four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Al Unser to climb into fifth on the all-time list. The win also was the sixth of Power’s career at IMS, as he also won the 2018 Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. Only NASCAR star Kyle Busch, with two Brickyard 400 wins and four Xfinity Series wins on the oval, has as many major race victories at the Racing Capital of the World.
“We needed that as a group,” Power said. “I can’t tell you how good these guys have been all year. Flawless on pit stops. They’ve given me the car, and we’ve had some bad luck. I’ve made some mistakes, as well.

“So stoked to get the Verizon 5G car in Victory Lane. Oh, what a relief, man!”

Rookie Romain Grosjean equaled his season-best finish – on this same circuit in the GMR Grand Prix in May – by placing second in the No. 51 Nurtec ODT Honda, 1.1142 seconds behind Power. Colton Herta rebounded from his disappointing late-race crash last Sunday in Nashville to finish third in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda.

2016 Indianapolis 500 winner Alexander Rossi earned his season-best finish by placing fourth in the No. 27 AutoNation/NAPA AUTO PARTS Honda. NTT P1 Award winner Pato O’Ward finished fifth in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren SP Chevrolet, but he still ended up a winner because of a dramatic shift in the championship standings.

O’Ward pulled to within 21 points of series leader Alex Palou with four races remaining in the season, as Palou retired from the race on Lap 68 with a mechanical problem while running fourth in his No. 10 NTT DATA Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

Palou led six-time and reigning series champion Scott Dixon by 42 points entering this event. Dixon fell to third but still trimmed the margin to the top, 34 points behind Palou, after placing 17th – tying his season low – in the No. 9 PNC Bank Grow Up Great Honda.

A tense, strategic duel erupted into a mad dash for the checkered flag when Palou retired from the race.

Palou was running fourth and closing on Grosjean on Lap 68 when smoke began to flow from the rear of his No. 10 NTT DATA Chip Ganassi Racing Honda in Turn 4. He pulled off track and hopped from his car, out of the race with a 27th-place result, his lowest of the season.

There were warning signs from the opening lap about possible troubles for Palou, who told his team on the radio after Lap 1 that he felt down on power.

“We started having some issues with the mapping, and we weren’t sure what was going on,” Palou said. “We managed like 60 laps, and it was fine. We were losing a bit of power, but it wasn’t too bad. We were trying to fight for a podium, and we had to stop.

“It’s a shame when we were running so good, but it’s just a bump in the road. We’ll continue, and we’ll get those points back.”

The ensuing full-course caution, the first of the 85-lap race, erased Power’s 1.9-second lead over Herta. Grosjean, who had closed to within a car length of Herta’s gearbox before the caution, passed Herta for second on Lap 72 on the restart.

Power maintained a 1.1-second lead over Grosjean when the field was bunched again by a full-course caution on Lap 77 when Rinus VeeKay’s No. 21 Sonax/Autogeek Chevrolet stalled in Turn 7 after contact from behind by the No. 3 CarShop Team Penske Chevrolet of Scott McLaughlin.

“When the yellow came and then another one, you’ve got to survive those yellows,” Power said. “We had a really good car. It’s tough to get by lapped traffic, but the car was solid out front.”

2014 series champion Power kept the lead on the restart on Lap 79, helped by Grosjean using all 200 seconds of his push-to-pass by Lap 65. He maintained a gap of about one second to Grosjean over the final six laps, with both drivers running on the Firestone alternate “red” tires.

“We had a good car all day long, and we fought at the front,” Grosjean said. “We ran out of push-to-pass early today. I had to use quite a bit early in the race to make sure we were going through the lapped cars. Through the end, Will had more than I did. I just had to go flat out and try not to make any mistakes.”

Various tire and fuel strategies unfolded during the first 67 laps of the race, which ran caution-free. That helped breed 11 lead changes among six drivers as teams tried to undercut and overcut rivals with well-timed pit stops.

Herta appeared to be the biggest threat to Power, as he trimmed a deficit of nearly nine seconds to just 1.9 seconds before Palou’s problem triggered the first caution.

The next race is the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 on Saturday evening, Aug. 21 at World Wide Technology Raceway near St. Louis. It’s the final oval race of the season.

Results Saturday of the Big Machine Spiked Coolers Grand Prix NTT INDYCAR SERIES event on the 2.439-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, driver, chassis-engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

  1. (2) Will Power, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  2. (3) Romain Grosjean, Honda, 85, Running
  3. (5) Colton Herta, Honda, 85, Running
  4. (10) Alexander Rossi, Honda, 85, Running
  5. (1) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  6. (7) Jack Harvey, Honda, 85, Running
  7. (16) Graham Rahal, Honda, 85, Running
  8. (20) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  9. (11) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, 85, Running
  10. (15) Takuma Sato, Honda, 85, Running
  11. (8) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  12. (4) Christian Lundgaard, Honda, 85, Running
  13. (19) Felix Rosenqvist, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  14. (17) Ed Jones, Honda, 85, Running
  15. (14) Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  16. (12) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  17. (26) Scott Dixon, Honda, 85, Running
  18. (13) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, 85, Running
  19. (22) Jimmie Johnson, Honda, 85, Running
  20. (18) Max Chilton, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  21. (23) Helio Castroneves, Honda, 85, Running
  22. (24) James Hinchcliffe, Honda, 85, Running
  23. (21) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  24. (9) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, 85, Running
  25. (27) Cody Ware, Honda, 83, Running
  26. (28) Dalton Kellett, Chevrolet, 81, Running
  27. (6) Alex Palou, Honda, 67, Mechanical
  28. (25) RC Enerson, Chevrolet, 12, Mechanical

Race Statistics
Winner’s average speed: 113.458 mph
Time of Race: 1:49:38.0811
Margin of victory: 1.1142 seconds
Cautions: 2 for 5 laps
Lead changes: 11 among six drivers

Lap Leaders:
O’Ward, Pato 1 – 15
Lundgaard, Christian 16 – 17
Pagenaud, Simon 18 – 20
Power, Will 21 – 36
Herta, Colton 37
O’Ward, Pato 38
Pagenaud, Simon 39 – 41
Power, Will 42 – 60
Herta, Colton 61
Pagenaud, Simon 62
Newgarden, Josef 63 – 64
Power, Will 65 – 85

NTT INDYCAR SERIES point standings:
Palou 415, O’Ward 394, Dixon 381, Newgarden 360, Ericsson 353, Rahal 312, Herta 311, Pagenaud 295, Power 278, VeeKay 269.

CHEVROLET RACING NTT INDYCAR SERIES – ROAD COURSE AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY WILL POWER WINNER QUOTE

CHEVROLET RACING NTT INDYCAR SERIES
THE BIG MACHINE SPIKED COOLERS GRAND PRIX
THE ROAD COURSE AT INDIANAPOLIS MOTOR SPEEDWAY
WILL POWER WINS – QUICK QUOTE
AUGUST 14, 2021

WILL POWER, NO. 12 VERIZON 5G TEAM PENSKE CHEVROLET, picks up the first win of the season, the fifth at the Road Course at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the 40th of his career.

ON WINNING AT IMS ROAD COURSE: “ I can’t begin to tell you what it means to win these days. When you are in your 40s and still kicking butt-it’s awesome. You can’t doubt yourself, you just have to keep digging. I wan’t feeing safe until there was literally one to go. The misfortunes we’ve had at times have been a struggle it’s a tough series. There are many many components that have to right. Everyone has to do their job perfectly and that’s what we did today. Winning is important for Roger Penske, especially here. Very very happy.”

HOW BADLY DID THIS RACE TEAM NEED THIS MOMENT?
“We needed it as a group. I can’t tell you how good these (crew) guys have been this year; flawless on pits stops. They’ve given me the car and we’ve just had some bad luck and obviously I’ve made some mistakes as well. I’m stoked to get the Verizon 5G car in Victory Lane because we’ve haven’t done that ever. I’d been thinking about that coming into this weekend. Can’t thank Chevy enough for the engine and all the work those guys have done. What a relief. When the yellow came and another one … but we had a really good car. It was tough to get by lapped traffic but the car was solid up front.”

WHAT WAS THE DIFFERENCE TODAY?
“I was very focused coming in here today. I did a lot of homework for this race. We weren’t quite strong in the May race and just put it all together. I was aggressive at the start to hold that position and held off Pato (O’Ward) on the blacks, so a very good day.”

YOU BRING ROGER PENSKE HIS FIERST WIN AT INDIANAPOLIS SINCE HE HAS OWNED THIS FACILITY. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?
“That’s awesome. Roger has had a rough year as far as the team goes. I’m really happy for the whole group. Because it’s not for lack of effort. They worked really hard during the Month of May and we were all scratching our heads at the end. I’ve been here six times now (five for road course wins, one Indy 500 win) in this Victory Lane; pretty special place for me. This win goes to the whole group; they deserve it more than me.”

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.