Thursday, October 9, 2025

IndyCar Wrap-Up: A.J. Foyt Racing's 2025 Season

We hit the halfway point of the IndyCar Wrap-Ups, and A.J. Foyt Racing had another good season. This year saw both of its cars running competitively and a change in the driver line-up was a positive. David Malukas was up to the task against Santino Ferrucci, who was coming off a revelation of a 2024 season. The team had good spells, though it was not quite as consistent as the year before. It might have been a dip, but it is still a big leap from where the team had been for the better part of the previous decade.

David Malukas
Salvaging a 2024 season by stepping into a Meyer Shank Racing for ten races, Malukas was signed early to join A.J. Foyt Racing in an anticipated program as it was believed the Team Penske-affiliated team was bringing in an unofficial Team Penske development driver. Like his past seasons, there were a few impressive days from Malukas. There were also a number of less stellar results.

What objectively was his best race?
Malukas was technically third on the road, but he will be classified as second in the Indianapolis 500 after Marcus Ericsson was disqualified from the final results. It was Malukas' best finish in the Indianapolis 500.

What subjectively was his best race?
It is hard to go against Indianapolis because Malukas spent most of that race lurking behind the lead pack. In his penultimate stint, he stretched fuel to keep himself in the picture for a shot at victory late. He never really made a move to get ahead either Ericsson or Álex Palou, but he did not falter in the biggest race of the season.

Gateway must be mentioned as well because Malukas led the most lap in the race, however slow pit stops hurt his track position, and Malukas had a moment where he went up the track making an aggressive attempt to pass Kyle Kirkwood that cost him more spots. He ended up finishing 12th.

What objectively was his worst race?
While running second, Malukas made contact with the lapped car of Louis Foster entering turn one at Nashville. Malukas spun into the barrier and the race was over, ending a promising chance at victory. He was placed 26th.

What subjectively was his worst race?
It is Nashville. The incident was avoidable. Foster was not blameless as he had made a move up the track as Malukas was approaching, but Foster was also all the way on the bottom line when Malukas made contact. Foster had nowhere to go and Malukas was perhaps a tad too aggressive and could have held off until the backstretch to make the move. 

David Malukas' 2025 Statistics
Championship Position: 11th (318 points)
Wins: 0
Podiums: 1
Top Fives: 2
Top Tens: 5
Laps Led: 97
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 3
Fast Twelves: 8
Average Start: 9.411
Average Finish: 13.529

Santino Ferrucci
Back for his third season with A.J. Foyt Racing, Ferrucci was looking to defend a top ten championship finish from the 2024 season. He also had a teammate he would be extra interested in beating with the Penske ties. Ferrucci had some good days, but he didn't quite match his 2024 output. His best days this year came more down to timing than sheer speed.

What objectively was his best race?
Ferrucci caught a caution at Detroit having made his final pit stop just before a caution. This lifted him up to the lead and Ferrucci was at the front for most of the final stint, but he could not hold off Kyle Kirkwood. Ferrucci was able to come back and finish second despite fighting drivers with better tires.

It should be noted Ferrucci received a 26-point penalty as his car had an incorrect driver equivalency weight for the Detroit round. His best finish with a completely legal car was third at Road America after Ferrucci stretched his fuel to hold on ahead of Kyle Kirkwood.

What subjectively was his best race?
Nashville saw Ferrucci finish eighth after he made his own blunder on a pit stop. Ferrucci had an illegal pit entry under caution and it knocked him out of the top ten. Ferrucci made up ground quickly and got himself back into the top ten. A block from Robert Shwartzman likely cost Ferrucci another spot or two.

Gateway should get recognized as a really good race for Ferrucci on speed. He was in the top ten and led late running as long as he could before his final pit stop. Even after that stop, he still cycled out to a top five spot and finished fifth, which was likely a few spots better than how he had been running prior to that final stint.

What objectively was his worst race?
Ferrucci spun on the exit of the final corner on lap three at Portland and he hit the inside barrier. This ended his race and placed Ferrucci in last, 27th.

What subjectively was his worst race?
An accident on a damp but drying surface at Toronto meant Ferrucci could not start the race. The team could not get the car repaired in time for the race. It ended what had been a good run of form. Prior to Toronto, he had five top ten finishes in the previous seven races. After Toronto, he had one top ten finish and an average result of 18th over the final four races.

Santino Ferrucci's 2025 Statistics
Championship Position: 16th (293 points)
Wins: 0
Podiums: 2
Top Fives: 4
Top Tens: 6
Laps Led: 16 
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 0
Fast Twelves: 1
Average Start: 12.8235
Average Finish: 15.588

An Early Look Ahead
This is a crossroads for A.J. Foyt Racing. 

We don't know if the Team Penske technical relationship is continuing for another season. Team Penske seems to have gotten all it wanted out of this relationship. It was able to put a young driver in one of the Foyt cars and confirm his ability was good enough to offer a Team Penske seat. 

For two consecutive seasons, Foyt was a championship top ten contender. Malukas did end up 11th in the championship. Ferrucci took a dip. However, if you give those 26 points back from the Detroit penalty, Ferrucci would have been 11th and a point better than Malukas. In essence, the lineup was pretty even and did not suffer a massive backward slide from 2024.

There are some concerns. Ferrucci didn't really progress this year. He had fewer top ten finishes. His two podium finishes were definitely fortunate results where cautions fell in his favor and he didn't get fully reprimanded for having an illegal car at Detroit. His qualifying form was bad in 2025. Only once did he make it out of the first round of qualifying on a road or street course. At some point, you aren't going to be able to gain seven to nine spots a race.

Malukas will be gone, and the next driver will not be a Team Penske plant. A.J. Foyt Racing doesn't have a great track record hiring drivers. It isn't clear if it will go for experience or for youth. Neither have been the proven decision for Foyt. Both have struggled.

If the Penske support is gone, it is natural to expect a step back, at least for one of the cars. There will be a lot of holes that will need to be filled, and we know where Foyt was prior to the support. It might not necessarily sink entirely to the bottom in 2026, but it is difficult to imagine it can maintain its positioning without it. 


Wednesday, October 8, 2025

IndyCar Wrap-Up: Ed Carpenter Racing's 2025 Season

Our fifth IndyCar Wrap-Up brings us to the first race winning team of the 2025 IndyCar season, and it was probably a little bit of a surprise. The driver who won the race was probably not the driver you expected would win for this team, but Ed Carpenter Racing returned to victory lane for the first time in over four years. It was still a tough season for ECR. It was not a regular contender for victories, and it was in the same place we are accustomed to seeing ECR run. It just had one outstanding day.

Christian Rasmussen
For his second year in IndyCar, Rasmussen was given full-time responsibilities from day one at ECR. All the road courses, all the street course and all the ovals. There was plenty of room for growth, and Rasmussen made some strides in a team where he was paired with a past race winner for a teammate. The difference in experience did not hold Rasmussen back, and over the second half of the season, he was the better of the two Ed Carpenter Racing drivers, and Rasmussen ended the season with a stunner.

What objectively was his best race?
How about his first career victory? At Milwaukee, Rasmussen overcame a pit lane speeding penalty and took new tires under a late caution while a handful of cars did not. In the late sprint, Rasmussen used new tires to get to the front and it led to a one-on-one battle with Álex Palou, who was approaching 200 laps led. Rasmussen had the advantage and he took the lead with 16 laps remaining. 

Palou did his best to remain close, but Rasmussen had the tire advantage and was about to win by just under two seconds. 

What subjectively was his best race?
It is Milwaukee, but it is also for how aggressive Rasmussen ran the final stint. Rasmussen was on the ragged limit even after taking the lead. Despite not being under much pressure, Rasmussen never let off. Palou couldn't keep up. No one else on newer tires had close in and pose a challenge. Yet, Rasmussen remained on the limit and he was sawing on the wheel. There were a few moments where it felt like he was almost going too far, but Rasmussen took the victory.

There should be an honorable mention for Gateway because Rasmussen overcame being thrown off strategy after a bad pit stop where the car was not filled with fuel and then needing emergency service for fuel under the Louis Foster/Josef Newgarden caution. Rasmussen was able to make passes front he back and he was able to get up to third.

The Indianapolis 500 should be recognized because he ended up sixth after the post-race penalties, but he went off-strategy and it put the car in the top ten. He held his own for the entire race and moved forward from his starting position.

What objectively was his worst race?
A week after winning his first career race, Rasmussen didn't even complete a lap in the next race at Nashville. Rasmussen was starting at the back after a grid penalty for an engine change. Rasmussen spun in turn two and hit the wall, ending his season 250 laps early.

What subjectively was his worst race?
Rasmussen may have finished 12th at Portland, but his antics with Conor Daly did Rasmussen no favors. He ran Daly off the road in turn seven. That didn't get a penalty. Then the two came together in turn ten, and Daly spun off course. I don't think Rasmussen was 100% at fault and believe it was more of a racing incident, but Rasmussen did not help his already aggressive reputation.

Christian Rasmussen's 2025 Statistics
Championship Position: 13th (313 points)
Wins: 1
Podiums: 2
Top Fives: 2
Top Tens: 6
Laps Led: 46
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 0
Fast Twelves: 2
Average Start: 17.9411
Average Finish: 14.294

Alexander Rossi
Joining his third team in four seasons, Rossi was hoping to find some form with Ed Carpenter Racing, a team that had not been a regular at the top level of competition. The season started respectively for Rossi, but after the first five races, Rossi experienced the worst slump of his IndyCar career. Results were not going his way, and Rossi ended up having his worst season in IndyCar.

What objectively was his best race?
The weekend where his teammate took victory, Rossi was fourth at Milwaukee. Rossi was actually the best placed driver on new tires after that final round of pit stops, but Rasmussen had the better restart and did a better job getting through traffic. Milwaukee was a great day prior to that final stint. Rossi spent practically the entire race in the top ten and much of it pushing for a top five result.

What subjectively was his best race?
It is Milwaukee, but Portland also deserves a mention. Portland was the first race of the season where Rossi felt like an actual contender for the podium. He started sixth and spent pretty much the entire race in the top five and on the edge of a podium spot. Prior to that, I am not sure he had really contended for a top five finish in any races. There was actually one race that looked promising. 

What objectively was his worst race?
That promising race was the Indianapolis 500, and Rossi was running in the top five, but gearbox issues brought his race to an end with a pit lane fire only adding insult to injury. Rossi's race was done, and he was classified in 28th.

What subjectively was his worst race?
It isn't one race, but it is Rossi's entire slump a seven-race rut that really started in Gateway and went through Laguna Seca. Seven races. No top ten finishes. Two retirements. Add to that the Indianapolis 500 gearbox problem two races before that, Rossi could not catch a break for two months, and it wasn't just the race results. He couldn't qualify either. He didn't start in the top ten for nine consecutive races. Considering how his season started, it was tough to see Rossi constantly struggling to be in the top half of the field. 

Alexander Rossi's 2025 Statistics
Championship Position: 15th (297 points)
Wins: 0
Podiums: 0
Top Fives: 2
Top Tens: 7
Laps Led: 33
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 1
Fast Twelves: 5
Average Start: 14.352
Average Finish: 13.764

An Early Look Ahead
Ed Carpenter Racing ended 2025 with momentum. Rasmussen won a race. Rossi ended with two of his best finishes and three consecutive top ten finishes. The problem is how much will it carry over to 2026.

The 2025 season started well. Rossi had three top ten finishes in the first four races. The team then hit a rut. Rasmussen had a few good results, but Rasmussen has been inconsistent and erratic at times over his two seasons. He has shown good speed on ovals, but ovals are only a third of the schedule. He has never finished better than ninth on a road or street course in two seasons.

Everyone is sticking together for another season. Rossi should improve, but he didn't make a big leap from year one to year two at McLaren. That was already a team competing at the front with a load of resources. ECR is looking to move up a tier. 

There should be some positivity that the oval form could position the team to be more competitive for the championship top ten. Rasmussen did have five top ten finishes in six oval races. Rossi was on the wrong side of mechanical issues at Indianapolis and Iowa. It cost him promising results at both. Those were two races where Rossi could have at least finished in the top ten. He likely would have gotten more at Indianapolis. If he goes the distance in both of those, he is probably ahead of Rasmussen in the championship and maybe even 11th. That surely changes how we view his season. 

It is hard to get excited about Ed Carpenter Racing. It feels like we have been here before where it has these flashes but it never materializes over a full season to be something serious, and it is never more than one good year. We are going to be approaching a decade since ECR last had a driver in the top ten of the championship, and that was Josef Newgarden. Since Newgarden left, ECR's best driver has finished 15th, 14th, 14th, 14th, 12th, 12th, 14th, 13th and 13th in the championship. The team has gone through a fair share of drivers at different points in their careers and they are all end in the same area. 

We know the limit of ECR, and we haven't really been given a reason to believe next time will be any different.


Monday, October 6, 2025

Musings From the Weekend: Spending Roger Penske's Money

Here is a rundown of what got me thinking...

McLaren clinched the World Constructors' championship with a 3-4 finish in Singapore, but only one half of the lineup felt like celebrating. The Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters had a season finale for the ages. The inevitable happened in Charlotte. NASCAR is also simultaneously seeing two of its greatest performances in the lower divisions happen, and it could all be for nothing in a month's time. Marc Márquez at least broke his collarbone after he clinched the world championship. IndyCar teams might be getting a little more money at the end of next season. Perhaps they should be getting more than that.

Spending Roger Penske's Money
They say it is easier to spend other people's money, and that is true, especially when it is a lot of money. Spending $20 is hard, $20 million however? Piece of cake. 

Roger Penske will be spending a little more of his own money next year, or at least IndyCar will be spending a little more money after Fox purchased a stake in the series. Racer Magazine's Marshall Pruett reported last week IndyCar is preparing to increase the Leader Circle prize to each entry at the end of the 2026 season. An increase of $500,000 per the 22 entries would mean an additional $11 million in the Leader Circle purse. Each entry would receive around $1.7 million as the base payment. 

Such a boost is nice to see considering the cost of fielding a full-time entry has essentially doubled in just a little over a half a decade. What once could be done for around $5 million for the full season has inched closer to $10 million. Something had to change or at least adjust to keep up with the times, but more should be done. 

This isn't just about the base payments for the Leader Circle program. It is good that these teams get a foundation to start with each year, even if that foundation is a little thinner than it used to be, but money can be used to drive attention. People get excited when the lottery creeps ever closer to $500 million. You don't hear much celebrating about the guy who won the $50 million prize. The $500 million prize winner gets your attention. 

Nobody will tune in because 25 cars will be competing for 22 spots that will now get $1.7 million for 17 races of work. That is essentially $100,000 per race.  

If IndyCar wants attention, it should do something attention worthy. 

In golf, the Fedex Cup might bill itself as the playoffs, but no one looks as the winner as the undisputed champion in golf. It does pay $10,000,000 to win to win the final event, The Tour Championship. That is noteworthy and a reason to tune in. And that is just one event. Golf is not hurting for big money events.

Scottie Scheffler won over $3 million for winning The Open Championships. Scheffler also got closer to $3.5 million for winning the PGA Championships in May. Then there is this event called The Masters, and Rory McIlroy got a cool $4.2 million for winning it. The Players' Championship isn't even a major but McIlroy took home $4.5 million for winning that event a month after The Masters.

Throughout the golf season, there are multiple events that draw your attention.

When it comes to the IndyCar season... well, we all know the joke that is one race in May and a bunch of filler for the rest of the year. 

There is only one IndyCar race that pays anything worth the damn for winning. Álex Palou took home $3.8 million for winning the Indianapolis 500 this year. How much did Palou take home for the other seven victories he had in 2025? As far as we know, with the Leader Circle funding, winning a race only pays an additional $30,000. That means in seven races, Palou took home an additional $210,000. 

At least the championship earned Palou $1,000,000. 

We can inflate a race's importance on name, location and history, but the truth is if the prize is not flashy race prestige is only going to take it so far. If IndyCar wants all of its races to be taken seriously, then the series must take them seriously. 

This is where we get to Roger Penske's wallet. 

The man is set. He isn't struggling. He can part with some cash, funnel it to the teams and drivers, and he will still be fine. He likely would never notice it is missing. 

An $11 million injection could be coming to the base payments, but there should be a significant infusion of what each race pays and that should be a selling point for each event. 

Let's remove the Indianapolis 500 for a moment, because that race is fine. There are 16 other races on the schedule. 

Roger Penske could take $16 million dollars and have every race pay at least $1 million to each winner. That would get everyone's attention. Win a race, bring home $1 million. 

Let's go a little further than that, because not all races are made equally. Some should be more than $1 million.

Shouldn't Long Beach pay a little more than $1 million? We act like it is one of the five most historic races in the United States and you can win more on a scratch off ticket from the convenience store than the race itself. That should get an additional $1 million for the winner. Road America is one of the best attended races of the year. That should be worth a little more. If Nashville is going to be immediately after the World Cup Final, that night race should have a little extra on the line too. 

If IndyCar is worried about viewers tuning out if a championship is clinched early, those last few races could pay even more. How about $3 million for each Milwaukee race? How about $4 million for the Laguna Seca finale? Now, if Laguna Seca is paying $4 million, then we will need to boost the Indianapolis 500 winner's share and make that at least $6 million. 

Then there is the championship. The championship cannot be worth equal to one race victory at Detroit or Markham, Ontario. Let's get the championship up to $5 million. The champion will likely have a few race victories. It will be a healthy year in the bank account for the champion. 

With $1 million to win the other 16 races outside of Memorial Day weekend, plus the additional million for three races, plus the additional $2 million for the Milwaukee races, then the additional $3 million for the finale, the $2.2 million to increase the Indianapolis 500 share and the $4 million for the championship increase, it would cost Mr. Penske $32.2 million. 

You might be saying, "How can we do that? Do you realize what that would do to Mr. Penske's bank account? It isn't fair." 

If Roger Penske spent $32.2 million to award the winners and champion in the IndyCar series, Roger Penske would still be a handsome billionaire after all the checks cleared. This would not financially ruin him. He would be fine. He is going to be fine. The series he owns is another story.

It would be tough to make it back, but maybe spending just north of $32 million is what it will take to draw in more viewers. 

You must imagine some would be curious to tune in if there was that much money on the line. There would be something to sell at every race. The drivers would have something to shoot for. It could cause an influx of followers who will be wondering who gets a payday and they could keep showing up to see whose week it will be. With an increase in viewers, sponsors become more intrigued and are willing to spend more in the series. If done right, it could pay for itself. 

It would at least give people a reason to tune in for Gateway on a Sunday night in June June or Arlington in March when it is against the NCAA tournament. It makes the Mid-Ohio race a little more interesting and it would help against the competition of a NASCAR race possibly happening at the same time. There is something to push that is intangible and people understand the value of. That is a hell of a lot more compelling than a playoff spot.

I get it. This is easier said than done, but wouldn't the attention from the announcement alone be worth it? IndyCar has a six-month season, and then it is radio silent. Talk about launching a cannonball from the top platform. People would have a reason to talk and at least take note of when next season begins. There is nothing IndyCar can do between and the first race of 2026 that would generate such attention. It doesn't matter if it is a third manufacturer joining the series, announcing the return of Michigan or stunningly hiring Max Verstappen to be on the grid. Money talks. People listen when it speaks.

They say you have to spend money to make money. IndyCar has its sugar daddy. It shouldn't be afraid to flaunt the cash for a few eyeballs.

Champions From the Weekend
You know about McLaren, but did you know...

Ayhancan Güven won the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters championship with finishes of fifth and first from Hockenheim. Güven passed Marco Wittmann on the final lap of the finale, giving the Turkish driver an additional five points as he defeated Lucas Auer by four points for the championship. Thomas Preining won the first race of the weekend.

José Antonio Rueda clinched the Moto3 championship with his ninth victory of the season from Indonesia.

Winners From the Weekend
You know about Preining, Güven and Rueda, but did you know...

Fermín Aldeguer won MotoGP's Indonesian Grand Prix, his first career victory in the class. Marco Bezzecchi won the sprint race. Diogo Moreira won the Moto2 race, his third victory of the season. 

George Russell won the Singapore Grand Prix, his second victory of the season. 

Shane van Gisbergen won the NASCAR Cup Series race from Charlotte, his fifth victory of the season. Connor Zilisch won the Grand National Series race, his tenth victory of the season. Corey Heim won the Truck Series race, his tenth victory of the season, and a single-season record for the Truck Series. 

Coming Up This Weekend
The 68th Bathurst 1000.
Petit Le Mans ends the IMSA season. 
The 3 Hours of Barcelona ends the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup Season.
World Superbike has its penultimate round from Estoril.
Super Formula has its penultimate round from Fuji.
NASCAR begins its semifinal round in Las Vegas.



Friday, October 3, 2025

This Week in IndyCar Silly Season: Testing, Testing, Testing

October did not start with a bang, but it is not a case that nothing happened. Cars were on track to open the month! Whether it leads to any race seats for 2026 remains a question, but we start with some news from last Friday that was released after we covered the previous week in silly season. 

Mick Schumacher to Test for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing
Last Friday, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing announced Mick Schumacher would participate for the team in an evaluation test at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course on Monday October 13. 

Schumacher currently competes in the FIA World Endurance Championship driving for Alpine in the Hypercar class. Schumacher has a pair of third-place finishes this season at Imola and Spa-Francorchamps. He and his co-drivers Jules Gounon and Frédéric Makowiecki are 16th in the championship with one round remaining from Bahrain next month. This is Schumacher’s second season with the Alpine program. 

Prior to his time in WEC, Schumacher spent the 2021 and 2022 seasons in Formula One driving for Haas. His best finish was sixth in the 2022 Austrian Grand Prix.

Mid-Ohio Evaluation Test
On Wednesday October 1, five drivers competed in a private test from Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in evaluation runs. 

Felipe Nasr led the testing driving for Team Penske with a lap at 65.715 seasons, ahead of fellow Brazilian Caio Collet, who was driving for A.J. Foyt Racing and ran a lap at 65.861 seconds. Dennis Hauger was third as Hauger was able to use the test to begin acclimation to his 2026 race seat with Dale Coyne Racing. Hauger’s best lap was run at 68.232 seconds. 

Chip Ganassi Racing had Niels Koolen fourth (66.649 seconds) and Meyer Shank Racing had Kakunoshin Ohta in fifth (66.850 seconds). 

Nasr competes for the the Porsche Penske program in IMSA while Collet and Koolen were in Indy Lights in 2025. Ohta competes full-time in the Super Formula and Super GT championships, but the Japanese driver has run for MSR’s Acura program in IMSA this season. 

More Testing to Come
Along with Schumacher testing for RLLR at the IMS road course on October 13, Andretti Global is believed to be running an evaluation test for Lochie Hughes. Hughes was third in the 2025 Indy Lights season driving for the Andretti program. 

It is believed Arrow McLaren will run an evaluation test at the end of the month for Enzo Fittipaldi at Sebring. Enzo, the brother of recent IndyCar driver Pietro Fittipaldi, has spent 2025 competing in the LMP2 class in the European Le Mans Series. Prior to that, he spent three seasons in Formula Two where he won two races. 

It is believed Fittipaldi will be competing in Indy Lights next year with HMD Motorsports.

Though official details have yet to be finalized, tests on the oval at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and at Gateway are expected to be held this month. 

How Do We Feel About This Week?
Evaluation tests are a mixed bag. Some lead to nothing. Some lead to something. You cannot take them that seriously, but they are notable.

When it comes to Schumacher at RLLR, it feels a little surreal. For starters, it is the son whose father who publicly never regarded IndyCar and oval racing highly. The words of Michael Schumacher also came almost 25 years ago when American open-wheel racing was fractured and it was not at its highest. Mick Schumacher has also expressed a longing for single-seater racing, and there are only a few top series where you compete. He did Formula One and no one is calling him back. Other than IndyCar, the other option is Super Formula in Japan, a series where almost all the drivers pair with another whether that be Super GT or another sports car division because it is only eight weekends a year.

The Schumacher family has long had property in Texas. The United States is not so foreign to Mick. There are not many options out there, and RLLR is probably the best of the remaining options. He is going to get a taste and then we will find out if he wants more, if he can afford to do more considering RLLR will likely need some funding, and we will progress from there. An IndyCar is far different from a Formula One car. Nico Hülkenberg tested for Arrow McLaren four years ago, and one of the reasons it didn’t go anywhere is because Hülkenberg found the car physically more demanding to drive while also not wanting to race on ovals.

Schumacher might feel the same way after this test. If he thinks it is not for him, it is fine if he decides to decline any further opportunity, but if he wants to take on more, he at least has a foot in the door.

Besides Hauger, the two drivers of note from the Mid-Ohio test are Collet and Ohta.

Collet is believed to be auditioning for that Foyt seat, and to put up a respectable time without getting into an accident is a good first impression. It feels like this could check the box and Foyt has its second driver set for 2026. 

Ohta had been long-rumored to be set for an IndyCar test at some point this year. The more interesting thing about Ohta is how invested Honda is in this opportunity. Ohta will not be on the grid full-time in 2026, but IndyCar and Honda do not have a contract for the 2027 season. I cannot imagine Ohta is preparing for a possible 2027 seat if Honda is not involved in the series. This doesn’t mean it is all but confirmed that Honda is remaining in IndyCar for the near-future, but if it wasn’t interested, I don’t think Ohta has this test.

As for Nasr and Koolen, this wasn’t Nasr first IndyCar test nor his first test with Team Penske. Nasr has potential to run an IndyCar, but Team Penske has just signed David Malukas, Scott McLaughlin signed a contract extension ahead of last season, and while Josef Newgarden has been in a rut for the last two years, I don’t think Penske is going to move on from Newgarden after 2026. Nasr is there to keep Newgarden honest, but I don’t think we are going to see the Brazilian change categories anytime soon.

Koolen made a big improvement from 2024 to 2025 in Indy Lights, but he still has a long way to go, and Ganassi is taking advantage of testing one of its Indy Lights drivers. It doesn’t mean much at this time.

What is to Come?
Besides these tests, we wait for the same three seats at RLLR, DCR and Juncos Hollinger Racing to be filled. 

I am sure something else will come up to keep us occupied. 



Thursday, October 2, 2025

IndyCar Wrap-Up: Dale Coyne Racing's 2025 Season

Our fourth IndyCar Wrap-Up sees a team that moved up the grid. Dale Coyne Racing went from a team that didn't have a car finish better than 13th in 2024 to a team that nearly stole a victory in Toronto while having a number of other impressive days. It was the last team to set its driver lineup, and it did it late in the game, but the last driver hired proved to be a wise choice. However, Dale Coyne Racing still showed its shortcomings, and it took another tough blow in the month of May.

Rinus VeeKay
The last driver hired for a full-time seat, VeeKay took on a new challenge as he was out of a ride after five seasons with Ed Carpenter Racing. Joining the team that did not have a car finish better than 13th the year prior was a cause for concern, but VeeKay excelled at Dale Coyne Racing. Together they found good results early, and ran surprisingly competitive at times. What could have been a step backward for a career at a crossroads may have been a big leap forward for the Dutch driver.

What objectively was his best race?
VeeKay ended up second at Toronto, but he led 16 laps after the cautions and pit strategy shook out to the point where VeeKay was at the front. He was leading going into the final round of pit stops, but the concern would be if his #18 DCR crew could complete a stop to hold off Patricio O'Ward. Unfortunately, it didn't. O'Ward took the lead and sailed to victory, but VeeKay held on to second, his first podium in over three years.

What subjectively was his best race?
Toronto was good, but VeeKay started to stand out early. He opened the season with a ninth at St. Petersburg. Thermal Club and Long Beach were tougher days, but VeeKay shined at Barber Motorsports Park. He qualified a surprising fifth and he spent the entire race in the top five. He was up to fourth late and pushing Scott McLaughlin for that final podium position. Barber set the tone for VeeKay's season. 

What objectively was his worst race?
VeeKay had consecutive 27th-place finishes, and at the worst time. In the Indianapolis 500, VeeKay had an accident in the pit lane. At Detroit, his car suffered an engine failure after only completing six laps. 

What subjectively was his worst race?
At Indianapolis, VeeKay had used an alternate strategy to get into the top ten. We were only 200 miles into the race. There was plenty of time for VeeKay to do more, and he lost the car on pit entry when he didn't have brakes. Detroit was terrible because he qualified sixth. That final week of May and first day of June are really the low points of his season. 

Rinus VeeKay's 2025 Statistics
Championship Position: 14th (305 points)
Wins: 0
Podiums: 1
Top Fives: 2
Top Tens: 7
Laps Led: 19
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 1
Fast Twelves: 4
Average Start: 18.764
Average Finish: 13.882

Jacob Abel
After three seasons in Indy Lights, there was only one place left for Abel to go, and that was IndyCar. With help from his family's team, Abel partnered with Dale Coyne Racing, and it was one of the toughest seasons you could ask for. While half the team shined and were a reason to celebrate, Abel's half was a reminder of how small Dale Coyne Racing is and how tough it is to be remotely competitive let alone succeed.

What objectively was his best race?
Benefitting from not stopping before what ultimately was the final caution of the second Iowa race, Abel remained on the lead lap while a number of drivers were trapped a lap down. He had not been driving great prior to that but he was not ahead of most of the competition, and Abel finished 11th. 

What subjectively was his best race?
It is really just the second Iowa race, but Detroit should be mentioned because after Abel failed to qualify for the Indianapolis 500, he responded and finished 18th, his best finish of the season up to that point.

What objectively was his worst race?
On the road, Abel was 27th at Barber Motorsports Park, dead last in a race where every car was running at the finish. Abel never had good speed. In the first Iowa race, Abel had an accident after 72 laps and he was classified in 27th.

What subjectively was his worst race?
Isn't failing to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 objectively worse than finishing last in two other races? Either way, Indianapolis was a low moment. We knew Dale Coyne Racing had a car fail to qualify last year, and DCR had two cars in the last row shootout the year before that. Most had Abel penciled in for the last row shootout, but he never had the pace to threaten to make the race. He struggled to break 227 mph over a four-lap average. It became clear in the middle of the practice week that Abel was missing the race unless someone else had the qualifying weekend from hell. That didn't happen, and Abel missed the Indianapolis 500. 

Jacob Abel's 2025 Statistics
Championship Position: 27th (123 points)
Wins: 0
Podiums: 0
Top Fives: 0
Top Tens: 0
Laps Led: 0
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 0
Fast Twelves: 0
Average Start: 24.9375
Average Finish: 22.6875

An Early Look Ahead
We know Dennis Hauger will be joining the Dale Coyne Racing operation, as Coyne forms a technical partnership with Andretti Global for the 2026 season. It is unclear who will be in the second seat. Jacob Abel has not been ruled out, but it seems unlikely Abel will return for a second season at DCR. The one named mentioned for the second seat was Romain Grosjean, who spent 2025 as a reserve driver for Prema.

There were plenty of reasons to be encouraged heading into 2026. The Andretti partnership only increases the positive vibes around the Coyne operation. 

The month of May should be more smooth now that Andretti is involved, but it is not guaranteed they will be in the clear. Remember, Marco Andretti was also in the last chance qualifying session at Indianapolis along with the two Dale Coyne Racing last year. At least it shouldn't seem inevitable one of the Coyne cars will fail to make the race. 

Coyne is getting a driver who is more than ready for IndyCar and probably should have been in IndyCar this year. Hauger is joining an ascending team, if it was only getting out of the cellar. There will surely be some growing pains. Ovals are still new to the Norwegian. However, there should be a level of competitiveness that is somewhere in the ballpark of where we saw DCR in 2025. It is still Dale Coyne Racing. It will not be competing for the championship. It will have days where it is never in the picture, but there will be weekends where Coyne is quick and performing better than a handful of cars that are better on paper.

Dale Coyne said we would know both of the team's drivers by Halloween. That is less than a month away. If it is Grosjean, we know that combination worked in 2021. Grosjean probably should have won one race, if not two. We also know how Grosjean's attitude can swing and, when things are not going right, he is stuck in a hole too deep for a tow truck to pull him out. Maybe a year on the sidelines will help. It is not going to fully change him, but he could have a new perspective that keeps him more grounded. 

If it isn't Grosjean, you would think it would be someone with experience, and I mean more than the 16 starts Abel made last year. Coyne has an opportunity with the Andretti partnership to return to a level it has not seen since 2019. This is a chance to have two proper drivers that you can feel confident will have days in the top ten, maybe push the top five, and if the cards fall right, could be looking at victory. We saw that was the case with Rinus VeeKay this year.

Who else fits that mold? It is a pretty steep drop off from Grosjean. Conor Daly could be available, but we know his ceiling and unless it is an oval, you do not expect Daly to raise Coyne's level. Coyne isn't getting Takuma Sato to comeback to full-time driving. The same can be said for Ryan Hunter-Reay. Jack Harvey has already announced his Indianapolis 500 plans with Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. Outside of those handful of drivers, there aren't many other veterans available to direct a program. There is a lot of youth and inexperience. That isn't what Coyne needs or is looking for. 

There should be a lot of curious eyes on Dale Coyne Racing over the next few months, especially when testing begins. 


Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Best of the Month: September 2025

And so begins the final quarter of 2025. September has cooled off though summer made a few late statements. The sun is going down before 7:00 p.m. and it is rising after 7:00 a.m. September is a sleepy month, a recovery of sorts from the rush of summer and an adjustment to the change of autumn. There is also less racing to keep us busy. 

A few series are wrapping up. Every series is in its final races. Everyone is in the single-digits. They will all be over soon. Some hardware is being claimed early. We have an idea how these seasons will end. We are counting down the final days.

IndyCar Tidbits
Yes, the season ended a month ago and there was not a single IndyCar race contested in September 2025, but we are closing this month with the final trove of tidbits from the 2025 season. We are going to touch upon penalties, the rookie class, ending the season making the wrong kind of history, as well as how American drivers did, but we must start with what was a historic championship and put it all into perspective.

The Champion
Last year I said it was hard to write about a driver when he has won his third championship. It should be no surprise that Álex Palou followed that up by making it easy to write about his fourth championship because the fourth was staggeringly good. It was a historic season in many different ways. 

Let's just start with the points because Palou hit a total we have never seen before with this points system. 

Palou scored 711 points. Since the Indy Racing League because awarding 50 points for a victory in 1998, this was the highest points total ever achieved. The previous highest was 678, which Scott Dixon achieved in 2018. 

But Palou scored 711 out of a possible 929 points. That is 76.533%, the highest percentage of points since Sébastien Bourdais scored 76.938% of the maximum points in the 2006 Champ Car season (387/503). 

There is something notable about the highest share of points since the CART/USAC split in 1979. See if you can notice it. 

A.J. Foyt - 85.128% (1979 USAC)
Johnny Rutherford - 78.71667% (1980 CART)
Buzz Calkins & Scott Sharp - 78.095% (1996 IRL)
Sébastien Bourdais - 76.938% (2006 Champ Car)
Álex Palou - 76.533% (2025)

Did you pick up on it? 

The other four occasions higher than Palou's share all occurred during a split. Whether it be USAC and CART or CART and the Indy Racing League, they all occurred when there was a fracture in American open-wheel racing, until Palou in 2025. 

Since 1979, this was the first season in which a driver scored at least 75% of the maximum points and there was a single IndyCar series. On only two other occasions has a driver scored at least 70% of the maximum points and there been one series. That would be Scott Dixon in 2008 (71.698%) and, you guessed it, Álex Palou in 2023 (70.613%). 

Yeah, so Palou made a bit of history. 

Let's go a bit further...

Eight victories, it was only the ninth time a driver has won eight races in a season since 1946.

Thirteen podium finishes, it was only the sixth time a driver has reached that total since 1946.

Fourteen top five finishes, it was only the ninth time a driver has reached that total since 1946.

The interesting thing is the juxtaposition of Palou's last two championships. 

In 2024, Palou won the title, but it wasn't the most impressive championship we ever saw. We wrote about a lot of lows. Palou only won twice in 2024. He only had five podium finishes. His share of the maximum points was the lowest in nine years, which was the 2015 season, a season that saw six drivers enter the finale with a chance at the championship and only one driver won at least three races. 

This season, Palou quadrupled his victory total from the year before, he nearly tripled his number of podium finishes, and as we mentioned before, he had one of the highest share of points in the last 45-plus years in IndyCar. 

Yet, despite the difference of these two seasons, both titles felt pretty secure halfway through the season. This year, it was pretty much locked up after race #2. Palou led the championship wire-to-wire! Scott Dixon just did that in 2020, but 2025 was only the second time a driver went wire-to-wire in the championship lead since reunification.

This was Palou's third consecutive title. Only three other drivers have done that (Hello, Ted Horn, Sébastien Bourdais and Dario Franchitti). It was Palou's fourth title. The only drivers with more have the last names Foyt and Dixon. Palou is level with Bourdais, Franchitti and someone named Mario Andretti. 

And this was only Palou's sixth season in IndyCar! He has still only made 98 starts in his career. He will not turn 30 years old for another two years! He is on 19 victories! Multiple that winning percentage over 350 starts and Palou is at 67.85 victories. That means we are pace for a new all-time leader in victories in about 15 years time, and that seems very possible considering Palou will only be 43 years old at that time and we have already seen the likes of Scott Dixon and Will Power remain highly success at that age. If the all-time victories record is at risk of falling, championships sets to be in the crosshairs as well. Palou is more than halfway to Foyt's record of seven, and he hasn't even been in IndyCar for a decade.

Last year, I asked if IndyCar is ready for a driver who could completely dominant a decade. I think we know the answer is no, but like it or not, it appears Palou is just getting started.

Americans
Unless Palou takes on new citizenship and openly embraces becoming an American, it will be tougher for the local drivers to triumph in IndyCar for the next ten years. Though one had a pretty good year, the American drivers did not shine in 2025. Even the best ended on a bit of a downer.

For the second consecutive season, American drivers combined to win only four races. There were only two American winners for the third consecutive season. However, there were only two American drivers in the top ten in the championship. That was the fewest since 2014. However, in 2014, there were two American drivers in the top ten of the championship and five regular drivers. This season, there were 11 full-time drivers, the most since 2020.

Kyle Kirkwood was the top American driver in the championship, and he did win three races, the second most to Palou, but Kirkwood ended the season with no top five finishes in the final eight races. This was after having five in the first nine events. 

Josef Newgarden swept in and saved this from being a year with only one American winner in the final race, but Newgarden wasn't the other American driver in the top ten of the championship. That was Colton Herta, who ended up winless but seventh in points.

Americans excelled in the next set of ten drivers in the championship. While Kirkwood and Herta were in the top ten, six American drivers took the next six spots in the championship. David Malukas was 11th and two points ahead of Josef Newgarden. Alexander Rossi was 15th on 297 points, four more than Santino Ferrucci, who lost 26 points for improper weight ballast at Detroit. Those 26 points would have put Ferrucci 11th in the championship. Conor Daly and Graham Rahal were 18th and 19th respectively.

This was the fifth consecutive year without an American champion, the longest drought since 2007 through 2011.

Every Race Álex Palou Did Not Lead Kyle Kirkwood Won
Pretty straightforward statement.

This season saw Palou lead at least one lap in 14 of 17 races. In the three races Palou did not lead a lap, Kyle Kirkwood won.

At Long Beach, Kirkwood led 46 of 90 laps form pole position while Palou finished second, just over 2.6 seconds back. At Detroit, Kirkwood led 48 of 100 laps after starting third. Palou had started fifth, but he was taken out after David Malukas hit Palou entering turn one. At Gateway, Kirkwood only led eight laps as the race came down to a late pit cycle while Palou spent most of the race running just inside the top ten and ended up finishing eighth after starting ninth.

I don't know what it means other than it is a strange coincidence of the season, and if anything happens to Álex Palou, Kyle Kirkwood is suspect #1. 

The Wrong Kind of History
The final three races of the season could not have been more memorable for the worst possible ways and the best possible ways for Christian Rasmussen.

Let's start with Portland where Rasmussen was ostracized for his driving after he forced Conor Daly off the road in turn seven, Daly made a lunge at contact at the chicane, and the spat soon ended with Daly spinning off the circuit after attempting an aggressive pass on Rasmussen in turn ten. 

Though never punished from race control, Rasmussen was labeled as the menace from the ruckus in Portland. 

What happened in the next race? 

Rasmussen took a stunning first career victory at Milwaukee after taking tires under a late caution and charging down Álex Palou, who had dominated the race. Rasmussen also won with one of the most aggressive drives we have seen as he was sawing on the wheel and remained on the limit despite pulling away from second-place. 

How did Rasmussen follow up his first career victory? 

The Dane couldn't even make it through two corners at Nashville and he was out on the first lap of the race, leaving him classified in 27th, last-place. 

Wait a minute? Haven't we been here before? Yes, and we have already done the research.

How many times has a driver won a race and then finished last in the next race?

Rasmussen was the 41st occasion of a driver winning a race only to follow it with a last place finish. He was the first since Will Power in 2019, who had his own bit of history as Power won at Pocono, was last at Gateway and then won at Portland. Power did a complete 360º in a three-race span over six years ago. 

But let's go a little further because Rasmussen wasn't just a driver who finished last. He finished last and Rasmussen did not complete a lap. How many times in the previous 40 occasions did that happen?

It happened four times prior, and the other four names will have your attention!

Dan Gurney won the first race of the July 27, 1969 doubleheader at the Indianapolis Raceway Park road course. In the second race, Gurney was out before lap one was completed due to a fuel filter issue.

It would not happen again until 2001, and this one is a little messy. Hélio Castroneves won the Indianapolis 500. Seven days later, Castroneves was competing in the CART race at Milwaukee. What happened? Castroneves had an accident on the opening lap after contact with Kenny Bräck and Cristiano da Matta. Castroneves was first in a race in one series and then last in his next race in a different series. Ah... The Split. You got to love it!

The following season saw Dario Franchitti win the first CART race in Montreal. In the next race at Denver, Franchitti was out on the opening lap due to the accident after Team Green teammate Paul Tracy slammed into Franchitti attempting a wishful pass up the inside. 

This is where Franchitti gets his own bit of history that Rasmussen could match at the 2026 St. Petersburg season opener. Franchitti then won the next race at Rockingham. So Franchitti went win, out without completing a lap and win in a three-race span. 

The most recent time prior to Rasmussen was in 2013. James Hinchcliffe won at Iowa. At the next race at Pocono, Hinchcliffe had an accident in turn one spinning all on his own after getting a little high after starting third. 

Here is another coincidental trend that Rasmussen is a part of after his Nashville result. 

Of the last five occasions where a driver has won a race and then finished last in the next race, four of those have been drivers coming off their first career victory. 

You have Rasmussen, and we have already covered the most recent occasion prior to Rasmussen was Power in 2019, but before Power was Colton Herta, who won his first career race at Austin earlier in that 2019 season and then Herta followed that with a last-place finish at Barber Motorsports Park.

Prior to Herta, Carlos Muñoz won the first race of the 2015 Belle Isle doubleheader only for his engine to fail five laps into the second race. Then you have Carlos Huertas, who infamously won the first Houston race in 2014, which was rain-shortened and Huertas had a fuel cell that was larger than regulations allowed, but in the second race at Houston, Huertas retired after two laps due to a mechanical issue.

If you go beyond Huertas, you have Hinchcliffe's Iowa/Pocono combo that we just mentioned but prior to Hinchcliffe, you also have James Hinchcliffe, who scored his first career victory at St. Petersburg to open the 2013 season only to finish last in the second race at Barber due to a loose wheel. So it has actually been the case that in five of the last seven occasions where a driver has gone from first to last in race results that the driver was coming off their first career victory.

This might be a trend to keep in mind moving forward.

Multiple Winners Outside the Championship Top Ten
Speaking of Rasmussen, he won the penultimate race, but he was 13th in the championship. Josef Newgarden was 12th in the championship, and Newgarden won the season finale.

It is not often we see multiple drivers win races and not finish in the top ten of the championship. When was the last time it happened? 

Well, it happened not that long ago in 2021. Rinus VeeKay won the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, but VeeKay ended up finishing 12th in the championship. Hélio Castroneves won the Indianapolis 500, but Castroneves was not full time in 2021. He only ran six races and he was 22nd in the championship.

So when was the last time two full-time drivers won a race and both finished outside the top ten in the championship? 

It still likely happened a little more recent than you would imagine. 

It was 2016. Alexander Rossi won the Indianapolis 500 and he ended up 11th in the championship, only two points outside the championship top ten. Sébastien Bourdais won the next race at Belle Isle, and Bourdais wound up 14th in the championship. Bourdais was 28 points outside the championship top ten.

This year, Newgarden was 40 points outside the championship top ten, and Rasmussen was 43 points off.

An Odd Rookie Class
For all the bright spots we can take from two of the three rookies this season, it was one of the most unproductive rookie classes in recent IndyCar history. It is difficult to call it the worst rookie class, but it has an argument.

For starters, this was the first time a rookie did not finish in the top 20 of the championship since 1986. Louis Foster was the top rookie in 23rd on 213 points, two points more than Robert Shwartzman in 24th. Jacob Abel scored 123 points over 16 starts, and Abel was 27th in the championship, 48 points behind the next closest driver. 

Despite all of that, two of these drivers won a pole position. Robert Shwartzman took pole position at the Indianapolis 500 and Louis Foster took pole position at Road America. We actually had multiple rookies score pole positions in 2019 with Felix Rosenqvist and Colton Herta, so it wasn't that long ago but it still rarely happens.

How about this? We had a rookie of the year with zero top ten finishes and he beat another driver who had multiple top ten finishes. 

When was the last time either occurred?

The answer is, of course, 1986. 

Dominic Dobson is credited as rookie of the year for the 1986 CART season. Dobson's best finish over nine starts was 11th at the Meadowlands. That earned him two points, combined with a point for 12th at Long Beach and Dobson finished 31st in the championship on three points. However, Dobson was not the top finishing rookie in points. In fact, he wasn't even second best.

Sports car driver Chip Robinson made two starts in the 1986 season with Dick Simon Racing. Robinson was 14th at the Meadowlands, but he finished the season with a seventh-place result in the 1986 finale at the Tamiani Park circuit in Miami. This earned Robinson six points. However, Mike Nish also made three start in the 1986 season, nearly two years removed from his first career start at Phoenix in October 1984. Nish was tenth in his first start at Portland, earning him three points. 

Robinson and Nish were 26th and 30th respectively in the championship. Nish was a spot better than Dobson on tiebreaker as Nish's best finish was tenth to Dobson's 11th. Robinson made three starts in the 1987 season and never raced in IndyCar again. Nish failed to qualify for the first two races of the 1987 season and never attempted another race after that.

Dobson would go on to attempt a race in each of the next eight seasons. He would not get a top ten finish until he was seventh at Detroit in 1989, his 19th career start. His best finish was third in the 1994 Michigan 500 driving for PacWest Racing. Dobson was tenth in his final career start, the 1994 finale at Laguna Seca.

Only time will tell how we will look back on the class of 2025. I am sure all three drivers hope to do more than what they achieved this year. 

No Repeat Finishes
When we last checked in on this in June, only two drivers were remaining after nine races, Scott Dixon and David Malukas. How far would they go?

Well, in the very next race, the tenth race of the season from Mid-Ohio, Malukas would finish 17th, his first repeat finish as he was 17th at Long Beach. Cross off Maluakas.

Dixon won Mid-Ohio, his first and only victory of the 2025 season. Dixon remained alive for another race.

At the first Iowa race, Dixon was tenth, and he finished tenth at Thermal Club in the second race of the season. Within two races, no drivers were left standing. Everyone had a repeat finish by the 11th race. 

Dixon's streak of ten consecutive different finishes to start a season was the fewest since Marcus Ericsson was the last one standing with a nine-race streak to start the 2019 season. The previous five seasons had all seen at least one driver make it 12 races repeat finish. This was the first season where Dixon was the last driver standing before a repeat finish.

Penalties
We do not talk about penalties much in IndyCar. We acknowledge them when warranted. This season saw a fair number of penalties we could not ignore, but there are plenty of penalties we brush off because Nolan Siegel running in 17th serving a penalty for running over the air hose on a pit stop doesn't really matter. 

There was something I noticed early on. In three of the first four races, there were no penalties. No drive-through penalties for speeding, no blocking penalties, no jumped restarts, nothing, nada occurred at St. Petersburg, Long Beach and Barber Motorsports Park. That would not stand, and every subsequent race would see at least one penalty occur. 

Based on IndyCar's box scores, the races with the most penalties were the Indianapolis 500 and Road America, as each had nine penalties. Indianapolis includes the three post-race penalties that saw Marcus Ericsson, Kyle Kirkwood and Callum Ilott effectively disqualified and moved to the final three spots in the classifications. 

In the first five races, three had no penalties, Thermal Club had four penalties and the Grand Prix of Indianapolis had three penalties. In the next four races, every race had at least seven penalties. Along with the post-race penalties after the Indianapolis 500, Detroit saw Santino Ferrucci penalized post-race 26 points for improper weight ballast instillation. 

There were 25 unique penalties this season in IndyCar and 66 penalties occurred over the 17 races.

The most common penalty was avoidable contact, which there were 11 of each violation over the 17 races. The most avoidable contact penalties came at Road America, which saw three. Only one driver had multiple avoidable contact penalties this season. That dubious honor belongs to David Malukas. Malukas was penalized for the contact with Palou at Detroit and then he picked up the second avoidable contact penalty on lap 38 at Road America.

Pit lane speeding violations and blocking were tied for the second most offenses in 2025. Each happened nine times. Almost half of the pit lane speeding penalties occurred at the Indianapolis 500. There were four during that race. 

Six of the nine blocking penalties came in two races. There was one block at Gateway (Nolan Siegel) and then three at Road America before we saw two at Portland and three in the Nashville season finale. 

The only other penalties that occurred more than five times this season was emergency service in a closed pit lane, which happened seven times. 

The most penalized driver was Devlin DeFrancesco, who took seven penalties this season. DeFrancesco's first infraction was avoidable contact at Thermal Club, which technical came before the race even began as the Canadian got into the side of Scott McLaughlin going through the final corners on the final pace laps.

Then at Detroit, DeFrancesco took two penalties, emergency service in a closed pit lane and causing an avoidable yellow flag. He had a block at Road America, another emergency service penalty at Mid-Ohio and then two blocking penalties at Portland. DeFrancesco was responsible for a third of the blocking penalties this season, and he was the only driver to receive multiple blocking penalties!

The only other drivers to have at least five penalties this season were Christian Rasmussen (two speeding penalties, two emergency service penalties and a failure to follow directions penalty), and Robert Shwartzman, but one of those wasn't really on Shwartzman because his penalty at Thermal Club was an unapproved modification to the fire suppression system. That is more on the team, and it only cost the team entrant points, not driver points. Shwartzman did fail to pack up in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, hit personnel in the pit lane in the Indianapolis 500, sped on pit lane in the second Iowa race and threw a block at the Nashville finale.

On two separate occasions this season did a driver get three penalties in a single race. At Gateway, Felix Rosenqvist received an unsafe release penalty on the pit lane. The punishment was a drive-through, but Rosenqvist decided to drop to the rear of the field thinking that would satisfy the demand. Since the Swede did not properly serve his penalty, he was handed a stop-and-go penalty for failing to follow directions. About 143 laps later, Rosenqvist had to take emergency service in a closed pit lane. 

Despite all of that, Rosenqvist was still leading with less than ten laps to go and one caution could have won him the race.

The other occasion involved Rinus VeeKay in the next race at Road America. VeeKay was handed a penalty for jumping the restart on lap seven. Two laps later, VeeKay got a penalty for receiving service in the pit lane before green flag conditions, and he got an avoidable contact penalty on lap 28 and was forced to drop three positions. I remember none of that from VeeKay's Road America race and he finished tenth despite those penalties!

Six of the full-time drivers did not receive a penalty throughout the 17 races. They would be Álex Palou, Patricio O'Ward, Josef Newgarden, Alexander Rossi, Graham Rahal and Sting Ray Robb. 

October Preview
There are a few European championships that will be decided shortly. One will be decided this weekend.

The Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters season ends at Hockenheim this weekend, and one of nine drivers could leave as champion. Lucas Auer leads on 171 points, seven points ahead of Jordan Pepper, 11 points ahead of René Rast, 16 points ahead of Maro Engel and 17 points ahead of Ayhancan Güven. 

Then you have Jack Aitken and Marco Wittmann tied and 21 points behind Auer. Thomas Peining is 25 points back and Jules Gounon is 29 points behind Auer with 56 points remaining on the table. 

Auer won two of the first three races and he has only finished on the podium twice since then. Pepper has one victory. Rast has won three times but he has also finished outside the top ten in as many races. Rast has the most podium finishes this season with five. Güven has the most victories this season with four, but he has five finishes outside the top ten and his victories are his only podium results. 

Reigning DTM champion Mirko Bortolotti is 15th in the championship and his best finish is sixth. 

The European Le Mans Series will go to its finale from Portimão on October 18 with the top three in the LMP2 championship separated by seven points. VDS Panis Racing has won twice with the #48 Oreca of Oliver Gray, Esteban Masson and Charles Milesi. IDEC Sport has won the other three races with Jamie Chadwick, Mathys Jaubert and Daniel Juncadella in the #18 Oreca. VDS Panis Racing has 81 points, six more IDEC Sport. The you have Inter Europol Competition, which has finished second in each of the last four races and it has #43 Oreca of Tom Dillman, Jakub Śmiechowski and Nick Yelloly six points back entering the finale. 

In LMGT3, seven teams could win the championship. AF Corse leads with Riccardo Agostini, Custodio Toledo and Lilou Wadoux on 66 points in the #50 Ferrari, 12 points clear of the #59 Racing Spirit of Léman Aston Martin of Erwan Bastard, Valentin Hasse-Clot and Clément Mateu. 

The other title hopefuls are the #82 TF Sport Corvette (52 points), the #57 Kessel Racing Ferrari (47 points), the #85 Iron Dames Porsche (46 points), the #55 Spirit of Race Ferrari (44 points) and the #86 GR Racing Ferrari (43 points).

The #50 Ferrari is the only team with multiple victories in the class. 

Other events of note in October
IMSA will also have its season close and a number of championships decided at Petit Le Mans.
The Bathurst 1000 takes place in two weeks. 
MotoGP has some dead-rubbers to run in the Asia-Pacific region. 
Toprak Razgatlioglu will likely claim another World Superbike championship.
Formula One has a night race in Singapore before coming to the United States and Mexico.
NASCAR has some races to run.
There will also be the Indianapolis 8 Hour to close out the Intercontinental GT Challenge season.


Monday, September 29, 2025

Musings From the Weekend: Contract Reform

Here is a rundown of what got me thinking...

All Marc Márquez needed was a pair of runner-up finishes in Motegi to clinch his seventh MotoGP championship and ninth world championship overall. Max Verstappen won on the Nürburgring Nordschleife on GT3 debut in the Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie with co-driver Chris Lulham. Elsewhere, Fuji provided a rather compelling endurance race. NASCAR is having a bit of an existential crisis. Mick Schumacher will test an IndyCar with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course on October, which we should talk about at some point, but an IndyCar contractual situation has my attention.

Contract Reform
We know most of IndyCar silly season is over. All the big seats have been filled. All that is remaining is the third seat at Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, the second Dale Coyne Racing season and the second Juncos Hollinger Racing seat. The big dominoes have fallen. The ones that towered the most over the 2025 season are taken care of, but while "t's" are crossed, "i's" are dotted and ink has dried on the paper, the drama isn't necessarily over. 

We know Will Power is leaving Team Penske, and Power has joined the Andretti Global organization for the 2026 season. With Power leaving Penske, this has opened the door for David Malukas to join Team Penske. That is pretty straightforward, but what we have learned is while Will Power not returning to Team Penske, he is not out of contract with the team. Power's contract runs through December 31, 2025, and Team Penske is making Power honor every day of it. 

It isn't that Team Penske is keeping Power busy and having him test dampers or run the simulator. Power isn't running Petit Le Mans as a third driver in the Porsche program. He isn't running the NASCAR race from the Charlotte roval next week as well as Homestead, Martinsville and Phoenix. Power isn't going to be doing anything for Team Penske. Team Penske has decided it will not led Power do anything, which means not letting him get a head start on 2026 with his new team.

In terms of the contract, Team Penske is not doing anything wrong, but it is neglecting some of the sportsmanship decisions made within IndyCar when it comes to offseason driver changes. It is not uncommon for a driver to be released early from his contract if the team and driver are not remaining together for the next season. The season is over, no more races will be run, and it makes sense for two parties to move on. Why make a driver wait through the rest of the calendar year if both parties have already agreed to part? That driver is then free to go and begin the next chapter. The team is free to do the same. 

In this case, Penske is choosing to exercise its right and enforce the contract to the last second of the agreement, but it does paint a very one-sided picture in terms of power within the paddock. 

While Team Penske is keeping Will Power sidelined for three-plus months, we will likely see David Malukas on track in a Team Penske car during testing over the final months of 2025. Whether or not Malukas' contract ran through December 31, 2025 or not is unknown, but Penske could be benefitting from A.J. Foyt Racing choosing to do what Penske has not done for Power.

It should also be pointed out that Team Penske very well could be taking advantage of a situation it orchestrated and made sure David Malukas' contract would not prevent him from experiencing any delays when it came to joining the Penske program. Penske made sure it could win out in both scenarios. 

This is a bit of a problem, especially where a few big teams can take advantage of the smaller competition. If drivers are signing contracts that are part technical alliances, you could see teams dictating the future for drivers who are not even racing for them and manipulate it so the teams have the most favorable terms. The Malukas/Penske scenario is no different from what we will see with Dennis Hauger joining Dale Coyne Racing with the Andretti Global partnership or what we see with Marcus Armstrong racing for Meyer Shank Racing under its Chip Ganassi Racing partnership. 

Andretti is going to decide what is best for Hauger, not Coyne even though the Norwegian will be driving for Coyne. The day Andretti wants Hauger, it will get Hauger.

You can argue that has long been the way driver contracts have been handled, and if those were the terms agreed upon from all sides than there is nothing wrong with them, but IndyCar can decide to have a more balanced landscape for drivers and teams. 

It doesn't look good when one set of drivers are held to one standard and others are held to another, especially when it appears one team is pulling the strings for multiple organizations. The tough thing about motorsports is uniformity is difficult to agree upon, hence the landscape we have today. However, IndyCar can set a standard that would be better for everyone in the series, drivers and teams.

IndyCar should step in set a standard where all drivers are free of their contracts at the same time. We see it in other sports. Free agency begins at a set time. Teams and players may start negotiating at a different time. It isn't a case where one player becomes a free agent the second after the season ends and another player has to wait three months to sign a contract. It is fair for everyone.

You may say that is harder for a series like IndyCar to enforce, but I would argue IndyCar has never been better set for it and that is due to the charter system. With IndyCar having 25 charter entries that award teams a certain cut of the prize money, a chance at the Leader Circle program, while also guaranteeing these cars will start every race with the cap at 27 starters at all races outside the Indianapolis 500, IndyCar has a mechanism it can use to create a uniform date for the end of a contract. 

A term of the charter agreement between the teams and the series can be that any driver contract for a charter entry will end 30 days after the final race of the season. Everyone would be playing to the same rules. It would eliminate the possibility that one driver could sign at midnight, just hours after the season finale has ended, and then be in a car for his new team testing the next day while another driver might be able to sign but cannot do anything with his new team for three-to-four months. 

This would be better for everyone. A driver will know when he or she can start working with their new team. A team will known when it will have its desired driver first available. It could also be good for the teams to talk to drivers and not rush into a decision, and it could be good for the drivers as they could go through a negotiating period knowing no one can start any earlier than them. For that first month of the offseason, testing could be paused to make sure no team is gaining an advantage nor would contracted drivers be able to get extra seat time.

This could actually create a free agency period of sorts. We kind of saw it this entire month where every week of September had another bit of driver news come out as a few spots on the grid were determined. It kept things busy though there were no races. I don't think it would be a bad thing for IndyCar if there was a month where drivers were talking to teams and we had a consistent news cycle in the month after a season has concluded. 

It would be different for IndyCar, and frankly motorsports in general, but I think it would benefit everyone. There are grey areas. How would this work for Prema since neither of its cars have charters? What about Indianapolis 500-only entries? What about any new team that wishes to join the series? What about charters that change hands? There are obviously things that would need ironing out. 

There is also the legal aspect of what this means for the drivers. The drivers are not unionized. They do not have the same protections. Is there a way this uniformed end date for a contract could hurt them and would the drivers even want it? It is not as simple as a snap of the fingers and everything is perfect, but it would at least be better than what we have now.

The teams should not have this much power where it can force one driver to honor a contract while also benefitting from another driver being granted an early release. The standards should be the same for all, and it would benefit everyone if that was the case. IndyCar has a chance to set a standard using the apparatus that already exists. It would be wise to do so...

But we must remember this is a series that is owned by Roger Penske, and despite everything that is said when it comes to avoiding conflict of interests, do we really think Penske would go this far to implement an agreement that would hurt his own team? Even if it was for the better of everyone and better in term of fairness? 

Let's be honest, do we really expect the series, which is run by a team owner, to do something that is best for the drivers? There is that conflict of interests again. 

Damn! We could have had something good.

Winners From the Weekend
You know about Marc Márquez, Max Verstappen and Chris Lulham, but did you know...

Francesco Bagnaia won MotoGP's Japanese Grand Prix, his second victory of the season. Bagnaia also won the sprint race. Daniel Holgado won in Moto2, his second victory in three races. David Muñoz won in Moto3, his third victory of the season.

The #35 Alpine of Paul-Loup Chatin, Ferdinand Habsburg and Charles Milesi won the 6 Hours of Fuji. The #81 TF Sport Corvette of Rui Andrade, Charlies Eastwood and Tom van Rompuy won in LMGT3.

Chase Elliott won the NASCAR Cup race from Kansas, his second career victory. Brandon Jones won the Grand National Series race, his second victory of the season.

Toprak Razgatlioglu (race one) and Nicolò Bulega (SuperPole race and race two) split the World Superbike races from Aragón. Valentin Debise and Can Öncü split the World Supersport races.

Coming Up This Weekend
MotoGP travels down to Mandilika.
Formula One will be a few islands over in Singapore.
The Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters season will end at Hockenheim.
NASCAR ends the second round of the playoffs on the Charlotte roval.