Showing posts with label SFHR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SFHR. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Wednesday Wrap-Up: Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing's 2014 Season

Halfway through the 2014 Verizon IndyCar Series team reviews has brought us to Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing and Josef Newgarden. The pairing made great strides in Newgarden's sophomore season in 2013 with the Tennesseean earning his first career podium at Baltimore as well as four top fives and seven top tens after his best finish in his rookie season was eleventh. The 2014 season had a lull in May and June but they turned it around as the summer wore on.

Josef Newgarden started slow in 2014 but ended strong.
Josef Newgarden
Newgarden started 2014 with a ninth place finish at St. Petersburg after starting last on the grid in 22nd. He had a career day going at Long Beach where it appeared he was going to be in serious contention for his first career victory. He was able to get out ahead of Ryan Hunter-Reay, James Hinchcliffe and Will Power on a pit cycle and was in position to claim the lead once everyone had made their stops but Hunter-Reay attempted a bold pass on the inside of turn four and ruined his day as well as Newgarden's and about a half a dozen other drivers. Newgarden would recover at Barber with an eighth place finish after starting fourth.

His month of May wasn't spectacular but it had it's moments. He was average in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis finishing 17th. In Indianapolis 500 qualifying, he ended up eighth on both day one and day two, his second career top ten start in his third appearance for the famed event. During the race he started well but ran out of fuel coming into the pit lane and like Tony Kanaan lost many laps due to it. The dagger to the heart that ended his day was Martin Plowman running into the back of Newgarden when he slowed for the caution that Scott Dixon brought out.

His struggles carried over to Detroit where accidents in each day, one on his own, the other caused by Will Power. Texas was a step in the right direction but could have been better after he started second but slides back to 11th, one lap down. Houston capped off a rough stretch of races with a mechanical failure in race one and a brakes issue in race two gave him a pair of 20th place finishes heading into the second half of 2014.

Needing to make his own luck, Newgarden turned an average day at Pocono into a top ten with an eighth place finish. After deciding to stretch fuel mileage and despite starting dead last, Newgarden found himself leading with thirteen to go but had to stop with six to go. At Iowa, he once again had to make his own luck. While the leaders Kanaan, Dixon, Ed Carpenter, Hélio Castroneves and Power stayed out on the final caution, Newgarden took tires, as did Hunter-Reay and Graham Rahal and all three finished much better than they would have had Juan Pablo Montoya and Carpenter not gotten together. Hunter-Reay beat Newgarden out of the pit lane and held off Newgarden by just over a half second after the two blew by the Target Ganassi duo as Newgarden was able to pick up his second career podium and first on an oval.

He was on the verge of a top ten in race one at Toronto but locked up the tires heading into turn three and blew the corner. When he tried to get back into the race, he smacked the barrier, adding insult to injury. He was running in the top five in race two but was a sitting duck on wet tires and came home 13th. At Mid-Ohio, Newgarden had another career day. He started second and was on the back of pole-sitter Sébastien Bourdais all day. He was in contention until a sloppy pit stop caused a penalty for running over the air hose and dropped them to 12th in the final results while Scott Dixon performed a masterpiece, stretched fuel to win from 22nd on the grid and Bourdais finished second.

At Milwaukee, Newgarden had to pit late for fuel but on fresh tires was able to go from 12th to fifth after making up a lap on his own under green flag conditions. He started second for the third time in 2014 at Sonoma but fell to sixth in final results which could have been a few positions worse had Will Power not spun on his own. He qualified third for Fontana and ran well all night in the season finale before slipping to tenth.

Josef Newgarden's 2014 Statistics
Championship Positions: 13th (406 points)
Wins: 0
Podiums: 1
Top Fives: 2
Top Tens: 7
Laps Led: 14
Poles: 0
Fast Sixes: 4
Fast Twelves: 5
Average Start: 10.588 (10th)
Average Finish: 13.722 (18th)

Josef Newgarden ended 2014 strong as he and SFHR head to new terrain after merging with Ed Carpenter Racing. Being a Chevrolet team may benefit the American as the American manufacture ended 2014 winning the final six races. He has been making strides but the clock is ticking.

He has made 51 starts in his IndyCar career. Only 25 drivers have won their first career race after making their 51st start. Of those 25, eight only won once in their career (note: Takuma Sato is one of those drivers and is still active) and those 25 combine for 87 career victories. The average amount of victories for a driver to take more that 52 starts to get their first career victory is 6.69. Only one of those drivers reached double-digit career victories (Jimmy Vasser won ten races after taking 56 starts to get his first). And possibly most importantly only three of those 25 drivers are Indianapolis 500 winners (Eddie Cheever, Arie Luyendyk and Buddy Lazier).

Merging with Ed Carpenter Racing puts the pressure on Newgarden to win after Carpenter and Mike Conway combined for three victories in 2014. There is no reason why Newgarden shouldn't get a victory in 2015. The resources are there and it appears he will have two competent teammates to help him out. After getting by for three years as the likable driver on the little team pinching pennies to get by, it is time to be more stern on him. It is time for him to get into victory lane.


Thursday, March 13, 2014

2014 Verizon IndyCar Series Team-By-Team Preview: Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing

The second of our twelve-part, team-by-team preview for the 2014 IndyCar season takes a look at our first Honda-powered team and that would be Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing.

2013 Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing Review:
Wins: 0
Best Finish: 2nd (Baltimore).
Poles: 0
Best Start: 5th (Baltimore).
Final Championship Position: 14th (Josef Newgarden). 36th (Lucas Luhr).

2014 Driver:

Josef Newgarden
The Tennessean returns for his third season with SFHR. After a rookie season that showed a lot of promise but little results in 2012, Newgarden made great strides in 2013 by scoring his first career podium, top five and top ten finishes. The 2011 Indy Lights champion was in contention for a few race wins with two races that stand out being São Paulo but an aggressive Takuma Sato and hard-charging James Hinchcliffe prevented Newgarden from getting his first career win and Baltimore where he battled Simon Pagenaud but ultimately the Frenchman had the better car, pulled away and took victory. Newgarden was able to finish fourteenth in the final championship standings ahead of the likes of Ed Carpenter, race-winner Takuma Sato and both Rahal Letterman Lanigan drivers, Graham Rahal and James Jakes.

Numbers to Remember: 51 and 25. The amount of career IndyCar starts Newgarden will have should he start all 18 IndyCar races in 2014. The amount of drivers who took more than 51 starts to score their first career victory. This includes the likes of Ed Carpenter, Oriol Servià, Eddie Cheever, Bryan Herta, Scott Pruett, Maurício Gugelmin, Roger McCluskey, Max Papis, Buddy Lazier, Jimmy Vasser, Scott Goodyear and Takuma Sato.

Prediction/Goals: The goal should be top ten in points. It's going to be difficult considering the depth of the IndyCar grid and the loss of chief engineer Nathan O'Rourke to Andretti Autosport. The one place Newgarden has to improve on is qualifying. He had only three top ten starts in 2013 and while he has shown the ability to go from the back to the front (22nd to 9th at Barber, 25th to 5th at São Paulo, 24th to 7th at Belle Isle 1, 15th to 5th at Pocono, 18th to 5th at Houston 1) common sense tells you starting up front puts you in better position for finishes up front.

I don't see Newgarden winning a race in 2014 but he will be in contention for a top ten finish in the championship entering Fontana.

Alex Tagliani
Announced this morning, 2011 Indianapolis 500 pole-sitter, Alex Tagliani will drive the #68 SFHR/RW Motorsports Dallara-Honda for the Indianapolis 500. Tagliani lost his Bryan Herta Autosport ride midseason in 2013 after a rough season. The French-Canadian driver was brought in at the end of the 2013 season to substitute for an injured Dario Franchitti at the Fontana season finale for Ganassi Racing where Tagliani qualified thirteenth, started twenty-first after a penalty for an engine change and led five laps before retiring after a spin off of turn two.

Number to Remember: 12.2. Average starting position for Tagliani in five Indianapolis 500 starts. And if you drop the 33rd starting position in 2009 after he took over Bruno Junqueira's ride, his averaging starting position is 7th.

Prediction/Goals: One goal would be for Tagliani to turn this one-off into more races and at least the Toronto doubleheader. SFHR has had fast cars at Indianapolis the last few years and Tagliani has a good track record qualifying for the Indianapolis 500. He will start in the first four rows and complete every lap.

Keep an eye out for the third team preview tomorrow. A hint: The team owner is an IndyCar race winning driver. Remember, the first round of the 2014 IndyCar Series season is the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg and can be seen live March 30th at 3:30 p.m. ET on ABC.