Sunday, April 10, 2022

First Impressions: Long Beach 2022

1. This was actually a very impressive day for Josef Newgarden, and he did more work than most race winners who spent nearly every lap in one of the top two positions. 

For a driver who lost ground but didn't lose any positions after his first pit stop, Newgarden quietly had a comeback. He was set in second in the opening stint behind Colton Herta, not challenging but not terribly far off. And when the pit stop sequence was complete, Newgarden was second behind Álex Palou, how was third prior to the stops. 

Newgarden's team didn't have a great pit stop, but it wasn't a poor stop either. Palou's team was on it. It could have been one of those days where Newgarden was set to finish second, not bad in terms of the championship, but not what a driver would like. In the second stint of this race, Newgarden kept it close again. He didn't let Palou pull away and when it was time for the second and final pit stop, the Penske crew nailed it. He leap-frogged back ahead of Palou and into the lead.

In the closing laps, it was a new challenger, as Romain Grosjean rocketed forward on the alternate tire, but Newgarden held off a few attempted overtakes. Newgarden didn't put a wheel wrong all race, and after an offensive victory in Texas, Newgarden showed his all-around talent defending the lead in the closing stages. After a dreadful St. Petersburg season opener, two consecutive victories has Newgarden back on top, a good position for him and difficult for the rest of the field.

2. Romain Grosjean looked competitive all weekend, but never quite put himself on top. His qualifying accident cost him at least a front row start, and he was mostly in the middle of the top ten for the first half of the race. The cautions got him back into the battle, and Marcus Ericsson slapping the wall after the lap 67 restart gifted Grosjean a position, but Grosjean got around Palou and pressured Newgarden. 

This turned into an old school race as both Newgarden and Grosjean were out of push-to-pass with more than 10 laps to go and Palou only had a few seconds left. It came down to tire life and skill. Grosjean's alternate tire didn't quite have the life in the closing laps, but it still got him second. Good for Grosjean, and it papers over what was another lackluster day for Andretti Autosport.

3. Álex Palou had another under-appreciated drive. Palou was not mentioned for the race lead during that first cycle, but the team had an incredible stop, and he was over three seconds clear ahead of Newgarden and Herta. Palou didn't pull away though. He settled in and Newgarden and Herta actually closed in over that stint. Newgarden only barely beat Palou out of the pit lane. A tenth of a second slower for Newgarden and we are likely talking about a Palou victory. It is a net loss day in points for Palou considering how many laps he led, but this is how Palou won his championship last year. He isn't going anywhere.

4. I am not sure Will Power was mentioned once outside of when he led during the first pit cycle and late when it was noted he was fourth and had the most push-to-pass left. Power is driving smart, and he has three top five finishes through three races. This could be an "old-hat" championship where Power isn't going to light the world on fire and take the title, but he will quietly pile up top five finishes, get a few victories fall his way and suffocate the competition with his consistency.

5. Patricio O'Ward pulled off a few good moves to get to fifth, ending what is one of the few slumps he has had in his young IndyCar career. He had to put in some work to get into the top ten. More consistent pace over an entire stint went in his favor. He benefitted from a few retirements, but he was still going to be in the top ten and maybe pushing for a top five today.

6. Scott Dixon had to go off strategy early and it got him in the top five because he had clear air. He had to conserve fuel over the middle of the race, which might have cost him, but he remained at the front, and survived bouncing off his damaged teammate Ericsson after the Swede hit the barrier to finish sixth. Dixon has these races all the time, no surprise he went from 16th to sixth, but the next race will be exactly one year after his most recent victory. He is due.

7. Stop if you have heard this before: Graham Rahal failed to advance from the first round of qualifying but finished seventh. Oh? This happens about six times a season? Yeah, it does. Rahal does this all the time. He doesn't do anything foolish, makes a few moves and has us all wondering where he would finish if the team had competitive qualifying pace. Three races in and Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing has a combined zero top ten start, but it has had a top ten finisher in every race this season. Go figure. 

8. Stop if you have heard this before: Alexander Rossi was in the back half of the top ten, but he spent the first portion of the race in the top five only to lose ground because his tire management is putrid. Oh? This happens about six times a season? Yeah, it does. Rossi didn't have the pace on the alternate tire at the end of the first stint. He stopped earlier than the leaders and lost ground. Tire preservation has been the one thing Rossi has not improved on in his IndyCar career, and it is a damn shame. It is one of the things that has kept him from victory since June 2019. 

9. Hélio Castroneves was ninth. He did nothing flashy, didn't make a breath-taking pass, but he drove a smart race. When you have made 360 IndyCar starts, Castroneves can pull this race out of his back pocket and leave us applauding the veteran.

10. How about a first career top ten finish for Kyle Kirkwood? Kirkwood was between tenth and 13th all race. For a rookie that is driving for A.J. Foyt Racing, this is a wonderful day. Everyone should be happy. 

11. Alexander Rossi's day was ruined because of poor balance on the alternate tire, but Felix Rosenqvist's balance was worse. Rosenqvist was hanging on in that opening stint, and actually holding up Rossi. Rossi made a daring pass with slight contact with Rosenqvist. It didn't appear like either car was damaged, but that started the free fall for Rosenqvist. He went from the top five to outside the top ten before making his first pit stop. Rosenqvist recovered for 11th, but this was far from a good day. 

12. Ed Carpenter Racing is average. Conor Daly was 12th, which is where he was all race, and that means it is a bad thing that he finished 12th, because when leaders were falling out of the race Daly wasn't making up positions, they were only offsetting the spots Daly was dropping. Rinus VeeKay had to make a pit stop late, and he got back to 13th, but this feels like an underwhelming result for VeeKay. 

13. Scott McLaughlin started on the primary tire, the top starter to do so, it didn't look like a bad strategy, but he clipped the wall in the hairpin and that spun him. The spin only really cost McLaughlin a position on track, but he never showed great competitiveness in this race and kept falling backward. With the amount of attrition, McLaughlin was able to finish 14th and only finds himself five points behind Newgarden in the championship. It will be key seeing how McLaughlin responds. He was on top of the world in the first two races. Now, he has work to do. 

14. Jack Harvey was in the middle of the field all race. Never a threat and he finished 14th. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing has to speed to find across the board, but Harvey needs better showings. 

15. Through the field: Tatiana Calderón was 16th and that happens when seven cars get into accidents. Calderón didn't get into an accident and despite her slowness, it netted her a better result. Takuma Sato ended up in the turn eight tires on the penultimate lap when Rinus VeeKay passed him. There didn't appear to be any contact. I think VeeKay made a good pass, caught out Sato and Sato went wide. Sato's accident did mean the race ended under caution and now we have to endure a week of "should races end under caution?" think pieces. I guess we are all losers in that one. 

Christian Lundgaard went off the lead lap early with some kind of mechanical issue and he managed to pull out an 18th-place finish. 

Simon Pagenaud went backward this weekend. From topping the first practice session to 19th, Pagenaud had a slow first pit stop, it sent him back a few spots and then Pagenaud went into the flowerbed racing side-by-side with Sato into the fountain section. Not a good day for him.

16. Jimmie Johnson had four accidents in five sessions this weekend. Racing with a fractured right hand, I am not sure Johnson would have been in this race if he was another driver. If a 20-year-old had the first three sessions that Johnson had, I think the team would have sat the young driver for his own protection and found a veteran for this race. There were plenty of veterans around. Chip Ganassi Racing had Sébastien Bourdais at the track and winning in IMSA. 

It felt like Johnson was in harm's way. He is already one of the slowest drivers in the series and driving injured wasn't doing any favors to Johnson or the rest of the field. I understand he is trying IndyCar, and for all his mistakes, Johnson is admirable for taking on this challenge, but it would have been better to let him rest today and not driven battered. 

Also caught up in the Johnson incident in turn eight was David Malukas. Dale Coyne Racing did not look good today, and Malukas' penalty for improper pit lane exit did not help. 

17. Just when Marcus Ericsson was receiving praise, and he was worthy of it, Ericsson slaps the barrier exiting turn four. It must be something with Long Beach because in three races Ericsson has finished outside the top 20 each race. He looked good, but was a distance off Palou, Newgarden and Herta. However, Ericsson had breathing room to the rest of the field. This should have been a top five finish. 

18. Colton Herta has another race he throws away, but this isn't entirely on Herta. Yes, he smacked the barrier entering turn nine while a lap or so away from making his final stop of the race, but Herta was third after dominating the first third of the race because of a slow pit stop. Herta's first stop was a second slower than Newgarden and two seconds slower than Palou's. If the team has a respectable stop, he likely isn't chasing the lead and might be controlling the race. 

Andretti Autosport already has plenty of strategy issues, but slow pit stops and other miscues in the pit box is setting them further behind. Herta overstepped it, but like Nashville last year, he was forced to be on edge. Andretti Autosport has a lot to clean up. 

19. Final three spots: Callum Ilott pulled off course after 55 laps for an unannounced problem. This has been common for Juncos Hollinger Racing since it returned to competition at the end of 2021. Devlin DeFrancesco smacked the turn nine barrier on fresh tires. Dalton Kellett walloped the turn one barrier after five laps. Not a great race for Canada. 

20. During the race, Simon Pagenaud expressed concern for the marbles on the track. The track looked rough. Marbles littered the circuit in every corner. Pagenaud called for a caution. That seems extreme but think of it this way: If the track was coming apart or if it was raining and puddles were forming, race control would call a caution for track conditions. 

Should a caution be called for track conditions if there are excess marbles? It hasn't been done before, and I think most would not be in favor of it, but it isn't that dissimilar to asphalt coming up or puddles. Unsuitable track conditions are unsuitable track conditions. We didn't hear any other drivers express concern, but maybe more agreed with Pagenaud than we realize. 

21. There were many historic Long Beach videos posted ahead of this race. You cannot help but notice how the track has changed over the years, and in the Formula One clips you can tell how much further the hairpin was down Shoreline Drive. Could we move the hairpin back? One, it would make the hairpin an actual corner where cars could pass. Two, we could have the entire field on the front straightaway for the start instead of only the top eight side-by-side with 18 other cars single-file. It would also make turn one a better passing zone. 

This shorter hairpin has been in use for every IndyCar race. IndyCar never ran the longer straightaways into the hairpin like Formula One did. I think IndyCar and Long Beach organizers should look into this. I am sure paddock support for it would be near unanimous. 

22. Another three week break for IndyCar. At least these breaks are consistent. There will be testing at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in about ten days. That will keep us busy until Barber Motorsports Park.



Saturday, April 9, 2022

Morning Warm-Up: Long Beach 2022

Last year, Colton Herta led 43 laps from 14th position last year on his way to his first Long beach victory. This year, Herta will have less work to do to get to the lead, as the California-native won pole position with a lap at 65.3095 seconds in the final round of qualifying. It is Herta's eighth career pole position and he has won from pole position four times in his career. Herta has won the last three IndyCar races to take place in California. Herta could become the eighth driver to win consecutive Long Beach races.

Josef Newgarden makes it an all-American row one, but Newgarden was 0.4455 seconds off Herta's pole-winning time. The only time Newgarden has won consecutive races in his IndyCar career was at Toronto and Mid-Ohio in 2017. He has been runner-up in the last two Long Beach races and on the podium in three of the last four Long Beach visits. 

Álex Palou enters Long Beach third in the championship, and Palou will start third, his best starting position of the 2022 season. The 2021 champion was 0.5572 seconds off Herta's pole time. Palou has five consecutive top ten finishes, the longest top ten streak of his career. Third starting position has produced five Long Beach winners, including two Chip Ganassi Racing Long Beach winners. 

Felix Rosenqvist ended up fourth, 0.6254 seconds behind Herta. This is the second consecutive race Rosenqvist has started in the top five, the first time he has had consecutive top five starting position since the first two races of his career in 2020. Rosenqvist had three top five finishes in his first five IndyCar street course starts. In his last six IndyCar street course starts, he has zero top five finishes and only one top ten finish, eighth last year at Nashville. 

Alexander Rossi will be making his 100th start this weekend from fifth on the grid, and Rossi enters in the worst championship position of his career in 27th. This is only the third time Rossi has been outside the top twenty in the championship in his career. The other two races were after the 2020 Grand Prix of Indianapolis and the following race at Road America. Rossi was 0.7579 seconds behind Herta in the Fast Six, but Rossi was only 0.1718 seconds off Herta in the Fast 12. 

Romain Grosjean's hopes of a pole position were dashed when he got into the barrier during his qualifying run in the Fast Six, deleting his fastest two laps and relegating him to sixth on the grid. Grosjean topped the pre-qualifying practice session. His most recent street course victory was June 25, 2011 in the GP2 Series feature race on the Valencia street course.

Will Power missed out on the Fast Six by 0.0001 seconds. If Will Power takes the green flag, it will be his 16th consecutive Grand Prix of Long Beach start, which would be a new record, breaking a tie with Bobby Rahal, Al Unser, Jr. and Jimmy Vasser. Power would be tied for the fifth-most Long Beach starts with Vasser on 16 starts. The only time Power has won from seventh on the grid was the 2007 Toronto race, Power's second career victory.

Car #8 will start eighth, as Marcus Ericsson will be to the outside of Will Power at the start. The Swede was 0.0803 seconds outside the Fast Six. Ericsson has 11 top ten finishes in his last 12 starts. He had 15 top ten finishes in his first 35 career starts. He has failed to finish on the lead lap in his previous two Long Beach starts. 

Championship leader Scott McLaughlin will roll off from ninth on the grid. McLaughlin has opened the season with a first-place finish and a runner-up finish. The last driver to open the season with a first-place finish and a runner-up finish was Josef Newgarden in 2019. Newgarden won the championship that season. With his runner-up finish in Texas, McLaughlin became the 13th driver to open the season with a first and a second since 1946. The bad news is only four of those previous 12 occasions saw that driver win the championship. Besides Newgarden, the other three are Johnnie Parsons in 1949, Bill Sweikert in 1955 and Will Power in 2014.

Simon Pagenaud rounds out the top ten. Pagenaud topped the opening practice session on Friday. He has six top five finishes in ten Long Beach starts. He has only led in two of those Long Beach starts, 26 led in 2012 on his way to finishing second, his first career IndyCar podium finish, and 28 laps in 2016 on his way to victory.

Patricio O'Ward starts 11th, his worst starting position at Long Beach. O'Ward has started in the top ten in his first two Long Beach starts, however he finished outside the top ten in both those races. O'Ward enters with three consecutive finishes outside the top ten. The only time he has failed to pick up a top ten finish in four consecutive IndyCar starts were his final three starts in 2019 and the 2020 Texas season opener.

Kyle Kirkwood advanced from round one and he will start 12th, matching his career best IndyCar start. Kirkwood won three of four street course races in Indy Lights last year, including a sweep of the Belle Isle doubleheader. He also has three Toronto victories between U.S. F2000 and Indy Pro 2000, and Kirkwood won on his U.S. F2000 debut at St. Petersburg in 2018.

Graham Rahal was over a tenth off of advancing out of round one and he will start 13th. This will be Rahal's 15th Long Beach start, matching his father Bobby's number of Long Beach starts. Bobby Rahal never won at Long Beach, but he had four runner-up finishes. Bobby Rahal led only one lap at Long Beach. Graham Rahal has led four laps at Long Beach. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing has not had a top ten starter through three races this season. 

Hélio Castronveves joins Rahal on row seven after falling 0.0686 seconds off advancing. Castroneves has not had a top ten finish in his last six starts, matching the six start drought he had from the 2018 Indianapolis 500 through the second race of the 2020 Harvest Grand Prix weekend. He ended that drought with his Indianapolis 500 victory last year.  The only time Castroneves has gone seven races without a top ten finish was from Michigan to Surfers Paradise in 1998, starts #12 through #18 in Castroneves career. This weekend marks Castroneves' 360th start. 

Rinus VeeKay will be on the inside of row eight. VeeKay's 2022 season has a near identical opening to his 2021 season. Last year, he opened with a sixth and a ninth. This year, he has opened with a sixth and a tenth. Ed Carpenter Racing has not had a top ten finisher in the last three Long Beach races.

Scott Dixon starts 16th, his worst starting position at Long Beach in nine years. Dixon had started on one of the first two rows in six consecutive Long Beach races. He has won the third race of the season the last two seasons and he has finished on the podium in the third race of the season in seven of the last eight seasons, which includes another victory, and that was the 2015 Long Beach race.

Conor Daly ended up 17th in qualifying. This is Daly's seventh consecutive race starting outside the top fifteen and ninth time in the last ten races. Daly won the 2011 Indy Lights race at Long Beach. It is Daly's most recent victory in the United States. Daly is only of three drivers entered in this race that have won in Indy Lights at Long Beach. The others are Hélio Castroneves and Scott Dixon.

David Malukas makes his Long Beach debut from 18th on the grid, a career-best for the rookie. Malukas was on the podium in three of four street course starts last year in Indy Lights, one of which was a victory at. St. Petersburg.

Christian Lundgaard ended up 19th in qualifying and he leads an all-Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing row ten. Lundgaard's best street course finish in two Formula Two seasons was sixth in the first Jeddah sprint race last year. 

In 20th position is Jack Harvey, his fifth consecutive race starting 20th or worse. Harvey is returning after missing the Texas race due to a practice accident. He had started 33 consecutive races prior to that. 

Callum Ilott will start 21st, three spots worse than Ilott's Long Beach debut last September. This will be the first track Ilott has visited for a second time in his IndyCar career. He has reset his personal best finish in each race this season. His 16th-place result at Texas was the best for Juncos Hollinger Racing since René Binder was 16th in the 2018 Barber race. 

Takuma Sato ended up 22nd on the grid, matching his worst Long Beach starting position. Sato started 22nd in 2011 and 2018. In both those races, he went on to finish 21st. Sato has won the third race of the season twice in his career, his first career victory at Long Beach in 2013 and the 2019 Barber race. 

Devlin DeFrancesco was handed a six-grid spot penalty for his avoidable contact incident at Texas. After the penalty, DeFrancesco will start 23rd. He has finished outside the top twenty in the first two races of the season. He is the only driver to have started both races and not finished in the top twenty. The last champion to open the season with consecutive finishes outside the top twenty was Greg Ray in 1999. Only five champions since 1946 opened the season with a finish outside the top twenty.

Dalton Kellett makes it an all-Canadian row 12 in the #4 A.J. Foyt Racing Chevrolet. Kellett completed all 85 laps in last year's Long Beach race. It is the only time he has finished on the lead lap in a street race in his IndyCar career. 

Jimmie Johnson suffered a broken hand in a practice accident on Friday, but he intends to start this race. It will be from 25th on the grid after causing a red flag in his qualifying group, negating his fastest two laps. Johnson's average finish in six street course starts is 23.833 with five finishes outside the top twenty. 

Tatiana Calderón rounds out the grid in 26th. Calderón will become the first woman to start a Long Beach race since Simona de Silvestro and Ana Beatriz ran in 2013. De Silvestro was ninth in that race while Beatriz was 14th. The only top five finish for a woman at Long Beach was Danica Patrick in fourth in the 2009 race.

NBC's coverage of the 47th Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach begins at 3:00 p.m. ET with green flag scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET. The race is scheduled for 85 laps. 


Thursday, April 7, 2022

Track Walk: Long Beach 2022

The third round of the 2022 NTT IndyCar Series season will be the 47th Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach. Long Beach returns to April after closing out the 2021 season in September due to delays because of the pandemic. Chevrolet has opened the 2022 season with a pair of victories, but the American manufacture has not won at Long Beach since 2016. Chevrolet's early success has it leading the manufactures' championship with 187 points, 50 points clear of Honda. Chevrolet has not won three consecutive races since the final three races of 2020. All three of those victories went to a Team Penske driver, and currently Team Penske is leading the way having won the first two races of the 2022 season.

Coverage
Time: Coverage begins at 3:00 p.m. ET on Sunday April 10 with green flag scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET.
Channel: NBC
Announcers: Leigh Diffey, Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe will be in the booth. Marty Snider, Kevin Lee and Dave Burns will work pit lane.

IndyCar Weekend Schedule
Friday:
First Practice: 6:15 p.m. ET (60 minutes)
Saturday:
Second Practice: 11:45 a.m. ET (60 minutes)
Qualifying: 3:00 p.m. ET 
Sunday:
Warm-up: 12:00 p.m. ET (30 minutes)
Race: 3:30 p.m. ET (85 laps)

* - All sessions will be available live on Peacock

Penske Leading the Way
Two races in and there have been two victories for Team Penske. That may sound like a normal occurrence for Team Penske, but this year has started much better than last year. 

Team Penske has had multiple cars on the podium in each of the first two races. Last year, Team Penske had multiple podium finishers in only one race, Gateway. The team took three of the top five spots at Texas. Last year, the only time Team Penske had three cars finish in the top five was Gateway and the only other race Penske had multiple top five finishers in 2021 was Long Beach. Through the first two races of 2022, Team Penske has already won two-thirds as many races as it won in the entire 2021 season.

With three of the top five drivers in the championship, 2022 is shaping up to be a much stronger season for Team Penske. 

Scott McLaughlin has opened the season with a first and a second, gifting the New Zealander a solid championship lead of 97 points, 28 points ahead of teammate Will Power, who has been third and fourth in the first two races. Josef Newgarden's Texas victory has him 32 points behind McLaughlin. 

McLaughlin is looking to become the first driver to open a season with three consecutive podium finishes since Scott Dixon won the first three races of the 2020 season. Three of the last four drivers to open the season with at least three consecutive podium finishes have gone on to win the championship, but it is not a guarantee of a championship. Since 1946, there have been 33 occasions of a driver starting a season with at least three podium finishes. On only 18 of those 33 occasions has the driver gone on to win the championship. 

This is the first season Power has opened with two consecutive top five results since 2014. Power had three top five finishes to open that season and he went on to win the championship. Newgarden's Texas victory made 2022 the fourth time in six seasons with Team Penske he has won one of the first three races of the season. 

Team Penske is looking to become the first team to win the first three races of the season since Chip Ganassi Racing did it in 2020 with four consecutive victories. This could be the fourth time since reunification a team has opened the season with at least three consecutive victories. Besides Ganassi in 2020, Team Penske did it in 2010 with Will Power winning the first two races and Hélio Castroneves winning the third. In 2012, Castroneves won the season opener and Power then won the next three races. 

Team Penske has six Long Beach victories but has not won since 2016. Penske has won only twice at Long Beach since reunification. Penske's six Long Beach victories have come from five different drivers with Al Unser, Jr. the only one to win this race multiple times for The Captain. 

Herta Hoping For Honda Bounce Back
Despite not winning either of the first two races to open the 2022 season, Honda should have some confidence entering Long Beach. Honda has won the last four Long Beach races, and last year, Colton Herta picked up an impressive victory from 14th on the grid. 

Herta led 43 of 85 laps after failing to make it out of the first round of qualifying. It closed out his 2021 season with consecutive victories. It was also Andretti Autosport's third consecutive Long Beach victory after Alexander Rossi won in successive years between 2018 and 2019. 

Rossi's Long Beach winning streak might have ended at the hands of his teammate, but he was sixth last year, his third consecutive top ten result at Long Beach after finishing 20th and 19th in his first two visits. One more Andretti victory at Long Beach and this will become the second track it has won four consecutive races. The team won six Iowa races on the spin from 2010 through 2015.

Romain Grosjean and Devlin DeFrancesco are just two of the drivers looking to become the fifth driver to score a first IndyCar victory at Long Beach. If either were to do it, they would be the second Andretti Autosport driver to achieve a first career victory on these streets. Mike Conway did it in 2011. 

Grosjean would become the third Frenchman to win at Long Beach after Sébastien Bourdais and Simon Pagenaud. DeFrancesco would be the third Canadian to win at Long Beach in IndyCar, but fourth Canadian Long Beach overall. Paul Tracy and James Hinchliffe have won in IndyCar, but Giles Villeneuve won the 1979 Formula One race at Long Beach. 

While Andretti has been on a recent run of good form at Long Beach, Chip Ganassi Racing was once the kingpins around Long Beach. The team won four consecutive years from 1996 to 1999. After reunification, Dario Franchitti won the 2009 race, Franchitti's first IndyCar victory after his return from NASCAR, and Scott Dixon won in 2015. Ganassi is tied with Newman/Haas Racing and Team Penske for most Long Beach victories. Another Andretti Autosport victory would make it a four-way tie at the top. 

Ganassi has had the third-place finisher in the last three Long Beach races with Scott Dixon standing on the podium the last two years. Dixon has five top five finishes in his last six Long Beach starts. Álex Palou has not finished on the podium yet at Long Beach, but he was fourth last year, which was enough to seal the championship for him. Marcus Ericsson is coming off his first podium finish of the season in Texas, but Long Beach has not been kind to him. In two Long Beach starts, Ericsson has finished 20th and 28th. Jimmie Johnson will make his second Long Beach start. Johnson was 17th last year, which remains his best street course finish.

Meyer Shank Racing has two past Long Beach winners on its roster. Hélio Castroneves won the 2001 Long Beach race and Castroneves has four Long Beach podium finishes. Simon Pagenaud won the 2016 race, but Pagenaud's fifth place finish last year was his first top five result at Long Beach since that victory. If either driver were to win this weekend they would become the tenth multi-time Long Beach winner. 

Another driver who could become that tenth multi-time Long Beach winner is Takuma Sato, who leads Dale Coyne Racing into the third round of the season. While being the site of Sato's first career IndyCar victory, the 2013 Long Beach winner has not had fond results lately. Since that victory, Sato's average Long Beach finish is 14.428. David Malukas will make his Long Beach debut. Dale Coyne Racing has only three top five finishes at Long Beach: fifth in 2006 with Cristiano da Matta, third with Justin Wilson in 2013 and second with Sébastien Bourdais in 2017.

Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing is another team looking for its first Long Beach victory. Graham Rahal's season has opened similar to his 2021 season. In each of the last two seasons, he was seventh in the season opener and then finished outside the top ten in the next race after being caught in an incident that wasn't of his making. Rahal had three consecutive top ten finishes at Long Beach before ending up 16th last year. Jack Harvey looks to return to competition after missing the Texas race due to his practice accident. Harvey picked up his first top ten result at Long Beach last year with a seventh-place finish. 

Honda opened the prior two seasons with at least three victories on the spin. It hopes to avoid going winless through the first three races for the first time since 2016, when Chevrolet won the first five races.

McLaren's 40th Anniversary
It is an anniversary weekend for Arrow McLaren SP at Long Beach, but it is not tied to the IndyCar program. 

This year's race marks the 40th anniversary to McLaren's first of two Long Beach victory. It came in the 1982 United States Grand Prix West with Niki Lauda winning over Keke Rosberg driving for Williams and Riccardo Patrese driving for Brabham. Andrea de Cesaris led the first 14 laps, but de Casaris' Alfa Romeo was caught in traffic and when balked behind Rual Boesel's March, Lauda swung into the lead and led the final 61 laps.

It was the first of two consecutive Long Beach victories for McLaren, with the 1983 victory being the most famous of the two. The 1983 race saw John Watson lead a McLaren 1-2 finish despite Watson and Lauda starting 22nd and 23rd respectively. It was also the final time Formula One raced at Long Beach before IndyCar took over as the main show the following year. 

McLaren looks to accomplish something that has never been done by a team before: Win at Long Beach in both Formula One and IndyCar. Though this year's IndyCar season has started on rocky terms. 

Neither McLaren driver has a top ten finish this year. Patricio O'Ward enters 13th in the championship on 33 points. Felix Rosenqvist is 19th with 23 points. O'Ward was failed to finish in the top ten of his last three starts, his longest drought since joining the McLaren program. Rosenqvist does not have a top ten finish in his last four starts and he has only two top ten finishes in his 16 starts with McLaren. 

O'Ward has three podium finishes on street courses, including a victory at Belle Isle last year. This will be his third Long Beach appearance. He was 12th in 2019 driving for Carlin before last year's infamous retirement after contact on the opening lap with Ed Jones and subsequent gearbox issues. Last year's Long Beach race was the first time O'Ward has retired from a race in his IndyCar career. 

Rosenqvist was hoping his pole position at Texas would spark his season. Unfortunately, he didn't even lead a lap before his botched pit stop set him back and mechanical failure was the final nail in his coffin after only completely 138 of 248 laps. Rosenqvist had three top finishes on street courses in his rookie season in 2019. In his six street course starts since the start of the 2020 season, his only top ten finish was eighth at Nashville last year. 

Arrow McLaren SP has not had a top ten finisher in the last three races after having at least one top ten finisher in the nine previous races. The team has not gone four consecutive races without a top ten finish since from Mid-Ohio through Portland in 2019. 

IMSA
Long Beach also marks the third round for the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, and like IndyCar, this is IMSA's first race in three weeks. With this being a street race, only three class will be on track: Daytona Prototype international, GT Daytona Pro and GT Daytona. But 26 cars are entered for this year's race.

There are six DPi entries, and after finishing third and second in the first two races, the #5 JDC-Miller Motorsports Cadillac of Tristan Vautier and Richard Westbrook lead the championship with 676 points. They are 11 points ahead of Wayne Taylor Racing's #10 Acura duo of Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque. Daytona winners Oliver Jarvis and Tom Blomqvist are third in the championship, 13 points back in the #60 Meyer Shank Racing Acura. 

Earl Bamber and Alex Lynn sit in fourth after their Sebring victory. The #02 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac is 23 points off Vautier and Westbrook. Pipo Derani and Tristan Vautier are 40 points back in the #31 Whelen Engineering Racing Cadillac. After a pair of seventh-place finishes to open the season, Renger van der Zande and Sébastien Bourdais are chasing the field, 135 points back in the #01 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac. 

GTD Pro will also have six entries. Daytona winners Matt Campbell and Mathieu Jaminet lead the way with 668 points in the #9 Pfaff Motorsports Porsche, 13 points ahead of Sebring winners Antonio García and Jordan Taylor in the #3 Corvette. Ben Barnicoat and Jack Hawksworth are 97 points behind in the #14 VasserSullivan Lexus. 

Cooper MacNeil will run the #97 Mercedes-AMG after competing in a Porsche in the first two races. MacNeil has 524 points and Raffaele Marciello will be his co-driver at Long Beach. BMW looks to get off the floor with Connor De Phillippi and John Edwards in the #25 Team RLL BMW. Their best finish was seventh at Daytona and they are 176 points off the championship lead. The #23 Heart of Racing Team Aston Martin has come out of the gate poorly. Ross Gunn and Alex Riberas are 232 points behind the #9 Porsche. 

GTD leads the way with 14 entries. Team Korthoff Motorsports has a surprising championship lead with Mike Skeen and Stevan McAleer in the #32 Mercedes-AMG on 672 points. Ryan Hardwick and Jan Heylen has 615 points in the #16 Wright Motorsports Porsche. The #57 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG of Russell Ward and Philip Ellis has 491 points, 34 points more than the #99 Team Hardpoint Porsche of Katherine Legge and Rob Ferriol, 38 points ahead of the #96 Turner Motorsport BMW of Bill Auberlen and Robby Foley, and 40 points clear of the #12 VasserSullivan Lexus of Frankie Montecalvo and Aaron Telitz. 

The #66 Gradient Racing Acura of Mario Farnbacher and Marc Miller has 417 points. Heart of Racing Team sits on 409 points for its GTD entry, the #27 Aston Martin of Roman De Angelis and Maxime Martin. Robert Megennis and Jeff Westphal have 363 points in the #39 CarBahn with Peregrine Racing Audi. Crucial Motorsports scored 345 points in the first two races with the #59 McLaren for Paul Holton and Jon Miller. 

NTE Sport/SSR has 321 points in the #42 Lamborghini of Don Yount and Jaden Conwright. Paul Miller Racing is back for its second race of the season with Bryan Sellers and Madison Snow in the #1 BMW. GMG Racing will have Kyle Washington and James Sofronas in the #34 Porsche. Rick Ware Racing will make its first start in the GTD class with the #51 Acura for Ryan Eversley and Aidan Read, as the team will contest the GTD Sprint Cup championship. 

General Motors has won six consecutive Long Beach races overall with Action Express Racing responsible for the last three victories. Corvette won three of the last four years in the GT Le Mans class. Last year was the GTD class' first Long Beach appearance since 2017. 

The IMSA Long Beach race is scheduled for an hour and 40 minutes and will start at 5:00 p.m. ET on Saturday April 9.

Fast Facts
This will be the 12th IndyCar race to take place on April 10 and first since Will Power won at Barber Motorsports Park in 2011. 

This will be the second time the Grand Prix of Long Beach has fallen on April 10. The first time was in 2005 and Sébastien Bourdais won that race. 

Only twice in the 13 Long Beach races since reunification has the Long Beach winner gone on to win the championship: Dario Franchitti 2009 and Scott Dixon 2015.

The Long Beach winner won the championship in eight of the 13 seasons preceding reunification. 

The Long Beach winner has won the championship in 13 of its 37 seasons on the IndyCar schedule.

Four drivers have had their first career IndyCar victory come at Long Beach: Paul Tracy 1993, Juan Pablo Montoya 1999, Mike Conway 2011 and Takuma Sato 2013.

The average starting position for a Long Beach winner is 4.405 with a median of third. 

Last year was the sixth time a Long Beach IndyCar winner had started outside the top ten. Colton Herta won from 14th. 

Fourteen of the last 17 Long Beach races have been won from one of the first two rows. Fifteen of the last 20 Long Beach races have been won from one of the first two rows.

The average number of lead changes in a Long Beach race is 5.054 with a median of six. 

The last seven Long Beach races have had five lead changes or more. 

The most recent Long Beach race with fewer than four lead changes was 2008, which only had three lead changes. 

The most recent Long Beach race with zero changes was 2001. In the IndyCar-era, only two other races have had zero lead changes (1984 and 1987).

The average number of cautions in a Long Beach race is 2.837 with a median of three. The average number of caution laps is 11.432 with a median of 12. 

Seven of the last ten Long Beach races have had three cautions or more. Twenty-one of the last 26 Long Beach races have had three cautions or more

There has never been rain on race day for the Grand Prix of Long Beach.

Predictions
Honda's Long Beach winning streak continues and it is Romain Grosjean getting his first career victory while leading an Andretti Autosport 1-2 finish. Scott McLaughlin will finish outside the top ten. Jimmie Johnson will finish outside the top fifteen. Alexander Rossi will finish better than his starting position. Devlin DeFrancesco will not make it three-wide when he shouldn't. Patricio O'Ward avoids being spun on the opening lap. Scott Dixon will be the top Ganassi finisher. Kyle Kirkwood will be the top rookie, but he will have Christian Lundgaard finish directly behind him. The driver with the fastest lap finishes in the top five. Sleeper: Graham Rahal.


Wednesday, April 6, 2022

2022 Super Formula Preview

While the open-wheel world might have its eyes on Melbourne and Long Beach, another major series gets its 2022 season underway this weekend, with the Super Formula opener taking place at Fuji. 

The last two seasons have been difficult for Super Formula with Japan's strict travel restrictions, and the 2022 grid shows the ongoing constraints during the global pandemic. Only two drivers are the grid come from outside Japan, as the series continues to remain mostly domestic after a very international last decade.

On the bright side, the 2022 driver roster remains highly competitive, and Super Formula has a healthy schedule.

Schedule
Super Formula is going to have one of its longest seasons in recent history. A grand total of 10 races over seven weekends with three doubleheaders makes up the 2022 calendar. 

The season begins with a doubleheader at Fuji on April 9 and 10. Two weeks later, Super Formula will be at Suzuka. After a month off, Super Formula heads to Autopolis on May 22 before another month break. Sportsland SUGO marks the fifth round of the season on June 19. 

The second half of the calendar begins on July 17 at Fuji. Motegi will host the second doubleheader on August 20 and 21. Super Formula will have over two months off, with an extended break due to the FIA World Endurance Championship's 6 Hours of Fuji in September. Suzuka will close ou the season with a doubleheader on October 29 and 30.

Teams:

Team Mugen
Tomoki Nojiri: #1 Team Mugen Motul SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Nojiri won the Super Formula championship on with three victories, four podium finishes, six top five finishes and his worst finish was sixth over seven races in 2021. His official points total was 86 points, but he scored 94 points before his dropped score.

What to expect in 2022: After a four-year rough patch, Nojiri has won a race in each of the previous three seasons, been in the top five of the championship all three years, but last year far exceeded his previous expectations. He again is at the front, second in the Suzuka test and fifth in the Fuji test. There hasn't been a repeat champion since Tsugio Matsuda in 2007-08. Prior to that, Satoru Nakajima was the last repeat champion in 1984-85. History says Noriji will not successfully defend his title, but he should put up a strong effort and if he is on form again, maybe Nojiri will make history of his own. 

Ukyo Sasahara: #15 Team Mugen Bingo SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Sasahara scored 18 points after starting the first two races of the season, a fifth from third on the grid at Fuji, and he was third as Suzuka. He was full-time in Super GT driving for Team Mugen in GT500. He scored points in five of eight races with two top five finishes.

What to expect in 2022: Testing was not flattering for Sasahara, as he was 18th at Suzuka and 12th at Fuji. He is with a good team and Nojiri showed they are in a good position. Sasahara can get up there. He looked good in his few starts last year with Team Dandelion Racing. I think he will score some points and could compete for a podium finish occasionally. 

Carenex Team Impul
Yuhi Sekiguchi: #19 Carenex Team Impul SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Sekiguchi was third in the Super Formula championship with two podium finishes, five top five finishes and points scored in six of seven races. His official points total was 55 points, but he scored 55.5 points before his dropped score.

What to expect in 2022: Sekiguchi's consistency was a plus for him last season and he bounced back from a difficult 2020 season. It will be nearly three years since his last victory when the season commences. He is a regular top five championship driver. He should end his winless drought. Testing results looked good, as he was fifth at Suzuka and fourth at Fuji. We cannot count him out of the championship conversation.

Ryō Hirakawa: #20 Carenex Team Impul SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Hirakawa was fourth in the championship with 46 points after a pair of runner-up finishes and four total top five finishes while retiring from his other two starts. He missed the Sportsland SUGO round due to his FIA World Endurance Championship commitments in Portimão.

What to expect in 2022: It appears to be a theme from testing that no team has two cars at the front, and Team Impul wasn't any different. Hirakawa was 16th at Suzuka, but was up to ninth at Fuji. However, Hirakawa should have nothing to worry about. He and Sekiguchi might be the best 1-2 punch in Super Formula. I think Hirakawa can win a race and he will be in the championship fight.

Docomo Team Dandelion Racing
Tadasuke Makino: #5 Docomo Dandelion M5S SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Makino scored 24 points in five starts, which saw his best finish being third and he scored in the final four races of the season, putting him ninth in the championship. He missed the first two races due to meningitis. 

What to expect in 2022: Missing the first two races threw off what Makino's season actually could have been, but four consecutive points results are encouraging. His testing pace was encouraging, sixth at Suzuka and 11th at Fuji. I think he will be a solid points scorer, but I am not sure he will take it to the next level just yet.

Hiroki Otsu: #6 Docomo Dandelion M6Y SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Otsu scored his first career victory from pole position in the penultimate race of the season at Motegi. With points scored in six of seven races, his official points total was 38.5 points after a dropped score of one point, placing him sixth in the championship.

What to expect in 2022: Otsu was third at the Suzuka test and seventh at the Fuji test. He was one of the quieter drivers in the 2021 season. I think he is the sleeper for this season. I think he could sneak into the championship picture and be the driver we least expect to have multiple victories through the first six races and all of a sudden is someone everyone is taking seriously. Championship top five is not out of the question.

TCS Nakajima Racing
Naoki Yamamoto: #64 TCS Nakajima Racing SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Yamamoto had his worst championship finish in his 12-year Super Formula career. He was 13th in the championship with 13 points scored. His best finish was sixth and he scored points in four of seven races.

What to expect in 2022: A bounce back because it couldn't have been much worse for Yamamoto last year, but testing results were scattered: tenth at Suzuka and 19th at Fuji. Just from the testing results it feels like when Nakajima Racing is hot it will be hot and when it is cold it will be freezing. There is a chance Yamamoto will be exactly where he was last year. He should do better, but that doesn't mean he will be on the podium and contending for race victories. His goal should be to get one or two top five finishes and score points in at least five races.

Toshiki Oyu: #65 TCS Nakajima Racing SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Oyu rounded out the top five in the championship after picking up two runner-up finishes and finishing in the points in the first five races of the season. His official points total was 41 points, but he had 43 points before the dropped score.

What to expect in 2022: When Yamamoto was tenth at the Suzuka test, Oyu was eighth. But at Fuji, Oyu was only 18th. He thoroughly thrashed his championship teammate last year. But after seeing the testing results, I am not sure he can do that again. I think both Nakajima drivers will be fighting just to make the top ten of the championship. 

P.mu/Cerumo INGING
Shō Tsuboi: #37 P.mu/Cerumo INGING SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Tsuboi scored points in only two of seven races, a seventh in the first Suzuka race and a ninth in the first Motegi race. He retired from three races and was placed 15th in the championship. He also won the Super GT GT500 championship.

What to expect in 2022: After a dismal 2021 season, Tsuboi opened testing in fine form, topping the Suzuka test and being second in the Fuji test. Last year was a step back. In 2020, he was third in the championship and was heading in the right direction. The only problem is in each of his three seasons in Super Formula, he is a bit of feast or famine. His best two finishes in 2019 were fifth and second and scored no points in the other five races. In 2020, he won twice, but he retired from three races and didn't score in another. If he is going to be a champion contender he must be more consistently at the front. Maybe the fourth year is the charm, but we need to see the results immediately.

Sena Sakaguchi: #38 P.mu/Cerumo INGING SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Sakaguchi was seventh in the championship with two runner-up finishes, three top five finishes and points scored in five of seven races. He scored 35.5 points.

What to expect in 2022: While Tsuboi was at the top of the charts in testing, Sakaguchi was toward the bottom, 20th at Suzuka and 17th at Fuji. Testing is concerning, but if Tsuboi has speed then Sakaguchi should be competitive. If Tsuboi hits its then I am not sure Sakaguchi will beat him. Both cars should be competing for a top ten championship finish. Top five for both is a stretch.

Kuo Vantelin Team TOM'S
Giuliano Alesi: #36 Kuo Vantelin Team TOM'S SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Alesi scored his first career victory in his second start of his career, a rain-shortened Autopolis race. He scored in four of five starts, filling in when Kazuki Nakajima was busy with the Toyota Hypercar program in the FIA World Endurance Championship. Alesi was also runner-up in the Super Formula Lights championship with four victories and 14 podium finishes from 17 starts.

What to expect in 2022: Alesi's one victory in a rain-shortened race kind of flattered his overall results, and his testing results left some questions. He was 16th at Suzuka but sixth at Fuji. He has a handled on the tracks. He has raced this car more than he probably expected at this point in his career. I am not comfortable saying he is one of the best drivers in this series yet. He was just on the edge of the championship top ten last year as a part-time driver. He should get in there, but still has more room to improve.

Ritomo Miyata: #37 Kuo Vantelin Team TOM'S SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Miyata was tenth in the championship after scoring points in the first six races of the season. His best finish was fourth in the shortened Autopolis race. His official points total was 22 points, but he had 24 points before his dropped score.

What to expect in 2022: Miyata might not have had the victory, but his consistency stood out in 2021 and he was quicker than Alesi in both tests, one position ahead at Suzuka and he was third overall at Fuji. Miyata is lining up to be better than Alesi even though many are likely swayed by Alesi's name. Miyata could sneak into the top five of the championship and turn some heads.

Team Goh
Ren Sato: #53 Red Bull Team Goh G01 SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Sato was third in the Super Formula Lights championship with five victories and nine podium finishes.

What to expect in 2022: Team Goh is stepping up to run a two-car team, and it is doing it with two young, but promising drivers. Sato was 17th and 15th in testing. This team will be learning and struggling for speed. Any points will be a plus. 

Atsushi Miyake: #55 Team Goh G01 SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Miyake was fourth in the Super Formula Lights championship with two victories and five podium finishes.

What to expect in 2022: Miyake was slowest in the Suzuka test, but a spot ahead of Sato in the Fuji test. Same as Sato, Miyake needs to complete laps and develop. If the team can get points then it is a bonus.

B-Max Racing
Nobuharu Matsushita: #50 BYOUBUGAURA B-Max Racing Honda
What did he do in 2021: Matsushita had two podium finishes, three top five finishes, four top ten results and he won pole position for the season finale at Suzuka. He wound up eighth in the championship on 33.5 points. 

What to expect in 2022: After being a late addition to the grid when B-Max's original driver, American Yves Baltas, was unable to enter the country, Matsushita saved his career and is back in Honda's good graces. He was mid-pack in testing, 12th at Suzuka and tenth at Fuji. We could see Matsushita hit off again and be at the front. I think he will be one of many drivers fighting to be in the top ten.

Kondō Racing
Kenta Yamashita: #3 REALIZE Corporation Kondō SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Yamashita scored eight points with his only points finishes being eighth in the penultimate race and sixth in the finale. 

What to expect in 2022: Yamashita was consistent in testing, seventh at Suzuka and eighth at Fuji. After respectable results in his previous three seasons, last year was a sharp drop off. I think he should bounce back and be more competitive. He could get back to competing for podium finishes. A race victory could be out of reach but it is not doubtful. He should be back in the top ten of the championship.

Sacha Fenestraz: #4 REALIZE Corporation Kondō SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Fenestraz returned to competition for the final two races of the season after missing out on the first five races of the 2021 season due to pandemic travel restrictions. He was seventh in the finale at Suzuka.

What to expect in 2022: After nearly missing out on the nearly 2021 season, Fenestraz returned and he was fourth at the Suzuka test and topped the Fuji test. He knows the tracks. He won the 2019 Japanese Formula Three championship. This brief hiatus could just be a blip and he could be set to be the top driver. He should win some races and could find himself in the title battle. 

KCMG
Kamui Kobayashi: #7 Kids.com KCMG Cayman SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Due to FIA World Endurance Championship commitments, Kobayashi was only to make one start, the penultimate race at Motegi. He was tenth and picked up one point, giving him 20th in the championship.

What to expect in 2022: Death, taxes, and Kamui Kobayashi has still not won a Super Formula race in 42 starts. One of the best drivers in the world, Kobayashi is not with a perennial Super Formula threat. He was ninth in the Suzuka test but 13th at the Fuji test. There has to be one race that goes Kobayashi's way and he just wins. I am not sure that will happen this year. I am not sure he can be a regular points scorer in 2022. 

Yuji Kunimoto: #18 Kids.com KCMG Elyse SF19-Toyota
What did he do in 2021: Kunimoto was eighth in the season opener at Fuji and then did not score points for the rest of the season with three retirements. 

What to expect in 2022: Kunimoto was at the bottom of both tests, 19th at Suzuka and 21st at Fuji. Just because there are more races, he should do better than three points, but I am not sure he will do much greater than that. 

docomo business ROOKIE Racing
Kazuya Oshima: #14 docomo business ROOKIE Racing
What did he do in 2021: For the second consecutive season, Oshima was 19th in the championship. He opened the season with a tenth at Fuji and then picked up another point and a half in the rain-shortened Autopolis race. 

What to expect in 2022: Oshima's last five championship finishes have been 12th, 12th, 14th, 19th and 19th. He has not score more than seven points in any of those seasons. He was 15th and 16th in testing. If he breaks the seven-point barrier, it is because he had a safety car or weather in his favor. 

ThreeBond Drago Corse
Nirei Fukuzumi: #12 ThreeBond Drago Corse SF19-Honda
What did he do in 2021: Fukuzumi was second in the championship with two victories, Sportsland SUGO and the Suzuka finale, and a third in the Fuji season opener. However, his only other points scored was the three from pole position in the first Suzuka race and he finished on 55 points. 

What to expect in 2022: The surprise change of the offseason was Fukuzumi moving from Team Dandelion Racing to Drago Corse, which only returned to the grid in 2020. Fukuzumi had a good Suzuka test in 11th but was 20th at Fuji. I don't think he will be winning multiple races and be runner-up in the championship, but he should get a few points finishes, perhaps he could get into the top five for a race or two. 

Other Notes:
Qualifying will consist of only two rounds in 2022. The fastest six from round one will advance to set the first three rows of the grid. 

At doubleheader weekends, there will be a qualifying session held for each race in the morning before each race. 

All ten races will count toward the championship. Only the best five results out of seven races counted toward the championship in 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic. 

Last year, was the first time Honda had drivers win consecutive championships since Toyota joined the series in 2006.

The drivers' champion has not driven for the teams' champion since 2017. 

The last European champion was André Lotterer in 2011. Lotterer's 2011 championship is also the last time the champion missed a race during the season. The German won five of seven races that year.

Two French drivers have won championships: Benoît Tréluyer in 2006 and Loïc Duval in 2009.

Nojiri won three races last season on his way to the championship. It was the second consecutive season the champion won at least three races. Prior to 2021, the champion had not won three races in a season since 2012.

The last Super Formula season where Japanese drivers won every race was 2000. Toranosuke Takagi won eight of ten races that season, Tsugio Matsuda won once, and Satoshi Motoyama won the season finale. 

Three of the last four champions have won the season opener. 

Each Fuji race this weekend will be at 12:40 a.m. ET on Saturday and Sunday. Both races are scheduled for 41 laps or 75 minutes.



Monday, April 4, 2022

Musings From the Weekend: IndyCar Just Isn't Sexy

MotoGP had shipping delays eliminate its Friday practice sessions, but it did not stop Áleix Espargaró from getting his first career MotoGP victory in his 200th career MotoGP start, and Aprilia's first triumph in the premier class. Valentino Rossi made his first start in the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup season, but it was business as usual. It took NASCAR about 200 laps to call a penalty for a piece of tape at Richmond. IndyCar declined Kevin Harvick's call. Formula One announced a Las Vegas round for the 2023, and now everyone in American motorsports is having an existential crisis. Here is a rundown of what got me thinking.

IndyCar Just Isn't Sexy
Prior to the start of the Formula One season, I started listening to The Ringer's new Formula One podcast.

An intersection of sports and pop culture, The Ringer, a brainchild of former ESPN writer and Grantland founder Bill Simmons, never gave the time to any motorsports series prior to last year. The Ringer has lived on the American essentials, football and basketball, while also focusing on film and music. It touches upon baseball, golf and soccer regularly, as well as current events, with each having dedicated podcast and regularly featuring articles. But motorsports were never on the radar.

And then came Drive to Survive. 

Formula One became a new habit for many in 2020 and 2021 thanks to Drive to Surive introducing the series the previously unaware individuals. The Ringer sees the popularity increase, as well as having the interest increase among its own staffers, and has decided Formula One warrants a podcast. 

The Formula One diehard will likely not like this podcast, but The Ringer F1 Show is important in understanding why people are tuning into Formula One. 

None of those involved with this podcast are from the Formula One traveling circus. These are not lifelong Formula One. The host Kevin Clark covers football for The Ringer mainly. This show is a gathering of Ringer staffers who watch Formula One. This isn't a place for highbrow conversation. These aren't experts, though they are trying. These are fans expressing their views about what they have seen from each race whether they fully understand what they are watching or not. 

The contributors make no bones that they aren't experts, but they know many of its listeners are in the same position and aren't looking for a lecture, but rather something relatable to their viewing experience. 

The first few episodes of The Ringer F1 Show was a recap of Drive to Survive season four, and while they have come to appreciate the sport and the competition, it isn't the cars or the races why they are tuning in. It is the personalities, the conflicts, but Drive to Survive is also an escape. Many of the contributors are drawn to the international and eccentric nature of Formula One. The global locations, million-dollar yachts, luxury cars. It is more than a reality show based on a motorsports series, it is a travel show taking the viewer to each corner of the globe. 

When these new viewers express why they watch Formula One it is because it is an escape and something they have never seen before, an inside look at sporting organizations trying to compete in this costly sport. There is nothing like Formula One on the planet. 

Contrast that to IndyCar, which has been around the entire time and never drew any interest from The Ringer, and IndyCar cannot hold a candle to Formula One. 

IndyCar has always been far less extravagant, but when people express their interest in Formula One is because of its lavish lifestyle, IndyCar doesn't stand a chance. St. Petersburg to Denton, Texas to Birmingham, Alabama with additional stops in Newton, Iowa and Madison, Illinois aren't quite the same as Monaco, Monza, Mexico City, Singapore and Abu Dhabi.

The common refrain in the last two years is if only IndyCar had its version of Drive to Survive it too would see an increase in viewership. The problem is IndyCar has not been big enough to be noticed. It has its own events. It has its own travel. It has the Indianapolis 500, but it isn't enough. Nothing IndyCar has feels like it is enough. It is too small to brag about. It wouldn't catch the eye the way the Formula One traveling circus does. It isn't that it wouldn't be interesting or informative or relatable to the viewer. It would just be... average, especially to the American viewer.

Meanwhile, Formula One continues to grow in the United States while IndyCar remains stagnant in its own backyard. The Miami race is sold out for the second Sunday in May, with at least 80,000 attendees expected, and tickets sold for $1,500 a pop. Las Vegas will re-join the schedule in 2023, over 40 years after leaving a sour taste in Formula One's month. Only this time the race will be under the lights, on the Las Vegas Strip and be historic, as it will take place on a Saturday night. 

IndyCar on the other hand will likely not get 80,000 people at any race outside the Indianapolis 500 this year, and we are all preparing for the tracks IndyCar will lose ahead of the 2023 without any idea if any tracks will be added to the calendar. 

It is ok that IndyCar's lowest price point for every races isn't $1,500, but IndyCar has slid to the third in the American motorsports hierarchy. Formula One surpassed IndyCar without an American driver or a successful American team on the grid while IndyCar has had a handful of successful Americans, including champions and Indianapolis 500 winners this entire time. IndyCar had the playbook we thought was necessary for success and has been completely shredded by something revolutionary. 

The referee can ring the bell. This fight is over. Any chance for IndyCar to become moderately respectable is gone. It doesn't matter how many different drivers win a race, how many passes there are on track, how close the finishes are and whether or not three or four drivers are alive for the championship in the finale. Nobody is tuning in for what makes IndyCar great and IndyCar cannot afford to become what makes Formula One attractive. 

That doesn't mean IndyCar should pack it in and give up, but for it to be truly recognized in its own backyard, it has to tie itself to Formula One. IndyCar has to stop being foolish and realize where the tide is rising. There are going to be 80,000 people at Miami, Austin was already drawing close to 150,000 on race day and Las Vegas will likely be somewhere in the six-figure range as well. 

IndyCar isn't going to grow being on its own. Pride needs to be buried under 12 feet on concrete and IndyCar should bend over backyard to become a support series to each Formula One weekend in the United States and probably all of North America as well. It should do it for free because of the exposure alone. Austin on Saturday draws 70,000 people. Montreal and Mexico City are massive events. Miami and Las Vegas will likely draw similar crowds, but these are people who aren't going to seek or stumble into IndyCar. IndyCar has to put itself in front of them. They might just get a kick out of it and IndyCar might become something else to follow. 

Formula One might have three races in the United States, but IndyCar has 16 races in this country. A person only has three chances to see Formula One, but if IndyCar plays its card right, it could use Formula One to its own benefit. Americans travel to these Formula One races. People from Cleveland go to Austin. People from Seattle will go to Las Vegas. Those in Los Angeles will head to Miami. Formula One only has three options, but if IndyCar is there with Formula One and people enjoy it, they could learn that there is a race in Long Beach or Laguna Seca or Portland or Mid-Ohio and all of a sudden have another race to check out. They can have their Formula One date, but only find out there is an IndyCar race when Formula One isn't around. Not to mention that IndyCar date will take less out of the bank account. 

Believing IndyCar's best course of action to Formula One's growth is to be the anti-Formula One and be on its own all the time is moronic. To benefit from the rising tide, IndyCar has to get in the right body of water. It needs to fish where the fish are and it has to swallow its pride for its own damn good. It should beg to be a part of these weekends, but also work with Liberty Media to have its own respectable race. It works for Supercars in Australia. IndyCar is no different. 

There are no more excuses. We see the success. We see the people that are going to these American Formula One races. Nothing IndyCar has done in the last 25 years rivals this level of interest. For IndyCar's own benefit, it has to be second fiddle for these three weekends each year. There is no downside to it. There is no way fewer people are going to watch IndyCar because it is running on a Formula One weekend. That logic really doesn't check out. There are differences and Formula One cars are quicker, but people can see when a race is competitive. IndyCar believes in its racing product. It should be confident of the race it will put on.

IndyCar is already taking three weeks off between each of its first four races. Taking the same amount of time off between say Laguna Seca in September and Austin in October and then Las Vegas in November when Austin and Las Vegas will each have at least 70,000 spectators on Saturday is worth it, especially if Austin and Las Vegas will be the final two races for IndyCar. The season grows, the offseason shrinks, and IndyCar's champion would be crowned in front of an actual crowd and not a glorified club racing weekend. That is a win-win-win. 

People are into Formula One now. They might not love Formula One in two years. This might just be a blip, but for IndyCar to get anything out of this period, it has to do more than just sit on its hands and hope that a fraction of this audience will just decide to watch IndyCar because they are race cars that look similar. IndyCar needs to be active and cozy up to the more popular and more attractive girl in school to receive attention. It can no longer be on the sidelines hoping that people will just notice it. It has to be present when 100,000 people are gathering to watch a motor race and accept that isn't the main draw, but just because it isn't on the top of the bill doesn't mean it is not what is best for the series.

There should be no shame in being a support series. If IndyCar is confident in the racing it has, it should want people to see it and do all it can to increase its exposure. We know IndyCar believes it has great racing, and we know the drivers enjoy the level of competition in the series. Show that off to an audience that is otherwise unaware IndyCar exists. Be a fan friendly series and have spectators walk through its paddock while the Formula One paddock is inaccessible. 

There are plenty of ways IndyCar could become a big winner from a Formula One weekend. It just has to be there first to show off what it has got. 

Winners From the Weekend
You know about Áleix Espargaró, but did you know....

Celestino Vietti won the Moto2 race from Termas de Río Honda, his second victory of the season. Sergio García won the Moto3 race. 

Denny Hamlin won the NASCAR Cup race from Richmond. Ty Gibbs won the Grand National Series race, his third victory of the season. 

The #32 Belgian Audi Club Team WRT Audi of Kelvin van der Linde, Dries Vanthoor and Charles Weerts won the 3 Hours of Imola.

Coming Up This Weekend
IndyCar is back with the Grand Prix of Long Beach. 
IMSA will also be in Long Beach.
MotoGP scurries on up to Austin for its lone visit to the United States.
The Australian Grand Prix returns to the Formula One calendar. 
Supercars joins Formula One at Melbourne's Albert Park.
NASCAR has its first Saturday night race, a 400-lap race around Martinsville.
Formula E is back with a doubleheader in Rome. 
Supercross has its final Triple Crown round of the season in St. Louis. 
World Superbike opens its season at Aragón.
Super Formula opens its season with a doubleheader at Fuji.
World Touring Car Cup opens its season at Most, Czech Republic. 



Thursday, March 31, 2022

Best of the Month: March 2022

We have made it to spring and pretty much every series is in action. Formula One had a back-to-back to open its season. NASCAR is in full momentum. IndyCar has already completed an oval race. There has been plenty of sports car racing. March is proving to be the launchpad for the 2022 season, as we have seen for pretty much every season before. 

There is a lot to celebrate from the past month and it gives us a lot to look forward to for the remainder of the year. 

"Mini Memorial Day Weekend"
During the March 20 podcast episode of The Teardown from The Athletic, Jeff Gluck mentioned that weekend was a "mini Memorial Day weekend" of sorts as Formula One, IndyCar and NASCAR all competed on the same day and virtually avoided overlapping. The Bahrain Grand Prix and Texas IndyCar race might have overlapped a tad, but the IndyCar race was over before NASCAR got started in Atlanta and went four hours around the reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway. 

While it was the opening weekend for the Formula One season and only the second round for IndyCar, this happens more often than we likely realize. Memorial Day weekend isn't the only time all three series compete on the same day. It is the most notable day because for each series one of their biggest races takes place, usually Monaco for Formula One with the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600. But it happens a more often only with less sexy races. 

For starters, let's go back to 2008. The first season of IndyCar reunification, Lewis Hamilton's first world championship season and the first full season of the Car of Tomorrow for the NASCAR Cup Series. On four occasions there were "mini Memorial Day weekends" including Memorial Day weekend. 

April 6: Bahrain/St. Petersburg/Texas
April 27: Spain/Kansas/Talladega
May 25: Monaco/Indianapolis/Charlotte
June 22: France/Iowa/Sonoma

This is not including the weekend when IndyCar race on Saturday while Formula One and NASCAR were on Sunday or NASCAR was on Saturday and Formula and IndyCar were on Sunday. 

How does that compare to 2022?

We already had one "mini Memorial day weekend" in March. How many more are there?

Six!

May 29: Monaco/Indianapolis/Charlotte
June 12: Azerbaijan/Road America/Sonoma
July 3: Silverstone/Mid-Ohio/Road America
July 24: France/Iowa/Pocono
September 4: Zandvoort/Portland/Darlington
September 11: Monza/Laguna Seca/Kansas

Make sure to rotate your couch cushions accordingly. 

Super Sebring
It took three years, but the second edition of Super Sebring finally took place with the FIA World Endurance Championship returning to central Florida for its 1000-mile (or eight-hour) season opener the day before the 12 Hours of Sebring. 

Everyone is still learning to live with one another, but it is working out. Sebring reported an attendance increase from 2019. They have figured out to spread out the races with Michelin Pilot Challenge on Thursday, WEC on Friday and IMSA on Saturday. They moved the WEC race up in the day to a noon start time. We still didn't come close to the 1000-mile mark due to multiple red flags for accidents and weather. 

I still don't think the WEC Sebring race has to be special and be 1000 miles or eight hours. I think a six-hour race would be perfectly fine and I think it works better. The race could start a little later. It could be a 3:00 p.m. Sebring start and be half a day race and half a night race. But this is working. 

We had Alpine win the WEC race overall with a grandfathered LMP1 car. I thought SportsCar365's John Dagy said it best that it was fitting an LMP1 car won on its final visit to Sebring considering how synonymous the track and class were for nearly 20 years. I was happy that Nicolas Lapierre won considering his LMP1 pedigree and his unceremonious exit from the Toyota program not so long ago. Kudos to André Negrão and Matthieu Vaxivière for also being in the Alpine.

We had some cross-pollination between the 1000 miles and the 12 hours. Some drivers couldn't do both. Sébastien Bourdais was told no. Ricky Taylor didn't, but his co-drivers Filipe Albuquerque and Will Stevens did. Ben Keating did both. Loïc Duval only did the 12 hours. Nicolas Lapierre only ran the 1000 miles. Twenty-one drivers did both events. 

Since the convergence regulations were announced I have wondered what this weekend will look like moving forward. The Hypercars and LMDh cars can run against each other. The LMP2 classes are identical. No one would dare run both races with the same car, but I am interested in seeing what teams choose to do which race. We cannot have one race with all IMSA and WEC competitors participating. There were 36 cars in the 1000 miles. There were 53 cars in the 12 hours. We cannot have one race with 89 cars on track. Even if we took the LMP3 cars off track there would still be 79 cars out there. 

Ultimately, world championship teams will run the 1000 miles. We will see fewer IMSA/American-based teams attempt the WEC race, which is a little sad, but it is the best of both worlds coming together. Some drivers will double-dip. Of course, with both races we will not see every driver in each. I guess the one small hope is a manufacture like Toyota would run its full WEC program but then have a spare car for the 12 hours, and Peugeot and Ferrari could theoretically do the same. Each team could put together a mix of three drivers. It would be similar to what Corvette did during the Lone Star Le Mans weekends at Austin. It is unlikely, but there is nothing wrong with wishing for it.

April Preview
In North America, Japan's Super GT series does not get much coverage, but it is a highly competitive series and high-class drivers have populated the grid through the years. This year's season begins in the middle of the month and there have been some changes ahead of the 2022 season. 

Schedule 
Eight races, but the race distances will either be 300km or 450km, with no longer endurance races.

Okayama opens the season on April 17 before the first of three 450-kilometer events at Fuji on May 4. Suzuka closes the month with a round on May 29. After two months off, Super GT returns with a pair of 450km races. First at Fuji on August 7 and then at Suzuka on August 28. 

Sportsland SUGO will be on September 18, as the season closes with three rounds over three months. Autopolis hosts the penultimate round on October 2 before Motegi hosts the finale on November 6.

Grid Changes
The GT500 champions have split. Sho Tsuboi will remain in the #36 Team au TOM's Toyota but Giuliano Alesi will join him while Yuhi Sekiguchi moves to the #39 Team SARD Toyota replacing Heikki Kovalainen alongside Yuichi Nakayama. Sacha Fenestraz and Ritomo Miyata will share the #37 Team KeePer TOM's Toyota. Sena Sakaguchi continues the game of Toyota musical chairs, moving to the #19 Team WedSport Bandoh with Yuji Kunimoto.

Bertrand Baguette has left Honda to drive the #12 Team Impul Nissan alongside Kazuki Hiramine. Baguette replaces Nobuharu Matsushita, and Matsushita moves to the #17 Real Racing Honda, the entry Baguette occupied in 2021. Koudai Tsukakoshi remains in the #17 Honda.

Nissan is also making a change in the car. The Nissan Fairlady Z GT500 replaces the Nissan GT-R GT500, which had been Nissan's model of choice since 2008. Nissan has also flipped Mitsunori Takaboshi and Kohei Hirate, with Takaboshi moving to the #3 NDDP Racing entry joining Katsumasa Chiyo and Hirate in the #24 Kondo Racing entry with Daiki Sasaki. Nissan has not won the GT500 title since 2015 when the #23 NISMO entry of Tsugio Matsuda and Ronnie Quintarelli took the title. Matsuda and Quintarelli are back in the #23 Nissan.

In GT300, Autobacs Racing Team Aguri will have Hideki Mutoh and Iori Kimura in the #55 Honda NSX GT3. Shinchi Takagi moves from ARTA to the #96 K-Tunes Racing Lexus joining Morio Nitta, reuniting the two drivers, who were co-drivers from the middle of the 2000 season through 2010. Takagi and Nitta won the 2002 GT300 championship. Augusto Farfus will run the #7 BMW Team Studie x CSL BMW M4 GT3 with past Le Mans winner Seiji Ara, and Tsubasa Kondo.

Other events in April:
IndyCar has one race: Long Beach.
Formula One has two races: Australia and Imola.
MotoGP visits the Americas before starting its European season. 
NASCAR is short track heavy: Richmond, Martinsville and the Bristol dirt race, before Talladega closes the month.
World Superbike and the European Le Mans Series each begin their seasons.

Monday, March 28, 2022

Musings From the Weekend: Yeah... It's About IndyCar on Ovals

Everyone was on their toes in Saudi Arabia. Max Verstappen won the race after a late pass on Charles Leclerc. Formula One might be making Thanksgiving plans for Las Vegas. Track limits have come to NASCAR, and they were officiated questionably. RFK Racing went over the limit and paid dearly. One man is re-writing the Supercross record book, and now Supercross gets a week off. Milwaukee is somehow back in the IndyCar schedule conversation. Here is a rundown of what got me thinking.

Yeah... It's About IndyCar on Ovals
Texas Motor Speedway has been a flashpoint for conversation recently. Unfortunately, these have not been good conversations. 

After IndyCar's most recent event at Texas, there were plenty of discussions over the racetrack, promotion and whether it was time for IndyCar to make a change. It was not too dissimilar from NASCAR's most recent trip to Texas. NASCAR went last October and raced in front of mostly empty grandstands for one of its final races of the season on an overcast autumnal Sunday. To make matters worse, one week later Formula One was at Circuit of the Americas in Austin and competing in front of one of its largest crowds in the last ten years. Meanwhile, in Kansas, NASCAR was again competing in front of mostly empty grandstands while allegedly in a dramatic championship battle. 

There was much to be pleased about after IndyCar's most recent trip to Texas. The race was a vast improvement over the last few seasons. A final corner pass for the victory helped. IndyCar made an effort to develop a higher lane despite the grip challenges with the PJ1 stained surface in the corners. The extra practice session helped though didn't completely eliminate the issue. After two hours, nine minutes and 29 seconds of racing, the general consensus was there was something worth saving in Texas. But a lot of work remains to be done. 

Attendance must increase significantly, and from the sounds of those at the event, more has to be done promotionally. Labeled as a glorified tire test, awareness is one potential answer. Dallas is the fourth largest market in the United States. Texas is the second largest state. With just over seven million people in the market alone, a respectable five-figure crowd should be the least of both the track and IndyCar's concerns. 

There is a playbook to success. Formula E finds a way to put on respectable races, one-day shows nonetheless, on temporary circuits around the globe. Texas Motor Speedway is one track in a larger multi-million dollar company that has been around for 25 years, not to mention a track that was led by a self-professed marketing marvel. There are no excuses why Texas cannot turn around one of its events to break even. 

With how many seats the place has, 50,000 might not be enough to have a good looking crowd, but it would be a lot better financially and at least feel like an event. 

It is not all on Texas Motor Speedway. IndyCar has plenty of oval issues since reunification. Crowds have shrunk at many tracks from different parts of the country. IndyCar has its own work to do. But is it willing to do what is necessary for oval races to survive? 

Iowa is pulling out all the stops. It has a sponsor in Hy-Vee willing to throw its support behind the event. With a doubleheader capped with concerts featuring four notable performers, Iowa is getting the treatment we have only seen for the likes of the Indianapolis 500 and Long Beach. There is no guarantee we will have two successful days, but if Iowa can get 25,000 or 30,000 each day, it will be the revival the event needed after dwindling crowds and falling off the schedule in 2021. 

Can IndyCar do that at every oval event?

There was only one series on track at Texas. The Road of Indy series do not run Texas. The NASCAR Truck Series is now on the NASCAR weekend at Texas. Iowa will at least have Indy Lights as an additional series, but when it comes to on-track action, that second IndyCar race fills a massive hole. 

IndyCar has been wearied to expand the schedule and doubleheaders are far from popular, but doubleheaders might be the only answer for ovals outside the Indianapolis 500. Texas wanted to be a doubleheader again in 2022, but with Iowa returning as a doubleheader and IndyCar's scheduling philosophy, contraction was forced upon Texas.

Power is something IndyCar doesn't really get to wheeled in any relationship with any track. If Texas needs a doubleheader to survive, IndyCar has to meet it in the middle and accommodate another race. Margins might be tight, but one more race shouldn't be a matter of life or death for IndyCar. If that is the case, IndyCar is in far greater trouble than we realize. Not to forget mentioning, a doubleheader might be exactly what IndyCar needs if it is only having three race weekends in a seven-week period and four race weekends in a ten-week period to open the season. 

Whether Texas remains in the game is to be determined, but for IndyCar's sake it might be better if it does. Texas wants to stick around from the sounds of it. No other track is knocking on IndyCar's door, not even after a last lap pass for the win in its most recent race. The devil IndyCar knows is better than the devil it doesn't. There is a working relationship with Texas. They can play off one another and try to revive this event fresh off an improved race. Any new track would have the motivation to at least make its money back, but it and the series would be starting at zero. Does IndyCar have the time to waste building a relationship?

IndyCar is in a difficult state when it comes to oval events. After two terrible years at Texas, this year's race was doomed before a ticket was even sold. Everyone expected a dog of a race. This year's outing wasn't the greatest race in Texas history, but it was acceptable. Not every race can light the world on fire, but in the 21st century, the tolerance for a bad race is non-existent. Texas had two bad years and there was no saving it. There was no proof this year's race was better. No number of tests in the world was going to persuade 60,000 people to show up at Texas Motor Speedway for race day. 

This is why Iowa is trying to be more than a race weekend and that might be the only recipe going forward. No racetrack can bank on the race being the main draw. A bad race is too much to overcome, but if people can forget the race with two concerts and loads food trucks or whatever other carnival aspect is at the race weekend, then fantastic. 

The Indianapolis 500 had a solid period of lackluster races, but Indianapolis is more than a race. It is an entire weekend with concerts on three consecutive days including the Snake Pit on race day. Even as the race has risen in competition, the weekend has continued to grow beyond the race and attract spectators for multiple reasons.

Race fans might not like to hear it, but it needs to be more than a race. It needs to be an event. That doesn't mean the race doesn't matter, but the weekend or race day needs to be enough to justify the time at the facility. One IndyCar race starting at 11:40 a.m. local time and ending before 2:00 p.m. isn't enough, no matter how many passes there are and if it is five-wide across the line for victory.

Seeing the steps Iowa is taking, it feels like IndyCar has a game plan for future oval events. If it is successful, we could see race weekends evolve after decades of stagnation. But if it doesn't, well then it is more of the same and we continue to scratch our heads. 

Winners From the Weekend
You know about Max Verstappen, but did you know...

Liam Lawson and Felipe Drugovich split the Formula Two races from Jeddah.

Ross Chastain won the NASCAR Cup race from Austin, his first career victory. A.J. Allmendinger won the Grand National Series race. Zane Smith won the Truck race, his second victory of the season. 

Shane Van Gisbergen swept the three Supercars races from Symmons Plains.

Eli Tomac won the Supercross race from Seattle, his fifth consecutive victory, his seventh of the season, and his 44th career victory, tying him with Chad Reed for fourth all-time.

Coming Up This Weekend
NASCAR returns to Richmond.
MotoGP is back in Argentina.