Monday, December 18, 2023

2023 For the Love of Indy Awards

There were plenty of historic moments in motorsports in 2023. Records were shattered. We saw achievements for the first time in decades. There were standout races and racers from all around the globe. New formats were adopted and new places were visited. There were tears for those that came short, and cheers for those clutching silverware. It was a complete year with plenty of reasons to celebrate what happened over the last 12 months. 

We close another year recognizing the best that made up this motorsport season, from those competing to the races themselves. There are many moments that standout in our heads from this year and we will do our best to capture what was the best of the 2023 season.

Racer of the Year
Description: Given to the best racer over the course of 2023.
And the Nominees are:
Ritomo Miyata
Max Verstappen
Jett Lawrence
Ben Keating
Álex Palou

And the winner is... Max Verstappen
Max Verstappen had already made a fair amount of history in 2022. Off a second consecutive championship, one that was convincing and left little doubt who the best driver was that season, it was going to be difficult to follow that up with something better.

Verstappen did just that. He didn't just put 2022 to shame, he made us forget about it entirely. The Dutchman's 2023 season was historic beyond belief. 

Everyone knew Red Bull would be the team to beat. I don't think anyone thought Red Bull would be this untouchable. The manufacturer won 21 of 22 races, but Verstappen was the clear top dog in the team, winning 19 times, a record. He won ten consecutive races, every race from Miami in May to Italy in September, another record. He was only a few days away from a perfect summer when he finished fifth in Singapore. 

It wasn't just the victories, but the way he was winning. He left the field in his dust most of the time. 

11.987 seconds in Bahrain. 
27.921 seconds in Monaco.
24.090 seconds in Barcelona.
33.731 seconds in Hungary.
22.305 seconds in Spa-Francorchamps. 
19.387 seconds in Suzuka. 
10.073 seconds in Austin.
13.875 seconds in Mexico City.
17.993 seconds in Abu Dhabi. 

Nearly half of his victories were by more than ten seconds! At one point, he led 248 consecutive laps from lap 48 in Miami through lap 24 in Austria, nearly two full months later. It is the third longest streak in Formula One history. Verstappen led 1,003 laps total in 2023. He led 75.70% of the laps run this season. Both are records. Verstappen started on pole position 12 times this season and won all 12 times. Again, another record. 

It will be hard to look back and find a more flawless season in Formula One history. Verstappen never finished worse than fifth. He was on the podium in 21 of 22 races, another record. 

At no point did Verstappen step over the line. At no point did a mistake cost him precious seconds or a position or, more importantly, a victory. While a fair number attempt to discredit his ability and boil it down to just the race car, Verstappen makes it hard to ignore the driver. He has shown us an incredible ability to stomp the competition. While he was gone, the rest of the field was close. Teammate Sergio Pérez found himself among Mercedes, Ferrari, Aston Martin and McLaren more times than not. The Red Bull was an incredible car, but only Verstappen could extract its highest potential. 

Verstappen might not be the most lovable personality, but he comfortably expressed himself throughout the season as a race car driver, unafraid to voice dissatisfaction with course selection as more street courses going the schedule, nor when questioning the existence of sprint weekends. He might not be the most sociably driver, but Verstappen does have a passion for racing, and he believes it is the most important part of Formula One. 

I would hate to say we will never see this again, but knowing Verstappen and Red Bull, it feels unlikely their dominance will vanish in 2024. For all the records broken in 2022 and then broken again in 2023, Verstappen is poised for another staggering run in 2024, and no one would be surprised if Verstappen ended up surpassing himself. At the moment, he looks like the only person who possibly could. 

On the other nominees:
Miyata had a breakout year in Japan. In Super Formula, he picked up his first career victory, but better than that he won twice and never finished worse than fifth in a race. With 114.5 points to his name, Miyata claimed the champion, the first title for a Team TOM'S driver since Nick Cassidy in 2019. In Super GT, Miyata and co-driver Sho Tsuboi won three races, including the final two events, claiming the GT500 title with 89 points. Miyata became the fifth driver to win the Super Formula and Super GT championships in the same year. Now, he will be off to Formula Two, competing with Carlin in 2024, while also running in the European Le Mans Series. 

Lawrence has been an outstanding motocross rider for the last few years now, but 2023 saw the Australian move from the 250cc class to the 450cc class. After winning the 250 West Supercross championship with six victories and an average finish of 1.44, Lawrence swept the 2023 AMA Motocross 450 season, winning all 22 races, the third rider to ever go undefeated in a season, and he did it in his rookie year. He closed out the season taking the inaugural SuperMotocross 450 championship. At 20 years old, he has already made a place for himself in history, and there is still a long time to go.

Gentlemen drivers are not thrown into the mix as ever being the best, but Keating has stood out as one of the best amateur drivers in the world today. Keating returned to the FIA World Endurance Championship to defend his GTE-Am championship, but this time driving a Corvette instead of an Aston Martin. In IMSA, Keating drove full-time in an LMP2 entry. In WEC, Keating with co-drivers Nicky Catsburg and Nicolás Varrone won the championship with two races to spare. The trio won three races, including the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Keating's second consecutive victory in the event. In IMSA, Keating and PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports co-driver Paul-Loup Chatin won once and finished no worse than fourth over the six championship races, taking the LMP2 championship. 

Despite it appearing his IndyCar career would be heading elsewhere in 2024, Palou put together one of the most dominant championship performances the series has seen since reunification. The Spaniard went on a tear, opening the season with nine top five finishes in the first ten races, including four victories, three of which were on the spin from June into July. With a worst finish of eighth, Palou was able to claim the championship in style, winning in Portland and clinching the trophy with a race to spare. Palou ended with the lowest average finish for a champion since reunification, and he will continue onward with Chip Ganassi Racing into 2024 and beyond. 

Past Winners
2012: Kyle Larson
2013: Marc Márquez
2014: Marc Márquez
2015: Nick Tandy
2016: Shane van Gisbergen
2017: Brendon Hartley
2018: Scott Dixon
2019: Marc Márquez
2020: Lewis Hamilton
2021: Kyle Larson
2022: Max Verstappen

Race of the Year
Description: Best Race of 2023.
And the Nominees are:
Dakar Rally - Bike Class
Portland ePrix
12 Hours of Sebring
Singapore Grand Prix
World Superbike at Portimão, Race Two

And the winner is... 12 Hours of Sebring
This year's 12 Hours of Sebring could not get anymore chaotic. All five of the classes were close for majority of the race. In the final hour, at least four of the five were nail-bitters. 

For the overall victory, every manufacturer was in the mix. For most of the race, it was Acura and Cadillac trading the lead, with the #01 Chip Ganassi Racing Cadillac and the #60 Meyer Shank Racing Acura being the main players. Wayne Taylor Racing got in the mix with the #10 Acura, and then #01 Cadillac retired due to a mechanical issue. As the sun started to set, the Germans arrived on the season. Both Porsches and the #25 BMW led the race.

Late cautions bunched the field, and it set up for a wild dash to the finish. Mathieu Jaminet and Filipe Albuquerque came together heading into turn three while battling for the lead. Albuquerque slid through the inside of the corner and hit Jaminet again. As those two cars came to a halt, the #7 Porsche of Felipe Nasr had nowhere to go and hit Albuquerque, taking out the third-place runner as well. 

This allowed Pipo Derani to inherit the lead with only minutes remaining in the #31 Whelen Engineering Racing Cadillac. The only other car on the lead lap was the #25 BMW, but the BMW could not match the Cadillac, and Derani along with Alexander Sims and Jack Aitken took the victory. 

That would normally be enough, but in LMP2, Tower Motorsport overcame an accident halfway through the race to win the class with Scott McLaughlin holding off Mikkel Jensen and Paul-Loup Chatin in the final hour. 

In LMP3, the class leading #30 Jr. III Racing Ligier-Nissan of Garett Grist hit some debris, damaging the car and allowing Riley Motorsports with Gar Robinson, Felipe Fraga and Josh Burdon to take the victory. 

In GTD Pro, six cars from six different manufacturers were on the lead lap. Pfaff Motorsports held over the VasserSullivan Lexus with the WeatherTech Racing Mercedes-AMG in third. Iron Lynx brought a Lamborghini in fourth ahead of the factory Corvette and the Risi Competizione Ferrari. 

BMW went 1-2 in GTD with Paul Miller Racing ahead of Turner Motorsport as the top ten in the pro-am class finished on the lead lap. 

For 12 hours, some of sports cars and motorsports best drivers slugged it out and when it got to the finish, nearly nothing separated any of them. It forced drivers into errors and left many wondering what could have been if it was for one or two different decisions. For 12 hours, you could not look away from this race, and it did not disappoint. 

On the other nominees:
One of the most grueling races in the world, the Dakar Rally separates the weak from the strong. This year in the bike class, the strong were many. Halfway through the rally, less than eight minutes covered the top eight riders. The class lead had already changed four times in the first eight stages. In the second half of the race, it became a three-way battle between Skylar Howes, Kevin Benavides and Toby Price. The class lead changed four more times over the final six stages, with Benavides overcoming a 12-second deficit in the final stage to win the Dakar Rally over Price and Howes.

For the first time in the United States, Formula E raced on a permanent circuit, the 1.967-mile Portland International Raceway, famous for its IndyCar racing. The track produced the liveliest Formula E race to date. Due to the nature of the circuit, and lack of opportunities for regeneration, drivers looked to remain in the draft, and not in the lead. A total of 403 passes took place, an average of 12.6 a lap, as drivers kept cycling through positions. It was about positioning for the final run to the line. Nick Cassidy ended up winning from tenth on the grid ahead of Jake Dennis and António Félix da Costa. Mitch Evans went from 20th to fourth, Sébastien Buemi from 16th to fifth. The top ten points finishers were covered by 4.3 seconds. Different from every previous Formula E race, this one had everyone in contention for the entire 32-lap affair. 

It was the one race Red Bull got wrong, and it opened the door for an intense battle between Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes at Singapore. Carlos Sainz, Jr. led from pole position, but he had Lando Norris and teammate Charles Leclerc keeping him honest. The Mercedes went for the two-stop strategy, going to the medium tire compounding, allow George Russell and Lewis Hamilton to carve their way forward. The Mercedes drivers were up to third and fourth, but Sainz, Jr. backed up Norris to slow the Mercedes drivers' progress with fresher rubber while putting Norris within DRS range and canceling out the benefit to the Mercedes drivers. On the final lap, the top four were all within two seconds. Russell brushed the entering turn ten, allowing Hamilton to slide up to third, but Sainz, Jr.'s driving was enough to hold off Norris for the victory. 

It was a two-man race in the World Superbike Championship in 2023, but they put on a few shows for us, most notably, the capper to the Portimão weekend. Toprak Razgatlioglu was on pole position and hoping to take some points out of the gap to Álvaro Bautista before heading to the final round at Jerez. Razgatlioglu started on pole position and led the first four laps, but he could not shake Bautista. The Spaniard took the lead on lap five and led the next five circuits. Over the final 11 laps of the race, neither rider led more than two consecutive laps and the lead changed seven times. Bautista went on to beat Razgatlioglu to the checkered flag by 0.126 seconds, Bautsita's fifth sweep of the weekend and one that added some cushion to his championship lead.

Past Winners
2012: Indianapolis 500
2013: British motorcycle Grand Prix
2014: Bathurst 1000
2015: Australian motorcycle Grand Prix
2016: Spanish Grand Prix
2017: All the races at the World Superbike/World Supersport weekend at Phillip Island
2018: Petit Le Mans
2019: Honda 200 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
2020: Turkish Grand Prix
2021: Monaco ePrix
2022: British Grand Prix

Achievement of the Year
Description: Best success by a driver, team, manufacture, etc.
And the Nominees are:
Max Verstappen breaking the record for highest winning percentage in a Formula One season
Every manufacturer in IMSA's GTP class winning in the first year of the class
Jett Lawrence's Perfect Motocross Season
The NASCAR Garage 56 Effort
Revival of North Wilkesboro Speedway

And the winner is... Max Verstappen breaking the record for highest winning percentage in a Formula One Season
There were many records we could have chosen this year from Verstappen and Red Bull Racing, but this one stands out because of its longevity. It almost felt unreachable. 

With 19 victories from 22 races, Verstappen ended the year having won 86.363% of the Formula One races this season. That didn't just break a record, it shattered the previous mark, and one that stood since the early days of Formula One. 

In 1952, Alberto Ascari won six of eight races, a 75% winning percentage. For 71 years, that record stood, and looked a little unobtainable. Plenty of great drivers had come since Ascari and fallen short. 

Jim Clark. Jackie Stewart. Alain Prost. Ayrton Senna. Michael Schumacher. Sebastian Vettel. Lewis Hamilton. 

They all had great seasons, some had expectations that they would break Ascari's record and fallen short. It almost felt like 75% was just too much to beat. Then Verstappen and Red Bull put together the most dominant season in Formula One history. 

Verstappen didn't just eek over the line with 17 victories, earning him 77.27% and the lowest victory total possible to get the record in 2023. Verstappen crushed the record. He went over 11% better than Ascari's mark. He bypassed the 80% club and started the 85% club. He had a winning streak of ten races and a winning streak of seven races in the same season! 

If Ascari's mark looked untouchable, Verstappen's record is as distant as the stars in Orion's Belt. It will take something truly remarkable to beat Verstappen's 86.363%. It appears like the only thing that will beat it is perfection.

On the other nominees:
It was a banner year for IMSA, as its GTP class debuted and provided close competition across all four manufacturers. It was not a one-make runaway in year one. A few manufacturers struggled, but they all worked through the issues. Each became competitive, and all four won. At one point, each won once in a four-race stretch. There were many reservations about this season, and there could have been a lot of work to do before year two, but IMSA and the manufacturers (Acura, Cadillac, Porsche and BMW), could not have started on a better note.

Perfect season. No defeats. Only victories. That is what Jett Lawrence accomplished in the 450cc AMA Motocross season, and it was his rookie season! Lawrence had mastered the 250cc machinery. He was ready for the next step, and he showed how talented he is at such a young age. The moment was not to grand for him, and the veteran competition did not spook Lawrence. A perfect rookie season does not leave many places for him to go, but it suggests we will see more great things to come. 

Announced in March 2022, the Garage 56 effort for the 100th anniversary 24 Hours of Le Mans would be an adapted NASCAR Cup car. There was much interest in this effort. A NASCAR stock car had competed at Le Mans before, but it was almost 50 years removed, and the current generation of vehicle differs greatly. Under Hendrick Motorsports operation, the NASCAR Garage 56 effort modified the Chevrolet Camaro body style used in the Cup Series to maximize aerodynamics and mechanical grip on the eight-plus mile Circuit de la Sarthe. Weighing 525 pounds less than a normal Cup car, the Garage 56 effort ended up qualifying over 4.5 seconds faster than the GTE-Am pole-winning Corvette. With Jimmie Johnson, Jenson Button and Mike Rockenfeller, the car ran toward the front of the GTE-Am class the entire race until a gearbox issue put it in the garage for an extended period. It was able to return to the circuit and completed 285 laps.

North Wilkesboro Speedway was left for dead after the last NASCAR Cup race there in 1996. With races moving to Texas Motor Speedway and New Hampshire International Raceway, North Wilkesboro was shuttered and slowly was grown over. Nothing was torn down, but Mother Nature did her work, collapsing ceilings and snapping bleacher seating. Weeds grew through the surface. For nearly 30 years, the track was left to die. However, in 2022, after receiving funding from the state of North Carolina, North Wilkesboro began a renovation projection that led to an announcement to bring the NASCAR All-Star Race to the facility in May 2023. After months of work, NASCAR returned to a North Wilkesboro that looked brand new and yet still possessed a charm of yesterday. Arguably the hottest ticket of the NASCAR season, each night of All-Star weekend was full, and they even got to see some racing despite some rain. It appears after being left for dead, North Wilkesboro has a long, second life ahead of it on the NASCAR calendar. 

Past Winners
2012: DeltaWing
2013: Sebastian Vettel for winning nine consecutive races on his way to a fourth consecutive title
2014: Marc Márquez: Setting the record for most wins in a premier class season.
2015: Justin Wilson Memorial Family Auction
2016: Jimmie Johnson for his seventh NASCAR Cup championship
2017: Jonathan Rea: For becoming the first rider to win three consecutive World Superbike championships.
2018: Robert Wickens for winning IndyCar Rookie of the Year despite missing the final three races.
2019: Joe Gibbs Racing setting single-season record for most Cup victories by a in NASCAR's modern-era.
2020: Donald Davidson for 55 years of service to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indianapolis 500
2021: Team WRT's championship success across multiple series and disciplines
2022: Max Verstappen achieving the most grand prix victories in a single season

Moment of the Year
Description: The Most Memorable Moment in the World of Racing during the 2023 season.
And the Nominees are:
Ferrari wins the 24 Hours of Le Mans
Robert Wickens with the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge TCR Class championship with Harry Gottsacker
Kyle Kirkwood's tire flying over the catchfence at the Indianapolis 500
Shane van Gisbergen winning the NASCAR Cup race at the Chicago street course
Jack Harvey making the Indianapolis 500

And the winner is... Shane van Gisbergen winning the NASCAR Cup race at the Chicago street course.
NASCAR's first street race in its modern era was not off to a dream start. Heavy rainstorms washed out half of Saturday's action and significantly delayed the proceedings on Sunday. Many were worried about what would happen if the rain did not let up to allow for competition on Sunday. 

There was a break in the weather, and NASCAR was able to get the Cup race started. One of the drivers competing, making his Cup debut, was Shane van Gisbergen. The Supercars champion made a highly anticipated cameo with Trackhouse's Project 91 effort meant to bring international drivers to NASCAR. While van Gisbergen had only had a brief shakedown of the car at Charlotte, many were curious to see how the New Zealander would do, as the current generation Cup car shared more similarities with a Supercars machine than any ever before. Van Gisbergen's had a wealth of street course experience while a street course was foreign to nearly every other driver competing in Chicago. 

Van Gisbergen topped the Saturday practice session and was third in qualifying. He kept the car pointing in the correct direction at the start of the race in wet conditions. However, van Gisbergen was coming to life as the track dried out. He did suffer a setback when he made his pit stop at the end of the second stage and NASCAR announced the race would be shortened to 75 laps from the scheduled 100 laps to do pending darkness. With 26 laps remaining, van Gisbergen restarted in the middle of the field, but he went to work. 

In 16 laps, van Gisbergen drove up to third. He clearly had more speed than the leader Justin Haley and Chase Eliott in second. A caution for Martin Truex, Jr. getting into the tires erased the deficit, but van Gisbergen didn't need the help. With the disadvantage gone, van Gisbergen took no time taking the lead in turn two. 

A few more late incidents set up a green-white-checkered finish, a prime moment for van Gisbergen to lose the race due to another driver's tactics, but van Gisbergen was untouchable. He drove away from the field in the final two laps and became the first debutant winner in the NASCAR Cup Series since Johnny Rutherford in 1963. 

It was one of the greatest performances in NASCAR history. Van Gisbergen had tremendous pace in a car he had little time driving, and he found a way to be blindingly quicker than the competition, especially in the back-half of the circuit from turn seven through turn 11. His turned everybody's head, and even had Max Verstappen left in awe. 

On one July Sunday evening, the motorsports world was left astonished when a highly respected talent went out and won in a different discipline against unknown competition. It was a humbling moment on one end, but a defining moment on the other.

On the other nominees:
Ferrari is the most recognizable automobile company in the world. Nearly 60 years had passed since its most recent Le Mans victory, and in the 100th anniversary 24 Hours of Le Mans, the Italian manufacturer was back looking to recreate past Le Mans glory. The Ferrari 499P had the pace, but had the tried-and-true Toyota to battle, which had won five consecutive years at Le Mans. At the end of 24 hours, the #51 Ferrari of James Calado, Alessandro Pier Guidi and Antonio Giovinazzi was on top, a historic result for a monumental race. 

There were plenty reasons to celebrate in 2022 with the return of Robert Wickens to full-time competition nearly four years after his spinal injury. In the IMSA's Michelin Pilot Challenge series' TCR class, Wickens won two races and showed competitive speed on a regular basis. What did Wickens do for an encore? He won the TCR championship with Gottsacker. The duo did not win a race, but they finished runner-up in six of ten races with another third mixed in and the team's worst finish was sixth! It was another case of Wickens dazzling us and showing there is no limit to what is possible.

This year's Indianapolis 500 was an incredible race. It was open for any of about ten drivers to win, and in the closing laps, it felt like we were set up for a grandstand finish. There had been only two cautions in the first 184 laps, and the race was in a full sprint to the finish. Felix Rosenqvist was running in the top five when he brushed the barrier exiting turn one. It brought out a caution, but Rosenqvist was trying to keep the car straight. The Swede's Dallara broke loose into the path of Kyle Kirkwood. Kirkwood attempted to avoid Rosenqvist, and mostly did, only for Rosenqvist's car to catch the left rear tire of Kirkwood. The tire was sheared from the chassis and flew over the catchfence. For a brief moment, it felt like this was about to be the final Indianapolis 500, as we prepared to see a tragedy amongst the spectators. However, the greatest relief was finding out the tire went over the catchfence, but missed the grandstand and all it did was damage a car in the parking lot. No one was hurt. There was a great sigh of relief, but it was closer than anyone hoped for. 

There was much drama in Speedway, Indiana long before we even got to race day. With 34 entries, one car would miss the race, and the four cars relegated to the last row qualifying session on the final qualifying day were the #45 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda of Christian Lundgaard, the #51 Dale Coyne Racing Honda of Sting Ray Robb, the #30 RLLR Honda of Jack Harvey, and the #15 RLLR Honda of Graham Rahal. RLLR had its back against the wall with three of its four cars in this session, and it looked highly likely one of its cars would miss the race. Graham Rahal sat in the 33rd spot after the first run through while Jack Harvey was on the outside. Harvey made a second attempt late and did not have the speed to bump his way in. When he pulled into the pit lane, Harvey still had a few minutes left on the clock. After a quick adjustment, Harvey went back to the track in a desperation attempt. It worked. Harvey made the race with a four-lap average at 229.166 mph compared to Rahal's 229.159 mph. Harvey was joyous. Rahal was despondent. We were all left stunned.

Past Winners
2012: Alex Zanardi
2013: 24 Hours of Le Mans
2014: Post-race at the Charlotte and Texas Chase races.
2015: Matt Kenseth vs. Joey Logano
2016: Toyota Slows at Le Mans
2017: Fernando Alonso announcing his Indianapolis 500 ride
2018: Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson battle at Chicagoland
2019: Kyle Kaiser and Juncos Racing knocking out Fernando Alonso and McLaren and Penske Purchasing Hulman & Co.
2020: March 12-13
2021: The entire Formula One season
2022: Ross Chastain's final corner at Martinsville

Pass of the Year
Description: Best pass of 2023.
And the Nominees are:

And the winner is... António Félix da Costa on Jean-Éric Vergne in turn eight of the final lap of the Cape Town ePrix
This was the toughest category to select this year. All five nominees could have won. Da Costa's move stands out because of how close to disaster it could have been. 

In the closing laps of the Cape Town ePrix, da Costa was on the heels of Vergne. On the penultimate lap, da Costa had a run down the straightaway out of turn seven. However, turn eight was a slight and quick right-hander just prior to a quick correction to the left for turn nine. 

Da Costa went to the outside of turn eight and then squeezed his car ahead of Vergne on the inside of turn nine and made it stick on exit.

This could have been a gnarly accident if da Costa was a half-inch further to the left going through turn nine. Clipping the inside of the barrier takes him out and takes out Vergne. If da Costa was too quick on exit of turn nine, he likely would have slapped the outside barrier and Vergne would have taken the victory. Da Costa had to be pinpoint precise to make this move work. He was. 

There was another lap after da Costa made this pass. The opportunity presented itself for Vergne to duplicate the move da Costa had just pulled off. Vergne never took a chance attempting it, and da Costa was able to hang on for the victory.

On the other nominees:
The Barber IndyCar race might have been the best of the season, and for most of that race it was Romain Grosjean against Scott McLaughlin. After the final round of pit stops, McLaughlin leapfrogged ahead of Grosjean, but Grosjean had the preferred tire at the opening of the stint. Grosjean hounded McLaughlin. The Frenchman could not get to McLaughlin's inside in turn 13, but Grosjean backed off early in the corner to increase acceleration into turn 14. He got to McLaughlin's outside which allowed Grosjean to have the inside in to the 15th and final corner. Grosjean exited with the lead with such a daring move. Of course, McLaughlin had the tires over the long run and would overtake Grosjean and eventually win the race, but Grosjean gave it his all.

Unexpectedly, DeFrancesco qualified fifth for the second IndyCar race on the IMS road course. We have seen some quizzical qualifying performances before at that track, but Andretti Autosport also had a good track record at the circuit, so perhaps it should not have been a surprise. What was a surprise was the move DeFrancesco made at the start of the race. He settled back in fifth position, but approaching turn one, DeFrancesco went to the outside and kept up his speed. He passed three cars and was on Graham Rahal's outside on corner exit. DeFrancesco was able to get the power down before turn two and take the lead. It was incredible, something no one expected from DeFrancesco. Unfortunately, DeFrancesco must have used up everything to make that one pass because he soon started to fall down the order and ended up finishing 19th, one lap down, with no apparent issue with the car. 

The inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix proved to be a spine-tingling race with cars able to make numerous overtakes down the fast straightaways. Leclerc had battled most of the race with Max Verstappen for the lead, but Red Bull had the power and the strategy to not only put Verstappen in first but placed Pérez in second in the closing stages. Verstappen pulled away but Leclerc was making a push for second on Pérez. Driving down the Las Vegas Strip toward turn 14 on the final lap, Leclerc had the DRS advantage on Pérez and took his chance. Leclerc braked later than imaginable and went up the inside of Pérez. The Ferrari stuck on exit and Leclerc had the spot. The Monegasque driver held off the counter move from Pérez on the run to the line and Leclerc dispatched the Red Bull 1-2. 

After 24 hours, the LMP2 class at Daytona saw the first two cars within touching distance. Ben Hanley had the #04 CrowdStrike Racing by APR Oreca-Gibson in front while James Allen chased in the #55 Proton Competition Oreca-Gibson. Exiting the chicane for the final time, Allen had the benefit of the draft, which was increased thanks to an LMP3 car also on the banking. Exiting the banking, momentum was on Allen's side as he picked up the tow off Hanley. Entering the tri-oval, Allen slipped to the outside and had enough speed to beat Hanley to the line by 0.016 seconds, the sixth closest finish in IMSA history. Talk about timed to perfection. 

Past Winners
2012: Simon Pagenaud at Baltimore
2013: Robert Wickens at Nürburgring and Peter Dempsey in the Freedom 100
2014: Ryan Blaney on Germán Quiroga
2015: Laurens Vanthoor from 4th to 2nd on the outside in the Bathurst 12 Hour
2016: Scott McLaughlin on Mark Winterbottom at Surfers Paradise
2017: Renger van der Zande: From second to first on Dane Cameron at Laguna Seca
2018: Alexander Rossi for all his passes in the Indianapolis 500
2019: Álex Rins on Marc Márquez in the final corner at Silverstone in the British motorcycle Grand Prix
2020: Pipo Derani on Ricky Taylor into turn one at Road Atlanta
2021: Shane van Gisbergen from fourth to second at Sandown
2022: Ross Chastain's final corner at Martinsville

The Eric Idle Award
Description: "When You're Chewing on Life's Gristle, Don't Grumble, Give a Whistle, And This'll Help Things Turn Out For The Best, and...  Always Look On The Bright Side of Life."
And the Nominees are:
Nyck de Vries
Eli Tomac
Robert Mau
Stefan Wilson
Chase Elliott

And the winner is... Eli Tomac
Eli Tomac was on the precipice of his third Supercross championship. With two races remaining in the season, Tomac had an 18-point lead over Chase Sexton in the championship and he had a chance to lock up the championship in his home race in Denver if he left with a 26-point lead. Even with a good day in Denver, Tomac could leave with at least a hand on the trophy heading to the Salt Lake City season finale. 

Denver's main event started out in Tomac's favor. He had an early lead while Sexton was running in third. However, three minutes into the race, Tomac pulled off course and rode straight to the medical truck. He ruptured his Achilles tendon, ending his race. Sexton ended up winning the Denver race, taking a seven-point championship lead and effectively winning the championship as his closest competitor, Tomac, was done for the season. 

Without the injury, Tomac likely takes the title in his backyard with a race to spare. Even if he had fallen behind Sexton in the Denver main event, he likely would have gone to the finale just needing to 12th or better, something he had easily done in every race prior to the penultimate round. This injury caused Tomac to miss the Motocross season and the inaugural SuperMotocross championship. He will return in 2024 and look to make up for the championship lost.

On the other nominees:
After scoring points on an unexpected Formula One debut in 2022, de Vries earned a call from AlphaTauri to be the full-time driver for 2023. If he could score points with Williams in a cameo, what could he do as a full-time AlphaTauri driver? Well... unfortunately, the 2019 Formula Two champion did not score any points. He was only unclassified in one of the first ten races. Teammate Yuki Tsunoda only had two points in that span, but AlphaTauri had seen enough, and de Vries was out of the rider before Formula One had even reached the summer break.

The name Robert Mau might sound familiar, but you cannot place where you heard it. Mau was the LMP3 driver that plowed into the back of the #6 Porsche while behind the safety car at the 12 Hours of Sebring. The #6 Porsche was able to be repaired and continue in the race, but it was a setback. On the other hand, Mau did not compete in another IMSA race in 2023.

Wilson cannot seem to have a peaceful experience at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He famously sacrificed his seat in the 2017 Indianapolis 500 to allow Fernando Alonso to attempt in a fifth Andretti Autosport entry. After a two-year hiatus, he returned in 2021 with Andretti Autosport, only to have an accident entering the pit lane. In 2022, Wilson was the 33rd and final entry as there was a scramble to materialize a entry with DragonSpeed. The car didn't get on track until late in the week and the engine failed morning of qualifying, leaving Wilson as the default 33rd starter. How did 2023 go? Wilson qualified comfortably in 25th. Everything was looking fine until Monday practice when a collision between Katherine Legge and Wilson led to an accident in turn one. Wilson suffered a fractured vertebra and had to withdraw from the race. Can Wilson ever have a normal month of May?

It is not easy being the most popular driver in NASCAR. It is worse when you break your leg two days prior to the third race of the season in a snowboarding accident, which is what Elliott did, forcing him to miss six races. It happened early enough in the regular season that Elliott still had a good chance of making the playoffs either through victory or points. He returned and had good results, until he intentionally wrecked Denny Hamlin in the Coca-Cola 600, leading to a one-race suspension. Elliott was unable to win a race, nor could he amass enough points to make the playoffs. A consolation victory in the final ten races did not come either, and 2023 marks the low point for his still relatively young career. 

Past Winners
2012: Ben Spies
2013: Sam Hornish, Jr.
2014: Alexander Rossi
2015: McLaren
2016: Toyota
2017: Nick Heidfeld
2018: Brett Moffitt
2019: Dennis Lind
2020: Marc Márquez
2021: Liam Lawson
2022: Linus Lundqvist

Comeback of the Year
Description: The Best Comeback in the 2023 season.
And the Nominees are:
Eli Tomac in the Anaheim Supercross season opener
McLaren's 2023 Formula One Season
Enea Bastianini: From Injury to Victory
Tower Motorsports winning LMP2 at the 12 Hours of Sebring
Dani Pedrosa: Finishing seventh and fourth in two MotoGP races, five years removed from last competing full-time.

And the winner is... McLaren's 2023 Formula One Season
The 2023 season did not begin on a great note for McLaren. At the opening round in Bahrain, Oscar Piastri could not get out of the first round of qualifying and Lando Norris could not get through round two. Piastri retired and engine issues plagued Norris' race. McLaren continued to struggle for points. There were a few good races, but McLaren was not close to a competitive car. 

Through the first nine races, McLaren had one top five finish and had 29 points. McLaren was averaging 3.222 points per race and on pace for 70 points for the entire season. 

In the final 11 races, McLaren had seven runner-up finishes and nine total podium finishes. Piastri and Norris went 1-2 in the Qatar sprint race. After having one race in the first nine where both cars finished in the points, both McLaren drivers scored points in eight of the final 11 events. 

When the season was over, McLaren finished on 302 points and fourth in the constructors' championship, ahead of Aston Martin. McLaren went from averaging 3.222 points per race to 13.727 points per race. At its original pace, McLaren was looking at seventh in the constructors' championship. Instead, McLaren ended up with its highest points per race since the 2012 season.

On the other nominees:
Tomac had opened a respectable lead in the Anaheim season opener. However, on lap eight, he took a spill and dropped back to fifth, over eight seconds off the lead. Tomac clawed his way back and reclaimed the lead on lap 18. He held on to win the season opener despite being down in the dirt nearly halfway through the race. 

There were plenty of reasons for Bastianini to be excited before the start of this season. After winning multiple races with Gresini Racing, he moved to the factory Ducati outfit. However, his season was plagued with injuries, missing the first five races and then injuring himself on the initial start at Barcelona and forced to miss four more races. Many thought Ducati would move on from Bastianini, especially as Jorge Martín was putting up a championship fight. However, Bastianini ended his season with five points finishes in the final six grand prix, including a victory in Malaysia, and Bastianini will continue with Ducati for another season.

Halfway through the 12 Hours of Sebring, Tower Motorsports was done. Kyffin Simpson had a massive accident exiting turn one. However, Simpson was able to drive back to the pit lane and most of the damage was cosmetic. The Tower crew kept the car in the race and with John Farano and Scott McLaughlin and the #8 Oreca was back in the lead for the final hour. McLaughlin held off late challenges from Paul-Loup Chatin and Mikkel Jensen to win the LMP2 class and finish third overall. 

Pedrosa was once one of the best riders in MotoGP, but he stepped away from full-time competition after the 2018 season. Outside of a wild card appearance at the Red Bull Ring in 2021, Pedrosa had not seen much competition, but he returned as a wild card for the Spanish Grand Prix at Jerez. He qualified sixth, finished sixth in the sprint race and was seventh in the grand prix, only 6.371 seconds off the winner Francesco Bagnaia. Pedrosa returned for a second wild card appearance at Misano, and he finished fourth in both races that weekend, only a few weeks before his 38th birthday.

Past Winners
2013: Michael Shank Racing at the 24 Hours of Daytona
2014: Juan Pablo Montoya to IndyCar
2015: Kyle Busch
2016: Max Verstappen from 15th to 3rd in the final 18 laps in the wet in the Brazilian Grand Prix
2017: Kelvin van der Linde: From third to first after a botched pit stop in the final 20 minutes in the 24 Hours Nürburgring
2018: Billy Monger: Returning to racing after losing his legs and finishing sixth in the BRDC British Formula 3 Championship with four podium finishes and a pole position at Donington Park.
2019: MotoE: For getting to the grid after fire destroyed every motorcycle prior to the first round of the season
2020: The #7 Acura Team Penske: Coming from last in the championship to winning the IMSA DPi championship
2021: Kyle Busch's victory at Pocono
2022: Robert Wickens

Most Improved
Description: Racer, Team or Manufacture Who Improved The Most from 2022 to 2023.
And the Nominees are:
Jorge Martín: From ninth on 152 points to second on 428 points with four victories and eight sprint victories in MotoGP
Marco Bezzecchi: From 14th on 111 points to third on 329 points with three victories and a sprint victory in MotoGP
Chris Buescher: From 21st on 729 points with one victory to seventh with three victories in the NASCAR Cup Series
Nick Cassidy: From 11th on 68 points with one victory to second on 199 points with four victories in Formula E
Fermín Aldeguer: From 15th on 80 points to third on 212 points with five victories in Moto2

And the winner is... Jorge Martín
Through his first two MotoGP seasons, Martín had shown bursts of speed. As a rookie, he won a few pole positions and even won at the Red Bull Ring in a season where he missed four races due to injury. In his sophomore season, Martín again had mostly good days and scored a fair number of points, but of the eight Ducati riders, he finished fifth best of that group, and he was fourth best of the five riders on the 2022 bike. 

With Ducati's success in 2022, it was going to be a tough season for any Ducati rider to stand above the best in 2023, no matter which bike the rider was on. For Martín, he started slow with two retirements in the first three races, but took his consistency to a new level as the season went on. He scored five consecutive top five finishes for the first time in his career after his previous longest streak was two. His sprint race results lifted him up the championship as well.

Martín kept the pressure on Francesco Bagnaia as the season wore on, and it did not appear as if Martín would slip up. For a brief moment, in Indonesia, the championship lead was Martín's, but an accident saw the lead go back to Bagnaia. Martín stayed in the fight to the final round. A poor set of tires in Qatar forced himself to face an even greater uphill battle in Valencia. It may not have ended the way Martín had hoped, but even without a championship trophy, he earned greater respect and appreciate for his 2023 season.

On the other nominees:
Bezzecchi had a great sophomore season in MotoGP. He struggled to score points in sprint races, and that might have held him back in a championship push. But Bezzecchi was one of the most competitive riders for most of this season. He made an early push for the championship, and while it did not stick, he was one of the top three riders this season.

Buescher led a bounce back for RFK Racing in the NASCAR Cup Series this season. The turnaround started in late 2022 with a victory at Bristol, but it carried into 2023. Along with three victories, Buescher tripled his best season in top five finishes from three to nine. He had 17 top ten finishes, his most ever in a season. He had his best average finish in a season, 12.1, over five positions better than his previous best. It led to Buescher making the semifinal round and finishing seventh in the championship, the first top ten championship finish for the team since 2014.

Cassidy had some success in his first two Formula E season, but far from the lofty success he experience in Japan. Year three saw Cassidy make great strides. After scoring four podium finishes in his first two seasons, the New Zealander had eight podium finishes in 2023 alone. He was in the points in 12 of 16 races and he went to the final round with a chance at the championship, finishing second to Jake Dennis.

Aldeguer had some good moments, but had some rough moments in his first full season in Moto2 in 2022. In 2023, Aldeguer made incredible strides, and he ended on the highest notes. Victory and 11 points finishes in the first 13 races aside, Aldeguer ended with four consecutive victories and six consecutive podium finishes. In the final six races, he went from 11th on 88 points to third on 212 points.

Past Winners
2012: Esteban Guerrieri
2013: Marco Andretti
2014: Chaz Mostert
2015: Graham Rahal
2016: Simon Pagenaud
2017: DJR Team Penske
2018: Gary Paffett
2019: Cooper Webb
2020: Joan Mir
2021: Francesco Bagnaia
2022: Scott McLaughlin

And that will do it. What a tremendous year this was! While it felt like 2023 went a little quicker than previous years, 2024 will be here soon enough. Competition will begin shortly and soon another batch of spectacular memories will be made. There will be plenty of new things we will see as well as historic moments we will be grateful to witness. For now, let's enjoy this holiday season. 

Soon, we will be making predictions and handing out some Christmas presents. 


Thursday, December 14, 2023

2023 IndyCar Milestones

One final chance to close out a season looking at what was accomplished. As we have covered Formula One and NASCAR, now it is time to cover IndyCar. It was a rather historic season in IndyCar this year. For the first time since reunification, the championship was decided prior to the finale. For the first time since 2005, the series whose roots are the Indy Racing League was decided prior to the season finale. 

But beyond the championship, we saw a few other records broken. A few veterans reached a few notable milestones. Some reached some less known marks. There are things that happened that you probably did not realize occurred. This is why we do this exercise, to hopefully leave you a little more informed. 

Scott Dixon: Most Consecutive Starts
This was on our radar from the start of the season and when it comes to a consecutive starts streak, you never really know when it will end. If everything goes as planned, a driver should start every race with no problems. But little things pop up, and a streak can end on a down note.

Dixon started 2023 with 305 consecutive starts. He had not missed a race since July 2004. Nothing lasts forever, but when the record is in reach, you just hopes it lasts a little longer. Dixon had to start 14 races to break the record Tony Kanaan set from 2001 to 2020. 

Fortunately, nothing bad or unforeseen occurred, and Dixon was able to make it to the 14th race of the season, the second race from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, and took this record for himself. Of course, he did it in incredible fashion, overcoming an opening lap accident to win through incredible fuel conservation. It was a victory only Dixon could pull off and he did it on such a historic occasion.

Dixon did start every race this season, meaning he enters 2024 having made 322 consecutive starts.

Dixon: Most Top Five Finishes
This wouldn't be an end-of-year IndyCar milestone recap without a handful of Scott Dixon accomplishments. We got two more for you. 

This one is Dixon again reaching uncharted territory. It isn't so much the record for most top five finishes, but the plateau he reached. The record was likely always going to fall this season. Dixon entered 2023 on 192 top five finishes, one behind Mario Andretti's record.

I even said at the start of the season Dixon would likely claim this record by the second race of the season, and he did after finishing third at St. Petersburg and fifth at Texas. Once Dixon was on 194 top five finishes and the record was his, the next goal was 200 top five finishes, and it felt highly probably he could reach that mark before the season started. 

He only needed eight top five finishes this season, and he had scored at least eight top five finishes in six consecutive seasons entering this year. Dixon had six top ten finishes in the first ten races. He was fifth at Nashville and then his victory in the second IMS road course race, his record-breaking 319th consecutive start, was Dixon's 200th top five finish. What a day!

Dixon ended the season with three more top five finishes, leaving him on 203 in his career.

Dixon: Second Most Laps Led
This is another record that feels increasingly more likely to end up as Dixon's before his career is over. 

Dixon started 2023 with 6,519 laps led in his career, fourth all-time. He was 102 laps behind A.J. Foyt for third and 174 laps behind Michael Andretti for second. For most of this season, it did not look likely Dixon would reach second. 

Through the first 13 races, Dixon had only led 13 laps. Then, starting with that August IMS road course race, Dixon went on to lead 192 laps in the final four races, surpassing Andretti for second in the final race of the season at Laguna Seca. 

With 6,724 laps led entering 2024, Dixon is 871 laps behind Mario Andretti's record. He isn't likely to come close this season. Over his last three seasons, Dixon has led 783 laps. At best he could be three seasons away, but he is 43 years old and turns 44 in July 2024. It will be close. The 7,000 laps led milestone is certainly achievable, maybe even next year.

Will Power: 5,000 Laps Led
Speaking of laps led milestones, Power led 180 laps, leaving him with 5,015 laps led in his career. He reached 5,000 laps led in the second Iowa race, and in doing so became the seventh driver in IndyCar history to lead at least 5,000 laps in a career.

Like Dixon to Mario Andretti, there is some breathing room from Power to the next guy in the record book. Al Unser is sixth all-time with 5,802 laps led. Power will likely not lead 788 laps in 2024 and remain seventh for at least another season if not two, but there is a chance he could end his career with at least 6,000 laps led. That is not out of the realm of possibility. 

Josef Newgarden: 52 Podium Finishes
When you win the Indianapolis 500, it is difficult to look at a season and call it a disappointment, especially when you won four times and had the second most victories in the season, but Newgarden's 2023 season just doesn't quite feel great. Perhaps it was the disjointed nature where he started rather slow and then ended on a dud with three finishes outside the top twenty in the final four events. This dropped him to fifth in the championship. 

However, Newgarden did have five podium finishes this season, which made him the 21st driver in IndyCar history to reach the 50 podium finish milestone. The Tennessee-native entered the year with 47 career podium finishes. With his second-place result at Road America, he hit 50. Then he won both Iowa races and he ended the year on 52 podium results, 19th all-time, just ahead of Tom Sneva and Gil de Ferran, who both ended on 50. 

Newgarden turns 33 years old on December 22 and he is already over 50 podium finishes and on the doorstep of 30 victories. There is easily another decade ahead of him, perhaps even 15 years. It isn't a matter of if Newgarden ends among the all-time greats, but where among the all-time greats.

Newgarden: Sixth Time Leading the Most Laps in a Season
Due to his oval mastery, Newgarden ends up leading a lot of laps every season. This year, he raised the bar even for himself, leading a career-high 602 laps. It was the ninth consecutive season Newgarden has led more than 300 laps in a season. But that isn't the only thing Newgarden did in 2023. 

For the sixth time in his career, Newgarden led the most laps in a season. It was the fifth time in the last six seasons, Newgarden ended the year with the most laps led. It is quite the accomplishment. 

How many other drivers have led the most laps in a season at least six times?

A.J. Foyt (1961, 1963-65, 1975, 1979 USAC)
Bobby Unser (1968, 1971-74, 1979 CART)
Mario Andretti (1966-67, 1969, 1984-85, 1987)

That's it. That's the list. 

When it is you, Foyt, Andretti and Bobby Unser, you have done something special. 

As I mentioned before, Newgarden will only be 33 years old next season, plus there are two races at Milwaukee. Newgarden has a great chance at making IndyCar history and doing something none of the other three did.

Hélio Castroneves and Tony Kanaan: 25-Year Careers
This was always going to be a sentimental year for two of IndyCar's most notable drivers. For Tony Kanaan, this was set to be his final Indianapolis 500. For Hélio Castroneves, this was likely to be his final full season in IndyCar, again. The 2023 season was going to mark the turning of the page for these careers, which started in the 20th century. 

Castroneves and Kanaan started their IndyCar careers on the same day, March 15, 1998. For Kanaan, his final start will be May 28, 2023. For Castroneves, he has at least one more planned Memorial Day weekend at 16th and Georgetown in 2024. Either way, they both surpassed the 25-year mark in their IndyCar careers. They became the 19th and 20th drivers to have a career span a quarter-century. 

They were only the third and fourth drivers to reach the 25-year milestone in the 21st century, joining Al Unser, Jr. and Buddy Lazier. It could be a while until the next driver hits this mark. If Juan Pablo Montoya returns for another Indianapolis 500, his career will span 25 years. Scott Dixon will likely reach this mark. After that, it s unclear who could be next. Few have the staying power of Castroneves and Kanaan. We all know that. 

Katherine Legge: Ten Years Between Starts
Legge was once a full-timer in Champ Car, hung around IndyCar with the introduction of the DW12 chassis and then she was gone. To sports cars, but she was out of IndyCar circles for the most part, except for a failed program known as Grace Autosport. 

This year, Legge had the support to run an additional entry with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing at the Indianapolis 500. She ended up being the top RLLR qualifier for a team that struggled and failed to get all four cars into the race. It was the first time she had started an IndyCar race since 2013, more specifically, it was ten years and two days between starts. 

Legge became 12th driver to have at least a decade between IndyCar starts. She joined a select list of "wows" and "whos" to have gone at least ten years between starts. From the likes of Jacques Villeneuve and Juan Pablo Montoya to Jack Hewitt and Steve Kinser and John Andretti and then a collection of drivers from decades ago (Raúl Riganti, anyone?), Legge is now a part of that company. 

Here's to it not being another decade between Legge appearances.

Santino Ferrucci: Five Top Ten Finishes in First Five Indianapolis 500 Starts
We were onto this at the start of the year because Ferrucci had the chance to do something that only two other drivers had ever done before. Only two other drivers had finished in the top five in their first five Indianapolis 500 starts. Ferrucci entered this May having finished seventh, fourth, sixth and tenth in his first four appearances. 

Only Harry Hartz and Hélio Castroneves had started five-for-five in their Indianapolis 500 careers. History was not necessarily on Ferrucci's side, and yet, he had his best Indianapolis 500 to date as A.J. Foyt Racing had its best race in over a decade. 

Ferrucci qualified fourth and spent much of the race at the front. He led 11 laps. A slight stumble on a pit stop cost him some time, but Ferrucci was in the mix in the closing laps and ended up finishing third, the best result of his IndyCar career. 

Among drivers with at least five Indianapolis 500 starts, Ferrucci's now ranks fourth all-time in average finish at 6.0 behind only Bill Holland, Ted Horn and Jimmy Murphy. Heading into 2024, Ferrucci has a chance to make some more history, and do something never done before.

Álex Palou: 3.7059 Average Finish
We end with our champion. Palou locked up his second championship a race early something IndyCar had not seen in over 15 years. The Spaniard won five races, his worst result was eighth, he completed 2,258 of 2,260 laps. In four seasons, Palou has two championships. He already has nine career victories in 64 career starts. He is already leaving an impression on the record book and have his named littered across many different categories before his time is up. 

With how he ran this season, it should be no surprise Palou's average finish was 3.7059. Imagine your average day being better than a fourth-place finish. That is extraordinary to do. How extradorinary? Since 1946, it was only the 19th time the champion has had an average finish below four. Nineteen times might not sound that exclusive, but let's put Palou's finish into greater context. 

It was the best average finish for a champion since reunification. The previous best was Scott Dixon's 4.2 in 2018. Of those other champions with an average finish better than fourth, ten of those occurred during some kind of split, whether it be the USAC-CART split or the CART-IRL split. Not to take away from those championship performances, but Palou has been competing in one series with all the competition for American open-wheel racing in one place. This was the best average finish for a champion during a period of IndyCar stability since A.J. Foyt had an average finish of 3.5 while taking the 1975 championship. 

We were used to the championship going to the wire and even when a driver had an exceptional season, someone remained close enough or was perhaps equally as good. We don't know when we will see another season like Palou's. I don't expect it to be the norm for a driver to win a half-dozen races and finish on the podium over ten times a season from here moving forward. IndyCar might have been due for an early championship claim, it might be due for another as well, but I don't think after almost two decades of finale drama we are going to see a decade of contests decided with races to spare. 

IndyCar is going to remain competitive. We are going to have tight contests that could see three, four or even five drivers with a chance at the championship in the final race. There will be years where it will be Team Penske vs. Chip Ganassi Racing to the final day, and who knows? Maybe even Andretti Autosport and Arrow McLaren can get a driver in the title fight!

For 2023, we had Palou, a driver who had been the talk of IndyCar off the racetrack for the entire offseason, force us to continue to talk about him for what he did behind the wheel of a race car. That might not change in 2024, and might not change for quite some time. 



Wednesday, December 13, 2023

2023 NASCAR Milestones

We see the end of December approaching, we can use these days to reflect on what occurred in 2023. As we did with Formula One, we acknowledge a few achievements from this past NASCAR season. It was the 75th anniversary for the sanctioning body, and a few notable milestones were reached. For a few, it was the final acts for their careers. For others, these were building blocks as drivers attempt to boost their legacies.

Hendrick Motorsports: 301 NASCAR Cup Series Victories
The most successful Cup team already, Hendrick Motorsports had 300 Cup victories in the organization's view from the start of the season. All Hendrick Motorsports needed was nine victories to reach 300, something that was more than achievable. Nine victories is something the team regularly achieves at the Cup level.

When previewing possible milestones before the season began, it was penciled for some time in autumn. When did the ninth victory come? 

It was the first race of autumn, September 24, at Texas Motor Speedway, where William Byron won, Byron's sixth victory of the season. Kyle Larson took Hendrick to 301 victories three weeks later at Las Vegas. 

It is unexplored territory, and Hendrick Motorsports is the first one there, something that has been rather common in NASCAR.

Denny Hamlin: 51 NASCAR Cup Series Victories
Fifty victories is a significant milestone in the NASCAR Cup Series. It is a short list of the greatest drivers to reach 50 victories. Many great drivers haven't reach 50 victories, though it hasn't been for a lack of skill or effort.

Denny Hamlin had been closing in on 50 victories for a few seasons and he made it his stated desire to reach the milestone mark. He needed two victories to reach 50. His first victory came after a sensational battle with Kyle Larson at Kansas in May. Number 50 came at the location of Hamlin's first career victory, Pocono. It came after another fierce battle with Larson, this one hurt feelings. 

Hamlin didn't care. He became the 15th driver to reach 50 career victories. He is only the fourth driver whose career has begun in the last 30 years to reach the mark. Hamlin added his 51st victory at Bristol in September. Sitting 13th all-time, he is three behind Lee Petty and four behind Rusty Wallace with another desired milestone, 60 victories, only nine away. If he reaches 61, Hamlin will enter the top ten.

Ryan Blaney: 100th driver to 300 NASCAR Cup Series Starts
You would think the champion deserves some recognition, and we will give Blaney his moment, but we have already pointed out a few historical notes from his championship season. Instead of rehashing those, let's note something that has not been mentioned about Blaney's career. 

His 300th start came at Texas in September, the same day Hendrick Motorsports reached 300 victories coincidentally enough. He became the 100th driver to reach 300 Cup starts! What a fun drop note in history! 

Someone had to be the 100th driver to start 300 races. A few drivers are closing in on 300 starts. A series events over the last decade allowed Blaney to be that guy. Does it mean anything? Not really, but 300 starts is a mark, nearly a decade into a career. It shows a driver has some staying power. Kyle Larson surpassed 300 starts earlier this season, but we talk about Larson enough and Blaney won the championship. Blaney gets the spotlight, and with a championship under his belt, he is well on his way to 300 more starts in the Cup Series.

Kyle Busch: 61 Runner-Up Finishes
We mentioned this one prior to this season. No one wants to finish second, but it is also grueling just to finish second. Add second-place finishes to victories, and you get a true sense of a driver's ability. For Kyle Busch, he already had 60 victories and was tied for ninth all-time in victories before the season began. He didn't just one runner-up result to hit 60 runner-up finishes. 

That came at Austin in March. In the next road course race at Sonoma in June, Busch was second again, increasing his total to 61. He is now tied with Mark Martin for seventh all-time in runner-up finishes.

How many drivers have at least 60 victories and at least 60 runner-up finishes?

Richard Petty
David Pearson
Bobby Allison
Jeff Gordon
Dale Earnhardt
Kevin Harvick
Kyle Busch

It is seven of the ten drivers that have reached 60 victories, so that actually makes it a little less impressive and makes me more inquisitive about the three drivers that didn't do it (Jimmie Johnson didn't even reach 50 runner-up finishes). 

I digress. It is another club membership for Busch.

Chase Elliott: 5000 Laps Led
This was not a great season for Chase Elliott. I doubt Elliott dreamt he would break his leg, miss six races and then miss another race due to a suspension, leading to him to fail to win a race, fail to make the playoffs and take 17th in the final championship standings. 

We are looking for a positive from an otherwise disappointing season. Elliott entered this year needing to lead just 100 laps to reach 5,000 laps led in a career. This was by far the fewest laps Elliott has led in a full-time Cup season (195) but he did reach 5,000 laps led.

It came on lap 38 of the Charlotte roval race in October. Elliott became the 44th driver to lead 5,000 laps in NASCAR Cup competition, and he ended the season with 5,095 laps led.

Let's expand this a little further. 

Elliott has led 5,095 laps in his first 286 starts. That is an average of 17.814 laps per race. He is on pace to reach 10,000 laps led in his 562nd start (target the 24th race of the 2031 season). Elliott is on pace to reach 700 starts exactly at the midway point of the 2035 season). If he makes it that far, his laps led pace would have him at 12,470 laps. 

If he makes it to 828 starts, the same number his father's Bill made (target the second race of the 2039 season when Chase Elliott will be 43 years old, 13 years younger than when his father reached that mark), Chase Elliott is on pace to have led 14,750 laps, 3,337 more than his father and that would have him 12th all-time with probably a few more seasons remaining in his career. 

Shane van Gisbergen: Top Ten Finishes in First Two Cup Starts
We all know Shane van Gisbergen won on his NASCAR Cup Series debut in the Chicago race this past July. That is rather remarkable, considering how few debutant winners there have been in the Cup Series, and considering the most recent won prior to van Gisbergen was Johnny Rutherford in 1963 when the qualifying races for the Daytona 500 counted toward championship. 

However, it wasn't what van Gisbergen did in Chicago that I want to talk about. It is what he did in Indianapolis. Just over a month after his victory, van Gisbergen was back for his second start on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It was a respectable drive as the New Zealander finished tenth. It wasn't the breathtaking performance we saw in Chicago, but it showed van Gisbergen could hang with the regulars at a track the Cup drivers at least had a few years of experience racing on. 

Tenth doesn't sound like much to brag about, but with that result, van Gisbergen had done something no one had done in nearly 45 years. 

Van Gisbergen became the first driver to finish in the top ten of his first two Cup starts since Terry Labonte in 1978! 

That was incredible because it feels like somebody would have done it in that time. Many terrific drivers have raced in the Cup Series during that time. Wouldn't it have made sense for it to have happened somewhere between 1978 and 2023? We aren't talking about winning a race like van Gisbergen did. All a driver needed was to finish eighth and ninth in his or her first two starts and that would be enough. 

It is a testament to how difficult it is to crack the top ten even if we think it is a rather pedestrian accomplishment in NASCAR.

In case you are wondering, "Who is the most recent driver to have three consecutive top ten finishes to start a Cup career?" The answer is still Terry Labonte. He was fourth in the 1978 Southern 500 (talk about a hell of a way to make a debut), he was seventh at Richmond the following week and then Labonte was ninth at Martinsville two races later. 

We can worry about starting four-for-four if van Gisbergen get to three-for-three.

Corey LaJoie: Finished Every Cup Race in a Season
It is almost unthinkable that a driver will finish every race in a NASCAR Cup season. It is 36 races long. With places like Daytona and Talladega, and now Atlanta, sharing more characteristics with roulette wheels than racetracks, you are bound to have one day that ends early. However, that was not the case for Corey LaJoie in 2023. LaJoie was running at the finish of all 36 races this year. 

How often does that occur? A little more than you realize, and it has become a common occurrence in recent seasons.

It was the 34th time in Cup Series history, so not quite every other season, but close. Those numbers are misleading as it has happened 31 times since 2000. That is just more than one a season for 24 seasons. LaJoie's season was the 11th time since 2014 a driver has completed every race.

Since 2017, when the damage vehicle policy was introduced, putting cars in accidents on a clock to have the car repaired and back operating at average speed, it has now happened five times. 

Joey Logano and Ty Dillon each finished all 36 races in 2019. Kevin Harvick completed every race in 2020 as did Denny Hamlin in 2021 before LaJoie this year.

In case you are wondering what the record is for most consecutive races completed, it is 89, which Greg Biffle set having completed every race from the 2012 Daytona 500 through the 2014 Kentucky race. Biffle streak fittingly ended in the July 2014 Daytona race. LaJoie has completed 41 consecutive races dating back to 2022. He has to go another full season seeing every checkered flag before we can start talking about breaking Biffle's record.

Justin Allgaier: Third All-Time in Top Five Finishes in NASCAR's Second Division
I am dropping this one in here because we ignore the lower division record books, and sometimes you need to take a moment to really look at what is happening. 

Allgaier has become a career second division driver. After two season in the Cup Series in 2014 and 2015, Allgaier returned to the second division with JR Motorsports and he has been full-time ever since. He had five full seasons before that, had never finished worse than sixth in the championship and he had three victories. 

In the last eight seasons, he has continued to be a regular frontrunner, six times making the final four for the championship race. With that success over such longevity, it should come as no surprise Allgaier has moved up the record book in a number of categories.

In this case, Allgaier's 15 top five finishes in 2023 increased his career total to 143 top five finishes, moving him to third all-time. He surpassed Brad Keselowski, Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth in the record book this season.

Allgaier has a ways to go to reach second. He is 43 behind Kevin Harvick. Kyle Busch holds the record at 226 top five finishes and likely counting. 

Allgaier stands out amongst the names Busch, Harvick, Kenseth, Edwards and Keselowski, but Allgaier should be properly recognized. A driver doesn't accidentally end up third all-time in top five finishes. Even if you think it is just longevity, Allgaier's top five finish percentage of 32.65% is still 24th all-time. 

The unsung drivers should get their moment when it is due.

Kevin Harvick: 826 NASCAR Cup Series Starts
We must acknowledge the career of Kevin Harvick as 2023 marked the final Cup season of Harvick's career. There are a few notes that encapsulate his career and we should look at those starting with... well, his starts. 

Anyone can be the guy who replaces the guy and quickly be forgotten. It is another thing to replace the guy and then go on to have arguably one of the ten best careers in Cup competition. 

Harvick could have replaced Dale Earnhardt, had a few high moments but be out of the seat after four or five average seasons, bounce around through teams, win a few more races in his career, maybe make a championship push or two in his career and then retire. Harvick hung around for over two decades. Forget the championship, regular championship top five finisher and 60 victories for a moment, Harvick became only the tenth driver in Cup Series history to start 800 races. He ended eighth all-time. 

Since the start of 2001, Harvick only missed two races, the 2001 Daytona 500 and the 2002 spring Martinsville race. He started 784 consecutive races to end his career. The greatest ability is availability, and Harvick was always available, and competing at the highest level.

Harvick: Second Most Times Running at the Finish
Some records are near impossible to get in the NASCAR Cup Series because Richard Petty existed, so if you can end up second to Richard Petty that is almost a record in its own right. 

We noted this possible milestone before the end of the season and with Harvick finishing 35 of 36 races this season (the only one he didn't finish was the first Atlanta race), Harvick ends his career running at the finish of 778 races, a finishing percentage of 94.188%. Harvick ended up 57 races shy of Petty's record, at best about one and two-thirds of a season away from possibly surpassing it. Though, Harvick's finishing percentage is 23.665% better than Petty's. 

Harvick was brilliant behind the wheel, rarely stepping over the edge or putting himself in a bad position. You could count on him. Twenty-one times he finished at least 30 races in a season. Four times he was running at the finish of every race. Few will come close to his consistency.

Harvick: 251 Top Five Finishes
Harvick did not win in his final season, leaving him on 60 victories, not a bad number to end on. He only had six top five finishes this season, his fewest since five in 2012, but it was enough for Harvick to get to 250 top five finishes, the ninth driver to reach the milestone. 

He ended up ninth all-time in top five finishes. His top five percentage was 30.39%, 41st all-time, just behind Charlie Glotzbach and just ahead of Tony Stewart and Joey Logano. Throw in 444 top ten finishes and ranking fifth all-time in that category, Harvick is leaving solidly among the all-time greats and he will remain at the top for some time to come.


Monday, December 11, 2023

Musings From the Weekend: A Forgotten Statistic

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

The fastest car at IMSA's test from Daytona will not even be at the 24 Hours of Daytona. A few other drivers have lined up rides for that race and other endurance races. There was testing in Japan, and that included a few names from IMSA and Indy Lights. There was a gala. There was an investigation that apparently nobody asked for. An endurance race was held. IndyCar delayed introducing the hybrid system until after the Indianapolis 500, and Honda is threatening to leave the series, but we will discuss that another day. Trust me, there is plenty of time left in this offseason, 90 days to be specific with 92 days already behind us. I had something else planned to end this year on, and it is a little more fun...

A Forgotten Statistic
After every IndyCar race, the box score summarizes two hours of competition. 

It lists the finishing order, giving each driver's starting position, the number of laps they completed, interval to winner, reason for a retirement and, back in the day, it would even tell you how much each driver earned. 

A box score can also tell you how many laps a driver led, when lead changes occurred, when cautions occurred, what cause the cautions and how many laps were under caution. 

It is quite informative, and it tells you one other thing, but you probably don't even think about it. 

Take a look at the box score from the IndyCar season finale at Laguna Seca. What do you see? What are you not noticing? You probably think you have seen it all. There are no surprises. But take another look, right at the top. If it is at the top, it must be important, no? 

Going from the top to the bottom, you see who had the fastest lap before you see who the winner is. Think about that! Fastest lap means... something. Formula One gives away a point for it, if a driver finishes in the top ten. It is always mentioned in the box score. Again, IndyCar puts it right at the top. If you go to Wikipedia, fastest lap is listed in the race results section for each round along with pole-sitter, most laps led and winner, and yet fastest lap is worth nothing toward the championship. The other three at least earn a driver points. Fastest lap is purely bragging rights. 

Yet, if it is just for bragging rights and we know it is listed in every box score and it is widely publicized for each race, can you name who has the most fastest laps in IndyCar history?

...

You can't! 

You can't even find it in IndyCar's record book, because it is not tracked, or if it is, it is not publicized. Formula One tracks it. IndyCar does not.

You can name the record for most victories (67, A.J. Foyt). 

You can vaguely name the record for most pole positions because Will Power just broke it and you aren't sure what the exact number is but at the moment it is 70 pole positions, a nice round number. 

You could not say the number of fastest laps Scott Dixon, Will Power, Josef Newgarden, Álex Palou, Patricio O'Ward or Colton Herta have in their respective careers and they have all raced exclusively in the 21st century.

No one could fault you for being clueless on what the record is for fastest laps in IndyCar because there isn't an easily obtainable answer. For that matter, there aren't even reliable records of fastest laps for most of IndyCar's history. 

We know every fastest lap in the Indianapolis 500 since 1950, meaning there are 33 editions of the race where fastest lap will forever be a mystery. However, like most of IndyCar's past and present, the Indianapolis 500 is only one race. There are hundreds of other races that have taken place and those matter just as much as the Indianapolis 500 when it comes to record keeping. 

When it comes to each season, it appears the best we can do is have every fastest lap dating back to the start of the 1993 season, which simultaneously isn't that long ago and a large sample of data. IndyCar's history is not going to be told accurately with just the last 30 years, but we might just have to accept that. We already accept holes in the record book. 

For starters, how many records are counted just from 1946 to today? That has generally been accepted in many cases. Heck, even Colton Herta really isn't the youngest winner in IndyCar history, but we consider him because the record book only takes into consideration from 1946 to the present. Though we have records of a younger driver winning a race that counts toward the IndyCar record book. George Joermann is still in the record book as a race winner, but does not get recognized for his rightful place in history.

Certain records will just be lost to history. It is ok. The sack wasn't an official statistic for the NFL until 1982. We will never know the exact sack totals for the likes of Deacon Jones, Dick Butkus and a number of other great defensive players from the first half of the biggest professional sports league in the United States. Yet, the world continues to turn and we have accepted that Bruce Smith holds the record on 200 sacks. 

The same can be done with fastest laps. Yes, it will forever be incomplete and be vacant of some of the greatest names in IndyCar history, but it can be as complete as we have records for and will remain that way as long as we keep tracking it accurately. 

With that being the case, who has the most fastest laps in IndyCar history? 

Again, the best we can do in terms of having complete seasons of fastest lap data is the 1993 season. That is 31 years and 673 races between CART, the Indy Racing League, Champ Car and the reunified IndyCar Series. A tumultuous period that inflated the numbers for drivers on all sides of the split, leaving us with some head-scratching statistics but also did see most of the best talent rise to the top. 

Leading the way would be Sébastien Bourdais with 41 fastest laps. Thanks Champ Car! Thirty-four of Bourdais' 41 fastest laps occurred between 2003 and 2007, including having seven in the 2005 season, nine in the 2006 season and eight in the 2007 season, three of the five times a driver has had at least seven fastest laps in a single season.

Tied for second would be Hélio Castroneves and Scott Dixon, each with 36 and two ahead of Will Power in fourth. Tony Kanaan would round out the top five with 29 fastest laps. Josef Newgarden is three outside the top five with 26 fastest laps. Dario Franchitti would be the final driver with at least 20 as Franchitti ended with 23 fastest laps.

Alex Zanardi, Paul Tracy and Juan Pablo Montoya would round out the top ten with 18, 17 and 15 fastest laps respectively. There would be a three-way tie on 13 between Ryan Briscoe, Tomas Scheckter and Dan Wheldon. Ryan Hunter-Reay sits alone on 12, one more than Emerson Fittipaldi, Bruno Junqueira and Álex Palou would also already be on 11 career fastest laps.

Only four other drivers have ten fastest laps since 1993: Michael Andretti, Jimmy Vasser, Simon Pagenaud and Justin Wilson. 

That would be the top 21 drivers. As for when drivers move up the fastest lap category, we can keep track of it from here going forward. Of course, if more data comes in and we are able to complete more seasons from prior to 1993, those can be added and adjustments can be made. 

For now, the answer we have is Sébastien Bourdais.

Champion From the Weekend

Jules Gounon clinched the Intercontinental GT Challenge championship with a third-place finish in the Gulf 12 Hours with Maximilian Götz and Fabian Schiller in the #14 Mercedes-AMG Team 2 Seas Mercedes-AMG.

Winners From the Weekend

The #99 Mercedes-AMG Team GruppeM Racing Mercedes-AMG of Maro Engel, Mikaël Grenier and Luca Stolz won the Gulf 12 Hour.

Coming Up This Weekend
Nothing really. Enjoy the holiday season and keep an eye out for some awards and some predictions coming between now and the end of the year.


Thursday, December 7, 2023

2023 Formula One Milestones

We are a few weeks removed from the conclusion of the 2023 Formula One season and, on the surface, it looked pretty one-sided, with one driver winning 19 of 22 races and one team going 21-for-22. However, there is a story beyond those numbers, and some should be put into proper context. There were also achievements that were lost in the hubbub of the season. 

This is the chance to pick out a few notable accomplishments from this season and give them proper recognition. 

Max Verstappen: Highest Single Season Winning Percentage
Max Verstappen made a lot of history this season. We could do a list just of Max Verstappen accomplishments. However, nobody wants that, but we do have to recognize a few of Verstappen's accomplishments. He broke records many probably never thought would be touched. 

We are going to cover three records for Verstappen.

For starters, Verstappen's 19 victories out of 22 races meant he had a winning percentage of 86.36%. That didn't just break the record, it shattered it, and it wasn't some small feat either. 

It broke Alberto Ascari's 71-year for highest single season winning percentage. Set in the third season of the Formula One World Championship, Ascari won six of eight races. A few drivers had come close to this record. Michael Schumacher was just under three-percent from matching it with 13 victories in 18 races in 2004. Jim Clark won 70% of the races in 1963. Sebastien Vettel broke 68% in 2013, as did Verstappen in 2022. 

Verstappen had to win 17 races to claim this record, which would have been two more than the single-season record he set the year before. Verstappen didn't just eek over the line to break this record, he put 11% between him and the old mark. He didn't settle for being the first in the 80% club. He went straight to the 85% club.

This record only looks touchable for Max Verstappen at the moment. Even if it isn't him, it looks it will require a near-perfect season for it to be broken again. 

Max Verstappen: Highest Single Season Percentage of Laps Led
Breaking a 71-year-old record is impressive. Breaking a record that Jim Clark has held for 60 years? You have my attention again. 

We all know Verstappen led only 1,000 laps this season, 1,003 laps to be specific, but it isn't just 1,003 laps led. It is 1,003 out of 1,325 laps run the entire season. That is 75.7% of the season. The previous record was Jim Clark, who led 503 of 708 laps in 1963, or 71.47% of the laps run that year.

Nobody else had broken 70% prior to Verstappen this year. The only other driver to break two-third was Nigel Mansell in 1992. Leading half the laps run in a season is actually a little more common than you realize. This was the 20th time a driver has led at least 50% of the laps in season, but to take the top spot, again is staggering. This is another record I am not sure will be matched for quite some time. 

Unless Verstappen goes out and breaks it in 2024.

Max Verstappen: Most Victories from Pole Position in a Single Season
This one is a little less historic, but historic nonetheless, because I don't think many people realize Verstappen set this record this season. When we look back on his 2023 season, we will probably not be surprised to see that Verstappen set the record for most victories from pole position in a single season, but in December 2023, I am not sure many realize he did that. 

For starters, qualifying was the one weak spot for Red Bull. The car was built for long-run pace. It could lose over a single lap on Saturday by a tenth or so and then crush the field by 25 seconds on Sunday. Adrian Newey built a car not focused on the battle but meant to win the war. Look at how many pole positions Ferrari won this season. 

And yet, Verstappen won 12 pole positions this season. Every time he started on pole position, he won the grand prix. Again, in a few years, probably not going to be a surprise when looking back on 2023, but at this moment, no one has mentioned that. It isn't a surprise. The Red Bull RB19 was stellar, but it goes to show when this car was on it was untouchable.

The previous record for victories from pole position in a season was nine. Nigel Mansell set it in 1992. Sebastien Vettel matched it in 2011. Verstappen went three better in 2023. 

Of the three Verstappen records listed, this feels the most attainable for another driver and manufacturer. There is a world where Mercedes turns it around, wins 19 of 22 pole positions in a season and one of its drivers wins 15 races from pole position. This one might not be Verstappen's forever, but if he wants to have better security on it, he should probably win 14 races from pole position in 2024. 

It just goes to show that 2023 was not a perfect season for Red Bull and there is still more work to do. 

Charles Leclerc: 23 Pole Positions
There is nothing really that special about 23 pole positions, but doesn't it feel weird that Charles Leclerc is already at this mark? Leclerc has had a good career so far in Formula One, better than the average driver to step on the grid. But 23 pole positions? It looks a little more startling in context.

Leclerc's five pole positions in 2023 took him ahead of Fernando Alonso, who has 22 career pole positions. He surpassed Damon Hill, Valtteri Bottas, Mario Andretti, René Arnoux and Kimi Räikkönen as well this year. 

Leclerc is now 14th all-time. With two more pole positions, he surpasses Niki Lauda and Nelson Piquet. With four, he goes ahead of Mika Häikkinen. If Leclerc wins five pole positions again, he is on the door step of tenth all-time. If he wins six, he ties Juan Manuel Fangio for tenth all-time.

It feels a little unsuspected that Leclerc is already pushing tenth all-time in pole positions. Again, he has had a good career, but this good? The Monegasque driver has only five career victories. He has made his fair share of errors, but Ferrari has not been helping him. He probably should have another three or four victories easily. 

It is a strange juxtaposition to see 23 pole positions and only five career victories. But, one-lap pace is one thing and an entire grand prix is another universe. This could end up being the story of Leclerc's career.

Fernando Alonso: 20th Season
Twenty seasons does not sound like much of an accomplishment, but consider this: Fernando Alonso became the first driver to ever compete in 20 Formula One seasons. Debuting in 2001 with Minardi, Alonso appeared in 16 consecutive seasons from 2003 to 2018 with Renault, McLaren and Ferrari before taking a two-year hiatus to focus on the FIA World Endurance Championship and Dakar Rally with Toyota.

In 2021, Alonso returned with Alpine and joined Aston Martin for the 2023 season. 

Someone had to be first to 20 seasons. It makes sense it was Alonso. Rubens Barrichello was first to 19. Michael Schumacher was second, thanks to a sabbatical, same for Kimi Räikkönen. Let's hand it to Alonso. He will at least reach it to 21. We could not rule out a 22nd season. 

Another driver will reach 20 seasons someday. The closest is Lewis Hamilton on 17 seasons, due for 18 in 2024. Hamilton might call it quits before 20 seasons, and in that case it could be a while before some reaches Alonso territory.

Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton: 300 Grand Prix Finished
To finish first you must first finish. It has been a minute since either Alonso or Hamilton finished first, but they each reached previously uncharted territory this season, and they each did it in the final two races of the season. 

They became the first two drivers to successfully finish 300 grand prix in a career. Alonso reached the mark first at the Las Vegas Grand Prix. Hamilton hit 300 while Alonso went to 301 in Abu Dhabi. 

This is a longevity achievement, and one aided with the expansion of the Formula One calendar, as well as increased reliability, but credit to each driver. These have been two of the best drivers in the 21st century. Hamilton has seen the checkered flag in 90.36% of his starts. The only drivers with a better finishing percentage with at least ten starts are Roberto Mehri (12 out of 13!) and Max Chilton (32 out of 35!). 

Credit where credit is due.

McLaren: 500 Podium Finishes
The last decade or so has been rather difficult for McLaren. Arguably, this has been the toughest decade of the manufacturer's existence. This year did not start pretty either, but McLaren made a remarkable turnaround and ended up creating a little history before it was over. 

When Oscar Piastri crossed the finish line in second for the Qatar Grand Prix, it was the 500th podium finish for McLaren, making it only the second manufacturer to reach 500 podium finishes. Ferrari was the first. 

McLaren didn't have to wait long for podium #501. It came about 1.1 seconds later when Lando Norris finished third at Lusail. At the end of the season, McLaren concluded with 503 podium finishes, 304 podium finishes behind Ferrari's all-time lead and 190 podium finishes clear of Williams in third.

Lando Norris: 13 Podium Finishes
Some might find it concerning we are recognizing the number 13, and this isn't necessarily a celebratory moment either. Norris ended 2023 with 13 podium finishes. He had seven podium finishes this year, his most in a single season. 

However, with 13 podium finishes, Norris is now tied with Nick Heidfeld for most podium finishes without a victory.

Like Charles Leclerc, doesn't it feel early for Norris to already be at this mark? Norris just completed his fifth season and he has reached a mark Nick Heidfeld has become famous for. It doesn't feel right. 

There is a good chance someday this will go back to being Heidfeld's record and Heidfeld's record alone. At 24 years old, Norris should win one grand prix someday, but for the moment, he shares a record, though likely one he hopes not to share for too longer.

Nico Hülkenberg: 203 Starts
Hey! Did anyone see this one coming? Nico Hülkenberg reached 200 career starts this season. I guess it makes sense, but really? Hülkenberg at 200 starts? He was sidelined for the better part of two seasons and it looked like his Formula One career was over prior to 2020. It found new life as a substitute driver and then as a late replacement for Nikita Mazepin. 

This revival has brought him to 200 starts and beyond, and it will continue to increase as Hülkenberg will be back for at least the 2024 season. 

With the length of the calendar, 200 is going to become the new 100. A lot of drivers are going to reach it. Hülkenberg is at the start of the trend. He was only the 22nd. 

Who else is closing in on 200?

Max Verstappen is on 185. He will hit 200, fittingly, at Zandvoort if everything goes as planned in 2024, a little over a month before turning 27 years old. 

Carlos Sainz, Jr. is only two starts behind Verstappen. Sainz, Jr. will only be two weeks removed from his 30th birthday if everything goes as planned. 

It is a stretch, but Kevin Magnussen is on 163, Lance Stroll is at 144, Esteban Ocon is on 133 and Pierre Gasly is at 130 with Charles Leclerc at 123. Lando Norris and George Russell are each at 104 starts. 

Those are the remaining drivers above 100 starts. It feels like six of those remaining nine names will reach 200 at some point. 

Yuki Tsunoda: Most Laps Led for a Japanese Driver
We all heard this one during the season finale from Abu Dhabi, or at least we heard Tsunoda became only the second Japanese driver to lead a Formula One race. That is a little surprising. 

Prior to Tsunoda, Takuma Sato led two laps in the 2004 European Grand Prix from the Nürburgring, laps ten and 11 to be specific. Sato was the only of 21 Japanese drivers to participate in a Formula One race weekend to lead a lap. Until Tsunoda. 

Tsunoda led five laps in Abu Dhabi, as he ran a different strategy hoping to leap up the grid and score enough points to take AlphaTauri ahead of Williams in the constructors' championship. He didn't quite get the points necessary to usurp Williams, but Tsunoda made a small place for himself in Formula One history.