The fifth round of the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season is at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, as the festivities begin in Speedway, Indiana. Since 2014, the 2.439-mile road course hosts the opening weekend of action from the Speedway with the Grand Prix of Indianapolis taking place a fortnight before the Indianapolis 500. Only twice previously has the Grand Prix of Indianapolis winner gone on to win the "500" two weeks later. Six drivers have split the first 11 editions of this race. The first seven editions were won by drivers born in 1984 or earlier, but the last four races have been won by drivers born in 1997 or earlier.
Coverage
Time: Coverage begins at 4:30 p.m. ET on Saturday May 10 with green flag scheduled for 4:52 p.m. ET.
Channel: Fox
Announcers: Will Buxton, Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe will be in the booth. Kevin Lee, Georgia Henneberry and Jack Harvey will work pit lane.
IndyCar Weekend Schedule
Friday:
First Practice: 9:30 a.m. ET (75 minutes)
Second Practice: 1:00 p.m. ET (60 minutes)
Qualifying: 4:30 p.m. ET
Saturday:
Warm-up: 11:32 a.m. ET (25 minutes)
Race: 4:52 p.m. ET (85 laps)
* - FS2 will have coverage of first two practice sessions. FS1 will have coverage of qualifying and the morning warm-up.
Palou's Roll
There is only one place to start entering any IndyCar weekend at this point. That is with Álex Palou.
At Barber Motorsports Park last week, Palou took his third victory in the first four races of the season. He has not finished worse than second in 2025. With 81 laps led at Barber, Palou cleared 1,000 laps led in his career and it only took him 85 starts to get there. Out of the 10,586 laps run in his career, Palou has led 9.843% of them.
The Grand Prix of Indianapolis could not have come at a worse time for the competition. Palou has won the last two races on the IMS road course, and he has started in the top seven in the last eight races here. Last year, he won from pole position.
This season, not only has Palou not finished worse than second, but his worst starting position is eighth. He has started on third twice, and his Barber victory was from pole position. He has won from pole position in five of his seven times starting on the point. This is only the second time in Palou's career where he has had four consecutive podium finishes.
The Catalan driver is already out to a 60-point lead in the championship after four races. This is the largest a championship lead has been after four races since reunification in 2008.
Palou will have a little more history to chase in the Grand Prix of Indianapolis. He will be looking to become the first driver with five consecutive podium finishes to open a season since Simon Pagenaud in 2016. In that season, Pagenaud's championship lead after five races was 76 points. Palou is looking for a fourth victory in five races. The last driver to open with four victories in five races was Sébastien Bourdais, who won the first four races in the 2006 Champ Car season before finishing third in the fifth round at Portland. Palou could also become the first driver to win consecutive races at multiple times in a single season since Will Power in 2010.
It might seem hard to believe, but Palou is already mixing his name with some of the most famous in IndyCar history. His victory at barer was the 14th of Palou's career. That moved him to 35th all-time, breaking a tie with Tom Sneva. Palou is now one victory away from tying Alex Zanardi, Juan Pablo Montoya and Simon Pagenaud for 32nd, and he is two away from tying Dan Wheldon for 31st.
Not only is Palou winning often, but he is coming rather close on the days he doesn't win. His runner-up finish at Long Beach last month was the tenth in his career, making him only of 35 drivers to have at least ten runner-up finishes in an IndyCar career. His 47 top five finishes put him three away from becoming the 34th driver with 50 top five finishes in an IndyCar career. Palou has had 13 top five finishes in each of the last two seasons.
For all that Palou has accomplished, the missing jewel in his crown comes at the end of the month. He already has one victory in the month of May. Only four drivers previous have won a race in the month of May and then won the Indianapolis 500 later that month. No driver has ever won three races in a single month of May. That possibility remains alive for Palou to chase over the next few weeks.
Who Could Slow Palou's Roll?
As inevitable as a Palou victory might feel, he will not win forever. Someone will best him even if Palou is still finishing at the front. In all likelihood, someone new will win this weekend at Indianapolis.
The biggest challenger through four races has been Christian Lundgaard. The Arrow McLaren driver continued his tear at his new team when Lundgaard raced to a second-place finish at Barber. It was his third consecutive podium finish, and prior to this season Lundgaard had never had multiple podium finishes in a season. Off the back of three consecutive podium finishes, the Dane is one top five finish away from matching his most in a single season.
While IndyCar is heading to a favorable track for Palou, it is also a wonderful track for Lundgaard. Among drivers with at least three starts on the IMS road course, Lundgaard has the best average finish. In six starts, he has an average finish of 5.667, and he has finished in the top five of the last four races. He has never started worse than eighth on this course and he has started on the front row in each of the last three IMS road course races.
Lundgaard would be a new winner on the IMS road course, but there are six other past winners at the track entered for this weekend's race who look to knock off Palou.
Will Power is the wizard of the IMS road course. In 16 races on the circuit, Power has won five of them, three being the Grand Prix of Indianapolis in May. At no other track has the Australian won more than three times. Power has completed all 1,326 laps run in the 16 IMS road course races. Half of his results here have been top five finishes and 75% have been top ten finishes.
Form has improved for Power over the last three races. He has finished sixth, fifth and fifth. He shook some of the qualifying ills at Barber Motorsports Park, starting fourth after having failed to make it out of the first row of qualifying in the first three races. Power has six pole positions on the IMS road course.
There is always competition from within the Chip Ganassi Racing organization. Scott Dixon is a two-time winner on the IMS road course. He won in 2020 when the Grand Prix of Indianapolis was moved to July 4 and run alongside the NASCAR weekend. Dixon won the 2023 race held during the Brickyard weekend with NASCAR as well. The New Zealander has 14 top ten finishes in 16 IMS road course races and, like Power, Dixon has completed all 1,326 laps in these 16 races.
Though he was runner-up at St. Petersburg, Dixon has not finished in the top five of the last three races. His starting position has dropped over each of the first four races. After starting sixth at St. Petersburg, Dixon has rolled off from 11th, 14th and 26th starting positions over the last three races.
Josef Newgarden's only victory here was the first race of the 2020 Harvest Grand Prix weekend held in October 2020. At that time, Newgarden had one top ten finishes on the IMS road course in his first seven starts. In his eight starts since the victory, Newgarden has three top five finishes and five top ten finishes. The bad things is his other three results have been finishes of 25th, 25th and 17th. Those last two results have been his last two finishes on the IMS road course.
Newgarden has not won on a natural-terrain road course since Road America in 2022. Last year, he did have two podium finishes on natural-terrain road courses, a second at Road America and a third at Portland. The Tennesseean has not been able to get on a good run of form. He has not had three consecutive top ten finishes since 2023.
Colton Herta is looking for another rebound this season. A stall in the pit lane dropped Herta from a likely podium finish at Barber to seventh. For the third time in the last four seasons, Herta does not have a podium finish through the first four races. The good news is in one of those seasons Herta won the fifth race of the season and it was the Grand Prix of Indianapolis.
Since he won the 2022 Grand Prix of Indianapolis, Herta has not finished better than seventh at circuit in five races. That 2022 Grand Prix of Indianapolis victory remains Herta's most recent victory on a natural-terrain road course.
Alexander Rossi won on the IMS road course in July 2022, and Rossi has four consecutive top ten finishes at the circuit. He has six top five finishes in his last nine starts on the IMS road course. Rossi has started on a good note with three top ten finishes in the first four races, and eighth at Barber was his best finish of the season.
Rossi's top ten conversion rate is the best for an Ed Carpenter Racing driver through four races since Rinus VeeKay had three top ten finishes in the same span in 2022. The 2021 Grand Prix of Indianapolis winner returns to Indiana on cloud nine. VeeKay was fourth at Barber Motorsports Park, his best finish since fourth in the first race of the 2022 Iowa doubleheader. This was Dale Coyne Racing's first top five finish on a road/street course since Romain Grosjean was third at Laguna Seca in 2021.
Past IMS road course winners and Lundgaard aside, the sleeper for the weekend is Graham Rahal. For all the struggles Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing has had over the past few seasons, the IMS road course has been the one place where it has been competitive regardless of pace elsewhere.
On top of Lundgaard's impressive form at RLLR, Graham Rahal has the fourth-best average finish all-time on the IMS road course. Rahal's average is 7.6875. He has three runner-up finishes, five top five finishes and 14 top ten finishes in 16 starts. Rahal was on pole position for the August 2023 race, and RLLR has had a top five finisher in four consecutive IMS road course races.
You can never count out Patricio O'Ward at any race, but the IMS road course is the one place where O'Ward has yet to find consistent success. While having finished on the podium in two of the last three IMS road course races, he has finished outside the top ten in six of 11 starts all-time at the circuit. That is despite starting in the top five in six consecutive races here and in seven of the last eight.
Arrow McLaren is still looking for its first IMS road course victory. Chip Ganassi Racing, Team Penske and Andretti Global have combined to win 14 of 16 races on the circuit with Simon Pagenaud's inaugural Grand Prix of Indianapolis victory with Schmidt Peterson Motorsports in 2024 and VeeKay's victory with Ed Carpenter Racing in 2021 as the only exceptions.
Living in the Green, Waiting for Yellow
When the checkered flag waved at the finish of the Barber round IndyCar had officially completed three consecutive races without a caution flag. It is a first since the 1986 season when Portland, Meadowlands and Cleveland were all run without interruption. In this case, nearly 39 years later, IndyCar hasn't seen a caution period since the first six laps of the season. Entering this weekend's Grand Prix of Indianapolis, IndyCar has run 349 laps without a caution period.
It hasn't been without a share of incidents.
At Thermal Club, Devlin DeFrancesco collided with Scott McLaughlin before the race even began. The two cars spun off in the final corners as the field took the green flag, but both McLaughlin and DeFrancesco restarted before anyone else in the field knew they had a problem. On the opening lap at Thermal, Callum Ilott made contact with another car and suffered damage, slowing on circuit. Ilott was able to continue and the debris was not great enough to warrant a caution flag.
The Long Beach round ran without any incidents that came close to warranting a caution. At Barber Motorsports Park, the only incident of note was Louis Foster having a bobble in the final corner and driving off course. Foster kept it out of the barrier but he struggled to trudge through the wet grass. When he re-entered the racetrack, Foster was in front of the oncoming leading Álex Palou. Fortunately, Foster caused no issues and was able to return to racing speed.
IndyCar has the onboard starting capabilities of the hybrid system to thank for this lengthy green flag period, preventing some cars that could have stalled from drawing a full course caution. There has also been some good behavior and respect from the competitors.
Moving onto the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, it is a circuit that lends itself to an incident, but not many. If it comes, expect it early.
For the first handful of years, the Grand Prix of Indianapolis was noted for its opening lap accidents. The inaugural year didn't get further than the starting grid as Sebastián Saavedra stalled from pole position and was then hit from behind as IndyCar used standing starts that season. There was an opening lap accident in four of the first five IMS road course races. All-time, six of 16 races have had an opening lap caution.
Nine IMS road course races have had the first caution come within the first six laps. In ten races has the first caution come within the first 11 laps.
There have been three caution-free races on the IMS road course, and there have been a few times where the race has played out before the first interruption. In 2019, the first caution was on lap 36. The August 2021 race did not have a slow period until lap 68 when Álex Palou lost an engine. Last year's race went 66 laps before the caution was thrown when Luca Ghiotto spun and stalled in turn 11.
On average, the first caution lap in the IMS road course race has come on 15.2307, but the median of the first caution lap is lap two.
The Tire Tango
There has been a regulation change ahead of the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, though it is only a temporary change for this race.
In the Grand Prix of Indianapolis, each team must use each tire compound, the primary and the alternate, at least twice during the race. IndyCar regulations called for at least one set of each the primary and alternate compounds to be used during a road/street course race prior to this weekend. This regulation is only in effect for dry races.
With the tire allocation change, every team will need to make at least three pit stops to satisfy the regulation. However, the IMS road course has always been a three-stop race. Outside of the second race of the 2020 Harvest Grand Prix weekend, which was 75 laps in length, every winner at the IMS road course has made at least three stops. The only time a winner has made more than three stops was Colton Herta in the wet in May 2022 when Herta made four stops. The one difference between this race and the three-stoppers before is every driver will now need to use both sets of compounds twice during the race.
On average, an IMS road course race winner has made his first pit stop on lap 17.375 with the next two stops on average coming around lap 40.125 and lap 59.9333.
The alternate tire has generally been the tire of choice for an IMS road course race. An IMS road course winner has started on the alternate tire in ten of 16 races, though the primary tire has been the starting tire for four of the last seven winners. However, on all five occasions where a IMS road course winner started on the primary tire, that driver used the alternate compound on every subsequent stint.
If you remove the second race of the Harvest Grand Prix weekend and the two races that were held in mixed conditions, 11 IMS road course winners in 13 races have used the alternate compound on three of four stints. In May 2023, Álex Palou because the only IMS road course winner to use the primary tire on three stints. The only winner on the IMS road course to used both tire compounds multiple times in a race was Josef Newgarden in the first race of the Harvest Grand Prix weekend in 2020. That was an 85-lap race held in cooler conditions in October.
Through the first four races of the 2025 season, the primary compound has been the one of choice in the street races. At St. Petersburg, 16 drivers used the alternate tire for four laps or fewer. Twenty-one drivers started on the alternate tire at Long Beach and all 21 of those drivers disposed of the compound within the first ten laps. Of the six drivers to use the alternate compound mid-race, no one used for more than 12 laps.
On permanent road courses, the alternate compound has reigned supreme. At Thermal Club, the alternate tire was the preferred tire to end on, but Palou won after using the primary compound on his middle two stints before his final stint on the alternates. Nineteen drivers ended on the alternate tire at Thermal and 14 of those drivers were able to use the alternate compound on three stints. Last week at Barber, the alternate tire was the clear tire of choice. No one used the primary compound for more than one stint and 24 of 27 drivers finished on the alternate compound.
Road to Indy
For the first time since St. Petersburg, all the three series of the Road to Indy system are back together competing on the same weekend. There are a pair of doubleheaders and a triple-header on the docket for this weekend.
Dennis Hauger has opened the Indy Lights season with two victories from two races and both have come from pole position. Hauger has led all 79 lap this season and with two fastest laps to boot, the Norwegian has two grand slams to open his Indy Lights' career.
Hauger has a 32-point lead over Andretti Global teammate Lochie Hughes, who has finished second and third in the first two races. Myles Rowe has a pair of fourth-place finishes and he is third in the championship on 64 points, 44 points off the top spot. Josh Pierson sits on 52 points with Salvador de Alba rounding out the top five on 49 points.
Throttle issues ended a promising run for Caio Collet at Barber, and it dropped Collet to sixth on 47 points, one ahead of Jordan Missing and five ahead of Ricardo Escotto.
Evagoras Papasavvas made an unexpected debut at Barber and Papasavvas was second in his first start. The Washington-native will be back for the IMS road course doubleheader. Papasavvas' second place finish has him on 40 points and tied with Liam Sceats.
We will have another debut this weekend in Indy Lights. American Juan Manuel Correa will drive the #39 Dallara for HMD Motorsports. Correa plans on running seven race weekends this season while also participating in two oval tests.
Correa was a regular in Formula Two from 2019 through last year. After breaking both legs and suffering a minor spinal injury in an accident at Spa-Francorchamps in 2019, Correa did not return to competition until 2021 in Formula Three, where he spent two seasons. Correa has also run for Prema Racing in LMP2 competition in the European Le Mans Series and FIA World Endurance Championship. He won the 2022 ELMS season finale at Portimão with Prema.
The first Indy Lights race will be at 7:00 p.m. on Friday May 9 The second race will be at 1:00 p.m. on Saturday May 10. Both races are scheduled for 35 laps.
This will be the third round for the USF Pro 2000 Series, as it competed at NOLA Motorsports Park last month with a triple-header round.
Alessandro de Tullio won two races in Louisiana and Max Garcia won the other. De Tullio and Garcia split the St. Petersburg weekend, but Garcia has finished second in the other three races this season, and he leads the championship on 141 points. De Tullio was second in the final race from NOLA Motorsports Park, but 18th in the second St. Petersburg race sets him back and he has 125 points from the first five races.
Max Taylor has four top five finishes from seven races, and his worst finish is seventh. Taylor had 89 points, eight clear of Jacob Douglas, who has four consecutive top five finishes entering this weekend. Mac Clark opened the season with three consecutive top five results, but finishes of 17th and 18th to close the NOLA weekend has Clark in fifth on 73 points.
Michael Costello sits on 68 points, four ahead of Jace Denmark. Ariel Elkin's three top five finishes in NOLA has him on 60 points, seven ahead of Owen Tangavelou. Jorge Garciarce rounds out the top ten on 49 points.
USF Pro 2000 will race once on Friday at 3:20 p.m. ET. Its two races on Saturday all be at 9:30 a.m. and at 2:20 p.m. All three races are scheduled for 25 laps or 45 minutes.
U.S. F2000 was also at NOLA Motorsports Park last month, and Liam McNeilly swept the triple-header. With five victories from five races, McNeilly has 163 points and he is 51 points clear of Jack Jeffers in the championship. Jeffers was runner-up in the first three races and then finished fifth and fourth. Thomas Schrage has finished runner-up in the last two races, and Schrage had 95 points in the championship.
Evan Cooley takes fourth on 85 points and then there is a 17-point gap to G3 Argyros in fifth. Teddy Musella is on 65 points, one ahead of Caleb Gafrarar and Sebastián Garzón. Jeshua Alianeli has 60 points and Cristian Cameron is in tenth on 55 points.
U.S. F2000 will race a pair of 15-laps races, the first at 12:10 p.m. ET on Friday and the second at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday.
Fast Facts
This will be the fifth IndyCar race to take place on May 10, and the first since Simon Pagenaud won the inaugural Grand Prix of Indianapolis in 2014.
Four of the 25 starters from the inaugural Grand Prix of Indianapolis are entered in this year's race (Will Power, Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden, Graham Rahal).
Hélio Castroneves will turn 50 years old on Saturday.
Nine drivers have won on both the oval and road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. They are Alex Lloyd, Jack Harvey, Dean Stoneman, Colton Herta, Will Power, Simon Pagenaud, Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden and Alexander Rossi.
Marcus Ericsson could become the tenth driver to win on both the oval and road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway this weekend.
Rinus VeeKay, Josef Newgarden and Colton Herta are the only drivers to win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indy Lights and IndyCar. VeeKay and Herta are the only driver to win on the IMS road course in both Indy Lights and IndyCar. David Malukas, Jacob Abel or Louis Foster could join VeeKay and Herta as drivers to win on the IMS road course in Indy Lights and IndyCar.
Rinus VeeKay is the only driver to have a first career IndyCar victory occur on the IMS road course.
Patricio O'Ward, Sting Ray Robb, Christian Rasmussen or Louis Foster could become the first driver to win on the IMS road course in Indy Pro 2000 and IndyCar.
Kyle Kirkwood could become the first driver to win on the IMS road course in U.S. F2000 and IndyCar.
The average starting position for a winner on the IMS road course is 4.375 with a median of second.
Scott Dixon's victory from 15th in the August 2023 race was the furthest back an IMS road course race winner has started.
Two of the last five IMS road course winners have started outside the top ten. Colton Herta won from 14th in May 2022.
The average number of lead changes in an IMS road course race is 8.85 with a median of ten.
Last year's race had a record 13 lead changes.
Only three of 16 IMS road course races have had fewer than eight lead changes. Will Power has won two of those races (2017 Grand Prix of Indianapolis and the second Harvest Grand Prix race in 2020).
Power's victory in the second Harvest Grand Prix race is the only time a driver has led all the laps in an IMS road course race, and it is the most recent time a driver has led every lap in an IndyCar race.
The average number of cautions in an IMS road course race is 1.8125 with a median of one. The average number of caution laps is 6.875 with a median of 4.5.
Nine of 16 IMS road course races have featured one caution or fewer.
The most cautions in an IMS road course race was eight in the 2022 Grand Prix of Indianapolis, which ran to a time limit due to rain.
Predictions
Now is when Christian Lundgaard gets his first victory with McLaren and he takes some points out of Álex Palou's championship lead, but Palou is still in the top five and the best finishing Chip Ganassi Racing driver. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing does have a top ten finisher. Six teams have a top ten representative. Colton Herta has three clean pit stops. There will be at least eight drivers who end the race on the primary tire, but the preferred tire strategy will be alternate-primary-primary-alternate. At least one driver makes his first appearance in the final round of qualifying. Sleeper: Graham Rahal.