Friday, January 17, 2025

2025 IndyCar Team Preview: Meyer Shank Racing

Another week has come to a close and the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season is 44 days away from commencing. 

Meyer Shank Racing saw a big turnaround in 2024. After having one top ten finish the entire 2023 season, MSR opened last year with four consecutive top ten results and five top ten finishes in the first six races. This included a pair of top five results, the team's first since 2022, and MSR even picked up its first pole position in IndyCar competition. 

While there was plenty to rightfully celebrate, MSR took its lumps along the way. A gamble on driver selection backfired and forced the team to make a midseason change. It worked out for the better as both its entries finished in Leader Circle positions, but after the team's hot start, it had only three top ten finishes in the final 11 races. 

There were positives to draw upon from 2024, but still much work to be done. MSR has bolstered its driver lineup with its new technical partnership with Chip Ganassi Racing, and its outlook for 2025 should sound familiar.

At First Glance... Results should be better
Like A.J. Foyt Racing, results should be better for Meyer Shank Racing in 2025. 

Joining Felix Rosenqvist will be Marcus Armstrong, essentially loaned from the Ganassi organization with the new charter limit of three entries per team. After the Tom Blomqvist experiment did not pay off, MSR has brought in the 2023 IndyCar Rookie of the Year and a driver who had four top five finishes last season, including his first career podium finish, a third in Detroit. 

Rosenqvist won a pole position and started in the top five in seven races. Armstrong started in the top ten in ten races, including starting third on two occasions. The raw pace is there for MSR to be better. Some of the issues were old issues last season. MSR could still not close out races. It could not take the hard work on Saturday and yield fruitful results on Sunday. That has also been a flaw of Rosenqvist's since he entered IndyCar. 

The good news is the team found speed, which was not there in 2023. Now it must get more out of it. The Ganassi partnership will help the team and potentially lead it to some of the answers it has been missing when it comes to long-run pace. If it can do that and maintain its qualifying form, MSR could win a race or two. 

These two drivers were 12th and 14th in the championship last year with Rosenqvist only eight points ahead of Armstrong. They are two drivers on the same level and both have a working relationship with the Ganassi organization. It will still be difficult to top Álex Palou and Scott Dixon and the Penske cars, but we saw last year Rosenqvist could run at the front of the field even if it could not sustain for an entire race. It feels more likely that MSR should be there at the end of races.

It might not lead to a full championship push but on one of the circuits that have favored Rosenqvist best, it could lead to him contending for a victory and pulling it out. The same goes for Armstrong. This will be his third season but he drove respectably well and kept up with Palou and Dixon on days when the entire Ganassi team clicked. There could be a day where it is his to lose and he maintains control. 

This is a midfield team in a tightly packed midfield. The smallest advantage can go a long way. Two years after MSR was in the cellar, it should make a step closer to the top in 2025 and it could have a few glorious days that seemed unimaginable not long ago.

2024 Meyer Shank Racing Review
Wins: 0
Best Finish: 4th (Barber)
Poles: 1 (Long Beach)
Championship Finishes: 12th (Felix Rosenqvist), 24th (David Malukas), 30th (Tom Blomqvist), 35th (Hélio Castroneves)

Felix Rosenqvist - #60 Meyer Shank Racing Honda
Numbers to Remember:
11: Top ten starts in 2024

10: Times in those 11 top ten starts where Rosenqvist finished worse than or equal to his starting position

5: Laps led in 2024, the fewest among the seven drivers to have an average starting position inside the top ten and start at least 70% of the races

What does a championship season look like for him?
His race pace matching his qualifying pace, and that qualifying pace not falling off. If Rosenqvist is qualifying in the top five, he is finishing in the top five. If he is qualifying in the top ten, he is finishing in the top ten but ahead of where he started. A championship season starts with Rosenqvist not going backward in races. 

It can start with a podium day in St. Petersburg after starting fifth. The worn surface of Thermal Club suits the Swede's driving style and he takes a surprising victory early before another podium run in Long Beach. Entering the Indianapolis 500, he has four top five finishes from five races. 

When it comes to ovals, Rosenqvist does a good job even if he doesn't look like a contender. He is able to finish in the top ten and pick up respectable point totals. He may only have one or two top five finishes, but he is finishing ahead of the key competitors. 

This championship will be decided on road and street results. On the streets of Detroit, he picks up another victory. He gets another pair of top five finishes at Road America and Mid-Ohio. He dominates Laguna Seca and Portland is another top five run. 

For Rosenqvist to win the championship, he will need at least three victories and 11 top five finishes, like most champions do, but he does it with an average starting position that ranks inside the top three in IndyCar.

What does a realistic season look like for him?
Championship top ten. He was close last year but the end of the season cost him dearly. Not all of those were his fault. Rosenqvist had two retirements due to mechanical issues at Iowa and Toronto. The concern is his form of starting well and dropping back in races isn't going to disappear overnight. If it is still an issue in year five, it is going to be around in year six. 

The balance could be better where it doesn't feel like a weekly thing, but it will likely come up, and if he is starting third at Mid-Ohio, there is a good chance that will be a race where he finishes seventh or eighth. It isn't the worst result in the world, but it does not feel great when top five starts are netting only top ten finishes.

IndyCar is somewhat due for an unexpected winner, though no one should be surprised if Rosenqvist has everything go in his favor at Long Beach or Toronto or Laguna Seca. The pace would likely justify the final result, but I don't think we will see eight or nine races where Rosenqvist is in contention. 

One victory with two or three podium results, but only four top five finishes and eight or nine top ten finishes feels like the best outcome for this group, and it would likely get him seventh to tenth in the championship. Even without a victory, Rosenqvist should be knocking on the door of the championship top ten.

Marcus Armstrong - #66 Meyer Shank Racing Honda
Numbers to Remember:
12: Top ten starts in his career

8: Times in those 12 top ten starts where Armstrong finished worse than or equal to his starting position

11.828: Average starting position for a Meyer Shank Racing entry in 2024, the third-best in IndyCar behind only Team Penske (6.803) and Andretti Global (10.865)

What does a championship season look like for him?
Stunning his previous/current employer. It is sending a message early that Chip Ganassi Racing should have found a way to keep him in a CGR car, even if they kind of are keeping him in a CGR car. 

Armstrong wins right out of the gate at St. Petersburg and he has a pair of podium finishes in the first four races before winning the Grand Prix of Indianapolis and becoming the first multi-time winner of the 2025 season. He completes more than six laps in the Indianapolis 500 but settles for a good eighth-place finish in his first real run at the 500 miles.

Another pair of good days at Detroit and Gateway follows, but he strikes back with a victory at Road America and a podium at Mid-Ohio, and this puts him into the championship lead. Armstrong is due for a bad day at Iowa, but he rebounds with three consecutive top five finishes over Toronto, Laguna Seca and Portland, and one of those is a victory.

With two ovals to close the season, Armstrong raises his game, finishing in he top five at Milwaukee and ahead of all his championship rivals and then he clinches the title with another top five run at Nashville.

What does a realistic season look like for him?
Armstrong and Rosenqvist should be close to indistinguishable when it comes to race results. When comparing the finishes once the 2025 season is over, we should have trouble picking out which MSR driver is which. 

Both these guys should be on the cusp of the championship top ten, and there is a good chance one will be just inside and the other will just be outside, but ending up just outside should not feel like a failure. 

If there is one thing for Armstrong to work on it is his eagerness. He may have started third in two races last year, but on both occasions he was involved in opening lap incidents and he played a significant role in how those events turned out. When at the front, he must remain settled and get into a race before taking chances. If he can do that, results will improve. 

Armstrong can win a race. Like Rosenqvist, if the qualifying speed is there, Armstrong could have a weekend where he qualifies on the front row and the tire strategy is in his favor. He has good wear and doesn't have to make a risky decision. It puts him ahead of everyone and he closes out the race. That isn't a guarantee but he is setup for success should such a situation arise. 

While he had four top five finishes last year, Armstrong only had eight total top ten finishes. He was outside the top twenty in six races. That last number should decrease. 

What is best outcome for Rosenqvist is also the best possible outcome for Armstrong. If he finishes seventh or eighth in the championship, it has been a tremendous year, but a season where he may dip and only have three top five finishes but increases his top ten finish total to nine or ten and leads to 11th or 12th in the championship would not be a failure either. That would be a solid season for the New Zealander.

The 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season opens on Sunday March 2 with the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. Fox's coverage of the season opener will begin at noon Eastern Time.


Wednesday, January 15, 2025

2025 IndyCar Team Preview: A.J. Foyt Racing

As we inch closer to the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season opener from St. Petersburg, we move onto the second team preview and a team that far exceeded expectations in 2024. 

A.J. Foyt Racing had not placed a driver in the top fifteen in the championship in over a decade and it had not had a driver finish in the championship top ten since 2002. With Santino Ferrucci, A.J. Foyt Racing ended up ninth in the championship and pulled out for more top ten finishes than expected. In 2023, the team had one top ten finish. Last year, Ferrucci had 11 top ten finishes. Now, Ferrucci looks to improve and the team will have a new second driver that should lift the competition. 

In 46 days, we will find out if 2024 was a fluke for the Foyt organization or if the team has raised its game for sustained competitiveness.

At First Glance... Results should be better
No offense to Sting Ray Robb but David Malukas is an upgrade. After two seasons at Dale Coyne Racing and a partial season as a mid-year replacement at Meyer Shank Racing, we know Malukas has bursts of speed and can run at the front of the pack without needing strategy to get there. With another driver that can bring the pace, Foyt should be better.

That doesn't mean Foyt will finish higher than it did and best the ninth-place championship finish Ferrucci achieved in 2024. As much as Foyt succeeded, it was all one-sided. Ferrucci did all the heavy lifting. The team could get better because the gap between the two drivers level out. Foyt could end up with more top ten finishes as an organization, let say 13 or 14, but it could come at the expense of Ferrucci. It could be a seven-six split or a seven-seven split between the drivers. Better for the team, but a slight dip for one of its drivers. 

As celebrated as Foyt's 2024 season was it is only one season. Prior to 2024, Foyt had not had anything remotely close to a good season since 2013, the year of its most recent victory. Even with all that went well in 2013 with Takuma Sato, who led the championship entering the Indianapolis 500 that year, Sato still finished 17th in the championship. 

IndyCar has a knack for the middle of the pack to rotate. It wasn't that long ago Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing had two top ten championship finishers and Dale Coyne Racing was winning races and had a top ten championship finisher. It has been difficult for any team that is not Team Penske, Chip Ganassi Racing, Andretti Global or Arrow McLaren to have sustain success. A team might have a good season or two, but it has yet to last for anyone else. 

Much of Foyt's improvement has been linked to the Team Penske technical partnership, and that is certainly a plus, but the team did lose lead engineer Mike Cannon to the new Prema organization. For every step forward, there can be an equal or greater step back. It should not be a complete slide. 

For all his faults, Malukas finds a way to have good days. Considering what the team produced with the second car last year, anything more than one top ten finish will be a step in the right direction. Foyt should be more competitive on road and street courses. Malukas has shown promise on ovals with his best days coming at Gateway. That will only help the Foyt organization, however, it must be openly acknowledged the short comings. Malukas is celebrated, but in nearly three seasons, 44 starts, he has three top five finishes, 11 top ten finishes and his career average finish is 15.386. 

Many believe Malukas is a future Penske driver, but he must be better and this will be his best chance to prove himself. Ferrucci will feel the need to back up last year. Foyt is going to have two motivated drivers in an organization that must at least match 2024 and cannot afford a dip. This team should not fall off in 2025 even if it does not quite match what we saw the year before. 

2024 A.J. Foyt Racing Review
Wins: 0
Best Finish: 4th (Milwaukee I & II)
Poles: 1 (Portland)
Championship Finishes: 9th (Santino Ferrucci), 20th (Sting Ray Robb)

David Malukas - #4 A.J. Foyt Racing Chevrolet
Numbers to Remember:
5: Retirements in ten starts last season with Meyer Shank Racing. 

8.7: Average starting position last season.

16.0: Average finishing position last season.

What does a championship season look like for him?
Malukas exploding on ovals. It is an Indianapolis 500 victory followed by a victory at Gateway and a sweep of the Iowa doubleheader and then a victory at Milwaukee and Nashville to close the season. 

With six oval victories, Malukas will have at least 306 points and only need about about 244 more points to win the championship. That is around 22 points per the 11 road and street course races, an average finish of about ninth. Malukas doesn't quite hit that, but he is respectable and piles up top ten finishes.

There are a few top five finishes on the road and street course races, and he finishes in the top ten in vast majority of them. Malukas benefits from other drivers not being as clinical on road and street courses as he is on ovals. With no other driver winning more than two races in the season, Malukas does enough to pull out the championship with a victory in the finale being icing on the cake. 

What does a realistic season look like for him?
Somewhere between tenth and 17th in the championship, a wide range, but we could see Malukas join Foyt and become the best in the team, get the most top ten finishes among the two drivers, run respectable and raise his level to higher than it has been in IndyCar while not winning a race. Or we could see Malukas continue to be a driver that averages a 15th-place finish with two or three really good races, another two or three plain good races and then is rather anonymous for eight to ten races. 

There is also the world where Foyt isn't as good as 2024 and the best the team can do is 15th in the championship. 

From what we have seen from Malukas is spurts but nothing consistently outstanding. He has pulled off some impressive drives in less than stellar equipment, but that has not been at any greater rate than some of the drivers that preceded him. 

In three seasons, we have seen Malukas hit a snag and have a spell where he isn't noticed each year. There is bound to be a four or five-race stretch where we are not thinking about Malukas. That hasn't been a problem when he has been the best driver in his team. However, if his teammate is running respectably at that time, it will not look good.

Santino Ferrucci - #14 Sexton Properties Chevrolet
Numbers to Remember:
13: Times finishing better than his starting position in 2024.

4: Consecutive top ten finishes to end the 2024 season.

9,639: Days between the last time an A.J. Foyt Racing driver had at least five consecutive top ten finishes (Kenny Bräck on October 11, 1998 at Las Vegas) and the 2025 St. Petersburg season opener. 

What does a championship season look like for him?
Something similar to what Malukas' dream championship season looks like: Incredible results on ovals and respectable results on the road and street courses. 

It likely would include an Indianapolis 500 victory plus three or four more victories, likely all coming on ovals. He would finish in the top five of every oval race and have a strong cushion to the rest of the field. 

Ferrucci's road and street course resuts might not match that dominance but they are a step forward. Days that were eighth or ninth-place finishes last year become fourth or fifth-pace finishes. It is consistency that cannot be matched even by the likes of Álex Palou and Patricio O'Ward. Every race sees Ferrucci at the front even if he is not leading the way and it is something the rest cannot beat.

What does a realistic season look like for him?
Somewhere between how he did last year and a slight step back. Nobody saw Ferrucci and Foyt producing those kind of results entering 2024. It will be a tough act to follow. The team should still have good days, especially on ovals. It would surprise no one if Ferrucci found a way to win at Gateway, Iowa or Milwaukee. Even Indianapolis is a plausible place for triumph. 

The toughest part will be breaking into that next level. For all the good results, the team had only two top five finishes, both were at Milwaukee. The team ran well on road and street courses but it was mostly breaking into finishes of eighth, ninth or tenth. Six of his 11 top ten finishes were in one of those three positions. He was 11th on the road in the opening race at St. Petersburg and benefitted from two Penske cars being disqualified. Such gifts likely will not come in 2025.

There will be competition that raises its game. Meyer Shank Racing is a greater threat with Chip Ganassi Racing as its technical partner. Marcus Ericsson will look to improve in year two with Andretti. Christian Lundgaard is with Arrow McLaren. Ed Carpenter Racing will look to do more with Alexander Rossi. These are five entries/drivers Ferrucci finished ahead of last year but all could be ahead of Ferrucci in 2025. That is the nature of the IndyCar Series. The middle is tight and a handful of results swinging in one direction can take a driver out of the championship top ten to know fault of his own. 

Ferrucci should push for the championship top ten, but probably come down a little bit from the 2024 results. A few top five finishes on ovals will boast his efforts with about seven to nine top ten finishes.

The 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season opens on Sunday March 2 with the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. Fox's coverage of the season opener will begin at noon Eastern Time.


Monday, January 13, 2025

Musings From the Weekend: NASCAR Cannot Keep It Simple

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

Big riders had clunky starts to the Supercross season in Anaheim, but that did not mean notable names were not victorious. Chase Sexton won in the 450cc class and Jo Shimoda won in the 250cc class. Endurance race is back though it never really went anywhere. Prema made its big IndyCar unveiling. People are enjoying the honeymoon phase. Formula One announced the Belgian Grand Prix will rotate on and off the schedule starting in 2027. NASCAR made a number of unexpected announcements, most quite startling changes, and one we will see in affect come the Daytona 500. However, this was another case of doing too much and what no one was asking for.

NASCAR Cannot Keep It Simple
January announcements are nothing new for NASCAR. We usually find out of changes in the final month before the start of the season. Normally, they come with fair warning and a build up. Usually there is a press conference with key dignitaries and maybe even drivers on stage praising the changes before we have even seen them in action. This year, three changes flew in out of the blue on a Friday afternoon. 

The Damaged Vehicle Policy is essentially gone. If a car drives to the garage or is towed to the garage for repairs, it will not be ruled out of a race. Teams will still have seven minutes (eight minutes at Atlanta) to make repairs on pit lane before being sent to the garage area where teams can continue repairs and still re-join the race.

Playoff waivers for non-medical reasons will carry significant consequences. If a driver is required a non-medical waiver for the playoffs, that driver will surrender all playoff points earned up to that point and that driver will not be allowed to earn any playoff points afterward. A driver will not be able to start with more 2,000 points at the start of the playoffs. 

NASCAR also introduced the "Open Exemption Provisional." If a team enters a driver that has made a significant contribution to the world of motorsports outside of NASCAR, that entry will be locked into the race and it will become a 41st starter should the field be at the maximum capacity of 40 starters. All "OEP" entries must be made at least 90 days before the race and those drivers must be NASCAR approved.

All three of these rulebook revisions could come into play at some point during the 2025 season. The last one is guaranteed to factor into the first race of the season. 

Three days prior to Friday's announcement, Trackhouse confirmed Hélio Castroneves would attempt the Daytona 500 in the team's Project 91 entry, which is meant for drivers coming from other series to attempt a Cup race. After it appeared Castroneves would face with having to qualify for NASCAR's biggest race against notable competitors that include two past Cup champions, Castroneves was confirmed to be locked into the Daytona 500. 

While good for Castroneves, the introduction of the "Open Exemption Provisional" has unnecessarily been introduced and somewhat dampened the Brazilian's first attempt at the Daytona 500. 

It is rather sad that Castroneves will be forever tied to this rule as the first "OEP" benefactor, because it looks like the rule was created for him, even though this was something the teams negotiated in the renewal of the charter system. This isn't NASCAR playing favorites with Castroneves, but it is NASCAR making it easier for outside talent to be a one-off entry. 

Intrinsically, that isn't a bad thing. These teams spend a lot of money on off-off entries, especially when it is for a notable name from the world of motorsports. Hélio Castroneves and Kimi Räikkönen aren't rolling out of bed for peanuts. If that level of investment is being made for such a driver then in the eyes of the teams that driver better be in the race. Teams cannot afford to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars not to race. It cannot risk upsetting new partners with a car that did not make the race. In 2025, when NASCAR is constantly making changes to cut spending, it isn't going to want teams to lose money trying to bring great talent into the series. 

But this does fix a problem that exists for only one race. 

The NASCAR Cup Series has not had a car fail to qualify for a race that wasn't the Daytona 500 since Timmy Hill failed to qualify for the Texas race in autumn 2018. That is over six seasons ago. The "OEP" really only exists for the Daytona 500. Does it open the door for teams to pursue other notable names for races and guarantee they will start and not have to worry about wasting their time and losing money? It does, but NASCAR didn't have a problem with the guests missing races, and it doesn't seem like NASCAR is expecting an increase in full-time participants limiting these opportunities. 

What has now been created is a subjective standard over who should be granted a guaranteed spot in a race and who should not. It works out this year with Castroneves. He is the only one that fits the criteria. But what would have happened if Fernando Alonso had entered? What if Toyota had decided it wanted Kamui Kobayashi to attempt the Daytona 500? 

The rule says it is only one spot. A 42nd entry suddenly makes it a subjective decision over who gets the "OEP." Whose accomplishments are greater than another's is a matter of interpretation. Before Shane van Gisbergen came to Chicago in July 2023, he was a Supercars championship and had been successful in sports car racing, but would his accomplishments have been deemed enough to earn the "OEP" from the American-based NASCAR officials? 

Jenson Button was also entered in that Chicago race. As was Andy Lally. There were only 37 entries that weekend, so nobody was at risk of missing the inaugural Chicago race, but if the J.J. Yeleys and Jeb Burtons and Landon Cassills and Timmy Hills of the world had been entered, NASCAR would have been faced with a decision over whether or not a World Drivers' Champion, Supercars champion or multi-time IMSA class champion should be locked into the race. We all know which way NASCAR would have gone. Button would have been locked in and van Gisbergen would have been faced of being on the wrong side of qualifying being rained out and not making the race. 

In all likelihood, the OEP will come into play for the Daytona 500 only, but it has created an arbitrary standard over who should locked into a race. It is great when drivers attempt other forms of motorsports and take chances, but something is lost when they are granted an advantage the rest do not get. 

Of no fault of his own, Castroneves' Daytona 500 attempt has lost a little meaning because he doesn't have to earn it. For as screwed up as the Daytona 500 qualifying rules are with 36 cars locked in and only four spots available for Open teams with only one spot being determined by finishing position in each qualifying race, it still means something to race your way in and earn it. Think about what it meant to Jacques Villeneuve and Conor Daly, two drivers who were expected to miss the race with unprepared teams, to make it via qualifying speed and racing their way in respectively. 

In both cases, Villeneuve and Daly would have had an argument for an "OEP." Villeneuve would have definitely got it. The Canadian was an Indianapolis 500 winner and World Drivers' Champion. He definitely would have received it in 2022. Daly though... I guess we must ask what the floor is. Is being an IndyCar driver who has never finished better than 17th in the championship enough to earn an "OEP?" Would Travis Pastrana have been handed it? Daniil Kvyat had raced in Formula One and finished on the podium. Would Kvyat earned one? Mike Rockenfeller won the 24 Hours of Le Mans overall on top of success in sports car racing and the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. Surely Rockenfeller fits, no? 

There are clearly those who fit the criteria, but where do you draw the line in the sand? How much of it will come down to who is supporting these drivers? Would a Rick Hendrick-supported Rockenfeller in a Spire Motorsports entry receive it but a Team Hezeberg's run Kvyat be left without the provisional? It feels like we have created another political football in the NASCAR world, something the series needed like a hole in the head. 

While the introduction of the "OEP" is understandable from a business standpoint for the teams, it does take a way the spirit of competition and puts a number of drivers on a pedestal above those who regularly compete in NASCAR. Those deemed worthy enough from the outside can now be slotted onto the grid without having to prove they are good enough to make a NASCAR Cup race. Castroneves is locked into the Daytona 500 thanks to his four Indianapolis 500 victories and three 24 Hours of Daytona victories, but seven-time Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson has to race his way in. 

For the longest time, NASCAR took pride in how tough it was to make a Cup race, and successful drivers from elsewhere would not necessarily be one of the top 40 drivers to make a race. 

No one was looking for NASCAR to make this change, not the fans nor the drivers this rule change is intended to benefit. The simple thing would be to let them compete for their spot as they likely wished to do in the first place. That is something NASCAR simply cannot do when given the opportunity. 

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

The #777 Al Manar Racing by Team WRT BMW of Dan Harper, Max Hesse, Darren Leung, Ben Tuck and Al Faisal Al Zubair won the Dubai 24 Hour.

Oliver Rowland won the Mexico City ePrix.

Through seven stages, here are the leaders of the Dakar Rally:

Bikes: Daniel Sanders leads Tosha Schareina by 15 minutes and 33 seconds. 

Cars: Henk Lategan holds a 21-second advantage over Yazeed Al-Rajhi.

Challenge: Nicolás Cavigliasso is up by over a half-hour on Gonçalo Guerreiro.

SSV: American Brock Heger is over an hour and 35 minutes ahead of Xavier de Soultrait.

Trucks: Martin Macík is over two hours clear of Mitchel van den Brink.

Coming Up This Weekend
The conclusions of the Dakar Rally.
The 39th Chili Bowl.
Supercross will be in San Diego.



Friday, January 10, 2025

2025 Supercross Season Preview

With the start of any New Year comes the start of the first major motorsports championship in the United States. This weekend the AMA Supercross season begins in a familiar place, Anaheim, California. 

There have been four different champions in the last four Supercross seasons. Supercross has not had five different champions in five consecutive seasons since an eight-season run of different title winners from 1979 to 1986. The top five from the 2024 championship are all past champions. There are plenty of capable riders competing, last season saw six different winners with ten different riders finishing on the podium. 

Honda has produced the last two champions after going 20 years without winning a title. The Japanese manufacturer has not won three consecutive Supercross championships since its nine-year run of dominance from 1989 to 1996. For the other manufacturers, it will have 17 races to prevent history being made for the first time in nearly 30 years. 

Schedule
After the Anaheim season opener this weekend, Supercross heads down to San Diego before returning to Anaheim on January 25 for the final California round of the season. 

The first trip outside of California will be the first Triple Crown round of the season in Glendale, Arizona on February 1. Supercross heads across the country to Tampa for the fifth round of the season the week after that. From Tampa, Supercross will head up to Detroit on February 15, which has an afternoon start of 3:00 p.m. Eastern. The criss-crossing nature of the 2025 Supercross season will continue with Arlington, Texas hosting the series on February 22, the second Triple Crown round of the season. 

March begins in Daytona for Bike Week on the first. Indianapolis follows on March 8, which leads into the one off-week for the series. 

The season resumes with the final Triple Crown round in Birmingham on March 22. Seattle has the 11th round on March 29. Following Seattle, Supercross will have an eastern swing starting in Foxborough, Massachusetts on April 5 with a slightly earlier start of 5:00 p.m. Eastern. The series heads south to Philadelphia for a 3:00 p.m. round on April 12. East Rutherford, New Jersey will also be at 3:00 p.m. ET on April 19. 

After Easter, Supercross returns to night races and it has its first new venue of the season. Pittsburgh's Acrisure Stadium will host Supercross for the first time on April 26. This will only be the third time Supercross has visited Pittsburgh and the first time since 1983 at Three Rivers Stadium. 

As has become a new tradition, Supercross' season ends in the Rocky Mountains. Denver hosts the penultimate round on May 3 with Salt Lake City again hosting the season finale on May 10.

Team Honda HRC Progressive
Jett Lawrence: #1 Honda CRF450R
What did he do in 2024: Lawrence won the Supercross championship and the SuperMotocross championship. In Supercross, the Australian won eight times and stood on the podium ten times from 17 races. He won six of ten races in Motocross before a thumb injury ended his season. Jett won two of three SuperMotocross races to win that title on tiebreaker over his brother Hunter. Jett, his brother Hunter and Kyle Webster combined to win Motocross des Nations for Australia, the first Motocross des Nations title for the country. 

What to expect in 2025: The best rider in the world is going to be the best rider in the world. Lawrence will be the man to beat. If he was not injured in the Motocross season he would have won that championship as well. Injuries do add up, but these are not going to slow Lawrence down at this point. He is bound to win seven or eight races. It will be up on the competition to keep him down. That is a mighty ask for the field.

Hunter Lawrence: #96 Honda CRF450R
What did he do in 2024: Lawrence failed to qualify for the first Anaheim race, but he ended up ninth in the championship with a pair of podium finishes, including a second to his brother in Denver. In the Motocross season, he won three times and he had 17 podium finishes but was second in the championship to Chase Sexton. He won the middle leg of the SuperMotocross playoffs, but Jett won the title on tiebreaker.

What to expect in 2025: Better than last year. The older Lawrence brother is due to win a round or two, maybe even three. Will it be enough to form some type of championship challenge? Possibly. Top five in the championship feels realistic for this Lawrence.  

Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing
Cooper Webb: #2 Yamaha YZ450F
What did he do in 2024: Four victories placed Webb second in the Supercross championship, 15 points behind Jett Lawrence. Webb had nine podium finishes. In the outdoor season, Webb only contested Unadilla. In the SMX playoffs, he finished tenth, fifth and fifth over the three races. 

What to expect in 2025: Webb gave Jett Lawrence a true fight during the 2024 season, but he could not quite keep up. Webb had his days, but he will need to go a step further and that could be a step too much. Webb will win a few races and be in the championship top five. 

Eli Tomac: #3 Yamaha YZ450F
What did he do in 2024: Tomac scored one victory and five runner-up finishes in Supercross. A Bennet fracture to his thumb caused him to miss the finale and he placed fourth in the championship. Tomac was back for the final two rounds of the Motocross season, where he went 4-11 and 4-3. He had finished of second, fourth and third in the SMX playoffs. Over the winter, Tomac won the FIM World Supercross championship.

What to expect in 2025: Looking back over the 2024 season, Tomac did better than first thought, but for as close as he was to some victories, one felt representative of what he deserved for his pace. For what will likely be his final act in Supercross, Tomac will want to end on a high. His day will come, but he will have some races where he is not quite in the picture. It could be boom or bust with either a podium result or a finish in the back half of the top ten. 

Christian Craig: #28 Yamaha YZ450F
What did he do in 2024: Craig ran with Husqvarna but only ran the first six Supercross races due to an elbow injury. His best finish was 12th. He ran the entire Motocross season and his best finish was seventh. He was 20th in the SMX playoffs.

What to expect in 2025: Craig has been brought in to help with the 250cc riders and he will get to run in the 450cc class as well. The key thing is to remain healthy because he has yet to complete a 450cc Supercross season in two tries. He should get some top ten results, but considering the riders Yamaha has, it will be tough to beat his teammates let alone the rest of the competition. 

Justin Cooper: #32 Yamaha YZ450F
What did he do in 2024: Ending the season on his highest note, Cooper was runner-up in the Salt Lake City season finale, placing him sixth in the Supercross championship and giving Yamaha three of the top six. He was fourth in the Motocross championship with six podium finishes and 14 top five finishes. A bad race in Texas torpedoed his SMX playoff result despite finishing sixth in both the other races.

What to expect in 2025: Cooper had a sneaky good season in 2024. It was not brilliant, but he had a few good days. He should be the third-best Yamaha on a regular basis, but there could be a few more days he is the second-best Yamaha and he could steal a victory. A few podium finishes would not be a surprise.

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing
Chase Sexton: #4 KTM 450SX-F Factory Edition
What did he do in 2024: Sexton won twice and had nine podium finishes on his way to third in the Supercross championship. In Motocross, he won 13 races and he had 19 podium finishes with his worst finish being sixth as he won the championship. In SMX, Sexton was third and second in the first two races but suffered a hand injury in the first moto of the Las Vegas finale, knocking him out of the competition.
 
What to expect in 2025: For all the concerns about Sexton's consistency, he was rather consistent in 2024, but he was not at the same high level in his first year with KTM. Things should be better in 2025. Sexton should be in a tight knot between Webb and Hunter Lawrence for just behind Jett Lawrence. A few victories, some podium finishes, and somewhere in the top five in the championship for Sexton. 

Aaron Plessinger: #7 KTM 450SX-F Factory Edition
What did he do in 2024: Plessinger took a popular victory in San Diego, and he had three podium finishes and seven top five finishes from the first 12 races, but a practice accident in Foxborough ended his season with a fractured elbow. He was back for the Motocross season, contesting every race. There were no victories, but Plessinger did have 11 podium finishes and was third in the championship. He was fourth in the SMX playoffs.

What to expect in 2025: Good but not great. Plessinger can have his days and finish on the podium. No one would be surprised if he won again, but more often he will be just outside the top five. It will lead to a respectable championship finish somewhere in the top ten.

Monster Energy Kawasaki
Jason Anderson: #21 Kawasaki KX450
What did he do in 2024: Fifth was the place for Anderson in 2024. He was fifth in both the Supercross and Motocross championships. In Supercross, he had four podium finishes and he was tied with Tomac on points but lost the tiebreaker. In Motocross, he had three podium finishes and 17 top five finishes. Anderson did not start the first SMX round from Charlotte, leaving him tenth in the final championship standings.

What to expect in 2025: We know who Anderson is as a rider. He will run right around fifth in almost every race. Sometimes it ends with a podium finish. Other times he will be sixth or seventh. There could be one bad race. There could be one strong day where he wins. All is on the table, except it will not be bad. 

Jorge Prado: #70 Kawasaki KX450
What did he do in 2024: Prado won his second consecutive FIM Motocross World Championship as the Spaniard won 16 of 40 races and 11 of 20 rounds. Prado also ran the first four Supercross races last season. His best finish was seventh in San Francisco, where he also won a heat race.

What to expect in 2025: As we saw in his four Supercross races last year, Prado will be learning but he will have flashes. On talent alone, he should figure it out and be able to win a race and maybe two. There is a world where it clicks and he could be a stunning championship challenger. I expect a few tough races, but things clicking and he finishing ahead of Anderson in the championship.

Progressive Insurance ECSTAR Suzuki
Ken Roczen: #94 Suzuki RM-Z450
What did he do in 2024: Roczen won in Glendale and he had six podium finishes, but an accident in Nashville ended his season, and left him seventh in the championship. He only contested Unadilla in the Motocross season before he finished sixth in SMX. Roczen was second to Eli Tomac in the FIM World Supercross championship.

What to expect in 2025: As we have seen with Roczen in recent seasons, he has been quick, can win races, but an injury has slowed him. Last year, it was either really good or bad. If he is healthy, top five of the championship is in play. It does feel like the window has closed for a championship.

Rockstar Energy Gas Gas Factory Racing
Justin Barcia: #51 Gas Gas MC 450F
What did he do in 2024: After opening the season with only two top ten finishes in the first eight races, Barcia ended the Supercross season with eight top ten finishes in the final nine events, including three top five finishes in the final four races, lifting him to eighth in the championship. Knee injuries ended his Motocross season after five rounds despite having finished no worse than 11th. He missed the Charlotte SMX round and was ninth in that championship.

What to expect in 2025: Last season saw Barcia go winless and he dropped to eighth in the championship after finishing in the top five in each of the previous three seasons. I don't see it getting better. Barcia is good enough where he can put it together and compete with the big boys on a night, but that will not be a common occurrence. 

Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Team
Malcolm Stewart: #27 Husqvarna FC450 RE
What did he do in 2024: Stewart could not break into the top five last season and he took tenth in the championship despite his best finish being sixth. Outdoors, he did not score a top five finish until the antepenultimate race of the season at Budds Creek. Stewart was sixth in the Motocross championship. He was outside the top ten in two of the three SMX rounds, placing himself 17th.

What to expect in 2025: After looking like he was on the cusp of winning a race in 2022, missing the 2023 season due to injury was a setback. Husqvarna is not at its strongest. This season appears set to mirror 2024. A top five finish would not be a surprise, but do not expect those to be frequent. 

Phoenix Racing Honda
Dylan Ferrandis: #14 Honda CRF450R
What did he do in 2024: Ferrandis had a good start to the season with six consecutive top ten finishes and seven top ten finishes in the first nine races. A lung infection kept him out of the next five races, but he ended the season with three top ten results on the spin. He was seventh in the Motocross championship with one podium finish, and 11th in SMX with his best finish being ninth.

What to expect in 2025: As a privateer rider, Ferrandis did rather well in 2024. We saw him run consistently in the top ten. That should continue. There could be a race where he is in the right spot and finishes in the top five or even sneaks on the podium. That is unlikely but not unthinkable.

Twisted Tea Suzuki presented by Progressive Insurance
Kyle Chisholm: #11 Suzuki RM-Z450
What did he do in 2024: In Supercoss, Chisholm failed to make six A-Mains and his best finish was 13th on two occasions. In Motocross, he was 20th in the championship with his best finish being 15th. In SMX, he ended up 22nd out of 25 riders.

What to expect in 2025: Not much different from 2024. Maybe he makes a few more A-Mains, but just making the show is only a minor bump. Any finish in the top ten would be incredible. 

Colt Nichols: #12 Suzuki RM-Z450
What did he do in 2024: Riding for Beta, Nichols joined for the final nine races. His best finish was 11th, but he never finished worse than 15th though he failed to make two A-Mains. Nichols was a wild card entry for the SMX playoffs with the Twisted Tea Suzuki team. He was ninth and tenth in the first two rounds before finishing 17th in Las Vegas.

What to expect in 2025: Nichols should have better days than his teammate. If he was pushing the top ten on the Beta, he should get some top ten finishes on the Suzuki. He could sneak into the championship top ten or be just on the wrong side of it. 

Liqui Moly Beta Racing
Mitchell Oldenburg #49 Beta 450 RX
What did he do in 2024: Oldenburg contested six races with his best finish being ninth in the Salt Lake City finale. He was fifth in the FIM World Supercross championship. 

What to expect in 2025: Beta is still behind the other manufacturers. There were some good days last year, but plenty of growing pains. Oldenberg did well in his handful of races on the Smartop MotoConcepts Honda. Any top ten finishes would be welcomed.  

Benny Bloss: #57 Beta 450 RX
What did he do in 2024: Developing the Beta, Bloss went from failing to qualify for the first two rounds to finishing tenth in two races, tenth in Daytona and eighth in Nashville. A collarbone fracture took him out of the final two races.

What to expect in 2025: Bloss got some impressive results on the Beta last year. I don't see much changing in 2025. There could be some top ten finishes, but not many. It will still be good to see and little victories for rider and manufacturer. 

FirePower Honda 
Shane McElrath: #12 Honda CRF450R
What did he do in 2024: McElrath ran Supercross with the Twisted Tea Suzuki team and he took a surprise fourth in muddy conditions in San Francisco. He was tenth at St. Louis and that was his only top ten results of the season as he was 13th in points. He ran the first eight rounds of Motocross with Suzuki before switching to the MaddParts.com Kawasaki Racing Team. He was 16th in the outdoor championship and 12th in the SMX playoffs. McElrath won the FIM World Supercross Championship in the SX2 class.

What to expect in 2025: FirePower had some good days with Dean Wilson last year, especially toward the end of the season, but those were still results fighting to crack the top ten. Things can improve and McElrath could still be 13th in the championship. 

Joey Savatgy: #17 Honda CRF450R
What did he do in 2024: Unable to compete in Supercross last year due to the delayed Triumph bike, Savatgy was sidelined until the 250cc Motocross season. He was 12th in the championship with three top five finishes and 11 top ten finishes. He joined FirePower Honda for the FIM World Supercross season, and he was third in the championship behind Eli Tomac and Ken Roczen.

What to expect in 2025: Results not as good as the FIM WSX season. He has taken privateer bikes and gotten good results with them before when he was with the Rocky Mountain KTM group. Results should not be that good, but he could pick up a few top ten results.

The first round of the 2025 AMA Supercross season from Anaheim will be at 8:00 p.m. ET on Saturday January 11, and can be seen on Peacock. 


Wednesday, January 8, 2025

2025 IndyCar Team Preview: Ed Carpenter Racing

It might feel early to look ahead to the 2025 IndyCar season, but we are within two months of the opening race from St. Petersburg, and with an expcted 11 teams and 27 full-time entries, we must start early if we want everyone to have proper coverage. Also, why wait and cram 11 previews in over the final two weeks?

We start with Ed Carpenter Racing, a team that did not crack the top ten in the championship in 2024. ECR will see a change behind the scenes that might almost be bigger than then changes on track. ECR has a new co-owner with Ted Gelov, CEO of Heartland Food Products Group which produces Splenda, joining the team. Gelov brings a financial boost that could go a long way for a team that has only won once in the last eight seasons.

Along with a new co-owner, ECR has hired Alexander Rossi, who has not won in the last two seasons, while Christian Rasmussen will move to the #21 Chevrolet in a full-time effort. Ed Carpenter will step back to an Indianapolis 500-only entry.

At First Glance... Uncertain parties are coming together
ECR has not quite returned to the heights since Josef Newgarden left after the 2016 season. It had a brief spell in 2021 where it looked like the team was back to be a regular contender. The last three years proved that was not the case.

Alexander Rossi has gone from a perennial championship contender to an afterthought, tossed aside late in the silly season by McLaren and left uncertain of who would hire him.

This is a coming together of two uncertain parties hoping for better but neither should be all that confident either can provide for the other. 

Ed Carpenter Racing has not had a driver finish better than 12th in the championship in the last eight seasons. Rossi has not finished better than ninth in the championship in any of the last five seasons. It feels lined up for a team either to receive a small boost and get over a hump or a driver to take a small step back but one that would still be classified as a decline. 

After running Rinus VeeKay for five consecutive seasons and VeeKay finishing between 12th and 14th in the championship every year, we know ECR's level. It is a mid-pack team that cannot quite breakthrough and be a regular contender, but it is not a cellar dweller either. It is a good team in a world where good is fine but not enough. Bringing in Rossi is not enough of a change to think ECR can move up to the next level.

The team is open to changes. It started last year when Ed Carpenter removed himself from the final three oval races for Rasmussen as the team hoped the #20 Chevrolet would remain in one of the 22 Leader Circle positions. Rasmussen did enough to keep the team in the money, and the Dane had a few strong runs, though his rookie season had a number of rookie moves.

ECR has kept Rasmussen onboard and for all the limitations we have seen from Rossi, he is still a veteran driver who can be quick and get respectable results. Is this enough while against other teams who are also making steps forward?

It has been 47 races since ECR's most recent podium finish, and the team is not the oval powerhouse it once was.

The one hope for this team is its best track is also Rossi's best track. Both are frontrunners every year at the Indianapolis 500. ECR might not have shown the same speed as in previous years, but it is still at the front each May. The same goes for Rossi. He is in the picture every year. 

That is only one race, and living boom or bust is a fool's errand, more likely to end in disappointment than glory. ECR must be better everywhere. Results must improve everywhere. Rossi might be a step in the right direction at both the one race the team is aiming for and at all the others it cannot afford to ignore. For both sides, there is a hint of desperation. Perhaps it will be enough to create something special.

2024 Ed Carpenter Racing Review
Wins: 0
Best Finish: 5th (Iowa I)
Poles: 0
Best Start: 7th (St. Petersburg, Indianapolis 500)
Championship Finishes: 13th (Rinus VeeKay), 22nd (Christian Rasmussen), 32nd (Ed Carpenter)

Alexander Rossi - #20 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet
Numbers to Remember:
2,471: Days between Rossi’s most recent oval victory (August 19, 2018 at Pocono) and this year’s first oval race, the Indianapolis 500.

5: Times leading ten laps or more in the last 59 road/street course races (since Toronto 2019)

12.111: Average entrants’ championship finish for the best Ed Carpenter Racing entry since 2016. 

-18: Difference in Rossi’s total podium finishes over the last four seasons (six) in IndyCar compared to his total podium finishes over his first five seasons (24). 

What does a championship season look like for him?
ECR's oval strength returning and that speed we saw at Indianapolis in 2018 and 2019 being underneath him and enough to dethrone Team Penske and company to win the "500." 

Off the back of strong oval form where Rossi wins four races and finishes no worse than fifth, his road and street course results are solid. They are not spectacular every time out and there will be three or four races where he gets stuck in the middle and either finishes 12th or 13th or works hard enough to eek out a top ten finish, but on more weekends than not he is a second round qualifier and it puts him in a good position. 

Strategy does not get the better of him and it actually lifts him forward, turning what looks like a fourth or fifth into a podium results and a seventh or eighth in a top five finish. He doesn't win on a road or street course, but combined with his four victories Rossi has three more podium finishes, and along with top five finishes in all six oval races, he adds another five from the 11 road and street course events. He is running at the end of every race and finishes all of them in the top fifteen. 

What does a realistic season look like for him?
Rossi essentially has replaced Rinus VeeKay but will take over the #20 Chevrolet instead. There were only three positions between the two drivers in the 2024 championship. They were essentially living in the same neighborhood, only 66 addresses apart as Rossi scored that many points more than VeeKay, and Rossi did it with one fewer start to his name. 

Rossi had one podium finish, three top five finishes and ten top ten finishes. VeeKay went zero, one and seven in those categories. 

Paper is saying Rossi should make ECR a little better. Rossi was with McLaren last year, but he has been ninth or tenth with multiple organizations now. A little better with ECR does not necessarily equal ninth or tenth in the championship. 

It will be close, but the only place I can see Rossi winning at is Indianapolis, and that is more down to questioning how consistent ECR can be across the board. 

A realistic season is Rossi will have a few impressive days, but he will go through some days where the pace is not there and it will be a slog to try and get close to the top ten. He is looking at two or three top five finishes, eight to ten top ten finishes and possibly breaking into the top ten or coming up just short.

Christian Rasmussen - #21 Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet
Numbers to Remember:
6: Lead lap finishes in 13 starts last season. 

23.75: Average starting position in Rasmussen’s four oval starts.

18.333: Average entrants’ championship finish for the second-best Ed Carpenter Racing entry since 2016. 

What does a championship season look like for him?
Rasmussen bonding with Rossi and their partnership producing improvements we did not think were possible for this organization. If Rasmussen is competing for a championship than Rossi would be up there as well. 

It is a season where Rasmussen is not making mistakes and he is not running into other drivers. He is mostly following in Rossi's footsteps on ovals, but there are a few races that break his way and he wins at least twice. He is better on road and street courses, but the results are not spectacular, like Rossi's best case scenario. The difference is Rasmussen catches the breaks. He wins two races because of timely cautions that put him to the front during a pit cycle and he runs away from there. 

Those two victories are his only top five finishes on road/street courses in the season, but four victories with seven total top five finishes and 13 top ten finishes is enough for a stunning championship in a season where no other driver wins more than twice, and Rossi also finishes in the championship top five. 

What does a realistic season look like for him?
In his 14 starts last year, Rasmussen averaged 11.642 points per start. That would have put him 19th in 2024, still well behind Graham Rahal in 18th and a little ahead of Pietro Fittipaldi. 

The Danish driver had one top ten finish all season. He had five finishes outside the top twenty. He could step over the line and cost himself and he did not make many friends last year. His qualifying pace was not all that good, and outside of the Indianapolis 500 and maybe Mid-Ohio, there wasn't really a race where you felt all that impressed watching Rasmussen. 

One top ten is still a low total and he should improve from that, but I don't see a big leap. While VeeKay could not get out of the 12th-14th rut, the second ECR entry wasn't doing much better than 17th or 18th. That actually feels perfect for Rasmussen. ECR might have hired two drivers perfectly suited to finish where the team has been finishing all along. 

I think we will see improvements from Rasmussen, but not see him challenge Rossi for best in the stable. Three or four top ten finishes feels like the limit. Better, but not all that great either.

The 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season opens on Sunday March 2 with the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. Fox's coverage of the season opener will begin at noon Eastern Time.


Monday, January 6, 2025

Musings From the Weekend: A Few Random Thoughts to Start the Year

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

It is a new year. It has mostly been silent. A couple tests have been announced. Some seats are being confirmed for the 24 Hours of Daytona and Bathurst 12 Hour. There has already been plenty of racing in Australia. The courts have been busy. McLaren owns more of McLaren's IndyCar team. Lamborghini has a team in IMSA for the endurance rounds. The Dakar Rally began. After the holidays, there is not one thing that stands out to lead off the Musings for 2025.

A Few Random Thoughts to Start the Year
We did this at the end of 2024. Sometimes there are few things on your mind but you don't have a lot to say about any of them. However, instead of letting those thoughts remain unknown, each of them can get their moment. The Christmas period is not always the loudest when it comes to news, but a few things came out that stirred up some thoughts.

There is no point in having cars fail to qualify for races outside of Indianapolis
Less than two months until the IndyCar season opens, and with the charter era upon us where every race outside of the Indianapolis 500 is limited to 27 starters, it must be stated that there is no point in having cars fail to qualify races outside of Indianapolis. 

The charter system is understandable, but a 28th entry should not face having to miss Long Beach or Iowa or Laguna Seca if it is entered. 

Let's acknowledge that isn't 1982. There is no chance of 40 cars showing up to any races. IndyCar is at its limit when it comes to full-time entries. Honda and Chevrolet cannot support anymore teams. We aren't going to see 35 full-time entries any time soon. Let the 25 charter teams that are committed to the championship start the race. 

However, there is no value in sending one car home if 28 cars show up. Even if there are 29 entries, there is no value in sending two cars home. It is especially hurtful since Prema's two-car operation will be the only one that has no chartered entry. Both Prema cars will be full-time, competing for the championship, but it will run the risk of either or both of its two cars sent home at every race. 

If a team has a driver or the funding to run in an additional race or two, that team should run, but it should not run the risk of missing the race, nor should that one-off entry take a spot from a full-time entry who is only not locked in because a charter was not made available since Prema is an entirely new team. 

Here is the middle ground: Every team should be allowed to run a "wild card" entry in at least three races outside of Indianapolis. These "wild card" entries would be added to the field but there is a limit of two per round. No one would fail to qualify. If Chip Ganassi Racing has found the money to run Linus Lundqvist in three races outside of the Indianapolis 500, it should be able to run Lundqvist without having it take away from Prema. 

Hypothetically, if Kyle Busch went to Ed Carpenter Racing and said he had the money to run Toronto, Laguna Seca and Milwaukee, it should not come down to Busch having to qualify and needing to beat Callum Ilott and Robert Shwartzman to make the race. We have run 28 cars already. This would be a case where a 28th car would be an advantage. Just let Busch race. 

Until this becomes a problem, nothing will change, but the teams and IndyCar can work together and limit grid size while also allowing some flexibility. 

Start Times and Scheduling Gymnastics
Over the Christmas season, IndyCar released its start times for all of its races. It drew a reaction.

None of the races are a true prime start, the latest being a 5:00 p.m. Eastern start for the first Iowa race.

Nine races will be head-to-head with a NASCAR race, eight Cup races and one for its second division. Two of those head-to-heads are with a Cup race on FS1. 

On only one occasion will an IndyCar race lead into a NASCAR race or vice versa. That is the St. Petersburg season opener with the NASCAR Cup race from Austin. 

Two races will overlap with Formula One's two early trips to North America. 

I has been written before, some conflicts are unavoidable. If IndyCar is racing in California and every NASCAR Cup race will be starting no earlier than 3:00 p.m. Eastern, there is going to be clashes. That is unavoidable. You have to accept some of those, but there are a few others you wish you could miss.

Of course, when the partners are not shared, there is no reason for IndyCar and NASCAR to look out for one another.

Some are avoidable, or at least you think they are. This is the price of a new relationship. Road America will have its latest start in recent memory (outside of the 2020 doubleheader). Road America will start at 3:30 p.m. Eastern, almost three hours later than we have seen. With that change, it is now head-to-head with the Cup race at Pocono.

Gateway and Mexico City will occur simultaneously. Mid-Ohio and Chicago will occur simultaneously. Toronto and Dover will occur simultaneously. Laguna Seca and the Brickyard 400 will occur simultaneously. 

All the IndyCar races will run on Fox while all of those NASCAR races will be on Amazon Prime or TNT. You can say it is better to be on a network, but IndyCar has struggled to break one million viewers on network television. NASCAR draws two to three million viewers wherever it shows races. IndyCar doesn't do better when against NASCAR. 

This is also the price of announcing the schedule on June 13, 2024 over two months prior to the NASCAR schedule released. NASCAR is not racing on Sunday June 29, 2025, but that is an IndyCar off-week. NASCAR is not racing on Sunday August 17, 2025, but IndyCar is off that weekend. Meanwhile, the Portland IndyCar race on August 10 will start an hour after the NASCAR Cup race at Watkins Glen.

As much as you may hate to hear it, but people who will watch both will choose NASCAR if the two are head-to-head. It doesn't seem to matter how good the IndyCar race might be. That is not unchangeable, but until IndyCar becomes enticing to the point where it changes viewing habits, it is a losing position when put in a clash. It is best for IndyCar to wait and take advantage of the openings it is provided. 

You need to calm down anytime the Indianapolis 500 is mentioned
God Bless Al Michaels.

The lead commentator of Amazon Prime's Thursday Night Football has been calling games for over 60 years. From the Miracle on Ice to 11 Super Bowls, the World Series to a pair of NBA Finals, a number of other Olympics, Michaels has called it all, and he has let us know.

In the final Thursday Night Football game of the regular season, Michaels' partner Kirk Herbstreit asked about the litany of sports he has called, even asking if he had called NASCAR. Michaels said he had and mentioned how he had called the Indianapolis 500. If you are an IndyCar fan, everyone let you know that Michaels mentioned it.

Nothing special was said, other than Michaels mentioning he had called the Indianapolis 500. 

We must calm down any time the Indianapolis 500 is mentioned. We don't need the clip shared. We don't need to know when the three contestants on Jeopardy are all stumped when the Indianapolis 500 is the correct response. We don't have to act like it is going to change anything. 

Be cool. If it is mentioned in some form of pop culture passing, let it be. It doesn't need to be repeated. It doesn't need to be shared. There is no need to look desperate. 

There is never enough money... until there is enough money
You may have missed it, but in a Racer.com article posted this weekend, Michael Shank said Meyer Shank Racing is considering hiring a specialist pit crew instead of using mechanics. It is a practice NASCAR teams has been using for quite some time. 

Shank said it would be a way to reduce the physical demands on the full-time crews that work on the team's two full-time entries and it would allow those crew members to be helpful in other meaningful areas.

Of course, hiring an exclusive pit crew costs money. Many college athletes from football, basketball and other sports have found a career as pit crew members in NASCAR as teams look for the most physically gifted individuals to maximize the speed and agility needed to complete a pit stop. These members would practice and fly in during the middle of the race weekend. Their responsibilities begin and end with going over the pit wall. 

It is amazing how every time you turn around IndyCar team owners are expressing concerns about costs... and then they decide to spend more money. 

Alexander Rossi mentioned on his Off Track podcast a few years ago that teams are looking to save money and keep costs down and they are worried about a new car, new engine formula and the hybrid due to the cost... but then Andretti Global announces it is spending over $100 million for a new shop and Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing spent millions building a new shop of its own. 

For the last four years, IndyCar has dragged out introducing a new car, new engine formula and hybrid system. Cost was highly cited as a reason. There is a big difference between spending $10 million for new equipment and spending maybe an additional million dollars on six pit crew members while also taking into consideration the extra expenses for travel, lodging and meals, but at some point crying poor is rendered ineffective when teams are constantly welcoming additional spending.

I don't buy that the biggest thing holding back is the lack of a new car, but at some point the teams must plan for bigger expenses, especially if a new car better integrates all the additional safety measures that have been tacked on over the last decade-plus. Specialized pit crews are not why people are going to tune in nor will it make the races better. 

You know who we do not appreciate enough?
Jacky Ickx. 

With the Dakar Rally starting this weekend, the event honored Ickx as New Years' Day was the Belgian's 80th birthday. 

Let's consider Ickx's career. 

Six-time Le Mans winner and the all-time leader in overall Le Mans victories for 24 years.

Eight Formula One grand prix victories and two-time championship runner-up in 1969 and 1970.

1983 Dakar Rally winner. 

This is also not mentioning his victories in the 24 Hours of Daytona (though it was only six hours), 24 Hours of Spa, Bathurst 1000 and two victories in the 12 Hours of Sebring. 

That is an absurd record and we don't really mention it. Mario Andretti and A.J. Foyt are constantly lauded for all their success in multiple categories... and then there is Ickx.

Winning the Indianapolis 500 and Daytona 500 is cool. As is winning those two races and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Ickx won multiple world-renowned races. Two of his grand prix victories were on the Nürburgring Nordschleife! 

Nobody competes in a variety of categories on a regular basis anymore let alone to a level that Ickx did. The only contemporary that comes close is Fernando Alonso with his two World Drivers' Championships and two 24 Hours of Le Mans victories. Alonso also made a few Dakar starts, but he didn't win the race and didn't really challenge for it. Alonso more or less took a sabbatical from Formula One for two years until the fire had settled from burning a bridge with McLaren and Honda. He didn't seek long-term competition elsewhere. 

Nobody has the Formula One success to match. Motorsports has evolved. Sébastien Buemi has become a four-time Le Mans winner, he is a Formula E champion, and he is tied for the all-time victories in Formula E history. Buemi ran in Formula One, but for only three seasons. The Swiss driver's Formula One career ended when he was 23 years old! Ickx's first full season in Formula One came at 23 years old, a very young age for a full-time driver at that time. 

In a different era, Buemi would have been back in Formula One at some point. After the second world championship and Le Mans victory, Buemi would have been a hot commodity to a Formula One team and been back on the grid. As good as Buemi's résumé has been, it doesn't feel like it quite lives up to Ickx's. Maybe Sebastian Vettel has a second chapter in him that is fruitful wherever it goes. Vettel already has a pretty strong first chapter to build upon. 

I don't know how you rank the all-time greatest racers, but Ickx should probably be higher than you think.

Winners While We Were Away

The #25 Saintéloc Racing Audi of Gilles Magnus, Dennis Marschall and Bihuang Zhou won the Gulf 12 Hours after the #69 Optimum Motorsport McLaren received 60 seconds worth of penalties for pit lane speeding on its final two stops.

After the first stage in the Dakar Rally...

KTM's Daniel Sanders leads the Bikes class by 2:22 over Honda's Ricky Brabec.

American Seth Quintero leads the car class by 45 seconds over Guerlain Chicherit. 

Nicolás Cavigliasso leads the T3 class by four seconds over Gonçalo Guerreiro.

Xavier de Soultrait is 7:35 up on Francesco López in the T4 class.

Mitchel van den Brink holds a one-minute and 40-second lead in the Truck class over Aleš Loprais. 
 
Coming Up This Weekend
The Dakar Rally will continue. 
The Supercross season will begin in Anaheim.
Formula E has its second round of the season in Mexico City.



Tuesday, December 31, 2024

2025 IndyCar Predictions

We have made it to the final day of 2024. The year is over. Whether it was a good year or a bad year has already been decided and cannot really be changed. We had 366 days this year. Day 366 is not going to be the difference. With that said, it is our final chance to look ahead to 2025 before we get into 2025. Four sets of predictions are complete. We end with IndyCar, as the series is about to enter a new dynamic and television partnership.

1. Will Power has at least two pole positions and on multiple track disciplines
For the first time since 2005, we had an IndyCar season where Will Power did not win a pole position. It was not for a lack of trying. Power started second in four races and he started inside the top five in 11 of 17 races. He started in every position in the top five except first. Power will enter 2025 on a 22-race pole position drought. 

At some point in 2025, that drought will end. In 19 full seasons of IndyCar competition, Power has won at least two pole positions 14 times. He has won at least four pole positions in ten seasons. Power will get back on track and he will also do it on multiple track disciplines. 

Five of his six most recent pole positions have been on ovals, and four of those have been at Iowa. He has not won pole position for a street course race since the 2020 season finale at St. Petersburg. Some of these trends will change. Power could win on all three disciplines. He will win on at least two in 2025.

2. Josef Newgarden will not have consecutive finishes outside the top 20
Since August 2023, Newgarden has not been able to completely escape a funk. Entering the second race on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course that season, Newgarden was second in the championship, 84 points behind Álex Palou with four races remaining in the season. Then he got caught in an opening lap incident with Marcus Armstrong, got trapped a lap down and finished 25th, and Newgarden hasn't been the same since. 

In the following race, Newgarden hit the wall in Gateway and finished 25th. At Laguna Seca, he was caught in an opening lap incident and trudged along to finish 21st. 

The bad run of form could not be shaken in 2024. Along with the disqualification at St. Petersburg that classified him in 26th, Newgarden had five races where he finished outside the top twenty. At the Milwaukee doubleheader, he spun out while running second and battling Marcus Ericsson, and in the second race Newgarden was hit from behind at the waved off start, ending his race before it really began. 

In the last 21 races, Newgarden has finished outside the top twenty in eight of them, and on three occasions has he had consecutive finishes outside the top twenty. In his first 111 races with Team Penske, he had only finished outside the top twenty in four races. He finished inside the top twenty in his first 65 races with the team. 

Newgarden famously (or infamously?) used the offseason prior to 2024 to refocus on driving to achieve better results. That didn't work, but he will have another chance to correct course before 2025. Some results a driver cannot control. You cannot control if you will be run over at the start of a race or if an engineer has entered the wrong code for the push-to-pass system, but Newgarden will avoid the ruts has been falling in for the better part of the last season-and-a-half. He will get back to more of who he was from 2017 through 2022.

3. Álex Palou will have consecutive finishes outside the top 20
While Newgarden has been going through a rough spell, Álex Palou has won the championship the last two seasons and has been almost untouchable during that time. 

In 2023, he did not finish worse than eighth and he won five times with ten podium finishes. In 2024, he only won twice times and only had seven podium finishes, but he had 13 top five results. No one has kept up with Palou's consistency and that has been the key to his last two championships.

We did see Palou look human in 2024. He got trapped when Newgarden spun at Detroit and that cost him a good result, relegating him to 16th. Palou spun on his own at Iowa and finished 23rd. The car had a battery issue on the pace laps for the second Milwaukee race and Palou salvaged a 19th-place finish. With Will Power caught many laps down after his seatbelt issue in Nashville, Palou did not push it and could settle with an 11th-place finish to clinch the title. 

With those last two results, Palou will enter 2025 with consecutive results outside the top ten for the first time since August 2021. For a man who has a knack for making history, he is going to make more in 2025.

How many times has Palou finished outside the top twenty in consecutive races in his IndyCar career?

The answer is zero! It has never happened. Despite finishing 23rd on debut, Palou had never had consecutive races where he was in the bottom-third of the field whether that because of his own mistake, lack of speed or mechanical gremlins. In his first 81 starts, Palou has finished outside the top twenty in six races. Three of those came in his rookie season with Dale Coyne Racing. 

Palou is going to remain consistent and quick. He will win multiple races and he will be in the discussion, if not leading the discussion, for the championship into the final race, but if Josef Newgarden can fall into a rut and Scott Dixon, who had three finishes outside the top twenty in 2024, can fall into a rut, Palou can fall into a rut as well. It might not be for long, but any time in a rut is long enough. 

We are due for Palou having a few hands go against him and having some extra work to control the championship.

4. Colton Herta will end the year with enough FIA Super License points
Aren't you tired hearing about Colton Herta and Super License points? I am!

For nearly four years now, the biggest topic of conversation around Herta has been his lack of Super License points and it preventing him from getting a shot at Formula One, whether that be with the Andretti-led Cadillac program or with possibly Red Bull's junior team. Herta has ben a few short the entire time, and the only way to get Super License points is through results. Results were not Herta's strong point there for a few seasons.

While he was third and fifth in the 2020 and 2021 IndyCar seasons, Herta followed that with a pair of tenth-place championship finishes. Only the top ten IndyCar championship finishers earn Super License points, and tenth only pays a point. A driver needs a combined 40 points over the previous three seasons to qualify for a Super License. A combined two points over two seasons will not get you there. 

The good news for Herta is he woke up in 2024 and finished second in the championship, earning him 30 points. He will be dropping a point for his tenth in the 2022 season, but that leaves him with 31 points, needing only nine to qualify for a Super License. The problem is the points become hard to get very quickly. 

While the champion gets 40 and second gets 30. If you finish fourth, you only get ten. If you finish fifth, you only get eight. Herta could be fifth in the championship and be a point short of a Super License. What could work in Herta's favor is a driver can earn a single Super License point if he completed at least 100km in a Formula One free practice session during a grand prix weekend, and a driver can earn up to ten points through free practice.

Theoretically, Herta could finish fifth in the championship and then run a free practice at Austin with a team and that will get him to the 40-point threshold. 

I think Herta will finish inside the top four in the championship and not need the practice session. He is coming off his best season in IndyCar and Andretti Global is a more-focused organization. Herta was successful on all circuit disciplines. He picked up his first oval victory of his career. He can finish in the top four of the championship and not need to do backflips to secure Super License qualification. 

5. Scott Dixon will win a race from pole position
We are accustomed to Dixon winning races. He has won at least one race in 20 consecutive seasons. He is second all-time in victories with 58. Last season was the 18th time in Dixon's career where he won multiple races in a season. Winning is an expectation for Dixon every season.

What we should not expect from Dixon is pole positions. 

The New Zealander has gone two consecutive seasons without a pole position, and he has not won a pole position in five of the last seven seasons. Only twice has he won a pole position over the last 115 races. In that same time frame, Dixon has won 17 races. Only Josef Newgarden has won more in that timeframe. For a man who commonly finishes first, it is uncommon to see Dixon start first. 

Life is a number's game, and with someone has talent as Dixon, he will eventually win another pole position. It will click on setup and timing and Dixon will nail a lap to put him on top, but this prediction goes a step further. Not only will Dixon win a pole position, but he will turn that into a race victory.

Dixon has not won a race from pole position since Watkins Glen in 2016. To give you an idea how long ago that was, Dixon hit the 40-victory milestone with that result. He has won 18 times since! Of those 18 victories since he last won from pole position, Dixon has won from outside the top ten in four races and he has won from outside a top five starting spot ten times in that span!

It has been eight years. We are due for Dixon to qualify first at a race and then make it look easy over a two-hour drive. 

6. There will be a first-time winner with at least 50 career starts
Fifty starts is a good indicator of what a driver's career will look like. In contemporary IndyCar, three full seasons get you 51 starts. That is a good point where we find out how the rest of the grid views you. Are you seen as someone that a team must have or will you be someone who will always need funding to get on the grid? 

When it comes to winning, 50 starts is a pivotal point in time. Of the 299 recognized race winners in IndyCar history, only 28 drivers took 50 starts or more to get their first career victory. Of those 28 drivers, nine of them only won once in their careers. Only six of those drivers won more than five races in their career, and only two of them won at least ten races. Five of those 28 drivers won a championship. 

The 50 career start milestone is a pretty good barometer for what affect a driver will have on IndyCar. 

It has been a while though since we had a truly veteran driver score a first career victory. The most recent first-time winner with over 50 career starts was Josef Newgarden at Barber Motorsports Park in 2015. There was a period where we saw these type of first-time winners with greater regularity. Much of that had to do with The Split, but for us to be going on nine years without a first-time winner with at least 50 starts is a bit of a surprise. Like many predictions for 2025, we are due. 

Who could fulfill this prediction? 

Of the announced drivers for the 2025 season, the driver with the most starts without a victory is Conor Daly. Daly has made 115 starts and he has yet to win a race. He is set to become the driver with the third-most starts before a first career victory and he could be the driver with the most starts before a first victory if he does not win one of the first 14 races. 

Daly has shown good form on ovals, but he will be with Juncos Hollinger Racing. While Daly and JHR did combine for a runner-up result in Milwaukee, they will have some work to do to beat the entire IndyCar field.

Jack Harvey only has the Indianapolis 500 confirmed with Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. Harvey has 93 starts so he fits the criteria.

Santino Ferrucci has 77 career starts and no victories. Ferrucci has been in the picture late in the Indianapolis 500 the last few years, and like Daly, Ferrucci has had strong runs on ovals. From what we saw in 2024, it would not be all that surprising if Ferrucci were to win at Iowa or Milwaukee. He is the only driver to have six top ten finishes in his first six Indianapolis 500 starts. The Speedway isn't out of the question either. 

The only other driver with more than 50 starts but no victories that is somewhat in consideration is Romain Grosjean. Grosjean does not have a seat for 2025 at the moment, but he has made 64 starts. Dale Coyne Racing is the only team with open seats. Grosjean nearly won multiple races with Coyne in 2021. He arguably should have won once that year. If a reunion is in order, maybe we see a breakthrough. 

Those are the four drivers who would automatically fulfill the prediction. There are a few drivers just short of 50 starts that could do it but they cannot win too soon in 2025.

David Malukas has 44 starts and no victories to his name. Callum Ilott could not win until the 12th race, the second Iowa race, to qualify for this prediction. Devlin DeFrancesco and Sting Ray Robb could not win until the penultimate race at Milwaukee.

If we are being honest with ourselves, this prediction is saying one of Daly, Ferrucci, Malukas or Grosjean, if he gets a ride, will win in 2025. 

7. There will not be consecutive races where the opening lap is under caution
This wasn't really noted during the 2024 IndyCar season, but on reflection it was surprising to notice. A lot of races didn't make it through lap one this past season.

There were seven races in 2024 that had an opening lap incident. Then there was Long Beach, which saw the first lap take place under caution, and Mid-Ohio, which started under caution due to Scott Dixon's car stopping on the final pace laps. Nine races in 2024 did not see the first lap completed under green flag conditions.

There was a three-race stretch that covered the Indianapolis 500, Detroit and Road America where there was an opening lap incident. Mid-Ohio and the first Iowa race saw another pair of consecutive races without a first lap completed under green flag conditions.

One, I think IndyCar will see a correction and we will not have as many races with opening lap incidents as we did in 2024. Two, if this does happen, I don't think they will be in consecutive races. It might be alternating races, like we saw from the first Iowa race through the second Milwaukee race, but it will not be as common in 2025 to the point we have are expecting the first lap incident. 

8. Marcus Ericsson will finish in the top nine of oval points
Ericsson's first season with Andretti Global was likely not as strong as he hoped for. Not all of that was his own making. There were some growing pains, and that set Ericsson back after having finished sixth in the championship for three consecutive seasons. He dropped down to 15th, his worst championship finish since he was 17th in his rookie season in 2019.

Part of the problem were Ericsson's oval results. In seven oval races, Ericsson finished outside the top twenty in five of them. He was caught in the opening lap accident of the Indianapolis 500 when Tom Blomqvist spun. An air gun problem set him back in the second Iowa race and trapped him two laps down. He had engine issues at Gateway. There was the aforementioned accident with Newgarden in Milwaukee. His season ended when he brushed the barrier with about 70 laps remaining in Nashville. 

With that combination of results, Ericsson was 21st in oval points with only 81 points to his name. In the previous two seasons, Ericsson finished second in oval points and sixth in oval points with 224 points and 143 points respectively.

I don't think Ericsson will hit whammies like he was in 2024 on ovals again in 2025. We know what he can do. At his best, he should finish in the top third of drivers on ovals. He should get back to that status in the new season.

9. The Thermal Club race will have at least 150 total passes
IndyCar's first visit to The Thermal Club outside of Palm Springs, California did not receive much fanfare. For starters, there weren't that many fans to begin with, but the non-championship race with a prize that was only half of what was promoted was met with disdain almost immediately and throughout the entire weekend. In 2025, Thermal Club will host a proper championship race.

Passing was a concern with the non-championship round and we saw two rather lackluster heat races, the second of which registered no passes for position. The final race was not much better, but the first half of the race saw some drivers laying back in hopes of making a rush forward in the final ten laps on less-worn tires.

That strategy did provide for a lively second-half, as Colton Hera drove up to fourth. 

Between the three parts and 38 laps of the non-championship round there were only 39 total passes, not brilliant, but we did see high-tire wear over a course of a stint, and that could play well for a full race around Thermal like we will see in 2025. 

It might not be a spectacular race, but Thermal could be more competitive than everyone expects. It might not change the perception of the race, but it could still be something respectable.

In the six IndyCar races held on permanent road courses in 2024, the average number of total passes in those races was 276 with a median of 279.5. Only one race featured fewer than 150 passes. Mid-Ohio had 116. 

There are still concerns about the Thermal layout and what kind of racing it allows, but if the tire wear remains high and you combined it with a race distance between 200 and 215 miles, which adds fuel strategy, we are not going to see a complete procession for two hours. 

10. Among the 11 full-time teams, Prema will finish at least eighth in total top ten finishes
Prema is entering IndyCar and increasing the number of full-time organizations in the series to 11. For its debut lineup, Prema is bringing a mix of experience and the unknown. Callum Ilott, a veteran of 38 IndyCar starts, will lead the team, while Robert Shwartzman, a Formula Three champion, Formula Two vice-champion and FIA World Endurance Championship race winner, will be a new addition to the series. 

At time of writing, Prema has yet to participate in a test as an IndyCar team. We do not know where Prema falls among the existing teams. Ilott has been a good driver in IndyCar, usually running in mid-pack equipment. Shwartzman was a promising prospect and was a member of the Ferrari Driver Academy. 

Last year in IndyCar, ten teams scored at least one top ten finish. Only one of those teams was a part-timer (Dreyer & Reinbold Racing at Indianapolis). Dale Coyne Racing was the only full-time team without a top ten finish. 

Finishing eighth out of 11 full-time teams does not sound like accomplishing much, but every IndyCar team is capable of getting good results on a given day. While five teams exceeded ten top ten finishes during the 2024 season, the other four full-time teams finished with either nine top ten finishes or eight top ten finishes. 

If Prema can enter IndyCar and score eight or nine top ten finishes, I think that must be considered a good year, especially since it would likely not finish last among teams in total top ten finishes. If Prema were to break ten top ten finishes in a season, it would put the organization in the top half of the grid. 

There will likely be a few tough outings, but Prema has the drivers to put together some respectable days. Ilott was getting top five finishes at Juncos Hollinger Racing. Shwartzman will be learning, but we have seen Christian Lundgaard enter and become a contender early. Marcus Armstrong, a past teammate of Shwartzman's, has been quick and scored good results. If it clicks, Shwartzman could pull out some impressive results. 

Looking at the rest of the grid and knowing the struggles teams have had, I think Prema can score more top ten finishes than Coyne, Juncos Hollinger Racing and Ed Carpenter Racing. It could even edge out Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. 

11. There will be a change to the IndyCar practice structure
This is factoring in the new television contract with Fox, which says all practice sessions will be broadcasted on FS1 or FS2. This is a big change for IndyCar, as previously no practice sessions were on cable television. Every session was available on Peacock, and the openness of streaming allowed IndyCar practice to be IndyCar practice without the broadcaster dictating how the session was run.

IndyCar practice could be 45 minutes with a 20-minute delay in the middle due to a red flag. Peacock was not beholden to a time window. If there was a 30-minute delay during the session, Peacock could show all 75 minutes. If IndyCar wanted to try a new practice structure, like it did in 2024, where every car will get 45 minutes of practice time but it took place over a 70-minute window, that works for Peacock. 

With FS1 or FS2, those cable channels have timeslots. Something will be following an IndyCar practice session. If it is one of FS1's many talk shows, FS1 isn't going to hang with IndyCar for an extra ten or 15 minutes for practice. Television windows are not accommodating to 75-minute sessions. It is also less likely IndyCar will be given 90 minutes for practice. Anything within 60 minutes is good.

I expect in the weeks leading up to St. Petersburg an announcement about practice changing, even if only minor, to every session being a 45-minute session and it will be an all-skate, which will clutter the racetrack and annoy some teams, but this is what is necessary with this new television deal. 

I would also not be surprised if qualifying is tweaked for road and street courses because road and street course qualifying has usually taken about 70-75 minutes to complete without any issues. IndyCar might get a 90-minute television window for qualifying, but I also believe Fox will likely want that in a tidy 60-minute window, especially if it is leading into a baseball game on a Saturday. 

Be prepared for changes.

12. At least one race outside the Indianapolis 500 will have a car fail to qualify
With the introduction of the charter system to IndyCar, there will be a cap on number of starters at every race on the 2025 calendar. 

The 25 charter entries will all be guaranteed a spot in every race outside of the Indianapolis 500. Every race besides the Indianapolis 500 will be limited to 27 starters. With 27 full-time entries anticipated, every race is at full capacity before we even get into the season. If any team wishes to field an additional entry or if a new team looks to run an IndyCar race, the non-chartered entries will all compete for those final two spots.

Prema's two entries are currently the only non-chartered teams entering the races outside the Indianapolis 500. As long as no one else shows up, Prema will be safe. If one additional entries appears then Prema will be at risk of an entry missing a race.

Last season saw one race feature 28 starters besides the Indianapolis 500. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing entered a fourth car at Portland. 

As much as everyone believes that no team will field an additional car outside of Indianapolis, if there is enough money and interest, an additional entry can form for a race. I don't think the big teams will do it, but I believe at one race and additional entry will form and there will be a case of 28 cars with 27 available starts.

This is IndyCar after all. There is bound to be one weekend where everyone will feel uncomfortable about a car missing the Gateway race or Laguna Seca race.

And that is it for 2024! Feel free to check out any of the other four predictions done for Formula OneNASCARsports car racing and motorcycle racing. We will be back to normal at the start of 2025 as we begin our preview period before series begin competition.