Here is a rundown of what got me thinking...
The Olympics are over. The United States swept the ice hockey gold medals. Simona de Silvestro was 23rd in the monobob and 23rd in two-woman competition. Elsewhere, not much changed in Atlanta, except a winless streak ended. Formula One continued to test. Indy Lights went to Miami. MotoGP has decided to leave Phillip Island for Adelaide, and few are happy about it. World Superbike was at Phillip Island to open its 2026 season. Supercross had a pair of first-time winners in Arlington. NASCAR could have another prominent court case on its hands, but at least it is not against the series this time. February is nearly over, and with the first day of March comes the start of the IndyCar season after a lengthy period off.
And Now the Season is Here
I guess this is going to become an annual tradition of entering the first week of the IndyCar season with a look at the temperature in the series. It might be best to gauge where things stand before everything gets underway, and then you have a reference point for when everything ends in September.
There is a sense of nothingness after this offseason. What really happened? Other than an additional race in Washington, D.C., which based on IndyCar history you cannot get too excited about, what really happened this offseason? What happened after September 2025?
Think about how much of this offseason took place in the first 30 to 60 days after the first race of the season.
Within the first 23 days of September we knew Will Power was leaving Team Penske, Rinus VeeKay was leaving Dale Coyne Racing, Colton Herta was going to Formula Two, Will Power was replacing Herta at Andretti Global, David Malukas was going to Team Penske and Dennis Hauger was moving up to race for Dale Coyne Racing. That meant only three full-time seats for 2026 were unaccounted for before we got through the first month of the offseason.
By the middle of October, we knew VeeKay was going to Juncos Hollinger Racing and we knew before Thanksgiving that Caio Collet was joining A.J. Foyt Racing and Mick Schumacher was going to Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. Only one seat remained opened with 97 days left in the offseason. Whatever drama remained was the final Dale Coyne Racing seat, which ultimately went to the driver we all expected to be hired in the middle of September, and then there was Prema's implosion, which had as much excitement as watching an ice cube melt in the dead of winter.
What else did we learn? Chevrolet and Honda are staying but there has been no public progress in a new chassis, no renderings shared, no development schedule official released. No ground has been made on a new engine manufacturer joining the series. IndyCar has a new, independent officiating board, but that is administrative work. No one tunes in for officiating even if IndyCar was borderline obligated in making a change after the conflicts of interest over infractions involving Team Penske in a Roger Penske-owned series in the last two seasons.
Not enough happens in a six-month offseason to justify a six-month offseason. A fire could have been lit under Dale Coyne and he could have had Romain Grosjean secured before Christmas. The six-month offseason isn't going anywhere anytime soon, and we will live with a lot of hurry up and wait offseasons for years to come.
It is difficult to feel all that excited for this new season. What is going to be different? Álex Palou is going to win five or six races. It will likely be enough for the championship. Is there much excitement in seeing Will Power at Andretti Global? Is Power enough to lift that organization to a championship after 14 years of waiting? Do we really care about David Malukas at Team Penske? Is that going to change IndyCar?
It is going to be the same season we have seen for the last 15 years. Chip Ganassi Racing or Team Penske is going to produce the champion. There could be a race or two that has a fun winner and a mid-pack team could perform above expectations, but ultimately top out at eighth or ninth in the championship, and then it will be over and we will do it all again starting in March 2027.
But there should be things we should be intrigued about. Team Penske is coming off its worst season in the 21st century. It cannot be that bad again, right? But maybe it is, and then what? It would mean Chip Ganassi Racing will become the most successful team in IndyCar history with an 18th championship. That doesn't mean nothing, especially since Ganassi hasn't even been around for 40 years.
Will Arrow McLaren finally breakthrough with Patricio O'Ward or maybe Christian Lundgaard? How many races will Nolan Siegel get before he is kicked to the gutter?
Is Christian Rasmussen going to win again? Will Alexander Rossi wake up? Are Ed Carpenter Racing for real?
Can Meyer Shank Racing make another step forward after having both drivers finish in the top eight of the championship?
Is Mick Schumacher the missing piece for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing?
Will a phoenix rise from Prema's ashes?
There is not nothing, but it just doesn't feel that substantial. An IndyCar offseason is little more than rotating the couch cushions. The cars are the same. The engines are the same. The tires are the same. The rules are basically the same. We are always asking if another team can breakthrough, and they never do. Why believe 2026 will be anything different?
The mood is better entering this season. We know Chevrolet and Honda are locked in for a handful of seasons into the new engine regulations. With that set, progress to the 2028 regulations may continue. The teams have less angst and there is a better feeling of fairness with the new officiating panel.
Teams are going to be mandated to run two stints on alternate tires on street courses, and that is fun. Things may end up the same way, but there are fun components to the season. A Schumacher is racing in IndyCar. Who would have ever thought that? It could be only for one season, it could be the start of a lengthy career! Let's see where it goes!
McLaren is always burning out drivers. It already set the top ten in the championship as the ultimatum for Siegel. We will know by Mid-Ohio if that objective is achievable. If it isn't, how many replacement drivers will McLaren rotate through? Who could it bring out of the woodwork? Will 20 years from now we look back in the history book to see three or four IndyCar starts for Leonardo Fornaroli or Richard Verschoor?
We are also still going to see three of the greatest drivers in IndyCar history competing against one another. Time is becoming a little more valuable when watching Scott Dixon and Will Power compete. Dixon is one victory away from 60 in his career, and he is eight away from tying A.J. Foyt for the all-time lead. A special season makes the all-time record achievable. Will Power is five victories away from 50. Only three drivers have reached that milestone.
As inevitable as it may be, Álex Palou is something special. We must remember that and cannot become sullied in seeing greatness. It is staggering how much he has achieved this quickly in his career, but that is what makes it special. No driver has won eight races in consecutive seasons, but Palou could do that. He could become the second driver to win four consecutive championships, and we are pretty sure if he does that he will return in 2027 with a great shot at an unprecedented fifth consecutive title. We may never see this again. It is worthy of our attention.
Palou also has to pay over $12 million in damages to McLaren for not honoring his contract, which makes ever race a little more fun because Palou is basically racing to pay off debt, and that could be the rest of his career. At least we have that to keep us entertained!
Winners From the Weekend
You know about the United States, but did you know...
Tyler Reddick won the NASCAR Cup race from Atlanta, his second consecutive victory to open the season. Reddick is the sixth driver in Cup Series history to win the first two races in a season, and he is the first to do it since Matt Kenseth in 2009. Sheldon Creed won the Grand National Series race, his first career victory in his 137th career start. Kyle Busch won the Truck race, his 68th in the series.
Broc Feeney (race one and three) and Anton de Pasquale (race two) split the Supercars races from Sydney Motorsports Park.
Nicoló Bulega swept the World Suerpbike races from Phillip Island. Jaume Masià and Albert Arenas split the World Supersport races.
Hunter Lawrence won the Supercross race from Arlington, his first career victory in the 450cc class. Pierce Brown won the 250cc race, his first race back after being injured last year at Tampa.
Coming Up This Weekend
IndyCar opens in St. Petersburg.
NASCAR will be at Austin but the Trucks will be in St. Petersburg.
MotoGP opens its season at Buriram.
Supercross has Daytona Bike Week ahead of it.

