The third round of the 2026 NTT IndyCar Series season sees a new event as for the first time the Grand Prix of Arlington will take place. Cutting through the streets and parking lots around the stadiums for the Dallas Cowboys and Texas Rangers, IndyCar will run 70 laps on the 2.73-mile course, the longest street course for modern IndyCar since running on the 2.795-mile Surfers Paradise course on the Gold Coast of Australia. The course will be comprised of 14 corners, nine right-hand corners and five left-handers. This is IndyCar's first trip to Texas since it last visited Texas Motor Speedway in 2023. Arlington will become eighth venue in the Lone Star State to host an IndyCar round.
Coverage
Time: Coverage begins at 12:30 p.m. ET on Sunday March 15 with green flag scheduled for 1:17 p.m. ET.
Channel: Fox
Announcers: Will Buxton, Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe will be in the booth. Kevin Lee, Georgia Henneberry and Jack Harvey will work pit lane.
Channel: Fox
Announcers: Will Buxton, Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe will be in the booth. Kevin Lee, Georgia Henneberry and Jack Harvey will work pit lane.
IndyCar Weekend Schedule
Friday:
First Practice: 4:05 p.m. ET (75 minutes)
Saturday:
Second Practice: 9:35 a.m. ET (75 minutes)
Qualifying: 2:35 p.m. ET
Sunday:
Warm-up: 10:05 a.m. ET (30 minutes)
Race: 1:17 p.m. ET (70 laps)
Qualifying: 2:35 p.m. ET
Sunday:
Warm-up: 10:05 a.m. ET (30 minutes)
Race: 1:17 p.m. ET (70 laps)
Newgarden's Need For a Good Day on the Streets
Josef Newgarden is not only the most recent winner of a Texas IndyCar race, he is also the most recent IndyCar winner. After taking tires under the final caution in the Phoenix race last Saturday, Newgarden drove through the top ten to take his first victory of the season with only eight laps led. It was the 33rd victory in Newgarden's career, and eight laps led are his fewest in a victory since he won his first Indianapolis 500 in 2023 leading only five circuits. His Phoenix triumph gave Newgarden the championship lead for the first time since after his 2022 Long Beach victory.
However, that Long Beach victory remains Newgarden's most recent street course win, and Newgarden's last ten victories have come on ovals. His most recent non-oval victory was at Road America in 2022.
If Newgarden has any hope of claiming his third championship, he will need to succeed on road and street courses, places where his form has dipped over the last few seasons. In 2024, while he was first on the road at St. Petersburg, he was disqualified after his team was found to have violated push-to-pass regulations. He did have three top five finishes on road and street courses, but did not win again. Newgarden had one top five finish on road and street courses last season, and that was third in the St. Petersburg season opener. In the other three street course races held, he had an average finish of 20th.
From 2017 through 2022, Newgarden had an average finish of 6.8636 in 66 road and street course starts. Over that time, he won 12 of those races, stood on the podium 38 times, had 34 top five finishes and 53 top ten finishes. Newgarden had only three finishes outside the top twenty in those 66 starts.
In the 34 road/street course races since 2023, Newgarden has only finished on the podium four times with eight top five finishes and 14 top ten finishes. He has finished outside the top twenty in ten of those 34 races.
Newgarden's qualifying form has not been much better. Last season, he made the Fast Six only twice, and his best tarting position was fourth. He had five total appearances in the second round of qualifying in 11 road/street course races. His last front row start for a road or street course was the 2024 St. Petersburg race where Newgarden started on pole position before being disqualified.
Entering Arlington, Newgarden has four consecutive top ten finishes, his longest top ten finish streak since the summer of 2023 when he was fifth at Toronto, swept the Iowa races and then was fourth at Nashville. His last five-race top ten finish streak was over the final five races of 2022. In each of his championship seasons, Newgarden won at least two on road and street courses, and his average finish on that discipline in those seasons was 4.818 and 6.5 respectively.
With his victory last week at Phoenix, it was the 12th consecutive season where Newgarden has won a race. That is the third-longest streak in IndyCar history behind only Scott Dixon's active 21-season streak and Will Power's 16-season streak from 2007 to 2022.
Palou's Unfamiliar Place
While Newgarden was in a familiar place when the Phoenix race was over, victory lane, Álex Palou left the desert in a different spot than we are used to seeing him. His accident from contact with Rinus VeeKay left Palou 24th in the final result, and Palou lost the championship lead for the first time since after the 2024 Road America race. The Catalan driver had held the championship lead since he won the Laguna Seca race on June 23, 2004. It was a streak of 621 consecutive days.
Phoenix was the first time Palou had retired from a race since Detroit last June when David Malukas bumped Palou into the barrier in turn one. It was only his sixth retirement in 86 races with Chip Ganassi Racing. Twenty-one laps completed are Palou's fewest completed in a race since the second race of the 2020 Mid-Ohio doubleheader, where he was caught in an opening lap accident and only completed two laps over that race.
Palou did not drop far in the standings. He is still fifth in the championship and he is only 19 points behind Newgarden. Palou has been ranked in the top five of the championship for 52 consecutive races, and he just made his 100th start at Phoenix last week. He has been ranked in the top five of the championship after 82 of his 100 career starts. After 59 of those races, he has been ranked in the top three of the championship. He has led the championship after 54 races, and he has led the championship after at least one race in each of the last six seasons.
While Arlington will be an unknown for everyone, Palou should find comfort fairly quickly. He has won at least one street course race in three of the last four seasons, including this season as he has already won at St. Petersburg. He has finished on the podium at all six street courses he has contested in his IndyCar career. In 25 street course starts, Palou has 11 podium finishes and 15 top five finishes. He was on the podium in eight of 12 road/street course races last season, and he has scored the most points on road and street courses in four of the last five seasons.
Palou has not been outside the top five of the championship since the 2023 season opener when he was eighth in the championship after finishing eighth at St. Petersburg. He has never been outside the top ten of the championship while driving for Chip Ganassi Racing. He ended the 2020 season 16th in the championship while driving for Dale Coyne Racing.
Entering Phoenix, Palou had 18 consecutive top ten finishes. He has not had consecutive finishes outside the top ten since the final two races of the 2024 season. He has not had consecutive finishes outside the top fifteen since 2021 when he was 27th in the August race on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course and 20th at Gateway. Palou has never had consecutive finishes outside the top twenty in his IndyCar career.
Unappreciated Starts
Through two races, two names have gotten a fair amount of the attention, and we have covered them above. Newgarden and Palou aren't the only two drivers to have good starts this season.
Two drivers have started the season with a pair of top five finishes. Those drivers would be Kyle Kirkwood and Patricio O'Ward.
Kirkwood's finishes of fourth and second have him second in the championship on 73 points, five behind Newgarden. This pair of finishes is the first time Kirkwood has had consecutive top five finishes since last June when he won at Detroit and Gateway and then was fourth at Road America. Kirkwood has finished in the top ten in the last ten street course races dating back to his Nashville street course victory in 2023, and that includes four top five finishes in the last five street course races with his worst finish over that span being sixth. Four of Kirkwood's five career victories have come on street courses.
O'Ward was fifth in St. Petersburg and fourth in Phoenix. This places O'Ward fourth in the championship on 63 points. Dating back to last season, he has eight top five finishes in the last ten races, and nine top five finishes in the last 12 races. O'Ward ended the street course portion of last season with a victory at Toronto. It was his second consecutive season in which he scored a victory on a street course.
Sandwiched between Kirkwood and O'Ward in the championship is Scott McLaughlin. While he was not in the top five at Phoenix, that eighth combined with his runner-up finish at St. Petersburg has McLaughlin on 66 points. He had three consecutive podium finishes prior to Phoenix, but his streak of top ten finishes continues and it is now up to six consecutive races, his longest streak since he ended the 2024 season with five consecutive top ten results and then opened the 2025 season with a fourth at St. Petersburg.
David Malukas' third-place finish at Phoenix has lifted him with sixth in the championship on 56 points, three behind Palou. Phoenix was the fourth podium finish for Malukas in his IndyCar career, and it was his sixth top five finish. All of those results have come on ovals. He has yet to finish in the top five on a road or street course. Last season, his best street course finish was ninth. In 16 street course starts, his average finish is 16.375.
Phoenix was not the greatest race for Christian Lundgaard, as Lundgaard started 17th and finished 13th in a race where he spent majority of the race outside the top ten. The Dane did lead eight laps, but those were all during a pit cycle. However, Lundgaard was third at St. Petersburg and he is placed seventh in the championship with 54 points. He does have three podium finishes in the last six races.
Seldom mentioned, Marcus Armstrong is eighth in the championship after the first two races with 50 points, but he was fifth at Phoenix, Armstrong's seventh top five finish in his career, but it was his second career top five finish on an oval. He as third in the second Iowa race last season. Armstrong was 11th at St. Petersburg after starting seventh. While he had 11 top ten finishes last season, only one of those was on a street course. He was sixth at Detroit.
Inaugural Race
While the 2026 IndyCar calendar has a few new events compared to the 2025 season, Arlington is an inaugural event, never contested before. It is actually the second consecutive season IndyCar has an inaugural event. Last year, it raced at Thermal Club located in Thermal, California for the first time, one year after the circuit held an exhibition event. Álex Palou won both the exhibition race and the lone championship race at Thermal.
IndyCar has had a few new tracks in recent seasons.
Though not original, the new Detroit street course is different from the Renaissance Center course CART used from 1989 to 1991. Palou also won that inaugural event when IndyCar returned to downtown Detroit in 2023. Prior to that, IndyCar raced on the street of Nashville for the first time in 2021. In a chaotic affair, it was Marcus Ericsson taking the victory despite contact that lifted the Swede's front tires off the ground at one point.
For those observant readers, you will realize the last three inaugural races in IndyCar history have been victories for Chip Ganassi Racing.
The last inaugural event that Chip Ganassi Racing did not win was IndyCar's only race at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. That is famously remembered for Colton Herta's first career victory only a week prior to his 19th birthday and it was Herta's third career IndyCar start.
There have been only two other inaugural IndyCar events during the DW12-era. Prior to Austin, it was NOLA Motorsports Park, which saw an infamous race where weather disrupted the weekend and saw a clunky race in which 26 of 47 laps were run under caution. James Hinchcliffe took the victory.
The only other inaugural event since 2012 was the inaugural Grand Prix of Indianapolis in 2014. The first race on the IMS road course is remembered for an accident at the start as IndyCar was experimenting with standing starts at a few races. Sebastián Saavedra had started on pole position, but he stalled and collected Carlos Muñoz and Mikhail Alehsin. Simon Pagenaud took the victory in the first Grand Prix of Indianapolis for Schmidt Peterson Hamilton Motorsports.
If you have remained observant you will realize that none of the last six inaugural events have seen a Team Penske victory. Don't worry, you don't have to go back any further than that because the next most recent inaugural race was the Grand Prix of Baltimore, and Will Power won that for Penske.
There have been three other inaugural tracks since reunification in 2008, plus one event that saw a new circuit layout used while competing on the same property of an existing race. IndyCar made maiden trips to São Paulo and Barber Motorsports Park, it ran the Twin Ring Motegi road course in 2011 after damage to the oval from the Tōhoku earthquake required the change. Then there was Edmonton, which adopted a new circuit layout in 2011.
Team Penske won three of those four events. Power won at São Paulo and the inaugural race on the second Edmonton layout. Hélio Castroneves won the inaugural Barber race. The only non-Penske victory was Motegi where Scott Dixon came home in first at Motegi, which happened after the first Baltimore race, meaning Team Penske has not won the last seven inaugural races in IndyCar.
If you have remained observant, you will notice a fair number of this inaugural events did not last long. Thermal, Austin and NOLA all lasted only one year. Motegi was only going to be one year as the 2011 race was already declared to be the last race of the event prior to the damage on the oval. Baltimore and Nashville each only made it three years. São Paulo got a fourth edition. Barber, the Grand Prix of Indianapolis and Detroit all currently remain on the schedule.
Road to Indy
Two Road to Indy series, one of which will be opening its 2026 season, will join IndyCar for the inaugural Grand Prix of Arlington.
For Indy Lights, this will be the second round of the season. Nikita Johnson took victory in St. Petersburg leading all 42 laps. It was Johnson's first career victory in his fourth Indy Lights start. He had not run an Indy Lights race since the Grand Prix of Indianapolis weekend last season. It was the first Indy Lights victory for Cape Motorsports powered by ECR.
Max Taylor was second from pole position at St. Petersburg while Tymek Kucharczyk was third on podium on his debut, and Kucharczyk was the best finishing HMD Motorsports driver in the opener. Sebastian Murray and Lochie Hughes rounded out the top five making it three Andretti Global drivers in the top five along with Taylor.
Myles Rowe and Josh Pierson were sixth and seventh ahead of Salvador de Alba while Juan Manuel Correa was ninth. Three rookies took the next three spots in the finishing order. Alessandro de Tullio rounded out the top ten ahead of Jack Beeton and Max Garcia.
Indy Lights will race at Arlington will be 27 laps or 55 minutes. The green flag is scheduled for 11:06 a.m. ET on Sunday March 15.
USF Pro 2000 will be opening its 2026 season with a doubleheader in Arlington. It is the first race weekend of the season, a doubleheader in an 18-race calendar. Twenty-one cars are entered for the season opener.
Exclusive Autosport has four cars entered with 2025 U.S. F2000 champion Jack Jeffers leading the group with Evan Cooley and Anthony Martella and Joey Brienza. VRD Racing has Teddy Musella, second in U.S. F2000 last year, in its three-car lineup with Colan Aitken and Frankie Mossman. Jacob Douglas is the top returning driver from last year's USF Pro 2000 championship and he will be Pabst Racing. G3 Argyros will be Douglas' teammate.
Michael Costello was eighth in the championship last year and he will be back with Turn 3 Motorsport in a five-car lineup. Tyke Durst is also back as is Sebastian Manson. Leonardo Escorpioni is running this weekend as the Brazilian competes in combination with the U.S. F2000 season. Escorpioni was third in both U.S. F2000 races at St. Petersburg. Brady Colan will be in the fifth car.
Andrés Cárdenas had good pace in testing and he leads the three-car Jay Howard Driver Development powered by ECR stable with Tanner DeFabis and JT Hoskins. Christian Cameron was also one of the quickest in testing and one of three TJ Speed Motorsports drivers alongside Thomas Schrage and Leandro Juncos, son of Juncos Hollinger Racing co-owner Ricardo Juncos. Logan Adams is back with Comet/NCMP Racing.
The first race of the USF Pro 2000 season all be at 1:25 p.m. ET on Saturday March 14. The second race will be later that day at 5:55 p.m. ET. Both races will have a 40-minute time limit.
Fast Facts
This will be the third IndyCar race on March 15 and the first since 1998 when Michael Andretti won at Homestead.
The only other March 15 race was in 1919. Cliff Durant won a 34-lap race in Santa Monica, which was held on a 7.36-mile course. It was the 15th and final race held on the streets of Santa Monica. The first 14 races took place on a 8.417-mile course.
Two of those Santa Monica races were the American Grand Prix, the predecessor of the United States Grand Prix. Eddie Pullen won it in 1914. Howdy Wilcox and Johnny Aitken were co-drivers that won the 1916 edition.
This will be the first IndyCar round to use single-car runs in the final round of qualifying. Each of the six participants will have one lap in the final round of qualifying to run for pole position, starting with sixth-fastest from the previous round and ending with the fastest car. The first two rounds of qualifying remain unchanged.
If the final round of qualifying should be disrupted due to weather or conditions that significantly change the track surface, IndyCar will have the option to revert to the standard procedure of a six-minute session with all six cars competing, or it can use results from the second round of qualifying to determine the starting lineup.
An Andretti Global driver or Scott McLaughlin have combined to win the last seven pole positions on street courses.
The pole-sitter has won only two of the last seven street course races (Colton Herta at Toronto in 2024, Kyle Kirkwood at Long Beach in 2025).
Twenty-five consecutive races have been won from a top ten starting position, 16 of those have been a top five starting position.
Honda has won seven of the last nine street course races, and Patricio O'Ward is responsible for the two Chevrolet victories. One of those was the 2024 St. Petersburg race, where O'Ward inherited the victory after Josef Newgarden was disqualified. The other was last year at Toronto where O'Ward won from tenth.
Dating back to 2023, Honda has won 12 of 14 street course races
Team Penske has not won a street course races since Belle Isle in 2022 with Will Power, the final Belle Isle race prior to the Detroit Grand Prix moving back to the downtown location. Team Penske had won the first three street courses in the 2022 season with Scott McLaughlin winning at St. Petersburg and Josef Newgarden winning at Long Beach.
This will be the 67 IndyCar race held in the state of Texas.
The first race held in the state of Texas was July 28, 1913 in Galveston on a five-mile beach course. Louis Disbrow won the 100-mile race. There were two more races held over the next two days, both of which were also 100 miles. Amour Ferguson won the second day with Disbrow in second. Disbrow won the third and final race.
Scott Dixon has the most victories in the state with six. Dixon won five times at Texas Motor Speedway and once on the Reliant Park street course in Houston.
A.J. Foyt and Hélio Castroneves are tied for second in state of Texas victories with four apiece. All four of Foyt's victories were at Texas World Speedway and all four of Castroneves' victories were at Texas Motor Speedway.
Four other active drivers have victories in Texas. Josef Newgarden and Will Power have each won three times. Graham Rahal and Patricio O'Ward each have won once.
Thirty-nine drivers have won a race in the state of Texas.
Predictions
Álex Palou is going to win from a top five starting position, and if it isn't Álex Palou it will be Kyle Kirkwood from the front row. Palou still gets the championship lead back but Josef Newgarden does finish in the top ten. Newgarden will not be the best Team Penske finisher as Scott McLaughlin takes a podium position. Christian Lundgaard bests his Arrow McLaren teammate Patricio O'Ward in both qualifying and the race. There will be an opening lap accident but it will not be in turn one, it will be in turn four. Romain Grosjean will see the green flag this weekend. Mick Schumacher rises from lat in the championship and picks ip at least three spots. Will Power gains the most spots in the championship after this race. Sleeper: Felix Rosenqvist.