The wait is over. Dale Coyne Racing confirmed Romain Grosjean will fill out its driver lineup for the 2026 NTT IndyCar Series season. It was great timing as IndyCar's official test occurs this week from Phoenix Raceway. Coyne also confirmed the return of the #19 entry for Dennis Hauger. Meanwhile, Formula E had a doubleheader go unnoticed. Michael Jordan has won the Daytona 500, thanks to Tyler Reddick. A kangaroo dominated the stories out of Bathurst. Formula One testing resumed in Bahrain, and most drivers are not happy. However, there was some big news out IndyCar that should clam nerves, but does leave a lot left unanswered.
Problem Solved, Problems Remain
After a year of nervous anticipation, IndyCar has secured its current engine manufacturers in a multiyear agreement. Chevrolet and Honda will continue in IndyCar starting in 2027 and will remain through the next set of engine regulations, which begin for the 2028 season with the introduction of a 2.4-liter, twin-turbocharged V6 hybrid engine.
Remaining in IndyCar has come with a perk for both makes as starting in 2028, both Chevrolet and Honda will receive a charter entry to be used as a factory entry on the grid. Each manufacturer will be able to use that charter with whichever team it wishes, expect for teams that already enter the maximum of three charter entries. In terms of whether these charters are coming from the existing allotment of 25 charters or if two will be added and the total number of charters will increase remains to be clarified.
Everyone in IndyCar can breath easier after it felt like Honda was on the verge of exiting the series and putting everyone in a difficult position of needing to find a replacement to maintain the grid size, however, while this contract extension solves a problem and it keeps status quo, this agreement does not address the limitations of having two engine partners that have stressed this series.
This is the first move, keep the ones you got, and it was important to address. IndyCar is in a better position now that Chevrolet and Honda are sticking around, but it does not change that both manufacturers have been at the limit of support when it comes to entrants, and now each manufacturer will effectively have another entrant to support in 2028 with their chartered factory entry. If anything, this deal has created more work for both groups.
We are entering the 15th season of the current regulation, and this will be the 14th consecutive season with just Chevrolet and Honda involved after one infamous season with Lotus as a third manufacturer in 2012. The worrying thing about IndyCar is it doesn't appear to have the might to make a significant move to draw in an additional manufacturer or two. That is what we need to see now. The worrying thing is this deal feels like it takes care of those who are around, and it makes it feel like it is more unlikely to growth the manufacturer support within the series.
IndyCar has taken care of Chevrolet and Honda with this agreement. Both manufacturers have equity in the grid. It will reap whatever is beneficial from the charter system. Both will be eligible for Leaders Circle prize money, which is a drop in a bucket, but those were drops neither Chevrolet nor Honda were eligible for receiving previously, and the slice of the Leaders Circle pie increased a little more this past offseason with it believed IndyCar will payout nearly $1.7 million per entry.
But the sweetheart deal Chevrolet and Honda received likely is not going to be extended to a new manufacturer that will likely need it and expect it, and IndyCar has put itself in a box with this decision.
Why would a new manufacturer join IndyCar if it was not given the same charter spot on the grid?
The introduction of the charter size was supposed to limit the grid size and increase the value of a spot in IndyCar by making it scarce to compete full-time. If a third manufacturer is interested, it will expect a charter entry like Chevrolet and Honda has received, and soon the grid is up to 28 chartered entries, three more than originally awarded and the grid would now be larger than the 27-car limit that was imposed last season on all races outside the Indianapolis 500. Then what happens if a fourth manufacturer is interested?
It is unsurprising IndyCar put itself in a pickle. This is IndyCar after all. The path to hell is paved with good intentions.
IndyCar has set a precedent that it will take care of manufacturers to a higher level and give them effectively a stake in the grid with an entry, and that now must be expanded to others who wish to enter the series. The manufacturer total will not increase if only Chevrolet and Honda have chartered entries because of loyalty while anyone else wishing to enter will be left out. This isn't a social club where legacy should be a perk. A professional motorsports series should be working equally with its partners and making sure they all receive the same support.
If it is unwilling to give a new manufacturer the same love it just gave Chevrolet and Honda then the grid is going to remain with two manufacturers for years to come, and the same strain both groups have experienced with each supporting a dozen or more full-time entries will remain as well, though it is something both Chevrolet and Honda would like IndyCar to address.
An additional manufacturer would do a lot more to help Chevrolet and Honda than a factory entry for each. Both groups have been expressing a desire to do less in IndyCar, and both should be praised for all that it has done as IndyCar has grown, especially over the last six seasons. There should be some concern that this deal IndyCar has given suggests the series is fine with keeping the status quo when the series needs growth.
We are fortunate Honda has decided to stick around. An exit for the manufacturer felt more imminent than ever before in the Japanese manufacturers' three-plus decades in American open-wheel racing. Who is to say in five or six years or whenever this current deal is up, Honda doesn't decide to walkaway after almost 40 years in IndyCar? Honda is at the limit. It has achieved all that you can in IndyCar. It has won many Indianapolis 500s, but at some point it must be acknowledged that the brand recognition Honda has from racing in IndyCar has maxed out and there is nothing more it can gain competing in the series. Either IndyCar must grow substantially that leads to a greater return on investment for Honda or an additional partner must come in to alleviate the pressure of running half the grid in the next few seasons if it hopes to avoid the stress it just faced over the last year.
If it doesn't do that, then what?
IndyCar is keeping itself in the same position it has been, but for long-term health of the series, it must find more support and more interested parties.
The last year should have been a wakeup call because in the year 2026, I don't think IndyCar can find a single manufacturer willing to support 24 full-time cars and 33 cars for the Indianapolis 500. It definitely would not be a sign of strength to be back down to one manufacturer supplying all the engines. That would be a terrible blow to the series that would hurt every team and driver competing. IndyCar shouldn't wait until it hemorrhaging to take care of its health and make sure it is best set for the future.
It solved a problem securing Chevrolet and Honda beyond 2026, but in the next year or so, it would be wise to make substantial ground in finding an additional engine partner or two to make sure we are not in this same spot in the not-so-distant future.
Winners From the Weekend
You know about Tyler Reddick, but did you know...
The #888 Mercedes-AMG Team GMR Mercedes-AMG of Maro Engel, Mikaël Grenier and Maxime Martin won the Bathurst 12 Hour.
Austin Hill won the Grand National Series race. Chandler Smith won the Truck race.
Pascal Wehrlein and António Félix da Costa split the Jeddah ePrix.
Eli Tomac won the Supercross race from Seattle, his third victory of the season. Haiden Deegan won the 250cc race, his fifth consecutive victory.
Elfyn Evans won the 73rd Rally Sweden
Coming Up This Weekend
NASCAR moves up to Atlanta.
Supercars open its season at Sydney Motorsports Park.
World Superbike opens its season a little further south at Phillip Island.
Supercross will be in Arlington.