Rain cancelled the third round of the Super Formula season from Autopolis, and a replacement round could be scheduled later this season. Supercross suffered through the rain and mud in Philadelphia, one championship was secured while another championship lead changed. There was a home winner in Austria. Marc Márquez continues to dig a hole. Acura will be exiting IMSA with Honda taking the brand to IndyCar with Meyer Shank Racing, and it will put more attention toward that program. However, IndyCar left Long Beach with some egg on its face, and it has become a recurrent issue.
Lack of Control
Hours after Álex Palou had taken the checkered flag and secured his first Grand Prix of Long Beach victory, likely after all the team haulers had packed up and began their journeys back east, IndyCar released a statement of a failure with the push-to-pass system on the only restart during the race.
"The failure left the Push to Pass system available to all drivers on the restart, when it should've been disabled prior to the passing of the alternate start-finish line on Lap 62," read IndyCar's statement. "The burden of the rule rests with INDYCAR to assure that the software run properly," continued the statement.
Twelve drivers were found to have used push-to-pass on the restart. The only pass to occur on the restart involved Marcus Armstrong overtaking Santino Ferrucci, however, both drivers used push-to-pass and both drivers had used a near-equal amount of push-to-pass on the restart.
No penalties were issued in the aftermath, but this points to a greater issue within IndyCar officiating. For the second time in three years, IndyCar had a push-to-pass issue seemingly get by the officials. In 2024, Team Penske ran the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg with software that allowed its cars to operate push-to-pass when it was disabled, and this problem was not found until after the morning warm-up for the next race, the Grand Prix of Long Beach, with penalties and amended results for the season opener not being issued until the middle of the following week.
Add last year's attenuator altercations from Team Penske, which were not picked up until post-inspection for the Fast 12 qualifying session on Sunday of Indianapolis 500 qualifying weekend, when the cars had already qualified on Saturday and there were photos of these attenuators used in competition at previous races, and this is the third consecutive year IndyCar officiating is a storyline for failing to do its job properly.
Considering Long Beach's push-to-pass issues, should any of the 12 drivers have been penalized? No. It wasn't disabled when IndyCar said it would be. Rule 14.19.16 clearly states push-to-pass will be disabled. Only IndyCar, by the letter of the law, can disable and enable the system. Twelve drivers caught a break and got a little boost. It clearly didn't matter as only one pass happened, and it was inconsequential to the actual result.
If you read the rulebook, there is nothing that says a driver cannot use push-to-pass on a restart. All the rules says is the system will be disabled for the race start and any restart that occurs the lap prior to the white flag or prior to three minutes remaining in a timed race. There is nothing that says the drivers cannot push the button. Technically, the rule cannot be broken if the system is not disabled. If the system is not disabled, that is a failure on IndyCar and not an infraction on the teams, unless they have circumvented the system.
In no way could any of the drivers be penalized.
Should the drivers be named? Other than Armstrong and Ferrucci, the remaining ten drivers are a mystery. Only if you hold a grudge for the aftermath of the Team Penske penalty from two years ago when Josef Newgarden was made the villain for pressing the button while also claiming he had no idea of Team Penske's software workaround should you believe these ten drivers should also be named. No one has stepped forward and voluntarily revealed to have benefitted from push-to-pass on that restart, but a fair number of drivers have stepped forward claiming innocence.
None of the 12 broke the rules. Team Penske, whether purposefully or accidentally, had coded its software to allow for push-to-pass on the restarts two years ago at St. Petersburg, breaking a rule. No one in this instance should be penalized, but IndyCar does not look good, and a race control that has already been scrutinized for its effectiveness regulating a motorsports series just received another harsh mark against it.
For the third consecutive year, it appears IndyCar is unable to sanction the IndyCar Series. The officials are not properly resourced or are not properly trained to notice when teams are violating rules or to make sure all the tools required to run a race weekend are properly operational.
Errors happen. It is not crazy to think there could be a software issue that does not allow push-to-pass to be disabled before a restart. Things happen, but in IndyCar's case, it has fumbled too many time to get a pat on the back. Once is happenstance, twice is a coincidence, three times is a pattern.
IndyCar has already made steps with an independent officiating panel, which has been put into place, but regardless of whether or not the officials are on the Penske payroll or independent and allegedly neutral, if the tools are not good enough then that is a bigger problem. If the officials on the ground running technical inspection are not skilled enough then that is a bigger problem. It is not mission accomplished because Ray Evernham, Raj Nair and Ronan Morgan were hired for the independent officiating board and Scot Elkins has just been hired as the managing director of officiating. The tools must work, and that is where the investment must go, along with proper training to those officiating on the ground, to ensure races can be properly executed.
Until the systems are in place, perhaps adjustments are necessary.
The rule could change. Push-to-pass could be left enabled the entire time, but the regulation could state it cannot be used at the start or on a restart unless it is the lap prior to the white flag or within the final three minutes of a timed race. It is available, but if a driver uses it, there will be a penalty.
It forces the drivers to police themselves. It is clearly evident that drivers are hitting the button when it is disabled. Whether that is a reflex or a deliberate action hoping IndyCar officials will be sleeping at the wheel and a driver could get an unexpected boost is irrelevant. IndyCar can make it so push-to-pass is always available, and if a driver does use it when not allowed, which the officials will see... we think... then it is a penalty.
IndyCar could also make it so it is apparent when a driver is using it. We don't have the LED panels anymore, which once told us when a driver was on the button, and we haven't had those in eight years, but there are plenty of other instruments that could be used to should when it is used. Super Formula has a flashing light around the air intake above the drivers head when its push-to-pass equivalent is being used.
Are people going to like to see a driver or two or nine penalized on every restart with a drive-through penalty because they used push-to-pass? Probably not, but it will phase itself out. The reflexes will adjust as the penalty will be severe enough to change behavior and no one is going to believe they will get away with using it when forbidden.
Maybe that is IndyCar's best option at the moment. Change the rule. It has already changed the qualifying format on street courses so the Fast Six session is a single-car run during the season, why couldn't IndyCar put push-to-pass in the drivers' hands and force them not to use it when they are not supposed to use it?
After Long Beach, it might be the only thing the officials can do to save themselves from any more embarrassing mistakes. Let the drivers be the bad guys! It will make officiating much easier.
Champion From the Weekend
Cole Davies clinched the AMA Supercross 250cc championship with a victory in Philadelphia.
Winners From the Weekend
You know about Cole Davies, but did you know...
Álex Márquez won MotoGP's Spanish Grand Prix. Marc Márquez won the sprint race. Senna Agius won in Moto2, his second consecutive victory. Máximo Quiles won in Moto3, his second victory of the season.
Carson Hocevar won the NASCAR Cup race from Talladega, his first career victory. Corey Day won the Grand National Series race, his first career victory.
Thomas Preining and Maro Engel split the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters races from Red Bull Ring.
The #31 Wright Motorsports Porsche of Dave Musial, Jr. and Ryan Yardley won the GT World Challenge America race from Austin. The #94 Random Vandals Racing BMW of Kenton Koch and Sam Craven won the GT4 America 3-hour endurance race. Memo Gidley swept the GT America races.
Sébastien Ogier won Rally Islas Canarias, his 68th career victory.
Ken Roczen won the Supercross race from Philadelphia, his fifth victory of the season.
Coming Up This Weekend
Formula One is back with a sprint weekend in Miami, and Formula Two will be there as well.
Formula E visits Berlin's Tempelhof Airport for perhaps the final time.
GT World Challenge Europe Sprint Cup opens its campaign at Brands Hatch.
NASCAR will be in Texas.
IMSA hosts a throwback weekend at Laguna Seca.
The European Le Mans Series visits Circuit Paul Ricard.
World Superbike heads to Baloton Park.
Supercross' hosts it penultimate round in Denver.
Super GT has its Golden Week round from Fuji on Monday.