Halfway! We are halfway through 2026. It is hot and only getting hotter in the Northern Hemisphere. The days are getting shorter though. That is the crux of summer. We are losing daylight from the start. The good time is already over. It is all a con.
Either way, it is the heart of the motorsports season, even if we are starting to enter the second half of seasons and we are running out of races. Most of the big races are behind us. I guess we have championships to watch. It is all a con. It is just going to end in loss anyway.
IndyCar Tidbits
As we like to do at the end of June, when the IndyCar season is at its midway point, we like to pick at some pieces of the season so far, and look at some of the overlooked portions of the season. You know, the tidbits that aren't going to be noticed by anyone except someone crazy enough to look closely. You know... me!
That is where we stand. With plenty that has happened over the first ten races, let's look over what has occurred and dig in!
New Winning Number
Every Indianapolis 500 is a historic Indianapolis 500. What a pretentious sentence. That is an obnoxious viewpoint. It is no historic than any other race that occurs. However, the year's Indianapolis 500 did see a bit of IndyCar history, and why I did not get to this at the end of May? Because that is a busy period, but this history extends beyond the 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Felix Rosenqvist made history when he took the checkered flag. Rosenqvist did something never done before. His victory was the first for car #60.
Yeah! It had never happened before. For a series whose history book stretches back to 1909, there aren't many numbers that have never won a race, but there is still a healthy number. We don't see new winning numbers that often.
Since reunification, there have only been nine new numbers.
Two of those aren't really new numbers. They are, but they aren't. In 2008, Graham Rahal won in car #06 at St. Petersburg and Justin Wilson won in car #02 at Belle Isle. Technically, those numbers never won before, but adding a zero in front of another single-digit, as was a trend at the start of the 21st century, isn't really another number. The value of #2 and #02 is the same. It is two! But, I digress, and they count, and that fad of running #0-something has died expect for Hélio Castroneves running #06 at the Indianapolis 500.
Fun fact: It wasn't that long ago it was against the rules to run a car #0-something.
Those two count. What are the other new numbers we have seen?
Car #37 - Ryan Hunter-Reay at Long Beach in 2011.
Car #67 - Ed Carpenter at Kentucky in 2011.
Car #50 - Dario Franchitti at the Indianapolis 500 in 2012 (The number changed from the usual #10 to honor sponsor Target's 50th anniversary)
Car #77 - Simon Pagenaud at Belle Isle in 2013
Car #83 - Charlie Kimball at Mid-Ohio in 2013
Car #88 - Colton Herta at Austin in 2019
That's it. That is the list of new numbers to win a race since reunification. If you wanted to cover the last 50 years, only three other numbers would be added.
Car #30 - Danny Sullivan at Cleveland in 1984
Car #91 - Buddy Lazier at the Indianapolis 500 in 1996
Car #97 - Cristiano da Matta at Chicago Motor Speedway in 2000.
Of the remaining two-digit numbers, only 18 have not produced an IndyCar race winner.
Car #13, #53, #59, #64, #65, #70, #71, #72, #74, #79, #80, #84, #85, #86, #87, #90, #93, #94.
I guess, if you wanted to add car #0, and for the sake of it car #00, there are 20. I am not going through the other #0-somethings. I can acknowledge #00. If it is good enough for Robert Parish it is good enough for me.
There are plenty of numbers out there for a driver to make their own and standout with. If you noticed, none of the remaining winless numbers are currently used full-time in IndyCar. For the moment, it looks like Rosenqvist has made history, and it will be awhile until someone else gets a chance to replicate it.
It would be nice if a driver embraced car #59 or car #72. Somebody who has an appreciation for offensive linemen.
Something Álex Palou-Related
We must acknowledge something about Álex Palou, because of course you have to! Where do we begin?
Four victories this season. Those put him up to 23 victories in his career, tied for 20th all-time with Tommy Milton. Another three victories in the final eight races would put Palou tied with Rodger Ward for 16th all-time on 26. If Palou wins four of the final eight races, he would end the year tied with Johnny Rutherford for 15th all-time.
Palou has six pole positions this season, including in the last five races. One thing at a time... six pole positions moves Palou into tied for 18th all-time with Rex Mays and Bobby Rahal on 18. Enjoy it while it last because soon 18th all-time will not be 18 pole positions. He has won ten times from pole position making Palou one of 12 drivers with at least ten victories from pole position.
This is only the sixth time since 1946 a driver has won five consecutive pole positions. One more and Palou would be just the fourth driver to win six consecutive pole positions. If he gets to 20 career pole positions, he will crack the top fifteen all-time.
Earlier this season, Palou surpassed 2,000 laps led in his career. After Road America, his career total is up to 2,130 laps led. He is the 25th driver to crack 2,000 laps led in his career. There is some breathing room until he starts moving up places in the record book. Palou is 246 laps behind Juan Pablo Montoya. That feels achievable before 2026 is out.
Newgarden's Oval Ovation
With his victory at Gateway, Josef Newgarden reached a special milestone. Gateway was Newgarden's 20th oval victory. He is only the 11th driver in IndyCar history to reach 20 oval victories.
For context, Hélio Castroneves, Dario Franchitti, Tony Kanaan, Michael Andretti, Bobby Rahal, Will Power and Al Unser, Jr. did not reach 20 oval victories.
About
four years ago, we pondered what drivers could reach 20 oval victories. At that time, Newgarden was on ten oval victories. Will Power had nine oval victories. Power is currently on ten. Besides Scott Dixon, who has 25 oval victories, Power is the only full-time driver with more than three oval victories. Patricio O'Ward has won three times on ovals. Graham Rahal has won twice, as has Alexander Rossi and Scott McLaughlin. Marcus Ericsson, Kyle Kirkwood, Álex Palou and Felix Rosenqvist have all won once on an oval. Those eight drivers don't even combine for 20 oval victories! They only combine for 13!
There is a lot of time left in the future. Someone... Álex Palou could go on a run. Would anyone be surprised if over the next 15 years Palou averages 1.5 oval victories per season? That would put Palou beyond the 20 oval victory milestone. However, it does not appear anyone is close to joining Dixon and Newgarden in that club anytime soon.
Most Pole Positions without Winning From Pole Position
I don't remember what led me to writing down this note to research. It was probably Felix Rosenqvist's pole position at Long Beach. It was Rosenqvist's seventh career pole position. In the race, Rosenqvist started first, however, he finished second. Seven pole positions, zero converted to victories.
Where does that rank Rosenqvist?
Seven is not the most. But it is close.
Let me cut down the possibilities. Every driver who won at least ten pole positions in their career won at least one from pole position.
The driver with the most pole positions to never win from pole position...
Only won once in this IndyCar career...
Won an Indianapolis 500 pole position...
Had 2/3rds of his career pole position come in the same season...
Have you figured it out?
The driver is Billy Boat!
Boat won nine pole positions in his career, but never won a race from pole position.
He won six pole positions in the 1998 IRL season, and only once in those six races did he finish in the top ten. Boat was ninth at Pikes Peak. His average finish in his nine races starting on pole position was 16.8889. He started first in the 1998 Indianapolis 500 and finished 23rd.
As for Boat's only victory, he won at Texas in 1998. Where did Boat start? Second, qualifying 0.097 seconds off Tony Stewart's fastest lap.
That is the all-time leader. How do the rest of the drivers rank?
1. Boat - 9
2. Alex Tagliani - 8
T3. Patricio O'Ward - 7
T3. Felix Rosenqvist - 7
T5. Scott Sharp - 6
T5. Marco Andretti - 6
T7. Emil Andres - 5
T7. Paul Russo - 5
T7. Scott Pruett - 5
These are all the drivers with at least five career pole positions to never win from pole position. Rosenqvist isn't even in sole possession among active drivers. Did you realize Patricio O'Ward had not won from pole position? I had not. But he came close to victory from his first pole position.
It was the second race of the 2020 Road America doubleheader, O'Ward started first, lead vast majority of the race... only to have Felix Rosenqvist pass him with two laps remaining! Because of course that is how it would play out. O'Ward would finish second.
In his other pole position starts, O'Ward has finished fourth, third, fifth, 24th, second and 24th. Not a bad track record.
In case you are wondering what Rosenqvist's track is, his finishes from pole position are eighth, 21st, ninth, 26th, 19th, ninth and second.
Most Victories without Leading the Most Laps in a Victory
This one I know where it came from because it came during the Gateway race. Marcus Ericsson probably had his best race in IndyCar that night. From 12th on the grid, Ericsson led 114 laps and he pushed Josef Newgarden only for Ericsson to finish second.
Entering that race, Ericsson had led 195 laps in his career. In his four victories, he has led five laps at Belle Isle, 37 laps at Nashville which sounds like the most laps led but Colton Herta led 39 laps in that race, 13 laps in the Indianapolis 500, and four laps at St. Petersburg. Prior to Gateway, there had never really been a race where Ericsson dominated. Then in the first race he is arguably the driver to beat, he leads the most laps and finishes second.
Four victories is a fair number to win without leading the most laps in any of them. But is it the most?
Like his fellow Swede Rosenqvist, Ericsson is not the all-time leader.
The all-time leader will probably stun you because not only is it a past champion but a two-time champion, and a driver who won consecutive titles.
It is Joe Leonard!
The 1971 and 1972 champion won six times in his career, but he never led the most laps in any of those victories!
Leonard's first victory was at Milwaukee in August 1965. He led 69 laps, but Parnelli Jones led 80. His next victory would not come until nearly five years later, again at Milwaukee. In that race, Leonard took the lead with nine laps to go, the only laps he led, and he finished ahead of Roger McCluskey, who led 81 laps, and Al Unser, who led 60 laps. In 1971, Leonard won the California 500 from Ontario. He led the final 40 laps. Al Unser led 84 and Mark Donohue led 49.
In 1972, Leonard won three consecutive races at Michigan, Pocono and Milwaukee. He led the most laps in none of them! In Michigan, he led only the final two laps after Mel Kenyon ran out of fuel. At Pocono, he led the final 37 laps. Mario Andretti led 105 of 200 laps before a gearbox issue on his final pit stop left him stuck in the pit lane, causing Andretti to lose 12 laps. At Milwaukee, Leonard led the final 93 laps, taking the lead after Andretti led the first 107 laps before retiring with a wheel issue.
Someday, we will double back and see how many drivers have won three consecutive races and led the most laps in none of them, but Leonard won a half-dozen times in his career and never led the most laps in any of those victories. Leonard led the most laps only once in his career. At Hanford in 1968, he led 93 of 167 laps but finished fourth.
How do the rest of the drivers rank?
1. Leonard - 6
T2. Al Rogers - 4
T2. Marcus Ericsson - 4
Now, we should make something clear, Rogers won four times in his career, and all four victories were when the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb counted toward the championship. His victories were from 1948 through 1951. Technically, there are not laps to lead on the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb. Rogers is tied for second on a technicality.
There is also an issue of missing data. Gaston Chevrolet and Joe Boyer are each listed with three victories in their careers, but there is no information on laps led for a few of their victories. They may have led the most laps in those races, but there is no official information.
What we can say is Leonard, Ericsson, and technically Rogers, are the only drivers with more than three victories in IndyCar history to never lead the most laps in any of those victories.
Scandinavia!
There are no statistics to this, but I wanted to take a moment to recognize the level of Scandinavian participation in IndyCar.
Denmark's Christian Lundgaard has won twice this season, including the most recent race. Sweden's Marcus Ericsson was runner-up in the race before that with Denmark's Christian Rasmussen finishing third, and Rasmussen had a great chance of victory at Phoenix in March. Sweden's Felix Rosenqvist won the Indianapolis 500 a little over a month ago. Norway's Dennis Hauger is the top rookie after ten races.
All we need is a Finn or two and we will have the region covered!
This is reminiscent to a little over a decade ago when we had five Colombian drivers on the grid: Juan Pablo Montoya, Carlos Muñoz, Carlos Huertas, Sebastián Saavedra and Gabby Chaves.
IndyCar has these periods where a country or a region has increased participation.
Back in the 2000s and 2010s, there were a lot of Brits in IndyCar, Dan Wheldon, Dario Franchitti, Justin Wilson, Mike Conway, Darren Manning, Alex Lloyd, James Jakes, Jack Hawksworth, Max Chilton, Pippa Mann, Jordan King. The numbers of Brits have decreased noticeably in recent years. We have Louis Foster, and Jack Harvey is part-time. Callum Ilott maybe wants to be in IndyCar. It isn't like how it was.
For a moment, we had three French drivers regularly competing: Sébastien Bourdais, Simon Pagenaud, Romain Grosjean. Before that, Tristan Vautier was around. Théo Pourcharie was here for a minute and then shown the door. Now, Grosjean is the last Frenchman standing and that is after a year away from full-time competition.
Brazil had an extended presence on the grid essentially from the arrival of Emerson Fittipaldi in the mid-1980s through the latter days of Tony Kanaan and Hélio Castroneves. Castroneves still shows up for Indianapolis. Kanaan hung it up only a few years ago, but Brazilians aren't as numerous as we once experienced. There is Caio Collet presently, and we just had Pietro Fittipaldi run full-time, but it does not feel like a given Brazilians will always be around.
The only other region that has a long stake in the IndyCar grid is the Antipodes. Australia and New Zealand has been featured full-time for over 20 years, all thanks to Will Power and Scott Dixon. Then we had Scott McLaughlin and Marcus Armstrong enter, which has been good for New Zealand. Power had fellow Australian Ryan Briscoe compete regularly for about a decade. McLaughlin and Armstrong suggest New Zealand will be represented on the IndyCar grid into the future. Australia is a bit of a question mark. It is funny that 20 years ago, IndyCar raced in Australia, and with how well all of the Antipodeans have done, a race could have stuck. It is more challenging than that.
It is cyclical. I don't think this is a case of we are always going to have a Swede or a Dane on the grid. I think it is just the moment. Sweden and Denmark have each produced outstanding talents in the first quarter of the 21st century. Denmark's talent is spread around the world, especially in sports car racing. It was natural one or two would end up in IndyCar, but it doesn't always work out that way. Remember all the Germans that have succeeded around the world of motorsports, and yet, none of made a home in IndyCar with Mick Schumacher being the first full-time German in over 20 years since Timo Glock was in Champ Car.
As for now, let's just enjoy our Scandinavian participants for the moment... and maybe we find a Finn for the sake of posterity.
Same Name - First and Last
At Road America, Christian Lundgaard took his second victory of the season. In last place was Christian Rasmussen. You can see where this is going.
When was the last time the race winner and the last place driver shared the same first name?
This must have happened before, right? Road America could not have been the first time. It wasn't, but it has been a while.
Try August 14, 2005. It was the Indy Racing League race from Kentucky. Scott Sharp took the victory, the final of his career. Last place? Scott Dixon!
Get this, prior to Road America, the last three times first place and last place shared a first name, it involved Scotts.
March 2, 2003 at Homestead: Scott Dixon won, Scott Mayer was last.
April 13, 2003 at Motegi: Scott Sharp won, Scott Mayer was last.
You must go back to July 19, 1998 at Toronto to find the last time it happened to a name other than Scott. Alex Zanardi won while Alex Barron was in last.
Prior to the Zanardi/Barron occurrence at Toronto, you must go back to the 1984 Grand Prix of Cleveland. The winner was Danny Sullivan and last was Danny Ongais. Two races before that, Al Unser, Jr. won at Portland on June 17, his first career victory. Who was last in Al Unser, Jr.'s first career victory? Well, wouldn't you believe it was Al Unser!?!?
During that 1984 season, there was also a case of Bobby Rahal winning at Phoenix and Roberto Guerrero finishing in last. It doesn't fit the spirit of criteria, but it is pretty close. In that same vain, Tony Kanaan won at Texas in June 2004 and A.J. Foyt IV was last. Close, but not within the spirit. We are not counting those.
Just going back to the start of 1976, those are the only seven times it has happened in IndyCar. I guess that sounds right. Some names are odd. We have hadn't more than one Hélio and there hasn't been more than one Simon lately. Josef is just unique enough to keep it from happening. We have drivers named Sting Ray now. How many Sting Rays can you expect to be competing? What are the odds of two Sting Rays competing at once? That is what this really comes down to. You need two drivers with the same first name competing in the same race.
I guess the surprise is it did not already happen with Álex Palou and Alexander Rossi, which aren't identical, but kind of counts. Should we count it? Alexander Rossi is referenced as Alex. It counts more than Bobby and Roberto. Álex Palou is not Alexander or Álexander. There were a few Ryans. Ryan Hunter-Reay and Ryan Briscoe didn't do us any favors.
We kind of saw history in Road America, whether we realized it or not.
No Repeat Finishes
An annual tradition, we track every driver and see which driver has yet to have a repeat finish. Last season, Scott Dixon went the furthest, not having a repeated finishing position over the first ten races. Road America was the tenth race. How do we look?
Dennis Hauger (Tenth, 15th, 16th, 23rd, 11th, eighth, 19th, 13th, 25th, 20th)
That's it! That is the list!
Every other driver has had a repeat finish, but rookie Dennis Hauger is the last driver standing.
It isn't even just the number of driver with repeat finishes but drivers with consecutive repeat finishes.
Álex Palou won at Barber and Long beach.
David Malukas was second at both Indianapolis races.
Felix Rosenqvist opened the season with a pair of 12th-place finishes.
Graham Rahal has finished 23rd in the last two races.
Rinus VeeKay was 14th at Arlington and Barber.
Kyffin Simpson was 20th at Arlington and Barber.
Romain Grosjean was 21st at Long Beach and the Grand Prix of Indianapolis.
Nolan Siegel was 20th in the first two races of the season.
Sting Ray Robb opened the season with three consecutive finishes of 21st, and he has finished 19th in the last two races.
Nine drivers have had consecutive repeat finishes, and it has happened ten times thanks to Robb having it occurred twice.
Let's see how far Hauger can take it. Plenty of top ten finishes remain out there, but Dale Coyne Racing has not shown great speed on a consistent basis. His only other top fifteen finishes left available are 12th and 14th. Those are two spots but eight races remain. He has three other finishes outside the top twenty (21st, 22nd and 24th). That would still leave three positions, and he hasn't finished 17th or 18th yet. That would mean one more spot. If it can be a top ten result that isn't eighth or tenth, Hauger could go 18-for-18 with a different finishing position.
July Preview
It has already begun, but most of NASCAR's In-Season Challenge takes place in July. The first round was held at Sonoma, and we saw far fewer upsets than last year when Atlanta hosted the opening round. Only three upsets occurred, and they all happened on one side of the bracket.
The top quarter of the bracket saw Tyler Reddick eliminated as the #1 seed after he suffered mechanical issues at Sonoma. Alex Bowman moved on as the #32-seed. Bowman will face #16 Austin Cindric. The #25-seed Todd Gilliland knocked off the #8-seed Daniel Suárez, and Gilliland will face the #9-seed Carson Hocevar.
While we had chalk in the next quarter with Chase Briscoe and Ty Gibbs advancing, the #20-seed Michael McDowell advanced over Bubba Wallace, and McDowell will face the #4-seed Chase Elliott in the next round.
The bottom of the bracket was straight chalk, and we will see Denny Hamlin vs. Erik Jones (#2 vs. #15), Chris Buescher vs. Christopher Bell (#7 vs. #10), William Byron vs. Kyle Larson (#11 vs. #6) and Shane van Gisbergen vs. Ryan Briscoe (#14 vs. #3).
The next round will be at Chicagoland Speedway, the first visit to the track since 2019. Atlanta will host the quarterfinals before North Wilkesboro's first points race in nearly 30 years hosts the semifinals. The final remains at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the Brickyard 400.
I still think there should be more at stake for this tournament than a cash prize. We don't have playoff points, but give the drivers bonus points. It will increase the incentive. Give 50 points for the champion, 25 points for the runner-up, 10 points for the semifinalists, five points for the quarterfinalists, and a point for the drivers that got out of the first round. It would be big for the tournament champion, but unless a driver won the entire thing, the points earned likely wouldn't change much other than flipping a few positions. We wouldn't see the tournament champion go from 27th to 15th and make the Chase at the end of the 26-race regular season.
How does this shape up after round one? Atlanta is a wild card, but I think you are feeling good if you are Denny Hamlin. One of Bowman, Cindric, Gilliland or Hocevar will make the semifinals. That is big for them.
Other events of note in July:
Formula E has two rounds, both doubleheaders, from Shanghai and Tokyo.
World Superbike will race over the weekend of July 11-12 at Donington Park, and then not race again until September.
Formula One has a few races before its summer break: Silverstone, Spa-Francorchamps, Budapest.
MotoGP has won round, Germany, before its summer break.
FIA World Endurance Championship returns to competition at São Paulo.
IndyCar races at Mid-Ohio and then Nashville.