The Drama Everyone Hoped For; The Results Nobody Wanted

Fans hoped that the return of bumping would bring drama back to qualifying at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. There was plenty to go around. As the gun sounded, however, many were not happy with the results. Two perennial favorites, Pippa Mann and James Hinchcliffe, were out of the field for the 102nd running of the Indianapolis 500, while another favorite, Conor Daly, fought his way onto the grid-twice.

James Davison, who had a hard crash Friday afternoon. sat for the last hour waiting to see if he would be bumped. His crew completed repairs around 2 am. Bob Lazier loaned the team  parts to rebuild the gearbox.

Davison was in a difficult position. He couldn’t withdraw his time until he was bumped. He had a spot and had to keep it. Mann wasn’t fast enough, and Hinchcliffe didn’t get another chance.

Conor Daly”s first attempt of the day ended with a 22.684 average. He was eventually bumped. His second effort put him back in the field. Oriol Servia, who was having a difficult day himself, bumped Daly on his third attempt of the day. Daly went out a third time and bumped Hinchcliffe out.

Servia had a problem on his first run and it was called off after laps of 201, 196, and 194. His second had two respectable laps in the low 220 range, but after he dropped to 217 on the third, the crew stopped the effort. He finally bumped his way in near the end of the day’.

In what would be Hinchcliffe’s final attempt of the day, he felt a vibration as he pulled out of pit lane. It went way, but it returned in turn 3 and he decided to pull in. The problem was a tire sensor broke and was rattling around inside the wheel. Hinchcliffe got back in line, but time ran out before he could get another try.

Press Conferences- Highs and Lows

The post qualifying press conferences ranged from silly to emotional. Foutr members of the Fast Nine- Helio Castroneves, Simon Pagenaud, Ed Carpenter, and Danica Patrick- spoke. They mostly joked around and all expected to be on the pole tomorrow.

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James Davison talked about how hard his crew worked to get the car ready after the crash on Friday.

“The only way to repay them (the crew) was  to make the race,” he said, “We owe them immensely.”

He sees no point in running hard Sunday to improve his position.

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Pippa Man and James Hinchcliffe also spoke in separate appearances. they both came from several rounds of on air interviews and team discussions. They both looked emotionally drained. I admire them both for making one last stop to talk to the media.

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In her brief emotional remarks, Mann said she knew Friday they might be in trouble when the car, which had performed well Wednesday and Thursday was not fast yesterday morning. Everything on the car was changed.

“We tried everything, obviously it wasn’t fast enough. It’s the worst feeling in the world.”

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Hinchcliffe was subdued and direct. ” This was our fault. Nobody failed us We failed us,” he told the media. His comments seemed pointed at those on social media blaming ABC, the drivers who went out just before him, and anyone else they could think of for his not getting into the race.

“This track has done worse to me in the past and we came back swinging,” he said, referring to his crash in 2015 followed by winning the pole the following year.

As to speculation that he might replace Jay Howard in the race, “I will do what Sam (Schmidt) and Rick (Peterson tell me to do, ” he answered.

 

As I said in a previous piece, the current qualifying format was designed for a field of 33 entries only. The rules need to be changed when there are more entries. We knew two cars were going home. We can’t be angry at the system because our favorite drivers are the ones left out. Sad for them, yes; disappointed, absolutely. More on this topic tomorrow.

I will post an update when I get to the track. The weather this afternoon looks iffy.

 

Qualifying Update

Rain started after 10 cars qualified. Hello Castroneves is fastest at 228.919. Slowest is Jack Harvey at 225.223. Next slowest is Graham Rahal at 225.407. Rahal is likely safe but will be in the last row. Oriol Servia’s run was waved off. He was averaging 197.334. Something is amiss in the Rahal camp.

Still waiting for an update on when qualifying will resume. I would say no earlier than 2:30 assuming it stops raining soon.

New Engine Debuts in 2021

In a joint announcement from Chevrolet and Honda this morning, the next generation Indycar engine format was announced.

The new powerplant will be larger, 2.4 liters. It will remain a twin turbo V-6 and have 900 + horsepower. Testing begins in 2021.

My hope is this announcement gives a definite plan that will attract another engine manufacturer. More on this topic next week.

Notes

James Davison’s crew finished repairs around 2 am. The sidepods no longer have the black lettering on the sidepods. Davison turned 4 laps in this morning’s warmup. Just 11 cars took advantage of the practice time.

The weather has suppressed the size of the crowd, not really surprising.

James Hinchcliffe is the next to qualify when action resumes.

Follow my twitter account, @tutorindie for live updates throughout the day.

Back later this afternoon.

 

 

Bump Day

Just announced tentative start to practice this morning is 8:45. Each group will get an equal length of practice time. The worst of the weather is supposed to arrive between noon and 2. This will be one of those go with the flow days with lots of schedule adjustments. Look for updates on weather all day here.

Thanks to Mike Joachim and Jess Baker for having me on Pit Lane Parley last night. It was a great discussion. You can listen by going to wildfireradiosports.com, clicking on the podcast link at the top. It is Episode 22. I think I did well enough that they won’t have to cancel the show.

Is Rahal in Trouble?

Graham Rahal’s no tow rank of 34 is concerning. He may be starting from the back again. Except for Thursday, the team has struggled to find speed.

Qualifying Order

The qualifying, with the T cars removed:

Claman DeMelo

Hunter-Reay

Harvey

Castroneves

Pigot

Dixon

Howard

Jones

Rahal

Servia

Pagenaud

Hinchcliffe

Davison

Bourdais

Patrick

Kaiser

Chilton

Wilson

Leist

Daly

Rossi

Hildebrand

Andretti

Veach

Wickens

Chaves

Karam

Munoz

Newgarden

Power

Kanaan

Sato

Kimball

Carpenter

Just Updated

Each group will 20 minutes, no gap between sessions. There will be no open practice for all cars. Each group is guaranteed an equal amount of green flag time.

 

 

James Davison- Maximum Efforts, No Regrets

James Davison has had an on again, off again relationship with Indycar. When he was in Indy Lights, he competed against several current Indycar drivers. The last three years he has driven in the IMSA Weather Tech Series, winning the pole in GT Dayona class at the Rolex 24 and he won twice in Pirelli World Challenge driving for Nissan in 2015.Davison, speaking to fans as part of the Fast Cars Fast Girls podcast series, says while he enjoys racing, ‘The Indy 500 is where I want to be.”

He had his first start in the 500 in 2014, driving for KV Racing. He started 28th and finished 16th. The following year, driving for Dale Coyne, he started last because he had a sportscar commitment on qualifying weekend. Tristan Vautier qualified the car for Davison. He finished 27th after first lap contact and an incident in the pits.

Last year, he had a deal fall through because of the limited availability of Honda engines and chassis for Chevrolet teams. When Sebastien Bourdais was injured during qualifying, Davison got the call to replace him. He again started 33rd, but led two laps late in the race. His day ended in a five car pileup in turn one with about 16 laps to go. He feels that he lost a chance to win the race.

2018 is the earliest he has had a 500 program in place, driving the Johnathon Byrd car owned by Brian Belardi in a partnership with A. J. Foyt Racing. He admits the one off teams are behind the full timers, but he feels they can be competitive.

“if we don’t qualify but I know the team put forth maximum effort on everything, I will have no regrets.”

Davison discussed the new car and his thoughts echo what other drivers have said- it is difficult to pass and the front end is loose in the corners.

Davison has started in the back in each 500 he has been in, but has always improved his position. As long asm he qualifies, Davison will be someone to watch on race day.

Pit Lane Parley Podcast

Due to technical difficulties, recording of the Pit Lane Parley podcast had to be postponed. Recording is planned for this evening. I will announce the air date and time. They have a not so special guest I happen to know.

 

Fast Friday at IMS

It’s the day before qualifying weekend at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Cars get their qualifying boost today. The weather is cool and cloudy with an threat of rain after noon today. With just a brief practice period tomorrow, any track time should be very busy.

The consensus  from most drivers is passing is difficult if you are third in line or farther back. They say that front end goes first. Tire management will be a key component of success on race day.

It will be interesting to see how the extra horsepower and the cooler weather affects the cars. How much of what they’ve learned the first three days of practice carry over?

Bump Watch

Which two cars will miss the race?

Any of the one offs are possibilities, but I think  Conor Daly and Pippa Mann are the most likely.

Here some more photos from yesterday. I’ll be back later with a feature on James Davison.

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Notice the protector on the end of the rear wing.

 

IMS Thursday- A Busy Practice Day Ahead

Good morning from IMS. The weather for Fast Friday tomorrow looks iffy, so today should be a very busy on track day. More than 3,300 laps were turned yesterday, and today could see an equal number of laps. The bad thing about a washout tomorrow would be that cars do not get to try out the added boost until the brief practice periods Saturday morning.

Nine cars have already been on track in the first 15 minutes.

I had an incredible experience yesterday afternoon. I went to far south end of the tower grandstand upper deck. A line of seven cars entered the turn single file. I heard a whoosh as they went by. I could almost feel it. If you are out at the track, go over there for a while. It’s an amazing view.

Pit Lane Parley

Listen to Pit Lane Parley tomorrow on Wildfireradiosports.com at 3:15 pm EDT or find it on the Podbean app. The show will be recorded this evening in Indianapolis.

Here are a few more photos from yesterday.IMG_3178 (2)

 

Cara Adams- Believe in Yourself

 

Cara Adams, chief engineer for Firestone Racing, has a message for young girls and women. She encouraged them to have a positive mindset and believe in themselves. Adams (center in photo) spoke to members of the Indycar Nation Fan Club today as part of the Fast Cars Fast Girls podcast series.

“Don’t believe people who tell you you can’t do something,” she advised.

Adams came to racing in a roundabout way. Her father was an engineer working for NASA and her mother was a science teacher. Early on she leaned toward science. Neither of her parents were sports fans. She got interested in racing her husband won tickets to the Cleveland Grand Prix. She was most fascinated by the cars. The fascination led to engineering school and eventually a job with Firestone.

Adams contributes to the STEM program which encourages young women to pursue careers in the sciences. She sees herself as having two responsibilities. One is making sure the racing tires are safe. The other is talking to young girls about engineering.

She finds Indycar drivers are “down to earth” people. The only driver she was ever star struck by was Mario Andretti.

Developing tires for the Indianapolis 500 is a project that takes more than a year. Adams said they are already working on next year. She described her May days as 12 nonstop hours.

The drivers rely on Firestone tires. Adams and her team have consistently provided a safe dependable product that has helped Indycar grow.

 

Preparation Key to Winning the Indianapolis 500- Hilderbrand

“You realize how good you have to be at every little thing to win,” J. R. Hildebrand said at a morning press briefing featuring the Dreyer & Reinbold team.  ” The speedway doesn’t owe you anything, ” he said regarding his 2011 near win, The loss caused him to focus on his approach to the 500.  The theme of the conference was preparation.

Team owner Dennis Reinbold said the team is gearing up to do more races in the future. They decided to get two really strong drivers with whom they have worked in the past. Their focus in 2018 is the 500. Reinbold said there is no definite timeline for adding more races. There is a reason DRR is looking to run a larger schedule. According to Reinbold,

“Indycar is growing. You can see it. You can feel it. There are more good teams, better prepared teams which makes it harder to win. It (the series) has come a long way since I had a full time team.”

Reinbold was particularly impressed with a team owners’ meeting he attended. He enjoyed that there was dialogue between the series and the owners, unlike the contentious meetings he remembers.

Sage Karam is excited to have a teammate this year. He said a two car team can go mthrough the checklist quicker by dividing the tasks between the two cars. He is happy that Hildebrand is on the team with him.  About the Speedway, Karam says it’s a “magical place.”

” Every year I feel more nervous. I’ve always had really strong cars. (This team) is definitely a good situation.”

Karam believes qualifying will be tight because the car is new to everyone. Reinbold sees only running the 500  as both an advantage and a disadvantage. The advantage is the car is new to everyone. The disadvantage is that the full time teams may have learned some things about the car in the five races already in the books.

Hildebrand and Karam both think a strong showing in the race will build momentum with their current sponsors- Salesforce for Hildebrand, Wix Filters for Karam-and possibly attract more.

While both drivers are confident of making the field, Karam warns that it would not take much to miss the race.

It all comes down to who is prepared. DRR expects to be one of the best prepared teams.

Quick Thoughts -Indycar Grand Prix

This was a very entertaining race. There were battles for position, passing, and drama.If every Indycar race were like this one, I think fans would be happy.

Robert Wickens WILL win a race this year. I really thought it would be today. The pass he made to take the lead from Will Power was amazing. The pass he couldn’t quite pull off to regain the from Power was an equally incredible move. Yet, officially, we still have to call him a rookie.

Scott Dixon’s run from 18th to 2nd puts him back in the championship hunt. He jumps to 4th in the standings.

Power’s win is the 200th Indycar win for Roger Penske.

The cars seemed to race closer this year than in the past. Passing was not necessarily easier according to some drivers, cars were not strung out all over the track as in past races.

This race still has only two winners from two different teams.

I will have a full race report up tomorrow.