| From IndyCar: Race weekend: Friday, March 21-Sunday, March 23 Track: The Thermal Club, a 3.067-mile, 17-turn road course (counterclockwise) in Thermal, California Media Links: NTT INDYCAR SERIES Entry List (PDF) | Trackside Media Guide (Interactive PDF) Race distances: 65 laps/199.36 miles Push-to-pass parameters: 150 seconds of total time, with a maximum time of 15 seconds per activation Hybrid energy deployment parameters: Unlimited activation, with a maximum deployment of 610 kilojoules (kj) per lap Firestone tire allotment: Six sets primary, four sets alternate to be used during the event weekend. Teams fielding a rookie driver may use one additional set of primary tires. Teams must use one set of primary and one set of new (sticker) alternate tires for at least two laps in the race. X: @TheThermalClub, @INDYCAR, #ThermalGP, #INDYCARInstagram: @TheThermalClub, @INDYCAR, #ThermalGP, #INDYCARFacebook: @ThermalClub, @INDYCAR, #ThermalGP, #INDYCARTikTok: @IndyCar, #ThermalGP, #INDYCARYouTube: @INDYCAREvent website: www.thermalgp.comINDYCAR website: www.indycar.com 2024 race winner: Inaugural Event (Alex Palou won The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge exhibition race in 2024.) Qualifying record: Inaugural Event FOX Sports telecast: Practice 1, 6:30 p.m. ET, Friday, FS1 (live); Practice 2, 1 p.m. ET Saturday, FS1 (live); Qualifying, 5 p.m. ET Saturday, FS1 (live); Warmup, 11 a.m. ET Sunday, FS1 (live); Race, 3 p.m. ET Sunday, FOX (live). Will Buxton is the play-by-play announcer for FOX’s coverage of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, alongside analysts Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe. Jamie Little, Kevin Lee and Jack Harvey are the pit reporters. INDYCAR Radio Network broadcasts: Mark Jaynes is the anchor alongside driver analyst Davey Hamilton. Nick Yeoman and Michael Young are the turn announcers. Jake Query, Jonathan Grace and DJ Clark are the pit reporters. The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix of race and all NTT INDYCAR SERIES practices and qualifying sessions air live on network affiliates, SiriusXM INDYCAR Nation 218, indycar.com/leaderboard and the INDYCAR App powered by NTT DATA. At-track schedule (All times local/Pacific Time): Friday, March 213:35-4:55 p.m. – NTT INDYCAR SERIES Practice 1 (split group format), FS1 Saturday, March 2210-11 a.m. – NTT INDYCAR SERIES Practice 2 (Limited green flag guarantee of 45 minutes), FS13:35-4:55 p.m. – The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix NTT P1 Award qualifying (three rounds of knockout qualifying), FS1 Sunday, March 238:02-8:27 a.m. – NTT INDYCAR SERIES Warmup, FS1Noon – FOX on air12:10 p.m. – “Drivers, start your engines”12:17 p.m. – The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix (65 laps/199.36 miles), FOX (Live) NTT INDYCAR SERIES Notes: •The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix will be the first NTT INDYCAR SERIES points-paying event at The Thermal Club, but it won’t be the first time the series has competed on the 3.067-mile road course. Alex Palou of Chip Ganassi Racing won The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge exhibition race in 2024 over Scott McLaughlin of Team Penske and Felix Rosenqvist of Meyer Shank Racing. •The Thermal Club is the third road or street circuit to debut on the NTT INDYCAR SERIES calendar since 2021. Chip Ganassi Racing drivers won the previous two debut races. Marcus Ericsson won the inaugural Big Machine Music City Grand Prix on the streets of Nashville in 2021, and Alex Palou won the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear when it debuted its new course in downtown Detroit in 2023. •The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix will be the first of six natural terrain road course races on the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES schedule. The other events are scheduled for Barber Motorsports Park on May 4, Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course on May 10, Road America on June 22, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on July 6, WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca on July 27 and Portland International Raceway on Aug. 10. |
Tag: The Thermal Club
Thermal Schedule- First Look
All times are Eastern/Pacific.
All pre race activity is on FS1. Race is on FOX.
Friday, March 21
Practice 1 6:30 pm/3:30 pm
Saturday, March 22
Practice 2 1 pm/10 am
Qualifying 5:05 pm/2:05 pm-6:35 pm/3:35 pm
Sunday, March 23
Warmup 11 am/8 am
Race 3 pm/Noon
Thermal Wrap-up: A Missed Opportunity
To sum up- Alex Palou dominated both his heat and the feature race to win the $5000,000 prize at The Thermal Club Million Dollar Challenge. Other than a first turn crash involving Romain Grosjean and Rinus VeeKay in Heat 1, there was little passing.
In the second half of the main event, Alexander Rossi was the entire show with a wheel to wheel duel with Josef Newgarden, and Colton Herta had eyes on him as he worked his way to fourth after saving his tires in the first half of the final race.
Overall, today was a missed opportunity for Indycar to gain some fans in what would have been an off week on the schedule. There were some positives, and several negatives. If IndyCar wants to do something like this in 2025, a lot needs to improve.
Some Good Things
I’m glad IndyCar finally decided to try something new. It has been a long time since we have seen any kind of different weekend format. More about this in the next section.
I liked the eight minute qualifying rounds and that Push to Pass was available to the drivers during qualifying. I think these ideas should be explored to possibly become a part of qualifying in the regular season.
This event filled what would have been a six week gap between the St. Pete opener and Long Beach. There is still a four week gap between the first two races.
Felix Rosenqvist now knows he can win a race from the pole. The Swedish driver has never before led the first lap of a race where he started on the pole. He is an excellent qualifier, and I don’t think this will his last pole of the year.
It was wonderful to see the old aggressive Alexander Rossi on track again. His passes were the reason to stay tuned today. If his duel with Newgarden had happened in the Indianapolis 500, Indycar would be sitting pretty.
What Did Not Work
Whenever I hear a sports program is a made for TV event, I cringe. It usually means, as we saw Sunday, that it’s not about the sport, but something that looks like the sport. The aim is ususally to sell something other than the sport. That is what we saw.
What could have been a great opportunity to introduce Indycar to a national audience turned into a two hour infomercial for The Thermal Club, a playground for the wealthy.
Don’t get me wrong, it looks like a fabulous place, and if someone can afford it, good for them.
But I thought this was to be an Indycar showcase, just one race into the season. I didn’t see any promos of upcoming races or the Indianapolis 500. I learned more about The Thermal Club than I will ever need to know.
The racing was dull. Except for the intrigue of Herta’s tire strategy and Rossi’s charge through the field, there was not much to get excited about. This track is too long to provide the close racing action a sprint event like this deserves.
The post race ceremony was too similar to a regular season post race. For this event it should have been bigger. There should have been money cannons or a jar full of dollar bills or something for the second biggest non 500 purse in history.
Far an event with that much money at stake, the post race should have been more significant. Speaking of the money, the $23,000 participation prize probably didn’t cover a team’s expenses in going to this event for four days. It was definitely a losing proposition for the teams that had crash damage.
How to Do Better
These suggestions are just my opinion, but if Indycar decides to do something like this again. and I like the basic concept, just not execution, here are a few ways to make this better.
An event like this needs to be at a venue where fans can affordably attend. There was zero atmosphere at The Thermal Club. Any spectators were on balconies of the homes around the track. The race may have felt more excited if tv viewers could hear fans cheering for their favorite driver.
Hold an exhibition at a shorter track which has some good passing zones. This track was not made for Indycar racing.
If the purse is going to be as large as it was this weekend, pair each driver with a charity and pledge a matching amount of each drivers’ winnings to that charity. For that amount of money in a setting built for people who have had good fortune, I think this is the right thing to do.
The final segment of the main event should be longer. If there is to be a halftime break, put some content in it, perhaps a celebrity tire changing contest.
Allow more Push to Pass. Imagine what Rossi could have done if he hadn’t dun out of extra boost.
I would prefer no halftime break and a required full service pit stop within a designated pit window.
Increase the purse, especially for those who finish 6 -27. They are the teams that could probably benefit the most from winning a half million dollars.
Hold the event at a venue separate from a test and either pre season or post season.
This was a nice try, Indycar, but a missed opportunity to gain some traction.
Race Morning in Thermal
Happy race morning. A high wind advisory should make things interesting for the drivers today. A dusty track track will likely greet the field or come into play during all segments of today’s event.
Today’s schedule: All times eastern
12:30 pm- NBC, Peacock on air
12:36 Heat 1 green flag
1:10 Heat 2 green flag
1:59 Main event green flag
Format:
Each heat race is 10 laps. Top six finishers min each heat advance to the main event.
Main event is 20 laps with a 10 minute break after 10 laps. Pole for the main event is the heat winner with the fastest qualifying time from last evening.
From last night:
Rosenqvist, Palou Win Poles for Thermal Heats
Cars may refuel and make wing adjustments during the break. Teams may not change tires.
Starting lineups for the heat races:
Heat 1

Heat 2

I will be back this afternoon with a weekend wrap up.
Rosenqvist, Palou Win Poles for Thermal Heats
The Thermal Challenge weekend got very interesting tonight as qualifying for tomorrow’s heat races took some interesting and surprising turns.
Group 1 looked to be a team Penske front row sweep as Will Power and Scott McLaughlin held spot 1 and 2 in the early laps. But Felix Rosenquist saved the best until last and grabbed the top spot for Heat 1 tomorrow.
McLaughlin finished second, and Rinus VeeKay will start third.
The top 6 for Heat 1 features all three Penske drivers and representatives from Meyer Shank, Rahal, and Ed Carpenter Racing.
Group 2 qualifying looked to be a McLaren front row with Callum Ilott and Pato O’Ward. But a red flag with 1:19 to go caused by Marcus Ericsson’s spin and tire barrier contact set up a one flying lap scenario. Ilott and O’Ward chose not to go back out.
Palou grabbed the ole with the session’s fastest lap. Ilott and O’Ward faded to 8th and 9th, respectively.
The top six has three Ganassi cars, two Rahal machines, and a Meyer Shank entry.
The pole for the main race will be the heat winner with the fastest qualifying lap. If Palou wins his heat, he is on pole for the feature event.
Notes
I thought the qualifying was better than I expected. The eight minute periods added a sense of urgency to each group. Having push to pass available made for some different strategies. Indycar may want to look at these new wrinkles for future qualifying sessions.
I have a feeling Felix Rosenqvist is just getting started, and the rest of the grid better watch out for him. He qualified on the front row at St. Pete and won a pole today. His teammate, Tom Blomqvist, also was in the top six in his group.
What a horrible weekend for Andretti. The cars are slow, and both Kyle Kirkwood and Marcus Ericsson had contact in separate incidents. Ericsson’s car got the worst of it. If this event returns, the teams outside the top 5 are going to need much more than $23,000 each.
I hope this is not the last time we see Callum Ilott in Indycar this season. He led one of the practice sessions and nearly took the pole for one of the heat races. Someone needs to find a spot for him.
I am more enthused about the races tomorrow than I was before the weekend started. Sunday has the potential to be a lot of fun.
Results:


Tomorrow’s action begins at 12:30 pm Eastern on NBC and Peacck.
Lundgaard Late Lap Tops Practice 4
Christian Lundgaard turned the fastest lap of the two days with about five minutes left in Practice four to edge Team Penske teammates Will Power and Scott McLaughlin.
Power had led most of the session. Practice started late because if high winds which blew sand across the track occasionally throught the two hour session.
Qualifying is up next at 8 Eastern.
Results:

Qualifying groups:

Ilott Nips Palou in Practice 3
Callum Ilott edged Alex Palou for top honors in the third session of The Thermal Club Million Dollar Challenge. Palou grabbed fast time early as he did yesterday, but Ilott, arguably the best Indycar driver not driving full time in Indycar, passed him before a 50 minute stoppage to repair broken asphalt in turn 5 halted action.
Ilott and Palou are the only drivers to turn a lap in less than 99 seconds.
Indycar extended the session by 15 minutes, but the extra time was chewed up by red flags for Romain Grosjean, who spun and stalled, and Kyle Kirkwood, lost control in turn 8 and made rear contact with the armco. The damage was not serious, and Kirkwood returned for the final 15 minutes of practice.
The final two hour practice session begins at 4 pm Eastern, followed by qualifying at 8 Eastern.
Results:

Palou Stays on Top
Today’s schedule: All times Eastern

Alex Palou repeated fast time in Friday’s second practice session as the Indycar concluded five total hours of testing at The Thermal Club.
Combined Session results:

Notes
The qualifying rounds have been shortened to 8 minutes from the originally scheduled 10 minutes at the requests of teams and drivers. High tire degradation was the reason for the change.
Felix Rosenquist continues to fit in well with his new team as he was in the top 10 all day.
Callum Ilott is doing a great job for Arrow McLaren filling in for David Malukas.
Chip Ganassi Racing and Arrow McLaren appear to be the strongest teams so far this weekend,
Palou Sets Fast Time Early
Alex Palou set the fast time early in Practice 1 and kept it through the entire session as the Thermal Challenge weekend began. The session ran without interruption.
Only seven cars cracked the 100 second mark.
Results:

