
Despite Season Struggles, Power to 'Keep Pushing' in Contract Year
Will Power enters Sunday's Java House Grand Prix of Monterey ranked ninth in points, but the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season has been anything but smooth.
Team Penske remains winless through the first 13 races of the year, its longest drought to start a season since 1973 when Gary Bettenhausen finally broke through in the 15th race of a 16-race campaign at Texas World Speedway. Team Penske has also gone winless in only four complete seasons: 1976, 1996, 1998, and 1999.
Scott McLaughlin delivered the team's most recent victory -- 15 races ago -- at last year's Milwaukee Mile doubleheader. He is 13th in the standings, while teammate Josef Newgarden is 16th.
At this point last season, the trio of Power, McLaughlin, and Newgarden had combined for six wins. They totaled just five finishes of 20th or worse in all of 2024. This year? They've already logged 16 with the most DNFs in a single season since 2000.
Power, a Team Penske mainstay since 2009 and one of the team's most decorated drivers, finds himself in a particularly difficult spot, with no contract extension yet signed.
'Can you believe the year I'm having, in a contract year?' Power said.
Power's 2025 campaign began with a crash on the opening lap of the season opener in St. Petersburg, relegating him to a 26th-place finish. In June, he crashed out of the lead at World Wide Technology Raceway and in July, consecutive race weekend engine failures at Mid-Ohio and the second Iowa race saw him finish 26th and 24th, respectively.
'Two engine failures in two race weekends,' Power said. 'Just one of those things. Not bad luck. It just happens at times.'
Amid the struggles, speculation around Power's future has intensified, especially after David Malukas scored a runner-up finish in the 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. The 23-year-old drives the No. 4 Clarience Technologies Chevrolet for AJ Foyt Racing, which has a technical alliance with Team Penske.
Malukas downplayed the rumors entering the doubleheader weekend at Iowa Speedway.
"No matter the rumors or no rumors, I think everybody is trying to strive to always live in the present instead of stressing about the past and the future,' Malukas said. 'I've had a mental coach training me to always stay and live in the present, and as of right now, I'm with the AJ Foyt team, and we're focused on our successes and what we've accomplished so far this season.'
Adding to the turbulence, Team Penske underwent a major midseason leadership shakeup. On July 4, Jonathan Diuguid was named president of Penske Racing, with longtime sports car program leader Travis Law appointed competition director.
The promotions followed the release of three longtime executives -- Team President Tim Cindric, Managing Director Ron Ruzewski and General Manager Kyle Moyer – being released by team owner Roger Penske in May in the aftermath of penalties incurred during Indy 500 qualifying to Power and Newgarden's cars.
Despite the challenges, Power remains resolute in proving he belongs behind the wheel of the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet.
Of his 44 career victories -- fourth-most in INDYCAR history -- 41 have come with Team Penske, the most of any driver in the team's storied history. That total includes the 2018 Indianapolis 500 win. He has 11 victories more than Team Penske legend Helio Castroneves.
Power also leads all Team Penske drivers in road and street course wins (31), holds the all-time INDYCAR record for pole positions (71), ranks fourth in podiums (107) and is tied with Al Unser Jr. for fifth in top-five finishes (141).
A two-time series champion, Power claimed the title in both 2014 and 2022.
Perhaps the tide turns at this weekend's Java House Grand Prix of Monterey (3 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX Sports app and INDYCAR Radio Network).
Team Penske has a strong recent record at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, with three top-three finishes over the past three years.
Power has shown consistency at the California road course, recording three top-four finishes in his last five starts. He finished seventh last year and has three top-six finishes in five natural road course starts this season.
Next is Portland International Raceway on Sunday, Aug. 10, where Power claimed victory last year and finished runner-up in 2022. Following that, the series heads to Milwaukee Mile (Aug. 24), a track where Power won in 2014 and recorded three podium finishes in his last five starts on the historic oval. Nashville Superspeedway ends the season on Sunday, Aug. 31.
'Just keep pushing,' Power said. 'Still got (four) races to get great results. I've had great cars everywhere -- we're quick. (I) can only smile about it, because I've been in the sport a long time. I know these sorts of things come around. It's very typical of life that a bad year plays out when you're trying to get a contract.
'I love it here. I do. I really hope I'm back next year.'
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Indianapolis Star
2 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
IndyCar race at Toronto continues TV ratings lull as Fox's struggles in first year continue
IndyCar's summer lull in the TV ratings game continued this weekend north of the border with a Toronto street race that captured an average audience of 734,000 viewers — the series' fifth consecutive race that failed to reach an average audience of 800,000 fans during the sport's busiest competitive stretch of the season. Sunday's noon Fox broadcast marked the first time the race had been shown to anything but a streaming-only audience since 2019, when it aired on NBC Sports Network and delivered an average audience of 504,000. Dating back to at least 2016, IndyCar's annual visit to Toronto hadn't been watched by an average audience higher than 530,000 (2016, CNBC), and Sunday's race audience was the largest since ABC's 2012 broadcast (1.129 million). The sub-750,000 average audience from Sunday's race won by Arrow McLaren's Pato O'Ward marks the eighth Fox network IndyCar race broadcast that has failed to reach even 800,000 this year, though the calendar has hit above 1 million four times. For comparison, NBC aired eight points-paying IndyCar race broadcasts a year ago, and only two failed to reach 800,000. Of those six that did, two (including the Indy 500) grabbed average audiences above 1 million. During NBC's tenure as IndyCar's exclusive media rights partner, the network registered 10 race broadcasts on network TV with average audiences below 800,000, not counting the pandemic-altered 2020 season. Of those 10, six of those were races up against the first couple weeks of the NFL season, meaning only four failed to eclipse 800,000 during an overlapping timeframe to IndyCar's Fox calendar. No NBC IndyCar season ever had more than one sub-800,000 average audience network race broadcast in a single season. Through 12 non-Indy 500 IndyCar network TV broadcasts on Fox in 2025, the series' new media rights partner sits at 829,833 in terms of its average viewership throughout a race broadcast. That number sits below NBC's 38 network broadcast from 2019-24 (excluding 2020 races, 500s, weather-altered races or ones that ran up against the NFL) of 998,342. When including those race broadcasts that went up against the opening weeks of NFL seasons, that figure drops to 935,408. Insider: Failure at Iowa sparks latest 2026 IndyCar schedule question: Will Penske Entertainment be able to promote? Strictly up against NBC's slate of non-500, non-NFL-conflicting network points-paying race broadcasts a year ago (of which there were 6), this year's Fox slate (minus its Indy 500 figures) trails 932,833 (2024, NBC) to 829,833 (2025, Fox), in terms of average race audiences. When including last year's season finale that ran up against Week 2 of the NFL season, that 2024 NBC figure dips to 868,571, still nearly 40,000 viewers ahead of Fox. Last weekend's IndyCar race at Toronto saw no formal in-race head-to-head competition with the NASCAR Cup series, with IndyCar's race ending just before 2:10 p.m. and NASCAR's green flag falling just after 2:15 p.m., though TNT's pre-race coverage of the Cup race began at 1:30 p.m. Sunday's head-to-head battle for IndyCar will be much more severe, with Cup's Brickyard 400 on TNT set to take the green just after 2 p.m. With IndyCar's estimated green flag time of just after 3:20 p.m., both races are slated to run head-to-head throughout the entirety of IndyCar's race broadcast.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
The winners and losers of IndyCar's 2025 Indy Toronto
For the only time this year, the NTT IndyCar Series ventured north of the U.S. border for a race around Toronto, the final street circuit event of the 2025 season. Some used the opportunity to return to the states with hard-earned gains. Others were left eager to return home from The Six after a difficult race at a challenging circuit. And for one driver, the weekend was over before the green flag ever flew. Here are the winners and losers from the Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto. Winner: Pato O'Ward times it right Patricio O'ward, Arrow McLaren, Zak Brown Few series in all of motorsport are more prone to major race shakeups when cautions fly than IndyCar. One timely yellow can be the difference between competing for the win and getting trapped in the they work out in your favor. Other times you're less fortunate. But rarely do those fates swing so significantly in the span of seven days. O'Ward was one of a few Chevrolet drivers caught out by the timing of a late caution last Sunday at Iowa Speedway, leaving them to take the wave around and fall out of contention for the last stint. But in Toronto, the Mexican driver caught every timely yellow and rode them to an unexpected win from 10th. So it goes in IndyCar. Loser: The shoe goes on the other foot for Palou, Ganassi Alex Palou, Chip Ganassi Racing On the opposite end of the spectrum was Alex Palou. One week after he snagged a victory at the expense of David Malukas and Josef Newgarden, Palou found himself on the wrong strategy in Toronto. A decision to start on primaries and push the first stint long paid costly for himself, Scott Dixon and Malukas. Palou led a race-high 37 laps, but wound up 12th at race's end. Malukas and Dixon cycled out ahead of him to salvage ninth and 10th. They were all disappointing results. And at least on Palou's side, he had no one to blame but himself. 'I chose the strategy, so there's what we did wrong today,' Palou said. 'I was pushing for that strategy. I thought it was going to give us the best opportunity to win.' Not this time. Winner: Everyone that didn't get caught up in carnage Will Power, Team Penske If your favorite driver made it to the checkered flag on Sunday and did so without a trip to the wall or broken wing along the way, they probably netted out alright. Only 16 drivers finished Sunday's race on the lad lap. Seven were lost to after crashes, with three others multiple laps down after contact ruined their runs. It was an attrition-filled race, particularly in the opening half. Related: See how crashes and on-track incidents defined the 2025 Toronto Indy Of those that made it to the end, many still endured contact along the way. Kyle Kirkwood was spun on pit road and rallied to sixth. Marcus Armstrong endured a penalty for causing the contact and quietly slotted 14th. Will Power ended up against the outside wall at one point, but came home a respectable 11th. Just reaching the finish was enough for a salvageable result. Loser: Santino Ferrucci falls out in the warmup Santino Ferrucci, A. J. Foyt Enterprises It's been a good summer stretch for Santino Ferrucci. The Connecticut native has four top-fives, five finishes of eighth or better and had risen up into the top 10 in the series standings entering Toronto. But IndyCar's law of averages tends to catch up with everyone at some point. It was Ferrucci's turn on Sunday. The 27-year-old was rolling through turn 7 in the final minutes of the morning warmup session when his car snapped loose, sending him into the wall hard at corner exit before sliding into the tire barrier and runoff in turn 8. That proved to be a day-ender for Ferrucci's AJ Foyt Racing team. There wasn't enough time to repair his No. 14 Chevrolet, sending the controversial star out hours before the green flag. Winner: Two-stop strategy bears fruit for Veekay, Simpson Rinus Veekay, Dale Coyne Racing If you don't qualify at the front of an IndyCar field, it can be difficult to rise into contention. But with eventual race's like Sunday's comes opportunity for those willing to be different. Enter Rinus VeeKay and Kyffin Simpson. After qualifying ninth and 13th, the pair took advantage of the early cautions and stretched their alternates for 13 (Veekay) and 16 (Simpson) laps. That put the duo on a two-stop strategy, which they executed to perfection to score a pair of unexpected podiums in second and third. Creativity rewarded. Loser: Team Penske's turmoil continues in Toronto Josef Newgarden, Team Penske This week in Team Penske trauma, we saw a new twist on the organization's seemingly endless string of crashes, mistakes and general poor luck. Scott McLaughlin had pitted to get off the quickly-degrading alternate tires at the end of lap 2 and was getting his first primary set up to temp when he lost a wheel, sending him out of the race in 26th. Josef Newgarden avoid incidents during the opening stint, but wound up crashed when a slowed Jacob Abel made contact with Louis Foster and checked up into - and then on top off - his No. 2 Chevrolet on a lap 37 restart. That ended his day in 24th. Will Power, Team Penske Will Power continued on, surviving an early run-in with Christian Rasmussen. But he got the worst of a mid-race battle with winner O'Ward and wound up having to back up off the wall before rallying to a serviceable result. Loser: Ed Carpenter Racing's very bad, no good weekend Alexander Rossi, Ed Carpenter Racing The good news is that Ed Carpenter Racing announced Tuesday that it's building a new headquarters in Westfield, Indiana. The bad news? Pretty much everything else that played out for the team this week. ECR's promising duo had a weekend to forget in Toronto. Christian Rasmussen qualified 22nd and fell out of contention with a broken front wing after contact with Will Power early on. Alexander Rossi started behind him in 24th and fell out after 29 laps when he hit a jut in the outside wall and destroyed his car's right-rear. Winner: Another good day for Prema Racing Callum Ilott, Prema Racing IndyCar's promising newcomer is making a habit of this at this rate. On another challenging weekend, Callum Ilott and the No. 90 team made the Fast 12, qualified 11th - even with poor timing keeping Ilott from completing a full lap at pace - and then put together a complete race to finish a respectable Shwartzman was less fortunate, ending up mid-pack in 16th on a similar primary tire strategy to Palou and co. But in the end Prema saw both cars survive, finish on the lead lap and end the weekend better than they started. This season's all about growth for a rookie team. Results like this are exactly what it needs. Loser: The pace car runs out of juice Street circuit races are known for their attrition - but it doesn't usually include the pace after Rossi's race-ending shunt in the race's opening half, race officials had to change pace cars after the field-leader pulled off to the side with a sudden loss of power. Embarrassing? Sure. But the impact was thankfully minimal. And it could always have been worse (see above)… Read Also: See how crashes and on-track incidents defined the 2025 Toronto Indy Pato O'Ward, Arrow McLaren score strategic win in Indy Toronto Kyffin Simpson rides two-stop strategy to breakthrough first IndyCar podium Ed Carpenter Racing announces new Westfield headquarters, set to open in 2027 To read more articles visit our website.


Fox Sports
8 hours ago
- Fox Sports
Despite Season Struggles, Power to 'Keep Pushing' in Contract Year
INDYCAR Will Power enters Sunday's Java House Grand Prix of Monterey ranked ninth in points, but the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season has been anything but smooth. Team Penske remains winless through the first 13 races of the year, its longest drought to start a season since 1973 when Gary Bettenhausen finally broke through in the 15th race of a 16-race campaign at Texas World Speedway. Team Penske has also gone winless in only four complete seasons: 1976, 1996, 1998, and 1999. Scott McLaughlin delivered the team's most recent victory -- 15 races ago -- at last year's Milwaukee Mile doubleheader. He is 13th in the standings, while teammate Josef Newgarden is 16th. At this point last season, the trio of Power, McLaughlin, and Newgarden had combined for six wins. They totaled just five finishes of 20th or worse in all of 2024. This year? They've already logged 16 with the most DNFs in a single season since 2000. Power, a Team Penske mainstay since 2009 and one of the team's most decorated drivers, finds himself in a particularly difficult spot, with no contract extension yet signed. 'Can you believe the year I'm having, in a contract year?' Power said. Power's 2025 campaign began with a crash on the opening lap of the season opener in St. Petersburg, relegating him to a 26th-place finish. In June, he crashed out of the lead at World Wide Technology Raceway and in July, consecutive race weekend engine failures at Mid-Ohio and the second Iowa race saw him finish 26th and 24th, respectively. 'Two engine failures in two race weekends,' Power said. 'Just one of those things. Not bad luck. It just happens at times.' Amid the struggles, speculation around Power's future has intensified, especially after David Malukas scored a runner-up finish in the 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. The 23-year-old drives the No. 4 Clarience Technologies Chevrolet for AJ Foyt Racing, which has a technical alliance with Team Penske. Malukas downplayed the rumors entering the doubleheader weekend at Iowa Speedway. "No matter the rumors or no rumors, I think everybody is trying to strive to always live in the present instead of stressing about the past and the future,' Malukas said. 'I've had a mental coach training me to always stay and live in the present, and as of right now, I'm with the AJ Foyt team, and we're focused on our successes and what we've accomplished so far this season.' Adding to the turbulence, Team Penske underwent a major midseason leadership shakeup. On July 4, Jonathan Diuguid was named president of Penske Racing, with longtime sports car program leader Travis Law appointed competition director. The promotions followed the release of three longtime executives -- Team President Tim Cindric, Managing Director Ron Ruzewski and General Manager Kyle Moyer – being released by team owner Roger Penske in May in the aftermath of penalties incurred during Indy 500 qualifying to Power and Newgarden's cars. Despite the challenges, Power remains resolute in proving he belongs behind the wheel of the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet. Of his 44 career victories -- fourth-most in INDYCAR history -- 41 have come with Team Penske, the most of any driver in the team's storied history. That total includes the 2018 Indianapolis 500 win. He has 11 victories more than Team Penske legend Helio Castroneves. Power also leads all Team Penske drivers in road and street course wins (31), holds the all-time INDYCAR record for pole positions (71), ranks fourth in podiums (107) and is tied with Al Unser Jr. for fifth in top-five finishes (141). A two-time series champion, Power claimed the title in both 2014 and 2022. Perhaps the tide turns at this weekend's Java House Grand Prix of Monterey (3 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX Sports app and INDYCAR Radio Network). Team Penske has a strong recent record at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, with three top-three finishes over the past three years. Power has shown consistency at the California road course, recording three top-four finishes in his last five starts. He finished seventh last year and has three top-six finishes in five natural road course starts this season. Next is Portland International Raceway on Sunday, Aug. 10, where Power claimed victory last year and finished runner-up in 2022. Following that, the series heads to Milwaukee Mile (Aug. 24), a track where Power won in 2014 and recorded three podium finishes in his last five starts on the historic oval. Nashville Superspeedway ends the season on Sunday, Aug. 31. 'Just keep pushing,' Power said. 'Still got (four) races to get great results. I've had great cars everywhere -- we're quick. (I) can only smile about it, because I've been in the sport a long time. I know these sorts of things come around. It's very typical of life that a bad year plays out when you're trying to get a contract. 'I love it here. I do. I really hope I'm back next year.' recommended Item 1 of 2