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Favorites and Sleepers: Road America

Favorites and Sleepers: Road America

Fox Sports20-06-2025
INDYCAR
Winning nine of the 10 races since the NTT INDYCAR SERIES returned to Road America in 2016, Chip Ganassi Racing and Team Penske are the organizations to beat.
Alexander Rossi's win for Andretti Global in 2019 is the lone exception.
CGR boasts five wins in that span, including four victories in the last six tries. Also, CGR driver Alex Palou is 3-for-3 on natural terrain road courses this season with victories at The Thermal Club, Barber Motorsports Park and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.
Team Penske has four wins at Road America since 2016, including a sweep of the podium last season with Will Power, Josef Newgarden and Scott McLaughlin finishing first, second and third, respectively.
Can anyone new join the fray for Sunday's 55-lap XPEL Grand Prix at Road America Presented by AMR? Live coverage starts at 1:30 p.m. ET on FOX, FOX Deportes, FOX Sports app and the INDYCAR Radio Network.
Favorites
Josef Newgarden (No. 2 PPG Team Penske Chevrolet)
Newgarden has six top-three finishes in his last nine Road America tries. He led 32 laps but suffered a mechanical failure while leading on a late-race restart in 2021. He led 26 laps in his 2022 win and finished runner-up the last two years.
Scott McLaughlin (No. 3 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet)
He's 0-for-4 at Road America but has finishes of 14th, seventh, eighth and third, respectively. McLaughlin led 18 laps last year. Over his last 16 natural road course starts, McLaughlin has five podiums, six top-five finishes and 11 top 10's.
Pato O'Ward (No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet)
O'Ward has five top-10 finishes in his last six Road America starts, including a third-place finish after qualifying second in 2023. He finished runner-up to Palou at The Thermal Club and on the IMS road course. O'Ward also has three podium finishes in the last four races this season.
Alex Palou (No. 10 Solo Cup Chip Ganassi Racing Honda)
Palou is undefeated on natural road courses this season and has a pair of wins in his last four Road America starts. He finished fourth last year.
Will Power (No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet)
Power had four top-five finishes at Road America, including a 2016 win and a pair of runner-up results, in a five-year span. He's had two over the last five, including a 2024 victory. Power finished sixth at The Thermal Club this spring, fifth at Barber Motorsports Park and third on the IMS road course.
Sleepers
Christian Lundgaard (No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet)
In three Road America starts, Lundgaard finished 10th in 2022, seventh in 2023 and 11th last year. In his first season driving with Arrow McLaren, Lundgaard has been strong on natural road courses by finishing third at The Thermal Club, second at Barber Motorsports Park and 16th on the IMS road course.
Colton Herta (No. 26 Gainbridge Honda)
The Andretti Global driver led 33 laps from the pole in 2023 at Road America. If not for the decision to pit a lap too soon, Herta was well on his way to a victory. Instead, he finished second. Herta has seven top-eight finishes in as many Road America starts, including five of the last six ending in the top five. Also, since the start of last season, Herta has eight top-eight finishes in nine natural road course starts. The outlier was a 25th-place finish in this year's Sonsio Grand Prix on the IMS road course.
Kyle Kirkwood (No. 27 Siemens Honda)
Can he score the season hat trick of wins on a street circuit, oval and road course? Kirkwood has improved all three opportunities at Road America, going from 20th as a rookie for AJ Foyt Racing in 2022, to ninth and fifth, respectively, the last two seasons with Andretti Global. Kirkwood also finished eighth in The Thermal Club this season, 11th at Barber and eighth on the IMS road course, leading to nine consecutive top-11 finishes on natural road courses.
Marcus Ericsson (No. 28 Fresh Connect Central Honda)
Ericsson boasts six consecutive top-10 finishes at Road America, including results of fourth, sixth, second, sixth and ninth, respectively, in his last five starts in Wisconsin. Ericsson has four top-10 finishes in his last seven natural road course starts overall.
Marcus Armstrong (No. 66 SiriusXM/Root Insurance Honda)
Road America was the site of Armstrong's breakout performance in 2023. He had a top-five car, leading five laps, before going off track late in the race. He qualified third last year, but a mechanical failure relegated him to 26th. Armstrong was seventh at The Thermal Club, 17th at Barber and seventh on the IMS road course. He also has three top-10 finishes in the last four races this season.
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Buckle up, IndyCar's silly season revolves around wily veteran Will Power. What we're hearing
Buckle up, IndyCar's silly season revolves around wily veteran Will Power. What we're hearing

Indianapolis Star

time4 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

Buckle up, IndyCar's silly season revolves around wily veteran Will Power. What we're hearing

With the IndyCar season just past the halfway point and the paddock converging on Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course this weekend, long famous for playing host to endless amounts of closed-door conversations about drivers' and teams' future, we've entered that special time of the summer that at times can force on-track intrigue to take a back seat. It's officially silly season. Just how silly will this year's edition be? A couple billionaires hold those cards, as they decide the futures of a modern-day IndyCar legend, a one-time Formula 1 hopeful and an ex-F1 driver in the midst of his toughest two seasons in the series since he joined in 2019. Ultimately, the summer of 2025 in IndyCar could ultimately be remembered as the one where so many teams, big and small, successful and less so largely stayed pat, with almost no driver changes of outsized consequence, beyond the ones that always linger into November, December, January and sometimes even February. Because as you look around the paddock, among the teams whose lineups are not without a shadow of a doubt locked down for 2026, who — when you consider the market of drivers on the outside looking in and the funding they may offer vs. the funding needs of teams on the market — would you really argue would be in their best interest to tear up their plans and start over? Compared to last year's sea-change — 14 of the current crop of 27 full-time drivers find themselves in different seats or situations than what they began 2024 — there's real chances the market stays abnormally unchanged headed to 2026. Or, like we saw in 2023, when Alex Palou surprised the paddock and stayed at Chip Ganassi Racing, ultimately influencing in some way Marcus Ericsson's switch to Andretti Global to replace Romain Grosjean, Felix Rosenqvist's leap to Meyer Shank Racing, David Malukas' slide over to Arrow McLaren and Callum Ilott's exit at Juncos Hollinger Racing for Grosjean, among others, the next eight weeks could soon be turned into an expensive, unpredictable game of musical chairs. Here's where the market stands, what decisions will ultimately set free agency into motion, what teams will, could and won't be players and what drivers will be in play. Not since Team Penske's swap of Josef Newgarden for Juan Pablo Montoya at the end of 2016 has IndyCar's winningest team been in a position to decide upon a true driver-for-driver move among its full-season lineup. Since then, the team has scaled back to three full-time cars after 2017, with Helio Castroneves switching to Indy 500-only and a Penske sportscar ride, and it ballooned up to four to accommodate then-rookie Scott McLaughlin for the 2021 campaign before losing Simon Pagenaud at the end of that year and switching back to three full-timers. But with the installation of IndyCar's charter system this year, three full-time cars is the limit, preventing Penske from sizing up as it finds itself with both a championship-caliber driver in Will Power — who spent the back half of last year second in points before a seatbelt failure in the finale dropped him to fourth and leads the team in points seventh, hampered by a largely rough last month almost entirely free of his own doing — out of a contract after this year, as well as Malukas that the team has aligned itself with through Penske's technical alliance with A.J. Foyt Racing. So what is one to do? Penske Corp. president Bud Denker told RACER last month the team expects to have its lineup for next year settled by the end of July, if not before. And that has the rest of the paddock prepared to hold serve until then. 'I think (Will's) going to be the first domino to fall, and everything else will happen after, so we'll see,' Dale Coyne Racing driver Rinus VeeKay — himself considered by many to be one of the top free agent targets — told IndyStar. 'For me, it doesn't feel like any silly season has been happening yet. 'It doesn't feel like a lot of spaces are opening up. The biggest one that might is Penske, and no one's totally sure if they have a seat (open) or not. We'll see. I'm just going to wait until I have some interest lined up and see what's best for my long-term career plans.' 'I'm very good at it': Will Power has unshaken confidence in contract year with Team Penske Power told IndyStar he still felt a sense of urgency to win, saying he didn't feel his place in the standings above his teammates — a spot he holds, held for most of last year and finished with in 2022 as the series champ — holds enough weight to solidify a future in the No. 12 Chevy. The argument for Penske to hold serve with Power is strong. No driver in the paddock won more races a year ago or logged more podiums than him. Only points leader Palou has logged more top-6 finishes this year, and only two other drivers (Kyle Kirkwood, second, and Pato O'Ward, third) have as many in what has proven to be a bit of a zany season. Outside the Lap 1 crash at St. Pete of his own doing, his poor Indy 500 finish can be attributed in part to the team's qualifying penalties for modified attenuators, and he's since had a tire blow from pole at WWTR that ended his race in last place and found himself on the wrong strategy at Road America and finishing 14th. And though the formal arrangement hasn't been confirmed, A.J. Foyt Racing team president Larry Foyt referenced to IndyStar last month some sort of connection between Team Penske and Malukas, one that has many in the paddock certain he's been tabbed as Power's heir apparent. Such a connection would mean that unless it's a promotion to Team Penske, Malukas isn't going anywhere else for 2026; there's no reason to rush to elevate the 23-year-old who finished runner up in the Indy 500 and qualified on the front row at Detroit and led dozens of laps at WWTR, but who only has two total top 10s in 2025 — opportunities for those at Detroit and WWTR lost due to self-inflicted mistakes. But is Penske only willing to offer a one-year deal, or perhaps a one-year deal with a team option tacked onto the end of it, having handed Power two-year deals in 2021 and 2023? And perhaps more importantly, is Penske's winningest IndyCar driver in team history and someone who at 44 years old still feels he's at the top of his game, willing to take that after the 17 years the sides have spent together? Should Penske and Power find a solution to stay together that both are happy with, all a sudden two of the top 3 open rides in the series can be taken off the board, but if there's not common ground to be found and Power and Malukas do anything other than a seat swap — made difficult not only by Power's higher salary but the lack of funding he brings to the table after Penske has helped make ends meet in some way this year on the No. 4 Chevy of Malukas — all of a sudden the flood gates could open. Unfortunate for him, Power lacks another option in a championship-caliber ride to use as a bargaining chip against his longtime boss. He very well could end up with a take-it-or-leave-it offer, the kind Penske is known for within the paddock, and the ball could be in Power's court on what he thinks he's worth and how he wants the final years of his IndyCar career to play out. This is another one of those team situations that could prove incredibly simple, but the ways in which this Andretti Global lineup could look very different come 2026 can't be overlooked. At the top, though, it needs to be said: All three of the team's drivers — Colton Herta, Kirkwood and Ericsson — are signed through at least the end of 2026. That fact is most important when it comes to looking at the future of the No. 28 of Ericsson, who finds himself in a rut unlike the 2022 Indy 500 winner has experienced in his IndyCar career. Coming to Mid-Ohio, a track where he's finished in the top 6 four of his last five starts, the veteran Swedish driver sits 21st in the championship just past the halfway point. No longer 'street-course merchant': Kyle Kirkwood 'in the zone' and serious IndyCar contender We won't go through a race-by-race autopsy of his second season at Andretti Global, one that followed a 15th-place points finish a year ago, but needless to say the 34-year-old has again seen more than his share of bad luck while also not matching the pace and execution of his teammates nearly often enough. Had his team not fitted Ericsson's No. 28 Honda with an illegally manufactured part that was caught in post-race technical inspection at the 500, he'd have 36 more points (presuming it wasn't something that so drastically changed his performance in a race that was run so much sitting biding one's time in a pack and avoiding trouble). 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Now, Ericsson might find himself making a Fast Six appearance Saturday as he did a year ago, and he might find some rhythm on the short ovals that have been his strong suit in his career, and maybe he similarly shines at Toronto in a which similar to his two teammates a year ago, and all these behind-the-scenes whispers about the potential of Andretti Global to cut ties with a driver with a year left on his contract could become a moot point in two months. And maybe, too, TWG Motorsports CEO Dan Towriss and Andretti Global president Jill Gregory ultimately decide they don't want to be seen as a program that would leave a driver hanging when the results and the point standings don't tell close to the full story. But in racing, it's the type of move you can't rule out. 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Last year's IndyCar title runner-up told reporters early this year that any offer to jump into one of the two expansion F1 seats at Cadillac — a team TWG Motorsports, the parent company of Andretti Global, co-owns and runs with General Motors — for 2026 would be a decision he wouldn't take lightly and not an automatic slam dunk. It's also not guaranteed he'd even qualify, sitting 10th in the championship and needing to make up a 47-point gap to fourth place before the season's end to land a license, something that unless he rattles off several wins here soon is unlikely to be decided until the season finale Aug. 31. Towriss and Gregory, among others in the TWG Motorsports camp, will be at Silverstone this weekend for the British Grand Prix to engage in substantive talks with drivers up for Cadillac F1's seats for next year, with reports in the paddock stating the team wishes to shore up one seat in the coming weeks with the other potentially taking until September to iron out — a timeline that could allow for Herta to remain in the mix. Under consideration for any potential changes to Andretti Global's 2026 IndyCar lineup are a front-running tandem of Indy NXT drivers in the team's stable — rookies Dennis Hauger and Lochie Hughes — who've combined to win six of the seven races this year and all seven poles. The former, in particular, with his four wins in five starts to kick off the year, has wowed the paddock and without a doubt looks ready to make waves in IndyCar after three seasons in F2. Four years ago, Michael Andretti lacked a ride for Kirkwood to slot into after his 2021 Indy Lights championship but signed the young American driver to a deal for the following year and made sure not to lose the homegrown talent. On the warmup broadcast at Road America, Towriss insinuated that such an arrangement could be in the cards for Hauger and Hughes, if not a full-blown Andretti IndyCar seat. '(Road America polesitter) Louis Foster is a product of our system, and it makes me look at Dennis a different way. We're celebrating his success, but I don't want to create a monster that we have to compete with next year, so we've got to find a way to keep these guys in our system,' Towriss said. Dan Towriss: F1 talks 'got very political', in part leading to Michael Andretti stepping down In particular, it would seem to make Ericsson's seat all the hotter, knowing the team has a driver it feels it can't afford to lose but no seat for him at the moment, but it could also make for a rather turn-key option to replace Herta if he were to go off to F1. Andretti, too, could make for a left-field option for Power, though such a move, knowing it's one solely for the short term when there appear to be viable long-term options on the market, that would be a bit surprising. 'I think we're very blessed with the driver lineup we have right now in IndyCar,' Gregory told IndyStar, noting that the team 'doesn't have to worry about silly season,' despite the obvious potential storylines at play. '(Andretti Global COO) Rob (Edwards), myself, Dan, we want to keep our three guys we have focused on keeping the momentum we have going into the rest of 2025 and not worrying about anything else, as we look at this great crop of young talent and think on 'How do we cultivate that and find ways to make sure they get opportunities they need?' 'I feel like we're in a pretty good position.' Together, that all seems to offer up at least reasonable chances for some real paddock-altering driver moves in the coming weeks – and yet, the situations outside Team Penske and Andretti Global offer a contrasting picture. Here's where they stand: Chip Ganassi Racing: I've been told definitively there's no reason to expect any changes to a lineup of Kyffin Simpson and his two teammates that by the end of the year may hold 10 titles between themselves: Scott Dixon and Palou. Arrow McLaren: Though first-time full-season driver Nolan Siegel sits 20th in points with just three top 10s to show for his 21 IndyCar starts, team principal Tony Kanaan is adamant the 20-year-old deserves more time to try and find his footing. 'I actually said when we signed him that no matter what, we needed to develop him. 'This kid can have two horrible years.' We're not changing anything. We're here to help,' Kanaan told IndyStar of his support and belief in Siegel, alongside his two teammates who're both under contract beyond this year. Though some had pegged it for a possible Power destination, Kanaan has said definitively there's a 0% chance Arrow McLaren is in the market to sign the two-time champ. How Nolan Siegel became rising star: He broke both wrists, then 'kicked everyone's a--' Meyer Shank Racing: Outside the open seat at Penske and potentially open one at Foyt, MSR offers one of the three most-coveted rides in the sport. As things stand, Marcus Armstrong, the third-year driver in his second full-time season in the sport and his first with MSR, sits 11th points in the midst of three consecutive top 10s and four in his last five starts. The 24-year-old, who's contracted to Chip Ganassi Racing and presently on loan to MSR, ranks eighth in the paddock in average qualifying performance. 'We're in the process of working on that,' Shank told IndyStar when asked about the team's progress in securing Armstrong beyond this year. 'It's one of those things where it's not up to me, is it?' Armstrong said of his future: 'It's my job to drive the car fast, and at the end of the day, if they like me, they'll keep me, and if they don't they won't.' This, too, would seem to represent fallback options for either Power or Ericsson, but doing so at the expense of losing one of the sport's young, fast, up-and-coming talents would seem a risky roll-of-the-dice. Andretti placing Hauger there for a year, only to snag him right back would seem like something CGR might not be too fond of as MSR's technical partner, given the likely displeasure with knowing a driver's about to run to perhaps your fiercest competitor with some level of knowledge of how you operate. And as promising as VeeKay looks, is he unquestionably better than what you have in Armstrong? I'd argue not. Ed Carpenter Racing: Both veteran Alexander Rossi and first-year full-time driver Christian Rasmussen are signed to multi-year deals, team co-owner Ed Carpenter told IndyStar last month, adding that, 'We haven't had discussions on anything different' regarding next year's lineup. With both drivers inside the top 15 in points and ironically sandwiching ex-ECR driver VeeKay in points, Carpenter says he sees a raised floor in the team and a lengthy runway for improvement in various projects the team has on the docket for the short and medium term. Notably, Rasmussen secured ECR's first podium in three years last month at WWTR. A.J. Foyt Racing: Outside the team's situation with Malukas, it's also on a multi-year deal with Santino Ferrucci, who after a slow start to the year with a new engineer, has rattled off four consecutive top 5s, including the second and third podiums of his career. He sits ninth in points, the spot he finished a year ago in a career year. Of note, his No. 14 car has for several years featured primary sponsorship from Sexton Properties stemming from the strong personal relationship that Marlyne Sexton has long had with AJ and the team. Her death last month leaves some understandable question marks as to the future of that backing. Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing: Though the team finds its two youngest drivers mired down in 23rd and 25th in points at the season's halfway point, new team president Jay Frye told IndyStar he believes the team is 'solid' with its present lineup and wants to cultivate some consistency into 2026 after hiring Foster and Devlin DeFrancesco, who at 25 has less than three seasons under his belt and was out of the series in 2024, last offseason. Both have shown signs of pace and promise both in races and qualifying. DeFrancesco, too, comes with a notable amount of funding that's rare in the sport at the moment and something pivotal to a team like RLL who's done a lot of hiring and needs to pursue various offseason projects in search of more consistency. Prema Racing: Ilott told IndyStar that he's signed to IndyCar's newest team well beyond the end of this year and said he's confident in the recent direction of the team's pace and overall progress. Series rookie and Indy 500 polesitter Robert Shwartzman, on the other hand, said 'nothing is for sure' regarding his future, though he expressed his desire to remain. 'We're working together trying to do our best to develop the team and the car, what's going to be next, we don't know,' he told IndyStar. 'I came here to IndyCar to do my best and show myself and show strong performances and show everybody that I'm a fighter. I came here to win and not just run around. That's my mentality, so whether that's going to be with Prema next year, which would be good, or somebody else, I don't know.' Team CEO Piers Phillips was rather coy to IndyStar when asked about Ilott's certainty and Shwartzman's lack of it but noted that 'it's all about continuity' and that the team 'is very happy with both of them and the job they're doing at the moment.' 'Just a passenger hitting the wall': Robert Shwartzman's Indy 500 fairly tale ends Juncos Hollinger Racing: With Sting Ray Robb signed to a multi-year deal as the highest-funded driver in the paddock, the team's focus this time of year shifts to Conor Daly, who's managed to deliver some funding for 2025 but still leaves some holes for the team, meaning team co-owner Brad Hollinger, to backfill. JHR is in a better place financially than previous years, but Hollinger continues to search for team partners. In 14 starts with JHR dating back to last year, Daly has logged four top 10s and twice this year has appeared to be the car to beat on ovals. He would seem to represent a more than worthy rehire for 2026, but until the team's funding holes are remedied, there's reason why Daly has said publicly he often feels he's racing one weekend at a time. Dale Coyne Racing: This is a tough team to get a grasp on for next year, between its funded driver that only once that has finished inside the top 20 this year and its veteran driver with five top 10s and two mechanical failure DNFs that should've led to two more. Though VeeKay would seem deserving of a jump to a higher caliber team for next year, such a destination doesn't appear to be clear cut. Staying with DCR is something he's considering, he told IndyStar noting that he's 'having a lot of fun' and said he hasn't enjoyed racing on a short oval as much as he did at WWTR in three years with legendary engineer Michael Cannon on his stand.

What is the start time for the IndyCar race Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio?
What is the start time for the IndyCar race Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio?

Indianapolis Star

time5 hours ago

  • Indianapolis Star

What is the start time for the IndyCar race Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio?

The IndyCar Series heads to the Ohio countryside when it competes at Mid-Ohio's 13-turn, 2.26-mile road course for a 90-lap race. Push-to-pass: Drivers have 200 total seconds, in increments of up to 20 seconds. Tire allotment: Five sets primary (hard/black sidewall) and five sets alternate for the weekend. Rookie drivers are allowed one additional set of primary tires. Teams must use one set of primary and one set of alternate tires unless wet conditions are declared. Nathan Brown is your best IndyCar follow, and keep up with coverage throughout the season with IndyStar's motorsports newsletter. Alex Palou has won six races and Kyle Kirkwood three. Palou's points lead is almost two full races of max points. Pato O'Ward edged Alex Palou at the finish line, swapping their starting positions. Scott McLaughlin completed the podium after starting 7th. From Nathan Brown, IndyStar We're in the back half of a 17-race season, and Palou and Kirkwood are the only drivers to take checkered flags. Is anyone besides Alex Palou or Kyle Kirkwood allowed to win a race? If so, who? Marcus Ericsson. Of all the drivers in the field sorely in need of a pick-me-up, the fact that Ericsson sits 21st in points just a single top-10 is one of the year's biggest headscratchers. And yet, he heads to a track where he's finished in the top 6 in 4 of his last 5 starts, and where he started and finished 5th a year ago. He's finished on the podium here before (2021, runner-up), and this is a track where Andretti Global has shown speed in years past. Who will have a surprising qualifying effort? Colton Herta snags his second pole of the year at a track where he's started on pole twice before and also qualified on the front two rows in each of his last five starts. Let's give away the full Fast 6: Herta's Andretti teammate Kyle Kirkwood, Arrow McLaren teammates Pato O'Ward and Christian Lundgaard, and Alex Palou and Scott McLaughlin. Ericsson narrowly misses out, and Team Penske teammates Will Power and Josef Newgarden make stunning in Round 1. What is something no one sees coming? Amazingly, we finally get our third winner of the year, as Herta capitalizes from pole. He has only done that in two of his last 10 pole starts. It will be his 10th career victory and Andretti Global's fourth of the year, its most since 2018. (All times ET; all IndyCar sessions are on IndyCar Live, IndyCar Radio and Sirius XM Channel 218) 3:05-3:50 p.m.: Indy NXT practice, FS2 4:35-5:55 p.m.: Indy NXT practice, FS2 4:30-6 p.m.: IndyCar practice, FS2 8:35--9:20 a.m.: Indy NXT practice, FS1 10:35 a.m.-11:35 a.m.: IndyCar practice, FS1 1:30-2 p.m.: Indy NXT qualifying, FS1 2:30-4 p.m.: IndyCar qualifying, FS1 9:30-10 a.m.: IndyCar warmup, FS1 10:30-11:30 a.m.: Indy NXT race, FS1 1 p.m.: IndyCar race, Fox TV: Coverage begins at 1 p.m. ET, Sunday, June 22, 2025, on Fox. Green flag is scheduled for 1:22 p.m. Will Buxton is the play-by-play voice, with analysts James Hinchcliffe and Townsend Bell. Kevin Lee and Jack Harvey are the pit reporters. Fox Sports app. Watch free with a Fubo trial IndyCar Nation is on SiriusXM Channel 218, IndyCar Live and the IndyCar Radio Network (check affiliates for each race) Friday: Sunny skies and temperatures in the mid 80s. Saturday: Sunny skies and temperatures in the upper 80s. Sunday: Sunny skies and temperatures in the upper 80s. The 2025 IndyCar Series schedule includes 17 races, all televised on Fox. (Times are ET; %-downtown street course, &-road course, *-oval) March 2, St. Petersburg, Florida % (Winner: Alex Palou) March 23, Thermal, California & (Winner: Alex Palou) April 13, Long Beach, California % (Winner: Kyle Kirkwood) May 4, Birmingham, Alabama & (Winner: Alex Palou) May 10, Indianapolis & (Winner: Alex Palou) May 25, Indianapolis 500 * (Winner: Alex Palou) June 1, Detroit % (Winner: Kyle Kirkwood) June 15, St. Louis * (Winner: Kyle Kirkwood) June 22, Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin & (Winner: Alex Palou) July 6, Lexington, Ohio &, 1 p.m. July 12, Newton, Iowa *, 5 p.m. July 13, Newton, Iowa *, 1 p.m. July 20, Toronto %, noon July 27, Monterey, California &, 3 p.m. Aug. 10, Portland &, 3 p.m. Aug. 24, Milwaukee *, 2 p.m. Aug. 31, Nashville *, 2:30 p.m. (Team and drivers; *-Indianapolis 500 only)

FOX Sports Sponsors 2022 Indy 500 Winner Marcus Ericsson At Mid-Ohio
FOX Sports Sponsors 2022 Indy 500 Winner Marcus Ericsson At Mid-Ohio

Forbes

time11 hours ago

  • Forbes

FOX Sports Sponsors 2022 Indy 500 Winner Marcus Ericsson At Mid-Ohio

Marcus Ericsson's FOX Sports Indy car. FOX Sports has been an active and aggressive promoter of the NTT IndyCar Series as its new television partner beginning this season. The network will become a car sponsor in this weekend's Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio. Andretti Global, the IndyCar team team under the TWG Motorsports umbrella, announced on July 3 that Andretti IndyCar driver Marcus Ericsson will run a special FOX Sports livery on his No. 28 Honda this weekend at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. In honor of a strong first half of the NTT IndyCar Series season on FOX, Andretti Global has partnered with FOX Sports to debut a special livery at the Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio. 'FOX Sports is thrilled to be on board the No. 28 FOX IndyCar Honda with Marcus Ericsson this weekend at Mid-Ohio to continue to bring our IndyCar partnership to life,' said Drew Panaro, Vice President of Sports Brand Partnerships, FOX Sports. 'FOX has built an exceptional sponsorship marketing relationship with Andretti Global in our inaugural season of IndyCar coverage, and we owe a special thanks to Jill Gregory and Doug Bresnahan for the opportunity to further ingrain FOX Sports as the destination for the 'fastest racing on earth.'' Cleatus having fun with the fans. (Photo by FOX Image Collection via Getty Images) The No. 28 FOX IndyCar Honda, inspired by FOX Sports' iconic football-playing robot Cleatus, a staple of FOX Sports' broadcasts since its debut in the 2005-2006 FOX NFL season, will showcase the bold, futuristic look of the larger-than-life fan favorite mascot. Cleatus will also join the Andretti IndyCar team as a special guest during the race weekend. 'FOX Sports has already proven to be a fantastic broadcast partner for the NTT IndyCar Series throughout the first half of their debut season, and we are proud to showcase that relationship in a unique way with the FOX Sports livery for Marcus this weekend in Mid-Ohio,' said Jill Gregory, President, Andretti Global. FOX Sports Delivers Ratings Increase IndyCar's debut season on FOX is off to an impressive start, with the season opener on the Streets of St. Petersburg drawing 1.4 million viewers, a 14-year high and 45 percent increase over 2024. The momentum continued with the 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500, which delivered more than seven million viewers, up 41 percent from last year, making it the most-watched Indy 500 in 17 years. Andretti IndyCar has claimed three wins this season (Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, the Detroit Grand Prix and the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 at World Wide Technology Raceway), all at races where viewership was up 75 percent or more. The No. 28 FOX IndyCar Honda will take to the track for the first time in the FOX Sports livery in opening practice on Friday, July 4, with the holiday weekend race airing live on FOX at 1 p.m. ET on Sunday, July 6.

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