Rotorua Daily Post

Castroneve­s starts to get used to new team colour

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Three-time Indianapol­is 500 winner Helio Castroneve­s felt a little out of place yesterday at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

He wasn’t exactly sure where Meyer Shank Racing set up shop in Gasoline Alley and when he did arrive, the hot pink driver’s suit certainly looked bright. It’s something he’ll get used to by May.

First, though, the popular Brazilian has some real work to do — like getting a new team, a new car and a new routine.

“I need to run,” Castroneve­s said after Thursday’s abbreviate­d first test session on the historic 2.5-mile oval. “I don’t really care about the speed, that will come. But we still have to get the pedal position down and all of those sorts of things. We need to start running and we need to get in rhythm.”

He spent the past 21 seasons driving for Team Penske, though he had run primarily in sports cars the last four seasons. In August, he competed in his first 500 for Arrowmclar­en SP — his first Indy start in a non-penske car.

Now Castroneve­s has a six-race Indycar schedule as he tries to join AJ Foyt, Al Unser and Rick Mears as the only four-time winners of the 500.

“I hope we can connect,” Castroneve­s said. “Some things might not work because every team has its own style, its own way but at the end of the day everyone wants to get to the same place.” That would be victory lane.

But the priority for many drivers Thursday wasn’t speed. They just wanted to shake down the cars and figure out some of the new aerodynami­c pieces would impact the racing on Indycar’s fastest track. They may do more in the second test session Friday.

The higher boost push-to-pass levels that were tested by four drivers in March and drew complaints from all four were not used Thursday.

“Today’s a

very

interestin­g day,” said Larry Foyt, president of AJ Foyt Racing. “I think teams will be feeling out who’s doing what and when you come back in May you have to be able to unload well.”

Others, like Castroneve­s and Swiss driver Simona de Silvestro, were simply trying to get in sync with new teams.

The 32-year-old de Silvestro hopes to make her sixth career Indy start May 30 — her first since 2015. She was Indy’s rookie of the year honor in 2010 and now drives the No 16 Rocket Pro TPO Chevrolet for Paretta Autsoport, a female-dominant team owned by Beth Paretta.

And though Dutch driver Rinus Veekay’s early crash halted testing for about 15 minutes and rain cancelled the final 30 minutes of yesterday’s first group, it was a busy day — on and off the track.

Twenty-one drivers started turned including familiar names such as Brazil’s Tony Kanaan, Canada’s James Hinchcliff­e and Alexander Rossi of California. Two-time race winner Juan Pablo Montoya, of Colombia, did not make it onto the track initially because of the rain. But when the track dried, series officials extended the test hours and Montoya did turn laps.

It was a busy day away from the track, too.

Foyt’s team announced it hired JR Hildebrand, the 500 runner-up in 2011, to drive its fourth car in the race. Hildebrand will drive the No. 1 ABC Supply Chevrolet in a throwback paint scheme to the car Foyt drove to the first of his four victories in 1961.

Meanwhile, Chip Ganassi Racing unveiled the No 48 American Legion Honda that Kanaan will use for the two May races at Indy. The Indy Grand Prix is scheduled for May 15.

And by then, Castroneve­s may have a tailor-made accessory ready for fans.

“How about a T-shirt that says ‘It’s good to be pink,”’ Castroneve­s said. “You know I’ve been here before but this feels like a new day at school.”

 ?? PHOTO / AP ?? Helio Castroneve­s, of Brazil, talks with a crew member during testing at the Indianapol­is yesterday.
PHOTO / AP Helio Castroneve­s, of Brazil, talks with a crew member during testing at the Indianapol­is yesterday.

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