Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Indy champ admits breach of contract

- JENNA FRYER

Two-time IndyCar champion Alex Palou concedes in court documents that he breached his contract with McLaren Racing when the Spaniard did an about-face and stayed at Chip Ganassi Racing.

The admission came in Palou’s response to a lawsuit filed against him by McLaren in September seeking to recoup at least $23 million in losses the team calculated Palou’s reversal cost the organizati­on. Palou’s 20-page response was filed in the High Court of Justice Business and Property Courts of England and Wales Commercial Court. The Associated Press reviewed the filing Monday.

In the response, Palou says he changed his mind about joining McLaren ahead of the 2024 season when he “lost trust and confidence that (McLaren) genuinely intended to support his ambition to race in the Formula One Series and decided to continue racing with CGR in the Indy Car Series instead.”

Palou “therefore admits that he renounced his contractua­l obligation­s” with McLaren and “the real issue between the parties is as to the quantum of any damages which the Defendants are liable to pay,” the documents say.

The spat over the 26-yearold between two IndyCar teams began when Palou initially disputed a Ganassi claim that the team had picked up the 2023 option year on his contract. McLaren in July 2022 said it had signed Palou and had him earmarked for an IndyCar

seat and a reserve driver role with its Formula One team. Chip Ganassi Racing said it had the contractua­l rights for Palou for the 2023 season.

Palou and Ganassi entered mediation and a resolution was reached a year ago in which Palou would drive for Ganassi in 2023 but was also McLaren’s reserve F1 driver when it did not interfere with IndyCar. He was able to participat­e in a practice session, tested for the F1 team both on track and in a simulator, and was the reserve driver for McLaren at F1’s Miami Grand Prix in May.

McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown was contacted Aug. 8 and told by attorneys for Palou that Palou would not be joining McLaren and had instead signed a three-year extension with Ganassi. Palou won the 2021 and 2023 championsh­ips with Ganassi and is now signed there through 2026.

IndyCar driver Pato O’Ward last week was named Palou’s replacemen­t as McLaren’s F1 reserve driver and participat­ed in a practice session during the season-ending race weekend in Abu Dhabi. O’Ward is a fulltime IndyCar driver for Arrow McLaren Racing.

The bulk of Palou’s response focuses on McLaren’s loss of revenue claims and attempts to mitigate what Palou will owe in damages.

The nearly $23 million in damages McLaren is seeking is broken down in future sponsorshi­p tied to Palou joining McLaren, the costs of using him as a reserve F1 driver, how much McLaren spent developing Palou for F1 and a $400,000 advance on his 2024 salary.

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