Austin American-Statesman

Marco joining Andretti Indy lore

- By Dan Gelston

Marco Andretti had already wagered a few bucks with teammate Alexander Rossi on the Super Bowl and then decided to up the ante. Andretti tweeted that if the Philadelph­ia Eagles beat the New England Patri- ots, he’d meet fans at his hometown’s downtown circle.

The Eagles won and Andretti stayed true to his word — he posed for a photo of Nazareth, Pennsylvan­ia, fans dressed in Carson Wentz jerseys and Eagles hoodies and index fingers raised in a No. 1 salute.

“I was surprised, a lot of people showed up,” Andretti said. “It was cool.”

His nerves steeled racing at speeds topping 230 mph, Andretti found some traffic he wasn’t willing to weave through: Thousands of Eagles fans getting rowdy at the Super Bowl parade. Andretti sat out the party where fans chugged stiffer drinks than milk.

“I’m not that crazy,” he said, smiling.

Who knows? Nazareth might throw its own bash should Andretti finally break through and win the Indianap- olis 500. Sitting on the roof- top deck of a Philadelph­ia restaurant just a few blocks off the parade route, Andretti could imagine following the Eagles into sports ultimate winner’s circle.

“A favorite? It’s me. That’s my favorite,” he said.

Andretti, a third-generation driver, starts his 13th Indy 500 driving for a team that knows of late how to win “The

test Spectacle in Racing.” Andretti Autosport won the Indy 500 in 2014 (Ryan Hunter-Reay), 2016 (Rossi) and 2017 (Takuma Sato) making the family wildly more successful at Indy in ownership than it was behind the wheel.

The 31-year-old Andretti believed the time was now to add his name to the list. He’s proud his teammates have had their image etched on the Borg-Warner Trophy and that his father, team owner Michael, has reaped the rewards of those wins and kissed the bricks. But if Andretti Autosport is going to win its third straight Indy 500, Marco is ready to past his teammates and that championsh­ip milk

“It’s a double-edged sw d, right? You’re thrilled tha the team won but it doesn’t really raise your stock,” Andretti said. “...We’re leading the Andretti Autosport train right now, so we’ve got to keep it that way.”

Michael Andretti has five wins overall as a team owner — all since his son’s debut in 2004.

“I feel happy for dad and for them in particular,” Marco said. “But no, it doesn’t feel good to me at all.”

The star-crossed family has fought the so-called Andretti Curse since grandfathe­r Mario Andretti won the 1969 Indy 500. Michael had it the worst, leading 431 laps without a win in 16 career starts. Marco is 0 for 12 with a runner-up finish in 2004 and four podium finishes. He was eighth last year.

Andretti starts 12th from the outside of Row 4 on Sunday in the No. 98 Honda for his dad and Bryan Herta. Andretti Autosport has Andretti, Rossi, Hunter-Reay, Carlos Munoz, Zach Veach and Stefan Wilson in the 33-car field.

Andretti has struggled to reach his father and grandfathe­r’s performanc­e in openwheel racing.

Andretti has only two career wins, none since 2011 and no podiums since 2015. He’s rarely out front (no laps led this season; 76 overall since 2014) but does have three top-10s in five races this season. ball’s men

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