Rahal sees progress in 500 bid after ’23 failure
INDIANAPOLIS – Nearly a year removed from perhaps the saddest day of his racing career, Graham Rahal walked into the Indianapolis Motor Speedway with a bit of perspective. It wasn’t so much that failing to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 for the first time in his 17-year career was unexpected – it’s that after a painfully slow 500 Open Test last April, combined with a few head-scratching days of practice last May, Rahal could see the massive letdown coming.
And after a couple years of ringing the alarm bells regarding Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s performance during the Month of May, one of Rahal’s worst days in a race car finally helped bring about change.
Wednesday, he was happy to report the fruits of those changes at the Racing Capital of the World, even after running just 38 laps in damp, cool conditions more than five weeks away from qualifying.
“I can assure you that the feeling at the end of today, even after just five or six runs, versus where we were the first day of the spring test here (a year ago) is a very different vibe within the team,” Rahal said Wednesday in an end-of-day press conference at IMS for the 500 Open Test. “And I hope that that will stay positive as we go into May.”
Rahal said the problems last year were “things that I had said to the team for years.”
“It wasn’t that all a sudden, we were slow,” he said. “We had been getting slow – like, we were falling behind for the years prior. But last year not qualifying (for the 500) was a real show of, ‘Hey, we are really far behind, and we need to get serious about this in a hurry.’ It allowed the owners to dig in, because I don’t think many of the issues were things that they were, frankly, that aware of.”
Listening to the differences Rahal described from Wednesday in what was just over three hours of total green-flag running in what was supposed to be 13 hours of track time over two days is almost jarring – even to a novice on the engineering side.
“Traditionally, I would have to downshift in order to build speed down the straightaway, and today was the first time in a while that I’d start to see speed, and the RPMs would start to come up like the car was responding well to it,” he said. “And when I’d get a sniff of a tow today – even a car seven or eight seconds in front – the speed would pick up. Most drivers, they’re probably thinking, ‘Yeah, that’s obvious. That’s the way it is.’ But last year, that’s not the way an RLL car was. We would probably fall further behind.
“... The best thing to happen to this team was the worst thing to happen to this team, and that was me not qualifying (for the 500 last year). It clearly rings home for my dad and everybody else.’’