Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Newgarden aims for repeat in revitalize­d IndyCar circuit

- Jenna Fryer

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – IndyCar heads into the season with a new American champion, a new car and the same hopes for a momentum-building year.

Josef Newgarden arrives for the season-opening race this weekend on the streets of St. Petersburg as the reigning champion. He won the title in his first season with Team Penske, a breakout year in which the 27-year-old won a career-best four races.

Penske drivers won 10 of 17 races last year and all four of its drivers finished in the top five of the final standings.

“Any driver that gets an opportunit­y like the one I got with Team Penske will tell you they expect to win right away,” Newgarden said. “I certainly did as well, but I think we were all surprised at how quickly we gelled together and made it happen.

“But that is last year. The drive for the 2018 championsh­ip starts at St. Pete, and it’s a track where I’ve never won before. That is our only thought this weekend – going to victory lane.”

Newgarden and the entire field will be in a redesigned and universal Dallara chassis.

The 2018 car was overhauled and completed with input from drivers and teams, who objected to the many pieces on the previous aerokits that created debris fields during crashes. Drivers wanted reduced downforce and got their wish. They also wanted faster tire degradatio­n and what ultimately was developed could force drivers to change their racing style.

The car has a sleek and clean look, and IndyCar is hopeful tweaks have made it safer for drivers and cheaper for teams to field.

It also could help the small teams close the gap on Team Penske, Chip Ganassi Racing and Andretti Autosport, winner of three of the last four Indianapol­is 500s.

“I do think it will equalize things,” said Graham Rahal, who this year at Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing is joined by 2017 Indy 500 winner Takuma Sato.

“If you do your job and you nail the setup, you will be right there contending for wins,” he said. “Before, there were certainly cases and tracks where that wasn’t the way it was for us, and it is nice now to feel like we can be rewarded for lots of hard work.”

IndyCar has been chipping away for years at rebuilding its fan base and stabilizin­g the series, and leadership feels good headed into the opener. The car count of 24 entries at St. Petersburg is the highest since 2015 and includes three new teams. Gabby Chaves will race for Harding Racing, Juncos Racing has a split lineup and Max Chilton and Charlie Kimball left Ganassi at the end of last season to form Carlin.

IndyCar’s television audience has continued to slowly grow, the series is returning to Portland Internatio­nal Raceway this year for the first time in more than a decade, and Danica Patrick is coming back for one last hurrah in the Indianapol­is 500.

Ganassi has scaled back to two teams this year and Ed Jones will join Scott Dixon in the lineup this year. Dixon needs just one more victory to reach 42, which would tie him with Michael Andretti for third on the all-time win list.

Roger Penske has also cut his team by one car, which meant three-time Indianapol­is 500 winner Helio Castroneve­s has left the series for sports cars. Even without Castroneve­s, IndyCar goes into the year with seven former champions and 13 former race winners – enough to put on a good show all year.

“We are all refreshed. We are all anxious and excited for what’s to come,” Rahal said.

Wickens wins the pole: In a new car and on a slick racing surface, rookie Robert Wickens snatched the pole away from Will Power for the IndyCar season-opening race through the streets of St. Petersburg.

Power had won seven of the last eight poles for Sunday’s race and he shot to the top of the qualifying board with less than a minute left in qualifying session. But Wickens bumped him to second at the buzzer in an upset for the Canadian driver.

Wickens starred in DTM driving for Mercedes-AMG Motorsport with six wins but made the move to IndyCar this year because Mercedes said it was pulling out of the series. Wickens landed at Schmidt Peterson Motorsport­s as teammate to childhood friend James Hinchcliff­e in an all-Canadian lineup.

During Saturday’s rainy qualifying session in the IndyCar’s redesigned 2018 car, Wickens turned a lap at 1 minute, 01.66 to make an impressive debut.

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