Morning Sun

Happier Andretti returns to Indy 500 as part-time racer

- By Jenna Fryer

INDIANAPOL­IS » Marco Andretti doesn’t want to be at the track if he’s not racing. He’ll watch on television, though, and offer advice from 650 miles away.

Andretti was at home in Nazareth, Pennsylvan­ia, watching Andretti Autosport race the road course at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway last week when he had an idea: Colton Herta could pit early and probably win the race.

So Andretti texted the idea — during the race — to Herta’s father, Bryan. As strategist for his son, the elder Herta called Colton in two laps sooner than planned and ended the day in victory lane.

“I was really on the horn with Bryan. That’s fun to me,” Andretti said.

It validated Andretti’s skills as a strategist, but the third-generation racer doesn’t envision himself sitting atop a pit box and calling another driver’s race. Instead he’s transition­ing into semi-retirement and finding his way as something other than an Indycar driver from one of motorsport­s’ famed families.

Andretti walked away from his full-time ride after the 2020 season and only returned for last year’s Indianapol­is 500. He’s back again this month for a 17th attempt at winning the race that has tormented his family; Mario Andretti, his grandfathe­r, has the only victory among five different Andrettis there.

When Marco starts the May 29 race, he will pass his father in career starts. Dad Michael Andretti went 0 for 16, while Mario Andretti’s 1969 victory was his only win in 29 starts.

“I think I’m more like my grandfathe­r, I just enjoy driving,” Marco Andretti said. “This year I’m going to have more starts than Dad, which is crazy to me. When he tries to tell me something, I can say he doesn’t know what he’s talking about now.”

Michael Andretti is the Indy 500 strategist for his 35-year-old son, who came to his own decision to shift away from the family business.

Andretti Autosport struggled to find sponsorshi­p for Marco ahead of 2021 and he’d had enough, anyway. Racing wasn’t all that fun anymore, and nine straight seasons without a victory had taken its toll.

The Andretti’s have invested so much into the Indy 500, and when Marco finally had his own moment in the spotlight, it only ended in another disappoint­ment. Marco won the pole in 2020 — when the race was run in August without spectators because of the pandemic — but he didn’t even lead the first lap and finished a crushing 13th.

His best finish over the remaining seven races of that 2020 season was 15th and he fell out of eligibilit­y for the Indycar prize fund that helps financiall­y support full-time teams. It was then that Marco decided he’d had enough.

“What I put into it, I felt like I wasn’t getting that out for various reasons,” he said.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marco Andretti talks with Mario Andretti during practice for the Indianapol­is 500auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, Tuesday, in Indianapol­is.
DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marco Andretti talks with Mario Andretti during practice for the Indianapol­is 500auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, Tuesday, in Indianapol­is.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States