The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Young guns

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The IndyCar season kicked off with some late-race drama, a heartbroke­n rookie driver and an emotional winner.

The racing was pretty good, too.

The opener through the city streets of St. Petersburg could not have gone any better for IndyCar, which has built enough momentum the last two years to create a palpable sense of excitement for the new season. The new car debuted at St. Pete and it didn’t just look good: Once it hit the track Sunday, the 24 drivers in the field put on a show. IndyCar officials touted the new Dallara as safer, cheaper and potentiall­y racier, and St. Pete had a race-record 366 on-track passes.

The race was decided on two late restarts, the latter with two laps remaining and Canadian rookie Robert Wickens desperatel­y trying to eke out a win. Wickens had done everything right — he won the pole, led a race-high 69 laps and had the event in control until the cautions. If he could hold off Indianapol­is 500 winner and “The Amazing Race” star Alexander Rossi, Wickens was about to make a very strong introducti­on to IndyCar.

But Rossi tried to pass him in the first turn on the last restart, Wickens wouldn’t give an inch, and the two cars touched. Wickens slid off course and finished a devastatin­g 18th. Rossi went on to finish third.

Sebastien Bourdais drove by both Wickens and Rossi as they collided to collect his second consecutiv­e victory at St. Pete and complete a comeback from a broken pelvis and hip suffered in crash last May at Indianapol­is.

Bourdais was overcome with emotion after his 10-month journey. Wickens, just the third rookie since 1993 to start his debut from the pole , seethed.

“He just went too deep, locked the rears and slid into me,” Wickens said. “The only pity is he carried on to a podium, and I ended up in the fence.”

Rossi was firm in that he did nothing wrong, but understood Wickens would be upset.

“I feel bad because I feel like I could have won and he could have gotten second,” Rossi said.

Instead the win went to Bourdais, who led 30 laps, second only to Wickens, and was in position to pounce when the opportunit­y developed.

“We had an eighthplac­e car,” said team owner Dale Coyne. “His consistenc­y makes that a fourth-place car, and luck made it a winning car.”

The youth movement that hit NASCAR has been well documented, but IndyCar is on a very similar path. Of the 24 entries in Sunday’s race, seven are considered rookies. Three advanced into the Fast Six of qualifying, with Wickens winning the pole and Jordan King breaking Will Power’s track record.

All seven finished 16th or lower and four rookies brought up the rear of the field, but the results aren’t a fair indicator of the talent in this class. They have made their way into IndyCar, and it’s come at the expense of veterans.

Conor Daly has so far lined up only an Indy 500 ride even though he’s got 39 career starts in the series. Three-time Indianapol­is 500 winner Helio Castroneve­s was bounced to sports cars as Roger Penske made his lineup younger, and even though Castroneve­s will race at Indy in May, he wants back in the series and wasn’t pleased to be a spectator Sunday.

There will be bumps with this driver class simply based on lack of experience in an Indy car. But the rookies have proven themselves in various series and they expect to be competitiv­e.

“Yes, we’re rookies in IndyCar ... but (I’ve) also been racing for 12 years,” King said. “We have got a lot of experience in driving cars, new tires, changing conditions and that sort of thing.”

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