The Palm Beach Post

Drivers prepare for Indy 500

Opening practice will be held today for the May 28 race.

- By Michael Marot Associated Press

INDIANAPOL­IS — IndyCar team owner Sam Schmidt started plotting Indianapol­is 500 strategy even before Saturday’s race ended. He certainly wasn’t alone. With Will Power dominating practice, qualifying and the IndyCar Grand Prix for his fifirst win of the season, just about everyone else in Gasoline Alley began looking ahead to today’s opening practice for the Indianapol­is 500.

“S i n c e we h a d s u c h a crappy grand prix, I think (our focus) shifted 30 minutes ago,” Schmidt said shortly after the race ended. “Maybe even as much as an hour ago. We know we have good cars for the 500 and hopefully we can be as good as we were last year. Right now is when we start working on the cars for the 500.”

There’s no time to waste for anyone.

I n l e s s t han 4 8 hours , speedway workers must convert the track from the 2.439mile, 14-turn road course into the traditiona­l 2.5-mile oval.

Crew members will scramble to change the cars to perform on four distinct corners and at speeds nearing or topping 230 mph.

Strategist­s will plan when to run in qualifying trim, when to run in race trim and how weather could affect next week’s two qualifific­ation rounds and the May 28 race.

Drivers will have to contend with much more traffic, with 33 cars expected to fifill the traditiona­l 11-row, three-car starting grid.

And numbers crunchers will get ready for the data inflflux that comes only once a year.

It’s all part of the biggest month in racing.

It’s defifinite­ly a diffffffff­fffferent deal,” said Power, who is still looking for his fifirst 500 win. “You (have to) get in a groove — you have plenty of time to get in that grove. You just run so many miles around this place that you know it too well, but you can’t get too comfortabl­e.”

The Australian drives for powerhouse Team Penske, which has won the 500 a record 16 times, three of the four road races in Indy and two of the last three series titles.

But since Brazil’s Helio Castroneve­s became the fifirst foreign-born three-time winner in 2009, Penske’s team has won one 500 — in 2015, when Colombia’s Juan Pablo Montoya captured his second win. Another win would put Castroneve­s in the four-win club, which only has three members: A.J. Foyt, Al Unser and Rick Mears.

The always-energetic Castroneve­s, now 41, couldn’t contain his excitement. Just 15 minutes after a fififth- place fifinish in the grand prix, he was already talking about his next mission — scaling Indy’s catch-fence one more time.

“They (the crew) will take about 12 hours to convert the car from road course to oval — they’re already going to start making some changes,” he said. “We’re going to take a little bit of time to focus, start setting the strategy for the week and hope for the best.”

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