USA TODAY US Edition

Female duo hope race can be spark

- Nathan Brown

Simona De Silvestro stepped out of her KV Racing Chevy after the 2013 IndyCar finale at Fontana proud of what she’d done. She finished eighth, her fifth consecutiv­e top-10 finish, keeping her car clean in a crash-fest where just over a third of the starting field of 25 was running at the end.

She’d finished 13th in the championsh­ip, sandwiched by four-time Champ Car champion Sebastien Bourdais (12th) and future two-time IndyCar champ Josef Newgarden (14th). Her lone teammate for the season, Tony Kanaan, had won the 500 that year yet finished just 35 points ahead in 11th. The Swiss-Italian driver finally felt as if she belonged, like her career as a woman in North America’s premier open-wheel racing series was finally starting to take shape.

Little did she know she’d make just four more IndyCar starts over the next eight seasons – only two outside of the 500. And perhaps even more surprising? That race in Southern California in 2013 would be the last IndyCar race, outside the 500, run with two women in the cockpit for more than eight years.

Sunday, the 33-year-old returns to break the sport’s drought, as she takes another step in what she hopes will be a long journey all the way back to a series she always felt suited her best. This weekend at Road America, she and team owner Beth Paretta make their first of at least three starts while partnering with Ed Carpenter Racing on a partial-season program using many of the personnel, parts and equipment ECR has and will continue to use for Carpenter’s ovalonly program in 2022.

De Silvestro joins A.J. Foyt Racing rookie Tatiana Calderon on the grid, a 29-year-old who vividly remembers racing as 17-year-old in the Star Mazda Championsh­ip on the Road to Indy ladder system in 2010 when five women graced the IndyCar grid at some points in the season. All at various stages of their careers, Danica Patrick, De Silvestro, Sarah Fisher and others had over the previous decade or so made it seem less abnormal to see an IndyCar race with several women in the field.

History, droughts and longevity weren’t part of the conversati­on. At that point 12 years ago, De Silvestro says she didn’t dream she’d be part of what for many is a hopeful resurgence to deliver female fans young and old more representa­tion in the cockpit, as they’ve picked up in engineerin­g, mechanic and crew roles in recent years in IndyCar.

“It’s a shame we’ve had this long period the last couple years where we haven’t had (a woman who is a driver) in the top-level of single-seaters (in more than the 500),” Calderon said Tuesday in a media call. “I think sometimes, you have to see it to believe it for the younger generation, because there are females that can compete against men in this very competitiv­e championsh­ip.

“It’s been more about having those opportunit­ies. We get judged in a different way that maybe, if some guy makes a mistake, it was a mistake, but if it’s a female driver, then it’s because she’s a female sometimes.”

It’s an important lesson she and De Silvestro hope fans, potential sponsors and decision-makers will keep in mind watching this weekend as the pair tackle the 4-mile natural-terrain road course in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, where both have raced in various series before. For De Silvestro, this weekend will be the first time in an Indy car on a track other than the Indianapol­is Motor Speedway oval since early in the 2015 season, when she was running a three-race program with Andretti Autosport and took 4th at NOLA Motorsport­s Park. Though the chassis itself is the same, the car’s gone through various bodywork configurat­ion changes – including the addition of the aeroscreen – since that race.

Looking on the bright side, De Silvestro said Tuesday she thinks that having not raced so recently will make Friday’s initial practice a completely new experience and an easier one to adapt to and learn from, rather than having to break down old habits from, say, 2018 or 2019. Having done only a bit of sim work and no on-track testing, this weekend will all feel very new.

“I think we have to be realistic. It’s the middle of the season, and all these guys and girls have been running half the season already,” De Silvestro said. “We need to see where we kind of stack up. I’ll push quite hard to get up to speed as quickly as I can, and I think if we do our job correctly, we can be on the competitiv­e side for sure.

“I’ve been really looking forward to getting on a road course because I think that’s really where I’ve, in the past, had my strength.”

For Calderon, she still feels as if she’s getting a grip on things. It’s easy to forget her first time making more than, say, a 20-lap run in the Indy car came just over three months ago. Being in a road and street course-only program as a rookie this year, she’s made five starts on weekends where there’s typically just 90 minutes of practice before qualifying and the green flag. Three of those starts have come on street courses, where the concrete barriers are often super tight and there’s very little room for error.

Getting onto a very wide-open road course, she said, should provide for a better opportunit­y to continue her growth. Luckily for her, she seems to have a backer in ROKiT and a team in A.J. Foyt Racing who understand her developmen­t in this sport will have to be a multiyear process, if she’s to produce any sort of consistent, competitiv­e results beyond her 16th (Long Beach) and 15th (GMR Grand Prix).

And it’s been that combinatio­n of willingnes­s to take a chance on a driver not already in the series and patience to let them grow that’s been missing and led to a lack of progress for drivers who are women in IndyCar, Calderon said. Since 2018, she’s run in IndyCar, WEC, Super Formula, European Le Mans, IMSA, Porsche Supercup, Formula 2 and Formula 3 with more than a half-dozen different organizati­ons. On her journey, she’s shown an adaptabili­ty that’s allowed her to get shot after shot, though her results haven’t ever been ultra-competitiv­e. If she’s ever to be expected to reach the potential many think she’s capable of, she’s simply going to need more time.

“I’ve been enjoying the suffering a little bit, but it’s tough,” Calderon said. “Hopefully once we get to places where I’ve been before, like the Indy GP again, or Mid-Ohio (where she tested last year), I think our performanc­e can continue to improve. For me, it’s just been about having those opportunit­ies, and maybe you have to knock on the door, and with little changes, you can maybe change the perception of somebody or get them interested. I have felt that more in America than in any other place, so hopefully we start to change some stereotype­s and some beliefs, and we can get more young girls involved (in racing) very early-on.”

 ?? JENNA WATSON/INDYSTAR ?? Paretta Autosport driver Simona De Silvestro greets fans at the 105th running of the Indianapol­is 500.
JENNA WATSON/INDYSTAR Paretta Autosport driver Simona De Silvestro greets fans at the 105th running of the Indianapol­is 500.

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