USA TODAY US Edition

Newgarden dominates IndyCar St. Pete from pole

- Nathan Brown

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – After a 2024 season that began with Roger Penske under fire for his stewardshi­p of the NTT IndyCar Series, The Captain’s two-time champion and defending Indianapol­is 500 winner walloped the field, delivering a near-wire-towire win on the streets of St. Petersburg.

Josef Newgarden, who on Saturday captured his first IndyCar pole since 2022, withstood a trio of cautions and a late-race push from his Team Penske teammates, leading 92 of Sunday’s 100 laps to grab the season-opening victory and his third career win at St. Pete.

A week after his two-year, $10.2 million contract extension with McLaren Racing was made public, Pato O’Ward again finished runner-up in the season-opening race, 7.9 seconds back. A year ago the Arrow McLaren driver held the lead with under five laps to go but suffered a brief mechanical hiccup that forced him to surrender the lead to eventual winner Marcus Ericsson. O’Ward started third on Sunday, fell back to fifth after the opening pit stops and worked his way up to second place behind Newgarden at the halfway point, but the young Mexican driver never seemed to have anything to seriously challenge the No. 2 Chevy in what for the bulk of the field was a fuelsaving two-stop race.

McLaughlin, the 2022 St. Pete-winner, started ninth but clawed his way up through the field into the top 6 after the opening pit stop and fifth after the final one. On the final restart, the Team Penske driver picked off front-row starter Felix Rosenqvist and Colton Herta to work his way onto the St. Pete podium. Nine-time St. Pete pole-sitter and three-time race-winner Will Power took fourth, with Herta rounding out the top 5.

Alex Palou, the defending series champion, took 6th, with Rosenqvist (7th), Alexander Rossi (8th), Scott Dixon (9th) and Rinus VeeKay (10th) rounding out the top-10.

Having started 12th, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s Christian Lundgaard was the race’s first casualty of on-track contact, suffering a right-rear tire puncture on lap 1, but the thirdyear driver managed to work his way back up to 20th by the checkered flag.

Chip Ganassi Racing’s first-year full-time driver Marcus Armstrong was the race’s first retirement, after running wide and tagging the Turn 10 tire barrier on lap 26. The second caution of the day came on lap 35 for AJ Foyt Racing’s Sting Ray Robb, whose car was smoking when he came to a stop. The race’s third and final caution came on lap 68, less than five laps after the leaders dove into the pits for the final time, when Romain Grosjean tried to nudge his way ahead of Ganassi rookie Linus Lundqvist heading into Turn 10 and send the No. 8 Honda backing into the tires.

Fellow Ganassi rookie Kyffin Simpson finished as the race’s top rookie in his IndyCar debut, taking 14th, followed by Meyer Shank Racing’s Tom Blomqvist (17th), Ed Carpenter Racing’s Christian Rasmussen (21st) and Dale Coyne Racing’s Colin Braun (22nd).

 ?? PETER CASEY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Indycar driver Josef Newgarden celebrates winning the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg on Sunday.
PETER CASEY/USA TODAY SPORTS Indycar driver Josef Newgarden celebrates winning the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg on Sunday.
 ?? PETER CASEY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Indycar driver Josef Newgarden (2) dominated the Grand Prix of
St. Petersburg.
PETER CASEY/USA TODAY SPORTS Indycar driver Josef Newgarden (2) dominated the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

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