Rahal sees progress after ’23 failure
INDIANAPOLIS – Nearly a year removed from perhaps the saddest day of his racing career, Graham Rahal walked into the Indianapolis Motor Speedway with a bit of perspective. It wasn’t so much that failing to qualify for the Indianapolis 500 for the first time in his 17year career was unexpected – it’s that after a painfully slow 500 Open Test last April, combined with a few headscratching days of practice last May, Rahal could see the massive letdown coming.
And after a couple years of ringing the alarm bells regarding Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing’s performance during the Month of May, one of Rahal’s worst days in a race car finally helped bring about change.
Wednesday, he was happy to report the fruits of those changes at the Racing Capital of the World, even after running just 38 laps in damp, cool conditions more than five weeks away from qualifying.
“I can assure you that the feeling at the end of today, even after just five or six runs, versus where we were the first day of the spring test here (a year ago) is a very different vibe within the team,” Rahal said Wednesday in an end-of-day press conference at IMS for the 500 Open Test. “And I hope that that will stay positive as we go into May.”
Rahal said the problems last year were “things that I had said to the team for years.”
“It wasn’t that all a sudden, we were slow,” he said. “We had been getting slow – like, we were falling behind for the years prior. But last year not qualifying (for the 500) was a real show of, ‘Hey, we are really far behind, and we need to get serious about this in a hurry.’ It allowed the owners to dig in, because I don’t think many of the issues were things that they were, frankly, that aware of.”
Listening to the differences Rahal described from Wednesday in what was just over three hours of total green-flag running in what was supposed to be 13 hours of track time over two days is almost jarring – even to a novice on the engineering side.
“Traditionally, I would have to downshift in order to build speed down the straightaway, and today was the first time in a while that I’d start to see speed, and the RPMs would start to come up like the car was responding well to it,” he said. “And when I’d get a sniff of a tow today – even a car seven or eight seconds in front – the speed would pick up. Most drivers, they’re probably thinking, ‘Yeah, that’s obvious. That’s the way it is.’ But last year, that’s not the way an RLL car was. We would probably fall further behind. ”
The first signs of change came last
June, when RLL noted it had parted ways with multiple members of its engineering team.
Within a month, team co-owner Bobby Rahal was back-slapping secondyear driver Christian Lundgaard in Victory Lane at Toronto, celebrating the team’s first IndyCar victory in more than three years – one the Dane won from pole. It would be the second of four poles RLL would capture that season – all of them, though, on road or street courses.
On ovals, RLL’s struggles for both qualifying pace and general raceability would continue. In 15 oval starts as a team in 2023, RLL would log just a single top-15 finish – Lundgaard’s 13th-place result at Iowa. And without an oval race
Winless through his past 42 races, Chase Elliott can almost taste Victory Lane after his strong showing last Sunday at Martinsville Speedway and probably does not want to leave Virginia.
Following a Cook Out 400 that was practically a coronation celebrating Hendrick Motorsports’ 40 years of winning, Elliott and his three teammates will head to Fort Worth for the series’ lone stop at Texas Motor Speedway when they run the AutoTrader EchoPark Automotive 400 on Sunday afternoon.
The sport’s six-time winner of the Most Popular Driver Award, Elliott watched two of his stablemates – race winner William Byron and runner-up Kyle Larson – finish in front of him, but by bringing home his No. 9 Chevrolet in third, Elliott grabbed momentum heading to the Lone Star State.
That 1-2-3 team finish was the firstever occurrence in 75 years of battling at the half-mile speedway, and Elliott said running as the leader for 64 laps brought back that familiar up-front feeling.
“Glad one of us (at Hendrick) got it done,” said Elliott, who had led just 23 circuits through the previous seven races.
“Nice to have a couple of solid weeks, and to be there in contention for a win is – haven’t been in contention to win one in a while.”
The 28-year-old’s last triumph was Oct. 2, 2022, at Talladega.
Elliott recorded his second straight top-five of 2024, his total for the campaign.
“It was fun to get to that last restart and it actually mattered,” said the 2020 series champion, who finished fifth at Richmond on Easter.
“I feel like throughout a lot of the season this year we’ve just been going in a very positive direction. If we keep to start the year until the 108th 500, there lingered an uncertainty early this year as to just how much impact this offseason’s work has made.
Philosophies have now changed, with large sums of money spent in-kind. The results, whatever they may be, will come next.
“The best thing to happen to this team was the worst thing to happen to this team, and that was me not qualifying (for the 500 last year),” Rahal said. “It clearly rings home for my dad and everybody else. Not to say that it doesn’t matter for any of the others, but it got serious in a hurry, and that made us really lock-in and focus on fixing a lot of items – particularly when it came to Indy.” producing that, we’ll get our turn one day.”
Elliott, who won at the tiny track during his title season, is one of the nine Hendrick drivers to record a win in the organization’s 29 Martinsville victories.
Added owner Rick Hendrick, “It was almost like divine intervention, just how in the world it all ended up like that on a day like that.”
Saturday morning’s qualifying session appeared to be a Toyota battle, but Hendrick’s Larson – the final driver to qualify – turned a hot lap of 28.366 seconds (190.369 mph) in his No. 5 Chevrolet to fend off the Camry XSEs of Ty Gibbs and Christopher Bell.
Larson won his third consecutive pole (Richmond, Martinsville) and the 250th for Hendrick Motorsports.
Last Sept. 24 in Fort Worth, Byron won by topping Ross Chastain and Bubba Wallace, the latter of whom won the pole and led a race-best 112 laps in the 11-caution event.