Stamford Advocate

IndyCar, NASCAR set for a triplehead­er weekend

-

INDIANAPOL­IS — Helio Castroneve­s walked into an empty, mostly quiet Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Friday morning. The four-time Indianapol­is 500 winner knew it wouldn’t last long.

With drivers from NASCAR’s top two series and the IndyCar Series all in town for a rare crossover weekend, Castroneve­s expected things to quickly shift into high gear at the busiest venue in motorsport­s.

“This place, it is incredible not only because of the place but because of the history,” Castroneve­s said, referring to his favorite track. “It’s an honor to be here. It’s an honor to be representi­ng IndyCar and it’s an honor to be a fourtime winner.”

Especially on a historic weekend.

A year ago, the Indianapol­is Grand Prix was postponed from its normal slot in early May to the July 4 weekend. That marked first time all three series competed in one place. But NASCAR’s top drivers still ran on the big 2.5-mile oval while IndyCar hit the 2.4mile road course.

This time, organizers cut the distance of the traditiona­l 400-mile Cup Series race in half, renamed it the Brickyard 200 and moved it to the road course after seeing last year’s epic Xfinity Series race finish on the same track.

Some drivers contend the Brickyard should be run on the oval. AJ Allmending­er, a road course specialist who was near the front of last year’s Xfinity pack, doesn’t mind the change.

“There are certain places

that if you just say the name of the racetrack, the generic fan or maybe not even a fan of motorsport­s, they know what that place is,” he said. “That’s what Indy means to me. You can say ‘ Yeah I won at Indy, I won at the racetrack’ and they know how big that is. I don’t really have an opinion on whether it’s the road course or the oval, a win at Indy is a win at Indy and when you go in there, you still get to kiss the bricks.”

NBC analyst Dale Earnhardt Jr. turned some laps on the new course and the retired NASCAR star described it as “fun” and better than it appears. He will spend the weekend calling the race atop a scissors lift in the seventh turn.

In all, 107 total cars are expected to compete in three races with qualifying rounds scheduled for Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Organizers said ticket sales for Saturday’s doublehead­er — the IndyCar race and Xfinity’s Pennzoil 150 — are ahead of last year’s pace.

The 28-car starting grid will be the largest for an

IndyCar race, other than the traditiona­l 33-car field for the Indianapol­is 500, in a decade. It also marks the first time since 1964 that NASCAR has run consecutiv­e road-course races.

NBC holds the broadcast rights to all three series and has slotted some of this season’s races, such as last weekend’s Cup and IndyCar races, as television doublehead­ers. Saturday’s races will be shown back-to-back on cable channel NBCSN while the NASCAR Cup Series race will be broadcast on network television Sunday.

Joey Logano watched Friday’s IndyCar practice in street clothes as 45-year-old rookie Jimmie Johnson, a seven-time NASCAR champion, turned laps in Chip Ganassi Racing’s No. 48 Honda.

Team Penske president Tim Cindric will call the race for two-time IndyCar champ Josef Newgarden on Saturday , then can spend the rest of the weekend watching his 22-year-old son, Austin, compete in the Cup Series.

 ?? Joshua Bessex / Associated Press ?? Joey Logano before a NASCAR Cup Series race in Watkins Glen, N.Y., on Sunday.
Joshua Bessex / Associated Press Joey Logano before a NASCAR Cup Series race in Watkins Glen, N.Y., on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States