The Arizona Republic

Contract debacle follows Palou

- Jenna Fryer

MONTEREY, Calif. – McLaren Racing has a hotel room booked in Singapore next week for Alex Palou, who contractua­lly is expected to be the team’s Formula One reserve driver for the remainder of the year.

Zak Brown doesn’t expect the room to be used.

The CEO of McLaren Racing doesn’t know for sure that Palou won’t show up – he’s yet to hear from the Spaniard, who informed McLaren through attorneys last month that he would not be honoring his 2024 contract with the team in IndyCar or F1.

Brown is suing Palou in the United Kingdom for at least $20 million in damages and to recoup money already paid to the driver.

In addition to an advance on his 2024 salary, Brown claims he covered Palou’s legal fees in last year’s fight between Palou and Chip Ganassi Racing when Palou tried to get out of his Ganassi contract early to move to McLaren.

“It’s pretty surprising how it’s been handled. There’s what happened. But then there’s also how it’s been handled,” Brown said. “I’ll let the court and the facts when they surface allow people to come to their own conclusion­s as to Alex’s character.”

And so continues the saga surroundin­g the current IndyCar champion. Palou clinched his second title in three years last weekend in Portland, which made Sunday’s race at Laguna Seca fairly meaningles­s. Palou is the reigning race winner and Brown said McLaren had planned to introduce him as a centerpiec­e of the organizati­on this weekend.

Ironically, it was Palou’s victory a year ago when the tide apparently began to turn on his career choices. He was locked in mediation with Ganassi because Ganassi held the 2023 option on Palou and had no intention of allowing his driver to leave early for rival McLaren. In the days after Palou’s season-ending victory, a resolution was announced with Palou set to complete his final season with Ganassi but allowed to do F1 work for McLaren when it didn’t conflict with IndyCar. Palou ran for McLaren in a free practice session at COTA last year, has tested in other F1 sessions and was the reserve driver for the team at Miami.

But Ganassi revealed this week that as he left Laguna Seca last year, he had a suspicion that Palou ultimately would not leave the team.

“I said, ‘I don’t think that guy’s necessaril­y gone,’” Ganassi said. “And let’s just leave it at that.”

Ganassi confirmed after Palou’s titleclinc­hing win that Palou would be back in the No. 10 with his organizati­on next year. Palou, meanwhile, is still struggling to explain his about-face. He said his own family has begged for answers, but because of the pending litigation, he’s limited in what he can reveal.

“I would love to just tell you exactly everything,” Palou said. “They said to say, ‘No comment.’ There is nothing I can say that is going to help me. Whatever I say now is not going to help me. It will help the fans a little bit and I understand.

“I understand from my side, and my family wants to know what is going on. That’s normal. If it happens to my family, I imagine same for everybody else. I don’t know what I can say that can help you.”

Palou earlier this week sat outside Pebble Beach Golf Links with a small group of reporters and tried to offer as much of an explanatio­n as he could. He indicated his career trajectory changed following his 2021 championsh­ip with Ganassi, which triggered Palou’s management group to pursue an F1 seat for the driver.

“If you look at my interviews until 2021, I would say I was not focused on F1 at all, and that was totally true. But things changed when I won the championsh­ip,” Palou said. “I was 24. I had just won my first big championsh­ip and what if I try something and it goes sideways, then I can come back when I’m 27 and still super young and can still do it for 10 or 15 years.

“Then it changed. The door opened a little bit with McLaren. It was amazing. I got to test old cars and then practice one last year at COTA, and it was amazing. The opportunit­y was great, but there was nothing else there of ‘You will have a car.’ Maybe if I was 20, I would have waited, but I’m not 20. I’m 26. I don’t know of anyone who waited until 30 that got into Formula One.”

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