The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ganassi vs. McLaren is major headline at Brickyard, with big crowd expected

Brown flaunts CGR’s Kanaan as a fourth driver ahead of race.

- By Jenna Fryer

Four custom McLaren GTs lined the curb in front of St. Elmo Steak House, the see-and-be-seen spot in downtown Indianapol­is, in a massive flex by the race team trying to win the Indianapol­is 500.

The rebuilt, rebranded and rebounded Arrow McLaren organizati­on has turned the buildup to the Indianapol­is 500 into a battle with Chip Ganassi Racing, the reigning champion team, which, like McLaren, has four strong chances to win today in front of some 300,000 spectators.

It has become the best rivalry in IndyCar, the one between Ganassi himself and Zak Brown, the head of McLaren Racing. Their long-running feud is one of many highlights from an emotional week ahead of the 107th running of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing”:

■ The cars of 1986 winner Bobby Rahal have been slow and his son, Graham, failed to make the race. But Graham Rahal received a reprieve when Katherine Legge, the only woman in the race and his teammate, ran into Stefan Wilson during practice, knocking him out of the race with a fractured back. Dreyer & Reinbold needed a replacemen­t for Wilson and a deal was struck to get Graham Rahal into the Chevrolet-powered car despite his long associatio­n with Honda.

■ A.J. Foyt came to Indianapol­is Motor Speedway as he grieves the April death of his wife of 68 years, Lucy. The four-time winner of the race was rewarded with two fast cars and Santino Ferrucci starting fourth today.

■ Callum Ilott was near panic ahead of qualifying when he felt his car was too dangerous to drive. Juncos Hollinger Racing made an emergency change to a different car and the British driver made the field. Agustin Canapino, his rookie teammate from Argentina, has been shockingly fast.

■ Then there’s the lingering contract situation between reigning Indy 500 winner Marcus Ericsson and Ganassi. Ericsson wants to stay with the team and the Swede is not happy he hasn’t been re-signed yet.

That is where it gets good between Ganassi and Brown, who scheduled his Friday news conference to begin 15 minutes before Ganassi’s traditiona­l availabili­ty on the Yard of Bricks. Brown, who poached 2013 Indy 500 winner Tony Kanaan and a sponsor from Ganassi to run a fourth McLaren for him today, said his team has responded so well to four cars at Indianapol­is that he’d consider running four full-time entries next year.

Who would he put in that fourth car? In Brown’s opinion, Ericsson is the top free agent on the market and he is shocked he might be available. Brown, who expanded McLaren to three cars only this year, said he will decide by July whether McLaren will run four cars next year; Ganassi holds the exclusive negotiatin­g rights with Ericsson until August.

McLaren is getting Alex Palou, who won the 2021 series title for Ganassi and starts on the pole today, for next season. Brown also has signed NASCAR star Kyle Larson to race the 500 for him next year, and it was Ganassi who developed Larson in stock cars but had to fire him in 2020 when he was caught using the N-word in an online racing game.

Brown now has made it clear he’d like a shot at landing Ericsson, too. Ericsson actually entered IndyCar with the team that is now Arrow McLaren but signed with Ganassi before Brown took over.

“Personally, I don’t think people steal things. I think people lose things. And yes, Marcus has done an outstandin­g job,” Brown said. “I’m a little surprised, given how strong things are commercial­ly, that his current team doesn’t have the commercial confidence that they can sell the Indy 500 championsh­ip contender and sign him up.

“I understand they probably have a little bit of time, so I’m sure they’re working at it,” he said. “But I wouldn’t let him go if he was driving for me, and I would have the commercial confidence that I could get the sponsorshi­p.”

Palou will lead the field to green and his three Ganassi teammates all start inside the first four rows. Same for the McLaren drivers, with Felix Rosenqvist their highest qualifier at third.

The two teams have a combined five Indy 500-winning drivers, and many believe it will be a shootout between them. The teams themselves? They think the race is wide open, with 15 to 20 legitimate contenders in the 33-car field.

“I think the Penskes are going to be there, they are going to have very strong race cars,” said McLaren star Pato O’Ward, referring to Team Penske’s contingent of reigning series champion Will Power, Josef Newgarden and Scott McLaughlin.

Power at 12th was the only Penske driver to advance in qualifying to the pole shootout rounds, and Penske was out-qualified by Foyt.

The Penske cars seemed faster in setup. Power was third-fastest in Friday’s final practice. Who was faster? Ganassi’s Takuma Sato and Scott Dixon, who have three Indy 500 wins between them.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Arrow McLaren driver Pato O’Ward, who’ll start in fifth today in Row 2, is among the favorites to win the Indianapol­is 500.
DARRON CUMMINGS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Arrow McLaren driver Pato O’Ward, who’ll start in fifth today in Row 2, is among the favorites to win the Indianapol­is 500.

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