The Denver Post

F1 eyes have been opened on the Indy 500

- By Dave Skretta

INDIANAPOL­IS» Alexander Rossi had no idea what he was getting into when he moved from Formula One to IndyCar.

Turning left the whole race? Looks easy.

But as Rossi soon found out — and as two-time world champion Fernando Alonso and his McLaren team learned in failing to qualify for the Indianapol­is 500 last weekend — getting around Indianapol­is Motor Speedway at speeds eclipsing 230 mph is a lot tougher than it looks.

“I didn’t understand what oval racing was. I didn’t understand what IndyCar racing was, because there is no exposure to it in Europe,” said Rossi, an American who moved to Europe as a teenager and made his F1 dreams come true with seven starts during the 2014 and ’15 seasons.

“So when guys haven’t been a part of it,” Rossi said, “they don’t understand how difficult it is, how unique it is to everything they’ve done. On TV, let’s be honest, it doesn’t look that challengin­g, so being a European driver, in your mind you’re at the pinnacle of the sport. You think, ‘Of course I can go over there and do that and it wouldn’t be a problem.’”

That inherent arrogance was underscore­d two years ago, when Alonso showed up at the Indy 500 for the first time. He ran near the front all race, only for his Honda engine to let him down.

Naturally, many F1 drivers were quick to pounce on their rival open-wheel series, claiming it must not be too difficult to win in IndyCar if Alonso could be competitiv­e right out of the gate.

“I looked at the times and, frankly, for his first-ever qualifying for Fernando to be fifth — what does that say about Indy?” five-time F1 champion Lewis Hamilton mused to L’Equipe shortly afterward.

“A great driver,” he said, “if he cannot win in Formula 1, will look for other races to win.”

In other words, Hamilton was calling IndyCar second-rate.

That’s part of why so many eyebrows jumped at McLaren’s spectacula­r disappoint­ment.

“Fernando may have done well in 2017, so there may have been a feeling like all he has to do is show up and take it over,” said Mark Miles, the chairman of Hulman & Co., which owns Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. “I think this causes that sense of, ‘Hey, this is harder than we thought.’ ”

The team that bumped the wellfunded, England-based team with the rich racing heritage from this year’s field? None other than Juncos Racing, the tiny team founded by Argentina-born Ricardo Juncos.

The moment Kyle Kaiser put their car in the field last Sunday was the moment McLaren’s world collapsed, leading to the firing of Bob Fernley, who headed its IndyCar operation.

“We got it wrong,” the team’s boss, Zak Brown, said Thursday. “There are little stories behind each of those individual issues and how they transpired, but you know, we didn’t execute and therefore we didn’t qualify for the Indy 500.”

One of the reasons the Indy 500 is so difficult is it tests the machines — and how they are tuned — just as much as the drivers. Manufactur­ers such as Mercedes and Ferrari can pump $300 million into their teams and essentiall­y buy the crucial tenths of a second they need to win races, but IndyCar teams work with a relatively stock setup that puts the onus on crew and driver.

“A big team like McLaren, and you see a small team like Juncos, it just shows this competitio­n, it’s not easy no matter who you are,” three-time Indy 500 winner Helio Castroneve­s said.

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