The Macomb Daily

Herta makes all right moves to win wet, wild IndyCar GP

- By Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS » Colton Herta stopped an early slide, overcame two late pit stops and eventually pulled away from Simon Pagenaud on Saturday to win the wild, wacky and wet IndyCar Grand Prix.

Herta beat the threetime race winner by 3.0983 seconds amid rooster tails coming from the saturated road course. The 22-year-old California driver won for the first time this season and seventh time overall.

“This is awesome,” he said. “That’s the hardest race I think I’ve ever done — wet to dry, dry back to wet.”

Rain and the threat of rain forced race strategist­s to constantly change their plans. Nobody made better calls than Herta, who also gave Honda its first victory of the season.

He and two-time Indy 500 winner Takuma Sato were the first to switch from wet tires to dry just three laps into the race. One lap later as he fought to keep the Andretti Autosport car straight on cold tires and a damp track, the No. 26 was sideways in the 10th turn on Indy’s 14-turn, 2.439-mile road course.

Somehow he hung on, quickly moved to the front and stayed there most of the race. Herta led 50 of 75 laps.

Even when it appeared Herta made the wrong choice — like running on dry tires after Alexander Rossi and made an early switch back to rain tires — his team didn’t fret.

“I’m not sure we did the right thing but if we were

wrong, we’re all wrong,” said Herta’s father and race strategist, Bryan, after the first of the two pit stops.

But Herta’s perfectly timed second stop set him up to make the winning pass of Pato O’Ward on Lap 66 with O’Ward still on dry tires. Herta took the inside line in the first turn, slipped past O’Ward and drove away.

“I just couldn’t see so I was looking for mates on the side for breaking points,” Pagenaud said. “It was tricky, it was really tricky.”

Race organizers moved the start time in hopes of avoiding a wet track.

Instead, they had to delay the start anyway — first because of lightning in the area, then because of a steady light rain. Eventually, drivers started on rain tires, switched to dry tires and then some switched back to rain tires as more rain moved into the area.

A dramatical­ly cooler and wetter track changed everything. There were

spins and crashes, even cars struggling to stay on the track under caution even for some of the series’ biggest names.

Team Penske scrambled to put two-time series champ Josef Newgarden back in the race after his car was damaged in a crash on Lap 17. His pole-winning teammate, Will Power of Australia, lost three spots on the first lap and wound up third though he took over the points lead. Scott McLaughlin, Penske’s third driver, lost the lead under caution because of a spin.

Not enough?

Six-time series champ Scott Dixon, the New Zealander who drives for Chip Ganassi Racing, ran out of fuel on pit lane and his teammate, defending series champ Alex Palou of Spain, also fell out of contention after switching to rain tires too early.

O’Ward finished second despite getting tangled up with Arrow McLaren SP teammate Felix Rosenqvist in the first turn of Lap 42.

Good bet?

Indianapol­is Motor Speedway officials opened the first on-site betting lounge in track history Saturday.

The Caesars Sportsbook Lounge at Pagoda Plaza will remain throughout Indianapol­is 500 practices, two days of qualifying and the May 29 race. Caesars Sportsbook also will sponsor the speedway’s remaining races this year.

“We’re extremely excited about this partnershi­p with Caesars and believe their on-site presence, which is a first for our storied facility, will give fans a new opportunit­y to engage with the on-track action at the Racing Capital of the World,” speedway president Doug Boles said.

New fan

Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton’s first trip to a race track, any race track, came with a special appearance — sitting behind racing icon Mario Andretti in IndyCar’s two-seater. And until he started talking with some friends, he didn’t realize what a privilege it was.

“Not much,” he said when asked if he knew about Andretti’s legacy. “I told some people that I was going to ride with Andretti and they were like ‘Oh my God.’ So I started to look it up.”

And in Indy, which bills itself as the racing capitol of the world, Haliburton expects to be making more regular trips to the track.

“It’s a different kind of fan,” he said. “But it’s an experience you have to appreciate to say you live in Indiana.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Colton Herta drives during the IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Saturday in Indianapol­is.
PHOTOS BY DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Colton Herta drives during the IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Saturday in Indianapol­is.
 ?? ?? Will Power, of Australia, leads the field into turn one for the IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Saturday in Indianapol­is.
Will Power, of Australia, leads the field into turn one for the IndyCar auto race at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway on Saturday in Indianapol­is.

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