USA TODAY International Edition

Sizing up drivers from top to bottom

- Nathan Brown The Indianapol­is Star USA TODAY Network

INDIANAPOL­IS – Eight full- time NTT IndyCar Series drivers – four of them rookies – find themselves on new teams in 2023. Two others had number and sponsorshi­p changes, raising questions about their longterm futures in their current homes. Five additional series veterans face levels of uncertaint­y as to where their careers might take them in 2024 – and if they may be full- time IndyCar drivers at all.

A lot of questions to be answered, right? While 10 or more drivers begin their 2023 campaigns Sunday in St. Petersburg, Florida, with legitimate title contention hopes, much of IndyCar’s midfield is mired in some level of speculatio­n about what lies ahead of them. Here are the most pressing questions each full- time ( or in Marcus Armstrong’s case, majority full- time) IndyCar driver faces in 2023, listed in the order in which I predict they’ll finish in the points race.

Scott McLaughlin

Can he become top dog on his own team? To do so, McLaughlin will likely have to borrow traits from both his teammates – skills he was beginning to show a year ago – and find ways to pile up wins ( Josef Newgarden) while remaining consistent­ly in the top- 5 conversati­on each week ( Will Power). Only then can he truly challenge for a title.

Josef Newgarden

What will it take to be more than second- best? Over the past three years of consecutiv­e runner- up finishes, Newgarden has won 11 times. The next- most among drivers who haven’t won a title in that span is five. The Penske driver has been undoubtedl­y the best driver of the aeroscreen era, and yet, when he isn’t winning, it hasn’t been good enough.

Scott Dixon

Can he turn in another dominant May? After having the best car across the month for three years running, Dixon has had bad luck ( or his own pit lane mistake) derail his shot at a second Indianapol­is 500 win. It would be easy for anyone not named the Ice Man to lose half a step, but if he’s to break through, he’ll have to be there with 20 laps to go.

Colton Herta

Can he limit his team’s bad weekends? Though he hasn’t won nearly as frequently as Newgarden, Herta’s been plagued the last two years by his off race weekends erasing any benefit he gains from his weekends running up front. After taking third in the 2020 title race when capitalizi­ng on a few more chances to win could’ve clinched a title, Herta’s fallen to fifth, and then 10th, as his consistenc­y has fallen off.

Will Power

How much magic does Power have left? Few outside his wife saw the 41- year- old’s second championsh­ip in the cards in 2022, one he won largely due to his ability to almost always find his way to the front ( 13 top- 6 finishes). Power had finished better than third in the title race once in the previous five years, so time will tell if 2022 marked a career resurgence or one last great run.

Pato O’Ward

Can his team give him a title- contending car? No one doubts O’Ward’s skills on- track but we hear too often that his car just wasn’t “in the window.” Arrow McLaren continues to ride quite a wave of hype with the team’s rapid growth, but it’s time to prove it by consistent­ly hanging with Ganassi and Penske.

Alex Palou

Is his heart truly set on leaving Ganassi? All the signs point to Palou leaving the team he won his 2021 title with for a hefty payday and a faint hope at F1 dreams at Arrow McLaren, but should he again finish ahead of all of his future teammates, I struggle to feel like it’s the best move long term for his IndyCar career. Only Palou will know if the doubts begin to trickle in.

Alexander Rossi

Can he avoid the typical “new team slump” that’s plagued several drivers of late? After championsh­ip finishes of ninth, 10th and ninth over his final three years with Andretti, I don’t imagine there’s anywhere for Rossi to fall. Still, immediatel­y finding championsh­ip- like form might not be as easy as he hopes.

Romain Grosjean

Can he prove to Michael Andretti he’s worth another contract? DHL’s desire to latch onto a worldwide brand may already have this decided, but if not, Grosjean will need to find a way to erase his number of finishes outside the top 15 ( nine in 2022) and find the form of a top- level Andretti driver to earn another deal.

Marcus Ericsson

Does he have another level? Ericsson’s won three races in two years ( including the biggest one on the calendar), and yet without more top- 5 finishes it’s

hard to imagine him finishing much higher than his sixth place of the last two years. Top- 10 consistenc­y is nice, but it won’t win you a championsh­ip.

Felix Rosenqvist

Can he force Zak Brown’s hand? As mentioned above, most in the paddock assume Palou’s move to Arrow McLaren is only a matter of time – quite possibly ending the Swede’s three- year tenure with the team. Still, Brown’s mentioned in passing a willingnes­s to consider expanding to four full- time cars. If Rosenqvist can beat one or two of O’Ward, Rossi and Palou, he could force the issue.

Christian Lundgaard

Does he have the talent to match the hype? It takes a rare kind of driver to launch a middle- of- the- road team toward the top of the grid, and with some of the sparks he showed as a rookie, Lundgaard may be just that. But even if RLL steadies the ship with its various personnel changes, it’s going to take a special talent to fight consistent­ly with the best of Penske, Ganassi, Andretti and McLaren.

Graham Rahal

Does he still have a win left in him? It’s been five years since Rahal swept the 2017 Detroit doublehead­er, and as IndyCar’s talent pool has gotten far deeper ( and younger), Rahal’s never been able to get back. His 2022 campaign was his first full- time American openwheel season without a podium. He’ll have to get back there before we can start talking about victories.

Kyle Kirkwood

Just how good can he be in top- level equipment? As a rookie with bottom- dweller Foyt, we didn’t see anything close to the talent Kirkwood flashed as the Road to Indy’s most dominant force. He’s admitted to pushing past his car’s limit in hopes of willing himself to top- 10 finishes. Without that deficit to overcome, Kirkwood’s Year 2 leap will be important to watch.

Simon Pagenaud

Is there any hope of delivering a top- 10 performanc­e across the season? Pagenaud hoped, with his pedigree, to help Meyer Shank Racing best the ceiling it seemed to have hit with Jack Harvey ( 13th in points in 2021). Instead, the 2016 champ managed just 15th in Year 1. Cracking the top 10 will take displacing at least three title- contending cars from the Top 4 teams on the grid.

Rinus VeeKay

Does he have a Newgarden- like leap to make? In his first three years with Sarah Fisher Hartman Racing, the future two- time champ logged just two podiums and a best points finish of 13th. Ed Carpenter’s patience gave him a shot to reach seventh in Year No. 4 and fourth in Year No. 5. If we’re ever to think VeeKay is a future title contender, we’re going to need to see pronounced improvemen­t in 2023.

Callum Ilott

With still the smallest, most inexperien­ced team on the grid, can the second- year Brit find more Lagunalike magic? Ilott said at Content Days he believes that “in the quickest car, I don’t think there’s many people quicker than me,” but those days with JHR won’t come often. Should he hope to one day jump to a more competitiv­e outfit, he’ll need to make the most of those opportunit­ies when he finds them.

David Malukas

Does he have more races like WWT Raceway in him? Malukas received rave reviews for his runner- up finish in the final oval race last year, but he was rarely in the weekend conversati­ons otherwise. It’s an uphill battle to fight for consistent top- 10s with a midfield team like Coyne, but there’s clearly some potential. Whether he can harness it more often will determine the next chapter of his career.

Jack Harvey

Can he replicate Rosenqvist’s 2022? Harvey expected his move from MSR to RLL to be a step up in the paddock. Instead, his first campaign at his new home was his worst as a full- time IndyCar driver. Rosenqvist experience­d a similar free- fall in his results from 2020 to ’ 21, moving from Ganassi to Arrow McLaren, and his eighth- place finish a year ago helped him hang onto his ride for another year. With so much young talent in the paddock, while not bringing budget to the table, Harvey will need a similar rebound to hang onto his ride.

Conor Daly

Is there another level left for him to reach? As Daly embarks in his fourth consecutiv­e full- time season ( second with ECR), it’s fair to wonder if he can be expected to deliver anything more than a couple of top- 12 finishes and some flair in the 500. IndyCar’s midfield gets deeper by the year, and though being backed by an enthused full- time primary sponsor helps one hold onto their ride, the results to back it up need to be there, too.

Devlin DeFrancesc­o

Can he prove he’s Andretti material? At the time of his signing, Michael Andretti said his plans for DeFrancesc­o always had a long runway, given his history within the team and the budget he brings to the table. But it’s hard to ignore the worst full- season championsh­ip finish of the team’s history. The young Canadian driver only finished in the top half of the field once

as a rookie. His ceiling must rise.

Helio Castroneve­s

Can he prove he deserves another full- time season? Castroneve­s’ team owner Mike Shank said several times that the four- time Indy 500 winner’s future as a full- time driver came down to more than his results. He’s beloved among sponsor executives. But with Tom Blomqvist waiting in the wings within MSR’s IMSA squad with an IndyCar test under his belt, it may prove tough to fend off Father Time.

Marcus Armstrong

Can he still win Rookie of the Year? Count me in the camp that thinks, despite missing the five ovals on the calendar, Armstrong could still challenge the other three rookies in his class for the crown. A couple of podiums from the young New Zealander could go a long way in delivering an exciting ROY battle.

Santino Ferrucci

Can he help pull AJ Foyt Racing from the depths of IndyCar’s team hierarchy? Across two partial seasons with three teams and his two full seasons with Coyne, Ferrucci’s proved he can do a lot with a little. That skill will be put to the test at Foyt. The team has upped its investment in resources over the offseason, and it needs the right young driver willing to put in the hard work to make it anything other than an afterthoug­ht.

Sting Ray Robb

Is he as talented as recent top- 2 Indy Lights finishers? Robb comes to IndyCar without nearly the level of acclaim as Malukas, Kirkwood, VeeKay, O’Ward and Herta, and it’s well- known his funding helped land him a ride while the ’ 22 Lights champ Linus Lundqvist remains on the sidelines. Coyne rookies who have come before him ( Malukas, Grosjean and Palou for starters) have shown there’s strong results to be had. It’s up to Robb to rise to the occasion.

Agustin Canapino

Was his performanc­e at Thermal more than an outlier? The Argentine rookie wowed those at the Open Test by finishing around the top- 20 each session among the 27- car field, despite virtually no openwheel experience. Then again, no one in the field had ever driven on the track. Should he come close to repeating that this year against a seasoned field of competitor­s, Ricardo Juncos may have found a gem.

Benjamin Pedersen

Can he occasional­ly run somewhere other than the back of the grid? Foyt’s struggles in recent years are well- documented, and IndyCar’s history of Lights drivers making the leap after something other than a top- 3 finish in the top of the Road to Indy ladder is pretty grim. The expectatio­n is he’ll do little more than take Dalton Kellett’s spot consistent­ly at the back of the grid. Exceeding those would be a strong rookie campaign.

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Will Power won his second IndyCar Series championsh­ip in 2022 that included 13 top- 6 finishes.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/ USA TODAY SPORTS Will Power won his second IndyCar Series championsh­ip in 2022 that included 13 top- 6 finishes.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States