St. Pete

  • Race Control — Live Blog: 2026 Indycar Grand Prix of St. Pete — Race

    Race Control — Live Blog: 2026 Indycar Grand Prix of St. Pete — Race

    🏁 Checkered Flag

    Palou wins the Grand Prix of St. Pete in dominant fashion. He makes it two years in a row winning the season-opener. McLaughlin holds on for 2nd and Lundgaard ends in 3rd, tied with Rinus Veekay for 10 overtakes.

    Lap 93/100

    McLaughlin and Lundgaard pass Kirkwood!

    It’s too late for P1, but the battle for P2 is now Chevy on Chevy.

    Lap 92/100

    McLaughlin is officially stuck behind Kirkwood, and Lundgaard behind McLaughlin. The gap is under half a second between each of them.

    Kirkwood actually has the fastest lap by six tenths with a 62.2, but Palou has been able to maintain a consistently lower lap time overall. He has taken care of the tires and made the fuel go long on the first stint.

    Lap 88/100

    Palou is actually faster than those on reds behind him now.

    Lap 85/100

    Still a stalemate on laptime. It’s like Palou knows the pace his competitors are going to run before they run it, and he does nothing more, nothing less. Just maintaining the 5.7s gap.

    Lap 82/100

    Laptimes among the top 3 stabilized on that last lap. All between 63.2-63.4.

    Lap 80/100

    The gap is down to 5.5s for Kirkwood. They’re reeling Palou in, but is Palou saving something for them when they get there?

    Palou has only made one on-track pass. The rest of the lead was down to his pace on that first stint in-lap, and then his pace on the second stint helped him maintain that lead.

    Jameis Winston’s Son

    His son has been “studying cars by drawing them.” He’s ready to join an engineering team on the grid.

    Kirkwood’s Race

    Kirkwood has moved up 11 spots with 9 overtakes.

    Push to Pass

    Palou leads the top 3 with 90 seconds of PTP. McLaughlin with 80, Kirkwood with 51.

    Lap 74/100

    McLaughlin and Kirkwood are pushing about .5s per lap faster than Palou.

    Lap 73/100

    Effective order:

    1. Palou
    2. Kirkwood (-7.2)
    3. McLaughlin (-8.6)

    Lap 69/100

    McLaughlin in.

    Looks like teams are prioritizing safety against a yellow to a short final stint. Seems the tires are holding up on the longer stints.

    Lap 67/100

    Palou is in. He’s looking at a 32 lap black stint. I’m a bit surprised he didn’t take the reds longer.

    Lap 66/100

    Armstrong made a wild attempt into Turn 1 and gave up 2 spots in the end. The field is getting racy.

    Now Lundgaard gets by as Ericsson dives into the pits.

    Lap 65/100

    McLaughlin moves into P2 with an overtake of Ericsson into Turn 1.

    We’ll see what kind of pace he has with clear air as he chases down Palou.

    Lap 59/100

    To add to the pain, Palou’s pulled out a 6 second gap on P2.

    Fuel Update

    Palou has 3 laps on McLaughlin and 2 laps on Ericsson. He’ll be able to go deepest in this stint. Quickest final stop should be in store for him.

    McLaughlin’s best hope at this point could be to pit on the early side and hope Palou gets caught out with a yellow. You’re not going to win the fuel-save battle against him at this point.

    Lap 55/100

    Last lap times:

    • Palou: 63.0
    • Ericsson: 63.9
    • McLaughlin: 64.0

    All on soft reds.

    McLaughlin’s First Stop

    Traffic and slow in laps hurt McLaughlin. He didn’t pull away from Ericsson or Palou on his in laps, and then got stuck battling on his out laps.

    🟩Green Flag – Lap 44/100

    Palou leads. He will need to take hard black tires for the final stint (presumably around lap 80). McLaughlin will have the tire advantage on a set of soft reds.

    🟨Yellow Flag #2

    McLaughlin Radio

    Their goal is track position and going “at least as long or longer” than their competitors on this stint.

    Effective Order

    Palou, Rossi, Ericsson, McLaughlin, Armstrong

    Radio

    McLaughlin’s engineer is saying “Woulda coulda shoulda” on how deep they took that first stint.

    Dixon lost his right rear. Loose wheelnut. So unfortunate.

    Stint 2

    Lap 40/100

    Pit sequence complete and the overcut was the clear winner.

    Lap 38/100

    Palou just did a 62.8. That was a much faster in lap than McLaughlin was a ble to do on the hard tire.

    Editor’s Note

    The live map is about 20-30 seconds ahead of live radio, which is about 2 minutes ahead of the broadcast. Makes it pretty hard to keep track of what’s happening when.

    Lap 36/100

    McLaughlin in.

    Lap 34/100

    McLaughlin is pushing, a 63.9 on that last lap. Now a 63.5. The soft runners behind are mostly keeping up though.

    Lap 32/100

    Rahal in 9th up 5. Dixon up to 11th with 6 overtakes and 2 pitstops in hand. Watch out for him. He’ll be able to take this stint longer, get on cycle with the others, and have a shorter final pitstop because he’ll need less fuel.

    Lap 27/100

    I spoke too soon. There’s no discernable difference between softs and hards from what I can see in the recent laptimes.

    Lap 25/100

    Will Power is out. Same spot as his previous incident.

    Radio: “12 more laps on these tires”. Looks like the target lap is 37.

    Reds appear to be falling off now, about .2-.5 slower than the blacks.

    Lap 23/100

    O’Ward is the fastest on the primaries of those yet to pit, with a 63.7 last lap.

    Lap 21/100

    Radio: “Tires starting to go” according to Louis Foster.

    However, the primary hard tires were slower last lap. The leaders did a 64.1 and the first soft runners did a 63.8.

    Lap 19/100

    This is looking to be a 2 stop race. Same start, different result. Perhaps due to the two-soft rule.

    Radio: Half tank of fuel was the call. Could put the absolute last stops around lap 37/38.

    Lap 17/100

    The hard and soft tires are both equal still at this point in terms of lap time, it appears. Both tires running around a 63.4.

    Lap 16/100

    Alexander Rossi has 1 pitstop done and 5 overtakes complete. He’s in P16 at the moment.

    Lap 13/100

    Anddddd Malukas’s left front gave out. He’s nursing it back to the pits.

    Lap 7/100

    Malukas has flatspotted his hard tires already. He’ll have to get them through the next 7 laps at least before he thinks about going to softs, but imagine he’ll be an early pitter once the window opens.

    We’re green again.

    Yellow Flag

    One notable early pitter: Scott Dixon.

    So far no takers from the lead group on pit row.

    Radio: lap 15 is the target lap for the first stint to optimize the stint length on the red tires. Per the broadcast, teams will need to do two stints on reds.

    Stint 1

    Look for early pitstops similar to last year.

    Full course yellow already after there’s commotion in the back: Schumacher, Ferrucci, Sting Ray Robb involved.

    Green Flag

    We’re green!

    Command

    There’s the command. We’re moments from the green flag.

    Strategy

    Last year, the first 6 laps were under caution and then the race went green the rest of the way.

    The winning strategy from Palou was a lap 2 stop, and then two more stops on laps 39 and 72, for 3 stops total.

    The early last stop allowed Palou to take over the lead on lap 75 and never look back.

    Look out for:

    • Taking cheap stops under yellow
    • Pitting early rather than going long

    Grid Walk

    I can’t believe I’m saying this but Jameis Winston actually crushed that grid walk assist. He’s a natural.

    Pre-Race

    Betting Odds

    If you’re a betting person, the odds for race one are intriguing. Palou (4th) is favored at +170 to win. McLaughlin (1st) is at +230, Ericsson (2nd) is at +900, and Hauger (R)(3rd) is at +1800.

    Track Stats

    To recap from yesterday:

    • the pole winner wins this race 19% of the time.
    • The top 5 win this race 71% of the time.
    • Someone in the top 10 wins this race 90% of the time.

    So we’re looking at any of McLaughlin, Ericsson, Hauger, Palou, or Malukas with the best shot to win this race. McLaughlin, Ericsson, and Palou have all won here before.

    O’Ward (8th) is the only other driver in the top 10 to have won here before.

    Starting Grid

    We’re about 15 minutes away from the start of the first Indycar race of the 2026 season. Scott McLaughlin starts on the poll, with Marcus Ericsson 2nd and rookie Dennis Hauger 3rd. Palou is starting 4th.

    Here’s the full starting grid.

  • Live Blog: 2026 Indycar Grand Prix of St. Pete — Qualifying

    Live Blog: 2026 Indycar Grand Prix of St. Pete — Qualifying

    Trying something new this season, we’ll be live-blogging the Indycar series (with a stats-focused tilt, of course).

    Fast 6

    Your fast 6:

    Fast 12

    5:40 PM

    McLaughlin fastest by four hundredths over Palou. 4 Hondas and 2 Chevys yet again. Hauger, the rookie, advances to the Fast 6 as well.

    5:37 PM

    Everyone on reds now.

    5:34 PM

    4 of the top 6 so far on reds, including the top 3.

    5:33 PM

    Getting into golden hour in St. Pete. The sun looks difficult to deal with into turn 1, and then other parts of the track look very dark.

    5:30 PM

    Here’s the lineup for the top 12. Notably, no Power or Newgarden. Rookie Dennis Hauger is the biggest surprise.

    Q1

    5:26 PM

    Racing Reference is supplying a lot of these stats. It’s a great reference.

    5:24 PM

    There have been 4 winners from pole in 21 races, so today isn’t everything.

    Only 2 winners from outside the top 10 though (both Sebastian Bourdais). And only 6 winners from outside the top 5. So you want to be top 5 to have a decent shot.

    5:21 PM

    4 more Hondas and 2 more Chevys move through, and Dixon misses out after a late-session spin.

    5:18 PM

    The updates to the drivers eye are pretty awesome: live track map is a new bonus.

    5:14 PM

    Colton Herta is another driver who liked St. Pete. He had the highest average start in the field at 3.7. His average finish is 9th, though. (His dad, Bryan, has the all-time highest average finish at 4th.)

    Highest among active drivers is Dixon at 7.3.

    5:09 PM

    Will Power has an astounding 8 poles at St. Pete. The next best is Scott Mclaughlin with 2.

    5:07 PM

    Newgarden and Power are the only two active drivers with 2 wins each at St. Pete. Newgarden is already out of qualifying and Power is still acclimating to his new car.

    5:05 PM

    4 Hondas and 2 Chevys advance in the first group. Newgarden is the biggest surprise to not make it to Q2.

    5:00 PM

    The fastest lap in practice was a 61.1 by Scott McLaughlin. Could he repeat this year?

    4:55 PM

    We’re underway! Mick Schumacher is another big name in Indycar this year. He’s a rookie on Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. He was 23rd and 22nd in P1 and P2, respectively.

    4:55 PM

    Scott McLaughlin was the fastest qualifier last year with a 59.462. Colton Herta was 2nd, and Felix Rosenqvist was 3rd.

    4:49 PM

    Running a bit behind schedule. One of the biggest stories of the offseason was the move of career Chevy driver Will Power to Honda-powered Andretti Global.

    Power had one win in 2025 and finished 9th in the championship. We’ll see how he does under Honda power. He was 18th fastest in P1 and binned it early in P2 on a slippery track and didn’t set a time.

    4:40 PM

    The 2026 Indycar season starts this weekend in St. Petersburg, Florida. Everyone is chasing Alex Palou, who won 8 of 17 races in 2025, including the Indy 500, and won the championship by nearly 200 points.

  • IndyCar Poised for A Breakthrough Season

    IndyCar Poised for A Breakthrough Season

    When F1 defiantly denied Andretti’s bid to enter the series, it rubbed a lot of open-wheel race fans the wrong way, not only in the US but abroad.

    Then, F1’s season-opener in Bahrain put fans to sleep, with only 10-cars finishing on the lead lap, Verstappen finishing 22 seconds ahead of the field (or rather his teammate; the field was 25 seconds behind), and no cars within one second of each other at the line.

    Now, Red Bull’s Christian Horner is embroiled in scandal, and the FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem is under investigation for tampering with a stewards’ decision last season. While some people may love the off-track drama, others may be tired of the “circus” that is F1, where more action occurs off the track than on it.

    Luckily for fans, Indycar awaits just around the corner this weekend. Race fans eager for some on-track action as well as uncertainty in the outcome should be chomping at the bit to tune in.

    Competitiveness and Driver Appeal

    The health of the IndyCar series is as good as ever. There were 10 different pole-winners and 7 race-winners in 2023, plus 16 different podium finishers. Alex Palou and Josef Newgarden took the major share of wins, but the series is also full of exciting young talents—Pato O’Ward, Scott McLaughlin, Colton Herta, and Kyle Kirkwood to name a few—and legendary veterans like Scott Dixon and Will Power that are still competing for both wins and championships. The series also brings the legitimacy of F1 in guys like Romain Grosjean and Marcus Ericsson with their experience in both series.

    The series strikes the right balance of international representation from Mexico to New Zealand to Sweden while still showcasing plenty of young American racing talents.

    Sustainability Focus

    They introduced the sustainably sourced “guayule” green-walled Firestone tires to the series, which just bolsters their sustainability efforts that took a huge leap forward with the biofuel they too quietly used to power the cars in 2023. Now in 2024, they’ll introduce the hybrid assist unit, which will come into play after the Indy 500 and also bring about more power for the drivers to pass with when deployed.

    Media Exposure

    To top it all off, IndyCar is more present on television than ever before. In 2023, NBC broadcast 15 races on NBC, 3 on USA network, and 1 race exclusively on Peacock. 100 Days To Indy aired on the CW, and returns for season 2 this spring, giving fans that behind-the-curtain look at the drivers and their lives that sports and reality TV fans alike are expecting these days. NBC has done a great job giving fans access to other sessions as well directly on Peacock and having the A-Team cover it, and they’ve been responsive to problems and suggestions from fans throughout the season, with Townsend Bell often going to Twitter and asking fans directly for feedback on the broadcast on the plane ride home after the race.

    There will be 12 NBC races this year, 6 USA races, and 2 Peacock races this season. With Peacock seeing subscriber growth from the NFL playoff game this year, and people being more accustomed to watching TV across multiple apps generally, we’ll see if Peacock becomes less of a friction point for fans.

    St. Pete Outlook

    St. Pete should be entertaining for fans, with opportunities for anyone in at least the top 10 to win. The average winner started 6th, and there were 7 lead changes on average per race.

    As with any street course, there’s also the chance for fireworks, with an average of 3.5 cautions for 16 laps.

    In the past 10 years, qualifying on pole only give you a slight edge, with two of the past ten winners coming from the pole position.

    With F1 fumbling their new Netflix-generated audience with every misstep they make, Indycar is poised to capture some of those fans that want the excitement of open-wheel racing that F1 has failed to deliver on.

    Qualifying starts at 2PM eastern on March 9th on Peacock, and the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg kicks off the IndyCar season on NBC at 12 PM eastern on March 10th.