…Where there was a lot of broken cars and pointed fingers, a Scotsman that started this season the same way he ended last season, and a female racer that wowed the fans — and it wasn’t You Know Who.
Photo credit: Chris Jones/IZOD IndyCar Series.
It goes without saying that we’ve seen cleaner starts to seasons past than Sunday’s Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. As expected, the new restart rules played a critical role in the form of two crashes on restarts during the first 13 laps. And there was plenty of frustration amongst the drivers afterwards.
But once the chaos settled, the familiar took hold as back-to-back IndyCar champion Dario Franchitti sailed away from the crash-depleted field and notched his 27th career open-wheel victory, tying him for 10th on the all-time list with Johnny Rutherford.
Meanwhile, as Franchitti was showing that he was still the clear-cut favorite in this year’s championship, an interesting battle unfolded between Tony Kanaan and Simona de Silvestro. Both drivers had dealt with their fair share of adversity going into St. Petersburg. But in their fight for the final spot on the podium, which went to Kanaan after an extended and entertaining duel, they showed why they’re rock-solid racers.
And with that, it’s time to turn on the Bean Machine — which now runs completely on the solar energy of New Mexico sunshine and thus, has become just like its creator.
Cheap.
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Happy days for Dario Franchitti
He wins the season-opening race over his main nemesis in convincing fashion and his wife Ashley Judd’s beloved Kentucky Wildcats made the NCAA Final Four. Of course, most of you likely don’t care about the latter. I suspect that’s because of one of two things: You believe her movies aren’t that good or you’ve strapped yourself on the Butler bandwagon-turned-rocketship. PLUS 10.
A rough start to the season
I think we were all hoping for something a bit more clean. Instead, we had a six-car pileup on Lap 1 (see photo above) that put Marco Andretti on his head again and affected several other big names like Helio Castroneves and Scott Dixon. Then Danica Patrick and Ryan Briscoe promptly lost their front wings, followed by another restart incident that turned around Sebastian Saavedra and sent Ryan Hunter-Reay to pit road for suspension damage.
These may all be on the new rule that’s causing restart packs to accelerate to green at a much slower pace than years past. As a result, the cars bunched up and all it took was one driver’s mistake to ruin the race for others. “There’s zero room for error, and we can’t bump like NASCAR,” Power said after the race. “…I think this is just going to continue every race. There’s going to be people getting knocked out every single restart.”
Perhaps Randy Bernard and Brian Barnhart need to go back to the drawing board and find another way to add some spice to races. MINUS 25.
Tony Kanaan pulls off a podium
As much as I’ve written that this economy demands great drivers to be greater fundraisers, I sincerely hope that at least one company that had a chance to help this guy find a ride sooner is kicking itself right now for passing on the opportunity. Good for Kanaan and KV/Lotus (which also got a fifth-place run from Takuma Sato). The last week was a wild one for both driver and team but they performed admirably nonetheless.
On to the next task for the former series champion: Learning more people’s names. PLUS 8.
Simply Simona
What can you say about her efforts on Sunday, as well as those of her HVM Racing team? Bouncing back from losing their engineer and the subsequent scramble to find a new one, the Nuclear Clean Air Energy squad pulled off a near-miracle. After finishing a career-best fourth, De Silvestro admitted she had no idea she would be able to run with the leaders in post-race. She likely wasn’t the only one feeling that way going into St. Pete, but now, they’ve got wind in their sails heading to Alabama. PLUS 8.
A nice surprise
ABC put up a stronger-than-normal broadcast for Sunday’s race and INDYCAR was rewarded with a 1.4 overnight rating, the highest overnight since 2007 for an IZOD IndyCar Series race outside the Indianapolis 500. We’ll see what the final ratings are on Thursday, but it’s certainly a good bit of news for the ratings-challenged series. Let’s see if Versus can follow suit with a solid viewership for Barber in two weeks. PLUS 5.
War of attrition helps some
At the front of this group is De Silvestro, who started 17th and ran as high as second before coming home fourth. But there were others that started from the back but moved forward with some help from the early crashes. Raphael Matos finished seventh for AFS Racing after starting 16th, while J.R. Hildebrand (11th; started 24th) and Sebastian Saavedra (13th; started 25th) made even bigger gains in their inaugural races as full-time IndyCar drivers. PLUS 3.
“G2” has tough first race
First thing’s first — the “G2” name for the new two-car addition to Chip Ganassi Racing came from IMS Radio’s practice coverage. Now that credit has been given, I think I’ll borrow it. Anyway, Graham Rahal and Charlie Kimball ran into trouble in their first run for the Chipster — Rahal (17th) got knocked into a tire barrier following the first restart and came back out from the pits four laps down, while Kimball (22nd) made his first rookie mistake by accelerating out of pit road on cold tires and going into the wall near Turn 3 on Lap 38. Not a great start for a team that may be expected to be Ganassi’s future, but the season is still young (as is the team). MINUS 10.
No return for Bourdais
If what happened to Sebastien Bourdais on Sunday occurred while he was still raising trophies at Newman-Haas, the team would just roll out a backup car and have at it. But that was then and this is now. Despite the best efforts of his scrappy but smaller Dale Coyne Racing team, Bourdais’ No. 19 couldn’t be repaired in time for race day — putting off the Frenchman’s return to American open-wheel racing for a bit longer. MINUS 5.
FINAL SCORE: -6 beans.