Archives for Indy Lights presented by Cooper Tire – TSO

Iowa Speedway – Indy Lights preview

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Indy Lights Preview

Hot, in all it’s various definitions is the word of the week as the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire series heads to the ⅞ of a mile Iowa Speedway bull-ring for the 11th race of the 18 round championship.

Leaving the Indianapolis Motor Speedway the chase for the $1million Mazda Motorsports Advancement Scholarship could certainly have been classified as hot. Carlin pilot Ed Jones led the championship by 29 points over Andretti Autosport rookie Dean Stoneman, with two other drivers within 50 points of the sophomore.

The two races in the scenic Kettle Moraine region of Wisconsin were witness to some hot tempers by the top three drivers in the championship that spilled over into some on and off-track shenanigans that forced Indy Lights Race Director, Tony Cotman to step in. Jones, Stoneman and Santiago Urrutia have all been placed on probation for the remainder of the season and warned that any additional incidents including unsportsmanlike conduct and dangerous or over aggressive driving will result in the loss of a minimum of 10 championship points.

“The notices issued do not preclude a driver from racing hard but serve as a reminder on how to race over the final eight rounds of the championship,” said Cotman.

With some pent up angst dating back to the crazy last restart during the first race of Angie’s List Grand Prix of Indianapolis weekend, Jones, Stoneman and Urrutia all used their cars in an attempt creates space and to intimidate each other over the course of the two races on the 14-Turn, 4.014-mile Road America road course.

What resulted was a hot championship fight becoming a red hot championship fight. Jones still holds a lead over Stoneman, but it has tightened up to a 19 point gap. Urrutia was the big winner when Stoneman and Jones made contact early in the second race at Road America. The reigning Pro Mazda presented by Cooper Tire champion won the race and was able to cut the gap to leader Jones to 24 points and the gap to second place Stoneman to a meager five points.

Jones, recently told TSO that,“I LOVE ovals”, and has just missed out on the top step of the podium in the last three Indy Ligths oval races. The 21-year old began his steak at the Iowa Speedway last year and it has continued at Phoenix International Raceway and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2016.

Jones is one of three drivers in the top six in points that has previous experience at Iowa Speedway in the Mazda powered Dallara IL-15, leading 13 laps and finishing second behind his Carlin teammate Max Chilton.

Stoneman’s ninth place finish in the second Road America tilt was his first finish off the podium since he suffered a mechanical issue in the second race at Barber Motorsports Park. The 25 year-old Cancer survivor has collected 122 points since the beginning of May, which is 17 more than Jones has tallied during that five race span.

“Looking forward to racing on the short oval at Iowa,” said Stoneman. “Testing there went well and I feel we will have a competitive car. It will be good to get back to racing after the bittersweet weekend at Road America. The podium in Race 1 kept us in the championship hunt, but the puncture whilst in the lead was really frustrating. We will arrive in Iowa wiser and stronger and looking forward to getting the Stellrecht Mazda up front again.”

Urrutia qualified on the outside of the Pro Mazda front row last year, his only appearance at Iowa Speedway, but ended up finishing a disappointing fifth. However, the Mazda sponsored 19 year-old only has an average finish of 8.75 in his four previous Mazda Road To Indy oval races will need to find a way to be more competitive during Sunday’s 115 lap event.

“I’m ready for Iowa,” explained the native of Montevideo, Uruguay. “As a team, I think we’re working better. Everybody did a great job when we got the win at Road America so I’m confident that we can work together and take advantage of that momentum throughout the rest of the season. I’ve never had a podium on the ovals so I’m looking to get my first one in Iowa and keep moving up in the points championship.”

The opposite of hot, is cool, as in keep your cool, something the three front-running championship contenders will need to accomplish if they don’t want to run afoul of Cotman and continue to have a chance at winning the Mazda advancement scholarship.

The pressure on these drivers is certainly immense, and while it’s understandable that pressure might seep over onto the track, it’s still inexcusable, and certainly can’t happen in the tight confines of a short-oval that races like a superspeedway.

We’ve spent a lot of words on the front running threesome, but by no means have we discounted anybody else.

Kyle Kaiser, the Juncos Racing sophomore who ran away with the first short oval race of the year at Phoenix International Raceway, is currently fourth in points and needs a Phoenix-esque performance to jump back into the the title conversation. TSO understands that Kaiser was very quick during testing at the Iowa Speedway last week, and will hope to build on an impressive fourth place finish in last years race.

A tenth place finish in last year’s race leaves Carlin’s Felix Serralles with some work to do. The Ponce, Puerto Rico native has had an up and down season, but has shown well on a short oval in the past, winning at the Milwaukee Mile in 2015.

The only driver with three races of experience at the Iowa Speedway, is also the hottest driver leaving Wisconsin. Zach Veach, moved back into championship contention with a win and a third place finish at Road America. The 21 year-old has experience in USF2000, Pro Mazda and Indy Lights at Iowa Speedway and will look to use that to make his way further up the championship points table.

Shelby Blackstock (Andretti Autosport), Juan Piedrahita (Team Pelfrey), Dalton Kellett (Andretti Autosport) and Neil Alberico (Carlin) all have prior Mazda Road To Indy experience at Iowa Speedway. Kellett, who is coming off a podium at the last oval race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, also has the best Iowa result of the foursome, a second place finish in last years Pro Mazda race.

Making their first visit to Iowa Speedway, and facing a steep learning curve, will be: Zachary Claman de Melo (Juncos Racing), Andre Negrao (Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian), and Heamin Choi (Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian).

Alright, back to the topic of hot to close out our preview of this year’s race. With the newly patched track surface in Turn 3 and Turn 4 combined with hot mid-day temperatures making it even slicker during the race, the team that finds the correct set-up for the north end of the track will have a great chance of keeping their car off the wall* and taking home the trophy at the end of the day.

This will be the ninth time in the past decade that the Indy Light series visits Iowa Speedway, with 2014 being the only year the top rung of the Mazda Road To Indy was absent.

Formula 1 veteran Max Chilton leads the field on the way to an Indy Lights presented by Cooper Tire victory at Iowa Speedway. (Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography)

Formula 1 veteran Max Chilton leads the field on the way to an Indy Lights presented by Cooper Tire victory at Iowa Speedway. (Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography)

Current Verizon IndyCar Series drivers that have won at Iowa are: Max Chilton (2015) and Josef Newgarden (2011).

Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian leads the way, winning five times. The pole sitter has only won twice (2010 and 2015) and their average finishing position is 2.88.

The average finishing position for the pole sitter is 4.5 and Andretti Autosport leads the way by taking pole on four occasions.

Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian has scored 58% (14 of 24) of the available podiums and Ana Beatriz, Wade Cunningham and Gustavo Yucatan are the only drivers with multiple podiums. All three drivers have two podiums.

Previous Indy Lights Winners at Iowa Speedway

Year Driver Team
2015 Max Chilton Carlin
2013 Sage Karam Schmidt Peterson Motorsports
2012 Estaban Guerrieri Schmidt Peterson Motorsports
2011 Josef Newgarden Schmidt Peterson Motorsports
2010 Sebastian Saavedra Bryan Herta Autosport
2009 Ana Beatriz Schmidt Peterson Motorsports
2008 Dillon Battistini Panther Racing
2007 Alex Lloyd Schmidt Peterson Motorsports

2015 Indy Lights race at Iowa Speedway


Indy Lights at Iowa Speedway schedule (all times are local):

Saturday, July 9th

  • 10am – 11:15am –> Indy Lights autograph session
  • 1:15pm – 1:45pm  – -> Indy Lights practice #1
  • 5:15pm – 6pm –> Indy Lights practice #2

Sunday, July 10th

  • 11:am – 11:45am –> Indy Lights qualifying
  • 2:15pm –> Indy Lights race (115 laps)

 

Don’t miss any of the action

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The race will air on NBCSN on Tuesday, July 12, 2016 at 7pm (et)

You can also catch all the action on IndyCar’s YouTube channel:

Saturday:

Sunday:

Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire – Road America Race #2

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What came as no surprise, the start of the Indy Lights race was declared to be wet by race officials.

Ed Jones, who started on pole for the sixth time this season, was able to tip-toe his way through the first three corners ahead of the 13 drivers behind him that were were side-by-side through Turn 5. Everybody made it cleanly through the first lap, but eventual winner Urrutia was the biggest loser when got shuffled back to sixth place from his outside front row starting spot.

The top 10 after the first lap were: Jones, Veach, Negrao, Dean Stoneman, Felix Serralles, Urrutia, Kyle Kaiser, Zachary Claman de Melo, and Juan Piedrahita.

Over the next five laps Jones was able to maintain a one second lead over Veach, until yesterday’s winner spun in Turn 5 while he was pushing to catch Jones. The eventual podium finisher fell back four spots to sixth.

At the very end of the same lap, the No. 28 Andretti Autosport machine of Dalton Kellett looped it into the gravel trap in Turn 14 and needed the help of the Holmatro Safety Team to get restarted. The Canadian driver finished the race in 12th, one lap behind the leaders.

The top five under yellow were: Jones, Stoneman, Negrao, Serralles, and Urrutia

On the Lap 7 restart, Jones was able to get through Turn 1 and Turn 3 ahead of now second place Stoneman, but the No. 27 Andretti Autosport was able to use the additional horsepower that push-to-pass generates in his turbo charged 2.0L Mazda engine to pull in front of the Carlin No. 11 before the end of the Moraine Sweep.

Jones was able to out brake Stoneman and get through Turn 5 first, but Stoneman used a textbook over-under to get along side of Jones, when the two drivers got together on the uphill run to Turn 6.

TSO was able to talk with both drivers after the race and not surprisingly they had differing opinions on what happened.

“It was quite clear what he (Jones) did,” explained Stoneman. “It’s very obvious the he physically drove me off the track.”

“I thought I made a really great move into Turn 5, using the boost around the outside,” added Stoneman. “Jones came back at me on the brakes, which I was expecting because I was more focused on the exit. And as you could see I got the cutback on him, and he literally drove me off the track.”

On the restart, Dean got around and past me going by, then in the braking zone I went down the inside. I locked up a little but was able to keep the position. After Turn 5, I went to defend and it was maybe a bit too much,” admitted Jones. “That’s not really a passing spot and when Dean drove off the track, I touched his wing. Once his wing was damaged he realized that it was over for him and he tried to run me off in Turn 6, and that’s what caused the pileup.

Serralles and Negrao were both innocent bystanders in the incident with Jones bouncing off of the No. 17 Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian machine of Negrao and slowing down so much Serralles rear-ended his teammate.

In his IndyCar Radio interview Serralles blamed both Jones and Stoneman, and thought that Stoneman braked checked Jones in Turn 6.

From Negrao’s standpoint, the incident at Turn 6 was initiated by Ed Jones.

Serralles and Jones both made it back to pits where the Carlin crew went to work on both cars. The damage to the No. 4 of Serralles was too serious for the Puerto Rican driver to continue, finishing in last place. The No. 11 of Jones required timely repairs but he was able to get back out on track to end up finishing 13th.

Coming to the restart, Stoneman slowed down not knowing that he had suffered a cut tire during his contact with Jones.

Urrutia, who was reminded by his crew that he had push-to-pass left just as he was coming to the restart and he was able to get by the wounded Stoneman and Negrao before Turn 1.

Stoneman was forced to pit due to his flat tire and he told TSO that they were 50/50 on whether or not to move to slicks or stay on the wet weather tires. The No. 28 eventually rejoined the field a lap down with Cooper Tire slicks.

The call to go to slicks was the right one as Stoneman was able to un-lap himself, make up two spots and turn the quickest lap of the race, gaining him three extra championship points.

The remainder of the race ran green with the 10 drivers still on wet weather Cooper Tires doing their best to keep their car underneath them.

Over the second-half of the race, Urrutia was able to manage his tires and grow his gap up to 8.1 seconds. This marked the second win of the year for the Uruguayan and the fifth of his two season Mazda Road To Indy career.

The podium was the first in the United States for Negrao. The GP2 veteran has spent the majority of his career racing in Europe. Negrao told TSO that he thinks this will really help them build some momentum for the rest of the year.

Veach, who stood on an Mazda Road To Indy podium for the 24th time, was not pleased with how he drove in the wet, but was happy that he was the only Indy Lights driver on the podium in both races this weekend.

Most teams and drivers now head to Iowa Speedway for a test on Tuesday before a 100 mile race at the ⅞ mile high-banked oval on July 10, 2016.

The top five in points after the race are:

  1. Ed Jones –> 212
  2. Dean Stoneman —> 194
  3. Santiago Urrutia —> 190
  4. Kyle Kaiser —> 174
  5. Felix Serralles —> 169

Mazda Indy Lights Grand Prix of Road America Presented by Cooper Tires Race #2 results

RANK DRIVER GAP
1 Santiago Urrutia 20 LAPS
2 Andre Negrao -8.1504
3 Zach Veach -13.1818
4 Zachary Claman De Melo -25.1035
5 Shelby Blackstock -27.6994
6 Kyle Kaiser -31.0848
7 Juan Piedrahita -37.1282
8 James French -46.2237
9 Dean Stoneman -61.4885
10 Garett Grist -76.024
11 Neil Alberico -78.0112
12 Dalton Kellett -1 LAPS
13 Ed Jones -3 LAPS
14 Felix Serralles -12 LAPS

Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire – Road America race #2 starting line-up and current points

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Good morning from a very damp Road America where it rained extensively over night. The second Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire race of the weekend is scheduled to get going at 8:55am.

TSO did learn that the No. 22 Rising Star Racing/Penn Grade Motor Oil/ Mobe/Doug Mockett & Company of Neil Alberico will have a new power plant for today’s race. The Carlin crew was busy late into the night changing the Mazda turbo-charged 2.o liter power plant not once, but twice. After the crew replaced the first engine, Alberico was allowed to do an install lap after yesterday’s track activity. Unfortunately, the crew found something in that data that necessitated another engine.

Starting Line-Up for the Mazda Indy Lights Grand Prix of Road America Presented by Cooper Tires Race #2

  1. Ed Jones – Carlin
  2. Santiago Urrutia – Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian
  3. Zach Veach – Belardi Auto Racing
  4. Andre Negrao – Schmidt Peterson Motorsports with Curb-Agajanian
  5. Dean Stoneman – Andretti Autosport
  6. Felix Serralles – Carlin
  7. Kyle Kaiser – Juncos Racing
  8. Garett Grist – Team Pelfrey
  9. Juan Piedrahita – Team Pelfrey
  10. Zachary Claman de Melo – Juncos Racing
  11. Shelby Blackstock – Andretti Autosport
  12. James French – Belardi Auto Racing
  13. Neil Alberico – Carlin
  14. Dalton Kellett – Andretti Autosport

Here are the points headed into this morning’s race. With what will be a wet track, this race certainly has the potential to shake-up the standings.

RANK DRIVER TOTAL
1 Ed Jones 204
2 Dean Stoneman – R 181
3 Felix Serralles 162
4 Kyle Kaiser 159
5 Santiago Urrutia – R 158
6 Zach Veach 146
7 Felix Rosenqvist – R 120
8 Shelby Blackstock 112
9 RC Enerson 111
10 Andre Negrao – R 104
11 Zachary Claman de Melo – R 98
12 Dalton Kellett – R 95
13 Scott Hargrove – R 93
14 Juan Piedrahita 91
15 Neil Alberico – R 86
16 Scott Anderson 61
17 Heamin Choi – R 14
18 Garett Grist – R 14
19 James French – R 13

Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire – Road America Race #1

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Relieved, is how Belardi Auto Racing veteran Zach Veach said he felt after his first trip to the top step of an Indy Lights podium in 22 months. The Stockdale, Ohio native admitted that he has struggled to come to grips with the Mazda powered Dallara IL-15 after winning three times in the previous generation Indy Lights machinery.

Starting on pole, Veach got a great start and beat the rest of the 14-car Indy Lights field to Turn 1. However, the action behind the veteran driver was certainly action packed.

Santiago Urrutia was the biggest loser on the first lap. The Uruguayan lost second position to Ed Jones in the Turn 1 and then proceeded to lose third position to Dean Stoneman in Turn 3. Urrutia then made an effort to get back by Stoneman in the downhill run to Turn 5, but Stoneman and his No. 27 squeezed reigning Pro Mazda champion to the outside, forcing him wide into the gravel trap. The trip off trap meant Urrutia dropped all the way back to 10th.

Zach Veach leads the 14 car Indy Lights field into Turn 3 on Lap 1, while Dean Stoneman makes the pass on Santiago Urrutia. (Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography)

Zach Veach leads the 14 car Indy Lights field into Turn 3 on Lap 1, while Dean Stoneman makes the pass on Santiago Urrutia. (Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography)

The top five at the end of the first lap were: Veach, Jones, Stoneman, Andre Negrao and Kyle Kaiser.

On Lap 2, Stoneman got a good run on Jones off of The Carousel and The Kink and the two drivers went side-by-side through Canada Corner and Billy Mitchell Bend before Stoneman took over the position as the cars made the steep climb to the start-finish line.

Stoneman’s hold on the second spot didn’t last long when Jones was able to get a good tow headed to Turn 1 and was able to make a last minute pass to get the second position back.

On that same lap, Andre Negrao was able to get beside Stoneman headed down the Moraine Sweep to Turn 5, and in almost an exact replay to what happened between Stoneman and Urrutia one the first lap, the No. 27 once again squeezed his competitor onto the gator strips and off track. Negrao, a 24 year-old Brazillian dropped back to 10th, and was not able to recover any more positions, finishing the race in 10th.

For his actions, Stoneman was handed a five-second post race penalty. The Croydon, England native did apologize after the race for the contact and explained that he didn’t know that Negrao was beside him and that he was just moving onto his braking line.

The on-track action settled down until Lap 7, when Stoneman, who had been pressuring Jones for a number of laps was able to finally make the pass to move onto the middle step of the podium.

Further back in the field Indy Lights debutante Garett Grist was able to pass his fellow Canadian Dalton Kellett going into Canada Corner. Kellett got loose at corner exit and backed his No. 28 Andretti Autosport Mazda powered Dallara into the tires bringing out the first and only yellow of the race.

The top five under yellow were: Veach, Stoneman, Jones, Felix Serralles and Kaiser.

Felix Serralles in the Carlin No. 4 gets crossed up at corner exit. The Indy Lights drivers have all talked about how tough the cars are to drive around the 14-Turn, 4.014-mile Road America road course  (Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography)

Felix Serralles in the Carlin No. 4 gets crossed up at corner exit. The Indy Lights drivers have all talked about how tough the cars are to drive around the 14-Turn, 4.014-mile Road America road course (Photo courtesy of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, LLC Photography)

After building a five second lead Veach had to defend from Stoneman on the restart, but was able to get through Turn 1 and build back his lead

Behind the first two on the restart, Serralles was able to get by his Carlin teammate Ed Jones, who was nursing front wing damage, for the final spot on the podium. Further back in the field, Kaiser, Urrutia and Piedrahita were waging a fierce three-car battle heading into Turn 5. Piedrahita got to the corner first, but quickly found himself facing the wrong direction after being spun from behind by Urrutia. This time, it was Urrutia who was hit with the five second post race-penalty.

While Stoneman was able to overcome his penalty and finish second, Urrutia’s five second penalty really hurt him. The Montevideo, Uruguay native took the white flag in fifth but fell back to ninth after the five-second penalty was applied.

After an action packed first half of the race the second half of the race settled into a nice rhythm with Veach holding a steady lead at just over 2.5 second. Behind him, the best battle on track was between Kaiser and Shelby Blackstock. Blackstock was able to make a pass of Kaiser, but carried too much speed at the exit of Turn 3 and spun off track. Blackstock was able to continue but finished a disappointing 13th.

Jones, who led Andretti Autosport’s Stoneman by 29 points headed into the race will start the second race of the weekend with a 23 point lead.

The biggest championship mover was Felix Serralles who used his third podium of 2016 to move from fifth to third on the points table.

Heading into the weekend, only three drivers were within 50 points of Jones, but after today’s race five drivers had moved to within the half-century mark of the Indy Lights championship leader.

RANK DRIVER GAP
1 Zach Veach
2 Dean Stoneman -7.9841
3 Felix Serralles -8.8199
4 Ed Jones -12.2401
5 Zachary Claman De Melo -13.6079
6 Kyle Kaiser -14.1648
7 Garett Grist -16.1469
8 James French -17.0672
9 Santiago Urrutia -18.3453
10 Andre Negrao -19.534
11 Neil Alberico -22.0599
12 Juan Piedrahita -35.0905
13 Shelby Blackstock -41.0834
14 Dalton Kellett -14 LAPS

Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire – Road America qualifying

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Relief and joy were the emotions exhibited by Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire driver Zach Veach who used a final lap flier to win his first pole of the year with a lap at 1:52.941. That was only one-hundredth of a second quicker than reigning Pro Mazda presented by Cooper Tire champion Santiago Urrutia.

The pole is the Stockdale, Ohio natives fourth overall in Indy Lights and seventh overall in the Mazda Road To Indy.

The 21 year-old explained that despite being the quickest in the practice session this morning his Belardi Auto Racing engineer Kent Boyer made a big change in the car. Veach wasn’t so sure about the changes in during his first new tire stint, but he admitted that he was overdriving the car and that he was less aggressive on his second new Cooper Tire run and that he kept getting quicker each lap.

Normally when a track record falls by 12 seconds it would be a huge deal, but in this case the Indy Lights track record of 2:04.812 was set in 1990, the last time Indy Lights visited Road America, by Mike Snow.

The half-hour session began promptly at 2:10pm and after a handful of laps most of the drivers came in to make a few adjustments before heading back out to see if the changes helped with the car balance and allow them to go quicker.

At the halfway point of the half-hour session the top five were: Santiago Urrutia, Zach Veach, Ed Jones, Dean Stoneman, and Juan Piedrahita .

With only 10 minutes left in the session, the majority of the drivers went to fresh Cooper sticker tires.

With five minutes left in the session, the times were dropping on each lap and the top five were: Urrutia, Jones, Negao, Kyle Kaiser and Stoneman.

Just when it looked like Urrutia would take his maiden Indy Lights pole, the veteran Veach went one-hundredth of a second quicker than Urrutia, who did not get a chance to try and snag the top spot back when he went off course on his final lap. He told IndyCar radio that he might have damaged the floor on his car doing so.

Points leader Jones will start third which is two spots ahead of his closest championship contender Stoneman.

GP2 veteran Negrao will start fourth, his best start of the year.

Of note was the impressive effort put in by series debutant Garett Grist (Belardi Auto Racing) who is making his first Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire start and first visit to Road America.  The 21 year-olds best lap was less than a second behind his pole winning teammate.

Qualifying results for Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tire Race #1

RANK DRIVER TOP LAP GAP
1 Zach Veach 1:52.941 0.000
2 Santiago Urrutia 1:52.955 0.0139
3 Ed Jones 1:52.963 0.0217
4 Andre Negrao 1:53.227 0.2862
5 Dean Stoneman 1:53.490 0.5494
6 Felix Serralles 1:53.728 0.7873
7 Kyle Kaiser 1:53.730 0.7887
8 Garett Grist 1:53.817 0.8764
9 Juan Piedrahita 1:53.860 0.9190
10 Zachary Claman De Melo 1:54.289 1.3484
11 Shelby Blackstock 1:54.367 1.4262
12 James French 1:55.011 2.0704
13 Neil Alberico 1:55.151 2.2105
14 Dalton Kellett 1:55.237 2.2958

Freedom 100 – Indy Lights Race

Indy Lights Logo

For the third time in four years, the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires’ Freedom 100 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway featured a thrilling, you-had-to-see-it-to-believe-it photo finish.

The one driver on the winning end this go-around was Englishman Dean Stoneman of Andretti Autosport, driving the No. 27 Stellrecht Dallara IL-15 Mazda, who edged points leader Ed Jones in the No. 11 Jebel Ali Resorts and Hotels entry for Carlin by a scant, 0.0024 of a second.

The margin of victory supplants the previous closest finish ever mark at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2013, when Peter Dempsey beat Gabby Chaves by just 0.0026 of a second as part of that incredible four-wide photo finish that also included Sage Karam and Carlos Munoz.

Then a year later in 2014, Chaves redeemed himself with a seemingly mountainous 0.0050 of a second win by comparison, over Andretti’s Matthew Brabham. Chaves was Brian Belardi’s second straight winning driver.

So after coming up short on the last two photo finishes it had been a part of in the Freedom 100, Michael Andretti’s team has now finally broken through courtesy of the rookie who’s hitting his stride and has now won in only his second oval start ever.

Stoneman also matches Jack Harvey in winning at least one of the two road course races at IMS, then following it up with the Freedom 100 win a couple weeks later.

The field started by points owing to yesterday’s initially truncated, then canceled qualifying session.

Jones would start from pole ahead of Santiago Urrutia, Kyle Kaiser, Felix Serralles and Stoneman, with others further down the order in Row 7 – Juan Piedrahita and Dalton Kellett – proving pleasant surprises as the day went on.

Reba McEntire gave the command to start engines and her son Shelby Blackstock started 10th for the race.

A two-lap caution delayed the start of green flag running because of debris on track.

Once cleaned, the race restarted on Lap 3, but it was game over for Kaiser in his No. 18 Juncos Racing entry early with a heavy crash on the high side exiting Turn 4. For a driver who’s noticeably improved his craft and consistency in 2016, it was an unfortunate setback for the Californian sophomore as his “evil crash out of the first lap in 2015 twin” made an unwelcome comeback.

“I’m massively disappointed. I caught the high side,” Kaiser told NBCSN’s Jon Beekhuis after being checked, cleared and released from the infield care center.

On Lap 8 the race restarted with Jones still leading Stoneman, RC Enerson up to third after starting eighth in his No. 7 Lucas Oil/Curb Records entry for Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, then Serralles, Urrutia, Zach Veach, Blackstock and Andre Negrao the top half of the 16-car field. Kellett and Piedrahita had already gained a few spots and were ninth and 10th.

From there though it was set for another classic Stoneman vs. Jones battle as these two, along with Urrutia, are shaping up as this year’s Indy Lights true title rivals. Stoneman, showing remarkable poise and guts for a driver in only his second oval start, wasn’t afraid to ride the high line as he and Jones set forth to exchange the lead several times.

On Lap 15 the order was Stoneman, Jones, then Blackstock having risen to third ahead of Piedrahita, Serralles and Kellett. Enerson’s snake bit 2016 season continued when he pitted with what his team thought was a flat tire and that dropped him out of the running.

At the halfway point there was only one other change, Kellett having got around Serralles for fifth. Zachary Claman De Melo’s tough weekend rolled on with a pit stop shortly thereafter where he needed his Juncos Racing team to examine his front wing.

At Lap 25 Stoneman still led Jones, with the fast charging Piedrahita of Team Pelfrey then up to third ahead of Blackstock and Urrutia.

Jones’ experience and tire saving savvy for his Cooper Tires he learned from last year would pay dividends two laps later on Lap 27 when he swept to the outside of Stoneman at Turn 1 for the lead.

The lead change didn’t stick though as a lap later Urrutia spun out of eighth place at Turn 2, but miraculously, the Mazda Racing scholarship driver and Pro Mazda champion didn’t hit any walls or other cars in the process. Kellett, in particular, was lucky to make it through cleanly.

It brought out another full-course yellow and suddenly by this point Piedrahita was well positioned to score a surprise podium, if not an outright win.

Following a restart after the Urrutia spin, Piedrahita made it past Jones for second, which triggered this great reaction from Anders Krohn in the NBCSN booth – “What have you done today, Juan Piedrahita? You are on it!!”

The race was building to a natural crescendo before an interruption occurred. Heamin Choi crashed the fourth Schmidt Peterson car out of the race exiting Turn 1 to bring out another yellow, and set up a final, one-lap only restart.

At the yellow, Stoneman led Piedrahita, Jones, Kellett and Blackstock.

A couple laps earlier, Kellett had another “hang on for dear life” moment when he and Jones collided down the front straight, Jones having positioned himself low and Kellett directly next to the pit wall. Despite the tire smoke and the contact both continued.

So the final lap got nuts. Piedrahita ran into the back of Stoneman exiting Turn 4 and lost all hope and all momentum, which then forced a mad scramble to avoid him. Luckily, the remaining runners did.

Jones, who’d got the momentum from third place, then swept around the outside of Stoneman for the lead into Turn 1. But only barely would the Dubai-based Brit maintain the lead.

Stoneman got him back around the outside into Turn 3, which set the two of them up side by side for a photo finish.

As they came down side-by-side, Stoneman held the edge – only by that microscopic margin – and held on to win the race. Jones was a deflated second, while Kellett emerged from the fracas behind them to score his first career Indy Lights podium in third in the No. 28 K-LINE Insulators USA, Inc. entry.

Post-race Stoneman was more relieved than anything but called the finish “fantastic.”

Jones beat himself up and found it difficult to take away any positives.

“Yeah it’s so frustrating to lose a race like that after a back and forth,” Jones told NBCSN’s Jon Beekhuis. “All the time was waiting. Then the safety car came out. I got the lead into Turn 1. I thought I had a good run. Made decision to stay on the inside. Got the momentum on the inside. The team gave me the job to win, but I made the mistake. A minor mistake on my part cost me everything. I blame myself for this one.”

An overjoyed Kellett survived several close calls on the day, having driven from 14th to third on the day. But his practice pace was such that his result shouldn’t be too much of a surprise. He was third on the overall combined timesheets in practice, only behind the Belardi Auto Racing teammates of Veach and Felix Rosenqvist who had a rare anonymous Freedom 100.

Blackstock finished fourth, equaling his season-best result in the No. 51 Starstruck entry, with Scott Hargrove posting his best result since second at St. Petersburg round one in the second Team Pelfrey car, the No. 3 Gap Guard-supported entry.

Felix Serralles was sixth ahead of Neil Alberico in a quiet but career-best seventh, and those two Carlin cars finished ahead of Piedrahita, who ended a hard luck eighth after arguably his best ever drive in Indy Lights. Rosenqvist and Veach were ninth and 10th with RC Enerson in 11th after his tough day.

Unofficially Jones leads Stoneman by 29 points and Urrutia by 39 with Road America’s doubleheader the end of June the next rounds for the season.

Results are below:

P No Name Laps
1 27 Dean Stoneman 40
2 11 Ed Jones 40
3 28 Dalton Kellett 40
4 51 Shelby Blackstock 40
5 3 Scott Hargrove 40
6 4 Felix Serralles 40
7 22 Neil Alberico 40
8 2 Juan Piedrahita 40
9 14 Felix Rosenqvist 40
10 5 Zach Veach 40
11 7 RC Enerson 39
12 77 Heamin Choi 35
13 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 34
14 55 Santiago Urrutia 29
15 17 Andre Negrao 19
16 18 Kyle Kaiser 2

The racing isn’t done for the day for the Mazda Road to Indy. The Pro Mazda Championship Presented by Cooper Tires and Cooper Tires USF2000 Championship Powered by Mazda having qualifying and their races tonight nearby Lucas Oil Raceway at Clermont, Ind. TSO Ladder will be there for that.

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Freedom 100 – Indy Lights Practice and Qualifying

Indy Lights Logo

It’s a good thing the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires had three hours of test time on Monday, under much sunnier and clearer skies, to prep in advance for Friday’s Freedom 100.

Because the planned three-hour practice was cut in half on Thursday morning as INDYCAR officials entered into hurry-up mode to beat the weather with rain descending on the 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway. And then things got worse once qualifying got bumped up to a planned 11:15 a.m. start time after the practice was cut short at 10:30 a.m.

PRACTICE

In the truncated 90-minute session, the propensity for surprise pacesetters continued with Team Pelfrey’s Juan Piedrahita leading the speed charts at a best speed of 197.957 mph. Piedrahita had one podium finish last year on an oval, third place at the Milwaukee Mile, and looks for his first this year if he can qualify the No. 2 Dallara IL-15 Mazda strongly.

Testing leader Zach Veach was second in the No. 5 Belardi Auto Racing car at 197.936 mph, and RC Enerson was third in the No. 7 Lucas Oil/Curb Records car for Schmidt Peterson Motorsports at 197.672 mph.

The top 11 of 16 drivers were separated by 0.2977 of a second only, with Shelby Blackstock in 11th at 196.669 mph.

In the no-tow speed charts, speeds were in the 193 to 196 mph range. Piedrahita led that as well, at 196.852 mph, with Ed Jones second in the No. 11 Jebel Ali Resorts and Hotels car for Carlin at 196.622 mph.

There was one yellow flag for, and this is true, a dog on track. Here’s a quick video from Turn 1 about it.

Practice speeds are below.

P No Name FTime Diff Laps FSpeed
1 2 Juan Piedrahita 45.465 0.000 30 197.957
2 5 Zach Veach 45.469 0.0047 22 197.936
3 7 RC Enerson 45.530 0.0654 33 197.672
4 11 Ed Jones 45.535 0.0703 17 197.651
5 4 Felix Serralles 45.539 0.0745 27 197.633
6 55 Santiago Urrutia 45.569 0.1043 30 197.504
7 18 Kyle Kaiser 45.627 0.1623 39 197.252
8 3 Scott Hargrove 45.654 0.1900 34 197.133
9 22 Neil Alberico 45.665 0.2005 31 197.087
10 27 Dean Stoneman 45.724 0.2600 33 196.831
11 51 Shelby Blackstock 45.762 0.2977 28 196.669
12 28 Dalton Kellett 45.973 0.5083 34 195.768
13 17 Andre Negrao 46.023 0.5587 33 195.554
14 14 Felix Rosenqvist 46.120 0.6556 29 195.143
15 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 46.403 0.9382 41 193.954
16 77 Heamin Choi 46.541 1.0763 39 193.379

QUALIFYING

Qualifying, meanwhile, was a damp squib – literally.

Half of the 16 cars got a qualifying attempt in before persistent rain decided to wreak havoc on the proceedings, and with the length of time it would take to dry the track, the decision was made to halt qualifying by Race Director Tony Cotman.

It means the grid for tomorrow’s race will be set according to current championship positions per the rulebook. That leaves Ed Jones on pole, ahead of Santiago Urrutia, Kyle Kaiser, Felix Serralles and Dean Stoneman.

Jones was leading the times when the session was halted, with a best speed of 197.125 over two laps.

“The Cooper tires really came in quickly and my Mazda engine performed perfectly,” Jones said. “It’s unfortunate that everyone else didn’t get a run in, but I think we would have been on the front row anyway. We did two pretty good laps and were sitting on pole when the weather came in. But it’s very different for me this year; I know what to expect. Everything I did last year was a guess, whereas this year, I was more confident.

Meanwhile there was a heavy accident for Canadian rookie Zachary Claman De Melo at Turn 1. The driver of the No. 13 Ugg/Seven for All Mankind/Vince/Vilebrequin Dallara IL-15 Mazda for Juncos Racing was checked and released.

The starting lineup, by points, is below.

Rank No Driver Points
1 11 Ed Jones 160
2 55 Santiago Urrutia (R) 139
3 18 Kyle Kaiser 139
4 4 Felix Serralles 125
5 27 Dean Stoneman (R) 125
6 14 Felix Rosenqvist (R) 108
7 5 Zach Veach 103
8 7 RC Enerson 101
9 17 Andre Negrao (R) 87
10 51 Shelby Blackstock 85
11 3 Scott Hargrove (R) 76
12 13 Zachary Claman De Melo (R) 72
13 2 Juan Piedrahita 69
14 28 Dalton Kellett (R) 66
15 22 Neil Alberico (R) 61
16 77 Heamin Choi (R) 5

Meanwhile here’s how the speeds were before De Melo’s accident and the rains came.

P No Name Speed
1 11 Ed Jones 197.125
2 3 Scott Hargrove 196.225
3 51 Shelby Blackstock 195.529
4 28 Dalton Kellett 194.978
5 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 195.099
6 22 Neil Alberico 194.920
7 17 Andre Negrao 194.384
8 18 Kyle Kaiser 193.297

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Freedom 100 – Indy Lights Preview

Indy Lights Logo

A bigger crowd, a live TV appearance and bragging rights in the biggest race of the season.

It must be time for the Freedom 100, for the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Since the revived Indy Lights ran its first Freedom 100 at IMS in 2003, there’s been a bevy of surprises, some stunning finishes and a higher level of interest for this race than almost any other event on the Mazda Road to Indy schedule.

And when you consider 23 of the 33 starters in the 100th running of the Indianapolis 500 are Mazda Road to Indy graduates, including nine Indy Lights champions, you realize that the Freedom 100 is the site to meet and watch the rising stars before they run the “Greatest Spectacle of Racing.”

Indeed, a record nine Indy Lights champions have qualified for the 100th Running of the Indianapolis 500: Spencer Pigot (2015), Gabby Chaves (2014), Sage Karam (2013), Josef Newgarden (2011), JR Hildebrand (2009), Townsend Bell (2001), Scott Dixon (2000), Oriol Servia (1999) and Tony Kanaan (1997). In addition, Jon Beekhuis (1988) will work the pit lane for ABC, with Townsend Bell (2001) and Paul Tracy (1990) in the NBCSN booth.

Chaves and Newgarden, of those nine, are past Freedom 100 winners.

Winning the Freedom 100 hasn’t always been a guarantee of success for the rest of the season or for graduating into IndyCar.

Each of the first nine winners from Ed Carpenter in 2003 through Newgarden in 2011 graduated to IndyCar and made at least one series start. However, three of the last four winners – Esteban Guerrieri, Peter Dempsey and Jack Harvey – have a combined zero starts in IndyCar. Dempsey continues to work with Juncos Racing as an engineer, while Harvey has been present with Schmidt Peterson Motorsports in coaching and spotting roles. He’s still keen to make it into IndyCar though and has been present this month at the Speedway.

So who might shine this Friday at noon ET, with live coverage on NBCSN?

TSO is particularly noting two series veterans – Zach Veach and RC Enerson – who are the two strongest bets to become the seventh different winner in eight races this year.

Veach, of Belardi Auto Racing, made it over 200 mph in testing at 201.455 mph in his No. 5 Dallara IL-15 Mazda during Monday’s test session. The lap time is unofficial, but nonetheless, the 22-year-old of Stockdale, Ohio is poised for his fourth career series win heading into this weekend.

“To be the first Indy Lights driver to go over 200 mph, then to be P1 in no-tow times and tow times for most of the afternoon is great,” he said. “I was beat in the tow times right at the end by my teammate. I never look at the speeds around here, so when I did the quick lap this morning and came in to the pits, I looked up at the pylon, saw 201 and had to ask if that was the average!

“The lap felt quick, but I didn’t know how quick this car needed to feel to be quick. We were working on qualifying setup this morning, so I set that on my second lap. It had to have had a tow in it somewhere, but we’re still in the 199s in no-tow times, so to be close to 200 mph on our own really speaks to how good our Belardi cars are. I’ve never felt so good going into a Freedom 100.”

Enerson, meanwhile, could lead the Schmidt Peterson four-car brigade this weekend. The native of New Port Richey, Fla., in the No. 7 Lucas Oil/Curb Records-backed car, has endured a number of mechanical woes throughout the season that have limited the talented 19-year-old from fulfilling his potential.

Schmidt Peterson enters this race having finished 1-2-3-4 last year, and with eight wins in the first 13 Freedom 100s (2004, 2005, 2007, 2009-2012, 2015). So whether its Enerson, Pro Mazda champion Santiago Urrutia or race rookies Andre Negrao and Heamin Choi, you expect their cars should be strong. Choi replaces Scott Anderson this race for his second start of the year, having also driven at Phoenix. Likable Brazilian Negrao, meanwhile, was apologetic and keen to recover after his pace lap accident took him out of the second race on the Indy road course before it even began.

While Veach is an oval veteran, teammate at Belardi Felix Rosenqvist makes only his second oval start. Rosenqvist led the afternoon test session on Monday and was wowed by his inaugural experience of the legendary 2.5-mile palace of speed.

“The last time I felt so excited driving a race car was when I was in Macau for the first time, in 2010. After that, nothing really seemed special until I came here. It’s just a fantastic track. It’s awesome to drive here. You have to be so committed turning in to the turns,” said the driver of the No. 14 car.

With Belardi having won in 2013 and 2014 – both in photo finishes led by Dempsey and Chaves – don’t put it past them winning their third Freedom 100 in four years this weekend.

TSO will also be monitoring Kyle Kaiser, team leader at Juncos Racing this year, who came out of the Angie’s List Grand Prix of Indianapolis weekend a happy camper to end on the podium. In the No. 18 InterVision/NetApp/Juniper Networks car, the cool Californian will look to capitalize on his year of experience and topple the Schmidt Peterson train this weekend. Teammate Zachary Claman De Melo will be learning throughout his first Freedom 100.

Carlin’s trio of points leader Ed Jones, Felix Serralles and rookie Neil Alberico will be interesting. The team is owed a better year on the IMS oval than it did last year. Max Chilton didn’t even get to start the race due to a pre-race fuel leak; Jones, meanwhile, had a late race crash that ended his hopes. Jones has been strong this season, of course, as the only two-time race winner and with a 21-point lead on both Urrutia and Kaiser. Alberico, fourth in testing on Monday and a guest photographer during Indianapolis 500 qualifying weekend, is due for a good result in his Rising Star Racing-supported entry, which sees PennGrade Motor Oil on the sidepods of his Carlin blue No. 22.

At Andretti Autosport, rookie Dean Stoneman is emerging as a man to watch. The Englishman bagged his first win in the most recent race on the Indy road course, and will look to emulate countryman Harvey as an Indy Lights winner of both the road course and oval races while in his No. 27 Stellrecht entry. Teammates Shelby Blackstock and Dalton Kellett should be good as well; Blackstock has an added bonus with mom Reba McEntire confirmed to give the command to fire the Mazda engines for the race.

Team Pelfrey struggled in Monday’s test and with neither Juan Piedrahita nor Scott Hargrove overflowing in confidence heading into the weekend – Hargrove having just returned from a one-off IMSA Porsche GT3 Canada event at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park – hopes aren’t particularly high here. But the beauty of having lower expectations is that when you exceed them, you become a pleasant surprise and a good story line.

What TSO is watching this weekend.

Tires, tires, tires. The Cooper Tires allow you to run slightly higher in the groove through the turns here than do their IndyCar brethren and as such, drivers may be a little more ambitious going into Turns 1 and 3. But beyond the additional half lane – perhaps full lane if you’re lucky – is tire management. Tire conservation over 40 laps and 100 miles is always a factor and he who hangs on best and most consistently will be one to reckon with in the final few laps.

The points championship is also very important to note here. Just 59 points separate the top half of the 16-car field, from first-placed Jones down to eighth-placed Enerson. A bad result here could knock you even further back and potentially cost you your championship hopes and the shot at the $1 million Mazda advancement scholarship that goes with it. With Rosenqvist, Veach and Enerson 52, 57 and 59 points in arrears, respectively, this could be a pivotal weekend to make hay or fall by the wayside.

Then, there’s a big rivalry starting to develop between Stoneman and Urrutia. It’s really getting scrappy between the two after the last weekend of the year at the Indy road course. If it’s the two of them battling for the win in the final laps, get your popcorn ready.

Freedom 100 schedule

Thursday, May 26, 2016

  • 9am-12pm – Practice
  • 1:15pm-2:15pm – Qualifying

Friday, May 27, 2016

  • 12:30pm-1:20pm – Freedom 100 (40 laps)

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Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course – Indy Lights – Race #2

Indy Lights Logo

There’s no shortage of talent in the 2016 Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires series and another of those drivers who seemed on the verge of a victory, Andretti Autosport’s Dean Stoneman, broke through Saturday to become the sixth winner in seven races to start the year.

The driver of the No. 27 Stellrecht supported Dallara IL-15 Mazda started fifth but was in the lead at the end of the first green flag lap on Lap 3.

Why Lap 3, you ask? Because the craziness on a cold day at the 2.439-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course began before the green flag even flew.

Here was the starting grid, and then here’s how the race evolved from there.

Rank Car Driver Time
1 11 Ed Jones 01:15.0014
2 55 Santiago Urrutia 01:15.0914
3 4 Felix Serralles 01:15.1006
4 14 Felix Rosenqvist 01:15.1164
5 27 Dean Stoneman 01:15.1669
6 7 RC Enerson 01:15.1987
7 5 Zach Veach 01:15.4457
8 77 Scott Anderson 01:15.4825
9 3 Scott Hargrove 01:15.5652
10 51 Shelby Blackstock 01:15.5707
11 18 Kyle Kaiser 01:15.6489
12 17 Andre Negrao 01:15.7930
13 28 Dalton Kellett 01:15.8319
14 22 Neil Alberico 01:15.8718
15 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 01:15.9174
16 2 Juan Piedrahita 01:15.9856

RC Enerson spun out of sixth on the grid exiting the final turn, Turn 14, but resumed without damage. Not as fortunate was his teammate at Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, rookie Andre Negrao, who made a notable error by losing control of his car on the front straight when warming up his tires. He crashed into the outside retaining wall, knocking off his front wing and damaging both his left front suspension and left front Cooper tire in the process. Negrao limped back to pit lane and apologized to his team afterwards, while Enerson made it to Lap 3 before retiring with mechanical issues.

The first green flag lap, Lap 3, was equally as chaotic as the infamous – or perhaps legendary – Lap 27 in Friday’s first of two races where the lead changed hands three times following a restart.

Polesitter Ed Jones led away from Carlin teammate Felix Serralles and Stoneman, who started fifth, made it up to third. Serralles locked his brakes going in too deep into Turn 1, then proceeded to run through the grass, and claimed he got punted into the corner.

https://twitter.com/felixserralles/status/731552934471839749

Jones and Stoneman looked set to advance into first and second but Stoneman lost the second position to Belardi Auto Racing’s Felix Rosenqvist, who’d started fourth but made it up to second by corner exit.

Serralles, meanwhile, re-entered the course at driver’s left exiting Turn 2, and the field did well to stay right and avoid the stricken Carlin driver as he resumed back to speed.

Jones led Rosenqvist before Stoneman made a move of Rosenqvist on the outside for second on the run to Turn 7.

Then it all went haywire there at the second of two notable 90-degree turns, like Turn 1. Jones ran wide on corner exit and fell to eighth; behind them, Zach Veach clipped his teammate Rosenqvist into a spin to knock the Swede back in the field.

In the chaos, Stoneman led with Santiago Urrutia, who’d fallen back to fourth off his initial second starting position, back into second with Scott Anderson having survived all the madness and running third in the No. 77 Schmidt Peterson entry – easily his best lap of the season.

The order was Stoneman, Urrutia, Anderson, Serralles and Scott Hargrove the top five with Kyle Kaiser, Shelby Blackstock, Jones, Juan Piedrahita and Zachary Claman De Melo the top 10.

Serralles quickly got around Anderson, who didn’t have the pace to remain as high up.

On Lap 7 Anderson ran wide ahead of Jones and De Melo and continued to drop.

Urrutia started closing a bit on Stoneman as the race progressed. The gap was 0.6375 of a second on Lap 8 and 0.3120 a lap later. The tightening at the top also allowed Serralles, who was often two to three tenths of a second quicker per lap, to close on Urrutia.

On Lap 12 Jones set what had been the fastest lap of the race to date as he tried to recover.

Serralles made it by Urrutia for second on Lap 14 around the outside into Turn 1.

The order on Lap 15 was Stoneman up by 0.7806 of a second over Serralles with Urrutia, Kaiser and now Jones in the top five. Rosenqvist, Hargrove and Anderson completed the top half of the field.

Hargrove, Anderson and De Melo ran seventh through ninth and got a bit too racey from there. Going into Turn 4 on Lap 18 De Melo tried a three-wide passing attempt and speared Hargrove, with Anderson stuck on the outside with nowhere to go. All three went into the gravel but the only driver to retire from the accident was De Melo. The race stayed green.

On Lap 22, Veach pitted for a new front wing, his primary wing having taken a battering from hitting Rosenqvist on the opening lap.

Up front Stoneman held the gap from Serralles and Urrutia.

The final dramatic moment of the race came on Lap 29. Serralles closed to within 0.4477 of a second on Lap 28, but a lap later went in too deep at Turn 12 and ran off course. That gave Stoneman more than a one-second buffer over Urrutia and promoted Kaiser to third with Serralles back to fourth.

Jones got Serralles for fourth a lap later, on Lap 30. Dalton Kellett and Neil Alberico also had off course excursions in the same time frame, with Alberico also sustaining front wing damage.

Urrutia closed to within half a second of Stoneman but got no closer.

Hargrove was on the tail end of the lead lap but did not come into play ahead of the leaders.

Stoneman came through 0.8659 of a second clear of Urrutia to claim the win over Kaiser in third, with Jones and Serralles completing the top five.

Post-race Stoneman was more relieved than anything, noting how much better the team has gotten despite no testing in preseason prior to Phoenix. He said he learned from his dramatic battle with Urrutia on Friday and defended expertly throughout the day.

Urrutia said he let Serralles by because he thought Serralles was faster, but he otherwise drove a smart race free of drama.

For Kaiser, the difference was using an extra set of sticker Cooper tires, noting many in the field hadn’t gone for that strategy throughout the weekend. Considering he said the Juncos Racing team didn’t have the outright fastest car this weekend, he was very pleased to come away with a podium. Having three years of track experience also meant he knew where the trouble spots were, and he was smart to avoid trouble throughout the weekend.

Jones maintained his points gap and unofficially leads Kaiser and Urrutia by 21 (160-139, with the latter two tied), while Stoneman moves into a tie with Serralles for fourth on 125 points. Rosenqvist (108), Veach (103) and Enerson (101) are also over the century mark in points before the series races the Freedom 100 on May 27.

Unofficial results are below.

P No Name Laps
1 27 Dean Stoneman 35
2 55 Santiago Urrutia 35
3 18 Kyle Kaiser 35
4 11 Ed Jones 35
5 4 Felix Serralles 35
6 14 Felix Rosenqvist 35
7 51 Shelby Blackstock 35
8 77 Scott Anderson 35
9 3 Scott Hargrove 35
10 5 Zach Veach 34
11 2 Juan Piedrahita 34
12 28 Dalton Kellett 34
13 22 Neil Alberico 29
14 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 18
15 7 RC Enerson 3
16 17 Andre Negrao —

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Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course – Indy Lights – Warmup and Race #2 Grid

Indy Lights Logo

You never want to be a guinea pig on a day where ambient temperatures are south of 50 degrees.

But with 46-degree ambient temperatures, the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires field of 16 competitors were first to venture out on the cold, dark and overcast 2.439-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course for a crucial 20-minute morning warmup session to kick off the Mazda Road to Indy activity on Saturday.

Santiago Urrutia had a tough start to the session with IndyCar Radio reporting the driver of the No. 55 Soul Red Mazda for Schmidt Peterson Motorsports was stuck in the pits with an apparent fuel pump issue, which sidelined the Uruguayan for the remainder of the session.

After incidents in race one of the Mazda Indy Lights Grand Prix of Indianapolis, both Team Pelfrey cars of Juan Piedrahita and Scott Hargrove, plus Andretti Autosport’s Dalton Kellett, all returned to the track.

Up front Felix Rosenqvist posted a best time of 1:15.4152 in the No. 14 Belardi Auto Racing entry ahead of Hargrove, Dean Stoneman, Friday winner and series points leader Ed Jones and Kyle Kaiser.

Zach Veach’s car, the second Belardi Dallara IL-15 Mazda, was stranded just prior to pit-in and needed a tow-in.

Warmup times are below.

P No Name FTime Diff Laps
1 14 Felix Rosenqvist 1:15.415 0.000 10
2 3 Scott Hargrove 1:15.681 0.2655 10
3 27 Dean Stoneman 1:15.791 0.3760 12
4 11 Ed Jones 1:15.850 0.4351 14
5 18 Kyle Kaiser 1:15.872 0.4572 12
6 4 Felix Serralles 1:15.907 0.4915 14
7 17 Andre Negrao 1:15.994 0.5787 9
8 22 Neil Alberico 1:16.176 0.7612 14
9 77 Scott Anderson 1:16.230 0.8146 11
10 7 RC Enerson 1:16.298 0.8832 14
11 28 Dalton Kellett 1:16.311 0.8959 14
12 5 Zach Veach 1:16.348 0.9328 12
13 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 1:16.447 1.0313 11
14 2 Juan Piedrahita 1:16.620 1.2052 10
15 51 Shelby Blackstock 1:16.689 1.2736 14
16 55 Santiago Urrutia No Time

Meanwhile here’s the starting grid for race two of the weekend, which has an estimated 1:25 p.m. green flag.

Jones and Urrutia are set to resume their battle from Friday, with the pair of Felixes third and fourth and Stoneman starting fifth.

Rank Car Driver Time
1 11 Ed Jones 01:15.0014
2 55 Santiago Urrutia 01:15.0914
3 4 Felix Serralles 01:15.1006
4 14 Felix Rosenqvist 01:15.1164
5 27 Dean Stoneman 01:15.1669
6 7 RC Enerson 01:15.1987
7 5 Zach Veach 01:15.4457
8 77 Scott Anderson 01:15.4825
9 3 Scott Hargrove 01:15.5652
10 51 Shelby Blackstock 01:15.5707
11 18 Kyle Kaiser 01:15.6489
12 17 Andre Negrao 01:15.7930
13 28 Dalton Kellett 01:15.8319
14 22 Neil Alberico 01:15.8718
15 13 Zachary Claman De Melo 01:15.9174
16 2 Juan Piedrahita 01:15.9856

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