Ed Carpenter’s team has been spending too much time in IndyCar’s midfield, a place where no veteran team wants to call home.

Its last era of high competitiveness ended when Josef Newgarden left after the 2016 season, and since then, amid a sprinkling of pole positions and a solitary win, Ed Carpenter Racing has hovered in that anonymous midfield void, somewhere between 12th and 15th with its best drivers across the last eight championship runs.

Financial instability has been among the greatest conspirators against ECR’s ability to achieve greater success in recent years. The oft-rumored and alleged problems of overdue sponsorship payments haven’t helped the team to keep up with the bigger and wealthier teams, the ones who use their budgetary might to push the ECRs of IndyCar out of the spotlight.

In his final year for ECR, Newgarden was fourth — evidence of its true potential – which made the eight underwhelming years that followed an ongoing source of frustration, all signs of targets being consistently missed.

If it’s taken the right way, mediocrity can be a powerful motivator, and to break free of the midfield, a sizable investment would be required. There were a few interlopers along the way who promised big and delivered small, and nothing much changed to move the team forward. That’s where the announcement of Ted Gelov as ECR’s new co-owner is such an important happening for the team. And for the NTT IndyCar Series.