Friday’s opening practice session on the streets of St. Petersburg featured two spins and a crash. The Meyer Shank Racing duo of Felix Rosenqvist and Marcus Armstrong were fortunate to complete full rotations without hitting anything, but Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin wasn’t as fortunate.

The contact was relatively minor with broken left-front suspension and bodywork damage from a meeting with the outside wall at Turn 3, and as the Shank drivers and Juncos Hollinger Racing’s Conor Daly explain, IndyCar’s first visit to St. Pete with its cars in hybrid configuration – carrying the 100-plus pounds of energy recovery system weight behind the turbocharged engines – has made navigating Turn 3 more of a knife-edge affair.

“I think it’s just the mechanical weight shift,” Daly told RACER. “I think that’s really challenging the car, challenging the chassis, challenging the suspension. People are fighting the cars, and I think right now, in this era of IndyCar, with the added weight, I mean, you’re challenging these cars mechanically in a different way. I think that leaves everyone on a new playing field, I would say, which is kind of exciting for the fans and for everyone involved. I don’t think it’s anything different on the track, but it’s a wild ride through there.”