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Welcome to the RACER Mailbag. Questions for any of RACER’s writers can be sent to mailbag@racer.com. We love hearing your comments and opinions, but letters that include a question are more likely to be published. Questions received after 3pm ET each Monday will be saved for the following week.
Q: Another ride buyer chosen over a proven racer. Conor Daly is head and shoulders better than Sting Ray Robb. Robb is one of the worst, if not the worst, talents in the IndyCar paddock. I guess the series likes the moving chicanes rather than a fan favorite like Conor Daly. Dave O’Neil should be ashamed!
Preston Proctor, Muncie
MARSHALL PRUETT: Robb had an enforceable contract and held the team to the agreement. The team tried to negotiate their way to an early divorce out of a desire to become more competitive. Meh.
Juncos Hollinger Racing had one open car to fill with Daly or another driver, and it opted to cut Conor. That’s on the team, not on Sting Ray.
I’d wager the go-away figure was too painful for the team to swallow, so it chose to ride the final season out with Sting Ray instead of paying him a portion (or all) of the rumored $9 million he brings, to vacate the seat. He wants to be an IndyCar driver and has some amazing backers who facilitate that dream. If he wanted to race in IMSA GTP or LMP2, he’d already be there in a full-time capacity, and that might be where Robb’s long-term future lies, but at least for 2026, he’ll be an open-wheeler.
If Robb took the buy-out, he’d be gone from IndyCar in an instant, and since there’s only one seat left (at Coyne) and Dale has different plans for the car, the second year of his two-year contract is a lifeline to remain in the series. I respect a guy who fights like hell to hold onto a thing he’s chased for most of his life.
As long as he can qualify for the races and doesn’t make an ass out of himself by constantly crashing or hindering the faster drivers, I have no issue with the Sting Rays being in IndyCar. He seemed to blend in rather well last season in that regard, and that’s about all I can hope for.
But I get it. It’s easy to hate on the paying drivers, especially when they run towards the back.
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We can ask IndyCar to broom them from the series, plus the ones who’ve never won, and those who’ve won before but won’t win again unless a miracle is involved, and that leaves us with the seven drivers from 2025 who qualify, and a handful of others who can still get the job done. So, do we cut bait with the 17 others who, like Sting Ray, also can’t get to victory lane?
Q: Recently, Arvid Lindblad was announced to replace Yuki Tsunoda at Red Bull. Will Buxton then invited Yuki to IndyCar.
I can appreciate wanting talent in IndyCar, and I don’t care per se if the talent is sometimes comprised of former F1 drivers. I love IndyCar and the 500 in particular. My great-grandfather raced and became an officiant at IMS. I’ve been a yellow shirt for 30+ years alongside my dad and brother. I’m in hook, line and sinker, but can’t help but feel a little off about the perception of continued F1 has-beens being invited to IndyCar. Yes, I know, it’s a conflicting viewpoint.
They can’t make it in F1 and won’t regress back to F2, but hey, give IndyCar a chance? From their view, it makes sense.
I want the best racing, but also feel IndyCar comes across as the first stop towards an F1 driver’s retirement. Does the seemingly constant intake of F1 has-beens diminish the reputation of IndyCar and its talent? Sure, not every current driver is Tier 1, but still….
Your thoughts?
Dave, Milwaukee area
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MP: It has been IndyCar’s reality since the 1980s, so I’m somewhat numb to the negative connotations with IndyCar being the landing spot for former F1 drivers. Same reality and perceptual challenge for sports cars, which has long been the retirement home for ex-IndyCar and F1 drivers.
He wasn’t the first, but Emerson Fittipaldi really stood out as a big F1 name to make the IndyCar switch and find success. Lots more were in similar positions, but arrived with much smaller F1 careers and profiles. Roberto Guerrero. Jan Lammers. Derek Daly.
Some, like Teo Fabi, had experience here in other series before going to F1 and quickly returning for CART IndyCar opportunities. Danny Sullivan came up here, hit F1 for a little bit, and was back home, pursuing IndyCar. And that’s just a small sample size from the 1980s.
Yuki would be a perfect fit in IndyCar with the right team. He’d be a riot at Foyt next to Santino, where you’d have the two most outspoken drivers as teammates. I’m more interested in his profile and what it could do for IndyCar.
It wasn’t lost on anyone that Mick Schumacher, in signing with RLL, became IndyCar’s most popular driver in terms of global social media followers. And no disrespect to Mick, but he last raced in F1 in 2022. Yuki has a huge following, and that spotlight is something I’d love to have placed on IndyCar.

Has helmet, can’t travel: Tsunoda says Red Bull pit the kibosh on him doing any racing next year. Jayce Illman/Getty Images
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Q: I sure hope that Penske Entertainment saw the Eddie Cue interview following the Apple F1 rights announcement. He referenced Apple using iPhones to capture unique camera views during MLB games to create different viewing experiences. In this case, an iPhone was strapped to the foul pole and provided a completely new viewing angle for foul balls.
Additionally, iPhones were used to obtain special angles for the F1 movie from inside locations on the car. The tiny packaging requirements for an iPhone or its components give teams and producers a lot of room for experimentation.
The costs for creating exciting, special viewing experiences are coming down and IndyCar should take notice.
Some of the TV production suggestions from Matt’s letter in the 12/3 Mailbag could be addressed by using off-the-shelf technology in creative ways.
These opportunities seem like low-hanging fruit for Indy Car to bring some new spark into the viewer experience for 2026.
Shaun, Berwyn, IL
MP: All true. It’s one of my old rants that gets shared with IndyCar every year or two and goes nowhere. Open the rules to allow the Apples and Googles and Samsungs and other tech-making companies to get involved in the series by bringing their phones/tablets/screens to cockpits and wherever else. Let teams go out and sign deals with them.
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Allow a paddock starving for money to profit from opening up the electronics side. Nothing against Cosworth, which makes the data systems and steering wheel displays, but Cosworth being a spec supplier does nothing to help anyone other than IndyCar.
LG, Panasonic, Sony and so on, all able to do business with the series and its teams to showcase existing or new and custom tech, instead of selling the sales rights to a single vendor with no commercial profile.
Streaming in-car footage via iPhone 18s in Palou’s car as he races into Turn 1 next to Pato O’Ward streaming in-car from his Google phones… while getting their dash info from cool screens supplied by both brands. Makes no sense for this to be banned.
Q: How about a Mount Rushmore of the worst funded drivers? No? It’s the holidays and we are being kind and not mean? Sounds good. Foyt, Mario, and Mears all seem like a given and all were before my time. I find Scott Dixon to be dry (except for his fuel tank which never empties) and boring, but I can’t deny the idea that he probably belongs on IndyCar’s Mount Rushmore. Ask me again in a few years about Alex Palou.
Ryan, West Michigan
MP: Jean-Pierre Frey is a worst hall-of-famer. The Dr. Jacks and King Hiros and Milkas are in there as well – at least in the modern wing.
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If it was the Mount Rushmore of public driver personalities, you might not include Dixon, but once he’s retired, I’d bump Montoya from P4 on my list for the Kiwi. Since he isn’t done, and we don’t yet know how to contextualize the complete greatness of his career, I’ll happily wait.
And Palou certainly has the runway to earn his spot on the mountain.
Q: I’ve driven IH-35W from Fort Worth to Denton regularly since 2010, when there was nothing but Alliance Airport, a Marriott, TMS and a truck stop along the highway. Today, there are thousands of McMansions, hundreds of McWarehouses (logistics centers, excuse me)… and TMS.
I got to wondering: Auto Club Speedway was set in the same general demographic, and it’s not there anymore. Replaced by logistics, warehouses, etc. How long before a developer makes Speedway Motorsports an offer for TMS that they can’t refuse? Keep the condos, build a pond for lakeside living, and flatten the rest.
What say you?
Damon Hynes
MP: Welp, that’s a depressing dose of reality. I found a bunch of old event programs last weekend, and within the stack was the inaugural IndyCar/Truck track launch program from TMS in 1997. Fond memories.
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Looking at its current calendar of major events, it’s a huge place being used at a bare minimum. Having been to TMS before everything sprung up around it, yes, the vast outgrowth of stuff encroaching the property is hard to ignore. I wouldn’t pretend to know how its finances work, but if the headlining visit from Cup in May and whatever else every few months stops being enough to make a profit, I imagine it would be razed for a AI server farm or similar. The era of double NASCAR and double IndyCar races feels like it existed a lifetime ago, which is sad.

As long as no real estate developers realize how many tract homes, strip malls or data centers you could get in there, we’re all good. James Gilbert/Getty Images
Q: Reading how many drivers are glad to be done with ground effect cars in F1, I have been thinking about the problems they have had during this era of IndyCar. As I recall, the Dallara DW-12 was designed to rely on ground effects to enable closer racing. That seems to have worked and I don’t recall problems with porpoising with the Dallara. Why has IndyCar not had the problems that F1 has had? A) the Dallara generates less downforce via ground effect than F; B) IndyCar teams are so restricted in what they can do to a car that they have not created problems for themselves with additional aerodynamic bits; C) something else; D) all of the above?
Paul Lewis, Macon, GA
MP: Almost every Indy car for the last 45ish years has made use of ground effects with underwings that generate significant downforce. Porpoising was an issue at points in the early 1980s when CART IndyCar designs used skirts to seal the sidepods, but those were soon deleted by the rules.
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You can have porpoising with any car that uses ground effects; open-wheel, sports cars, etc. It’s a function of low ride height, controlling that ride height, and the air feeding the underwing being starved as the front ride height dips too low, which kills the downforce, causes the front of the car to spring up, which starts feeding the underwing again until it’s pulled down again, gets starved, and you get the bucking bronco routine going. It has nothing to do with a Dallara having more or less downforce.
Ten teams make their own F1 cars using 10 completely different aerodynamic designs. Their performance is governed by running incredibly low ride heights. Many F1 cars had porpoising problems when the new formula debuted in 2022, but some did not. Given time, and a crazy amount of money, those teams solved their aero problems. Dallara makes a single IndyCar model. It runs at a low ride height, but wasn’t designed to perform in a tiny ride height window that lives on a knife edge where porpoising could become a problem.
Q: Is Dale Coyne’s long delay on naming a second driver due to waiting to see what Yuki Tsunoda status was with Red Bull? Can we expect an announcement that Yuki will be named to that position? I don’t imagine he has any options to stay in F1. Will Honda play a factor in this decision?
Dave
MP: No. Dale was never waiting on Yuki. That was the latest garbage rumor came into existence on social media that too many people ran with because who doesn’t love rumors with zero veracity? Tsunoda was confirmed as a Red Bull reserve and said his contract never allowed him to leave.
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Q: Last week in response to the Tsunoda question, you said that Honda would not be spending $8-$10 million on a new driver in the last year of its engine contract. Is that to suggest that Honda is done after 2026, or were you referring to the final year of the current engine contract?
Bob
MP: Apologies, Bob. I should have ‘splained myself in a more complete manner. The answer was unrelated to whether Honda will or won’t stay beyond 2026.
Honda’s talking to IndyCar about staying and bringing costs down in order to stay, which would make forking out a ton of money to sponsor a driver both a bad look and a terrible negotiating strategy.
Hard to be taken seriously if you’re spending freely on frivolous things that aren’t needed, and despite loving Yuki, he isn’t needed. If Honda’s driver stable was weak, I could see the company wanting to come out of pocket to improve the situation, but it just finished P1, P3, P4, P6, P7, and P8 in the drivers’ standings – six of the top eight – and ran away with the manufacturers’ title. Of all the times to throw money at a driver, this isn’t it.
Q: What is the thought process that goes into pit box selection? I have seen some series use loss of pit selection as a penalty. Is there really that big of an advantage to be gained from pit selection, or does that just end up being a minor penalty?
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Steven, Las Cruces, NM
MP: Depends on the series, but yes, in general, it’s a beneficial thing to be able to pick your pit stall. Whether it’s being the first (closest to pit-out) and having nobody in front of you so you can fire straight away without having to turn hard and lose time trying not to hit crew members and tires, or pitting coming into an open spot – the first box after a break in the pit wall – or simply being in a location that’s among the best teams in the pits, which usually means you have better odds of not being impeded by parking errors or crew mistakes on either side of you, there’s a real value in having a say in where you do your work on pit lane.

There are definite benefits to being able to choose your pit stall. Chris Owens/Penske Entertainment
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Q: How is the energy and (more importantly) ticket sales heading into the Arlington Grand Prix in four months? Is there any likelihood that you’ll be writing the phrase “the ill-fated Arlington GP event” in your columns within the next few years? I’m wondering if Midwestern fans who are considering making a trip to a new IndyCar race in the western U.S. might actually choose to travel to Phoenix over Arlington. I for one am leaning that way. What are your expectations for “Jerry’s race” at this point?
Mark Founds, Mason, OH
MP: I spoke with Arlington GP president Bill Miller last week and he said they expect to sell all 35,000 regular tickets and hope to get that up to 50,000 total with all of the guests in hospitality suites.
There’s great energy behind the event because it’s new and interesting. The answer to your question of whether it will go the way of the Baltimore GP, which was effing amazing but crashed and burned after three runnings, isn’t something I can answer today. Profits are needed through ticket sales and hospitality suite sales. Corporate support needs to not just be there in the first year, but on a continual basis. If those dip, it will eventually die.
I expect the first edition to be great and for overwhelming positives to emerge. But that’s the first date. It’s whether the energy and passion is still there by the city, the Cowboys, the Rangers, the fans, and the sponsors, by the third, fourth and fifth installments. Been to far too many big/new/amazing venues that disappear. Hoping this one has some permanence.
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Q: Two quick questions for you. First, does Will Power attend the Andretti Global Christmas party or the Team Penske Christmas party? Second, the longer that there’s no announcement about Honda staying, the more it has me worried. Do you think that negotiations still on going so there is nothing to announce, or has the decision been made and Honda and IndyCar are wanting to get to 2026 and then make the announcement?


