Sunday’s IndyCar race in Toronto marked the end of an exhausting three-week sprint for NTT IndyCar Series teams that included the changeover to hybrid powertrains and sweltering heat in Iowa spread across a doubleheader in the heartland. Throw in a busy May and June, and collectively, the paddock is tired and sore.

Thanks to the upcoming Olympic break during which IndyCar’s broadcast partner NBC will concentrate on the Paris games, no races will be held until the August 17 oval event at World Wide Technology Raceway, and with the unusually long pause, hundreds of team members will get a chance to breathe and recharge before sprinting to the championship finale on September 15 in Nashville.

There’s one or more tests scheduled to take place between Toronto and WWTR, so it won’t be possible for all of IndyCar’s 10 teams to completely shut down, but according to every squad that spoke with RACER, a rest period of some sort is in motion.

“Once we get back and get settled after Toronto, we’re going to take a week,” A.J. Foyt Racing team principal Larry Foyt told RACER. “The guys have really been putting the time in so they deserve it.”