What: Hy-Vee Homefront 250 & Hy-Vee One Step 250 / Races 11 and 12 of the 2023 NTT IndyCar Series

Where: Iowa Speedway, Newton, Iowa – 0.875-mile tri-oval

When: Saturday, July 22, 3:00pm ET (green flag 3:06pm ET) & Sunday, July 23, 2:00pm ET (green flag 2:30pm ET)

The NTT IndyCar Series takes on into its only double-header event of the season this weekend, and the pair of 250-lap races on the 0.875-mile Iowa Speedway tri-oval could prove make-or-break for those with championship aspirations.

Heading to the Corn Belt, championship leader Alex Palou holds a 117-point lead over his nearest challenger, Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Scott Dixon. But with only seven rounds remaining, including Iowa’s short-track showdowns, and a maximum of 54 points available from every race, it’s win-or-bust time for the Spaniard’s increasingly distant chasers.

Some good news for those in Palou’s wake? His four Iowa starts have delivered only one top-10 finish. That’s a sliver of hope for Dixon, third-placed Josef Newgarden (Team Penske), and long-shot contenders Marcus Ericsson (CGR) and Pato O’Ward (Arrow McLaren), but it will take more than an indifferent weekend for the 2021 champ to significantly change the narrative.

For Dixon, or four-time Iowa winner Newgarden, or 2022 Race 2 victor O’Ward, it will take a near-perfect weekend to maintain a realistic challenge – which is something the bullring has been reticent to deliver so far. Last year, Newgarden (below)

lined up second for Saturday’s race, then put on a masterclass to lead 208 laps and cruise to the victory. A day later, he started from the pole, led another 148 laps, but backed it into the wall just past three-quarters distance…

Iowa Speedway’s variable banking makes the track drive like a much bigger superspeedway – as in, it’s fast. In 2022, Team Penske’s Will Power took both poles, nudging 18 seconds for those laps and averaging more than 178mph. He doubled down on fastest race laps, too, posting a 165.410mph speed in Saturday’s Race 1 and 167.415mph in Sunday’s Race 2.

Due to the short lap time, high cornering loads and near-endless traffic, “The World’s Fastest Short Track” is exceptionally demanding both physically and mentally on drivers, with any momentary lapse of concentration often putting a car into the wall. If the caution count stays low, expect a three-stop strategy to be the way to go, but Dixon did grab a fifth-place finish in 2022 – last of the lead-lap finishers – with four stops in the books.

You can follow all the practice and qualifying action on Peacock on Friday, July 21, and Saturday, July 22, with NBC your go-to location for Race 1 on Saturday, July 22, and Race 2 on Sunday, July 23. And to get even closer to it all, grab the best seat in the house with the INDYCAR App powered by NTT DATA and its 14 race day live onboard cameras.

TUNE IN

Friday, July 21 / 4:30pm – 6:00pm ET – Practice 1 – Peacock

Saturday, July 22 / 9:30am – 10:30am ET – Qualifying – Peacock

Saturday, July 22 / 3:00pm – 5:00pm ET – RACE 1 – NBC

Sunday, July 23 / 11:05am – 11:30am ET – Warmup – Peacock

Sunday, July 23 / 2:00pm – 5:00pm ET – RACE 2 – NBC

* All sessions and the race are also available as audio commentary on SiriusXM and INDYCAR Radio. Plus, catch the Race 1 pre-race show on SiriusXM and INDYCAR Radio, 2:30pm – 3:00pm ET on Saturday, July 22.

Ride along with the INDYCAR App powered by NTT DATA

Taking you inside the action, 14 drivers will be carrying in-car cameras. During the race, you can live-stream every one of them with the INDYCAR App powered by NTT DATA. You choose who you ride along with, and you can switch drivers at any time. The App’s free to download for fans worldwide and you can find out more HERE. If you’re not already onboard, take your viewing experience to a whole new level HERE.

Bringing you the onboard action from the Hy-Vee Homefront 250 and Hy-Vee One Step 250 are…

Josef Newgarden / No. 2 Team Penske Chevrolet
Newgarden sits 126 points behind runaway championship leader Alex Palou, with just those seven races remaining and a maximum 54 points up for grabs at each, meaning Iowa’s double header is something of a pivotal weekend for the 2023 Indy 500 winner. A good weekend – make that an excellent weekend – and he’s still chasing the Spaniard. Anything less, and hereon in, he’s battling for best of the rest. As noted, last year, he utterly dominated Race 1 in Iowa to take his fourth career IndyCar win on the bullring, then led 148 laps before crashing heavily in Race 2. The four-time Iowa winner will definitely be one of the drivers to beat again, but will it be enough? 

Pato O’Ward / No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet
With 10 races in the books, the Arrow McLaren driver has been on the podium four times in 2023, but is yet to stand on the top step. If that’s going to change imminently, Iowa is as good a place as any. When it comes to ovals, the spectacular Mexican is king of the clutch move, and even better if the track gets slick in the steamy heat of the Corn Belt. Last year, he finished second to Josef Newgarden in Race 1, before leading the last 65 laps in Race 2 for his second win of the season (below). Is a repeat on the cards?