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.
ED’s note: Chris Medland is taking a few days off this week, but we’ve saved the F1 questions for him to answer next week.
Q: When and why did practice sessions become ‘free’ practice? FP1, FP2. etc? How come I don’t see free practice sessions on the event calendars?
Just in case you missed it, a major milestone was reached. After one of your recent articles, the comments section made it all the way to the fourth comment before it turned negative. This beats the old record of three comments before it became negative. Amazing how the ‘fans’ can complain about everything.
DA, Chicago
MARSHALL PRUETT: February 29, 1999. Love yourself more and don’t read the comments.
Q: Now that Malukas has left Foyt, I’m wondering if the technical alliance between Foyt and Penske is still in place? If still in place, is James Schnabel still at Foyt and will he be back on the 14 car? Maybe the engineering shuffles are not complete, with the season so far away. Here’s hoping the 14 car has a top engineer. Maybe that’s Armbrester, however 2025 suggests that Santino benefited more in 2024 from Schnabel than from Armbrester in 2025.
I have a rather negative view on Foyt in 2026 based on the technical relationship no longer being in place and in turn quality engineers leaving, and a new pay driver arriving. It’s a recipe for Foyt to return to the rear of the grid. Add into the mix the rumor of Daly rejoining the team and all that would entail between the drivers, and I see little to be excited about. Here is hoping my imagination is playing tricks on me.
Oliver Wells
MP: I asked Team Penske president Jonathan Diuguid about the continuation of the technical alliance last month and he declined to provide an answer. That doesn’t mean the answer is a no, but if it was a yes, I can’t think of a reason to obscure that fact.
Schnabel and Ferrucci were magic in 2024 and Schnabel had the same effect on Malukas in 2025. I’ve mentioned of late that I expect to see one of Penske’s veteran race engineers being promoted to a higher role – coming off the timing stand – and for Schnabel to step onto that stand as race engineer. Is that with Malukas on the No. 12? With McLaughlin on the No. 3?
Ferrucci really liked the shift to Adam Kolsar as his race engineer when Armbrester was promoted to technical director, so give that some time to develop since Kolesar was new to the role as of June. To your point, without the Penske involvement, yes, the team would go backwards. Let’s hope the technical alliance continues.
Q: Ten years ago I went to my first IndyCar race at Iowa Speedway with my now-husband. My husband’s first race was the inaugural year at the track after getting free tickets from his college buddy. I was hooked as soon as I saw the cars flying around during qualifying, and I’ll never forget seeing how happy our friend Bill was when Ryan Hunter-Reay won the race. Since then we’ve made trips to Road America, St. Louis, Nashville and the 500. While all these events have been special in their own way, I’ll miss our hometown race (we live about 45 minutes from Newton).
Although there was always a decent amount of heat exhaustion, we always had the KOA pool and for many years the racing was fantastic! It has been painful to watch all of the negative comments about the track over the past few years, from hatred of the concert years to the final partial paving of the track. With it being gone, I feel like we have put an elderly dog out of its misery.
When dealing with the pain, it is helpful to remember the good times, right? One of my favorite memories was watching Newgarden destroy the field in 2016 with a plate in his clavicle and a broken hand. What a show! What was your favorite memory of IndyCar at Iowa Speedway?
Liz, Proud Iowa Transplant
MP: I love your perspective here, Liz. You’re right, and the longer you’re a fan, the larger the graveyard gets with beloved events and tracks that left us. Ryan Hunter-Reay owned Iowa and among his victories there, the real thriller was in 2014 when Tony Kanaan dominated most of the race but RHR and a few others rolled the dice by pitting on a late caution and used their new tires to rip through the field. RHR took the lead off of TK with two laps to go, which was wild.
It also cemented the move as the go-to decision to follow at all future short-ovals when faced with a similar situation. Christian Rasmussen’s win last month in Milwaukee was the Iowa 2014 playbook executed to perfection.
Q: I am very encouraged by the cooperation between NASCAR and IndyCar on the Phoenix double header race next March. That got me thinking of other possible doubleheaders that might bolster the IndyCar schedule.
I believe IndyCar could revive the Iowa Speedway race by doing a doubleheader with NASCAR there.
A geographical area IndyCar could improve upon is in the Northeast, where it currently has no presence. Could either Watkins Glen and/or New Hampshire be possible if IndyCar teamed with NASCAR on those weekends?
In your opinion, what was it that FOX did or said that suddenly opened the door to NASCAR’s cooperation with IndyCar?
Kevin P., Los Angeles, CA
MP: FOX is vitally important to NASCAR. Hosts the first 16 events of the season (12 races plus qualifiers and all stars), including the Daytona 500, so it has a strong voice of influence.
I continue to hear the Phoenix mashup won’t heavily intrude on NASCAR’s weekend, and if what I’m told is correct and the Saturday IndyCar race isn’t the feature but the warmup before the Xfinity race (which is renamed the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series in 2026), it might have the look and feel of USF Pro 2000 running before Indy NXT before IndyCar. And if that’s the case, IndyCar will be in and out quickly, which will be an interesting experience for a series that isn’t accustomed to being the opening act.
NBC broadcasts the Iowa NASCAR event, so I can’t think of how that would work.

Let’s hope the Phoenix doubleheader is the start of something good. Chris Graythen/Getty Images
Q: Am I wrong to think that David Malukas could end up being Kevin Cogan 2.0 at Penske? No disrespect meant, but they seem to have multiple similarities.
Vincent Michael, Richmond, VA
MP: We might need to go full AJ on the pronunciation of Malooooooooooookas like he did with Coooooooooooooogan.
Davey could be a winless experiment like Cogan at Penske in 1982, but I don’t think the separation between Malukas and Newgarden/McLaughlin will be anything like what was seen between Rick Mears (Penske’s champion with four wins from 11 races) and Cogan (sixth place with one pole and two podiums).
At the same time, with the what-the-hell-was-that season from Newgarden/McLaughlin, I can’t think of a better time to introduce a wildcard like Malukas to possibly disrupt the team and help it find its way out of the wilderness. If this was the late 2010s when Newgarden and Pagenaud and Power were mollywhopping everyone, Malukas would have been eaten alive.
But while the team, which seems like it lost some of its identity in 2025, searches for a new identity with new leadership? Perfect time to try out a streaky new talent and see if he can add something new and dynamic. And if he goes the Coooooooooooooooooogan route, well, Lord, there’s some heavy hitters entering free agency in 2027 and beyond.
Q: As someone who has followed racing for most of my life, and who never got to see him race, why was Dr Jack Miller so bad in the early years of what we now call the NTT IndyCar Series?
Kurt Perleberg
MP: He was a high-achieving mortal in a form of racing where mortals usually aren’t found. I raced for a few years in junior open-wheel and touring cars when I was in my early 20s, and can say with complete confidence that Dr. Jack would destroy me and almost everybody else on the planet in a motor race.
But among purebred racers in Indy Lights and IndyCar, he stood out as human among most who were elite talents. He took part in three Indy 500s. Ponder that one for a moment. For all that Dr. Jack ‘The Racing Dentist’ was lacking, it wasn’t balls.
Also consider that he had a full-time job. And a family. And there was no iRacing. Or simulators. Or PitFit. Take all of the things that today’s mortals use to become the best possible IndyCar drivers with non-stop training and data to review and endless onboards to review and living on the sim with their engineers between races, and it simply didn’t exist in Dr. Jack’s time.
The older I get, the more I appreciate what he was able to achieve. We just didn’t have many like Miller back then, so he was eviscerated by fans, the media, and the other drivers. With the rise of pro-am racing – in sports cars, primarily – today’s Dr. Jacks aren’t totally uncommon to the racing world. But in his era, Miller was a misfit. (ED: If you’d like to hear The Racing Dentist’s own take on his career, check out our interview with him from a few years ago.)
Q: Just hopping on here to say that my wife and our three boys will be making the trip to Arizona in March for the IndyCar race. We’re going to make it a week-long trip. I just bought all five of our tickets and they are very reasonably priced. So for all the fans in the Phoenix area, get your a**es in those seats so that we can keep Phoenix on the schedule! I have no doubt the race will be great with the short oval package. Looking forward to seeing my first race at Phoenix.
Paul, Lake In The Hills, IL
MP: IndyCar’s short-oval races have been some of the best each year, so I can’t wait to see what we have in store at Phoenix. Should have some off-season testing there to set the aero and tire spec to refine the package before race weekend arrives. The event will mark my fifth decade of visiting Phoenix Raceway for IndyCar events. Not sure if that’s cool or depressing…
Q: Couple of questions after the IndyCar 2026 schedule got released.
Will the Mexico race get another shot? What are the odds of it happening in 2027?
Is Iowa definitely dead and gone for IndyCar? Or do you see it coming back, just like it did in 2022?
Reversely, is Phoenix here to stay, this time? How strong is the deal between IndyCar and NASCAR for the shared race weekend at this particular venue? Also, since it will host the second race of the 2026 schedule, have you heard of any test days happening anytime soon?
Is finishing the IndyCar season before the NFL season starts still a requirement? If so, I remember there used to be talks a few years ago about starting the season earlier in the year to avoid having a six-month long offseason. Is this no longer considered? I mean, what is preventing IndyCar from scheduling the St Pete race mid- or even early February and then spread the other races accordingly?
