‘IndyCar Weekly’ podcast: What to make of schedule changes
IndyStar’s Nathan Brown and IndyCar driver Conor Daly try to make sense of what will be an unusual 2020 racing season.
IndyStar’s Nathan Brown and IndyCar driver Conor Daly try to make sense of what will be an unusual 2020 racing season.
With so much uncertainty surrounding the 2020 IndyCar schedule, the series has ditched the double-points bump typically awarded during the finale since 2014.
In a letter to staff, Roger Penske pledged to forgo his salary till the COVID-19 crisis is settled, but Penske Corp. has begun reducing its staff at IMS and IndyCar.
After a month of rumors and news about a future IndyCar career, Jimmie Johnson announced Friday he’s taking the leap. Kind of.
Some drivers spent well over $10,000 to perfect their iRacing setups, while others had to scramble last-minute on a couple-hundred dollar budget.
It was never going to be easy, but Roger Penske made monumental changes in order to preserve the integrity of the Indy 500 during a wild 2020.
For the first time ever, the Indy 500 has now been scheduled to run outside the month of May, due to the coronavirus pandemic.
More than two-dozen drivers will compete on a virtual platform Saturday in IndyCar’s first-ever iRacing event among the paddock’s drivers.
IndyCar’s hopes of running this year’s Indy 500 as scheduled hangs in the balance. But there’s an obvious point in the calendar to move it.
He hasn’t gotten a chance to race yet in 2020 and doesn’t know when he will, but Sebastien Bourdais already sees A.J. Foyt Racing as a long-term home.