Will Power Puts Chevrolet in Victory Lane at Pocono

CHEVROLET RACING IN THE VERIZON INDYCAR SERIES
ABC SUPPLY 500
POCONO RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY POST-RACE RECAP
AUGUST 20, 2017

Will Power Puts Chevrolet in Victory Lane at Pocono

· Third win of season for 2014 Verizon IndyCar Series Champion
o Scores 32nd career win and breaks tie for ninth on all-time list with Dario Franchitti and Paul Tracy
o First IndyCar driver to score back-to-back wins at the Tricky Triangle
o With runner-up finish, Josef Newgarden gives Chevrolet IndyCar V6 1-2 finish in 14th race of season and extends point lead with three races left
Holds 18 point lead over second place
o Four Team Chevy drivers in top five of standings
· Chevrolet holds 37-point lead in battle for 2017 Manufacturer Championship

LONG POND, Pa. (August 20, 2017) – Will Power knew he had a very fast No. 12 Verizon Chevrolet. But when two separate issues forced the 2014 Verizon IndyCar Series champion down pit lane for bodywork replacement that ultimately put him a lap down to the leaders, Power knew he had to stay calm, focused and smart and let the race come back to him.

“What a crazy day for us,” said Power. “I mean, we had a really strong car. We were getting back to the front, and then suddenly, boom, the wing broke. Luckily, I didn’t hit the wall. Went a lap down, and then just was thinking, be smart, just anything can happen. You get your lap back and get through the field, and that’s exactly what we did. So very, very good day.”

It is the third win of the season for Power and the 32nd of his IndyCar career. The victory places him ninth on all-time list, breaking a tie with Dario Franchitti and Paul Tracy. He becomes the first IndyCar driver to win back-to-back at Pocono Raceway in the 24 series appearances at the track.

Power sits fifth in the standings with three races remaining in the 2017 season, just 42 points behind the leader, Team Penske teammate Josef Newgarden.

The win was the eighth of the season for Chevrolet in the 14 races run in the Verizon IndyCar Series, and extended the Bowtie Brand’s lead in the battle for the 2017 Manufacturer Championship.

“Today’s win by Will Power and the No. 12 Team Penske Chevy team was a true example of the ‘Never Give Up’ attitude of everyone associated with the Chevy IndyCar V6 program,” said Mark Kent, Director of Motorsports Competition for Chevrolet. “Coming from a lap down after stopping to replace damaged bodywork and not lose focus in the cockpit, on the pit box or on pit lane is a true testament to a team in championship form.”

Newgarden gave his teammate a hard chase during the final laps of the 200-lap/500-mile ABC Supply 500 on the 2.5-mile superspeedway, but settled for bringing his No. 2 Fitzgerald Glider Kit Chevrolet to the checkered flag in the runner-up spot. The strong performance extended his lead in the championship standings to 18 points over second place.

“And congratulations to Josef Newgarden on his second-place finish that extended his lead in the point standings,” Kent concluded. “The final three races should be exciting.”

Joining Newgarden and Power in the top five in the championship point standings are Team Penske teammates Simon Pagenaud and Helio Castroneves. Castroneves finished seventh today in the No. 3 Hitachi Chevrolet, and remains a strong third in the standings, just 22 points out of the lead.

Pagenaud, the defending series champion, brought the No. 1 DXC Technology Chevrolet to the checkered flag in fourth place. The finish strengthened his fourth-place position in the standings. He now sits 26 points out of the lead.

Other Team Chevy drivers’ finish:

Carlos Munoz, No. 14 ABC Supply AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet-10th
Ed Carpenter. No. 20 Fuzzy’s Ultra Premium Vodka Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet -12th
Conor Daly, No. 4 ABC Supply AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet-14th
Gabby Chaves, No. 88 Harding Group Chevrolet-15th
JR Hildebrand, No. 21 Fuzzy’s Ultra Premium Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet-19th

Alexander Rossi (Honda) completed the podium.

Up next is the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 Presented by Valvoline on Aug. 26 at Gateway Motorsports Park, across the river from St. Louis, Missouri.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 20, 2017
WILL POWER
JOSEF NEWGARDEN
POST RACE PRESS CONFERENCE

THE MODERATOR: We’ll continue with our Verizon IndyCar Series post-race press conference. Joined now by the winner of the ABC Supply 500, Will Power, driving the No. 12 Verizon Chevrolet for Team Penske. This is Will’s 32nd career win, which breaks a tie for ninth on the all dark time wins list with Paul Tracy and Dario Franchitti, his 32nd career win, also his third win this season and is currently fifth in the points standings, 42 points out of the lead held by his teammate Josef Newgarden.

Will, a really strong weekend for you, started fifth and were able to work your way up to the front, but take us through those few laps and battling back with your teammates knowing that Alexander was close behind, as well.

WILL POWER: Yeah, I mean, once Josef got to me, the only place he was going to be able to pass was into 3, so very aggressive with blocking and making sure he did not get up the inside. He got up the inside, it was over.

Yeah, but what a crazy day for us. I mean, we had a really strong car. We were getting back to the front, and then suddenly, boom, the wing broke. Lucky I didn’t hit the wall. Went a lap down, and then just was thinking, be smart, just anything can happen. You get your lap back and get through the field, and that’s exactly what we did. So very, very good day.

THE MODERATOR: That sounds so even keel, though. Was there any moment in the pits when I think you had to change both your front and rear wing that you were thinking, I don’t know if it’s going to happen but you ended up a repeat winner of Pocono Raceway?

WILL POWER: Once I got my lap back, I was like, all right, it’s game on, I can definitely get back up there. I was thinking like top 5, but when I was pumping out like 217 laps, I’m like, okay, we’re going to make some serious hay here. Yeah, we changed the rear wing because that pod was broken, and obviously the front wing broke. Yeah, guys did a fantastic job in the pits having to do all that and still able to go ahead and win the race.

THE MODERATOR: Will Power also the first back-to-back winner here at Pocono Raceway.

Q. Is it amazing sometimes in a 500-mile race something that happens bad can end up putting you in the right strategy to win a race?
WILL POWER: Yeah, I mean, that’s textbook IndyCar racing, where the fact that we got off that sequence, and so we had more fuel, so we could go longer and have some clear air and pump out some really fast laps, that’s what allowed us to win. And the car was obviously really good.

But yeah, never give up in an IndyCar race, particularly on an oval in a 500-mile race.

Q. Will, first 22 races nobody won back-to-back. What’s it mean to you to be the first to go back-to-back here?
WILL POWER: No one has ever won back-to-back?

Q. No, Rick Mears won three, Foyt won four races, but nobody won back-to-back. What’s it mean to you?
WILL POWER: It seriously means a lot. I love racing on ovals. Every oval win I get, I really, really enjoy because we don’t have many of them. Yeah, to come back and win it again in a very different way this year, it was a crazy race, exciting to me, but yeah, feels fantastic to go back-to-back.

Q. Will, you were just talking about the final stop; was that a combination of you getting that clean air and having fresher tires than some of those guys in the quick pit stops, and also, did you notice when Scott came down early that he really wasn’t getting the fuel mileage that you guys were getting?
WILL POWER: Yeah, I wasn’t really aware what everyone else was doing. All I knew is that we had clear air as people peeled off to pit and we could pump out some fast laps. I had no clue who was in the game and what, until the end, they’re saying Josef is closing on you. I’m like, okay, that’s who I’m racing. Yeah. Once we went a lap down, I mean, you just hang in there and then try and get your lap back, and then you’re fighting a lot of traffic, trying to be smart on those restarts, like you didn’t want to get involved in an incident.

Yeah, just one of those days. Really in IndyCar, you’ve just got to be smart all the time because anything can happen.

Q. I want to go back to what you said earlier with the rear wing issue. Did it break without any warning or did you know something was wrong already?
WILL POWER: No, the rear pod was — when Hinch almost crashed earlier he started to lose it and I thought he was going to spin in front of me, so I started to really slow up, and then Charlie ran into the back of me and unfortunately couldn’t see that Hinch was up near the wall.

Q. You mentioned before about in these 500-mile races you have to keep your focus because even if something goes wrong you have the time to come back from that. When you have multiple things go wrong, how difficult is it to keep your focus and keep your head in the game, and do you feel like — did a thought ever get in your head that this was starting to snowball and that this was really not going to happen for you today?
WILL POWER: No, I was like, if it goes yellow, we’ll get our lap back. It had to go yellow at the right time, but — and once you got your lap back, you can move up pretty quickly as you go through cars. It’s just trying to be smart on the restarts when you’re a lap down, and you don’t want to get in somebody else’s accident a lap down, so I wasn’t racing anyone really hard. I was very methodical all day. No matter the situation, that’s how I was racing, and it paid off.

Q. When you were coming out of Turn 2 and you were diving towards the inside of the track with Newgarden right behind you, was that your idea, or was someone telling you to do that with your race team?
WILL POWER: No, it was — with how close he was in 2, if I left that open he would pass me and he would win, and he goes through any little gap, so I wasn’t leaving any chance of him going all the way to the inside, so I was very aggressive like that, and it paid off.

Q. Will, are you surprised — basically the second year on the bounce where everyone has predicted like a Honda is going to win because of their superspeedway package and especially now because they’re so powerful and reliable, were you surprised how well the Chevys performed compared to Rossi and the two Ganassis?
WILL POWER: No, you could tell like when we came up here, Chevys were definitely in the game. I had a new engine in, so we had a bit of an upgrade. I think the engine was better. So yeah, I think — look, as you saw at Texas, same deal on the superspeedway. It’s a different configuration than Indy. We all have to run the Dallara rear wing, so that seems to even everything out there aerodynamically. But yeah, I think our cars were really good compared to the Honda.

Q. On the next to last pit stop, you came out with over a four-second lead. Did you guys short sell the car at that point, or were you just gaining time in and out of the pits? What happened there?
WILL POWER: No, the big gain was as people peeled off, I was able to do 217 laps. Like I was able to pump out laps in the 217s, and I think that’s close to 3 miles an hour quicker than what anyone else was doing at the time, so I just — it opened up for me to pump out some seriously fast laps, and that’s what got me — good in laps, good pit stops, good out laps. It all combines to having that big lead, yeah.

I was surprised I had that big of a lead. I had a feeling that we’d come out right at the front because of the speed I was doing, but I didn’t expect that.

Q. Could you just clarify, you mentioned the damage on the rear wing. How did the damage on the front wing —
WILL POWER: Front wing was a failure. For whatever reason something failed on the front wing, and it just went flat, and I lost all front downforce. Just some little — I don’t honestly know what the part was, but you get violent turbulence here behind cars, and maybe that’s the key and that’s what happens. But I was lucky enough to hit the wall.

Q. When you have to win the way you did today, overcoming adversity, is that maybe a little more satisfying than if you had just a dominant car and dominated the whole field?
WILL POWER: Pretty satisfying going a lap down, coming back and winning, I have to say. That was something else. Like I really did not — but then you think about Hunter-Reay last year, like he got back up to third from a lap down in one stint. Just had to be smart, be in the game at the end, and that was the result.

Q. You have wins at Motor Club Speedway, Pocono, 500-mile wins. How frustrating is it getting to be that Indy is evading you somehow or other?
WILL POWER: Yeah, I keep winning 500-mile races, and I really enjoy it, but I would really enjoy the Indianapolis 500. That would really be something. Obviously high on the list, and man, we’ll see. We’ll see. Next year everyone has the same car, so it should be very competitive.

Q. When you started in this game back in ’05, Paul Tracy was the big dog in town. Now you’ve won more races than him. Are you going to go by him and thumb your nose at him or anything now that you’ve won more than him?
WILL POWER: He’d probably beat me up. Yeah, no, it’s amazing to be up there with guys like Dario and Paul Tracy in wins because they’re obviously legends of the sport. Yeah, cool to be in that company.

Q. Gateway is a little unknown factor. Did you test there, and if not, what do you personally expect?
WILL POWER: I didn’t get to test. Helio did. Didn’t get to do too many laps, though. I think it’s going to be very nice, obviously the resurface. Kind of like Phoenix, it’s so hard, it’s so hard to tell until you race there. It’s a very cool track. I really like it.

THE MODERATOR: Just to clarify, you did test there in early May but have not tested since —

WILL POWER: Yeah, the test was cut short, but yeah, I tested on the old surface. Yeah, I haven’t tried the new surface, which is much different. Much different.

Q. 42 points back, three to go, double-points race. Is this within your reach?
WILL POWER: Yeah, absolutely, absolutely. Absolutely. When you think about the finish to last year, which was basically if you’re three DNFs in a row if you include a non-finish at a double-points race, it’s like the worst finish you can have, so really determined to finish on a high this year, really determined. I don’t want to have that again. It was frustrating the way we finished last year, so I’m going for it.

THE MODERATOR: We’re joined now by the second–place finishers of the ABC Supply 500 at Pocono Raceway, Josef Newgarden

Josef, we’ll start with you. Certainly a difficult — maybe not difficult but trickier start yesterday than you probably planned for starting 14th but able to make your way up to second and increase your points lead to 18 over, I believe, Scott Dixon. Take us through your day and how you were able to move up through the field.

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, it was a good day for points. Tough when you have an opportunity to potentially win a race at the end of it, but I don’t think we had enough for Will to be honest with you. I did everything I could to try and get by him, and I just felt like he was a touch quicker than us. That was difficult for me to overcome.

I’m happy for him. I’m happy for Team Penske. It’s a one-two at the end of the day, so keeping it in the family. When one car wins, we kind of all win. That’s the way we view it.

And certainly for the 2 car, it’s a points extension day, so we can’t be disappointed in it. Like it’s a good effort, especially, like you said, from where we started. We didn’t have a good start to the weekend. We tried to go off on our own mission and it didn’t really work, so we came back in qualifying and copied and pasted the other guys and took it from there, and I felt like we were decent enough, definitely a top-5 contender I would say.

Q. Josef, given the way this weekend went, it started very poorly for you yesterday, as you said. As disappointed as you are to finish second and miss out on another one, are you still satisfied to come home second after a rough start to the weekend? Even a rough race today, you really weren’t with the leaders much of the day until the end.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, we were earlier until we got shuffled back to the back. I mean, even when we pitted there, we pitted from the lead, and when the yellow came out, we went to the back. So I think we had speed at first in the race, so I’m not disappointed with that. There was definitely a couple stints where we weren’t good, but I think there were other stints where I thought we were very strong, and that’s why we were able to get back to the front.

You know, I’m not disappointed at all. Whenever you’re extending the points lead and you’re keeping the car off the wall and the team is getting a victory, I think it’s a great day, so I’m happy about that.

And then with regards to starting the weekend rough, I’m used to doing that. Sometimes, particularly in the last five years when I’ve been racing IndyCars, we’d always go on like a seeking mission trying to find something new, and we’d normally start the weekend off rough and find our way back. It makes it easier at Team Penske because you have three guys to lean on so you can do that and find your way back pretty quick, so I wasn’t too panicky after the first session.

Q. Josef, on the last lap, you swung left, as well, to follow Will’s kind of peculiar line. Was that to unsettle him and move around in his mirrors to see what he might do?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Sort of, yeah. I was doing everything I could. I just didn’t have enough for him, and I kind of knew that. I still gave him my best effort. I was going to try and beat him. I wasn’t going to just try and finish second. But I kind of knew he was just better than me. He had more speed was the thing, so I couldn’t quite get a run where I was going to complete a pass. With his move to block, it was really impossible, I think, for me to try and outside pass because I didn’t have the speed to clear him on the outside, and it would have been just very risky. Yeah, at the end there I tried to do something to rattle him or at least move him or make him think about something or doing something or mess up, but he’s pretty strong, as you know, so he doesn’t make many mistakes, and it didn’t help me at the end of the day.

Q. Josef, the first seven races of the season you led a total of 16 laps, but now you’ve led laps in all of the following races since then. I just want to know if you feel like momentum is on your side, and has it really kind of sunk in that you’re leading this championship, and what are you feeling now?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: You know, we’re just taking it one race at a time. You know, I felt like we were very good at the beginning of the year, but there’s certainly been points where we just needed to learn together. We haven’t been as strong as we could have been at some places because we didn’t have the experience together, and I feel like the longer we have together, the more time, the more races, the better we get.

But then on the other side, every race is so individualized now in IndyCar. I mean, you have to be good at every track from a history standpoint. You’ve got to know what you need for each specific track. Even though we’re getting better with time together, we still have to go through each specific race I feel like before we’re going to be really good. I’m hoping next year we can capitalize more, but like I said, we’ve just got to take it one race at a time. Maybe we’ll suck next year, I have no idea, but I’m hoping we’re going to be better.

But you know, like I said, we’ve got to take it one race at a time and keep trying to be consistent, and I really think if we could have been more consistent in the beginning of the year and not had as many issues or problems we could have been leading earlier because we’ve had good performance. But this championship going to be very difficult to win because there’s not a lot of guys messing up. Pagenaud is consistently in the top 5, so he doesn’t make mistakes. Will is very strong, Helio, Scott. It’s not going to be easy. I think it’ll come down to Sonoma regardless of whatever happens the next few races.

Q. Of the three races remaining, which track do you think is best suited for you?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: It’s difficult to say. I don’t know. I don’t know. I don’t really know. I would think Sonoma would be good for me because we’ve been strong at points there in the past. Gateway is an unknown, but I think we’re going to be strong there with team Chevy and Team Penske. Watkins, we only had one race there and we weren’t particularly strong there last year, but we finished second. I’ve got to think Sonoma, but I have no idea. Maybe we’ll be stronger at Gateway or Watkins. It’s up in the air.

Q. Josef, concerning fuel consumption, I think Team Penske is an open book; you share all the information among each other. Were you informed when Will pitted a little bit earlier for the last fuel stop and you were on lap 80 or 81, pitted earlier than you, and that includes on your pit stop?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Yeah, I think there was a couple variables going on there. I think with Will, he had a lead, and he just wanted to try and continue to open his gap. He had the speed to run away from everybody by himself, so I think for him, pitting earlier made sense. It gives you less risk for a yellow, so if a yellow does fall there at the end, you’ve already pitted so you’ll keep the lead.

You know, for us, we just tried to go a little bit longer but then it seemed like we were going to get into some traffic and I had to pass Conor Daly, so we decided to pit pretty soon after that, so we didn’t stay out too long. Really the yellow is what causes that because I think the longer you go, the more at risk you are if a yellow comes out.

Are you talking in stint? In a stint, I don’t know, it could have been 30, 32, depends on how much you want to save.

Q. Josef, while you’re out there racing, you probably didn’t see how many pit stops Will Power made, but he had a new front wing —
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Did he put on a rear wing?

Q. Yeah, that was later in the race.
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I was behind him when it happened. I thought he did.

Q. He thought he might have a front tire going down and then he thought his wing might have been broken, and I think he went to last when that happened, and I think probably that was after the second pit stop. And then later, somebody — I don’t know if it was Hinch, hit the back of the pod and damaged the rear wing. He had some contact with someone, and he came in, and it seemed that under caution — I don’t know the time he pitted but he probably spent the most time of every racer out there, and yet he wins. I mean, is that just a factor of being able to catch up to the field before the pace car laps him?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Well, I mean, I think you’ve got to give credit to Will and his crew. I think they were fast. They were able to go from the back to the front. We had a little similar deal. We were back there with them actually with 60 or something to go, and we were kind of staying together but he was leaving me a little bit.

And so that’s the beauty of the 500-milers. You can go to the back with 60 to go and go to the front again, especially if you’re on a little different fuel strategy and you’re fast. You can get right back to the front. I think a lot of it is credit to Will and his team, but I also think that’s the way 500 miles race. If you’re fast, you can go from the back to the front. It doesn’t matter. That’s how Juan Pablo won his Indy 500 in 2016, went right from the back to the front. If you have a good race car, a 500-mile race is good for you if you run into trouble.

We’re all pretty similar. We like different things. Really all four of us like little differences, but for the most part we’re globally in a similar place, so yeah, I think we like each other’s stuff for the most part.

Q. Josef, talking about what all Will’s team had to go through, sometimes when you have a bad moment early in a 500-mile race, does that almost kind of cast you into the winning strategy, and it ended up with them because they could go four miles an hour faster than everyone else by the way they were pitting out of sequence?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I mean, I think the speed difference was just down to Will and the 12 car. They were just faster. I don’t know if it was because they were off sequence. When I was in the back with him, he was that quick, too, when he was behind cars. They were just fast. I don’t think it had anything to do with the sequence. But I do think the sequence helped us. I think it helped me at the end of the day because we ended up going longer. I was on the same sort of strategy as Will. We got off the strategy with these guys because, I don’t know, we were like fourth or something, and then we were first and then the yellow came out, and we were like one of the only guys that hadn’t pitted, so we went straight to the back, and that put me on the same strategy as Will, we just kept re-pitting and pitting and trying to take fuel under that really long yellow. So now we’ve got, whatever, 10 more laps of fuel in the car and 10 more laps that we can go longer, and I think that just made it easier. We had fresher tires, had more fuel, and it just made it easier for the end of the race for those last couple stints where we would just go longer than everybody and make up ground really. We were off sequence and it helped, but I think Will’s speed was Will’s speed.

Q. After the last pit stop, Will was 4.4 seconds ahead and you guys had to run him down. Did you burn off your tires doing that, or did the tires really hold in there for you?
JOSEF NEWGARDEN: I don’t think we burned them off. I mean, when you’re in the tow there and you’re only catching one car, you’re not really burning them off. When you’re in the pack 12, 15 deep and you’re pushing really hard, then you can burn the tires off for sure, but with just one running him down, I —

JOSEF NEWGARDEN: Alex (Rossi – 3rd Place) was actually really good about that. Some of the guys weren’t. They just wanted to keep racing each other, but I think Alex saw that I was pretty quick, not as quick as Will, but we were catching him when I was in front, so he just stayed behind catch up and try and fight him. But it ended up being the same at the end of the day.