Marcus Ericsson wins IndyCar season opener in St. Pete

Marcus Ericsson dodged multiple incidents in a chaotic season-opening race for the NTT INDYCAR SERIES, winning the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg presented by RP Funding on Sunday in a day overflowing with drama.

2022 Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge winner Ericsson earned his fourth career NTT INDYCAR SERIES victory by 2.4113 seconds in the No. 8 Huski Chocolate Chip Ganassi Racing Honda over runner-up Pato O’Ward in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Racing Chevrolet.

Ericsson, who started fourth, took the lead when O’Ward slowed suddenly exiting Turn 14 on Lap 97 of the 100-lap race when his engine shut off momentarily due to a brief fire in the plenum chamber of his powerplant.

“I feel bad for Pato for having the issue, but that’s racing,” Swedish driver Ericsson said. You need to get there to the finish line. We were having such a good weekend. The car was fantastic all the way through. We were hunting him down, putting the pressure on, and that’s when things happen. It was a hell of a start to the season.”

Six-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Scott Dixon finished third in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. Alexander Rossi finished fourth in the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Racing Chevrolet in his debut with the team after seven seasons at Andretti Autosport.

Callum Ilott rounded out the top five after starting 22nd in the No. 77 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, with his 17 spots gained the most of any driver in the race.

O’Ward took the lead on Lap 74 when leader Scott McLaughlin in the No. 3 DEX Imaging Team Penske Chevrolet and second place Romain Grosjean in the No. 28 DHL Honda collided while dueling side by side for the lead, both plunging into the tire barriers in Turn 4. McLaughlin had just exited the pits on cold Firestone tires after Grosjean had pitted earlier and was on warm rubber, and McLaughlin took responsibility for the incident in a post-race interview.

McLaughlin and NTT P1 Award pole sitter Grosjean were the dominant drivers out front, leading 37 and 31 laps, respectively.

On the ensuing restart on Lap 79, O’Ward built a 2.8-second lead in just one lap and appeared to be destined for victory. But Ericsson steadily chipped at O’Ward’s gap, helped by saving twice as much Push-to-Pass time as O’Ward for the final stint of the race.

Ericsson pulled to within one-half second of O’Ward on Lap 97 when O’Ward’s car suddenly slowed with the plenum problem and then regained speed.

“We did everything right today,” a crestfallen O’Ward said. “There’s always something. The boys deserved that. Compared to where we were here last year, this is a massive step. But we gave that one away. We can’t have that happen anymore. I know we’re second, but …”

Ericsson slipped past O’Ward, taking the lead for the first time and cruising to the checkered flag to enthrall a chanting corps of Swedish fans in the grandstands. Ericsson will split $10,000 with his Chip Ganassi Racing team and his chosen charity, Riley Children’s Foundation, for his victory as part of the PeopleReady Force For Good Challenge.

Two major incidents on the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit thinned the 27-car field in the first half of the race.

On a restart on Lap 41, Rinus VeeKay’s No. 21 Bitnile.com Chevrolet nosed into the barriers in Turn 4 amid heavy traffic. The No. 30 Kustom Entertainment Honda of Jack Harvey had nowhere to go and plowed into the back of VeeKay. Then the trailing No. 27 AutoNation Honda of Kyle Kirkwood hit the rear of Harvey’s car and vaulted over that machine and VeeKay’s wounded car.

Harvey was taken to a local hospital in stable condition for further evaluation as a precautionary measure, according to INDYCAR Medical Director Dr. Julia Vaizer. The other drivers in the incident were unhurt.

The race started with a chaotic incident on the first lap. Felix Rosenqvist’s No. 6 Arrow McLaren Racing Chevrolet and Dixon’s car made side-by-side contact in Turn 2, with Rosenqvist being shoved into light wall contact.

That minor clash triggered a big, chain-reaction collision involving six cars that wiped out two teams’ hopes for a strong finish in the race. Drivers involved: Meyer Shank Racing teammates Helio Castroneves in the No. 06 AutoNation/Sirius XM Honda and Simon Pagenaud in the No. 60 AutoNation/Sirius XM, AJ Foyt Racing teammates Santino Ferrucci in the No. 14 AJ FOYT RACING/SEXTON PROPERTIES Chevrolet and rookie Benjamin Pedersen in the No. 55 AJ FOYT RACING/SEXTON PROPERTIES Chevrolet, rookie Sting Ray Robb in the No. 51 biohaven Honda and Devlin DeFrancesco in the No. 29 EVTEC Honda.

DeFrancesco’s car was tossed into the air in a pirouette when T-boned by Pedersen in the unfolding maelstrom. None of the drivers involved in the incident was hurt.

The next NTT INDYCAR SERIES race is the PPG 375 on Sunday, April 2 on the 1.5-mile oval at Texas Motor Speedway.

Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg

Race
Sunday, March 05, 2023
Rank Driver Car No. Starts Laps Total time Laps Led Status Avg.Speed Stops
1 Marcus Ericsson 8 4 100 02:05:30.7907 4 Running 86.047 3
2 Pato O’Ward 5 3 100 02:05:33.2020 23 Running 86.019 3
3 Scott Dixon 9 9 100 02:05:33.7164 3 Running 86.013 3
4 Alexander Rossi 7 12 100 02:05:37.5596 Running 85.969 3
5 Callum Ilott 77 22 100 02:05:39.0557 Running 85.952 3
6 Graham Rahal 15 20 100 02:05:41.5578 Running 85.924 3
7 Will Power 12 10 100 02:05:42.4705 Running 85.913 3
8 Alex Palou 10 7 100 02:05:45.5151 Running 85.879 3
9 Christian Lundgaard 45 11 100 02:05:45.7435 Running 85.876 3
10 David Malukas 18 16 100 02:05:46.2308 2 Running 85.871 4
11 Marcus Armstrong 11 13 100 02:05:46.5956 Running 85.867 4
12 Agustin Canapino 78 21 100 02:05:58.9239 Running 85.726 3
13 Scott McLaughlin 3 6 99 02:06:19.8874 37 Running 84.635 6
14 Conor Daly 20 26 99 02:06:28.0446 Running 84.544 5
15 Kyle Kirkwood 27 5 97 02:06:10.8940 Running 83.023 5
16 Sting Ray Robb 51 23 96 02:02:21.3481 Off Course 84.736 6
17 Josef Newgarden 2 14 95 02:00:44.6999 Running 84.972 4
18 Romain Grosjean 28 1 71 01:30:21.1461 31 Contact 84.868 3
19 Felix Rosenqvist 6 8 51 01:57:35.2383 Retired 46.842 3
20 Colton Herta 26 2 49 01:04:24.8942 Contact 82.155 2
21 Rinus VeeKay 21 24 41 00:50:50.9928 Contact 87.08 3
22 Jack Harvey 30 19 41 00:50:51.9701 Contact 87.052 2
23 Helio Castroneves 06 15 0 00:00:01.4598 Contact 0 0
24 Santino Ferrucci 14 17 0 00:00:01.5170 Contact 0 0
25 Devlin DeFrancesco 29 18 0 00:00:01.6639 Contact 0 0
26 Simon Pagenaud 60 25 0 00:00:05.1264 Contact 0 0
27 Benjamin Pedersen 55 27 0 00:00:06.2961 Contact 0 0

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