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2025 IndyCar Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American open-wheel racing championship season

2025 IndyCar season
NTT IndyCar Series
Season
Races17
Start dateMarch 2
End dateAugust 31
Awards
Drivers' championSpainÁlex Palou
Manufacturers' CupJapanHonda
Rookie of the YearUnited KingdomLouis Foster
Indianapolis 500 winnerSpainÁlex Palou
← 2024
2026 →
Defending series championÁlex Palou (left) won his fourth championship;Pato O'Ward (right) finished second.

The2025 NTT IndyCar Series was the 114th official championship season ofAmerican open-wheel racing and the 30th season underIndyCar Series sanction. Its showcase event was the109th running of theIndianapolis 500, which was won byChip Ganassi Racing driverÁlex Palou for the first time. Palou also entered the season as the back-to-back defending champion and earned athree-peat. He became the first driver to win the Indianapolis 500 and season driver's title in the same year sinceDario Franchitti in2010.

Background and series news

[edit]

After IndyCar's television contract withNBC Sports lapsed in 2024, the series signed a new agreement withFox Sports that saw all races being covered on theFox broadcast network.[1] On January 14, 2025, Fox announced its broadcast team for the 2025 season.Will Buxton was named the lead commentator, who previously coveredFormula One, whileTownsend Bell andJames Hinchcliffe, who previously served as analysts for NBC and are also former IndyCar drivers, retained their roles in the new lineup.[2]

On September 12, 2024, IndyCar announced that theFirestone Tire and Rubber Company had signed an extension to remain as the series' sole tire supplier.[3]

On September 23, 2024, IndyCar announced its first ever charter system, which began in 2025 and will extend until 2031. 25 charters were awarded among all teams that competed full-time in the 2024 season, with a maximum of 3 for each team. Chartered entries were qualified to compete for the 22 Leaders Circle contracts. At every race on the calendar outside of the Indianapolis 500, starting fields were limited to 27 cars, and chartered entries were guaranteed a starting position. Qualification for the Indianapolis 500 remained open, and no teams had a guaranteed entry in the 33-car starting field.[N 1][6]

As a new entrant in the series,PREMA Racing was excluded from receiving charters. If a race event outside of the Indianapolis 500 were to feature additional cars, those would have had to compete against the two PREMA cars for the two 'open' spots in the field.[7]

On February 11,Doug Boles was named as the new president of IndyCar, replacingJay Frye. Boles also continued to hold his role as president ofIndianapolis Motor Speedway.[8]

Numerous technical violations found during qualifying and the race for theIndianapolis 500, particularly involving the cars ofTeam Penske, led to the start of an overhaul of IndyCar's officiating system. The series announced after the race that they would create an independent officiating board for race stewarding and technical inspections, in part due to increasing concerns withRoger Penske owning both the IndyCar series and a competing team in the series. The new officiating board was targeted to be ready for the 2026 season.[9] Further, the series announced their intent to begin using a scanning system during inspections to assist with finding possible rules infractions on cars.[10] The new scanning process was rolled out atPortland, where four cars were impounded after the race and scanned to check for technical compliance.[11]

On July 31, 2025, Fox Sports parent companyFox Corporation announced that it had acquired a one-third stake in IndyCar parent company Penske Entertainment. As part of the acquisition, Fox Sports' TV contract was extended to 2030.[12][13]

Confirmed entries

[edit]

The following teams, entries, and drivers were contracted to compete in the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season. All teams used a specDallara DW12 chassis with2018 universal aero kit andFirestone tires.

TeamEngineNo.Driver(s)Round(s)Ref(s)
A. J. Foyt Enterprises[N 2]Chevrolet4United StatesDavid MalukasAll[14]
14United StatesSantino FerrucciAll[15]
Andretti GlobalHonda26United StatesColton HertaAll[16]
27United StatesKyle KirkwoodAll[17]
28SwedenMarcus EricssonAll[18]
98United StatesMarco Andretti6[19][20]
Arrow McLarenChevrolet5MexicoPato O'WardAll[21]
6United StatesNolan SiegelAll[22]
7DenmarkChristian LundgaardAll[23]
Arrow McLaren/Rick Hendrick17United StatesKyle Larson R [N 3]6[24]
Chip Ganassi RacingHonda8Cayman IslandsKyffin SimpsonAll[25]
9New ZealandScott DixonAll[26]
10SpainÁlex PalouAll[27]
Dale Coyne RacingHonda18NetherlandsRinus VeeKayAll[28]
50United StatesJacob Abel R 16[29]
511–15, 17[30]
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
Cusick Motorsports
Chevrolet23United StatesRyan Hunter-Reay6[31][32]
24United KingdomJack Harvey6[32]
Ed Carpenter RacingChevrolet20United StatesAlexander RossiAll[33]
21DenmarkChristian RasmussenAll[33]
33United StatesEd Carpenter6[33]
Juncos Hollinger RacingChevrolet76United StatesConor DalyAll[34]
77United StatesSting Ray RobbAll[35]
Meyer Shank Racing[N 4]
withCurb-Agajanian
Honda06BrazilHélio Castroneves6[36]
60SwedenFelix RosenqvistAll[37]
66New ZealandMarcus ArmstrongAll[38]
PREMA RacingChevrolet83IsraelRobert Shwartzman R All[39]
90United KingdomCallum IlottAll[40]
Rahal Letterman Lanigan RacingHonda15United StatesGraham RahalAll[41]
30CanadaDevlin DeFrancescoAll[42]
45United KingdomLouis Foster RY All[43]
75JapanTakuma Sato6[44]
Team PenskeChevrolet2United StatesJosef NewgardenAll[45]
3New ZealandScott McLaughlinAll[46]
12AustraliaWill PowerAll[47]
IconStatus
 R Eligible for Rookie of the Year
 RY Rookie of the Year

Driver changes

[edit]

Preseason

[edit]
  • On July 2, 2024,Arrow McLaren announced thatChristian Lundgaard would replace a departingAlexander Rossi, after Rossi and the team were unable to agree on a new contract.[23]
  • On August 13, 2024,A.J. Foyt Enterprises confirmed it had signedDavid Malukas full-time on a multi-year deal. Malukas departsMeyer Shank Racing after running the final 10 races of 2024 with them.[14]
  • On September 17, 2024,PREMA Racing confirmed reports thatCallum Ilott would join full-time in the No. 90 entry for the 2025 season. Ilott moves fromJota Sport in theWorld Endurance Championship and also competed in two IndyCar races in 2024 as an injury substitute for Arrow McLaren.[40]
  • On September 19, 2024,Meyer Shank Racing confirmed that it had signedMarcus Armstrong for the 2025 season, replacing David Malukas in the No. 66 entry. Armstrong departs Chip Ganassi Racing after two seasons.[38]
  • On September 20, 2024,Racer reported thatEd Carpenter Racing informedRinus VeeKay that it would end their relationship after five seasons.[48] On September 23, VeeKay confirmed this report via social media.[49]
  • On September 25, 2024, Ed Carpenter Racing confirmed its driver line-up, with Alexander Rossi joining the team on a multi-year deal in the No. 20 entry,Christian Rasmussen moving from the No. 20 to the No. 21 entry full-time on a multi-year deal, and owner/driverEd Carpenter returning to an Indy 500-only role in a third entry.[33]
  • On October 9, 2024,Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing announced the signing of2024 Indy NXT ChampionLouis Foster to a multi-year deal, in the No. 45 entry, replacing Lundgaard.
  • On October 30, 2024, Chip Ganassi Racing confirmed reports thatKyffin Simpson would move from the No. 4 entry to the No. 8, taking the place of a departingLinus Lundqvist.
  • On November 5, 2024, PREMA Racing confirmed reports that it had signedRobert Shwartzman to fill its second race seat for the 2025 season. Shwartzman moves fromAF Corse in the FIA World Endurance championship.[39]
  • On November 20, 2024,Juncos Hollinger Racing announced the signing ofSting Ray Robb to one of its entries for the 2025 season. He was later confirmed to be assigned to the No. 77 entry.[35]
  • On December 4, 2024,Dreyer & Reinbold Racing-Cusick Motorsports confirmed its Indy 500 lineup, withJack Harvey joining the team in the No. 24 car at the Indianapolis 500.[32]
  • On December 9, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing confirmedDevlin DeFrancesco to drive its third entry, replacingPietro Fittipaldi after one season.[42]
  • On December 18, 2024, Juncos Hollinger Racing confirmed thatConor Daly would drive the No. 78 entry full-time in 2025, after driving it part-time in 2024, and replacing a departingRomain Grosjean.[34] On February 28, 2025, the car appeared with No. 76 instead, using the number representing a brand, and the respective font, of sponsor76. Daly said a sponsorship announcement was expected for Thermal.[50]
  • On January 13, 2025, Dale Coyne announced thatJacob Abel would drive the No. 51 entry full-time, moving fromIndy NXT.[30]
  • On February 14, 2025, Dale Coyne announced Rinus VeeKay would drive the No. 18 entry full time.[28]
  • On March 11, Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing announced thatTakuma Sato would return to the team as an Indianapolis 500 only entry for the second year in a row.[44]

Team changes

[edit]

Preseason

[edit]
  • On April 9, 2024, Italian junior formula and endurance racing team PREMA Racing announced it would enter two full-time entries in IndyCar in 2025, having secured a supply ofChevrolet engines.[51][52]
  • On August 19, 2024, Meyer Shank Racing confirmed that it would be switching technical alliance partners fromAndretti Global toChip Ganassi Racing, having been with Andretti since2020.[53]
  • On September 4, 2024,Racer reported that Chip Ganassi Racing would downsize its IndyCar operation from five to three cars.[54]
  • On January 3, 2025, Arrow McLaren announced thatMcLaren Group had purchased the remaining 25% stake of the team fromSam Schmidt and Ric Peterson as of December 31, 2024.[55]
  • On January 13, 2025, with the confirmation of Jacob Abel to the No. 51 entry, Dale Coyne's partnership with Rick Ware Racing has ended, reverting the Dale Coyne Racing with Rick Ware Racing entry name back to Dale Coyne Racing.
  • On March 20, 2025,Abel Motorsports announced that they would not enter the Indianapolis 500 as they did in 2024, opting to instead keep their chassis available as a backup for the Dale Coyne Racing entry of Jacob Abel, the son of team owner Bill Abel.[56]

Mid-season

[edit]
  • On April 1, 2025, it was announced that Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing appointed formerIndyCar presidentJay Frye as a team president.[57]
  • On May 21, 2025, following failed technical inspections of the cars driven byJosef Newgarden andWill Power during qualifying for theIndianapolis 500, Team Penske announced that presidentTim Cindric, managing director Ron Ruzewski, and general manager Kyle Moyer had all been dismissed by the team.[58]

Schedule

[edit]

The schedule was released on June 13, 2024.[1]

IconLegend
 O Oval/Speedway
 R Road course
 S Street circuit
Rd.DateRace nameTrackLocation
1March 2Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg S Streets of St. PetersburgSt. Petersburg, Florida
2March 23The Thermal Club IndyCar Grand Prix R Thermal ClubThermal, California
3April 13Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach S  Streets of Long BeachLong Beach, California
4May 4Children's of Alabama Indy Grand Prix R Barber Motorsports ParkBirmingham, Alabama
5May 10Sonsio Grand Prix R Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road CourseSpeedway, Indiana
6May 25109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 O Indianapolis Motor Speedway
7June 1Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix S Streets of DetroitDetroit, Michigan
8June 15Bommarito Automotive Group 500 O World Wide Technology RacewayMadison, Illinois
9June 22XPEL Grand Prix at Road America R Road AmericaElkhart Lake, Wisconsin
10July 6Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio R Mid-Ohio Sports Car CourseLexington, Ohio
11July 12Synk 275 Powered by Sukup O Iowa SpeedwayNewton, Iowa
12July 13Farm to Finish 275 Powered by Sukup
13July 20Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto S Exhibition PlaceToronto, Ontario
14July 27Java House Grand Prix of Monterey R WeatherTech Raceway Laguna SecaMonterey, California
15August 10BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland R Portland International RacewayPortland, Oregon
16August 24Snap-on Milwaukee Mile 250 O Milwaukee MileWest Allis, Wisconsin
17August 31Borchetta Bourbon Music City Grand Prix O Nashville SuperspeedwayLebanon, Tennessee

Schedule changes

[edit]
  • The race at the Thermal Club that was the non-championship$1 Million Challenge in 2024 became a full points-paying race in 2025. It was the first American open-wheel racing championship race inRiverside County, California since the1983 CART season.
  • The Milwaukee Mile, which held a double-header in 2024, only hosted a single race in 2025.
  • The race at World Wide Technology Raceway moved from August to June.
  • On February 18, 2025, INDYCAR announced race lengths were extended for six races.
    • Long Beach – 90 Laps (five additional laps)
    • Mid-Ohio – 90 Laps (ten additional laps)
    • Iowa – 275 Laps (25 additional laps each race)
    • Toronto – 90 Laps (five additional laps)
    • Nashville – 225 Laps (19 additional laps)

Sponsorship changes

[edit]

On February 21,Hy-Vee announced that they were ending their event sponsorships for Iowa and Milwaukee.[59] Sukup Manufacturing was announced as the new title sponsor for the Iowa race weekend.[60]Snap-on was announced as the new title sponsor for Milwaukee.[61]

On June 4, IndyCar announced that the sponsorship name of theNashville race would be changing from the Big Machine Music City Grand Prix to the Borchetta Bourbon Music City Grand Prix for 2025 and beyond.[62]

On July 1, Java House was announced as the new title sponsor for theMonterey Grand Prix.[63][64]

Results

[edit]
Rd.RacePole positionFastest lapMost laps ledRace winnerReport
DriverTeamEngine
1St. PetersburgNew ZealandScott McLaughlinUnited StatesJosef NewgardenNew ZealandScott McLaughlinSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
2Thermal ClubMexicoPato O'WardMexicoPato O'WardMexicoPato O'WardSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
3Long BeachUnited StatesKyle KirkwoodCayman IslandsKyffin SimpsonUnited StatesKyle KirkwoodUnited StatesKyle KirkwoodAndretti GlobalHondaReport
4BarberSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
5IMS GPSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouUnited StatesGraham RahalSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
6Indianapolis 500IsraelRobert ShwartzmanBrazilHélio CastronevesJapanTakuma SatoSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
7DetroitUnited StatesColton HertaCayman IslandsKyffin SimpsonUnited StatesKyle KirkwoodUnited StatesKyle KirkwoodAndretti GlobalHondaReport
8GatewayAustraliaWill PowerSpainÁlex PalouUnited StatesDavid MalukasUnited StatesKyle KirkwoodAndretti GlobalHondaReport
9Road AmericaUnited KingdomLouis FosterSwedenFelix RosenqvistNew ZealandScott DixonSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
10Mid-OhioSpainÁlex PalouNew ZealandScott McLaughlinSpainÁlex PalouNew ZealandScott DixonChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
11Iowa 1United StatesJosef NewgardenMexicoPato O'WardUnited StatesJosef NewgardenMexicoPato O'WardArrow McLarenChevroletReport
12Iowa 2SpainÁlex PalouUnited StatesDavid MalukasSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHonda
13TorontoUnited StatesColton HertaUnited StatesColton HertaSpainÁlex PalouMexicoPato O'WardArrow McLarenChevroletReport
14Laguna SecaSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouSpainÁlex PalouChip Ganassi RacingHondaReport
15PortlandDenmarkChristian Lundgaard[N 5]AustraliaWill PowerAustraliaWill PowerAustraliaWill PowerTeam PenskeChevroletReport
16MilwaukeeSpainÁlex PalouUnited StatesDavid MalukasSpainÁlex PalouDenmarkChristian RasmussenEd Carpenter RacingChevroletReport
17NashvilleMexicoPato O'WardSpainÁlex PalouMexicoPato O'WardUnited StatesJosef NewgardenTeam PenskeChevroletReport

Season report

[edit]

Opening rounds

[edit]

Team Penske'sScott McLaughlin claimed the first pole position of the year at theFirestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg ahead ofAndretti'sColton Herta,[65] but the race was decided on tire strategy after a first-lap collision involving Penske’sWill Power,McLaren’sNolan Siegel andRLL’sLouis Foster brought out an early caution. Several frontrunners, includingCGR'sÁlex Palou, dove into the pits to switch off the fragile alternate tire. That set up a decisive advantage as the race would run green to the finish. McLaughlin led the most laps before fading during the following pit cycles and Herta’s fight for the win ended with pit lane issues. CGR’sScott Dixon briefly looked in control despite running without radio communication, before Palou undercut his teammate during the final round of stops and pulled away. Penske’sJosef Newgarden chased him until lapped traffic allowed Dixon to slip past him for second on the final lap. Palou scored his first St. Petersburg victory, starting off his campaign for a championship three-peat in the best way.[66][67]

McLaren’sPato O'Ward secured pole position atthe Thermal Club IndyCar Grand Prix ahead of teammateChristian Lundgaard, marking the team’s first front row lockout in their IndyCar history, while all three Penske drivers failed to advance past the opening round of qualifying.[68] O’Ward controlled the opening stints and led a race-high 51 laps, with Lundgaard and Palou running close behind as the race unfolded without interruption. Palou gained ground in the final stint by switching to the alternate tire, overtaking Lundgaard after a prolonged battle before rapidly closing down a near ten-second deficit to O’Ward. He completed the winning move on lap 56 and pulled clear to secure his thirteenth career victory by more than ten seconds. The race ran green from start to finish with only minor incidents, and O’Ward finished second with Lundgaard third, giving McLaren two cars on the podium. Herta andMSR’sFelix Rosenqvist completed the top five as Palou extended his lead in the standings to 39 points over O’Ward.[69][70]

Andretti’sKyle Kirkwood claimed pole position for theAcura Grand Prix of Long Beach for the second time, ahead of teammate Herta.[71] The race was the second consecutive event to run caution-free and was therefore shaped by tire and pit strategy on the tight street circuit. Kirkwood and Palou both switched to the primary compound early, trading lap times at the head of the field while Herta slipped back after the first pit sequence. Palou gained ground through an undercut on the final round of stops and emerged close behind Kirkwood, but the Andretti driver held firm under pressure and gradually extended his lead to 2.7 seconds to claim Andretti’s first win of the year at the flag. Lundgaard recovered from twelfth on the grid and a crash in qualifying to finish third after passing Rosenqvist in the closing laps, while Power completed the top five. All 27 cars reached the finish, marking the first yellow-free Long Beach race since 2016, as Kirkwood ended Palou’s winning streak and closed to within 34 points of the championship lead.[72][73]

Palou was back on top in qualifying for theChildren's of Alabama Indy Grand Prix, securing pole position ahead of his CGR teammateMarcus Armstrong, with McLaughlin lining up third for Penske.[74] At the start, Palou retained the lead, while Armstrong came under early pressure from McLaughlin and Lundgaard. The race was the third in a row to run without a caution, and differing pit strategies produced several position changes throughout the field. McLaughlin briefly moved ahead during the first cycle, but Palou regained control after the second round of stops, maintaining consistent pace on the primary tire. Behind the leaders, Lundgaard gained ground on the alternate strategy to secure a second consecutive podium, while Armstrong slipped to fourth after losing time in traffic. Herta completed the top five. Further back, rookie Siegel earned his first Fast Six appearance and maiden top-ten finish in ninth. Palou’s third victory in four rounds extended his early advantage in the championship to 60 points over Lundgaard.[75][76]

Round five, theSonsio Grand Prix, saw Palou double up in qualifying to take pole position once again as RLL'sGraham Rahal started alongside him on the front row.[77] At the start, Rahal overtook Palou into turn 1 and controlled much of the first half of the race, leading 49 laps as both drivers followed similar two-stop strategies under the new tire-compound regulations requiring two stints each on primary and alternate tires. Palou remained close behind and regained the lead into turn 7 on Lap 58, pulling away steadily thereafter. The race featured the first mid-race caution since the season opener:A.J. Foyt'sDavid Malukas stopped on course with 16 laps remaining, erasing Palou’s four-second lead and ending a 408-lap stretch of green flag running. On the restart, Palou held off O’Ward, who rose from eighth on the grid to finish second, while Power completed the podium after starting seventh. Palou’s fourth victory in five races extended his dominant start to the season as he headed into the Indianapolis 500 with a 97-point lead.[78][79]

Robert Shwartzman claimed a shock pole position forPrema Racing in his firstIndianapolis 500 appearance to become the first rookie polesitter since 1983.[80] RLL'STakuma Sato and O’Ward completed the front row, while the Penske squad’s weekend was overshadowed by disqualification from qualifying for technical violations that sent Newgarden and Power to the back of the grid and prompted major leadership changes within the team.[81][82] On race day, delayed by rain, Shwartzman initially held firm but faded quickly before crashing and retiring before half-distance, leaving Andretti'sMarcus Ericsson, Palou and Malukas to contest the lead through the final stints. Palou moved into position behind Ericsson in the closing stages and completed a decisive pass with 14 laps remaining, holding off the Swede to finally win the Indy 500 after years of near-misses.[83] Ericsson was later disqualified for an illegal aerodynamic modification, promoting Malukas to second and O’Ward to third. Palou now held a 112-point standings lead after just six races.[84]

Mid-season rounds

[edit]

Herta claimed his first pole position since Toronto 2024 in qualifying for theChevrolet Detroit Grand Prix, leading Malukas, who equalled his career-best starting position, and teammate Kirkwood.[85] The race developed into one of the most chaotic events of the season, with frequent cautions and a late red flag disrupting the order. Herta led the early stages, but Kirkwood quickly moved forward and assumed control after passing Siegel, who had briefly cycled to the front on an alternate strategy. Multiple incidents kept the field bunched together, and pit stop timing became decisive as teams juggled tire wear and timing under yellow. Kirkwood maintained track position despite front-wing damage, throughout a late red flag after a heavy crash between Rosenqvist and Foster. He held off Foyt'sSantino Ferrucci over the final laps to take his second victory of the season, with Herta completing the podium. Palou retired after contact with Malukas, bringing his three-race winning streak to an end and shortening his championship lead to 90 points.[86][87]

Next up was theBommarito Automotive Group 500, where Power claimed pole position, his fifth at the track and 71st overall, leading a Team Penske front-row sweep ahead of McLaughlin as championship leader Palou could manage only ninth.[88] At the start, Power initially maintained the lead, but his race ended early when a tire failure sent him into the wall on lap 47. McLaughlin then assumed control until a mechanical issue on lap 216 forced his retirement. The most significant incident came on lap 131, when Foster brushed the wall and slid into the path of leader Newgarden, launching their cars into a heavy collision that saw both retire. Multiple cautions set up a strategic contest between the remaining frontrunners. Dixon briefly led by stretching his fuel, but Kirkwood undercut the leaders during the final pit cycle and emerged ahead. He held off O’Ward to take his first oval victory, withECR rookieChristian Rasmussen climbing from 25th to finish third. Palou finished eighth, his championship lead shortened again to 73 points.[89][90]

Rookie Foster scored his first career IndyCar pole position at theXPEL Grand Prix at Road America, leading championship contenders Palou and Kirkwood.[91] Sunday’s 55-lap race began amid soaring temperatures and early chaos. Three cautions in the opening ten laps eliminated several contenders, including Malukas and Shwartzman, while a later crash for Newgarden triggered the fourth and final yellow on lap 30. Palou, who had dropped back after contact with Power, recovered through a sequence of timely pit stops and fuel management. Lundgaard appeared to be in control before the caution caused by Newgarden reversed the order, favoring those yet to stop. Dixon once again went for an alternative fuel strategy, which saw him lead briefly before he was forced to pit with two laps remaining. That handed the advantage to Palou, who held on to win ahead of Rosenqvist and Ferrucci despite having to save fuel himself. Kirkwood came fourth, losing ground again to Palou in the standings, where the Spaniard now led by 93 points.[92][93]

TheHonda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio saw Palou claim his third pole position of the season, ahead of Lundgaard, with CGR'sKyffin Simpson taking a career-best third on the grid.[94] Palou converted his pole into an early lead at the start, pulling ahead of Lundgaard as the field settled. The opening lap saw chaos when Newgarden spun at Turn 1 and collected Rahal, ending both of their races and triggering an early caution. Power retired shortly afterward due to contact sustained in the same incident. Once the race resumed, Palou controlled the pace from Lundgaard and Herta, while Dixon advanced from ninth on a two-stop fuel strategy. A second yellow for Rasmussen’s stalled car on lap 31 allowed Dixon to save fuel and stay within reach of the leader. Palou appeared on course for another win until a brief off-track excursion in Turn 9 with six laps remaining allowed Dixon to slip through. The Kiwi held off a late challenge to win by 0.4201s, with Lundgaard coming third. Palou extended his championship lead to 113 points with seven races remaining.[95][96]

Newgarden became the season's ninth different pole sitter in qualifying for theSynk 275 Powered by Sukup, leadingJHR'sConor Daly and Rosenqvist.[97] At the start of the race, Newgarden quickly established control, leading the opening 232 laps. Herta spun on lap 1 to bring out an early caution, and further incidents forDCR'sJacob Abel, Kirkwood, Siegel and Prema'sCallum Ilott interrupted the rhythm later on. When Newgarden pitted on lap 233, O’Ward elected to stay out two laps longer and cycled ahead after his stop. Siegel's crash was heavy enough to cause a red flag and force him to miss the weekend's second race. That set up two late restarts, where O’Ward held off Newgarden each time. He won the race by just over 0.2 seconds to take his first victory of 2025 and end an eleven-race win streak for Honda. Power completed the podium in third, while championship leader Palou came fifth. O'Ward's win allowed him to move past Kirkwood to second in the standings, slightly shortening Palou's dominant championship lead to 106 points.[98][99]

The second race of the double header, theFarm to Finish 275 Powered by Sukup, saw championship leader Palou lead Rosenqvist and Malukas in qualifying.[97] The Spaniard led the opening laps before being passed by Newgarden, who went on to control much of the race. The first caution came immediately when RLL'sDevlin DeFrancesco spun into McLaughlin, eliminating both. Mechanical problems ended Will Power’s race after 21 laps, before another yellow on lap 50 whenSting Ray Robb crashed his JHR car. Two tire failures for Andretti later changed the complexion of the race: Ericsson hit the wall on lap 130, and Herta did likewise on lap 254, both times just after Newgarden had pitted from the lead. The timing trapped him a lap down, handing Palou track position. The Spaniard stopped under the second caution, retained the lead on the final restart, and held off Dixon to take his seventh win of the season. Armstrong completed an all-Honda podium as Palou once again extended his championship lead over O’Ward to 129 points.[100][101]

Closing rounds

[edit]

Herta claimed his second pole position of the year at theOntario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto, leading Palou and Armstrong.[102] At the start, he held his advantage into Turn 1, while O’Ward, who had qualified tenth, made early progress through the field. The Mexican was among several drivers to pit within the first laps to remove the alternate tires, switching to primaries before a caution followed on lap two. That caution elevated O’Ward into a favorable position, and after another yellow for ECR'sAlexander Rossi crashing coincided with pit stops, he emerged among the frontrunners. DCR'sRinus VeeKay led briefly on a two-stop strategy but yielded the lead when O’Ward overcut him during the final cycle. A late caution neutralized the finish, giving O’Ward the win ahead of a season-first podium for VeeKay and a career-first podium for Simpson. Championship leader Palou, who tried an alternative strategy that was ultimately hindered by the cautions, finished twelfth, his lead over O’Ward reduced to 99 points with four races remaining.[103][104]

TheJava House Grand Prix of Monterey, saw Palou lead O'Ward and Herta in qualifying.[105] The Spaniard led cleanly at the start and controlled the opening stint while Siegel, running an alternate strategy, cycled to the front for 11 laps before the championship leader reclaimed the lead on lap 37. Early incidents included Shwartzman being pushed into the Turn 3 gravel and a separate collision between Simpson and Rosenqvist that brought out the first caution, followed shortly by another when Abel went off at Turn 2 with brake issues. A mid-race yellow followed after VeeKay was forced into the Turn 3 runoff following contact from Kirkwood, but the race remained green through the subsequent pit exchanges. Lundgaard gained positions through an undercut to run second, but was unable to challenge Palou over two restarts triggered by off-track excursions for Ericsson and Ferrucci. Palou took his eighth win of the season ahead of Lundgaard and Herta, with O’Ward finishing fourth to leave Palou 121 points ahead with three races remaining.[106][107]

Championship chaser O’Ward started theBitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland from pole position after a six-place grid penalty for Lundgaard.[108] He held the lead through the opening laps until Ferrucci crashed at the final corner on lap 2, triggering the first caution. The restart was short-lived as debris from a double spin for Foster and VeeKay brought out another yellow on lap 8. Racing resumed on lap 11, and a battle between Rasmussen and Daly escalated over several laps until Daly was sent into the Turn 9 tire barrier on lap 15, causing the third caution and removing both drivers from contention. Power moved to the front during the first round of pit stops and established a lead while Lundgaard and Palou settled into second and third. O’Ward’s race unraveled on lap 22 when an electrical issue ended his championship hopes. The remainder of the race ran uninterrupted. In the closing laps Lundgaard closed on Power while Palou pressured both, but Power maintained control to take the win. Palou’s third place secured his fourth championship.[109][110]

Newly crowned champion Palou secured pole position for theSnap-on Milwaukee Mile 250 ahead of Malukas and O’Ward.[111] The opening lap was interrupted immediately when Siegel spun and hit the wall, prompting the first caution. The restart was short-lived when Rahal slid wide and nearly crashed, bringing out a second yellow. Palou controlled the early stages afterwards while the field committed to a four-stop strategy. Rossi initiated the first pit cycle before lap 50, with further stops around laps 102 and 150. Palou held an advantage over McLaughlin and Newgarden through the middle phase and reasserted the lead after the final round of stops with just under 50 laps remaining. Light rain on lap 209 produced a fifth caution, and Rasmussen was among the drivers pitting for new tyres. Racing resumed with 28 laps to go, and the Dane quickly climbed through the order, passing McLaughlin and then closing on Palou. With 16 laps remaining, he overtook the race leader into turn 3 and held the position to claim his first IndyCar win.[112][113]

The season finale, theBorchetta Bourbon Music City Grand Prix, saw O'Ward claim pole position ahead of Malukas and Lundgaard.[114] Rasmussen crashed on lap 1, triggering the first caution. O’Ward led the early phase while Malukas held second until lap 83, when contact with the lapped Foster sent him into the wall. The restart preserved O’Ward’s advantage over Palou, but his race ended on lap 127 when a right-front tire failure put him into the same corner. That handed the lead to Power, who then lost a lap after stalling during his pit stop. That briefly cycled Rossi to the front before Newgarden, who had stopped earlier, moved past him on lap 147. Newgarden lost the net lead during the final pit cycle after a slow stop, allowing McLaughlin and Palou to jump ahead. He repassed Palou shortly after and then inherited the lead on lap 205 when McLaughlin brushed the wall. Newgarden controlled the final stint to finish ahead of Palou and McLaughlin, closing a difficult season with a win while Palou ended the year with a 196-point lead.[115][116]

Across the 17-race season, Palou established control early with four wins from the first five events and extended that momentum through the Indianapolis 500, where he finally claimed victory after several years of contention. His consistency, combined with repeated gains through strategy and minimal errors, allowed him to maintain a triple-digit points advantage for much of the campaign. O’Ward emerged as Palou’s closest title rival after mid-season gains, including victory at Iowa and a strong run of podiums, though mechanical issues at Portland ultimately ended his pursuit. IndyCar’s first season under new broadcast partner and part-owner Fox delivered a 28 per cent increase in average viewership, with 1.2 million viewers marking the best television figures since 2012. The Indianapolis 500 drew its largest audience in 17 years, while several events reported record or near-record attendance.[117]

Points standings

[edit]
Further information:List of American Championship car racing points scoring systems
  • Ties were broken by number of wins, followed by number of 2nds, 3rds, etc.; then by finishing position in the previous race; then by random draw.[118]
Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th  11th  12th  13th  14th  15th  16th  17th  18th  19th  20th  21st  22nd  23rd  24th  25th+ 
Points504035323028262422201918171615141312111098765

Driver standings

[edit]
  • At all races except the Indy 500, the pole position qualifier earned 1 point (unless qualifying was not held).[119] The twelve Indy 500 qualifiers who qualified for the fast 12 session received points based on the results of that session, descending from 12 points for first place.[120]
  • Drivers who led at least one race lap were awarded 1 point.[121] The driver who led the most laps during a race scored an additional 2 points.[121]
  • Entrant-initiated engine change-outs before the engine reached its required distance run resulted in the loss of 10 points.[122]
PosDriverSTPTHELBHBARIGPINDYDETGTWROAMOHIOWTORLAGPORMILNSSPts
1SpainÁlex Palou1L1L21L*1L16L2581L2L*5L1L*12L*1L*3L2L*2L711
2MexicoPato O'Ward112L*136233L7L2L1751L51L425L524L*515
3New ZealandScott Dixon2L108L12520411L4L9L*1L10210511912L452
4United StatesKyle Kirkwood581L*118321L*1L4L82618L61620126433
5DenmarkChristian Lundgaard8L33L2167881424L32161322625431
6SwedenFelix Rosenqvist75413104521L16L2L61771924922L7372
7United StatesColton Herta16L47725143L17164L13204L3101111L372
8New ZealandMarcus Armstrong24L714L17L7L1869579L3148810L19L364
9AustraliaWill Power266553164L2714263L241171L*2621L357
10New ZealandScott McLaughlin4L*2763L4301012L24L12L234262610733L356
11United StatesDavid Malukas131817162327L1412L*7L17124913198L26L318
12United StatesJosef Newgarden3L1327101222925L25272L*10L241124L71L316
13DenmarkChristian Rasmussen15122315196L24L3L182568209121L27313
14NetherlandsRinus VeeKay917194927277L10916122L23171513L305
15United StatesAlexander Rossi109L1581428L1011L1315251725155410L297
16United StatesSantino Ferrucci1414111820525L316815DNS2227148293
17Cayman IslandsKyffin Simpson181510L2127255156L10L181332721204282
18United StatesConor Daly17162519158L176L2219716151426135L268
19United StatesGraham Rahal121122146L*172022202411197124L2422260
20SwedenMarcus Ericsson6211220263191313L211215225L25221915234
21United KingdomCallum Ilott1926212322332618L15132321866259218
22United StatesNolan Siegel25192091313191981124DNS1818L162717213
23United KingdomLouis Foster RY 27241626111222L2611L14141421171317L20213
24IsraelRobert Shwartzman R 2022182518261L161027212091621151814211
25United StatesSting Ray Robb21239L2221231520261822231719142316181
26CanadaDevlin DeFrancesco2220242417L11L2323192019252220181618171
27United StatesJacob Abel R 2325262724DNQ1821232227112326232123123
28JapanTakuma Sato92L*36
29BrazilHélio Castroneves1020
30United StatesEd Carpenter15L16
31United KingdomJack Harvey19L12
32United StatesRyan Hunter-Reay21L10
33United StatesKyle Larson R 246
34United StatesMarco Andretti295
PosDriverSTPTHELBHBARIGPINDYDETGTWROAMOHIOWTORLAGPORMILNSSPts
ColorResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd-place finish
Bronze3rd-place finish
GreenTop 5 finish
Light BlueTop 10 finish
Dark BlueOther flagged position
PurpleDid not finish (DNF)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
BrownWithdrew (Wth)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid Not Start (DNS)
Race abandoned (C)
BlankDid not participate
In-line notation
BoldPole position
(1 point; except Indy)
ItalicsRan fastest race lap
LLed race lap
(1 point)
*Led most race laps
(2 points)
1–12Indy 500 "Fast Twelve"
bonus points
cQualifying canceled
(no bonus point)
 RY Rookie of the Year
 R Rookie

Entrant standings

[edit]

Only full-time entries shown. Light-gray background indicates non-chartered entries that were ineligible for the Leader's Circle for the 2025 season.

PosEntrySTPTHELBHBARIGPINDYDETGATROAMOHIOWTORLAGPORMILNSSPts
1#10Chip Ganassi Racing1L1L21L*1L16L2581L2L*5L1L*12L*1L*3L2L*2L711
2#5Arrow McLaren112L*136233L7L2L1751L51L425L524L*515
3#9Chip Ganassi Racing2L108L12520411L4L9L*1L10210511912L452
4#27Andretti Global581L*118321L*1L4L82618L61620126433
5#7Arrow McLaren8L33L2167881424L32161322625431
6#60Meyer Shank Racing withCurb-Agajanian75413104521L16L2L61771924922L7372
7#66Meyer Shank Racing withCurb-Agajanian24L714L17L7L1869579L3148810L19L364
8#26Andretti Global16L4[a]7725143L17164L13204L3101111L362
9#12Team Penske266553164L2714263L241171L*2621L357
10#3Team Penske4L*2763L4301012L24L12L234262610733L356
11#4A.J. Foyt Enterprises131817162327L1412L*7L17124913198L26L318
12#2Team Penske3L1327101222925L25272L*10L241124L71L316
13#21Ed Carpenter Racing15122315196L24L3L182568209121L27313
14#18Dale Coyne Racing917194927277L10916122L23171513L305
15#20Ed Carpenter Racing109L1581428L1011L1315251725155410L297
16#14A.J. Foyt Enterprises141411182052[b]5L316815DNS2227148293
17#8Chip Ganassi Racing181510L2127255156L10L181332721204282
18#76Juncos Hollinger Racing17162519158L176L2219716151426135L268
19#15Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing121122146L*172022202411197124L2422260
20#28Andretti Global6211220263191313L211215225L25221915234
21#90PREMA Racing1926212322332618L15132321866259218
22#6Arrow McLaren25192091313191981124DNS1818L162717213
23#45Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing27241626111222L2611L14141421171317L20213
Leaders' Circle cutoff
24#83PREMA Racing2022[c]182518261L161027212091621151814201
25#77Juncos Hollinger Racing21239L2221231520261822231719142316181
26#30Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing2220242417L11L2323192019252220181618171
27#51Dale Coyne Racing2325262724DNQ1821232227112326232123123
PosEntrySTPTHELBHBARIGPINDYDETGATROAMOHIOWTORLAGPORMILNSSPts
  1. ^The #26Andretti Global entry received a 10 entrant-point penalty and a $25,000 fine for an incorrectly installed anti-intrusion plate on the car during the race at Thermal Club.[123]
  2. ^Santino Ferrucci and the #14A.J. Foyt Enterprises entry received a 25-point penalty and a $25,000 fine, as well as lost a lap led bonus point and were rendered ineligible for engine manufacturer points, at the Detroit Grand Prix for incorrect driver equivalency weight.[124]
  3. ^The #83PREMA Racing entry received a 10 entrant-point penalty and a $25,000 fine at the race at Thermal Club for making an unapproved modification to the emergency pull cable for the car's fire suppression system.[125]

Engine manufacturer standings

[edit]

The top-two finishing full-season eligible entrants for a manufacturer in each race scored points toward the engine manufacturer's championship. Points scored were the same as the driver's championship except for bonus points – a race win was worth five bonus points for a manufacturer, while a pole position was worth one bonus point (except at the Indianapolis 500). A full-season entry was eligible to score manufacturer points until it exceeded the maximum number of allowed engines per entry.[126]

For Indianapolis 500 qualifying, the manufacturer that ran the fastest speed on Saturday received one bonus point; while the manufacturer that qualified on pole position received two bonus points.

PosManufacturerSTPTHELBHBARIGPINDYDETGATROAMOHIOWTORLAGPORMILNSSPts
1JapanHonda111111111151212111550
24245424228233364
95W87W96PW88PW86PW170FW96PW87W96PW96PW5496PW7691PW7579P82
2United StatesChevrolet323222323313121221328
43533363752484433
68P76P657575152P6376P616596PW6779W7287W7576P
PosManufacturerSTPTHELBHBARIGPINDYDETGATROAMOHIOWTORLAGPORMILNSSPts

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^The Leaders Circle program provides approximately $1 million dollars to the top-22 eligible entries by entrant points at the end of a season, in what has been described by sources as a "socialized financial incentive program".[4][5]
  2. ^Technical partnership withTeam Penske.
  3. ^Larson is considered a Rookie in the IndyCar Series as he has competed in less than eight IndyCar series races; however, he is not a rookie for the2025 Indianapolis 500 as he participated in the2024 Indianapolis 500.
  4. ^Technical partnership withChip Ganassi Racing.
  5. ^Lundgaard, the fastest qualifier, was assessed a 6-place grid penalty for an unapproved engine change.Pato O'Ward, who qualified 2nd, was the highest-placed driver not to have a penalty, and thus started the race from pole position. Lundgaard earned the pole award and the pole-winner's championship point.

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