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IndyCar starting lineup for race at WWT Raceway in June 2025

IndyCar starting lineup for race at WWT Raceway in June 2025

USA Today7 hours ago

IndyCar starting lineup for race at WWT Raceway in June 2025
World Wide Technology Raceway is up next for the NTT IndyCar Series, and Team Penske will lead the field to the green flag. Colton Herta won the pole for the 2025 Bommarito Automotive Group 500 this weekend. Scott McLaughlin will join Power on the front row for Sunday night's event. It is Power's first pole position of the 2025 IndyCar season.
Pato O'Ward and David Malukas will follow the two drivers on the second row. Most notably, Conor Daly, Rinus VeeKay, Santino Ferrucci, Nolan Siegel, and Robert Shwartzman all qualified 15th or worse for Sunday's event. It was a relatively straightforward qualifying session.
The full IndyCar starting lineup is available below.
IndyCar starting lineup: World Wide Technology Raceway (June 2025)

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Will Power opens up about infamous Plower Move: 'I just want it to go away'
Will Power opens up about infamous Plower Move: 'I just want it to go away'

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Will Power opens up about infamous Plower Move: 'I just want it to go away'

Bruce MartinSpecial to MOORESVILLE, North Carolina — "I just want it to go away." That's what veteran INDYCAR driver Will Power said in the wake of the controversy involving him and the now infamous Plower Move that he made during practice at last week's Detroit Grand Prix. Power is one of the most accomplished and respected drivers in the INDYCAR SERIES. Although he is a highly aggressive driver, his peers enjoy racing against the two-time INDYCAR champion and former Indianapolis 500 winner at Team Penske because they know Power will race them hard, but cleanly. That is why last Friday's Plower Move on Kyle Kirkwood of Andretti Global was surprising. It was early in practice last week and Power's No. 12 Honda entered the slow Turns 5 and 6 area of the Detroit street course in front of the Renaissance Center. He encountered another slow car, Kyle Kirkwood's No. 27 Honda. It's the slowest portion of the race course and Power was trying to get a gap. But on an extremely narrow race course that is also very short at 1.645-miles in length, that can be a maddening experience at Detroit. Power drove up from behind and put the nose of his car under the rear attenuator of Kirkwood's Honda and at slow speeds, pushed him up the course similar to a tow truck trying to push-start a passenger car with a dead battery. Once Power was past Kirkwood, the Andretti driver put his hand in the air, similar to someone on the highway asking another driver, "What the hell?" But the incident became a viral video. As FOX Sports Motorsports Insider Bob Pockrass called it, Will Power gave new meaning to the term push to pass. The nose on the No. 12 Chevrolet had cosmetic damage. Kirkwood's crew had to repair a hole in the floor of the No. 27 Honda, but Kirkwood was able to return to practice. INDYCAR officials reviewed the incident and because it did not bring out a red flag or a local caution, there were no penalties. It was similar to an official in the NBA Playoffs ruling, "No harm, no foul" and not whistling a foul on a hard basketball play. "I think they said it was a 50-50 sort of deal where he had stopped in the middle of a corner when I was coming hard and we made contact," Power said. "INDYCAR did speak to me." A week later, Power believes the incident has become overblown and would like it to fade away, just as a non-call in the NBA is quickly forgotten. "I just want it to go away," Power said. But Power did go into a detailed explanation of what he thought in last Friday's opening practice session for the Detroit Grand Prix. "From my perspective, we were doing about five to 10 miles an hour to be honest, and he (Kirkwood) stopped in the middle of the corner," Power recalled. "I made contact, and at that point I thought he was going to then drive off and he didn't. And I started putting the throttle down and he started braking and I thought at any point he could have just put the throttle off and driven off and he never did. "It was just a misunderstanding. I shouldn't have done it, basically. I certainly wouldn't do it again." Was it the long, grueling month of May at the Indianapolis 500, combined with an extremely bumpy and narrow street course five days later that created a moment of road rage? Or was it simply an unfortunate incident? Power explained. "You're on a lap and the guy stops in the middle of the corner," Power said. "I don't know why I did it. "It is frustrating at these tracks, how tight it is, it just is, it's just very frustrating. I felt he could have moved out of the way. But, you know, I don't know. "I have a lot of respect for Kirkwood. If I'd known it was him, I wouldn't have done it. I can't be making enemies in the paddock, man, right now." 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I saw his guys, I apologized. When I saw Kyle the next day just before the session … we kind of laughed about it because it was obviously at an incredibly low speed with the very bottom of first gear just sort of idling along, I guess. "It wasn't like we're doing 100 miles an hour so we're doing literally 15 miles an hour or something, if that. "I thought it was Marcus Ericsson, and he had held me up a couple of times in the previous races, so I had a little bit of frustration there, but had I known it was Kirkwood's car, probably wouldn't have happened." Because Kirkwood was able to have a successful practice and ultimately win Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix for his second win this season, he was able to laugh it off with his teammates, including Ericsson and Colton Herta. "I think he was laughing about it, but he was definitely surprised," Ericsson said. "He said that as well. He never experienced anything like that previously in his career. 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