
Wickens returns to elite racing with use of hand controls 7 years after he was paralyzed in a crash
LONG BEACH, Calif. — Nearly seven years after he was paralyzed in an IndyCar crash, Robert Wickens will return to elite competition on Saturday when he drives a Corvette in the IMSA sports car race on the downtown streets of Long Beach.
Wickens has raced since the crash at Pocono left him paralyzed from the chest down but considers the IMSA event a true completion of his comeback.
'My goal from the outset of this was to get back to the highest levels of motorsport again. I've always seen that (IMSA) is the highest level of sports car racing here in North America,' Wickens said. 'It would be a dream if I could call it a 10-year career here racing against the best drivers in the world and one of the best series in the world.'
Wickens will drive for DXDT Racing with teammate and longtime Corvette driver Tommy Milner. The Corvette is equipped with a hand-controlled throttle and braking system developed by Bosch and Pratt Miller. The brake controls mount to the steering wheel but are independent of the steering wheel so that Milner can seamlessly transition from hand controls to pedals when he's the driver.
'The steering wheel that Tommy will be driving or any other teammate that I drive with in this Corvette, it's the exact same steering wheel that they always know. What's great about it is, in theory, it can mount to virtually any steering column as long as you have the right bolt pattern,' Wickens said. 'What we're learning here today can transfer into any race car. And then, hopefully, down the road, what we're developing with the electronic braking system from Bosch, opportunities are endless. Maybe this can evolve into road safety and into everyday road vehicles and accessibility in road vehicles.
'But short term, we need to perfect this system here.'
Wickens has most recently been a driver for Bryan Herta Autosport in the Michelin Pilot Challenge, which is a lower division of IMSA and in 2023 he won a class title. He's tested a Formula E car, did a demonstration for Honda in Canada, where he's from, and now will make his debut in IMSA's GT Daytona class.
'Honestly, taking the green flag in Long Beach is going to be an enormous step forward in my career and my journey back to the highest levels,' Wickens said. 'You could say, 'We did it. We're racing against the best cars and the best drivers in the whole sports car industry.''
The car Wickens and Milner are competing in is eligible for the GTD championship.
'I want to win championships for myself, for General Motors, for DXDT,' he said. 'There's still some work to be done. I think you could say it's definitely a massive box to check, probably the biggest box that we could check off so far in my return.'
He'd like to race full-time in the series next season.
He and Milner are just getting to know each other, as well as the nuances of the car with the system Wickens must use versus how Milner will drive it.
'In Robbie's case he has to do all of his driving with his hands. This system is basically set up so that he can do all that with the steering wheel itself,' Milner said. 'There's a brake ring and there are throttle paddles that take the place of what I would normally use in the pedal box. The system is quite impressive with how it functions and how it works. With just one push of a button, the system switches from the able-bodied driver controls to the hand controls, which obviously is important for sports car racing where we have driver changes.
'Fundamentally, everything happens on the wheel. And it's a system that took me initially a little while to sort of understand in my own brain, how it is supposed to work, how to find lap time out of it and things like that.'
Milner has also been inspired by Wickens' journey since his life-changing crash in his rookie season of IndyCar racing. Aside from working with developers to create the technology needed to get him back to racing, he also works for Andretti Global as a driver coach in a multifaceted role in which he studies data analysis, driver guidance, and offers direct support at races.
'For him to go through what he went through and with his drive and determination to get back in a race car again and be competitive and win races, that's something that can be an inspiration for anybody,' Milner said. 'Anybody who's gone through some sort of hardship like he has, it's what you make of your life and that situation. You can tell that it does change parts of his life. But the one thing that he doesn't want it to change realistically is him driving race cars and driving them as fast as he does.'
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Indianapolis Star
6 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Will Fox, IndyCar find 'rapid growth' it sought after Indy 500? Detroit Grand Prix was a start
It's an age-old, annual trend a couple days after the race immediately following the Indianapolis 500: Why did IndyCar lose 80% of its audience from a week ago? And this year, for better or worse, was no different — although if you want to be specific, this year's post-500 audience drop-off was the worst the race has seen since at least 2016, if you're looking at Indy 500s with a race the next Sunday on the calendar that ran on network TV with no weather or scheduling alternations. Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix won by Andretti Global's Kyle Kirkwood averaged an audience of 1.061 million viewers, meaning the race was watched by 14.97% of the fans who tuned in for Alex Palou's Indy 500 victory the week prior. Those other figures dating back to 2016 look like this: 2023 Indy 500: 4.716 million (on NBC) Detroit Grand Prix: 1.047 million (on NBC) Percentage of audience retained: 22.2% 2019 Indy 500: 5.435 million (on NBC) Detroit Grand Prix Race 2: 1.091 million (on NBC) Percentage of audience retained: 20.07% 2018 Indy 500: 4.910 million (on ABC) Detroit Grand Prix Race 2: 951,000 (on ABC) Percentage of audience retained: 19.37% 2017 Indy 500: 5.457 million (on ABC) Detroit Grand Prix Race 2: 918,000 (on ABC) Percentage of audience retained: 16.82% 2016 Indy 500: 6.010 million (on ABC) Detroit Grand Prix Race 2: 1.397 million (on ABC) Percentage of audience retained: 23.24% In other words, as frustrating as it may be, a highly watched 500 like this year's (7.087 million) isn't going to guarantee an outlier of a next race audience. 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PR reps and executives from both sides will tout the year-over-year audience boost from 2024 as proof of a monumental win already. Seven races in, the average audience size for IndyCar races this year (2.173 million) is up 31% on last year's mark with NBC (1.662 million) — a percentage boost that's only going to continue to rise. At this point a year ago, two of the seven races had aired on cable. In total, seven of the 17 races on the 2024 calendar were scheduled for streaming-only or cable, versus zero this year with Fox. An overall average audience boost was already baked into IndyCar's deal with its newest broadcast partner. Ultimately, that means this year will be a win achieved at the negotiating table and one stemming from the sport's pure increased exposure. That simple fact, along with all practice and qualifying sessions airing on cable instead of streaming-only means that without a doubt, this sport will be seen by more eyeballs than any season in recent memory. That means more value for teams to sell, and ultimately more revenue coming in the door, but it's not a fact indicative of a sport whose discernable fanbase has grown according to the TV numbers (more on that in a minute). Sunday's audience size (again, 1.061 million) would fall into the middle or the upper half of recent IndyCar seasons on NBC, in terms of those years' network race metrics. Through six non-Indy 500s, it ranks second best, and notably best since the season opener on March 2 averaged 1.42 million. Since then, only one race had even topped 715,000, and none had hit 920,000. So in that sense, eclipsing that seven-figure glass ceiling for a race that didn't have close to the buzz or intrigue of a season opener on a new network (even though it immediately followed the 500) was a win coming out of this weekend. And if IndyCar can see more of those audience sizes that start with a 1 and hit seven figures, as the season cranks into high gear with 10 races over the next 13 weekends, this could appear in hindsight a bit of an inflection point — one that would show just how important it is to race with high frequency and avoid multiple consecutive weekends off. Still, as we stand six non-Indy 500s into the year, Fox's all-network, non-Indy 500 audience size for the year sits at 893,500. Is it higher than NBC's last year (which included seven races)? Yes (868,571). But it lags behind the four previous seasons of NBC's non-COVID-19 year IndyCar coverage. Those seasons sat pretty level throughout the entirety of the deal, ranging from 948,429 (2021) to 967,250 (2023). 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Think the series should aspire to more? For that figure to hit 1 million for 2025, the final 10 races would need to deliver average audience sizes of 1,063,900 — almost identical to Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix. In short: Sunday's race audience was a step in the right direction, but it can't be IndyCar's ceiling the rest of this year, if we're expected to be able to look back at Year 1 of IndyCar with Fox and see it as anything more than a win achieved in a boardroom back in June 2024. A win here means notable evidence that Fox has, by its weekly tune-in campaigns, its placement of IndyCar drivers on its various sports and news properties and its production of entertaining race broadcasts, created new TV-watching IndyCar fans. Fox and IndyCar executives talked of 'rapid growth' and a series set 'on another trajectory' heading in this year. In a couple months, that non-Indy 500 network audience average will tell us whether or not that goal was achieved in Year 1.

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