Indy GP winner Herta amazed by a car thats just not possible
Despite starting from 14th, Herta ended up leading 50 of the 75 laps, on his way to victory in a upturned weather unauthentic race held on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.
The race started in wet conditions but Herta quickly switched to the red walled slicks on lap 3 surpassing rain showers doused the spin then for the final stint.
After vibration Meyer Shank Racing\'s Simon Pagenaud and Team Penske\'s Will Power to requirement a first win of the season, Herta was impressed by how his car handled the varying weather conditions.
“The most interesting thing is you never have a car that works in the wet and the dry – it\'s just not possible, but it happened today,\" said Herta.
“It was very interesting. Felt well-appointed in all conditions.”
“The undeniability for slicks to wets that made the difference. I think we gained 15 [actually 13] spots on that transition. We pitted on Lap 3. Everybody pitted on lap 4 or 5. We gained [13] spots in that transition to go from 14th to first.
“It was really cool. The team did a tremendous job. They gave me such an incredible car.”
Herta was in a long discussion with his strategist and father Bryan Herta surpassing the final stint regarding whether to go for increasingly reds or switch to wets as rain had returned and heavier showers were expected imminently.
In the end they went for increasingly reds, but all their principal rivals did the same, so when the rain became heavier, scrutinizingly all ducked when into the pits.
He explained: \"I said, ‘With the track conditions right now it\'s probably wets, but if you think it\'s going to get dryer or wetter, that will transpiration my decision.’ We thought it was going to dry out a little bit, so we went on slicks. Immediately when I got out there, I knew it was going to be tough, but I said, ‘If you guys think it\'s going to be dry, then we\'ll stay out here.’
“I think they saw something pop up on the radar that it was going to stay wet. We made the wrong choice, but luckily, everyone followed our direction and did the wrong thing also! So we didn\'t unquestionably lose that much.”
Colton Herta, Andretti Autosport w/ Curb-Agajanian Honda
Photo by: Phillip Abbott / Motorsport Images
Herta admitted that part of his defence versus Pagenaud in the wet conditions came from watching the TV screens at the side of the track, and blinding his pursuer with spray.
“Maybe I shouldn\'t tell you guys this, but I saw Simon poking out [of the spray] on one of the restarts on the TVs,” he said.
“I was watching the TVs considering I couldn\'t see anything out of the mirrors. Every time he would poke out, I would go lanugo a little bit increasingly [to the right] so he couldn\'t see anything going into Turn 1. I was giggling a little bit in my helmet looking. He would poke out a little bit more, so I would go a little bit more. Funny.”
Herta moreover survived a major save on a wet patch at Turn 8 while pursuing Pato O’Ward for the lead, which he was bale to recover, surpassing going on to reservation and pass the Arrow McLaren SP driver.
“I was on the rack stops,” he said, “and I was shoving so nonflexible to get increasingly wheel, but I couldn\'t. I need to see the video of what happened, but what I think happened is, it was drying, but maybe I went out a little bit wider on the entry of the corner than I had been and got that left rear on a wateriness patch or something. That\'s what it felt like considering I turned in and it just lost everything immediately.
“I would have been upset if I spun there, but I would have been plane increasingly upset considering I didn\'t know that it was for the lead of the race. I thought maybe I was, like, 10th or 11th. Maybe gained a few spots from that, so I had no track where I was on track.
“I guess that was one of the only mistakes we made today.”
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