Motorsport IndyCar: USA’s Herta Youngest To Win

Motorsport IndyCar
AFP
Colton Herta, driver of the #88 Harding Racing Chevrolet, on track during pracrtice for the Verizon IndyCar Series Sonoma Grand Prix at Sonoma Raceway on September 15, 2018 in Sonoma, California

Colton Herta became the youngest winner in IndyCar history on Sunday, the 18-year-old American taking the checkered flag in his only third series start at the IndyCar Classic.

The son of former IndyCar driver Brian Herta prevailed over 60 laps on a 3.41-mile, 20-turn road course in the series debut at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas.

“It was spectacular,” Herta said. “Holy crap I’m worn out. I need a nap now.”

Herta, a class co-champion in January’s 24 Hours of Daytona, broke the former age mark set by American Graham Rahal.

Rahal, another second-generation IndyCar racer, was 19 years and three months when he won in 2008 at St. Petersburg, Florida.

Herta, who turns 19 next Saturday, made his last pit stop just inside the final refuel window and took the lead when a crash forced leaders Will Power and Alexander Rossi to delay their last stops.

“Perfect strategy,” Rahal said. “We were not expecting that. We had really good pace. Early on we were so quick.”

Herta’s dad, a four-time IndyCar race winner who owns a rival team, was overjoyed at his son’s success in the second event of the season.

“Really super proud of him. Feels like Christmas to me,” the elder Herta said. “He keeps amazing me. I’m just a proud dad.”

Herta’s Harding-Steinbrenner Racing is owned by George Steinbrenner IV, the 22-year-old son of New York Yankees baseball club co-owner Hank Steinbrenner.

“He did a phenomenal job,” Steinbrenner IV said. “He did everything right. I really can’t believe it. I’m shaking. It’s a dream come true.”

Herta led season-opener winner Josef Newgarden on a restart with 10 laps remaining. He stretched the edge to 2.5 seconds after his first high-speed lead lap before pulling away to stay, leaving Newgarden and Ryan Hunter-Reay to complete an all-American podium.

– Disaster foils Power –

Australian pole sitter Power, the reigning Indianapolis 500 champion, seized the lead at the start with Rossi second.

Herta passed Rossi after the first pit stops on lap 13, but Rossi replied on lap 22 with a daring inside move on a long backstretch to reclaim second.

After Herta made his last pit stop, disaster struck Power and Rossi when a crash closed the pits and brought out caution flags.

Canadian James Hinchcliffe bumped Swedish rookie Felix Rosenqvist into the inside wall on lap 44 and the newcomer’s car blocked the pit lane as the leaders were set to refuel.

Power eventually reached the pits but his car’s drive shaft failed there.

“Massively disappointed,” Power said. “If the yellow didn’t kill us, the drift shaft did.”

The season’s next race, the third of 17 events, will come in two weeks at the IndyCar Alabama Grand Prix.

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