Detroit Race 2
Finish | Driver | Grid | Led | Completed | A.R.P | Race Score | RSWC Points |
1 | Castroneves | 3 | 42 | 70 | 3.63 | 85.71 | 10 |
2 | Power | 8 | 2 | 70 | 5.61 | 68.20 | 5 |
3 | Kimball | 20 | 0 | 70 | 8.11 | 78.61 | 6 |
4 | Dixon | 22 | 0 | 70 | 6.77 | 80.65 | 8 |
5 | Hinchcliffe | 2 | 10 | 70 | 5.90 | 53.40 | 3 |
6 | Pagenaud | 7 | 0 | 70 | 6.04 | 52.97 | 2 |
7 | Aleshin | 16 | 1 | 70 | 7.96 | 61.15 | 4 |
8 | Munoz | 6 | 0 | 70 | 8.31 | 41.95 | |
9 | Kanaan | 17 | 0 | 70 | 10.83 | 51.77 | 1 |
10 | Briscoe | 5 | 0 | 70 | 9.91 | 31.95 | |
11 | Conway | 4 | 4 | 70 | 8.84 | 30.93 | |
12 | Wilson | 13 | 0 | 70 | 13.64 | 32.36 | |
13 | Montoya | 15 | 0 | 70 | 15.11 | 30.13 | |
14 | Hawksworth | 19 | 1 | 70 | 14.10 | 35.17 | |
15 | Huertas | 12 | 0 | 70 | 12.64 | 23.27 | |
16 | Andretti | 18 | 0 | 70 | 12.34 | 29.78 | |
17 | Newgarden | 10 | 0 | 69 | 19.77 | 3.46 | |
18 | Sato | 1 | 10 | 69 | 11.86 | 3.53 | |
19 | Hunter-Reay | 21 | 0 | 61 | 15.33 | 18.83 | |
20 | Bourdais | 11 | 0 | 58 | 13.45 | 5.24 | |
21 | Rahal | 14 | 0 | 43 | 21.19 | -1.80 | |
22 | Saavedra | 9 | 0 | 9 | 7.00 | 2.10 |
General Observations
- Redemptive run for Conway after a disastrous Race 1. More on him below.
- Serious All-You-Can-Punt Buffet for My Australian Overlord, Will Power on lap 2. THAT SAID, smart strategy (serving the drive-through as early as possible) got Power a BUNCH of laps in clean air, which put him in good position for a result.
- No one was going to catch Helio.
- Is Aleshin for real?
A Word on Strategy
I was going to do a strategy breakdown like I did for Race 1 for Race 2 as well. But, there was EXTRAORDINARILY little strategy in play in Race 2. Basically, every driver but Conway was able to fulfill their "run the reds" requirement after the aforementioned All-You-Can-Punt Buffet. Conway stuck to his guns and went for a long black run early, but wound up needing to stretch his reds for (most of) an entire fuel run. This (the fall-off on the reds & the inability to make it into the final pit window) put him out of contention.
ASIDE: I think that running prime tires in a first stint is genius. If fuel distance is not a factor, then running long on a first stint is full of glorious benefits. Of course, yellows and track position dictate a lot of strategy, as they did here in Race 2. END ASIDE.
That's enough about Detroit. A thoroughly enjoyable double-header. Let's jump back in to the numbers, however, and take a look at Texas:
2014 Firestone 600
Finish | Driver | Grid | Led | Completed | A.R.P | Race Score | RSWC Points |
1 | Carpenter | 5 | 90 | 248 | 3.19 | 81.51 | 10 |
2 | Power | 1 | 145 | 248 | 2.10 | 81.45 | 8 |
3 | Montoya | 4 | 13 | 248 | 5.85 | 59.54 | 6 |
4 | Pagenaud | 6 | 0 | 248 | 5.33 | 58.59 | 5 |
5 | Dixon | 7 | 0 | 248 | 4.40 | 58.48 | 4 |
6 | Kanaan | 3 | 0 | 248 | 3.63 | 50.57 | 1 |
7 | Aleshin | 11 | 0 | 247 | 8.71 | 51.85 | 3 |
8 | Castroneves | 14 | 0 | 247 | 10.21 | 51.08 | 2 |
9 | Briscoe | 13 | 0 | 247 | 11.20 | 45.06 | |
10 | Kimball | 15 | 0 | 247 | 13.02 | 42.31 | |
11 | Newgarden | 2 | 0 | 247 | 7.32 | 28.27 | |
12 | Rahal | 21 | 0 | 246 | 15.29 | 41.78 | |
13 | Munoz | 10 | 0 | 245 | 12.47 | 26.43 | |
14 | Hinchcliffe | 9 | 0 | 244 | 14.72 | 18.53 | |
15 | Hawksworth | 20 | 0 | 244 | 18.70 | 25.98 | |
16 | Huertas | 22 | 0 | 244 | 16.39 | 29.41 | |
17 | Saavedra | 19 | 0 | 244 | 16.56 | 21.67 | |
18 | Sato | 16 | 0 | 238 | 16.14 | 14.64 | |
19 | Hunter-Reay | 12 | 0 | 136 | 8.54 | 12.26 | |
20 | Bourdais | 18 | 0 | 118 | 15.87 | 8.24 | |
21 | Wilson | 8 | 0 | 118 | 9.73 | 3.23 | |
22 | Andretti | 17 | 0 | 3 | 8.67 | 1.69 |
Observations
- Maybe Aleshin really is for real...
- Best of a bad situation for Rahal. Increased his position a solid 10 spots by staying out of trouble. He'll get there one of these days...
- Ok, enough of having an ellipsis at the end of each observation, I'm not being wistful today.
- Back to the track. If you look at how the scores break down, you can observe some clear tiers take shape at the top of the table: Tier 1 - Carpenter and Power. By FAR the two best drives of the race. The winner and the leader of the most laps were only separated (in terms of Race Score) by .06. Tier 2 - Montoya, Pagenaud, & Dixon. These three were in the proverbial camera shot all race long. I'm not convinced that any of them had a chance to win it without something going wrong (well wrong-er, since Power had his drive-through) in front of them. And, finally, Tier 3 - Kanaan, Aleshin, & Castroneves. Solid, if not truly contending performances. Texas is hard to master, and these three can say they did it.
RSWC Update
Here's what the Race Score World Championship looks like post-Texas:
Driver | Points | Difference |
Castroneves | 43 | -- |
Power | 43 | -- |
Hunter-Reay | 34 | -9 |
Dixon | 22 | -21 |
Pagenaud | 21 | -22 |
Kimball | 17 | -26 |
Montoya | 16 | -27 |
Andretti | 14 | -29 |
Wilson | 14 | -29 |
Aleshin | 11 | -32 |
Conway | 10 | -33 |
Carpenter | 10 | -33 |
Munoz | 9 | -34 |
Kanaan | 9 | -34 |
Rahal | 8 | -35 |
Hinchcliffe | 8 | -35 |
Bourdais | 6 | -37 |
Karam | 5 | -38 |
Hawksworth | 3 | -40 |
Saavedra | 3 | -40 |
Briscoe | 3 | -40 |
Huertas | 2 | -41 |
Newgarden | 2 | -41 |
Servia | 2 | -41 |
Sato | 1 | -42 |
Busch | 1 | -42 |
- Here also, there are some tiers, but I won't quite do the same level of detail. You can see that the two Penskes who share the lead. Power and Castroneves have had the same level of dominant performances, which is really what this traces. Hunter-Reay, despite his troubles in the last couple of weekends, stays near the top because of the dominance that he's shown at times (not unlike last year.)
- But, for more of a snapshot of how seasons are going on the whole, let's take a trip to the:
Hall of Averages
Here are the full-timers:
Driver | Average Score |
Power | 70.27 |
Castroneves | 56.74 |
Hunter-Reay | 50.31 |
Pagenaud | 48.60 |
Dixon | 46.93 |
Kanaan | 41.42 |
Wison | 39.82 |
Kimball | 39.35 |
Andretti | 36.07 |
Montoya | 36.05 |
Briscoe | 35.34 |
Huertas | 32.02 |
Aleshin | 31.86 |
Munoz | 31.81 |
Rahal | 28.05 |
Bourdais | 27.76 |
Saavedra | 25.69 |
Hinchcliffe | 25.42 |
Hawksworth | 25.19 |
Sato | 24.55 |
Newgarden | 21.39 |
And, the part-timers:
Driver | Average Score | Races |
Karam | 65.51 | 1 |
Hildebrand | 48.16 | 1 |
Carpenter | 47.62 | 2 |
Tagliani | 45.08 | 1 |
Villeneuve | 43.73 | 1 |
Davison | 41.47 | 1 |
Servia | 40.23 | 4 |
Bell | 31.26 | 1 |
Conway | 29.34 | 6 |
Plowman | 25.36 | 2 |
Mann | 14.76 | 1 |
Montagny | 12.75 | 1 |
Lazier | 4.15 | 1 |
And, because I know you're interested, if you combine Carpenter and Conway, you get:
Driver | Average Score |
The 20 Car | 33.91 |
Which puts the combined Fuzzy's crew right between Briscoe and Huertas.
Observations
- The average scores for full-timers show how the balance of their seasons has played out. The scores for part-timers show potential. So, we'll look at them individually.
Full Time
- Looking at the full-timers, I'm unsurprised by how the list looks. I think only the Top 5 (down to Dixon) have shown anything approaching the consistency needed to win a championship.
- That said, I think only the top half of the group there (down to Briscoe) have shown true race-winning form this season. You could argue that Hawksworth looked like he could win the GP of Indy, but he didn't. He finished P7.
- I am surprised about 2 things (on the whole) looking at this list. First, I'm astounded that Sebastien Bourdais and Josef Newgarden are bottom-halfers. If you'd told me before the season that two of: Bourdais, Newgarden, Montoya, and Kimball were going to be on the bottom half of the table, I'd have said Kimball and Montoya, whom I both think are good. That shows you my shock here. Second, I'm surprised at the performances of Huertas and Aleshin. These two have really made the most of their shot. Good on 'em.
Part Time
Full Time
- Looking at the full-timers, I'm unsurprised by how the list looks. I think only the Top 5 (down to Dixon) have shown anything approaching the consistency needed to win a championship.
- That said, I think only the top half of the group there (down to Briscoe) have shown true race-winning form this season. You could argue that Hawksworth looked like he could win the GP of Indy, but he didn't. He finished P7.
- I am surprised about 2 things (on the whole) looking at this list. First, I'm astounded that Sebastien Bourdais and Josef Newgarden are bottom-halfers. If you'd told me before the season that two of: Bourdais, Newgarden, Montoya, and Kimball were going to be on the bottom half of the table, I'd have said Kimball and Montoya, whom I both think are good. That shows you my shock here. Second, I'm surprised at the performances of Huertas and Aleshin. These two have really made the most of their shot. Good on 'em.
Part Time
- Again, the part-timers show potential. With a small sample size, all you can get is what could be.
- I could, at this point, re-hash all the glowing words that have been said about Sage Karam. The kid seems to have the potential to be the real deal. We won't know if he has the consistency for it until he gets a consistent ride, however. I'm on record as saying he has heaps of talent, and that's true, but how far can one Indy 500 performance take you?
- Speaking of "how far can one Indy 500 performance take you?" how about JR Hildebrand? You see that the potential is there. He had some good runs in 2013, notably at Long Beach and (while he was running) at Fontana. Is there the space for him to get the ride he deserves? Probably only with an expanded field.
- Somewhere buried in the Weird Files is this idea that Jacques Villenueve wants to get back into full time IndyCar racing. His performance in the 500 was encouraging, but his occasional (and underwhelming, especially at the highest level) NASCAR starts were not.
- If I fell backwards into tens of millions of dollars, I would fund full-season entries at existing race teams (because I have neither the time nor the inclination to start my own) for Buddy Lazier and Pippa Mann. I keep looking at their numbers and wanting to write them off, but I just like them both too darn much. With a full season of data on each, I could come up with a real-live opinion...
Stay Tuned
As a recap, my Detroit predictions were awful; and I didn't make any for Texas, because I was traveling all weekend. Be sure to follow @ScoringIndy on Twitter for said terrible predictions as well as blog updates and my occasional opinion. I'll see you in one week for something fun, and then after that to go racing down in Houston. See you then!!
-- Guido
- I could, at this point, re-hash all the glowing words that have been said about Sage Karam. The kid seems to have the potential to be the real deal. We won't know if he has the consistency for it until he gets a consistent ride, however. I'm on record as saying he has heaps of talent, and that's true, but how far can one Indy 500 performance take you?
- Speaking of "how far can one Indy 500 performance take you?" how about JR Hildebrand? You see that the potential is there. He had some good runs in 2013, notably at Long Beach and (while he was running) at Fontana. Is there the space for him to get the ride he deserves? Probably only with an expanded field.
- Somewhere buried in the Weird Files is this idea that Jacques Villenueve wants to get back into full time IndyCar racing. His performance in the 500 was encouraging, but his occasional (and underwhelming, especially at the highest level) NASCAR starts were not.
- If I fell backwards into tens of millions of dollars, I would fund full-season entries at existing race teams (because I have neither the time nor the inclination to start my own) for Buddy Lazier and Pippa Mann. I keep looking at their numbers and wanting to write them off, but I just like them both too darn much. With a full season of data on each, I could come up with a real-live opinion...
Stay Tuned
As a recap, my Detroit predictions were awful; and I didn't make any for Texas, because I was traveling all weekend. Be sure to follow @ScoringIndy on Twitter for said terrible predictions as well as blog updates and my occasional opinion. I'll see you in one week for something fun, and then after that to go racing down in Houston. See you then!!
-- Guido
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