Colton Herta expects IndyCar to rethink the positioning of the restart zone at the Nashville street circuit after a series of crashes and near-misses at the venue’s second race.
Last year’s inaugural Nashville round was punctuated by a string of caution periods. The same was true of IndyCar’s return to the track on Sunday, despite the restart zone being relocated from its original position to the approach to turn nine.
“I don’t think that restarting on the bridge was a good thing,” said Herta, who finished fifth on Sunday. “I thought the closing speeds were incredibly unsafe and I’m sure that they’re going to probably change it to something else for next year because it was really dangerous.
“Especially going over a bridge like that. You don’t want to go over the back of somebody.”
Herta recovered to finish in the top five despite dropping a lap down at one stage after being pushed into a barrier by Dalton Kellett. The Andretti driver said the tight sequence of corners which precedes the restart area made for significant differences in speeds between the cars at restarts.
“The field spans out so much,” he said. “I got every range of restart. I got a restart where I was 25th or whatever, and then all the way up until I was fourth or fifth. I got all the ranges of restarts.
“Coming from the back, the field through that tight section is so strung out that they’re pushing to get back up. By the time the leader is halfway across the bridge, cars are still going through turn five, six, seven.
“As they come on to the straight, they’re flat out. And it’s a bridge [so] you can’t see what’s over the end of it. So you come over the bridge, and it’s, like, ‘oh, all the cars are going 70 miles an hour, 80 miles an hour’.
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“So I think it’s something that they knew could have been a little bit of a problem, but they wanted to try it out, so we’ll see what they do in the future. I think something has to be adjusted.”
Herta was also concerned about the length of time the race spent under caution, partly due to drivers being waved past the Safety Car in order to rejoin the lead lap.
“Maybe there’s a way to shorten some of the cautions without doing the wave-around every time or whatnot,” he said. “But it’s hard to say because that’s what saved me today, the wave-around.”
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