NASCAR News

Indy Road Course winner McDowell sees “an opportunity” in oval return

Michael McDowell, Front Row Motorsports, Horizon Hobby Ford Mustang

For the first time since 2020, NASCAR will compete on the historic 2.5-mile oval at Indianapolis Motor Speedway after having spent the past three seasons running on the road course configuration.

McDowell was last year’s race winner, and his impressive victory locked him and his No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford team into the playoffs just the second time in his career. He out-dueled Chase Elliott down the stretch to gain the win as the race ended on a grueling 77-lap green flag run.

“It is cool to go back there because we won last year and there will be banners there with us in Victory Lane. That is cool. It is going to be fun,” he said. “I know people won’t believe me when I say this, but I am. I wish we were still racing on the road course or had a doubleheader.

“I believe we should be racing on the oval at Indy as well. Just its history, and it’s just different. The feel is different. It’s no different than the Indy 500 versus the Indy Grand Prix when the Indy Car guys run on the road course. It’s still a cool race and still a cool weekend, but it’s not the Indy 500.”

Michael McDowell, Front Row Motorsports, Horizon Hobby Ford Mustang

Photo by: Gavin Baker / NKP / Motorsport Images

Don’t get McDowell wrong. He appreciates the history of IMS as much as anyone – he is a winner at the track after all.

He also has plenty of experience on the oval, having made 12 career Cup starts at the track with a best finish of seventh in 2020.

“There’s something really special about going to Indy – it’s almost hard to explain. The track has so much history and so many emotions associated with it, it’s a place where you really want to win,” McDowell, 39, said.

“At the end of the day, a lot of the time you’re battling the track itself. It can be difficult to pass because the corners are so tight, and you can’t really run well in a pack. Track position and restarts will be the key to a good run.”

How will IMS race with the Next Gen car?

McDowell is also curious to see if the Next Gen car – which has never been used on the Indy oval – lives up to its reputation of producing exciting racing on intermediate and high-speed big oval tracks.

Lackluster racing was a common complaint before NASCAR switched over to the road course three years ago.

“I’ve been in the sport a long time, so I have a lot of seat time at Indy. Some other guys do, but a lot of the guys don’t,” he said. “I…

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