IndyCar finalizes charter system
that doesn't guarantee spots in Indianapolis 500
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[September 24, 2024]
By JENNA FRYER
IndyCar on Monday finalized a charter system for 25 entrants that,
while it pales in comparison to the contentious deal reached between
NASCAR and its teams over their revenue sharing model, does give 10
open wheel organizations some guarantees.
The initial agreement runs through the 2031 season and ensures the
25 chartered cars a starting spot in all IndyCar races except the
Indianapolis 500. Teams will still have to qualify on speed for the
Indy 500's 33-car field, and that was one of the biggest elements of
negotiations as opinions were divided among traditionalists and
those seeking greater value for their teams.
Chartered entries are also the only cars eligible for the Leaders
Circle program, which is a monetary bonus awarded by IndyCar to the
top 22 finishers at the end of each season. That bonus money covers
significant portions of some teams' annual budgets.
“This is an important development that demonstrates an aligned and
optimistic vision for the future of our sport,” said Mark Miles,
president and CEO of Penske Entertainment Corp. “We're pleased to
have a system in place that provides greater value for our ownership
and the entries they field.”
Charters were extended to team owners based on full time entries
over the previous two seasons and capped at three per team. The cap
most affected Chip Ganassi Racing, which fielded five cars this
year.
But Ganassi has created an alliance with Meyer Shank Racing and
Marcus Armstrong will move to MSR after two seasons with Ganassi. It
is not clear what will happen to the fourth car at Ganassi, who also
fielded entries for six-time champion Scott Dixon, three-time
champion Alex Palou, and rookies Linus Lundqvist and Kyffin Simpson.
Lundqvist had indicated at last week's season finale that he would
be the odd man out with no plans for 2025.
Andretti Global, Arrow McLaren, Ganassi, Rahal Letterman Lanigan and
Team Penske all received three charters. AJ Foyt Enterprises, Dale
Coyne Racing, Ed Carpenter Racing, Juncos Hollinger Racing and MSR
received two charters each.
Prema Racing, which is entering IndyCar next year with two cars, did
not receive any charters. The team announced last week Callum Ilott
as the first of its two drivers.
Most teams were pleased with the system, which is essentially a
franchise tag that gives team owners something of value beyond cars,
parts and pieces.
“It is incredibly challenging to get a large group of owners to
agree on something, and certainly there was some give and take but,
in the end, I believe this is a path that is beneficial for all of
the owners and for IndyCar, while also maintaining the availability
for open competition,” said Larry Foyt, president of A.J. Foyt
Enterprises.
[to top of second column] |
Colton Herta, center, holds his winner's trophy as Pato O'Ward,
left, holds his second-place trophy and Josef Newgarden, right,
holds his third-place trophy after an IndyCar auto race Sunday,
Sept. 15, 2024, at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tenn. (AP
Photo/Mark Humphrey)
But the system does little to move the needle for
Arrow McLaren Racing chief executive officer Zak Brown, who wasn't
sure what the team actually gained in the charter agreement.
“I have found that there’s nothing material in there that drives for
us any substantial incremental value. So if the hype was this is
going to be a big thing and be great for the foundation of an
IndyCar team, I haven’t seen those benefits,” Brown said. "It’s not
bad. I think it’s good that it’s a first step. But there’s no
revenue sharing model. Indy, I don’t have a guaranteed spot.
“It really only helps, from my perspective, helps in an event if a
race is oversubscribed. If we had a (crash) in qualifying ... and
couldn’t qualify, I’m protected to make the race. From what I can
see, that’s what I’m getting.”
But rival Ganassi ranked the arrival of charters in IndyCar
importance behind only the merger of the defunt CART Series with the
IRL that create America's current open-wheel series, and Roger
Penske's 2020 purchase of the series and Indianapolis Motor
Speedway.
“When you look back in the modern era of IndyCar racing, you will
look at a few important moments,” Ganassi said. “I truly believe the
charter system will be the third.”
NASCAR earlier this month ended two years of tense negotiations on a
new charter agreement with its teams. Both Michael Jordan-owned 23XI
Racing and Front Row Motorsports refused to sign the new deal, and
most teams said they did so reluctantly because they didn't believe
they could get anything more from NASCAR.
NASCAR's charter agreement includes a revenue sharing model, while
IndyCar's does not. That's because IndyCar does not have the
lucrative television package that NASCAR must split between its
stakeholders.
IndyCar did sign a new television deal with Fox Sports that begins
next year, and team owner Ed Carpenter indicated the TV package and
charter agreement paved the way for upcoming organizational
announcements. Presumably, Carpenter needed the charter system
finalized and the Leader's Circle bonuses for his two cars to be
able to sign his 2025 lineup.
“ECR will have announcements soon and I don’t know that they would
be possible without the help of a program like this,” Carpenter
said. "With this groundbreaking development, the new TV deal with
FOX and the momentum that had been building, IndyCar's future is
very bright.”
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