Marco Andretti will attempt to take part in his 20th Indianapolis 500 as part of Andretti Global. The son of former team owner Michael Andretti is set for another month of May spent in the No. 98
Will Power will be 44 by the time the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season rolls off the starting grid at St. Petersburg on March 2nd. Talk has been circulating throughout the paddock about just how much longer the veteran championship driver plans to stick around.
Mario Andretti:Racing legend talks F1 team's approval ... belief that the team had almost completely shrunk the gap to Team Penske and Chip Ganassi Racing, who have combined to win the last ...
“Wait until it’s wet.” When Mario Andretti joined Formula 1, his competitors couldn’t believe that this former oval racer would be able to transfer his skillset to a wet race track ...
How about one driven by Mario Andretti ... Cosworth Andretti drove to victory in the 1986 Pocono 500. Andretti, the 1969 Indianapolis 500 winner and Formula 1 legend, drove for the team co ...
The reason Michael Andretti approached longtime CART team owner Barry Green more than 20 years ago was rather simple: His father retired at age 54 as a global racing icon but Mario Andretti didn't ...
Two-time IndyCar champ Will Power, the 2018 Indianapolis 500 winner, has signed with an agent for the first time as he heads into a contract year with Team Penske.
The Detroit businessman and race team owner collected his 20th Baby Borg trophy Thursday for his team's Indy 500 win in 2024.
They struck a deal with Andretti Global to acquire their 89,000 ... For over three decades, Team Penske's headquarters was located in Reading, Pennsylvania. In 2006, the Roger Penske-owned team ...
In an impressive Formula 1 career that featured starts with March, Ferrari, and Lotus, it took just one unfortunate car to bring Mario Andretti’s international open-wheel legacy to an end. Heading into the 1981 season,
Three active owners have won 16 of the last 20 championships: Rick Hendrick has nine, Roger Penske five, and Joe Gibbs three. Two went to the inactive teams owned by Tony Stewart/Gene Haas, the other to long-retired Barney Visser.