Team Penske, Indianapolis 500 and crashed Newgarden
Digest more
46mon MSN
Roger Penske has fired team president Tim Cindric, IndyCar managing director Ron Ruzewski and IndyCar general manager Kyle Moyer in the wake of an Indianapolis 500 cheating scandal.
O n Monday, news broke that the No. 12 car of Will Power and the No. 2 car of Josef Newgarden were being dropped to the back of the field at the Indianapolis 500 following both ca
Team Penske announced on Wednesday morning that it has released three members of its IndyCar leadership. IndyCar Team President Tim
Team Penske announced on Wednesday that three executives had left its celebrated IndyCar team. The departures include IndyCar managing director Ron Ruzewski, IndyCar general manager Kyle Moyer, and IndyCar team president Tim Cindric.
Team Penske has implemented some drastic personnel changes ahead of this Sunday's Indianapolis 500 in the wake of the technical violations found on two of its cars in qualifying last weekend.
2don MSN
However, it has now also been confirmed that the team strategists for both the No. 2 and No. 12 have been suspended for the iconic race, the cars have lost all qualification points, and they have been hit with an eye-watering $100,000 fine.
This year’s race has plenty of storylines heading into it. Two-time defending Indy 500 champion Josef Newgarden, along with Team Penske teammate Will Power, were penalized during last weekend’s qualifying for failing tech inspection, leading to the two being pushed to the 11th and final row of the race.’
Both Josef Newgarden and Will Power will start Sunday's Indianapolis 500 at the back of the grid. Reactions from the paddock began with Team Penske again under fire.
Team Penske has released a statement following the hefty penalties issued to the No. 2 and No. 12 entries for the upcoming Indy 500. Following an investigation, the No. 2 and No. 12 cars of Josef Newgarden and Will Power were found to have modified attenuators.
Qualifying day for the Indianapolis 500 turned into a Team Penske disaster when all three of its cars were denied a chance to run for the pole
Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner Roger Penske extended an invitation for Donald Trump to be the first sitting president to attend the Indy 500.