IndyCar Driver Spins Three Times at 200 MPH, Saves It
IndyCar's races at Texas Motor Speedway have not been the same since the track installed a groove of PJ1, a grip compound for stock cars. In an IndyCar, that same compound dramatically reduces grip on the darkened high line and l can lead to dramatic loss of control at speeds of 210 MPH or more. As Ed Carpenter Racing driver Conor Daly saw in practice today, though, spinning in the PJ1 at full speed does not always necessarily lead to a crash.
Ope. 👀@ConorDaly22 gets turned around during today's high-line practice session.#INDYCAR // #PPG375 pic.twitter.com/4hBQvlAjer
— NTT INDYCAR SERIES (@IndyCar) April 1, 2023
Daly's car snapped out of control at the exit of turn 4 while running side-by-side with rookie Benjamin Pederson, who dives out of the way just as Daly's car comes within a foot of his sidepod. Daly is in the middle of the track, next to Pederson and just ahead of Callum Ilott, for the entire first spin. Normally, a car either straightens out or finds something to hit by then. But this was not an ordinary spin.