Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Analysis: IndyCar cheating scandal risks sullying Roger Penske's perfect image !

Analysis: IndyCar cheating scandal risks sullying Roger Penske's perfect image

Time:2024-05-21 14:25:33 source:Worldly Window news portal

Santino Ferrucci once made a typo in a social media post in which he incorrectly spelled Josef Newgarden’s first name.

Newgarden, a two-time IndyCar champion at the time, quickly responded to Ferrucci, who does not drive for a powerhouse such as Team Penske.

“It’s Josef(asterisk)” he wrote two years ago. “At Penske, we care about details.”

It was a zinger that earned Newgarden scorn at the time for his arrogance to a driver on a lesser team. But he was being honest — attention to detail is next level under Roger Penske’s watchful eye — and that’s what makes the cheating scandal that has rocked IndyCar so troubling.

IndyCar last week disqualified Newgarden’s victory and teammate Scott McLaughlin’s third-place finish in the March season-opening race because it realized weeks later that the Team Penske push-to-pass software had been illegally used by both drivers during restarts.

Related information
  • US overdose deaths dropped in 2023, the first time since 2018
  • The extravagance of simplicity
  • China's broadband speed more than doubles in 3 years, report says
  • OPEC chief stresses energy cooperation with China
  • Lynn Williams breaks NWSL goal
  • Giant panda Fu Bao transported to base in Wolong National Nature Reserve for quarantine
  • Global smartphone shipments climb nearly 8% in 1st quarter as Samsung retakes the lead
  • Fighter jets fire at targets in live
Recommended content
  • Young Boys seals 6th Swiss soccer league title in 7 years after rallying from firing coach Wicky
  • Chinese researchers develop immunotherapeutic agent for colon cancer
  • Death toll from Moscow terror attack rises to 93
  • Carbon budget management system to be set up at provincial, prefecture levels
  • Storms damage homes in Oklahoma and Kansas. But in Houston, most power is restored
  • Conservationists give wings to black