The best thing about the push-to-pass controversy in Long Beach is that the rules have changed and drivers won’t have to wonder if they should try to break the rules.
Because that’s what it really came down to — whether a driver had to try to break the spirit of the rule while also avoiding violating the rule.
Push-to-pass gives a driver an extra 50 horsepower. Drivers get 150-200 seconds of it for a road-course or street-course race. The rule has been that it is supposed to be disabled on their vehicles on all restarts (except if the restart comes with two laps or one lap left in the race) and then enabled once a driver gets to the alternate start-finish line after the restart (so typically almost a full lap).
INDYCAR software enables and disables the system.
At St. Petersburg in 2024, the Penske cars had it enabled on restarts. INDYCAR found that Team Penske had manipulated the system, allowing push-to-pass to be enabled on restarts and both Josef Newgarden and Scott McLaughlin used it to a competitive advantage. Newgarden, who had won the race, and McLaughlin were disqualified.
At that time, there was the question about why drivers would push the button for the boost if they knew it shouldn’t have been enabled? And in a wider view, do drivers push the button just to see if it works?
Well, we got at least some of that answer this week.
At Long Beach, an INDYCAR software malfunctioned and did not disable the push-to-pass for the lone restart in the race. Of the 25 drivers, 12 used it.
Considering the rules didn’t prohibit pushing the button, it is hard to blame those drivers. What’s the harm in pushing it to see if it works, to see if there was a malfunction in the INDYCAR system or INDYCAR simply activated it earlier than it should have been activated?
Now there is harm. The rules have changed.
Previously the rule stated: “[Restarts] could have the Push to Cross system disabled and will likely be enabled for a given Automotive as soon as that Automotive reaches the alternate Begin/End line.”
INDYCAR re-wrote the rulebook so as to add this: “It’s the sole accountability of the Opponents to make sure that Push to Cross shouldn’t be utilized throughout any interval the place prohibited. Any profitable utilization of the Push to Cross throughout such durations, no matter INDYCAR sign standing, is prohibited and topic to penalty.”
Fairly clear. Push the button if you’re not imagined to and if it really works, you can be penalized.
If this had been within the rulebook because the starting, there would have been clear indication of if the drivers themselves deliberately broke a rule or not.
Is that this vindication for the Penske drivers? A bit of within the sense that if anybody thought that no driver pushed the button simply to see if it might work, that was proved in any other case.
However Penske nonetheless had a system that overrode the INDYCAR software program designed to disable the system, so these penalties had been definitely simply. There is no such thing as a exoneration.
Josef Newgarden was a push-to-pass casualty again at St. Petersburg in 2024.
Ought to the drivers who did use it and Lengthy Seaside have confronted penalties? No. INDYCAR made the precise name, because it was the league’s software program error that enabled the system. INDYCAR ought to be glad that there was just one driver who truly made a move utilizing it, so there weren’t a bunch of questionable outcomes.
INDYCAR additionally did the precise factor in releasing the names of drivers and the way lengthy they used it. That now retains anybody from questioning who used it and who didn’t.
It’s fascinating that each Alex Palou (who used it) and Will Power (who didn’t use it) each stated that there ought to be no penalties every week previous to the checklist being launched. Palou would clearly say he wouldn’t need penalties, however Energy had no motive to not give his true emotions contemplating no Andretti International driver used the system.
Whether or not the truth that drivers can now use the system on all restarts is an effective factor will likely be decided by the standard of the racing. It definitely doesn’t damage to strive, particularly as a result of it makes the rule way more easy and drivers don’t have to fret about violating push-to-pass on each restart.
Typically life is messy, and this has been a messy path. Hopefully, the mess is behind INDYCAR on this one.