IndyCar has changed its push to pass rules, allowing drivers to use the feature on restarts, which was previously prohibited. This midseason alteration follows confusion during the Grand Prix of Long Beach where drivers used it illegally.
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INDIANAPOLIS â By changing its push to pass guidelines, IndyCar has only created more confusion and controversy.
On Tuesday, IndyCar announced it will now allow drivers to use push to pass â a feature that adds a 60 horsepower boost for up to 200 seconds per road and street courses â on restarts, which was previously not allowed. Drivers still canât use push to pass at the start of races, and they must pass the alternate start-finish line on restarts before using it.
The midseason rule alteration came after another push to pass issue arose at Aprilâs Grand Prix of Long Beach, where drivers were given access to push to pass on a Lap 62 restart when they werenât supposed to. Twelve of the 24 drivers on track used it illegally, but starting this weekend, that move will be allowed.
Along with the rule change, IndyCar Officiating â the independent organization in its first season â announced a âresponsibility updateâ for push to pass. A news release from IndyCar Officiating said IndyCar will now âplace the burden on competitors to ensure Push to Pass is not used at restricted times.â IndyCar will update its Controller Area Network (CAN) to provide individual messaging, and an additional software engineer is to monitor outgoing CAN messages and push to pass.
At Thursdayâs news conference ahead of the Sonsio Grand Prix, the top five drivers in the IndyCar standings â Alex Palou (Chip Ganassi Racing), Kyle Kirkwood (Andretti Global), David Malukas (Team Penske), Pato OâWard (Arrow McLaren) and Christian Lundgaard (Arrow McLaren) â still didnât understand the change.
âIf IndyCar (expletives) up again and I press the button, I get penalized?â questioned Palou, who won at Long Beach after being one of the 12 drivers to use push to pass.
Palou was not yet aware of the responsibility update, and the four-time IndyCar champion was not in favor of how IndyCar shifted the burden to its drivers.
IndyCar now allows drivers to use push to pass on restarts, a change from the previous rule that prohibited its use in that situation.
The rule change was implemented after confusion during the Grand Prix of Long Beach, where drivers used the feature illegally on a restart.
Drivers can use push to pass for up to 200 seconds during road and street courses.
Drivers are now responsible for ensuring that push to pass is not used at restricted times, as per the updated guidelines from IndyCar officiating.
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âIf we press it and it works because someone else does a mistake, we get penalized?â he asked.
âYeah, because youâre not supposed to be able to use it until the alt start-finish,â Lundgaard responded.
Minutes later, as the drivers tried to understand whatâs allowed and what isnât, debate sparked about whether using push to pass illegally in Long Beach was justified since IndyCar wrongly gave cars the option.
Palou: âI am very surprised that only half of the grid used it. Very surprised.â
Kirkwood: âWell you guys must have an indicator because all your cars used it.â
Palou: âNo, Scott (Dixon) didnât.â
Kirkwood: âI know, but the (Meyer Shank Racing) cars did, (Kyffin Simpson) didâŠâ
Palou: â(Dixon) didnât.â
Kirkwood: âHe mustâve not seen that indicator.â
Palou: âI pressed it three times, and Iâm surprised I didnât press it more. ⊠Iâm very surprised, as well, that they pinpointed every single car that used it when it was not our fault, it was IndyCarâs fault.â
Kirkwood: âAlright, letâs set the record straight, everybody would have used if theyâd known it was active. Every driver would have. I wish I would have known it was on, because I wouldâve used it.â
OâWard: âFalse! I got toldâŠâ
Kirkwood: âYou got told it was active and did not use it?â
OâWard: âNo, I did not use it.â
Kirkwood: âWhy? You were told it was on.â
OâWard: âWell because you know the rule, man.â
Palou, whose pit stop beat out Meyer Shank Racingâs Felix Rosenqvist to take the lead before the restart, felt no remorse for using push to pass in Long Beach. Palou used it for 15.1 seconds, as Rosenqvist (18.5 seconds) was the lone driver to use it longer.
âIf Rosenqvist overtakes me and I lose a win, itâs like, âOh, weâre very sorry, weâre gonna change the rule now?ââ Palou questioned.
Palou felt the situation at Long Beach was different from the 2024 Grand Prix of St. Petersburg when Team Penskeâs Josef Newgarden and Scott McLaughlin were disqualified from the race weeks later for illegal use of push to pass. Newgarden was stripped of a win that was given to OâWard.
âItâs very different to what happened two years ago, where someone changed the code,â Palou said. âWeâre talking about someone not pressing the button (or) pressing the button. And itâs not on us to know if itâs active or not.â
IndyCar held a previously scheduled drivers' meeting hours after the news conference, with one of the objectives being to clear up the new rule. For the time being, there remains confusion on what the rule is and if drivers should carry the responsibility of activating push to pass.
Zion Brown is IndyStar's motorsports reporter. Follow him at @z10nbr0wn. Get IndyStar's motor sports coverage sent directly to your inbox with our Motor Sports newsletter. Subscribe to theYouTube channel IndyStar TV: IndyCar for a behind-the-scenes look at IndyCar and expert analysis.
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Push to pass rule change sparks IndyCar driver confusion, ethical debate