Kirkwood Fastest in Indy Lights Spring Training at Homestead

Kyle Kirkwood has dominated every series he has been in up to now. A future IndyCar star for sure
Kyle Kirkwood has dominated every series he has been in up to now. A future IndyCar star for sure

It’s a wrap! The final official test session prior to the start of a new Road to Indy Presented by Cooper Tires racing season concluded this afternoon at a blustery Homestead-Miami Speedway. Kyle Kirkwood, from Jupiter, Fla., posted the fastest time among the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires field for Andretti Autosport, which will be aiming to claim a third successive championship crown.

The Indy Lights teams and drivers now will join those from the two junior rungs on the ladder, the Indy Pro 2000 Championship Presented by Cooper Tires and the Cooper Tires USF2000 Championship, whose Spring Training test wrapped up yesterday, in heading north to St. Petersburg, Fla., for this weekend’s opening two races of the season to be held in conjunction with the NTT IndyCar Series.

Kirkwood, 21, has taken the Road to Indy by storm over the past two years. He won 12 of 14 races in 2018 during a dominant campaign in USF2000, then added another nine race wins last year on his way to securing the Indy Pro 2000 crown. In 2020 he will attempt to become the first driver to win championships on all three levels of the Road to Indy – and, even more impressively, in consecutive years. If so, he will also claim another Road to Indy scholarship, valued at $1 million, to ensure entry into a minimum of three IndyCar Series races in 2021, including the 105th Indianapolis 500.

Indy Lights represents the third and final step on the unique and internationally recognized open-wheel racing development ladder, which in 2020 will offer prizes and scholarships valued at over $2.7 million to help talented drivers to work their way from the grassroots of the sport all the way to the NTT IndyCar Series and the Indianapolis 500.

A total of 746 laps around the 2.21-mile road course were turned today during the four-and-a-half hour Spring Training test.

Toby Sowery
Toby Sowery

After the first 90 minutes of running this morning, Toby Sowery emerged narrowly fastest for Belardi Auto Racing with a best lap of 1:14.9445. But rookie teammate Rasmus Lindh, from Gothenburg, Sweden, and Kirkwood were both within just 0.0358 of a second of the Englishman.

Lap times continued to come down after the lunch break, with Kirkwood’s 11th lap remaining as the fastest of the day at 1:14.3331, an average speed of 107.032 mph.

“It reconfirms that we have a good setup and that we’re strong," said Kirkwood. “Everyone is close but it’s nice to go into St. Pete with some confidence. This year is so different from last year – I’ve had more testing this year than I’ve ever had, considering my deals the past two years came together at the last minute. I’ve had time to get to know the team and my engineer, Doug Zister, so everything feels good.

“I consider St. Pete my home race, but I’m not sure if it creates pressure to have so many of my friends and family there. It’s the best street course we go to and to race right downtown is very cool."

One year ago, both Kirkwood and Sowery arrived for the corresponding final pre-season Spring Training test with deals that were concluded virtually at the last minute. It certainly didn’t seem to adversely affect their results. While Kirkwood’s race season included a few hiccups in the early rounds, he ended the year as a convincing Indy Pro 2000 champion, while Sowery, from Cambridge, England, impressed by finishing on the podium at St. Petersburg in each of his first two Indy Lights races.

“This year is so much better than last year," said Sowery, who was one of only two drivers to improve at the end of the day, turning a best lap of 1:14.4428. “Last year the deal came together so late, and after the first session we were a second off the pace. This year we led the first session without really going for it and when everyone went to the new tire, we were right there. So I’m feeling quite confident going into St. Pete. There were some nerves going into St. Pete last year, as I had never driven a street course, but I came back to take two podiums – but it was Belardi who beat us so this year should be even better."

Lindh, 18, who has finished second to Kirkwood in each of the past two years, firstly in USF2000 and then again last year in Indy Pro 2000, continued his strong form to end the day third fastest with a time of 1:14.5290, less than a tenth behind his more experienced teammate.

“I’m quite happy," said Lindh. “I feel as though I’ve adjusted to the car after the Indy Pro 2000 car. Everything feels more proper: the brakes are better, there’s more downforce, so I thought the jump was fairly easy. Belardi always has a good car at St. Pete; they’ve won races there the past few years. It’s a good track to drive. You have to be very precise and that’s fun."

Another teenager, David Malukas, from Chicago, Ill., was fourth fastest today for HMD Motorsports, just over a tenth and a half faster than teammate and Indy Lights veteran Santi Urrutia, from Miguelete, Uruguay, who is returning to Indy Lights after a one-year hiatus.

Robert Megennis, a race winner last year for Andretti Autosport, was sandwiched between the two HMD Dallaras, fifth fastest, as the top six cars were blanketed by less than a half-second.

Frenchman Tristan Charpentier and Singapore’s Danial Frost, also driving for the Andretti Autosport juggernaut, were seventh and eighth ahead of Canadian Antonio Serravalle (HMD Motorsports) and Los Angeles-based Russian Nikita Lastochkin, who has stepped up to Indy Lights this year along with the Canadian-based Exclusive Autosport team.

The Indy Lights Grand Prix of St. Petersburg Presented by Andersen Interior Contracting and Cooper Tires will begin on Friday, March 13, with a 30-minute practice session at 9:00 a.m. EDT. Qualifying for Race One will take place at 8:00 a.m. on Saturday, with the race to follow at 1:35 p.m. Sunday’s schedule will be similar, with a second 30-minute qualifying session at 8:35 a.m. and the green flag for Race Two, to be held over 35 laps of the 1.8-mile street circuit, set for 1:15 p.m. directly before the IndyCar Grand Prix of St. Petersburg headline event.

In the U.S., both races will air live and on demand on NBC Sports Gold with practice and qualifying coverage carried via live streaming on the Road to Indy TV App, RoadToIndy.TV and indylights.com. In Canada, all races will air live on MAVTV Canada. Internationally, all practice, qualifying and race events will be live streamed on the Road to Indy TV App, RoadToIndy.TV and at indylights.com. Additional coverage can also be found on the Pennzoil INDYCAR Radio Network broadcasts which airs live on network affiliates, Sirius 216, XM 209, indycar.com, indycarradio.com and the INDYCAR Mobile App powered by NTT Data.

Indy Lights Test Times

Pos Car Driver Session Time Speed Laps
1 28 Kirkwood, Kyle (R) Test Session 2 01:14.3331 107.032 75
2 5 Sowery, Toby Test Session 2 01:14.4428 106.874 61
3 10 Lindh, Rasmus (R) Test Session 2 01:14.5290 106.750 79
4 79 Malukas, David Test Session 2 01:14.6514 106.575 54
5 27 Megennis, Robert Test Session 2 01:14.7652 106.413 83
6 55 Urrutia, Santi Test Session 2 01:14.8097 106.350 73
7 48 Charpentier, Tristan (R) Test Session 2 01:15.0847 105.960 67
8 68 Frost, Danial (R) Test Session 2 01:15.1824 105.823 50
9 68 Frost, Danial Nielsen (R) Test Session 1 01:15.4231 105.485 38
10 11 Serravalle, Antonio (R) Test Session 2 01:15.6888 105.115 96
11 90 Lastochkin, Nikita (R) Test Session 2 01:15.8207 104.932 70

(R) Rookie

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