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 articles:
Related suggestion:
Mets' Senga says he needs more time before beginning rehab stintMumbai Billboard collapse: At least 14 killed, 74 injuredUkrainian schoolchildren head underground in bombKate Martin one of four second round WNBA draft picks to make opening day rostersArkansas and coach John Calipari will face former team at Kentucky in SEC next seasonNo criminal charges in rare liquor probe at Oregon alcohol agency, state report saysMichael Jordan weeps during grand opening of his third clinic with his mom in North CarolinaChina Red Cross Society celebrates 120th anniversaryCubs place reliever Adbert Alzolay on injured list with right forearm strain and recall José CuasChina's consumer prices show mild upticks amid continued demand recovery
3.4464s , 6496.515625 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by Analysis: IndyCar cheating scandal risks sullying Roger Penske's perfect image ,Culture Circuit news portal