INDIANAPOLIS — Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Josef Newgarden begins his 15th IndyCar season in a new role — as the most veteran IndyCar driver at Team Penske.
It comes at the same time Newgarden is trying to rebound from one of his worst seasons in more than a decade. He's also trying to help the series' most successful team rebuild its image following two cheating scandals over the past two years, and he's still trying to get acclimated to seeing longtime teammate Will Power and Ron Ruzewski, Penske's ex-managing director, working together at a rival team.
Yes, for the 35-year-old, two-time series champ it's going to take some time for it to make sense.
''That was weird,'' Newgarden said Tuesday, explaining his reaction to seeing Power and Ruzewski in Phoenix for a Firestone test earlier this month in their new jobs at Andretti Global.
''It was more weird seeing Ron. I was like ‘What the heck?' Like I just wanted to debrief with Ron. I was like 'Yeah, what do you think of this? We like this tire, right?′ It was so silly. I'm like 'What are you even doing over there, both him and Will.''
Newgarden, like the other full-time drivers, was in Indianapolis for the first of IndyCar's two media content days at Indianapolis Motor Speedway despite losing power at his home during the weekend's winter storm. Power, his longtime former teammate, is scheduled to talk during one of Wednesday's two driver sessions.
Newgarden has been around long enough to understand that change is the norm when living in racing's fast lane.
For most of the past eight seasons, though, the Tennessean has been able to maintain his focus on winning races and capturing championships for one of the series most stable teams.