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Indy 500 rookies VeeKay and Palou stun with pace

Rinus VeeKay of Ed Carpenter Racing-Chevrolet and Alex Palou in the Dale Coyne Racing with Team Goh-Honda delivered two of the best performances of last week at Indy and will roll off fourth and seventh respectively on Sunday.

Rinus VeeKay, Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet

Rinus VeeKay, Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet

Barry Cantrell / Motorsport Images

Despite the general consensus being that Chevrolet was down on power compared with Honda when they ran 1.5-bar boost, which teams use on Fast Friday, Qualifying and the Fast Nine Shootout, VeeKay proved that a great handling car could help make up the deficit.

The #21 ECR car had looked fast and stable in dirty air during practice, allowing VeeKay to make bold maneuvers on his rivals, but it also responded well to being trimmed out for qualifying. The Dutch teenager was sixth on Saturday, behind four Andretti Autosport cars and Scott Dixon of Chip Ganassi Racing, and then on Sunday only one Andretti car – that of Marco Andretti – could outpace him, along with Dixon and Takuma Sato’s amazingly consistent Rahal Letterman Lanigan-Honda.

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Thus VeeKay became the best qualifying Indy 500 rookie since 2013, when Carlos Munoz claimed second for Andretti Autosport.

"That was the most amazing qualifying, I did not expect it!” exclaimed VeeKay who is advised by two-time Indy 500 winner and IMS lap record holder Arie Luyendyk. “I was really happy to even make it to the Fast Nine.

“Being the only Chevy made it tough, but we are starting fourth! Super close to making the front row, but I'm still happy with this. And fastest rookie!

Ed [Carpenter, team owner] really helped me, telling me what the wind was going to do to my car. I've never driven in wind like this at this track. He really helped me to be confident.”

Alex Palou, Dale Coyne Racing with Team Goh Honda

Alex Palou, Dale Coyne Racing with Team Goh Honda

Photo by: Barry Cantrell / Motorsport Images

Palou claimed seventh for Coyne which meant two rookies in the Fast Nine for the first time since (again) 2013, when Munoz was joined by Team Penske’s AJ Allmendinger (fifth).

Palou, who actually produced the quickest single lap of the Fast Nine session – 231.901mph on Lap 1 – was left pondering what might have been, due to a suspected weightjacker glitch that caused his third and fourth laps to drop into the 228mph zone.

“We had some issues on our run,” said Palou, “and the team is looking into it, but it looks like the weightjacker malfunctioned. We had the speed, it was in the car, we just couldn’t put the laps together. It’s a shame, but at the end of the day, we are in the Fast Nine which was our first objective.

“I would have loved to be on pole, just like the 32 other drivers that are here, but it’s OK. I’m not happy with my run today, but overall, I’m super-happy with how the week is going.”

Palou, like VeeKay, looked strong in traffic in the afternoon session, setting the best average speed over 30 laps, and managing to eke out his fuel to complete a 33-lap stint – one longer than Team Penske’s Will Power, and two longer than Arrow McLaren SP’s Patricio O’Ward.

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