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Robb set to be confirmed this week in Coyne IndyCar line-up

Dale Coyne is aiming to have a deal done in the next six days with Indy Lights graduate Sting Ray Robb, cementing DCR-Honda’s two-car full-season line-up.

Indy Pro 2000 Champion: Sting Ray Robb, Juncos Racing

Photo by: Road To Indy

Over the off-season, Coyne tested Marcus Armstrong but he has been recruited by Chip Ganassi Racing to drive the #11 CGR-Honda on road and street courses, while Coyne’s former full-timer in the #51 entry co-owned by Rick Ware Racing, Takuma Sato, is the primary candidate for the #11 on ovals.

Coyne, who sifted through six potential candidates for the #51 car, tested Sting Ray Robb on January 4 at Sebring, when Ganassi trialed 2021 Formula 2 runner-up Robert Shwartzman and Indy NXT (née Indy Lights) driver Kyffin Simpson, and Penske ran Dane Cameron. Robb finished the day second, just a few hundredths of a second off Shwartzman.

“Sting Ray was really good, as fast as Shwartzman, basically,” said Coyne. “Shwartzman has a better résumé, driving with a bigger team, with an allegedly better engineer – our old one! [Ross Bunnell] – and we were just four-hundredths off.

“So I’m very satisfied that Sting Ray can do a good job for us. His feedback was decent for a rookie, too. I think the Indy Lights car has been good at producing drivers who adapt quickly to the big cars. We saw that with David Malukas, and I think we’ll see the same with Sting Ray.”

Robb had a difficult jump from Skip Barber Series into USF Pro 2000 (at that time still called Pro Mazda), sidestepping USF2000, but in 2020 he won the title with Juncos Racing, racking up seven wins and five pole positions. Graduating to Indy Lights for 2021 was a struggle, but a switch from Juncos to Andretti Autosport last year unlocked his speed. Robb accumulated one win, three runner-up finishes and four thirds – as well as two poles – and he finished second in the championship.

Assuming negotiations proceed as planned and the ride is his, Robb will be engineered by Sato’s former engineer Don Bricker. Coyne confirmed to Motorsport.com that following the loss of Bunnell to Ganassi, Malukas’ #18 car for his sophomore IndyCar season will be Bunnell’s former assistant engineer, Alex Athanasiadis.

Coyne also confirmed that he intends to remain in business with Malukas’ father Henry, owner of HMD Motorsports, helping to run half a dozen cars in Indy NXT.

 

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