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Indy 500 winner Castroneves: “The older guys still get it”

Indianapolis 500’s newest four-time winner Helio Castroneves made a point to take a swipe at the regular talk of the current youth movement in IndyCar racing.

Race winner Helio Castroneves, Meyer Shank Racing Honda

Race winner Helio Castroneves, Meyer Shank Racing Honda

Sam Cobb / Motorsport Images

At 46 years and 20 days old, the Brazilian cemented a place in Indy 500 history by becoming the fourth-oldest driver to conquer the Indianapolis Motor Speedway after Al Unser in 1987, Bobby Unser in 1981 and Emerson Fittipaldi in 1993.

The Meyer Shank Racing driver beat Chip Ganassi Racing’s youngest driver, 24-year-old Alex Palou, in a straight duel in the closing laps to win by half a second, and score his fourth win at the Indy 500 – a full 11 years after his third.

Castroneves has been part-time in IndyCar since the end of the 2017 season, when Team Penske, with whom he scored his first three Indy 500 wins, switched him to the IMSA SportsCar Championship, a series he won last year along with Ricky Taylor, before Penske’s Acura contract ended and he was let go.

At that point, he was signed by Wayne Taylor Racing in IMSA and with Meyer Shank Racing for six races in IndyCar.

Coming just four months after he was part of WTR’s Rolex 24 Hours at Daytona winning line-up, Castroneves remarked to the TV broadcasters: “Man, I only did two races this year, and I won two. I think I still got it, don’t you think?”

Asked about the long post-race celebrations before reaching the TV mics, he said, “Let me tell you, it’s not the end of it, it’s the beginning.

“I don’t know if this is a good comparison or not, but Tom Brady won the Superbowl, Phil Mickelson won the PGA, and now here you go. So the older guys still get it, still kicking the young guys’ butt. We teach them a lesson.”

Race winner Helio Castroneves, Meyer Shank Racing Honda, Mike Shank

Race winner Helio Castroneves, Meyer Shank Racing Honda, Mike Shank

Photo by: Barry Cantrell / Motorsport Images

He also took the opportunity to ‘correct’ Paul Tracy, who he beat to the 2002 Indy 500 glory in controversial fashion. After complimenting the NBC team, he called out analyst Paul Tracy, who he controversially beat to the Indy win in 2002.

“PT, PT! I know you’ve been talking about that second win. PT, I’m sorry man, that was my win! And now I’ve just confirmed another win.”

Castroneves also paid tribute to his team.

“I can’t thank enough AutoNation, SiriusXM, [team co-owners] Mike Shank, Jim Meyer – the entire organisation and Honda. They gave me the most when I needed it, they were right there.

“This stage is absolutely incredible. I love Indianapolis. You guys don’t understand. The fans, they give me energy. This is absolutely incredible!

“From the beginning we were so comfortable, happy, kinda like calm. Right now I’m just so excited. The Firestone tyres were absolutely on rails. The car was just incredible. I knew it was good, I knew I was going to have to fight, to put the elbows out.

“What an incredible feeling. I couldn’t do this without my family, my mum and dad in Brazil. I love you guys.

“And of course the Lord. The Lord has been right by my side all the time. This is just absolutely awesome.”

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