Quinn Arrives and Conquers at Indy on RTI Debut
 May 13, 2022| 
  • Series News
USF Race One Indy 2022

SPEEDWAY, Ind. – Experienced Englishman Alex Quinn made a storybook Cooper Tires USF2000 Championship debut this morning in the first of three races which will comprise this week’s Cooper Tires Grand Prix of Indianapolis. Quinn, 21, from Truro in Cornwall, took control in the late stages of an incident filled 15-lap race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Grand Prix circuit to score a first-ever USF2000 victory for the Velocity Racing Development team.

USF Race One CheckersThird-generation racer Jagger Jones, from Scottsdale, Ariz., eventually was credited with second position after starting his Cape Motorsports Tatuus USF-22 from the pole. Jones took the checkered flag behind Billy Frazer, but the young New Zealander’s remarkable record of finishing second in the opening race of each event weekend this season for Exclusive Autosport was ended by a post-race penalty following a skirmish between the pair with a couple of laps remaining, which resulted in the positions being reversed.

Jones, after scoring his maiden victory a couple of weeks ago at Barber Motorsports Park, continued his fine form by snagging his first Cooper Tires Pole Award in qualifying earlier this morning. He was joined on the front row by Quinn, who has gained success in a variety of European open-wheel championships dating back to 2016.

The long front straightaway on the Indianapolis Grand Prix circuit always provides excitement in the heavy braking area for Turn One, only this time there was drama virtually as soon as the cars took the green flag when Nicky Hays, from Huntington Beach, Calif., lost his Cape Motorsports Tatuus USF-22's front wing in the initial jockeying for position. Teammate Jackson Lee, from Avon, Ind., also pitted for repairs during the subsequent caution period.

Championship leader Myles Rowe (Pabst Racing) was the biggest gainer at the start, leaping from seventh to second before the caution flags flew, and the gifted youngster from New York, N.Y., continued his progress at the restart by grasping the lead at Turn One.

USF Race One RaceJones found himself shuffled down to third in the early skirmishes, although two laps later he was back in the lead after Quinn’s attempt to pass Rowe at Turn One instead cost both of them momentum and allowed the polesitter to reclaim the lead.

The action was frantic, so it came as no real surprise when the caution flags waved again on the sixth lap following an incident at Turn Four between the top two championship protagonists, Rowe and Michael d’Orlando (Cape Motorsports), from Hartsdale, N.Y.

Quinn made his move decisive for the lead at the restart on Lap 10, and while Jones briefly fell back to fourth following a four-wide tussle at Turn One, he was back into second again before the completion of that lap.

There was one more brief caution after Bijoy Garg (DEForce Racing), from Atherton, Calif., found himself in the kitty litter at Turn One, setting the stage for a three-lap blast to the finish.

This time Quinn used his experience to excellent effect, jumping clear of his pursuers as Frazer pulled off a bold outside-line move on Jones for second place at Turn One. Quinn also set the fastest lap of the race as he cleared off to win by just over two seconds from Frazer and Jones, who was relatively content to secure third and the championship points lead.

Turn 3 Motorsport teammates Christian Weir, from Naperville, Ill., and Spike Kohlbecker, from St. Louis, Mo., steered clear of the drama to finish fourth and sixth, sandwiching Canadian Thomas Nepveu (DEForce).

Mexico’s Jorge Garciarce emerged in an impressive seventh after starting last in the 21-car field to comfortably claim his first Tilton Hard Charger Award. He was chased home by Jay Howard Driver Development teammate and USF2000 debutant Frankie Mossman, from LaVerne, Calif., who also started at the back of the pack.

Quinn’s fine performance ensured a PFC Award for Velocity Racing Development’s Dan Mitchell as the winning car owner.

Two more races tomorrow will complete the  Cooper Tires Grand Prix of Indianapolis, starting with Race Two at 8:05 a.m. EDT.

Provisional championship points after 5 of 18 races:
1. Jagger Jones, 102
2. Billy Frazer, 95
3. Myles Rowe, 90
4. Michael d’Orlando, 87
5. Jace Denmark, 76
6. Simon Sikes, 75
7. Christian Weir, 74
8. Thomas Nepveu, 70
9. Spike Kohlbecker, 60
10. Bijoy Garg, 59

Alex Quinn (#17 VRD/Arden Motorsport-Velocity Racing Development Tatuus USF-22): “It’s great to get the win here, that was the most fun I’ve ever had in a race car. I had no expectations but I got on the track immediately – the team did a great job. They got me over here and they provided me with a great car and I’m very happy for that. This was a very last-minute deal last week: I knew Dan (Mitchell) from England, I knew he was a very talented team manager and engineer. I’ve raced the Tatuus chassis before so this feels similar, and it’s got the Cooper tires, which I’m enjoying driving. There are a few things that are different but after I got used to things – and after an engine change – everything felt great, I felt at one with the car. This is a big, wide-open track, which is new to me, and there was a lot of overtaking, which was also new for me – in the racing I’ve done, it’s very “follow the leader” so this was very enjoyable. Turn One is a very tricky corner, especially three-wide, but we all gave each other room. It’s great to be here on the podium.”

Billy Frazer (#92 Corpay Cross-Border Solutions-Exclusive Autosport Tatuus USF-22): “We’ve had a solid race car all weekend, though P10 in qualifying wasn’t where I wanted to start. This was fantastic racing, though the cautions were pretty scary – you know that when it goes green, you just have to fly into Turn One and do your best. It was such a racecraft race – I was making passes inside, outside, down the middle, using as much of the draft as possible. And this finish was so important: these are the kind of races that help win championships, minimizing the bad luck. I was close to the incident between Rowe and d’Orlando but I was able to squeeze through and make it work. Super happy for the team, the No. 92 Corpay/Giltrap car was on fire.”

Jagger Jones (#3 Cape Motorsports Tatuus USF-22): “That was a super crazy amount of racecraft, with such a long straight coming after the start, then a few corners, then another super long straightaway. That makes it interesting, but it makes it tough when you’re leading – the draft is so strong down the front straight. At most tracks, if you keep it clean on lap one you can check out but with all the yellows, that wasn’t the case. Having to restart so often, which allowed guys to draft up and get alongside me, it became a game of who wants to brake deeper. We ended up third, but I think we’re on pole again for race two and hopefully we can get two spots better.

“I never think about the championship when I’m racing: I’m always trying to get the best result I can. For us, a win today was the best result but I didn’t fully do my job as a driver.

(Regarding the Jones legacy at the Speedway) “It’s so cool for me to be here: it was so special coming into the weekend, but once I got on track on Thursday it was all about the racing, about trying to get three wins.”

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