But what they really get is another chance to wrestle Scott Dixon out of the top position.
And Dixon will start from the pole due to Saturday’s NTT P1 Award qualifying session being canceled due to weather delays earlier in the day.
The live action returns to the NBC Sports Network and the INDYCAR Radio Network.
Dixon, who led 206 of Saturday’s 212 laps, will be the prohibitive favorite again today, and keep in mind that he finished first and second in last year’s two Indianapolis Motor Speedway races that complete this Month of May.
While Dixon’s series lead is only 18 points, the driver in second place is teammate Alex Palou certainly is championship material – he won the 2014 title – but he already is 37 points behind Dixon after finishing 14th Saturday night in the No.
He has now won at least one race in a record 19 seasons, one more than A.J.
It wasn’t just Dixon leading the New Zealand charge Saturday night – or the only Scott finishing high on the TMS scoreboard.
Harvey conceded he “probably squeezed” his pseudo teammate too much – the teams have a technical alliance, with the drivers regularly together in briefings – but Rossi didn’t sound too willing to let it go after the race.
14 ROKiT Chevrolet driven by Sebastien Bourdais took a huge rear-first impact in Turn 2 following rear contact from Team Penske’s Josef Newgarden in traffic.
Ironically, it was Rosenqvist’s car which suffered the same consequence in last year’s race trying to pass Hinchcliffe.