
An
Interview With Marco Andretti
Wednesday,
May 2, 2007
THE
MODERATOR: Good afternoon, everyone. We're pleased to have
IndyCar Series driver Marco Andretti. Marco is in his second
season in the IndyCar Series, driving the No. 26 NYSE group
Dallara for Andretti Green Racing. Last year, he was the IndyCar
Series and Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year. He won at Infineon
Racewat and finished second at Indianapolis. This year,
he's recorded a fourth-place finish at St. Petersburg.
Marco,
unfortunately other than that fourth place at St. Petersburg,
you've had some tough luck in three of the first four races
of the season. But you kind of had similar struggles last
year heading into Indianapolis. Obviously, you were still
able to finish second. Do you have any concerns as we head
into Indianapolis or is it a completely fresh start?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: No, that's exactly what it is. I've got to look
at it just like that. You know, now we have a month. I
think my biggest struggle lately has been no warmup. It's
no excuse because everybody is in the same boat. But it
has caught us out twice in the first four races. You know,
Homestead and obviously last week in Kansas. We couldn't
tell you what was wrong. You know, we really were struggling
with the balance.
As
a competitor, as a driver, it's been an absolutely miserable
year so far from what I had hoped to start the season.
I was hoping to be right up there in the championship hunt
going into Indy. But now I can just think about winning
the Indy 500. That's got to be my main mentality.
You
know, like I said, the positive thing is that we have a
full month. That's what allowed me to turn my season around
last year, as well, because going into Indy last year,
I barely had any race experience. I mean, we broke two
drive shafts, then I just wanted to finish Japan, which
was almost like a test session just doing laps because
we ended up 12th or something.
Anyway,
I mean, I'm looking forward to Indy, having a month, driving
with dad and everything like that.
Q.
You alluded to it right there, you'll be competing against
your dad again for the second time. What does it mean to
you to be able to share the track with him again?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: It's awesome. It's good. With his experience,
along with my other teammates, of course, but he has a
ton of experience. He knows what it's like for a good car,
number one. Last year, I mean, I was struggling with the
balance a little bit. He goes, Well, get in my car, get
in my car. I was able to on the same day get in his car
and experience what a good car is supposed to feel like.
From then on, I'm like, 'OK, now I know what that feel
is, so we got to get back to it.' That was huge for me.
Having
him drive on that same track that particular day definitely
helps me.
Q.
Do you feel the Speedway owes you one this year from how
you lost that one last year?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: No, I don't think it owes me anything. I nearly
won the thing at my first go. I'd say a good example is
it owes my dad one. I only had one go at it, like I said.
Everything worked out. Yeah, it was kind of a bummer. I
don't know what's worse, losing it the way I did or in
dad's case almost a lap on the field and with 10 to go
the car breaks.
I
don't know, I wouldn't say it owes me. I'm still young.
We got time.
Q.
How long did it take you to get over that? Is it still
something that bothers you to this day?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: It's going to bother me till the end of my career,
even if I win that thing four times. The race is so huge,
I don't know, especially for our family. I explain it to
my friends. There's no Grand Prix or single race that's
as big as that. That's the biggest race in the world. It
just slipped away. Of course it's going to bother me. I'm
a competitor.
Q.
Sam was saying he bought you several dinners. Is this something
you're going to keep holding over him, keep getting him
to do stuff for you?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: No, we bought each other dinners. I'm going to
correct that.
No,
I don't know, he's a competitor as well. He's going to
go try to win the race. I don't hold anything against him.
If you say the better car should have won, then that's
what happened. Just kind of the way we lost, we were like
in fifth in the closing laps, we charged to second. We
lost by a straightaway. That's a good day. That's an awesome
day. But the way we lost it, leading out of turn four,
kind of bothers me. But no big deal.
Q.
I wanted to jog your memory about a track in Upstate New
York, Oakland Valley. What do you remember most about racing
there, go the go-karts?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Well, there was a couple kids that raced there
week in and week out. They were very competitive. They
had that track down. They had the track stuff. They were
the ones to beat. Actually, I mean, I got a lot of good
experience racing up there. Like I said, the competition
was very tough. I felt when you beat those kids, you've
done something. It's not just like you go up and you win
a go-kart race. It was a good feeling to beat them because
I think they were very talented individuals.
The
track itself was pretty fun. It's very local to me. It's
about an hour and a half from my dad's house in PA. It's
fun to go up and hang out and have fun.
Q.
When is the last time you've been there? Not since
you raced?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Not since I raced. Maybe five, six years. It's
been a while.
Q.
I talked to your grandfather. He said everyone was there.
How was it to have the whole Andretti clan up there of
watching you do your thing?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Yeah, I mean, if it was up to me some weekends
I'd just go up and just do it myself, not even tell anybody
I'm racing, just to go up and get the experience. But they
brought the TV crews and everybody out, stuff like that.
It's always good, too, to get positive exposure. They help
me when they can. They obviously bring a lot of attention,
too.
No,
I mean, like I say, it's always good. It's good to have
that support, for sure.
Q.
Can you tear it up there one last time? Any chance
of you making an appearance?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: I don't know. The last thing I want to do is
go up. I can't just go up there and say I'm going to test.
I'll go up there Saturday, feel I'm quick enough to race
Sunday, I'll end up staying overnight and try to win the
thing, getting hurt doing it. That's the last thing I want
to do.
Q.
You say you're struggling. Is it something you think you
can correct or your engineers got to correct? Is it
horsepower or just the car itself?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: I think it's a combination, of course. I mean,
there's no way I can just blame anybody. One thing I can
tell you is I didn't forget how to drive in a year. If
anything, I think I'm a lot better this year just because
of how much I learned last year.
But
even when you don't have the results, or on an oval when
the car is not working great, it's both of our faults because
maybe I didn't relay good enough of information about what
the car is doing to him or whatever. You can't just blame
your engineer or anybody like that.
Like
I said, even when things aren't working out, and you have
a year like I had so far, you tend to lose confidence.
That's the last thing I should do. If I do that, it's just
going to spiral downwards. I just need to keep my head
up and things will get better.
The
only thing I'm bummed obviously about is the points. Like
I said, I didn't forget how to drive a race car in a year.
We'll just get a good balance underneath us. It is frustrating
especially on an oval when the car's not working. It is
so frustrating, a bit embarrassing, to have to park it.
It's either that or crash the car, which I did the week
before. It was a bit better to park it.
Q.
Before the season, when you were in Sonoma, you were optimistic
about everything. Has it been any one thing in particular
you can pinpoint or lots of little things?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: The first race caught us out because we're like,
'OK, we got greedy. We went so far out there in our setup
to catch those other guys because their speeds were frustrating
us the whole off-season. We were like, man, how could these
guys be going so much quicker. We went so aggressive on
the setup, it kind of caught us out.' My mentality going
into last weekend was, 'All right, let's just be flat all
day, let's be conservative, everything like that.' Whatever
it was, it caught us out again.
It
really is easy to dial it right out on ovals like that.
It's easy to tip the car over from a good car to not even
being able to drive it. We're going to try to make sure
that never happens again. That's a miserable feeling. There's
a long season. We just didn't get a great start. All we
can do right now is go try to win some races, especially
the Indy 500.
Q.
Speaking of the Indy 500, you have a whole month to concentrate
on it. Coming back to Indy, a place where you did have
that good ride last year, does that give you some renewed
confidence, momentum?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Yeah, for sure. I always knew it could be done,
but it always helps your confidence if you can go out and
really prove to everybody, 'Man, we can win this thing.'
You said it. The month is the key for me. It's just seat
time 'cause, you know, I still don't have many oval races
under my belt. I'm not saying I'm a rookie any more by
any means. That excuse I can't use any more. It's just
not been as smooth as I would expect.
I
did come in this season with very high confidence, which
I can say I'm not sure I lost. I still feel -- I still
have confidence in myself and the team. Dario (Franchitti)
looked very strong. Obviously so did Tony (Kanaan) and
Danica (Patricfk). We can build off that. Now we have a
month to, again, get my act back together and hopefully
compete for the win.
Q.
Now that we're getting closer to Indy again, how is your
dad handling things? Is he beginning to get his game
face on?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Yeah. I mean, he knows exactly what needs to
be done. Yeah, he's getting in race mode a little bit.
I like to see that. He's very focused. I'll be sleeping
in until 9:30 a.m.. I'll wake up, he's already got his
run done and everything like that. He's been on it.
It's
good to see. Like I said, he knows exactly what he needs
to win. Now he just needs a little bit of that luck. Man,
all I can say is hopefully he gets it.
Q.
Do you carry any extra pressure as Andretti coming into
this place, trying to break the jinx, win one for your
dad?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: For sure. I mean, there is when you look at it
on the big picture. Yeah, it is. On that particular weekend,
I'm not feeling it at all because my thinking on it is
I want to win this thing so bad myself. I just do everything
in my power to maximize every time I'm on track and the
whole race, my thinking on that, as well, it's so long.
Everything I do in my power during the race is just to
make sure you minimize mistakes. I think if you do that
all day, it's almost guaranteed you'll be in it in the
end if you have any kind of speed. That's exactly what
I did last year. That's what we're going to try to do this
year.
Q.
Your record last year and so far this year has shown pretty
much you can dial a car awesomely when it comes to reasonably
flat tracks like Richmond, Milwaukee and Indy. On the high
banks, is it just overall balance or balance in traffic?
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Well, no, I mean, if the car's good on its own
-- well, I shouldn't say that. If the car's good, it's
going to be good in traffic. I mean, it has been a bit
of car balance for me on the mile-and-a-half's so far this
year. But there's no excuse. My teammate, Tony, for example,
after Motegi, I called him, I'm on the phone with him for
three hours saying, 'You kicked my butt, how did you do
it?' I'm picking his brain.
It's
a bunch of little things that add up. I'm just trying to,
again, learn from that and do everything in my power to
make sure it doesn't happen any more.
But,
yeah, I mean, we have work to do I think when it comes
to car balance. You said it, I love going to the shorter
ovals and stuff like that. Actually, I love Indianapolis.
It's a unique place. I'm looking forward to the rest of
the season, but now we've got to just win some races, like
I said earlier.
THE
MODERATOR: Marco, thank you so much for taking the time
to join us this afternoon. Good luck this month.
MARCO
ANDRETTI: Thanks.
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