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Josef Newgarden Breaks Year Winless Streak at Nashville
Imagn Images

After what can only be described as a season from hell, Josef Newgarden finally found his way back to victory lane at Nashville Superspeedway, ending a brutal 20-race drought that stretched all the way back to August 2024. The two-time Indianapolis 500 champion delivered a masterclass performance on home turf, proving that sometimes the racing gods do have a sense of timing – even if their sense of humor is questionable.

For a driver who once dominated IndyCar with the swagger of someone who knew he belonged at the front, this season had been nothing short of torturous. Sitting 16th in the standings heading into the finale? That’s not just disappointing for a driver of Newgarden’s caliber – it’s downright embarrassing. But Sunday’s victory at the season-ending Borchetta Bourbon Music City Grand Prix wasn’t just about salvaging pride; it was about reminding everyone why this Nashville native remains one of the sport’s premier talents.

The Home Field Advantage That Actually Mattered

Let’s be honest – home field advantage in motorsports is usually about as meaningful as a chocolate teapot. But Newgarden made it count when it mattered most, wheeling his No. 2 Astemo Team Penske Chevrolet to a half-second victory over four-time champion Alex Palou. The triumph was emotional, raw, and desperately needed for both driver and team.

The celebration was pure Newgarden – climbing through the fence to embrace the Nashville faithful, recreating those iconic moments from his Indianapolis 500 victories in 2023 and 2024. Sometimes the best victories aren’t the dominant ones; they’re the ones that remind you why you fell in love with racing in the first place.

When Tire Failures Write the Story

This race had more plot twists than a soap opera, and most of them involved Firestone rubber deciding to call it quits at the worst possible moments. Pato O’Ward looked destined for victory, leading a race-high 116 laps from pole position, until his right front tire said “nope” and sent him careening into the SAFER barrier on lap 127.

O’Ward’s frustration was palpable and entirely justified. “It sucks kind of knowing that can be a possibility and multiple cars having that issue,” he said, pointing out what everyone was thinking but afraid to say. When drivers are hitting concrete at 200 mph because of tire failures, that’s not racing – that’s Russian roulette with rubber compounds.

Even Palou, who clinched his fourth championship with typical clinical precision, suffered an early tire failure that somehow didn’t derail his title hopes. The Spaniard’s ability to claw back through the field after flat-spotting his right front showed exactly why he’s wearing the crown for the third consecutive year.

Team Penske’s Redemption Arc

For a team that’s won more IndyCar races than any other organization in history, 2025 was supposed to be another victory lap. Instead, it turned into an extended therapy session. Sunday’s win – just their second of the entire season.

Scott McLaughlin‘s third-place finish meant Team Penske actually put two cars on the podium for only the second time all season. Read that again – the most successful team in IndyCar history managed just two double-podium finishes in 17 races. That’s not a slump; that’s a full-scale identity crisis.

A Season Finale Worth Remembering For Newgarden

Newgarden’s victory moved him from 16th to 12th in the final standings – still his worst finish since 2014, but at least he avoided the ignominy of going winless. For a driver who’s made his reputation on ovals, it was fitting that all nine of his recent victories have come on the big speedways where precision and bravery matter most. As the checkered flag waved and Newgarden finally broke his drought, one thing became crystal clear: sometimes the best stories aren’t about dominance.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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