
Marcus Armstrong quietly put the entire IndyCar paddock on notice Tuesday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
While much of the attention entering Day 1 of Indianapolis 500 practice centered around the usual favorites, Armstrong spent most of the afternoon sitting atop the speed charts before finally ending the day second overall after Alex Palou ripped off a late flyer in the final hour.
Still, Armstrong’s pace was one of the biggest storylines of the opening day at the Speedway.
The Meyer Shank Racing driver looked comfortable from the moment cars hit the track, showing serious straight-line speed and the kind of balance that matters around the 2.5-mile oval. On a day where teams focused heavily on getting comfortable in traffic and learning how their cars reacted in dirty air, Armstrong consistently looked planted and aggressive.
And honestly, it should not be dismissed as a fluke.
Armstrong has steadily grown into one of the more underrated young talents in the series, but carrying front-running speed at Indianapolis is an entirely different challenge. The Speedway exposes weaknesses quickly. Drivers either trust their cars here or they do not. Armstrong looked like somebody fully committed behind the wheel Tuesday.
With veterans like Josef Newgarden, Scott Dixon and Palou all near the top of the charts as expected, Armstrong inserting himself into that conversation immediately adds another intriguing layer to this year’s Month of May.
It is only the first practice session. Nobody hands out the Borg-Warner Trophy in mid-May.
But if Tuesday proved anything, it is that Marcus Armstrong may have the speed to become one of this year’s surprise contenders at Indianapolis.
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