
This is part three in a 12-part series previewing every team set to compete in the 2019 IndyCar season. I will be previewing two teams per week on Push2Pass leading up to the season opener in St. Petersburg on March 10. Today’s team: Dale Coyne Racing
The plucky little team from Plainfield, Ill. will be hoping that 2019 can finally be the year they have found a talented driver to team with four-time CART series champ Sebastien Bourdais. With two wins at St. Petersburg for Bourdais the past two seasons, he will be a major name to watch in the early rounds of 2019.
The Honda-powered team is owned by former Champ Car driver Dale Coyne, who has led the team in 869 starts in IndyCar (formerly CART/Champ Car) since 1984. It took 25 years for the team to pick up their first victory when Justin Wilson won at Watkins Glen in 2009. They’ve taken six victories and two poles in their 35 seasons of running in open-wheel racing.
The Drivers
Sebastien Bourdais (#18)
Career: 188 starts, 37 wins, 34 poles, 56 podiums, 111 top-10 finishes
2018: Avg. Qualifying 9.8 (8th), Avg. Finish 11.1 (10th), 7th overall
Bourdais was a legend in the CART/Champ Car series in the years prior to their re-merger with the Indy Racing League, winning four-straight titles from 2004-2007 before IndyCar as we know it returned in 2008. This skews his career stats greatly, since he has only had six wins, three poles and 12 podiums in the last seven seasons. Series leaders like Penske, Andretti and Ganassi all left the CART series between 2002-2003, making it a less-talented field for Bourdais to dominate from 2004-2007.
Bourdais came to IndyCar after a few years of racing in Formula 1, joining Dale Coyne Racing in 2011 for a part-time season. He raced five seasons total with Dragon Racing, KV Racing and KVSH Racing before returning to Dale Coyne in 2017. He started his return with Coyne by finishing top-2 in his first two appearances before getting involved in crashes at Phoenix and the Indy GP. His season almost came to an end during Indy 500 qualifying when his car lost control during his run for pole, suffering pelvis and hip fractures that were supposed to keep him out for the rest of the season. He managed to return for the final three races of 2017.
Prior to 2018, former KVSH Racing owners Jimmy Vasser and James Sullivan partnered with Coyne to field the no. 18 car as a joint effort under the name Dale Coyne Racing with Vasser-Sullivan. Bourdais started his season off with another superb drive from the back half of the field to win at St. Petersburg, capitalizing on a collision between leaders Alexander Rossi and Robert Wickens in the final moments of the race.
Bourdais only found himself on one more podium in 2018 after a third-place finish at Portland. However, his results were good enough to place him seventh overall in the championship, the highest finisher outside of a driver for a big-3 team (Ganassi, Penske, Andretti). Bourdais had a 15-2 advantage in qualifying and a 13-4 advantage in race finishes over his teammate in the no. 19 car, whether it was Zachary Claman DeMelo, Pietro Fittipaldi or Santino Ferucci in the car.

Santino Ferrucci (#19)
Career: Four starts, Best Finish: 11th (Sonoma)
2018: Avg. Qualifying 17.3 (21st), Avg. Finish 18.3 (27th), 27th overall
Ferrucci will join Dale Coyne Racing as a full-time driver in 2019. He competed in a few races last season in the no. 19 entry after an injury to Pietro Fittapaldi, and as a third entry for the final two races at Portland and Sonoma. These two races seemed to serve as an audition for Ferrucci, who showed enough pace for Coyne to give him the seat for the full season.
Coyne’s second car has been up for grabs by tons of pay-drivers over the past few years who have been able to pay their way to drive in a car that lacks sponsorship money. There have been 11 drivers in the no. 19 entry over the last four seasons, with the only full-time entry being Ed Jones in 2017. Coyne’s second car has also only come up with nine top-10 finishes in the past four seasons.
Ferrucci comes with a bit of a checkered past, having received a ban from Formula 2 last season after intentionally crashing into his teammate after the Silverstone race in Great Britain. He has faced legal opposition from the Trident team after being fired for behavorial issues and lack of funds, but he will aim to put the episode behind him and focus on his career back in the United States. The 20-year-old has spent the past few seasons being a developmental driver for Haas F1 and racing in different Formula 1 feeder series. However, he had limited success and only found himself on one podium in 47 starts in GP3 and Formula 2.
Outlook for 2019
Coyne should feel pleased with Bourdais’ effort in 2018 to finish seventh in the championship, with a top-5 overall finish about as high as could be expected for a driver from a team with limited resources like Coyne. If Bourdais can avoid getting caught up in early-season wrecks after wins at street courses like in 2017, he could find himself in the championship hunt as they head to Indy.
Bourdais hasn’t had quite the same success on ovals since joining IndyCar in 2011, but he had his career-best qualifying at the Indy 500 last season of fifth. His best finish at Indy is only seventh place in 2015, so Bourdais’ focus should be adding his name to the historic list of Indy 500 winners in his ninth attempt at the race. While many discount his four CART/Champ Car titles, winning the biggest race of them all would give him more respect after winning at small teams the past few years.
Ferrucci needs to focus on staying out of the headlines for the wrong reasons in 2019 and learn from his teammate, who has shown the ability to pick up victories and get as much pace out of the car as possible. A few top-10 finishes and a good relationship with Bourdais could go a long way to change Ferrucci’s image and give the young American a fresh start.
The Verdict
I think Bourdais will finish ninth in the championship, just behind most drivers for the big-3 teams. Bourdais will probably pick up another win at a street course this season, so watch out for strong performances at St. Pete’s, Long Beach or Detroit. Ferrucci will most likely struggle in 2019 as a rookie, but he should have enough racing experience to put in a few top-10 performances at road courses. Expect a couple of crashes this season, with veterans describing him as a kid or hinting at his history of incidents.
Later this week- Preview #4: Arrow Schmidt Peterson Motorsports

