❌

Normal view

Yesterday β€” 20 February 2026Main stream

Mick Schumacher gaining confidence on ovals after Phoenix test

Motorsport photo

It was continued progress for Mick Schumacher at the Unser IndyCar Open Test at Phoenix Raceway.

The 26-year-old German had a busy two days, logging 222 laps (fifth most) over the three sessions on the 1-mile tri-oval. He ended up 18th overall on the combined speedchart with a flying lap of 171.076 mph (21.0408 seconds).

β€œIt was good,” Schumacher said. β€œWe got not as much running (on Wednesday) simply due to the weather conditions, but what we did was very effective and the changes were very interesting. Overall, I think we’re confident we know how we want to start our race weekend here, and take it from there.”

For Schumacher, who is embarking on his maiden campaign in the IndyCar Series behind the wheel of Rahal Letterman Lanigan’s No. 47 Honda, it was another step in his oval maturation.

Earlier this month, he received his oval initiation in a solo test day at Homestead-Miami Speedway, a 1.5-mile circuit with variable high banking. This time, in the Valley of the Sun, where he shared the track with his competitors for the first time, he noticed a considerable difference in navigating a proper line around the track.

β€œHere, it’s just very short,” Schumacher said. β€œThe lap comes quick. They’re high-g (g-force) corners, which are very interesting to drive.

β€œI feel like what I'm most interested in is to see how the other guys do it. Looking at them actually drive on track and see how they approach some of those corners is impressive to see and hopefully, we’ll be able to get there by the race weekend.”

Send more laps πŸ“© pic.twitter.com/h9ljBrfih4

β€” Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing (@RLLracing) February 18, 2026

With other cars on track, this was also the first time Schumacher worked his spotter, Jeff Troyer, who is known as one of the best in the business. Troyer has worked with a number of drivers such as Oriol Servia, Tomas Scheckter, the late Justin Wilson, along with spotting for Josef Newgarden during his first championship in 2017.

While there was limited side-by-side running during the test, the outing was still beneficial for Schumacher to learn the cadence of having a spotter provide feedback of on-track happenings.

In one instance, Troyer mentioned a close call for his rookie driver on Tuesday when he came up on a car quickly and tried to utilize the turn’s banking to brush off speed but quickly went off the racing line and skated up the track. Fortunately, Schumacher was able to keep it off the wall and continue on.

β€œI think what he did was he just kind of gave himself a little more room,” Troyer told Motorsport.com. β€œYou know, he just kind of let the car go up a little further up the track to scrub off some speed rather than drag the brakes.

β€œAnd when he did that, he got offline and he got pickup (tire marbles) on his tires. The car took off. He did keep it off the fence, but he got offline, he picked up some clag on the tires and he found out what it's like to get offline.”

All in all, though, Schumacher is appreciating the β€œnew challenge.”

β€œIt’s fun,” Schumacher said. β€œA new challenge is always good. As a team, we’re working really hard to get everything done and sorted for our first oval race that we’re going to have here in a couple weeks. Yeah, I think we’re in a good place to learn and get everything done for the first oval race.”

Read Also: Firestone prepared to take new right-front tire for Phoenix to WWTR Understanding IndyCar's new deal with Chevrolet and Honda

To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.

❌
❌