2019 IMSA Predictions: Acura Team Penske Will Be Top-Five Contenders

The 2018 IMSA Weathertech United Sportscar Championship season proved to be a rocky start for the two Acura Team Penske ARX-05 entries.

With the No. 7 entry of Ricky Taylor and Helio Castroneves capturing a race win at Mid Ohio, and the No. 6 Acura DPi of Dane Cameron and Juan Pablo Montoya averaging fifth place in the Prototype Championship battle — MotorMan Dan predicts that the Acura Team Penske organization will be among the top five contenders racing for the win throughout the 2019 schedule.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

For Acura Team Penske Lead Engineer, Jonathan Diuguid, he said on IMSA.com Wednesday, automotive reliability was among the team’s strengths heading into the 2018 IMSA season.

“We did significant mileage prior to the season and none of those issues arose during any of that. So, from a car-preparation standpoint, I think we relied a lot on the experience of the guys that worked here and have done this before to try to make sure we don’t repeat some of the mistakes that other teams have. I think we did a good job on that. That being said, everything can always get better.”

— Diuguid, IMSA.com

In the quest for improvement, Diuguid said Team Penske must minimize mistakes.

“As a group, everybody has a long list of notes on what we can improve,” Diuguid said. “By no means are we going to sit on our hands and look back and think we did everything correctly, because I think we still have a lot to learn.

“Just tying up loose ends from a team standpoint and a strategy standpoint and making sure we minimize mistakes. Even in the endurance races, you make one mistake and you’re out of the race. The (No.) 7 car this year at Daytona, they got into an accident when we were running in the top three and then that was their race and they couldn’t recover from that. So, I think just minimizing mistakes on all fronts, car preparation, drivers and engineering is the main goal.”

— Diuguid, IMSA.com

The initiation of a full-time motor racing team in any racing series, especially a team with a history of success like Team Penske making a return to sports car endurance racing, can be a rough mountain to conquer. Success in IMSA’s premier series, regardless of class, takes engineers who designs and fine tunes race cars that suit each co-driver’s style of driving while the drivers themselves, are trained mentally and physically in piloting their aerodynamic machines (of course money and sponsorship are vital in a team’s ability to perform). Engineers work day and night to produce hundreds of race cars every season for their drivers to hit the ground running from Daytona to Road Atlanta.

With the off season already in full swing, IMSA teams such as Team Penske, will be eager for on-track, left and right turning action at the Roar Before the Rolex 24 and beyond. Until then, a family Turkey dinner and spreading Christmas cheer is next on the agenda.