
How do the 21 full-time IndyCar road and street course drivers stack up against one another with six road and street course races now in the books in the 2018 season?
Of the eight races that have been contested so far in the 2018 IndyCar season, six of them have been contested on road or street courses. The eighth race of the season was the sixth road or street course race of the season. That race was the second race of the Chevrolet Dual in Detroit.
The second race of the Chevrolet Dual in Detorit was held on the 14-turn, 2.35-mile temporary street circuit on the streets of Belle Isle in Detroit, Michigan, and it was won by Andretti Autosport’s Ryan Hunter-Reay in his #28 Honda.
By winning the second race of the Chevrolet Dual in Detroit, which was the fourth street course race of the season, Hunter-Reay became the fourth different driver to win a street course race and the sixth different driver to win a road or street course race so far this season, proving just how competitive IndyCar is and just how much parity exists within the series.
How did the action in the sixth road or street course race of the 2018 IndyCar season affect the IndyCar Driver Road and Street Course Power Rankings? Here are the formulated IndyCar Road and Street Course Power Rankings and the non-formulated IndyCar Road and Street Course Power Rankings following Ryan Hunter-Reay’s victory and the rest of the action that took place in the second race of the Chevrolet Dual in Detroit.
To see how the formulated IndyCar Driver Road and Street Course Power Rankings are calculated, click here.