Indianapolis, IN
It takes a steady hand to be part of the Borg-Warner Trophy at the Indianapolis 500
INDIANAPOLIS – The magnificent Borg-Warner Trophy has stood the test of time since it was first introduced in 1935 and made its first appearance in Victory Lane at the Indianapolis 500 in 1936.
The winning driver that day was Louis Meyer, who captured his third Indy 500 on a hot, Indiana day and introduced another enduring tradition by requesting a cold bottle of buttermilk after completing 500 grueling miles on a race track that still had a brick surface on the frontstretch.
Eighty-eight years later, both traditions remain part of the historic legacy at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Meyer’s face, etched by a sculptor and cast in sterling silver, appears on the Borg-Warner Trophy as the first three-time winner. He is one of 75 drivers that have won the Indianapolis 500 and one of the 111 faces that appear on the impressive trophy.
3 September, 2015, Tryon, NC USA ©2015 Scott R LePage
The Borg-Warner Trophy — Scott R LePage for BorgWarner
There are two co-winners because the winning cars included relief drivers – LL Corum and Joe Boyer in 1924 and Floyd Davis and Mauri Rose in 1941.
From Ray Harroun, winner of the first Indianapolis 500 in 1911, to Josef Newgarden of Team Penske in 2024, the faces on the trophy are frozen in time from the way they looked on the year of their Indy 500 triumph.
There is one face on the trophy cast in gold and it honors Tony Hulman, the man who saved the Indianapolis 500 from extinction when he purchased the Indianapolis Motor Speedway from previous owner Eddie Rickenbacker on November 14, 1945, for $750,000.
Because of World War II, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway had been shuttered from 1942-45 and was in dilapidated condition.
Under the guidance of the Hulman-George family, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway became the world’s largest sporting arena and built the Indianapolis 500 into the world’s largest single-day sporting event.
When Roger Penske purchased the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2019, it ended 74 years of “stewardship” by the Hulman-George family. Penske has added his special touch to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, including many modern amenities to improve the fan experience.
In addition to owning the speedway, Penske is also the winningest team owner in Indianapolis 500 history with a record 20 victories, including Newgarden’s incredible drive in May.
In one of the more memorable Indy 500s in history, a race that was delayed by four hours because of rain and did not start until 15 minutes before 5 p.m. and ended at dusk, it was also historic.
Newgarden became just the sixth driver to win the Indianapolis 500 in back-to-back years.
The Indy 500 winner has defended his title 84 times with an average finish of 12.89 place. Only Wilbur Shaw (1939, 1940), Rose (1947, 1948), Bill Vukovich (1953, 1954), Al Unser (1970, 1971), Helio Castroneves (2001, 2002), and Newgarden, in 2023 and 2024, have won the Indy 500 back-to-back.
Helio Castroneves of Brazil hugs the Borg-Warner trophy during a photo session after winning his second race in a row, 27 May 2002, in the 86th running of Indy 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, IN. Castroneves becomes the first driver since Al Unser in 1971 to win back-to-back titles. AFP PHOTO/Jeff HAYNES (Photo by JEFF HAYNES / AFP) (Photo by JEFF HAYNES/AFP via Getty Images)
Helio Castroneves after winning his second-straight Indianapolis 500 in 2002 — AFP via Getty Images
Thanks to BorgWarner, NBCSports.com was able to get an exclusive, behind-the-scenes look at three key members that are part of this year’s Borg-Warner Trophy.
The one key element that all three share is a steady hand.
Newgarden needed a steady hand, and a coolness and calmness under pressure, to defeat Pato O’Ward of Arrow McLaren in a daring duel in the final laps of the 108th Indianapolis 500. He won the race with a brave move, taking the high line through Turn 3 to drive around O’Ward on the final lap to become the first repeat winner since Castroneves.
For sculptor William Behrends of Tryon, North Carolina, it takes a steady hand to first create a life-sized clay head image of Newgarden’s face and doing it again in miniature version using the lost-wax sculpting method. This method has been used since the 3rd millennium BC.
Once Behrends completes this process, Newgarden’s face is cast in sterling silver. That image is about the size of an egg.
Behrends attaches that sterling silver face onto the Borg-Warner Trophy.
This year was the 35th face of the Indianapolis 500 winner that was created by Behrends.
INDIANAPOLIS, IN – MAY 27: IndyCar driver Josef Newgarden after winning the 108th running of the Indianapolis 500 poses with the Borg Warner Trophy at the yard of bricks on May 27, 2024, at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Josef Newgarden stands next to the Borg-Warner Trophy on May 27, 2024 — Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
It also takes a steady hand for the engraver.
Since 2021, that responsibility has gone to Reid Smith, a hand engraver from the Ballantyne area of Charlotte, North Carolina.
Smith etches the important details that go underneath the winning driver’s face on the trophy, including year, name and the winner’s average speed in the race.
The Borg-Warner Trophy is a monument to history as it actually tells the story of the Indianapolis 500 through the faces and the engravings.
It takes a steady hand to win, sculpt and engrave this story.
THE ENGRAVER
There is a key element to the Borg-Warner Trophy on a silver panel right below the face that is equally important as the face itself.
Engraved on that panel is the winning driver’s name above the year and the average speed of the race.
It’s the information that identifies the face of the winner for each year on the Borg-Warner Trophy. It is engraved in immaculate detail just as the stone tablets were once etched to tell tales of history in previous millennia.
Smith is the man who engraves the important details on the Borg-Warner Trophy.
Reid Smith
Engraver Reid Smith — Bruce Martin Photo
For 35 years, he has mastered the art of hand engraving, including 20 years as a full-time engraver and the past 15 years working on special projects from his small studio in the Ballantyne area of Charlotte.
Ironically, the man who engraves one of the most famous trophies in sports, is not a sports fan.
In fact, when he was contacted by Behrends in 2021 to take over the role of engraving the key details on the Borg-Warner Trophy, he didn’t know what it was.
“Will Behrends called me on the phone when he was told to help find a craftsman to do the engraving,” Smith told NBCSports.com. “I’m not a sports fan at all, but it was the first time I remembered hearing the Borg-Warner Trophy and he says, ‘Are you familiar with that?’
“I was like, ‘No, not by name.’
“And he said, ‘Well, it’s the trophy that’s given to the Indy 500 winners.’
“Then I went, ‘Oh, wow, then I can kind of picture it.’
“And then he told me a little bit about it, but it was over several months of phone calls and emails.”
Watching games or races on TV isn’t Smith’s thing, but it was important to his father.
“I don’t care anything about college basketball, pro basketball, football,” Smith said. “I would be watching cooking shows. That is what I’m used to watching.
“My dad was a big jock and loved watching sports. It just never appealed to me.
“It’s just a very different lifestyle and culture that I’m used to because I’m not really into sports. It just has never been part of my life. I’ve always been more of the artistic- and dramatic-type loves. So, it was a very different world.”
Smith agreed to become the engraver for the Borg-Warner Trophy and his first assignment was a historic one as he etched the details of Castroneves’ fourth Indianapolis 500 victory in 2021. With the win, Castroneves became just the fourth, four-time winner of the Indy 500 joining Foyt, Unser and Rick Mears.
Smith became an engraver because of his father, who opened a trophy store after spending 24 years with the Sears corporation. When his father quit Sears and opened his own business, he specialized in trophies and promotional items.
“I fell in love with the art when I was 17 years old,” Smith said. “When my dad opened his trophy store, that’s where I began engraving, doing some machine engraving, and during the course of that learned that there was such a thing as hand engraving.
“There was an old man named Jim Buchanan who worked in uptown Charlotte, and I happened to visit his shop one day. I think I was picking up something for the family store and he asked, ‘Son, are you interested in engraving?’ I was like, ‘Well, I guess. I have worked the pantograph machine.’
“He said, ‘No, no, no. This is done by hand. Let me show you a thing or two.’
“I don’t know if you’ve ever seen the Norman Rockwell painting, it’s called the Watchmaker. It shows a little, red-headed boy watching the watchmaker work. I had red hair when I was little, and it just so much reminds me of me, maybe because it was just like the heavens opened and it was, ‘I want to do that. How do I learn?’”
Reid Smith engraves Josef Newgarden’s 2024 details on Borg-Warner Trophy
Reid Smith engraves Josef Newgarden’s 2024 details on Borg-Warner Trophy — Bruce Martin Photo
It takes a steady hand, and a detailed eye, to engrave because it is so meticulous and so precise.
“There is art, there is craft, there is a lot that goes into it with working with metals,” Smith continued. “It’s like any other love or any other craft you learn by doing and by continuing to do. It’s one of those things, one of those strange things that you just continually run into roadblocks and just problems that happen, but for some reason, that love stays there and wants you to overcome that.”
During his 35-year career in the engraving industry, Smith has worked on many projects, primarily antiques and silver jewelry. But there have been some items that require hand engraving because they can’t be done on a machine.
It would simply be far too risky.
The process of engraving the winner’s information on the base of the Borg-Warner Trophy happens before the winner’s face is added. The base of the trophy is brought to Smith’s studio in Charlotte by BorgWarner representative Steve Shunck.
Smith takes the base into his engraving studio and begins a process that takes between six-to-seven hours to complete.
“It starts when we place it on my workbench when he takes it out of the case, and I end up turning it upside-down and remove the six screws that are on the bottom of it and take the bottom off of it,” Smith explained. “A lot of people would be interested to know that there’s lots of goodies and memorabilia that’s stored inside the base.
“I do that then I move it to my workbench and cradle it on an — it’s basically, a flannel pillowcase that’s filled with rice and it can cradle it but yet hold it firmly enough for me to move it around.
“Most of the job is involved with just manipulating the trophy itself. There’s a lot of turning and twisting so my back muscles get pretty shredded over the day. You know it’s probably 50- or 60-pound base.
“It’s significant weight and I just manipulate it around.”
Engraver Reid Smith working on the base of the Borg-Warner Trophy
Engraver Reid Smith working on the base of the Borg-Warner Trophy — Bruce Martin Photo
Smith then waxes the surface so it will accept a pencil line. He then hand-draws the design, or in this case, where the duplicate winner’s information will go.
Because it is the same driver as last year, he can make a “pull” and transfer the design to this year’s panel.
He then uses different hand tools to cut out the design. That is followed by cleaning off the waxy film and adding the final touches.
Because this is his first time as an engraver that the same driver has won the Indianapolis 500 in back-to-back years, Smith was able to use a “pulling process” of lifting the engraved name from last year using a mixture a block powder called “bone black.”
It fills in the previous cuts where a layer of Scotch Tape is applied. Smith rubs that down and can lift the inscription with the tape, similar to the way a forensic scientist can lift fingerprints.
He waxes the surface with a mixture of half Bee’s Wax and half mutton tallow – a fancy word for “sheep fat.”
The “Pulling Process”
Engraver Reid Smith and the “Pulling Process” — Bruce Martin Photo
Smith uses a variety of tools to engrave, including calipers to get the proper measurements using some mathematical equations to make sure it is centered perfectly.
He also has a tool that can help move the metal in case a mistake is made, and then rub down the surface to fill in the area that is repaired.
“I’ve often told people the first rule of engraving is do it correctly, so you do all you can to try to avoid problems, but they do come up and it’s part of the work and it’s part of the art and skill of it,” Smith said. “I think if you practice enough, you can do whatever you want to do — and even through all the hardships of learning how to engrave. I initially learned the hammer-and-chisel method where I used to have a vice mounted on the corner of the bench, and it would probably be really hard to do the hammer and chisel.
“I could do it. If the power went out — now this machine is basically, just a little jackhammer inside of a hand piece, but it’s imitating the exact same, to the exact same motions. And I’ve had that happen before, like when the power went out and you’ve got a job to do and you got to make it happen.
“I’ve changed my tools. I’m a professional. Sometimes you just got to make it happen.”
Reid Smith’s finished engraved panel — Steve Shunck Photo
For a man who admits he isn’t a sports fan, since 2021, he has made time to watch one sporting event during the year.
It’s the Indianapolis 500, now that Smith, himself, is part of the history of the Borg-Warner Trophy.
“It is quite humbling,” Smith said. “The first time I did it in 2021, I remember it hit me after I did it, nobody can take that away from me.
“I don’t want to make it about me, I don’t want to make it bigger than this, but that was a big deal being able to work on the Borg-Warner Trophy.
“And just knowing that I have done something, and nobody can say that I didn’t.
“I’m just tickled that BorgWarner trust me and that it’s part of history. Simple as that.”
THE SCULPTOR
Nestled away in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, near the North Carolina-South Carolina state line, is the small community of Tryon, North Carolina. It bills itself as the “Friendliest City in the South.”
Up on one of the mountain roads is the home of Will Behrends, a noted sculptor who has created larger-than-life statues of former U.S. vice presidents that are in the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. He has also built statues of some of baseball’s greatest players, from Willie Mays in San Francisco to Tom Seaver of the New York Mets.
Since 1990, Behrends has created the face of the year’s Indianapolis 500 winner that goes onto the Borg-Warner Trophy. His first was Arie Luyendyk in 1990 and his latest was Newgarden in 2024.
Somehow, Behrends had to create an image of the same driver that won the Indy 500 in 2023 and make sure it didn’t look the same.
Dec. 2, 2024, Tryon, N.C. — William Behrends attaches the silver image of the 2024 Indianapolis 500 winner, Joseph Newgarden, to the Borg-Warner Trophy at his studio.
Side-by-Side Josef Newgarden from 2023 and from 2024 on the Borg-Warner Trophy — SCOTT R LEPAGE for BorgWarner
“Starting with Helio Castroneves, I decided that what I would do with back-to-back winners is just start from scratch, not even look at last year’s winner and just create the image all over again because I think there’s a number of different ways you can portray that image,” Behrends told NBCSports.com. He was referring to the only other time he has created the face of the same driver two years in a row.
“I take it as a new challenge and start from scratch,” Behrends continued. “In the case of Josef, I haven’t put the two images side by side, so, I just don’t know. There will be differences, but I haven’t looked at them both in the same frame yet.
“I think this one, the new one, is strong and we’ll just see how it looks next to the one from last year.”
By creating a face in 2023 and having a chance to do another one of the same subject in 2024, it gives Behrends an opportunity to fine-tune it.
“I have high standards for myself, and I try to do my very best every year, but I also am a perpetual optimist that I think I can do a little bit better than I did last year,” Behrends said. “And so that’s my attitude going into this. So, let’s see if I can improve on last year.
“That’s what I tried to do.”
Sculptor William Behrends working on Josef Newgarden’s “Clay Head” — Scott R. LePage for BorgWarner
Behrends described what changes he saw in one year on Newgarden’s face.
“He has such a strong facial structure, and I just wanted to emphasize the brightness of his smile,” Behrends said. “I tried to really pump those things up, I think.
“The things that when I look at Josef and when I saw him, right after he had won this year’s race, those are the things that I really tried to pump up on this one.”
One of the highlights of the IndyCar offseason is the annual trip for the winning driver of that year’s Indy 500 to Behrends’ studio in Tryon.
The first driver to do come to Behrends’ studio for a live study was Juan Pablo Montoya after he won the 2015 Indianapolis 500. Every driver since, including Takuma Sato during the COVID year of 2020, has come to meet with Behrends, sit in the chair and have the sculptor make subtle changes in the clay face that is a key part of the process.
This year, however, was different.
Landslide on US21 in Grayson County from Hurricane Helene
Hurricane Helene aftermath — Tim Pennington /Getty Images
Hurricane Helene ravaged the Western North Carolina area on September 27. Newgarden was scheduled to come to Tryon on October 4, but with widespread damage from the hurricane, many of the roads were closed and the area was without power.
The decision was made to cancel the live study and Behrends had to rely on a series of photographs taken the morning after Newgarden’s victory in the 108th Indianapolis 500.
“We did well, but on the date that Josef was due to come here we had no power then, so it just was not possible to do that,” Behrends explained. “It was more difficult.
“That decision was made really at the last minute. We tried to do it, and we really could have cobbled together something to have him here. But with so many people suffering around us, it just didn’t seem like the thing to do.
“So, we had to go to Plan B, and that was the old plan of doing it all from photographs, without a sitting. But by that time, I already had the full-size model paired from photographs that we took the day after this year’s race of him. I used those photographs to prepare that life-size image.
“Having the driver here, it really helps my process. It’s spending time with them face-to-face and talking with them, that helps me a really great deal. It’s hard to define how, but it really does.
“Starting in 2015 when Juan Pablo Montoya came here, and since then, it’s really been something we really look forward to.
“I was helped somewhat with the fact that I did him last year. I think that helped me a good bit, but it took me a little longer, had to work a little harder on it, but the end result I think is good.”
The good news for Behrends was he had the clay head essentially finished before Hurricane Helene hit. By being ahead of the game, it helped the process continue without Newgarden being present.
Behrends and his wife, Charlotte, helped several relief efforts in the area that sent food and supplies to the hardest hit regions, including Chimney Rock, Lake Lure, Burnsville, Black Mountain and Asheville.
Tryon did not have a chance to celebrate Newgarden’s victory, though, because of the hurricane. It’s usually a very big day for the community when the Indy 500 winner comes to town and his name is put up on the marquee at the Tryon Theater. It serves as a photo backdrop that features the Borg-Warner Trophy and the Indy 500 winning driver.
“Oh, it was a real letdown,” Behrends admitted. “You know that two to three days has become one of our favorite times of year. It just really is like a celebration for us because my daughter and son-in-law and our two granddaughters come, as they did last year and meet Josef and they are starstruck, of course.
“We really enjoy it so much, a perfect time of year around here to do something like that. And the same in the town when we have the pictures taken in front of the theater, the people, you know the people of the town come up and everything and an unusual kind of thing to happen in a little town like this so we get a lot of curious people coming up and it’s a lot of fun.
“It’s our two little days of celebrity that we get to enjoy.”
Newgarden’s sculpted face in 2024 is the 35th Indy 500 winner that Behrends has created.
Newgarden has a chance to become the first driver in Indianapolis 500 history to win the race three years in a row in the 109th running on May 25, 2025.
Behrends would like to play a role in that history.
“Well, just for that sake, I would love to see it happen because it would be such an impressive first,” Behrends admitted. “But from my own perspective in my work, I would love the challenge. I would do as I did this year, try to find something new and something fresh there and go for it.
“I would love it.”
Just three days before the Borg-Warner Trophy unveiling at a special ceremony at COhatch Stables in Indianapolis, Shunck arrived with the base of the Borg-Warner Trophy. Behrends, who received the sterling silver casting of Newgarden’s face five days earlier, completed the process by attaching the casting onto the base.
Dec. 2, 2024, Tryon, N.C. — William Behrends attaches the silver image of the 2024 Indianapolis 500 winner, Joseph Newgarden, to the Borg-Warner Trophy at his studio.
William Behrends attaches the sterling silver image of 2024 Indianapolis 500 winner Josef Newgarden to the Borg-Warner Trophy on December 2 — SCOTT R LEPAGE Photo for BorgWarner
Once that was done, Shunck made a rocket run from Tryon to Indianapolis, by car, and arrived at 2:08 a.m. on December 3.
The base was reattached to the Borg-Warner Trophy as it was prepared for the special ceremony the following day.
When the winner’s face is unveiled on the Borg-Warner Trophy, it’s the most significant day for the Indy 500 outside of the on-track events during the Month of May.
“It’s exciting,” Behrends admitted. “It’s a really sense of finishing something that, on my part, there are many steps in the process.
“It’s a six-month process for me and for it to come to completion and successfully is just really gratifying to me and happy to have another one in the books.”
THE DRIVER
A steady hand is a requirement to be an Indianapolis 500 winner, as well as incredible skill, bravery, the ability to think in milliseconds and maybe an extra-large dose of courage.
The drivers in the Indianapolis 500 are fighter pilots. In previous generations when innovation came rapidly, often ahead of safety, they displayed the same attitude as test pilots. They willingly climbed into machines with no guarantee of coming back and had the ability to look danger in the eye and never flinch.
Luckily, safety improvements give these high-speed gladiators a chance to have a lengthy and successful occupation.
When it comes to success, Newgarden is in the prime of his career.
At 33, he has 31 career IndyCar wins, including two Indianapolis 500 victories, and is a two-time NTT IndyCar Series champion, in 2017 and 2019.
Team Penske driver Josef Newgarden (2) smiles for a photo with his wife Ashley and his son Kota on Monday, May 27, 2024, after winning the 108th running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Josef Newgarden (left), son Kota (middle) and wife Ashley (left) on Monday, May 27, 2024 after winning the 108th Indianapolis 500 — Grace Hollars/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK
Blonde and handsome with his wife, Ashley, who was once a character princess at Disney World, and a young son named Kota, the driver from Nashville is the All-American Boy at Team Penske.
On December 4 at COhatch Stables, a shared workplace, social and family space in Indianapolis, the stage was set, and the spotlight was on the Borg-Warner Trophy. A black curtain covered the base and would be removed at the appropriate time to reveal Newgarden’s latest image.
“Today, we’ll see for the first time Will Behrend’s artwork and what it looks like on this beautiful trophy,” Indianapolis Motor Speedway President Doug Boles said to the crowd of media and other dignitaries invited to the unveiling. “There is nothing more iconic than this trophy, but what’s really cool about the relationship is that it just isn’t about the trophy.
“It’s about the relationship we have with BorgWarner and the work that they’ve done with the cars that are actually competing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway each year through the turbochargers and just the technology that the relationship with BorgWarner brings to the NTT IndyCar Series and the Indianapolis 500.”
Michelle Collins is BorgWarner’s global director of marketing and communications and spoke of the importance of this event.
“This is one of my favorite days of the year outside of the race and, of course, when we give the winning team owner and driver their Baby Borgs,” Collins said. “It’s just such an honor for me. I feel really honored to be part of this tradition, to uphold it, to still do things in the way that they were done when this trophy was created.
“We hand-engrave it. We have a sculpture that does the actual face. We’re not using any 3D printing. We’re not using any type of machinery. It’s just good, old-fashioned hard work, and I think that ties in so nicely just with all of the teams and the drivers.
BorgWarner Global Director Marketing and Communications Michelle Collins — Rick McIntyre Photo for BorgWarner
“A lot of people have asked me, ‘Hey, well Josef won last year. Are you just reusing the same face? Is Will Behrends just reusing the same face?’ No.
“If you know Will, he is a consummate professional and perfectionist. So, the day after the race, he started like he did last year for the very first time and went through every single step. And for BorgWarner as well, we treated it the same way. We’re not going to do anything different just because Josef has won before. In fact, we’re right behind him encouraging him to win three times in a row next year.”
As Newgarden was called to the stage, two videos were played, including one from Behrends and another from Castroneves, the last back-to-back Indy 500 winner before Newgarden.
Before the wraps came off, Newgarden described the importance of having a steady hand, cool composure and a calculating approach to his race-winning pass on the final lap of this year’s Indy 500.
“If I really think back to it, it is so vivid in my mind, ‘like this is an OK run. It’s not a great run and he is blocking to the inside,’” Newgarden recalled. “I was like, ‘I can’t wait though.’
“So, then I went to the outside and I thought, ‘We can do this.’ And then about midway through turning in, I thought, ‘I really hope I clear him, and he doesn’t hit me.’
“I tried to just give him enough room so that I had the excuse being like, ‘you have room, so what, don’t hit me.’ And he didn’t.
“I spoke about that afterwards. I thought Pato was extremely clean in the way he raced me. I tried to be clean in the way I raced him. I tried to give him just enough room to have his part of the corner, and it just worked out.
“I think it’s hard to win that race without the great car. Indy just really defines the team aspect, and the car is such a big part of that, and my car was so good on that day. So, it gave me the confidence to make that move. It’s not just, ‘oh, it was a brave move.’ I had a really good car that was capable of doing it, and I think that made a lot of the difference, too.”
Josef Newgarden looks at his latest face on the Borg-Warner Trophy as BorgWarner’s Michelle Collins watches — Rick McIntyre for BorgWarner
Finally, it was time to take off the wrap and reveal Newgarden’s face.
“Oh, wow,” he exclaimed as he inspected the image. “There are more wrinkles, yes.
“The hair is a little different.”
“I think you actually look better in 2024,” Boles said.
“Yeah, I agree,” Newgarden admitted. “I like the hair a little better. You know, you don’t always get the same thing.
“Oh, yeah, it does look better in 2024. Gosh, Will had a good day in 2024.
“That’s really cool. I do love that the details are different, and you can tell I was a little different on the day. I had a different night from when I won the first time.
“So very cool.”
Afterwards, Newgarden had a chance to give more detail to NBCSports.com.
“He’s capturing it in time,” Newgarden said of Behrends’ latest effort. “So, I think I saw a different night before, you know, and a different morning.
“I was a little more fresh, the second time around. I think I had a more professional evening the second time around than the first. And that certainly comes through.
“And there’s a little bit of age difference there, too. I think the year still shows through and probably a little more wrinkles, but he did a great job. Will is just an incredible artist, sculptor and, you know, I always enjoy getting to see what he does in his process It’s really painstaking the detail that he goes through.”
Having a face on the Borg-Warner Trophy is more than just honoring the winner of the Indianapolis 500, it’s honoring the history of courage, bravery and human achievement in one of the most unique sporting events on earth.
“I think the Indy 500 is what can immortalize you,” Newgarden said. “I think even if you don’t win it, you can still have an immensely significant career. And that’s what speaks to the difficulty of Indy.
“People that probably should have won it, never win it and then there’s some people that win it four times, you know, it’s just a tough race to get right.
“There’s nothing like it. There is no win that compares. It really is the top of the mountain, and you feel that when you finally do win it.”
Josef Newgarden admiring the Borg-Warner Trophy — RICK MCINTYRE for BorgWarner
For a race that began in 1911 and continues 114 years later, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is the Mount Olympus of motorsports and BorgWarner is the caretaker of the history of achievement at the Indianapolis 500.
“They are a custodian of the event, of the traditions,” Newgarden said. “The trophy is such an iconic part of it. And they keep that cherished and operating at the level it should. It is one of the things that makes Indy so great and the Indy 500 what it is.
“We are indebted to BorgWarner and not only their collaboration on the performance side and giving us great turbochargers, but it’s the history, it’s the tie-in together, it’s protecting what’s important about this event and they do it so well.”
Two faces, side-by-side, but subtly different, frozen in time.
“It’s just something to cherish, this event,” Newgarden said. “And you really understand the significance of it, and why it is what it is. BorgWarner is a huge component of that. They protect the sacredness of the race’s traditions and certainly the Borg-Warner trophy is a big part of that.
“And so, nights like tonight and being able to go through all these little processes that you get to experience as the winner is something that will never get old.”
Follow Bruce Martin on Twitter at @BruceMartin_500
Indianapolis, IN
Ciara Myst is Indianapolis’ shapeshifting superstar on social media, too
Indianapolis drag queen Ciara Myst sits down with IndyStar to chat
Indianapolis drag queen Ciara Myst sits down with IndyStar to talk about her latest projects, creative work, and what she has coming up next
This story is part of IndyStar’s ongoing series highlighting local influencers. Got a favorite you want to see featured? Nominate them here.
In reality TV’s modern era, the end of the competition is far from the end of the game. The real work for contestants begins outside the TV bubble, phone back in hand and internet access restored.
Social media is where reality TV contestants like Ciara Myst can hit their stride. Indianapolis’ “shapeshifting superstar” finished 11th on season 18 of “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” but Myst, a Purdue University graduate and Indianapolis resident with roots in Indy Drag Theater, has since parlayed deep Indy roots and momentum from the show into steady work and new projects capped with a headlining performance at this year’s Indy Pride.
Ciara Myst, 32, is a drag artist who gained a national profile as a contestant on the most recent season of “Drag Race,” the Emmy-winning reality competition show where drag performers contend for the title of America’s next drag superstar. With a lifelong love of drawing, comic books and horror movies and a background as a special effects makeup artist, Myst began experimenting with drag while still living in Atlanta. She moved to Indianapolis during the pandemic and quickly became a staple in the local drag scene, building her resume for years before getting the “Drag Race” nod.
With a lifelong love of drawing, comic books and horror movies and a background as a special-effects makeup artist, Myst first tried drag in 2019 while living in Atlanta and began pursuing it seriously in 2021. She moved to Indianapolis during the pandemic and quickly became a fixture in the local drag scene.
Since the show, Ciara Myst has ramped up her already-active Instagram account (@the_ciara_myst) and YouTube channel (@the_ciara_myst) taking fans behind the scenes of her drag. She sat down with IndyStar to dish on her “Drag Race” experience, her rules for handling online hate and why she’s sticking around in Indianapolis for a while.
This interview has been condensed and edited for length and clarity.
Question: How did you get started in drag? What were those early days like?
Answer: I started as what you might call a “bedroom queen.” I was on YouTube doing a series called “Dabbling in Drag” where I was, every month, building a look head to toe, curating and art directing a photoshoot as a way to propel my own artistry and challenge myself beyond just, “What could I do if and when I want to do this?” Having that schedule and challenging myself to do something new every month is really what built Ciara Myst aesthetically from the ground up.
It wasn’t until all of the Covid bans were lifted that we started to convene with the community here. Being a transplant from Atlanta meant we didn’t know a lot of the folks in the queer community yet, so we were eager to make those types of connections. It was through an organization called Indy Drag Theater that my partner and I auditioned for “Into the Woods.” That was the gateway for us to meet so many other artists in the community as well as for me to start my performance career here. I had been a performer on stage my whole life, so that was not something new to me. That unlocked the ability for me to engage with the community at large. Then it was performing at Almost Famous, it was hosting gigs. From there it was just sort of, “I’m really loving this. How can I continue to expand on this?”
You’re consistently active on social media, and you post plenty of behind-the-scenes content and fun extras. Where do you get the inspiration for these ideas, and do you consider yourself an influencer?
I love creating content. I’ve always loved YouTube. I’m a millennial, so YouTube was kind of the bread and butter of what we were doing with the little handi-cam, just throwing videos together. That aspect of capturing art for fun and sharing it with others was something I always enjoyed. Starting drag, I was like, “This is a place where I can do this.” It became sort of my first stage.
The title “influencer” feels a little strange to me. For folks out there who want to be an influencer, just be yourself. Any influence that I have on other folks is just a byproduct of my artistry and being who I am. I don’t want to persuade people to go and buy something.
As social media and content creation and influencing have all become these career paths, drag queen trajectory has also found itself on that path. In order to have longevity, there is now an entire digital platform that most people have to curate. Historically, it was bar performances or theater venue or cabaret or whatever. The digital audience is just a new avenue for folks to perform.
We have to talk about “Drag Race.” How was your experience on the show? Was it strange to see yourself on TV in real time?
“Drag Race” was some of the most fun I’ve ever had in my life. It sounds so cheesy, hokey pokey to say that, but I think so many people assume that you go on this TV show and you either come home a winner or you come home traumatized. For me, I was neither. It was like summer camp in the best way possible. To go no phones, which was a gift, and create art every day with a group of artists that I adore and that have become my best friends was such a special, unique experience.
When you go to “Drag Race,” you relinquish a lot of control in the challenges and what you’re doing, in how you’re going to be presented to the world and how the world is going to react to you. Those are three layers that you sacrifice control, and those things define how the world is going to receive you. It’s a very unique, liberating and challenging experience to say, “I have to be comfortable with whatever happens on this, and I have to be myself no matter what.”
“Drag Race” is an exciting opportunity, (but) it is a gig. We (the season 18 cast) approached it like, “Yes, this is a great platform. It is an exciting opportunity. It is also a job. It’s a gig.” Folks maybe assume that you go on this show and your whole life is changed and you move to New York, you move to LA, you’re in Hollywood and “Drag Race” is giving you all of these things. Those people worked to get those things. “Drag Race” was just an introduction for us.
“Drag Race” comes with a very engaged fanbase. How did you handle all the sudden attention online as your season was airing, specifically negative comments?
Indianapolis Drag queen Ciara Myst shares her top three accounts to follow
Indianapolis Drag queen Ciara Myst shares her top three accounts to follow in a video highlighting her favorite creators and influences
You have to create very intentional boundaries. And you will not do that. You will break your boundary, and then you will get your fi-fi’s hurt, and then you’re like, “That’s why I needed to create that boundary.” We’re excited by the idea of like, “Oh my gosh, I want to hear what people think about this.” There is an overwhelming amount of positive, but the loudest voices online are the ones who are passionately disgruntled, who have access to a computer and a lot of free time and need to turn in their homework.
There was an excitement when this project was coming out, and then very quickly you are exposed to the negative comments about you or anything that you do. It can be very discouraging, so a lot of us talked about ways to create digital boundaries around what types of comments could come into our feed, what types of comments we could see online, what types of websites could we access. That way, when you’re kind of lonely and you’re like, “What did people think about this?” Your internet is like, “Baby, we set the boundary months ago. You don’t need to look for this.”
I treat my internet like my house. If you want to come to my house, knock on my door and tell me, “I hate that thing that you did, and I think you’re ugly and terrible at makeup.” That’s pretty bold. Most people feel very safe to do that in a digital way. Don’t come to my house and leave hate mail. Don’t graffiti my wall. Don’t leave negativity here because I don’t have room for it.
Your drag is very intertwined with political activism. Was this always a goal for you?
In school, we were always taught to be aware of politics. It wasn’t something that I was necessarily as staunchly involved in as I am now. I think the first segue was coming into my queerness and realizing that there is an importance to your community, to your fellow people that comes being queer. A lot of that is respect for the history of where we come from and the people who fought for access to things that I can take advantage of now.
I think drag just doubled down on it. When I think about the people who were the pillars of the community or the pioneers, it is the trans people who come before us. It is the drag queens. It is the drag artists. Drag offers the community a reason to gather. When it comes to spreading information, sharing education, sharing resources, drag shows were the place to do that. I knew if I was to participate in the art form of drag, it couldn’t just be to be the most beautiful person in the room — that’s just a given. It had to be a commitment to championing the causes of queerness and being an ally to all other marginalized communities.
Reality TV contestants often move to New York or Los Angeles after their shows air in search of bigger opportunities, but you’ve remained in Indianapolis. Why?
BeelzeBabe is a fabulous king here in Indy, and he said, “They already have it in New York. They already have it in LA. Why should the people of Indiana or wherever not have access to amazing art just because they don’t live in one of those hubs?” I thought that was such an astute answer because people here crave creativity. They crave art.
The philosophical answer is that we need great art here in Indiana, and I would be humbled to be a part of that. And I’ve been so privileged to participate in amazing art here already. The practical answer is we’re just a hop skip out of “Drag Race.” People think you go on TV and you’re a millionaire. That reality is not true. We are still building and growing our work and our business. Where that takes us is to be determined, but the home right now for us is Indianapolis, and I love that. I have a drag family here. I have an amazing community here. To choose to take a chance and move on the “what if” of where we go doesn’t feel as enticing as somebody who’s in their 30s.
You’ve said you want to help revitalize the Indianapolis drag scene. Have you seen any progress, and do you think your “Drag Race” run is helping the city gain traction?
In decades’ past, we had many other avenues for drag to happen in Indianapolis. That’s simply not the case anymore.
There are so many systemic things that need to adjust in order to make Indianapolis a sustainable hub for drag artistry. We’re at such an interesting crossroads where there’s so much drag but there’s so few places for people to consume it. The younger folks who are excited about drag on TV, they’re not as excited about going out in public, or going to a bar and paying cover as they are gathering with their friends and watching it on TV. Live drag, local drag is suffering, especially under the current climate.
I was hopeful that we would see more excitement come out of my TV appearance, and we did see that. That’s the change that brought me a lot of joy. There were more folks who found pride in Indiana than maybe there were before. We saw people have that passion and enthusiasm when they knew there were Hoosiers on TV. The trick is how to capture that all the time. It’s not just the Hoosiers on TV, it’s the Hoosiers who are performing Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday at your local bar.
Fast facts: Who is @the_ciara_myst?
Name: Ciara Myst
Age: 32
Hometown: Indianapolis
Content: Drag, makeup, fashion, pop culture
Favorite Indy spots: Tsaocaa, Beauty 4 U, Monon Trail
Three local creators she recommends: Indy Drag Theater (@theindydragtheater), Haus of Diva, Pancha’s Penthaus (@penthaus69)
Advice to potential creators: Be yourself, and don’t give any energy to the negative comments.
Contact IndyStar Pop Culture Reporter Heather Bushman at hbushman@indystar.com. Follow her on X @hmb_1013.
Indianapolis, IN
Indiana veteran completes 250-mile march for semiquincentennial
LAWRENCE, Ind. (WISH) — An Indiana Gulf War veteran on Thursday said a special American Legion challenge shows there is nothing Americans can’t do as a team.
Ron Patterson served in the 82nd Airborne Division during Operation Desert Storm and is now the commander of the Indiana Department of the American Legion. For the past few months, he has been marching toward a total of 250 miles while wearing the infantry backpack he carried in the Army, adding weight each time. He said it’s his contribution to the American Legion’s national USA 250 Challenge.
“The thing I dreaded the most (when I was in the military) was the ruck march,” he said. “There’s a lot of pain when you do a ruck march. It made me think about the pain that our veterans with children in the household, if they’re struggling financially, what kind of pain are they going through? So this ruck, the pain that I feel in my shoulders, kind of reminds me of the service of people before me and the service of the people who are going to come after me.”
Launched last July, the USA 250 Challenge involves activities centered around physical fitness, mental wellness and community service. Donations support the Legion’s Veterans & Children Foundation, which provides one-time financial help to veterans who have children and are facing difficulty meeting basic needs. Patterson said he has already exceeded his personal goal of raising $20,000 for the foundation.
On Thursday afternoon, News 8 accompanied Patterson as he completed the final mile of his ruck march challenge, with an additional 22 pounds of weight added to represent the 22 veterans who die by suicide every day. Patterson’s route took him from the Legion’s Indiana Department headquarters into a neighborhood that was once home to officers’ housing when Fort Benjamin Harrison was still active.
Besides the monetary donations, Patterson said he has recruited new members for the Legion, the American Legion Auxiliary and Sons of the American Legion.
“Some of the great things I learned on the USA 250 Challenge, people are interested in what you’re doing,” he said. “When you’re engaging people like that, they’re genuinely interested in what you do and what the American Legion does.”
As America’s semiquincentennial nears and participants complete challenges, he said he wants Americans to understand just how truly exceptional this country is.
“America is a strong, amazing country. And there’s nothing we can’t do if we work together as a team,” he said. “So I feel that this Legion USA 250 really brought the Legion back together to work as a team to accomplish great goals.”
Patterson said the challenge runs through Independence Day, so you still have time to donate or to complete your own USA 250 Challenge.
Indianapolis, IN
Hogsett’s former chief of staff quickly took job at major city contractor
This article was produced as part of a series that focuses on ethical concerns within Mayor Joe Hogsett’s administration. It was reported in a collaboration between Mirror Indy and IndyStar and is not available for republication in other media. For questions, see Mirror Indy’s content republishing guidelines.
Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett’s former top deputy in city government is now working at an engineering firm run by major Hogsett donors that has received contracts worth up to $62 million since the mayor took office.
The top Hogsett official, former chief of staff Dan Parker, signed many of those contracts himself while he led the Department of Public Works from 2017 to 2022.
Parker’s move to American Structurepoint, about a month after leaving his job as Hogsett’s No. 2 at the end of 2025, comes as one of the company’s contracts with the city is facing scrutiny for being too expensive.
An analysis by IndyStar and Mirror Indy found the Indianapolis-based firm’s tens of millions of dollars worth of deals make it one of the largest city contractors over the past decade.
Meanwhile, the company’s political action committee and two of its executives, President Cash Canfield and Senior Executive Vice President Greg Henneke, are major donors to Hogsett. Collectively since 2014, about $368,000 in campaign donations have come from those executives, one of their spouses and a political action committee run by Structurepoint.
Multiple ethics experts said Parker’s move to Structurepoint raises questions about potential conflicts of interest.
Jeff Hauser, founder of the national ethics watchdog group the Revolving Door Project, said it’s “definitely concerning” that Parker began working for a top city contractor and major donors to the mayor shortly after leaving his high-profile role as a public servant.
“There is a concern about how he might have been behaving in anticipation of leaving government service,” Hauser said. He compared it to dating: “If you are planning to ask somebody out in the future, that could impact your behavior before you actually ask them out.”
It’s unclear whether Parker is working on city-related matters for Structurepoint. Neither the company, nor Parker, responded to repeated emails, calls and questions sent by IndyStar/Mirror Indy. Parker said “no comment” twice when approached by a reporter at an Indy Chamber event on June 23 before walking away.
A new IndyStar/Mirror Indy investigation has also raised ethical questions surrounding Parker’s role in how city contracts were awarded. The reporting found Hogsett’s campaign fundraiser arranged for donors’ project wish lists to be hand-delivered to Parker when he led DPW. Within months, some of the firms received contracts included on the wish lists. The deals, approved by the city’s Board of Public Works, were signed by Parker.
If Parker’s working on city contracts at Structurepoint, his public-sector experience could give the company an unfair advantage, said Danielle Caputo, senior legal counsel for ethics at the Washington, D.C.-based Campaign Legal Center.
Because Parker — a longtime Hogsett ally and former Indiana Democratic Party chairman — understands the inner workings of the Hogsett administration, he could know how to appeal to decision-makers with whom he recently had close professional relationships, Caputo said. In at least one major city, San Francisco, even communication between the city and Parker at this juncture would be forbidden to prevent favoritism.
“You don’t want a contract to be accepted just because the deputy mayor … is best friends or was close work confidants with the person who’s now choosing where the contract goes,” Caputo said. “That’s not how the government works and that’s not what’s in the best interest of the public.”
City lacks some revolving door guardrails
It’s not uncommon for elected officials and past government employees to accept lucrative roles in the private sector, experts noted. But many experts recommend cooling-off periods that prohibit former public officials and employees from quickly cashing in on their experience in private-sector roles with government contractors.
The city’s ethics code doesn’t require employees to wait to take a job with companies they oversaw or awarded contracts to while in their government role, despite Hogsett campaigning on such an idea in 2015 during his first mayoral bid.
The city’s rules do, however, prevent former employees from working on “particular matters” such as public works projects, economic development deals and other transactions in which they were “personally and substantially” involved.
But city attorneys can waive these ethics restrictions for past employees if their involvement is found not to be “adverse” to the city.
Hogsett spokesperson Aliya Wishner said Parker has not received a waiver, but she didn’t answer several questions about the situation, including when Parker informed the mayor he was applying for a job at Structurepoint and whether he was then shielded from decisions involving the firm. She also did not say whether he’d sought a waiver.
“The city does not control where city employees go after they leave the enterprise and cannot prohibit people from working where they want,” Wishner said in a written statement. “Nothing in the ethics ordinance prohibits former employees generally from earning a living in the private sector following their employment with the city-county, with the exception of activities to lobby the city-county for a period of one year.”
State law is more restrictive than the city’s ordinance. It requires a one-year cooling-off period before state employees can work for or lobby a company if they negotiated or held an administrative role over a contract involving that company while the employee worked for the state. That restriction applies to former state employees, officers and special state appointees, who may seek a waiver from the state ethics commission.
Hauser said the goal of such ethics rules isn’t to stop people from making a living in the private sector. It’s about protecting taxpayers.
“There are many construction and engineering jobs in the world that are not connected to government service,” Hauser said. “The question is whether this person should be involved in a firm that is so focused on public contracting.”
It’s not the first time former Hogsett administration workers have quickly gone on to work for city contractors.
IndyStar and Mirror Indy previously reported that Hogsett’s first chief of staff, Thomas Cook, did not seek a waiver after leaving the city in 2020. He went to work for a Hogsett-connected law firm, Bose McKinney & Evans, where he helped the firm’s developer clients secure millions of dollars worth of city incentives.
Past reporting from the news outlets also showed attorneys for Hogsett went on to work for law firms that do business with the city, where they then performed similar work under contract. The city previously said, in those cases, that the attorneys were either granted waivers or that the legal work they did after they left city employment was different enough as to not trigger the ethics ordinance.
Related
Mr. Clean
Mirror Indy and IndyStar investigate ethical concerns within Mayor Joe Hogsett’s administration.
‘Astronomical’
Parker’s move to the company comes as one of the city’s contracts with Structurepoint has drawn scrutiny.
The broad contract for stormwater consulting services will pay American Structurepoint up to $14.1 million over nearly four years, with most contractors earning hourly wages in the $100 to $300 range.
The latest amendment to the Structurepoint contract was signed in late 2025 when Parker was Hogsett’s chief of staff, roughly a month before he started working for Structurepoint. It’s unclear what, if any, role he played in its negotiation.
For consulting services, DPW puts out a “request for qualifications” to firms in the industry, according to the agency. Department leaders choose a company based on a variety of factors. Then those contracts must be approved by the Board of Public Works, an entity made up of City-County Council and mayoral appointees, and signed by the DPW director.
The contract’s price tag caught the attention of Susie Cordi, a Board of Public Works member who has previously campaigned for Hogsett.
Cordi called the cost “astronomical” in a November 2025 meeting where she urged DPW leaders to fill vacant positions. She lamented that the city was paying higher hourly rates to private contractors instead of more cost-effective wages to DPW employees.
The city defended the contract. Current DPW Director Todd Wilson, who worked for American Structurepoint from 2007 to 2013, told IndyStar/Mirror Indy that the city lacks staffers to perform all the needed work.
Specialized employees like engineers can earn higher salaries in the private sector. He said DPW is working to boost recruiting and increase city salaries to better compete and rely less on contractors going forward.
“But I don’t see in any world where we would completely eliminate staff augmentation from our program,” Wilson said.
DPW spokesperson Kyle Bloyd said the agency’s extensive contracts with Structurepoint and other companies are crucial to the timely execution of DPW’s five-year infrastructure improvement plan worth about $1 billion.
Still, Cordi called the contracts “money in Structurepoint’s pocket” in an IndyStar/Mirror Indy interview.
“We’re understaffed,” she said, “and now Structurepoint is reaping all these benefits from us not being able to keep our engineers.”
Mirror Indy reporter Peter Blanchard and IndyStar reporter Hayleigh Colombo contributed reporting.
Mirror Indy, a nonprofit newsroom, is funded through grants and donations from individuals, foundations and organizations. Sign up for our free newsletters.
Contact IndyStar Indianapolis City Hall Reporter Jordan Smith at jtsmith@indystar.com. Follow him on X @jordantsmith09.
Emily Hopkins is a senior reporter at Mirror Indy. You can reach them by phone or Signal at 317-790-5268 or email at emily.hopkins@mirrorindy.org. Follow them on most social media @indyemapolis or on Bluesky @emilyhopkins.bsky.social.
Related
-
North Carolina47 seconds agoMay home sales increase over 6% from last year in western North Carolina
-
North Dakota4 minutes agoNorth Dakota Supreme Court reverses dismissal of contractors’ lawsuit against city of West Fargo
-
Ohio9 minutes agoOhio State’s Bruce Thornton Has Perfect Draft Reaction After Landing With Rockets
-
Oklahoma16 minutes agoTexas A&M makes massive splash in transfer portal landing Oklahoma LHP
-
Oregon19 minutes agoOregon National Guard tests drone to remotely deliver explosive during training
-
Pennsylvania23 minutes agoHouse Republicans stall activity, Pennsylvania Rep. Meuser calls tactics ‘foolish’ | Fox Business Video
-
Rhode Island31 minutes ago32 photos capturing Rhode Island Pride’s nighttime magic
-
South-Carolina34 minutes ago
South Carolina adds to America250 time capsule set to be buried July 4