Sting Ray Robb will remain with Juncos Hollinger Racing for the 2026 NTT IndyCar Series season, JHR announced Dec. 2.
Robb returns to the team for a second season after debuting in the No. 77 in 2025.
“This season is massive for me and I’m embracing it fully,” Robb said in a team release. “It’s my first opportunity to run with the same team for a second season and I’m ready for what it demands. What’s key for me is the continuity – working with the established team people and the newer faces we all trust, with everyone focused on elevating across all areas.
“Having Dave [O’Neill, team principal]’s experience at the helm has been huge. You can feel the way his racing pedigree shapes our processes, the way he leads the room, and the overall professionalism. Pair that with the insight from Adam Carroll and the six seasons of experience Rinus [VeeKay] brings as a teammate, and it feels like the whole operation is headed in the right direction. I’m excited to have Rinus as a teammate – we’re aligned, we’re hungry, and we’re ready to fight towards the front together.”
“Sting Ray is a key pillar in the structure we’re building for 2026,” O’Neill added. “His commitment and approach match the ambition driving this team forward. We took meaningful steps this year, but we know there’s far more potential to unlock – and 2026 is our chance to convert that progress into real performance gains. With the continuity Sting Ray provides, combined with the pace, experience, and race-winning pedigree Rinus brings, we believe this lineup gives us the firepower to move up the order quickly.”
Robb’s reveal follows the previously announced addition of Rinus VeeKay to the team; VeeKay joins the organization from Dale Coyne Racing, replacing Conor Daly.
In 2025, Robb, in his third IndyCar season, scored one top 10, a ninth-place run at Long Beach.
Kevin Rutherford is the executive editor of Frontstretch, a position he gained in 2025 after being the managing editor since 2015, and serving on the editing staff since 2013.
At his day job, he's a journalist covering music and rock charts at Billboard. He lives in New York City, but his heart is in Ohio -- you know, like that Hawthorne Heights song.



