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Canadian James Hinchcliffe in search of hometown victory at Honda Indy Toronto

[media-credit id=4 align=”alignright” width=”150″][/media-credit]While some drivers dream of winning the Indianapolis 500, James Hinchcliffe has been dreaming of winning the Honda Indy Toronto. After all, the Oakville, Ontario native grew up 40 minutes from Toronto. It was going to the race in Toronto as a kid that got Hinchcliffe interested in racing.

“I went to that race the first time when I was 18 months old and have been to every one since, so it’s always special to go home,” he says.

Though so far, this weekend hasn’t gone as well as Hinchcliffe would’ve planned.

The hometown hero would miss the second session of practice following problems in the first session as he would have an engine failure. Hinchcliffe would come out in Saturday’s qualifying and qualify ninth. However, as a result of the engine change, he will suffer a 10-grid spot penalty and will start the race 19th.

“Overnight we took a bit of a swing at it and definitely made the car a lot better for this morning,” he says. “It’s a big credit to the Go Daddy guys and everyone at Andretti Autosport, I think we made all our cars a bit better. It’s tough out there – this is IndyCar – it’s a lot of good drivers and it’s only a tenth-of-a-second that sort of makes a difference.”

This isn’t the first time this year Hinchcliffe has suffered a 10-grid spot penalty as he did earlier this year, though came back to finish on the podium. Hinchcliffe is hoping for the same result with the fans and family that will be at the track on Sunday.

“The fan support for me, even in the junior formulas, was incredible and having all our friends and family come out… it’s a very cool thing to be a part of,” he comments.

Obviously that brings forth a lot of pressure for Hinchcliffe, though defending IZOD IndyCar Series Champion Dario Franchitti says its all about how Hinchcliffe manges it.

“I think it’s up to him to manage that pressure but not let it kind of interfere, not let it into that bubble, I guess, that we sort of live in on race weekend,” Franchitti says. “I think just don’t let that in and he’ll do fine. He’s done an outstanding job in my opinion. He makes very, very few mistakes on the track, and I’m very, very impressed with him.”

Franchitti adds that he believes that Hinchcliffe will treat it like any other race, and could find victory lane as that’s the next step for Hinchcliffe after some strong runs this year.

“He’s been very consistent and done a hell of a job, and I think as I say as long as he treats this race like any other week, he’ll be just fine,” Franchitti says.

After qualifying, Hinchcliffe said that it will come down to being more flexible with their strategy, working on the car a little, and staying out of trouble.

“I think we’ve seen in any IndyCar race that its about being able to finish, espically here in Toronto,” he says. “There’s a lot of opportunities here for guys to make moves that don’t pull off so keep your nose clean, stay out of trouble and then we can be there at the end.”

Though the opportunity to race in front of the hometown crowd is a special piece so far and the result of a lot of hard work.

“It’s a labour of love – I don’t want to make it sound like it was a hassle to do it,” Hinchcliffe says. “I love this city and I love trying to grow IndyCar here and this is where I’m from. It’s a combination of a lot of things.”

Dario Franchitti begins hunt for third Honda Indy Toronto win with the pole

[media-credit id=4 align=”alignright” width=”266″][/media-credit]At the end of the qualifying session for the IZOD IndyCar Series, Dario Franchitti would set a quick time of 59.351 seconds to win the pole. It marked his second pole in the last four years at the Honda Indy Toronto.

“These Target boys have given us a really fast car all weekend,” he says. “They have taken very good car of both Scott (Dixon) and I. The times have all been so close all weekend – we happy to be a the top.  The Firestone Reds have felt really good and we hit the rhythm and got really good grip during qualifying to get to the top. That was a really hard earned pole. Track position will be very important tomorrow and it is great be up front in Toronto again, the same place I won my first pole 15 years ago in 1997!    Tomorrow is going to be a really good race for all the fans that come out to see us.”

Penske Racing’s Will Power would set the second quickest time at 59.3757 seconds after getting through the previous two rounds of qualifying barely.

“I didn’t have anything [in the end for Dario], but very happy to be second,” he says. “We’d struggled to get through every round and made it in each time. I just had one good lap, I could see I was slow on the out on my first set, so I had to put everything together and that was as good as we could possibly do. We’re happy to start on the front row, we all know what this race is about, a lot of crashing and bashing so we’ll stay out of that and be in good shape.”

Texas race winner Justin Wilson would qualify third after his issues during practice yesterday at a time of 59.4506 seconds.

“The Sonny’s BBQ car was really good in qualifying and the first round we thought we had a pretty good balance, made a couple of small adjustments and in the second round it was great,” he says. “We’re just really happy, we didn’t change anything into the third, and just didn’t quite get the lap I was looking for. You know, I think it was there, we just didn’t get it all together, so we’ll start and that’s good enough for tomorrow. It’s all about the crashing and bashing so hopefully we can stay out of that from now on, keep our heads down and have a good solid race.”

Sebastian Bourdais and Scott Dixon would round out the top five. Canadian Alex Tagliani would qualify sixth, though will start 16th as a result of a 10-grid spot penalty due to changing the motor.

Ryan Hunter-Reay qualified seventh, followed by Helio Castroneves and James Hinchcliffe. Hinchcliffe, who considers Toronto his home track, will suffer the same fate as Tagliani and will start Sunday’s race from 19th.

“Obviously yesterday didn’t go our way completely – the first session was a bit rough and then no running in the second session, so overnight we took a bit of a swing at it and definitely made the car a lot better for this morning,” he says. “It’s a big credit to the Go Daddy guys and everyone at Andretti Autosport, I think we made all our cars a bit better. It’s tough out there – this is IndyCar – it’s a lot of good drivers and it’s only a tenth-of-a-second that sort of makes a difference. Our big thing is we were using up our tires quicker than other guys. I think the second lap was always my quickest and I didn’t have a chance to improve on that so it’s too bad. We have to take the penalty so we’ll start 19th and see what we can do from there.”

Rookie Simon Pagenaud rounded out the top 10.

Both Takumo Sato and E.J. Viso would suffer penalties due to “qualifying interference”. They would get their two quickest times removed.

Kenseth ‘incredibly disappointed’ in not completing Daytona sweep

[media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”240″][/media-credit]For the first time in 30 years it looked like Daytona was going to be swept. Matt Kenseth came within half a lap of winning the 2012 Daytona 500 and Coke Zero 400 before Tony Stewart passed him on the backstretch.

Kenseth ended up finishing third after leading a race high 89 of 160 laps. His No. 17 Zest Ford for Roush Fenway Racing was the class of the field and dominated early from the pole. But when it came down to tandem drafting at the end, he and teammate Greg Biffle were again unable to make it work.

“I guess you need to be happy when you finish that good, but also when you have restrictor plate cars that fast it doesn’t happen very often and you sure want to figure out how to win with them,” Kenseth said afterwards. “You always second guess your moves but I feel we had one of the fastest cars here all three races this year so I’m happy to get third, but yet on the other hand I’m incredibly disappointed because I feel my team kind of deserved to be down there holding the hardware and I kind of let them down.

“But overall, we had a really fast car. We had a pretty good race and made our way back to the front after the pit road thing and we were in contention, we just didn’t get it done that last lap.”

Right from the green flag it was clear that Kenseth was the driver to beat. Easily picking up where he left off in February. He and Biffle teamed together and stuck their Fords on the yellow line, where they were stayed and were able to fend off all challenges.

The competition repeatedly tired to overtake them on the outside, but were continually unable to make the lane work. The only problem that Kenseth had all night was pit road, when he came down for his pit stop on lap 124 and seven cars wrecked behind.

Instead of stopping for service he continued through pit lane and escaped without penalty. But he gave up all his track position. No worries, he and Biffle wasted no time in showing their strength and rejoining the fight at the front.

The final restart put Kenseth back together with Biffle, Stewart with Kahne on the outside. Going down the backstretch Stewart got a hard enough push from Kahne to charge ahead of Kenseth and take the lead. It was the winning pass and Kenseth fell to third when another wreck started off turn four.

For Kenseth he did everything he could to keep Biffle with him, deciding to drag the brake when Biffle got disconnected. That move was just enough for Stewart to clear Kenseth and take another win away. Kenseth had been unable to charge for the win at Talladega when he and Biffle became disconnected there.

“If he was by himself [Stewart], I knew we would pass him as long as me and Greg could get rolling again,” said Kenseth. “I knew we would pass him somewhere over by turn four, hopefully, so I got him [Biffle], made a run and tried to go outside of Tony and he made a block real high and I still kind of had position and then from there I’m not really sure what happened. They just started wrecking behind us.”

Hindsight is always 50/50 and it’s no different for Kenseth and what he might have been able to do differently. There were a few things he said, but you never know how they would have played out or what turn the race would have taken.

He remains the point leader heading into New Hampshire, now 25 up on Dale Earnhardt Jr. But, it won’t make missing out on a rare NASCAR accomplishment any better.

“Daytona has been wonderful to us this year, really starting last July when we were able to push David [Ragan] to his win and finish second,” he said. “Obviously, we had a really good Speedweeks [this year] and then to come down here and sit on the pole and be able to lead – the most laps I would think – so, we were up front most of the night and had one of the fastest cars.

“We didn’t get caught up in a wreck and still got a good finish, so it’s hard to be disappointed with that, but the racer in you, when you have a car like that, you certainly want to figure out how to try to win with it.”

Stewart comes from the back to win fourth Coke Zero 400 at Daytona

[media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Tony Stewart hasn’t lost his Daytona magic and Saturday night he needed all of it to earn his fourth win in the last eight Coke Zero 400s.

Having qualified second then failing inspection because of an open cooling hose in his No. 14 Mobile 1 Chevrolet, Stewart came from 42nd on the grid. He passed Matt Kenseth coming to the white flag and then had clear sailing the checkered flag as a wreck broke out behind him.

An exciting finish to a race that started off atypical for Daytona. Kenseth, the Daytona 500 winner who was looking to become the first driver in 30 years to win both races, led the field to the green flag then dominated the first half of the event. He and teammate Greg Biffle stuck together and never left the yellow line.

As they lead, many tried to get the outside lane to work. It never did. Kenseth and Biffle were simply untouchable. The first caution of the event didn’t fly until after halfway when Sam Hornish, subbing for the suspended AJ Allmendinger, spun down the backstretch after cutting down a tire.

During the caution the action got scary on pit road. Jeff Gordon was exiting his pit stall when he and Ryan Newman made contact. Newman ended up across the nose of Kasey Kahne and spun into the pit stall of Brad Keselowski. Lucky the No. 2 crew members and officials were able to escape without injury.

When the race restarted it looked like Kenseth was easily cruising toward another win. That was until the next caution when he had to restart at the rear of the field after losing his track position. Kenseth had been on pit road when the caution came out but had to continue through without service or be penalized.

His misfortune opened the door for Stewart. Quickly asserting himself the leader but he would have to deal again with Kenseth on a late restart after The Big One with eight laps to go took out 14 cars, setting up a two-lap dash to the finish.

On the restart Stewart and Kahne paired together and flew past Kenseth and Biffle. It would end up being the wining pass. Stewart headed for the finish line as 15 more cars wrecked off turn four. Jeff Burton came through for a second place finish while Kenseth, who led a race high 89 of 160 laps, finished third.

“I don’t even remember what happened that last lap,” Stewart said in Victory Lane. “I was in that second lane and just tried to get that 17 and 16 pulled apart and once we had them pulled apart that gave us a run on the outside.

“Just shows what Mobile 1 lubricants and oils can do for you. So good on restarts and just a weird day. I’m still hoping for a figure eight race here.”

Stewart then acknowledged, “Anytime you win at Daytona it’s special but this Chevy was awesome. Had great Hendrick horsepower. Everybody at Stewart-Haas Racing did a great job this weekend. I’m really, really proud of our organization.”

The win was the third of 2012 for Stewart and the 47th of his career. It’s also the 18th time that he’s won at Daytona, second only to Dale Earnhardt. And with his three wins he moves into a tie with Brad Keselowski for most on the season.

Kenseth retained the point lead, increasing to 25 over Dale Earnhardt Jr. Greg Biffle moved back to third and Jimmie Johnson fell to fourth after suffering another DNF at Daytona.

The 2012 Coke Zero 400 saw 12 lead changes among nine drivers and six cautions for 23 laps. The series heads to New Hampshire next weekend for the 19th of 36 races.

Unofficial Race Results
Coke Zero 400, Daytona International Speedway
http://www.speedwaymedia.com/Cup/race.php?race=18
=========================================
Pos. St. No. Driver Make Points
=========================================
1 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 47
2 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 42
3 1 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 43
4 20 Joey Logano Toyota 40
5 2 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 39
6 2 Brad Keselowski Dodge 38
7 99 Carl Edwards Ford 37
8 55 Michael Waltrip Toyota 36
9 47 Bobby Labonte Toyota 35
10 10 David Reutimann Chevrolet 34
11 3 5 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 33
12 5 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 32
13 27 Paul Menard Chevrolet 31
14 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 30
15 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 29
16 93 Travis Kvapil Toyota 28
17 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 28
18 43 Aric Almirola Ford 26
19 32 Terry Labonte Ford 25
20 7 13 Casey Mears Ford 25
21 4 16 Greg Biffle Ford 24
22 36 Dave Blaney Chevrolet 22
23 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 21
24 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 21
25 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 20
26 34 David Ragan Ford 19
27 21 Trevor Bayne Ford 0
28 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 16
29 15 Clint Bowyer Toyota 15
30 9 Marcos Ambrose Ford 14
31 38 David Gilliland Ford 14
32 83 Landon Cassill Toyota 12
33 22 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 0
34 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 10
35 51 Kurt Busch Chevrolet 9
36 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 8
37 6 50 Bill Elliott Chevrolet 7
38 26 Josh Wise * Ford 7
39 30 David Stremme Toyota 5
40 249 J.J. Yeley Toyota 4
41 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 0
42 33 Stephen Leicht * Chevrolet 2
43 98 Mike Bliss Ford 0