Josef Newgarden won an exciting Honda Indy Toronto race on the streets of Toronto

04CJ7721Team Owner Sarah Fisher, Josef Newgarden, Luca Filippi, and Team Owner Ed Carpenter in the Toronto Victory Circle — Photo by: Chris
Jones

Starting from 11th place Car 67 Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet won his 2nd IndyCar race at the Streets of Toronto Exhibition Place circuit. 2nd Place Car 20 Luca Filippi, Chevrolet, started from 6th place makes a 1, 2, finish for CFH Racing. 3rd Place Car 3 Helio Castroneves, Chevrolet, started from 7th place.

16C_5847-1Team Owner Sarah Fisher is all smiles as her driver, Josef Newgarden, wins the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Owens

4th Place Car 1 Will Power, Chevrolet, started from pole followed by 5th place Car 11 Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, started from 5thplace. 6th Place Car 10 Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet, started from 9th place followed by 7th place Car 2 Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, started from 3rd place. 8th Place Car 9 Scott Dixon, Chevrolet, started from 4th place followed by 9th place Car 15 Graham Rahal, Honda, started from 10th place. Lastly in the Top 10 Car 14 Takuma Sato, Honda, in 10th place, started from 8th place.

16C_5740The Honda Indy Toronto podium of Josef Newgarden, Luca Filippi, and Helio Castroneves hoist their trophies in Victory Circle — Photo by: Chris Jones

The race had lots of action with 2 Cautions for 9 laps & 7 Lead changes among 6 drivers. Lap Leaders: Power 1-30, Castroneves 31-41, Newgarden 42-57, Filippi 58-59, Kanaan 60-62, Castroneves 63-66, Gonzalez 67-71, Newgarden 72-85.

04CJ6617Will Power leaves his pit stall after a quick stop during the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Jones

As Paul Tracy said this was one of the most exciting Toronto Indy’s. The race started with most teams on wet tires then switched to intermediate or dry tires. The action was with contact & the fight for the lead. It was also great to see a small team like CFH Racing with a 1, 2, finish.

04CJ7732Josef Newgarden and Luca Filippi sweep the top two positions in the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Jones

“I’m so happy we were able to get a win, but a 1-2 is just amazing because Luca is such a star,” said Newgarden, who also won at Barber Motorsports Park in April in the No. 67 Hartman Oil Chevrolet. “Just an amazing team effort. I’m definitely excited because this is Toronto and this is an INDYCAR town.”

04CJ6700Josef Newgarden leads a group into Turn 9 during the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Jones

Newgarden pitted for tires and Sunoco E85 fuel on Lap 28 just before the first yellow flag flew for contact by the No. 7 Schmidt Peterson Motorsports Honda of James Jakes into the tire barrier in Turn 5. Newgarden remained in the top five through his final stop on Lap 58, and reclaimed the lead on Lap 72 when Rodolfo Gonzalez pitted in the No. 18 Dale Coyne Racing Honda.

04CJ6891The podium of Josef Newgarden, Luca Filippi, and Helio Castroneves hoist their trophies in Victory Circle following the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Owens

“It was close racing, for sure, and I got a little lucky on that yellow,” said Newgarden, who joined Ryan Hunter-Reay, A.J. Allmendinger, Al Unser Jr., Bobby Rahal and seven-time winner Michael Andretti as American winners in Toronto. “It was a great call, though, and it was an amazing effort by this team and the crew who gave me amazing pit stops.”

04CJ7794Josef Newgarden celebrates in Victory Circle with Team Owner Sarah Fisher after winning the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Jones

Filippi, driving the No. 20 Fuzzy’s Vodka Chevrolet, recorded his best finish in 16 Verizon IndyCar Series races dating to 2013.

16C_5281-1Will Power leads the field into Turn 8 during the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Chris Owens

“We had a goal to be on the podium and we both achieved it with both cars. It’s nice when you set the goal and you achieve it and the team did everything perfectly to give us the opportunity to be up front,” said Filippi, who qualified sixth. “But we had a fast car and we knew we needed to be kind of in the clean air up in front and this is what we did — just kept pushing.

“I thank the Fuzzy’s Vodka team because they believe in me and they gave me the opportunity to race INDYCAR properly and my first podium. Many more to come.”

36RD0418James Hinchcliffe and his girlfriend, Kirsten, on the pre-race grid prior to the Honda Indy Toronto — Photo by: Richard Dowdy

INDYCAR Drivers Show Well in 24 Hours of Le Mans

The 24 Hours of Le Mans sports car endurance race completed this morning in France featured a number of INDYCAR-related drivers with notable finishes.

Mike Conway, who won the second half of the 2014 Honda Indy Toronto doubleheader for the Verizon IndyCar Series, finished sixth overall provisionally and in the LMP1 class as part of the Toyota Racing team, one spot behind the No. 18 Porsche LMP1 team that included former Indy car driver Neel Jani.

Actor Patrick Dempsey, a former Verizon IndyCar Series team co-owner and honorary starter for this year’s Indianapolis 500, was co-driver of the Dempsey-Proton Racing Porsche 911 that finished second in the LMGTE Am category. That was one position ahead of the Scuderia Corsa Ferrari 458 co-driven by Townsend Bell, the 14th-place finisher at this year’s Indy 500 and an NBCSN analyst on Verizon IndyCar Series broadcasts when he’s not racing.

Other current/former Indy car drivers who competed at Le Mans included Mikhail Aleshin, Ryan Dalziel, Tristan Gommendy, Niclas Jonsson, Nicolas Minassian, Tiago Monteiro, Ho-Pin Tung and Scott Sharp. Ryan Briscoe and Jan Magnussen were scheduled to compete, but their LMGTE Pro car was withdrawn following a crash in qualifying.

Former Indy Lights driver Gustavo Yacaman was part of the G-Drive Racing team that finished fourth in LMP2. Current Indy Lights driver Max Chilton also competed with the Nissan Motorsports LMP1 team.

Mazda Road to Indy Race 2 Winners

The three rungs of the Mazda Road to Indy ladder series completed Toronto doubleheader weekends with the second race in each category. Season points leader Nico Jamin won the rain-shortened Cooper Tires USF2000 Championship Powered by Mazda race, his fifth victory in 11 races this season. In the Pro Mazda Championship Presented by Cooper Tires, Garrett Grist waited for the perfect time to collect his first win of the season, taking the checkered flag in his home country. Spencer Pigot (Juncos Racing) completed a weekend sweep of the Indy Lights Presented by Cooper Tires races in treacherous wet conditions. Saturday’s first race was highlighted by a spectacular crash that saw RC Enerson (Schmidt Peterson Motorsports) walk away uninjured after his car went airborne and flipped over the tire barrier in the Turn 3 runoff.

HONDA INDY TORONTO POST-RACE QUOTES:

WILL POWER (No. 1 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet): “(The race) went quickly. I was surprised. They said it was the end and I was like,
‘Really, that’s it?’ But, yeah, I was happy. We went with a low risk – we didn’t want to get caught out by the yellow. I felt like, if we’d had five more laps, our car was pretty strong because we had black (tires) and Helio had reds on. We gained some points back with a solid top-four (finish). It was a championship type day for the Verizon Chevy team.”

HELIO CASTRONEVES (No. 3 Hitachi Team Penske Chevrolet): “After all the circumstances today – what a great job from the Hitachi boys. Roger (Penske) made a great call. I had no idea how they put me up there, but we were running really strong laps. The car was on rails. It’s a shame, certainly, it was crazy. I was pushing like I stole it. But in the end it was great. It was a shame with the weather a little bit, but thank God we were able to put some dry laps out there for the fans. The Canadian fans are always awesome. This is a great event and I hope when we come here next year, we get a win.”

STEFANO COLETTI (No. 4 KV Racing Technology Chevrolet): “I struggled on the wet tires at the beginning. But then when we switched to the slick tires after 10 laps, the car was really good and really fast and I was able to make up positions and run as fast as the leaders. My crew did a great second pit stop and I rejoined 16th. At the restart, I gained another position and got as high as 14th when I broke a tiny bit too late in Turn 5 and hit the wall. That broke my suspension and, unfortunately, that was then it for me.”

SEBASTIAN SAAVEDRA (No. 8 AFS Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet): “It was a long day out there for the No. 8 AFS team after a very positive start to the weekend. I felt pretty strong with the car and after the conditions yesterday, but we didn’t quite get our setup right for the dry. It’s unfortunate because you want to get the most out of the car and yourself, and today it didn’t happen
for us.”

SCOTT DIXON (No. 9 Jurassic World Chevrolet): “Not the day we wanted to have, obviously, in the Jurassic World car. The start of the race was really strung out and there seemed to be big gaps everywhere. We managed the transition well between the rain and dry-weather tires early on, but then got shuffled back. We were in good shape in the top five for the first part of the race, but then after the last stop we slid back in the top 10. The car wasn’t bad, we just ended up back there with the flow of the race, unfortunately.”

TONY KANAAN (No. 10 NTT Data Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet): “We struggled a little at the beginning of the race just trying to make the passes we needed and we lost a few spots on the restart early on. We regrouped and decided on an aggressive fuel strategy that kept me out longer than everyone else on the last stint and allowed me to get out of all of the traffic that had been holding me up throughout most of the race. Once we were able to get out of the traffic and in clear air, I think we were running almost a second faster than everyone else, so we definitely had the car to be up front. I have to thank the NTT Data Chip Ganassi Racing crew guys for keeping me in this race. Our last stop of the race was so quick that I was actually able to make up seven spots. Sixth isn’t where I wanted to be, but with where we were running earlier on, it was definitely an improvement.”

SEBASTIEN BOURDAIS (No. 11 Team Hydroxycut-KVSH Chevrolet): “For sure, we could have stretched it but (Carlos) Munoz just made it very difficult for us. We destroyed the tires behind him, both Power and I, and we finished, you know, behind each other. … Obviously the guys who were in clean air who stayed out there who ran some quick laps on their own and it was the right thing to do, except obviously, if there had been a yellow like on the first sequence, then you cycle to black (primary tires) and the race is over. It was a defense strategy. It was the right thing to do. We probably should have done it on the first one as well, not to expose ourselves but, hey, that’s the problem with yellows and closed pits. Sometimes you’re right, sometimes you’re wrong.”

GRAHAM RAHAL (No. 15 Rousseau Metal Honda): “I was pleased with the car’s performance, but it’s just not quick enough everywhere. We’ve just got to work on it. I think we found some things this weekend that will help us going forward, but it’s just frustrating to put all the effort in that we are and to finish ninth. I feel like we deserve better than this but we’re going to keep trying hard. I was either stuck in traffic, trying to get by (Takuma) Sato and getting blocked or cruising behind (Scott) Dixon. It was frustrating. We would have liked to get the Rousseau car further up there, but that was the best we had today.”

RODOLFO GONZALEZ (No. 18 Dale Coyne Racing Honda): “The aim was to try to finish the race and running those laps up front was a big bonus. I think we took a big risk on our strategy and, in the end, it didn’t pay off because we got that second caution so quickly and it screwed us up a little bit. It was certainly fun. We were down a little bit on pace, but I was able to keep those guys behind me and, in the end, I had fun. It was a good race for me. I am a rookie, in the end. It is only my third race and to be spending any time leading is great. It is funny, I didn’t even know I was leading there at the end with (Josef) Newgarden. I was told I was leading all those laps after I got out of the car. I was just driving my race and knew I had a black car behind me. I thought maybe it was Gabby Chaves because we had been racing together earlier in the race. At one point, I was asking myself, ‘Why do I keep getting Penske cars behind me?’ In the end, it was a good, fun race. I am happy.”

TRISTAN VAUTIER (No. 19 Dale Coyne Racing Honda): “It was a strange race. It felt like we were recovering all the time. I had a good start but was caught on the outside of a driver that got on the brakes too late going into Turn 3. He took me into the escape road and put me all the way in the back. I had nowhere to go but straight. The pace was OK after that. All of the Hondas were running very similar pace, so track position was important. I had made up quite a few positions but made a mistake with the car’s settings and
lost all of the positions we had gained. We pitted early and had to save a bit of fuel to make it to the end. I think we had the pace to finish three spots higher if I had more fuel. I just couldn’t really push hard in the last stint. That is just the way it goes sometimes. Everybody gave their best this weekend.”

LUCA FILIPPI (No. 20 Fuzzy’s Vodka CFH Racing Chevrolet): “We had a goal to be on the podium and we both achieved it with both cars. It’s nice when you set the goal and you achieve it and the team did everything perfectly to give us the opportunity to be up front. But we had a fast car and we knew we needed to be kind of in the clean air up in front and this is what we did — just kept pushing. We were faster and we ended up in front. I’m very happy. Very happy. The team did a great job. I thank the Fuzzy’s Vodka team because
they believe in me and they gave me the opportunity to race INDYCAR properly and my first podium. Many more to come.”

CARLOS MUNOZ (No. 26 AndrettiTV Cinsay Honda): “Again, mechanical issues that ended our race. We were having a great race; I was fourth before everything and I think we had the speed to finish in that position or to fight for the podium. Once again, something out of the team and my hands – it’s racing. We really need to check to see why this is happening, but we put our heads down and head to Fontana.”

MARCO ANDRETTI (No. 27 Dr Pepper Honda): “We kind of had an intermediate setup on. I think of we had a dry setup on and went to (Firestone primary tire) blacks at the end, it would have been the way to go. The Firestone alternate tire) reds were gone halfway through the stint, I started to fall off (Simon) Pagenaud and there was nothing I could do to hang on to the rear of the Dr Pepper car. We’re heading back to an oval with Fontana, so we’ll see what we can do there.”

RYAN HUNTER-REAY (No. 28 DHL Honda): “Right rear brake issues the whole race, slowly but surely just kept losing rear brake pressure until it finally went completely. I had no rear brake pressure at all and had to pull it in with one lap from the end. Wish we could have brought home a better result in the No. 28 DHL.”

JOSEF NEWGARDEN (No. 67 Hartman Oil CFH Racing Chevrolet, Honda Indy Toronto winner): “I’m so happy we were able to get a win, but a 1-2 is just amazing because Luca (Filippi) is such a star. I’m super happy for the whole group. Just an amazing team effort – I can’t believe we had a 1-2. It got a little close there with Luca, but we were really just trying to keep up after we got into the final stint. I got a little bit of lapped traffic, but I couldn’t do anything with the lapped traffic, but they wanted me to because of everyone that was coming. It’s close racing and, for sure, I got a little lucky, too, on that yellow. But you can’t discount that because it was an amazing effort by this crew at CFH Racing. They gave me amazing pit stops and a car to win. I’m definitely excited because this is Toronto and this is an INDYCAR town.”

CHARLIE KIMBALL (No. 83 Levemir FlexTouch Chevrolet): “It’s a little frustrating that the incident with the No. 4 car (Stefano Coletti) cut my tire and sent me to the back of the field. Overall the pace of the No. 83 Levemir FlexTouch Chevrolet was really quick. I think we for sure had at least one of the top-five fastest laps of the race. I have to give a lot of credit to the Novo
Nordisk Chip Ganassi Racing crew guys – they did a great job. It was challenging conditions and a lot going on for them in the middle of the race with so many stops right there in a row. We’ll just put this one behind us and get back at it for the MAVTV 500 in Fontana in a few weeks.”

GABBY CHAVES (No. 98 Bowers & Wilkins / Curb Honda): “We had another race where we still managed to finish the race, learn some more. We definitely struggled with pace, so that is something we need to figure out. Why we are week in and week out not being able to close that gap that we need to close. Aside from that, I think the team is still highly motivated, I am still highly motivated. I think we can close out this last third of the championship improving even more and on a high.”

Honda Indy Toronto Race Results
TORONTO – Results Sunday of the Honda Indy Toronto Verizon IndyCar Series event on the 1.755-mile Streets of Toronto Exhibition Place
circuit, with order of finish, starting position in parentheses, Car #, driver, chassis-engine, laps completed and reason out (if any):

1. (11) Car 67 Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, 85, Running
2. (6) Car 20 Luca Filippi, Chevrolet, 85, Running
3. (7) Car 3 Helio Castroneves, Chevrolet, 85, Running
4. (1) Car 1 Will Power, Chevrolet, 85, Running
5. (5) Car 11 Sebastien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 85, Running
6. (9) Car 10 Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet, 85, Running
7. (3) Car 2 Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 85, Running
8. (4) Car 9 Scott Dixon, Chevrolet, 85, Running
9. (10) Car 15 Graham Rahal, Honda, 85, Running
10. (8) Car 14 Takuma Sato, Honda, 85, Running
11. (2) Car 22 Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 85, Running
12. (19) Car 5 Conor Daly, Honda, 85, Running
13. (18) Car 27 Marco Andretti, Honda, 85, Running
14. (14) Car 41 Jack Hawksworth, Honda, 85, Running
15. (22) Car 98 Gabby Chaves, Honda, 85, Running
16. (17) Car 17 Sebastian Saavedra, Chevrolet, 85, Running
17. (21) Car 19 Tristan Vautier, Honda, 85, Running
18. (23) Car 18 Rodolfo Gonzalez, Honda, 85, Running
19. (16) Car 28 Ryan Hunter-Reay, Honda, 84, Mechanical
20. (15) Car 83 Charlie Kimball, Chevrolet, 84, Running
21. (12) Car 7 James Jakes, Honda, 84, Running
22. (13) Car 26 Carlos Munoz, Honda, 69, Mechanical
23. (20) Car 4 Stefano Coletti, Chevrolet, 40, Contact

Race Statistics
Winners average speed: 90.410 mph
Time of Race: 1:38:59.9460
Margin of victory: 1.4485 seconds

Verizon IndyCar Point Standings: Montoya 374, Power 347, Dixon 329, Castroneves 322, Rahal 283, Bourdais 274, Andretti 272,
Newgarden 268, Kanaan 244, Pagenaud 232.

http://www.indycar.com/

Photos Courtesy of Indycar.

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