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Toronto
By
A.J. Foyt
I never would have thought I would be satisfied with an 11th place
finish at Toronto but I have to say after all that went on this past
weekend, I was damn glad to come away with just that.
We started out the weekend pretty good, at least Vitor Meira felt
the ABC Supply car was pretty good. He was hanging around the top 12
in practice. Since it was his first time to the track, I thought
things were going well.
We tried some new brake pads for qualifying and although they were
supposed to be pre-bedded by the manufacturer, they weren’t bedded
in good properly. So in qualifying, Vitor didn’t have the feel he
needed to hustle the 14 car around. I called him to the pits and on
that lap, he slid into a tire barrier. It didn’t hurt the car but he
would have brought out a yellow if Paul Tracy hadn’t done so a
couple moments before when he spun on the track.
Bringing out a yellow in qualifying means you get penalized—they
take away your two best laps from the whole 15-minute session. If
Vitor didn’t have the penalty he would have qualified around 16th
even with the brake problem (because eventually they do get bedded
in when you use them).
So as it was, we started last in the Honda Indy Toronto because
Tracy was a little bit faster than Vitor on their third best laps.
Starting 26th on a tight street course like Toronto is a challenge,
but Vitor made it even tougher on himself!
Green flag goes down, field goes by and no Vitor! But according to
the computers, the car is still running. I’m wondering where the
hell is he?
He was starting outside Milka Duno because she was last in her group
qualifying session which lined up on the inside. She was having
trouble on the final pace lap keeping up to the field, and by the
time he got by her, the field was gone. So he pushed the car too
hard on cold tires and went straight into the turn 8 run-off area.
He did a quick spin to get headed in the right direction and took
the green flag half a lap down to the leaders—and he had to pass
Milka again!
He caught and passed her by lap two and set off after the others.
But I thought to myself, this is going to be a long day.
We knew starting back there that we had to do an alternate pit
strategy because if the yellows fall right you can come out ahead of
the leaders and actually stay ahead of them. We also wanted to run
as little as possible on the red-rimmed alternate tires—the ABC
Supply car handled better on the primary Firestone tires. So we
started on the primary tires and when everyone else pitted around
lap 17 during a full-course yellow, we stayed out along with Tracy.
He was ahead of us on the track so we ran second when the race
restarted.
We were lucky on that first restart. Helio Castroneves, who was
running third, ran into the back of Vitor going into turn 3 (which
is where a lot of accidents happened). It’s not the first time
that’s happened with the 3 and 14 cars (Helio did it to Ryan Hunter-Reay
last year at Iowa, knocking us out of the race before it barely got
started!). This time though Helio busted up his car pretty good but
Vitor was able to keep going.
Vitor stayed in the top-five until we pitted during a yellow on lap
34.We dropped back in the field but we also made this stint on the
alternate tire our short stint. So we figured how long we could run
on a tank and worked backwards from the end of the race to figure
out the fuel window and the earliest we could pit and get back on
the primary tires.
We made our final pit stop on lap 51 under green because we knew we
could go the final 34 laps if we got a short yellow. It’d be close
if we didn’t get a yellow but sometimes you have to gamble.
Because of other drivers crashing into each other, we had advanced
to 9th by the time of the final full course yellow on lap 74. On
that restart, Vitor took a run on Simona DeSilvestro heading into
turn 3 (yep, the same place Helio hit him) but up ahead, everyone
got jumbled up in the corner. Simona braked early and Vitor had to
jam on the brakes to avoid hitting her. He locked them up and hit
her anyway, but luckily, both of them were able to continue on.
Unfortunately for Vitor, that hard braking blistered his tires
pretty bad. With 10 laps to go, he had to be really careful under
braking. Justin Wilson, who had spun earlier while running second,
passed him with six laps to go. With just two laps to go, Vitor said
he locked it up a little bit and ran wide and that’s when Dan
Wheldon snuck by for 10th.
I was hoping to salvage a top 10 out of it but even 11th felt pretty
good with the way this race went. The ABC crew gave Vitor good pit
stops. The stops have been a problem this year but we’ve changed up
some things and it seems to be working.
Was I okay with finishing 11th? On that day, in that race, yes I
was. The ABC Supply Dallara/Honda was in one piece and we gained a
position in the point standings—we’re now 12th. It wasn’t pretty but
we survived and sometimes you have to be satisfied with that.
We head back to Canada on Thursday for the Honda Indy Toronto race
in Edmonton this weekend. That track is pretty bumpy but what I like
about it is that you can see the whole track because it’s laid out
on an airport. You can see it if you tune into Versus this Sunday
starting at 5pm ET. |