Keeping his cool when almost all others were losing theirs
on a hot, sultry Saturday night at Richmond International Raceway, Tony Kanaan
dominated the second half of the SunTrust Indy Challenge, leading 166 of the 300
laps to score his first IndyCar Series triumph of 2008.
Kanaan's strongest challenger through the first two-thirds
of the contest was his Andretti Green Racing teammate Marco Andretti, who led 90
laps until his team elected to go "off sequence" in his pit stops due to the
high number of cautions and the possibility of a rain-shortened event. However,
the strategy backfired when the rain never came and the final 72 laps ran
caution-free. As a result, Andretti was forced to make his final pit stop under
green flag conditions and dropped off the lead lap, finishing ninth.
It was another typically successful weekend for Honda,
engine supplier for the full IndyCar Series. A total of 26 Honda-powered drivers
ran 6,400 miles of practice, qualifying and racing this weekend without a single
engine-related failure reported.
The race was interrupted nine times by the caution flag,
including seven for crashes that eliminated 10 of the 26 cars in the starting
field, but all without injury to the drivers involved.
One of those to crash out was rookie Jamie Camara, who to
that point was having his strongest race of the season for Conquest Racing, as
the Brazilian came from his 24th starting position to lead the field for 44 laps
during the middle stages of the race. Unfortunately, like several other drivers
tonight, Camara lost control exiting Turn 4 on Lap 217 and made contact with the
outside wall to end his night.
Almost five seconds behind Kanaan at the finish, Helio
Castroneves came from 18th on the starting grid to finish second, his eighth
top-five finish in nine races this year. The Team Penske driver remains second
in the championship standings, 43 points behind leader Scott Dixon.
Meanwhile, Dixon passed his slowing Target Chip Ganassi
Racing teammate, Dan Wheldon, to finish third. KV Racing Technology's Oriol
Servia was the top-finishing former Champ Car driver, running fifth, with Danica
Patrick rounding out the top six.
Next week, the IndyCar Series remains in the eastern U.S.,
but heads north to the Watkins Glen road course in upstate New York for the
Camping World Grand Prix at the Glen on July 6.
| IndyCar Series Drivers'
Championship Standings (after 10 of 18 races): |
1. Scott Dixon
2. Helio Castroneves
3. Dan Wheldon
4. Tony Kanaan
5. Danica Patrick |
351 points (3 wins)
308 7.
299 (2 wins)
269 (1 win)
220 (1 win) |
6. Hideki Mutoh-R
Marco Andretti
8. Ryan Briscoe
9. Oriol Servia
10. Ed Carpenter |
216 points
211
210
(1 win)
194
185
|
Tony Kanaan (#11 Andretti
Green Racing Honda) Started 1st, finished 1st, first
win of 2008, 13th career IndyCar victory: "I feel bad about Marco
[Andretti]. I think he had as good a car as I did and we worked very well
together early in the race. But we did it. I want to dedicate this win to my son
and to Robert Clarke, who is retiring and did a lot for me, and also all the
guys from HPD. This shows the strength this team has. It was a great team effort
tonight. We're coming. Scott [Dixon]'s doing what he needs to do, but now we're
in the chase."
Helio Castroneves (#3 Team
Penske Honda) Started 18th, finished 2nd:
"Wow! That's the only thing I have to say. What a race! It was a lot of fun for
us, we passed a lot of cars tonight. But probably not as much fun for a lot
other people. We did not have the fastest car out there, but it was not the
worst, either. My car was really good on new tires, but would start sliding
around more and more as the run went on. AGR [Andretti Green Racing] was very
consistent, and that's what won them the race tonight. Second is definitely
pretty darn good on a night like this one."
Robert Clarke (Executive
Advisor, former President, Honda Performance Development) on tonight's race, his final IndyCar Series event as a part of
HPD: "I have a lot of mixed emotions tonight. I've made a lot of
friends in the sport, and in this series, over the years, and very much enjoyed
being a part of open-wheel racing. I tried to contribute what I could to the
sport. I think it's very appropriate that Tony [Kanaan] won tonight. Now that
we're supplying engines to the entire field we're not supposed to have
favorites, but I've watched him develop as a driver all the way from IndyLights
to IndyCar Series champion, so seeing him win here is special to me. I want to
thank everyone I've worked with - all the drivers, team owners, mechanics,
engineers, and of course, everyone at Honda Performance Development, my 'home
for' the last 15 years - I'm going to miss you all."