Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Canadian driver Wickens airlifted after car wreck

- DAN GELSTON

LONG POND, PA. Alexander Rossi won Sunday at Pocono Raceway in a race marred by a violent wreck that sent Indycar rookie driver Robert Wickens to the hospital.

Wickens, of Guelph, Ont., was awake and alert when he was airlifted out of the track for medical treatment. Indycar didn’t have another update on his condition at the end of the race.

The 29-year-old Wickens was attempting to pass Ryan Hunterreay when the two cars slightly touched just six laps into the race.

That caused Hunter-reay ’s car to careen into the wall and Wickens’ car was pulled along for the ride. Once Wickens’ car soared over Hunter-reay’s and hit the fence, it spun round and round like a top. The fencing was shredded and Wickens’ car reduced to just the tub, which came to a rest on the track along an interior wall.

Medical workers calmly attended to Wickens, who was taken to an ambulance before he was transporte­d to a helicopter.

The impact of the wreck tore out about 80 feet offence, damaged a few posts and stopped the race.

After a nearly two-hour delay, the race resumed and ended without further incident. For Rossi, his thoughts were with Wickens.

“It’s tough to really celebrate after what happened,” Rossi said.

Rossi, the 2016 Indianapol­is 500 champion, ended Will Power’s bid to win three straight Pocono races.

Power made a hard charge down the stretch and finished second. Scott Dixon had his lead trimmed in the championsh­ip standings and finished third.

Rossi raced to his third victory of the season for Andretti Autosport and second straight. He also won on the streets of Long Beach in April and the Mid-ohio road course three weeks ago.

Sebastien Bourdais, who finished fourth, raised concerns about the quality of the repairs and condition of the fence before he got back in the car.

Track president Ben May said: “It may not be the prettiest job but it’s going to be safe.”

The crash was a grim reminder how drivers in open-wheel racing put their lives on the line.

Hunter-reay, Canada’s James Hinchcliff­e, Pietro Fittipaldi and Takuma Sato were among the drivers collected in Wickens’ crash.

Hinchcliff­e grasped his wrists as he slowly left his car.

He was cleared and released from the medical centre and declined to comment to reporters out of respect for Wickens.

Hinchcliff­e went to the hospital to visit his Schmidt Peterson Motorsport­s teammate.

The two raced each other as youngsters in Toronto and Hinchcliff­e, runner-up on ABC’S Dancing With The Stars in 2017, helped lure Wickens to Indycar this season after a successful career in Europe.

Hinchcliff­e survived his own life-threatenin­g injury when a broken part from his car pierced an artery during a 2015 crash at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

Wickens had reeled off five straight top-five finishes and matched a career-best second in the last race at Mid- Ohio. He was sixth in the points race.

Fittipaldi had just returned from a lengthy layoff because of two broken legs suffered in Europe.

Fittipaldi later tweeted: “Thank god I am fine and walking away from that accident. Praying for you @robertwick­ens, I hope you’re ok.”

It was a chilling moment again at Pocono.

Justin Wilson died from a head injury in 2015 when a piece of debris from a crashed car bounced off the track and hit his helmet. Other items of note at Pocono: Tony Kanaan, the 2013 Indianapol­is 500 champion, called the race from the broadcast booth after he was forced out because of an electrical issue in his car.

Indycar now heads to Gateway Motorsport­s Park, just east of St. Louis, where Josef Newgarden is the defending race winner.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Track workers repair the fence at Pocono Raceway after a crash involving Canadian Indycar driver Robert Wickens.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Track workers repair the fence at Pocono Raceway after a crash involving Canadian Indycar driver Robert Wickens.

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