The Peterborough Examiner

IndyCar rallies after violent crash

‘We try our best to look after each other ... You don’t want to see that happen to anyone’

- DAN GELSTON

LONG POND, PA. — Alexander Rossi and Robert Wickens have forged a bit of a rivalry this racing season. They’ve tangled on the track a few times, and exchanged the occasional verbal dart — some more playful than others, like when Wickens jokingly locked Rossi in a prison cell during a promotiona­l event last month.

But animosity between IndyCar drivers tends to dissolve quickly amid grim reminders of the sport’s dangers.

Wickens was just a few laps into the race at Pocono Raceway on Sunday when he connected with Ryan Hunter-Reay and soared into the catchfence. The fencing was shredded, and Wickens’ car was reduced to just the tub, which came to a rest on the track along an interior wall.

The race was stopped — and IndyCar came together.

“All 22 of us, 33 of us, whatever it may be, are a family,” Rossi said. “We try our best to look after each other out there. You don’t want to see that happen to anyone. We’ll continue to think of him and pray for him, his family, his fiancée; all that they have to deal with.”

Wickens was being treated for injuries to his lower extremitie­s, right arm and spine following an accident that led to him getting airlifted from the track to the hospital. IndyCar said the Canadian sustained a pulmonary contusion and was scheduled to undergo surgery for a spinal injury at Lehigh Valley Hospital Cedar Crest in Allentown on Monday night.

IndyCar drivers were more concerned with his health and future than what the race meant to the championsh­ip picture.

“All we can hope for is that everybody is going to be OK,” points leader Scott Dixon said.

It was the latest chilling moment 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.

James Hinchcliff­e, who was caught up in Wickens’ wreck, had survived his own life-threatenin­g injury when a broken part from his car pierced an artery during a 2015 crash at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

Once the green flag dropped for the final time Sunday, the drivers played nice. There wasn’t another caution the rest of the way, and Rossi closed the gap on Dixon in the points race with a dominant win.

Rossi led 180 of 200 laps to win his second straight race and third of the season, slicing Dixon’s lead to 29 points with three races left.

Will Power, who won the last two Pocono races, was second, and Dixon finished third.

Rossi sprayed champagne and confetti flew on the podium.

The celebratio­n may have seemed normal, but thoughts couldn’t help stray toward Wickens.

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

 ?? TWITTER ?? Frame grabs from the telecast of the IndyCar race at Pocono, where Canadian driver Robert Wickens’ car crashed hard into fencing. Wickens was airlifted to hospital and was facing spinal surgery Monday night.
TWITTER Frame grabs from the telecast of the IndyCar race at Pocono, where Canadian driver Robert Wickens’ car crashed hard into fencing. Wickens was airlifted to hospital and was facing spinal surgery Monday night.

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