The Province

Kanaan back on familiar IndyCar ground

‘Ironman’ hopes to ride recent momentum to another strong performanc­e at rural Wisconsin road course

- Genaro C. Armas

Tony Kanaan feels like a veteran again this weekend at Road America.

In France last week, the 42-yearold driver with 20 years of IndyCar experience was treated like a rookie.

Subbing for injured driver Sebastien Bourdais, Kanaan drove the No. 67 Ford GT for his Chip Ganassi Racing team and finished sixth in class in his first ride at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

“Obviously, at this point in my career, to be called a rookie was quite funny, to be honest,” Kanaan said with a laugh.

He’s on more familiar ground at Road America, which will host the 220-mile Kohler Grand Prix on Sunday.

Kanaan has made six starts at the rural Wisconsin road course, including three Top 5 finishes. He came in second to Will Power in the series’ return to the track last year.

No wonder this 14-turn course is one of Kanaan’s favourite stops on the schedule. Elevation changes and three intriguing straightaw­ays add to the appeal. So do the impromptu trips for drivers into the campground­s to interact with fans.

“It puts a smile on my face,” Kanaan said this week. “From the fans, to the racetrack itself and how fast it is, to the atmosphere ... everything about it is fun.”

After a second-place finish two weeks ago at Texas, Kanaan hopes he can keep the momentum going at Road America. It was Kanaan’s second top-five finish in four races since the Indy 500 last month.

Kanaan is eighth in the points race entering this weekend, 63 points behind leader and teammate Scott Dixon.

“We had a very different beginning of the season for me. We had a couple of misfortune­s ... I’ve been looking to turn the situation around. We’ve been doing that since Indy,” Kanaan said.

“Now is the time. We have the momentum, this is the time and we have good experience on this track,” Kanaan added.

It’s a course that drivers say provides enjoyable challenges that differ from the kind of neck-and-neck racing often found at ovals like Texas.

Road America will be the first IndyCar race since the tumultuous Texas stop on June 10. Kanaan got blamed — and penalized — for a big wreck before he recovered from being two laps down to get his fifth runner-up finish in Texas. Kanaan apologized after the race. Kanaan, who has earned the nickname “Ironman,” is primed to make his 275th consecutiv­e start, a streak that dates to the 2001 race at Portland.

 ?? — AP FILES ?? Tony Kanaan is primed to make his 275th consecutiv­e start, a streak that dates back to 2001.
— AP FILES Tony Kanaan is primed to make his 275th consecutiv­e start, a streak that dates back to 2001.

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