Waterloo Region Record

IndyCar’s Frye: Wickens’ car performed exactly as it was designed

- DAVE SKRETTA

The head of competitio­n for IndyCar said Friday that Robert Wickens’ car performed exactly as it was designed when it tore to pieces during a frightenin­g wreck at Pocono.

The crash left the Canadian driver hospitaliz­ed with serious injuries to his spinal cord and extremitie­s.

IndyCar’s Jay Frye also acknowledg­ed that a host of improvemen­ts could be made — to the car itself, to the fencing that shredded the car and even to the injury reporting process that some criticized as being much too slow after last Sunday’s accident.

“Any time you have something like this happen, you look at it,” Frye said at Gateway Motorsport­s Park, where the series will race Saturday night.

“What was good about it? What was bad about it? Did it do its job? What could be better? How long did it take to fix?

“We were very encouraged by how the car held up, certainly not satisfied though, because the driver was injured. We’ll never be satisfied until that doesn’t happen.”

The accident occurred early in the race, when Wickens made slight contact with Ryan HunterReay and catapulted into the fencing above the SAFER barrier.

Hunter-Reay barely managed to slip under Wickens’ car as it helicopter­ed along the fence, and other drivers began trying to dodge the debris.

Takuma Sato, Pietro Fittipaldi and James Hinchcliff­e also were involved in the crash. Hinchcliff­e, a fellow Canadian and one of Wickens’ best friends, had minor injuries to his hands from the debris. The fence sustained about 80 feet of damage, delaying the race for about two hours.

Wickens’ team owner, Sam Schmidt, said this week he would like to see the SAFER barriers at speedways extend higher in places where they wouldn’t obstruct the view of fans.

Traditiona­l catch-fencing used for decades is designed to keep cars from catapultin­g over the wall, but in the case of an IndyCar, it also tends to grab hold of the chassis and break it into hundreds of pieces.

“We’ve very aware of what goes on globally,” Frye said, when asked whether there are innovation­s elsewhere in wall design that IndyCar might implement.

“There are certain minimum requiremen­ts we want, and most of our promoter partners greatly exceed our minimum standards. But yes, like with the car, we’re encouraged but not satisfied. We always want to look to help any way we can.”

Frye also said Pocono officials, working hand-in-hand with IndyCar, did a remarkable job to get the fencing repaired, even though some drivers expressed concern with the quick fix.

“Again, same thing we talked about — we’ll look back at all this stuff and see if it was done 100 per cent correctly,” Frye said. “We think it was safe. We don’t think there was a problem there.”

Yet there was an issue in the chain of communicat­ion following the wreck, Frye said. IndyCar has been criticized for taking too long to report that Wickens was alive and alert, leading to confusion and concern that extended from the garage area to fans watching at home.

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