The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Castroneve­s and Kanaan in 20th year in Indy cars

- By Jenna Fryer

Helio Castroneve­s and Tony Kanaan have known each other so long, they share a favorite story from childhood they both tell nearly verbatim.

They were about 12, on vacation in Brazil, and met a pretty girl. Castroneve­s called her, with Kanaan sitting next to him and coaching him along. Kanaan advised Castroneve­s to be direct, advice he probably took too seriously.

The duo never heard from her again.

That was nearly 30 years ago, and the two Brazilians are still together, at the top of their profession, and celebratin­g their 20th season in IndyCar together. Kanaan has made this a commemorat­ive year, with hats and stickers to celebrate the occasion.

Castroneve­s? Well, he wanted it to be a little more under the radar.

“I think he wants people to know, but I don’t,” Castroneve­s said Friday. “But somehow people now know, and I am like, ‘Darn it, man, why you gotta do that? Now everybody knows we are old.’ ”

Castroneve­s turns 43 next month, Kanaan is only seven months younger. They are the elder statesmen of the series and sport serious hardware for their efforts. Castroneve­s is a three-time Indianapol­is 500 winner, Kanaan has one Indy 500 title and a series championsh­ip.

Kanaan also holds the record for consecutiv­e starts with 265.

Neither driver is feeling his age as they head into Sunday’s race through the streets of Long Beach.

“In my mind, I’m still very young,” Kanaan said. “I take care of myself a lot. I think I’m still in the game. I think I still I had a decent season last year, despite not getting a win. As long as I feel this way, I’m going to keep going.”

Yet both their team owners are admittedly already looking to an eventual future in which neither driver is full-time in Indy cars.

Roger Penske last month said he has Castroneve­s — along with Juan Pablo Montoya — on a short list of drivers for a potential sports car team. Chip Ganassi said Friday that when Kanaan is finished in IndyCar, he will likely continue with the organizati­on in a different role.

“Longevity in the sport has its rewards,” Ganassi said.

Castroneve­s said he will do whatever Penske needs, but insisted he’s fit enough to drive in this series another seven to eight years. He also said he’s still chasing his first career championsh­ip, and doesn’t want to stop running the Indianapol­is 500, where he’s trying to join an exclusive club of four-time winners.

Kanaan has the same hesitation about his career. He doesn’t know when he will be done fulltime racing in IndyCar, but like Castroneve­s, does not want to give up the Indy 500 or competing. He has a Rolex 24 Hours at Daytona victory with Ganassi, and wants to add to his resume.

“I would love to look around and do the IMSA program and do Le Mans,” he said.

“Winning (the Rolex 24) was great. The 500 was great, and the championsh­ip. But now, I think I want to have the opportunit­y to do Le Mans.

“So, some IMSA, maybe WEC, but I’d probably stay around sports cars and maybe do the 500 once a year, that would be ideal.”

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