The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Everyone playing catchup to Penske’s cars

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INDIANAPOL­IS >> The IndyCar chase is kicking into high gear.

As Roger Penske’s dominant cars continue to run up front, just about everyone else is pursuing the series’ hottest team. Somehow over the last 14 months, Team Penske has turned one of the world’s most competitiv­e racing circuits into a virtual oneteam showcase.

It claimed the top three spots in last year’s standings, added the fourthplac­e finisher during the offseason and has won all five poles and the last three races this season. Defending series champion Simon Pagenaud currently holds a 10-point lead over Scott Dixon of Chip Ganassi Racing in the standings. The next three spots are all occupied by Pagenaud’s teammates.

“I feel like we have as good a shot as anybody this month,” said Graham Rahal, who races for Rahal Letterman Lanigan. “You’ve just got to go beat them because the more you beat them, the more they’ll question themselves. But when you don’t beat them, they don’t question themselves.”

Penske’s unquestion­ed success defies logic.

On what is essentiall­y supposed to be a level playing field, the winner of more IndyCar races than any other team owner has seemingly found a secret code nobody else has cracked.

Penske’s Chevrolet-powered team has been the only significan­t threat to Honda this season, and there’s no indication Penske’s team is going to let anyone else get close to them at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

After Will Power won from the pole Saturday to give Penske his third straight IndyCar Grand Prix title, the Captain will now try to pad his incredible resume with an unpreceden­ted 18th Indianapol­is 500 pole in qualifying this weekend and an unpreceden­ted 17th 500 win on May 28.

In Tuesday’s hot, slick, windy conditions that could serve as a simulation of race day, the fastest lap on the 2.5-mile oval came from — who else? — Power at 224.656 mph. Helio Castroneve­s was second at 224.287. Colombian Gabby Chaves, who drives for Harding Racing, was third at 223.991.

Two-time Formula One champion Fernando Alonso finished 24th with a best lap of 221.029. He turned the most laps of the day, 117, and was one of 32 drivers on the track as he prepares for his closely watched debut in the showcase race.

Some in the series acknowledg­e the thrill of the chase has been replaced by frustratio­n. Others view the Penske powerhouse team as an example of what every team should aspire to.

“For 50 years, they’ve set the standard for all of us and what we want to achieve,” Chip Ganassi Racing managing director Mike Hull said. “We’ve been able to race with them side-by-side for a long time, and it’s always been fair.”

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