AND HE’S OFF... EVEN BEFORE RACE STARTS
HINCHCLIFFE KEPT BUSY IN RUN-UP TO HOMETOWN INDY
James Hinchcliffe might be faster on his phone than he is in his race car. “It might even be on my calendar still. Let me see,” the IndyCar star said when asked for a Coles Notes rundown of his biggest promotional week of the year, his hometown Honda Indy Toronto.
“Yep, sure is,” Hinchcliffe said upon locating his agenda from last July on his phone in fewer than 10 seconds during a recent interview at a downtown steak house. “No, no wait. Oh, yeah, no, yep, yep, all right, so …”
To say Indy week is a busy one for the Canadian Hinchcliffe, an eight-year Verizon IndyCar Series veteran, is a bit like suggesting the sun is warm. It’s an understatement of epic proportions.
The 31-year-old Oakville native’s preparations for Toronto begin around April and the work doesn’t really stop until the Monday following Canada’s lone Indy race weekend, when Hinchcliffe and his family make it a point to escape to Muskoka for a few much-needed days of R&R at the cottage.
Just how busy can things get for Canada’s most wellknown race-car driver this week? Consider that Hinchcliffe operates in what he calls “15-minute blocks” throughout his personal seven-day circus that is the Toronto Indy. The schedule is intense.
Last year’s template saw Hinchcliffe jet out of Iowa — home of the wonderfully named Iowa Corn 300, the same oval-track race he won last weekend — first thing on the Monday morning the week of the Toronto event, landing in his home city in time to do a couple of radio interviews later in the day, along with some promotional phone interviews for a nowdefunct September race at Watkins Glen, N.Y. (this year he was in Hamilton on Monday night along with teammate Robert Wickens for a go-kart fundraiser to benefit Make-A-Wish Canada).
On Tuesday, it’s more phone interviews in the morning before Hinchcliffe, who drives the No. 5 Honda for all-Canadian team Schmidt Peterson Motorsports, heads up to the Honda Canada campus in Markham for an employee and associate appreciation day.
“That’s one of those kind of staple things: Tuesday, every year,” Hinchcliffe said, adding that his day concluded with a visit to Sportsnet HQ for some TV and radio spots.
On Wednesday last year, it was over to Petro-Canada’s offices in his hometown of Oakville, followed by another sponsor event for a few more hours, then a personal appearance for New Era at the Lids store in the Eaton Centre.
An interview with The Canadian Press opened Thursday’s proceedings, followed by an Arrow sponsor appearance at the University of Toronto in Mississauga, then a meet-and-greet on pit lane, before an engineering meeting and a track walkthrough.
An on-site appearance for Honda as part of an NHL promotion followed, and Hinchcliffe’s night was spent at an annual cancer fundraiser in the Distillery District he cohosted alongside fellow racer Ryan Hunter-Reay.
Finally, on Friday in Toronto with his team organized in the paddock and practice sessions underway, Hinchcliffe began to settle into more of a typical race weekend. There is some added hometown emphasis on sponsor meet-and-greets, however, essentially squeezing in any promotional appearances he can when he’s not rounding the street course at top seed.
“If I’m not in the race car or in engineering, I’m somewhere, doing something,” Hinchcliffe said.
Practice sessions and qualifying take up most of Saturday, and the sensation that greets the Canuck driver when he’s finally in his single-seater and the green flag drops on Sunday afternoon is not a surprising one all things considered.
“Relief,” Hinchcliffe said. “Honestly, a lot of time we’re so excited to get in the car, because that’s kind of our peace and quiet.”