The Hamilton Spectator

It’s all new for century-old Indy 500

- MICHAEL MAROT

The Indianapol­is 500 is embarking on its second century much as it did its first: Nobody really knows what to expect in next weekend’s race. Pole-winner Scott Dixon posted the fastest four-lap qualifying average at Indy in 21 years Sunday. But with the first rows filled by three race winners, three 500 runners-up and a two-time Formula One champion, picking a favourite is anybody’s guess. “I think the hardest part of the week leading up to the 500 is you’re basically trying to predict things,” Dixon said. “Everybody asks you how do you think you’re going to do, how is the race going to go? It’s so hard to talk about the race continuous­ly before you’ve even done it. You know, you have to be positive, but there’s always some doubts in your mind.” This year is particular­ly confoundin­g after Dixon qualified with a four-lap average of 232.164 m.p.h. — the fastest attempt since Arie Luyendyk’s track record 236.986 in 1996. Many around the track, including secondplac­e qualifier Ed Carpenter, think increasing the speeds is long overdue and something fans have been craving. “It’s cool to see the speeds going back up, to hear the crowd roar when Scott did those laps, when everyone put up big times” Carpenter said Sunday. “It’s part of the mystique of this place — pushing the limits of the cars and us as drivers. So I enjoy that part of it. It’s thrilling when it goes well and when it goes poorly like we saw (Saturday’s crash), but that’s part of what makes IndyCar special.” But even with one of IndyCar’s best career drivers leading the way, there are no sure things at Indy. Dixon won after claiming his first Indy pole in 2008. Two years ago, after getting his second, the New Zealander finished fifth because of an overheatin­g car. He’s the fifth driver in race history with three pole wins and now faces a 33-car field with talent, experience and fast cars. Carpenter, a two-time Indy pole winner, will start from the inside of the front row after going 231.664. Defending champion Alexander Rossi was the fastest car in Andretti Autosport’s sixpack. He’ll start third after posting a 231.487. Japan’s Takuma Sato, Rossi’s teammate, will start fourth. He is best remembered for trying to make a dangerous first turn pass for the lead on the final lap at the 2012 race. Instead, he touched wheels with Dario Franchitti and wound up crashing. J.R. Hildebrand, Carpenter’s teammate, will start sixth, the outside of Row 2. He was the 2011 runner-up crashing on the final turn of the last lap. The third row is comprised of Tony Kanaan, the 2013 Indy winner; Marco Andretti, the 2006 runner-up; and Will Power, the 2015 runner-up. But the most intriguing story might be the quest of Fernando Alonso, who is skipping Monaco to run his first oval race. He qualified fifth with an average of 231.300 after only eight days on the track and just hours after an unschedule­d engine change. “He’s proving why he’s one of the best in the world right now,” Rossi said. Roger Penske has won the 500 a record 16 times. Helio Castroneve­s has three of them. Both face an uphill battle to reach victory lane at the Brickyard. After winning the first five poles this season, only Power advanced to Sunday’s nine-car pole shootout — and he wound up ninth at 230.200. Nobody else in the five-car stable will start higher than two-time winner Juan Pablo Montoya at No. 18, the outside of Row 6.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? James Hinchcliff­e of Oakville smiles during qualificat­ions for the Indianapol­is 500 on Sunday.
DARRON CUMMINGS, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS James Hinchcliff­e of Oakville smiles during qualificat­ions for the Indianapol­is 500 on Sunday.
 ?? GREG HUEY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The car driven by Sebastien Bourdais of France, impacts the wall and bursts into flames in the second turn in qualificat­ions for the Indianapol­is 500.
GREG HUEY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The car driven by Sebastien Bourdais of France, impacts the wall and bursts into flames in the second turn in qualificat­ions for the Indianapol­is 500.

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