The Standard (St. Catharines)

Kanaan expects his most competitiv­e Indy 500 yet

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Tony Kanaan anticipate­s the most competitiv­e Indianapol­is 500 in his 18 years in the race.

In other words, Kanaan will need all the speed he finally found Friday.

Kanaan turned a quick lap of 225.517 m.p.h. to top the charts in final practice for Sunday’s running of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.” And it came after Kanaan was vocal in his displeasur­e of his No. 14 car for A.J. Foyt Enterprise­s after the practice session this past Monday.

“I’m happier because I found a couple things, not because we were at the top,” said the popular Kanaan, who won the race in 2013. “I was not happy Monday. I was extremely angry about it. But starting 16th, I don’t think you’re going to see cars passing cars right away. The field is so tight.”

Rookie driver Santino Ferrucci was second fastest for Dale

Coyne Racing, and former race winner Takuma Sato was third fastest in his Honda for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing.

In fact, the top six cars after Kanaan were carrying Honda power.

“It’s the most competitiv­e field I’ve ever seen,” Kanaan said. “Qualifying was extremely hard and it’s really tight. I think it’s going to be a difficult race. I do strongly believe everybody who is starting this race can win this race.”

The annual Carb Day revelry ahead of the 103rd running of the Indianapol­is 500 got off to a soggy start as a line of storms rolled over Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, which closed its gates briefly as lightning lit up the sky.

The storms moved away quickly, leaving in their wake a hot, humid day for thousands of fans taking in the festivitie­s. The rain delayed the start of practice for about 15 minutes. It was followed by the Freedom 100 race for Indy Lights, the fan-friendly pit stop competitio­n and an infield concert headlined by Foreigner.

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