Toronto Star

Drivers still shaken after Pocono crash

Wickens top of mind, Hunter-Reay recalls attempting to duck

- JENNA FRYER

IndyCar drivers, unsettled and with heavy hearts, return to racing this weekend with their minds on Robert Wickens, the Canadian driver who remains hospitaliz­ed after a frightenin­g wreck last weekend.

Once they get in their cars, they will have no choice but to push the Pocono Raceway crash away and focus on their jobs.

“It’s been a tough week, I think everybody wouldn’t mind a week off,” Ryan Hunter-Reay said Thursday.

Wickens has been hospitaliz­ed with a spinal cord injury since his car launched into the fence Sunday at the Pennsylvan­ia track. The severity of Wickens’ injury has not been determined, and the waiting has been agonizing for the IndyCar community.

They race again Saturday night at Gateway Motorsport­s Park near St. Louis, and teams will honour Wickens with decals made by a Toronto merchandis­er for the 29-year-old. The “Wicky” stickers will be the only reminders the drivers can have once they get in their cars.

“It’s difficult when someone gets hurt and you’re close to someone that gets hurt,” said Josef Newgarden, “but at the same time, you’ve got to be able to switch gears. If your mind is somewhere else or if you have any second thoughts or second- guesses ... you can’t perform at a peak level, and that’s where a driver has to thrive. They have to drive at peak response time and peak decision-making, and you can’t have anything cloud that.”

Viewers got a front-seat glimpse into how dangerous racing can be when the camera inside Hunter-Reay’s car captured real-time footage of Wickens’ car sailing over top of Hunter-Reay and narrowly missing Hunter-Reay’s head.

“I could see it. I knew it was close. I saw him get up into the fence, and he was flying over me, I saw all of it,” Hunter-Reay said Thursday. “In real time, having lifted, I wasn’t really aware I was that close. After seeing the in-car (video), you know, the reality set in that I got very close to a much different and much worse outcome.”

An IndyCar champion and Indianapol­is 500 winner, HunterReay had time to “shrug down” in the cockpit in his own attempt to duck Wickens’ car. He recalls having the reflex to protect his head.

“I didn’t want to lower my head forward because if something does hit you, you have the motion of coming back and hitting the headrest,” he said. “But I did try and shrug down and it just goes to show there’s no room to move in those cars. I did try to move my head vertically and on the video it looks like there is no movement.”

Hunter-Reay had time this week to reflect on “divine interventi­on, whatever you want to call it,” and being able to walk away from the Pocono crash. He spent a few days at home with his wife, Beccy, and three young sons, who watched the race on television in Florida. One of the boys asked him to please not crash.

James Hinchcliff­e grew up racing karts against Wickens. When Wickens was ready to leave touring cars in Germany at the end of last season, Hinch- cliffe recruited the fellow Toronto native to IndyCar. Wickens landed a slot next to Hinchcliff­e at Schmidt Peterson Motorsport­s and was having an exceptiona­l rookie year that began with Wickens nearly winning his series debut.

Hinchcliff­e stayed with Wickens in Pennsylvan­ia until he needed to prepare for Gateway, where the team will field only his car. He said he will race this weekend with a broken heart for his best friend, then return to the hospital to see Wickens.

Hinchcliff­e, who was hit in the hands with debris during Wickens’ wreck, was nearly killed in a 2015 accident when a broken part from his car severed an artery. His childhood hero, Canadian Greg Moore, was killed in a 1999 race. He also landed a top IndyCar ride when a seat opened following Dan Wheldon’s death in 2011. He’s had an emotional week and has not publicly spoken about Pocono.

At Gateway, he’ll have an entire community to help lift his spirits.

“The best place for us is at the racetrack,” Newgarden said. “The quicker you get back to the track, the better. That’s what we do. That’s what we love. Wickens would want to do the same thing, I would think. As much positive energy as we’re sending to him, we’re going to try and funnel a little bit of that into the race weekend, too.” Hunter-Reay understand­s how fortunate he was at Pocono. He has wrestled with concern for Wickens, his good fortune and the next race ahead.

 ?? ICON SPORTSWIRE GETTY IMAGES ?? Canadian driver Robert Wickens has been hospitaliz­ed with a spinal cord injury and other damage since his car was totalled in a brutal crash last Sunday at Pocono.
ICON SPORTSWIRE GETTY IMAGES Canadian driver Robert Wickens has been hospitaliz­ed with a spinal cord injury and other damage since his car was totalled in a brutal crash last Sunday at Pocono.

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