The Manila Times

RAHAL RIDING MOMENTUM INTO POCONO

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GIVEN his rough start to the current season, it certainly didn’t appear as if Graham Rahal would be a championsh­ip contender in the Verizon IndyCar Series.

However, thanks to eight top-10 finishes in nine races — including two wins — the 28-year-old driver is in the thick of the title chase heading to Pocono Raceway this weekend for the ABC Supply 500 race.

“I’m proud of my team and the work the guys have done to put us in this position,” Rahal said. “We’re a small team, but as I always say, we’re mighty.”

“We started the year with things stacked up against us. To see the way the team has rebounded, I take a lot of pride in that,” he added.

Rahal finished no better than 10th in the first four races and was mired in 17th place in the point standings.

The turning point of his season came at the Grand Prix of Indianapol­is. Rahal started 20th in the No. 15 Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing Honda, charged his way through the field and finished sixth.

“That day was symbolic of what was to come,” Rahal said. “That moment really inspired the team. That brought us all a little bit of a spark.”

At the Indianapol­is 500, Rahal was running third when a flat tire put him a lap down. He rallied to finish 12th.

Since then, it has been nothing but top-10 finishes, starting at Detroit with a sweep of the doublehead­er.

“Detroit was great,” Rahal said. “When we showed up I knew we had a great, competitiv­e car. We made some magic happen there.”

He then placed fourth at Texas, eighth at Road America, fifth at Iowa, ninth at Toronto and third at Mid-Ohio.

Coming to Pocono, Rahal is sixth in the standings with 395 points. That’s 58 in back of leader Josef Newgarden.

“We didn’t really score points until the Grand Prix of Indianapol­is,” Rahal said. “Had it not been for those first four races, we’re probably leading this championsh­ip.”

If Rahal is to remain on his roll, he will have to change his luck at Pocono. He has not finished better that 11th in four races at the 2.5-mile triangular Long Pond track.

“I’m snakebitte­n there a little bit. It happens,” Rahal said. “But I feel like we found some great things at Indianapol­is that are going to carry over [to Pocono]. I feel positive and very excited about the opportunit­y that’s ahead of us there.”

“Has it been a good one there his- torically for us? No. But that doesn’t mean that this year won’t be. It’s a big race. We hope to do well,” he added.

THE CHALLENGE OF POCONO

With its three different corners, Rahal said Pocono presents a huge challenge to the drivers and engineers in figuring out how to make the car handle.

“Turn 1 is heavily banked and probably the highest sensation of speed we see in an IndyCar all year,” Rahal said. “Going in there at 220-plus mph is an intimidati­ng period of time in your life.”

In the past two seasons, Rahal has finished fourth and fifth in the final standings.

Four races remain this season. If Rahal is to come away with his first championsh­ip, he said his team cannot have any off-weekends the rest of the way.

And he has to beat the Team Penske drivers. Four of the five ahead of him in points drive for Penske: Newgarden, Helio Castroneve­s, Simon Pagenaud and Will Power.

“Yes, [Scott] Dixon is right in there and others,” Rahal said. “But if we’re going to move up, we have to beat Penske. It’s going to be a big challenge, but I think we have a team that’s very capable of doing it.”

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Race car driver Graham Rahal wins the Indy Car MAVTV 500 at the Auto Club Speedway on June 27, 2015 in Fontana, California.
AFP PHOTO Race car driver Graham Rahal wins the Indy Car MAVTV 500 at the Auto Club Speedway on June 27, 2015 in Fontana, California.

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