San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

INDYCAR DRIVERS TURN DAY INTO A NASCAR CONFLICT

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Reigning Indycar champion Will Power shoved Scott Dixon after the two were involved in a crash on Saturday that severely damaged both cars during practice at Road America in Elkhart, Wis.

Dixon, the six-time Indycar champion, had spun on course and re-entered the track ahead of Romain Grosjean and Power. Dixon allowed enough room for Grosjean to get by, but as Power approached the gap closed and Power couldn’t avoid hitting Dixon.

The two cars spun off course and Power slammed into a concrete wall. Both cars were extremely damaged, with only three hours to rebuild them ahead of qualifying.

Power then got out of his car, exchanged words with Dixon and shoved him in the chest. Power later kicked the air in frustratio­n.

“Scott moved abruptly and I was coming,” Power said. “It’s a very unfortunat­e incident. Nothing I could really do there. Didn’t expect him to move. Such a pity. I felt like we had a pretty good car. We’ll rebuild it and see what happens.”

Dixon acknowledg­ed he was at fault.

“Didn’t realize Power was even there,” Dixon said. “I’m really sorry for him and obviously his team. Mistake on my behalf. I feel frustrated for obviously wrecking our car and his car as well.”

Power’s tough day continued during Saturday afternoon’s qualifying. He qualified 22nd in the 27-person field and will be right next to Dixon, who qualified 23rd. Dixon ended up using an entirely new car for qualifying.

As he discussed his frustratio­ns at the end of the day, Power’s anger wasn’t solely directed at Dixon.

He wasn’t happy with the conditions at Road America following its repaving last fall.

“This track’s terrible when you go off it,” Power said after going off course in qualifying. “They do a terrible job here. They need to pick up their game. Any way you go off, you almost break your back every time. I’ve done it a couple of times this weekend. Need a kick in the butt for this place.”

Power also wasn’t happy with Grosjean.

“Grosjean is a piece of crap, if you saw what he did in practice,” Power said. “He needs a punch in the face.”

Colton Herta of Andretti Autosport earned the pole position for today’s race at by posting a fastest lap of 1 minute, 40.1945 seconds on this 14-turn, 4.014-mile road course. That’s over 4.5 seconds faster than the time Alexander Rossi ran to earn the pole for last year’s event.

Pato O’ward qualified second and was followed in order by points leader Alex Palou, defending Road America champion Josef Newgarden and Rossi.

Verstappen takes pole

Max Verstappen won the 25th pole of his career and moved one step closer to tying the late Ayrton Senna for Formula One victories as the two-time reigning world champion overcame wet conditions in qualifying at the Canadian Grand Prix.

Verstappen, who has won five of seven races this season, will lead the field to green Sunday as he attempts to win his 44th career race. It would tie him with Senna for fifth on F1’s all-time winners list.

Rain in Montreal hampered most of Saturday at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, and although the track was only slightly slick at the start of qualifying, it was absolutely pouring by the pole-deciding third session. The 10 drivers who advanced into the round tried to get a clean lap down, but Oscar Piastri of Mclaren crashed and Alex Albon of Williams didn’t get on track.

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