2017 Honda Indy Toronto Explained

The 2017 Honda Indy Toronto was an IndyCar Series event held on July 16, 2017 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The race served as the 12th round of the 2017 IndyCar Series season. Frenchman Simon Pagenaud qualified on pole position, while American Josef Newgarden took victory in the race.

Pre-Race

Prior to the race, Schmidt Peterson Motorsports elected to replace Mikhail Aleshin in the No. 7 car, instead opting for veteran driver Sebastián Saavedra. The reasons for the change were undisclosed by the team.[1]

Qualifying

Qualifying was held on Saturday, July 15. Simon Pagenaud secured pole position, setting a new track record time of 58.9124 at an average speed of 109.14 mph (175.64 km/h). Alongside him on the front row was Graham Rahal. The remained of the top six was rounded out by Hélio Castroneves, Will Power, Scott Dixon, and James Hinchcliffe.

Qualifying saw two incidents during the course of its several sessions. During the second group of round 1 qualifying, Esteban Gutiérrez suffered a heavy crash in turn 11 that placed doubt on his participation in the race, both due to damage to the car and due to Gutiérrez displaying concussion-like symptoms. However, the car was repaired, and Guitérrez was cleared by IndyCar's doctors, allowing him to participate in the race.[2] A second, more minor incident occurred in round 2 qualifying, when J. R. Hildebrand made contact with the wall in turn 8.[3]

Race

The race was held on Sunday, July 16. At the start, Hélio Castroneves managed to pass both Simon Pagenaud and Graham Rahal going into turn 1, giving him the lead of the race. Behind them, Scott Dixon managed to get to the inside of Will Power to move to third. However, as cars approached turn 3, Dixon moved wide to avoid hitting the back of Rahal, in the process making contact with Power and forcing him into the outside wall. Power's car suffered terminal suspension damage, relegating him to a last place finish. Dixon limped around the track with a flat tire, which, after repairs, dropped him to the tail-end of the field. He would then be assessed a drive-through penalty for entering a closed pit-lane. The incident brought out the race's first caution period.

Racing resumed on lap 6, with Castroneves leading Pagenaud, Rahal, Josef Newgarden, and James Hinchcliffe. The top five remained unchanged until lap 20, when Spencer Pigot, who had charged through the field, managed to move around Hinchcliffe. Shortly thereafter, drivers began making their first pit stops, including Hinchcliffe, Alexander Rossi, and Josef Newgarden. Just as Newgarden entered the pits, Tony Kanaan nosed into the wall in turn 1, bringing out the race's second caution, forcing the leaders and anyone else who had not pitted to make their first stop under caution and secede track position. Newgarden proved the biggest beneficiary of the caution, moving into the lead once the leaders came into pit lane. Behind him were Ed Jones, who had not yet pitted, Charlie Kimball, Rossi, and Hinchcliffe.

Racing resumed on lap 27 with the top five remaining intact. Further back, Takuma Sato suffered front wing damage and a punctured tire, forcing him to pit again. On lap 29, Jones began to fall back in the field due to his worn tires, losing position first to Kimball, then to Rossi, Hinchcliffe, and Marco Andretti before finally coming in to pit on lap 33. Several drivers began to make their second pit stops shortly thereafter, including Carlos Muñoz, Scott Dixon, and second-place running Kimball. This promoted Rossi to second, but Newgarden continued to extend his lead.

The running order remained the same until the leaders made their pit-stops at lap 54, when Newgarden led the entire top five into the pits. Max Chilton briefly inherited the lead before handing the lead over to Pagenaud with his stop on lap later. Pagenaud led until lap 57 when he pitted, allowing Newgarden to return to the lead of the race. The order now ran Newgarden, Rossi, Hinchcliffe, Dixon, Andretti, though Dixon would pit for the final time on lap 61, promoting Ryan Hunter-Reay into the top 5, though with heavy pressure from Pagenaud behind. The top five remained the same until lap 81, when Hunter-Reay ran wide at turn 7, allowing Pagenaud to move ahead for position. Up front, despite dealing with traffic from a dueling Takuma Sato and Conor Daly, Josef Newgarden held on to take his second victory of the 2017 season by a comfortable margin of 1.87 seconds over Alexander Rossi, while James Hinchcliffe came across the line third.[4] Marco Andretti secured his first top 5 finish in IndyCar since the 2015 MAVTV 500 with his fourth-place finish.

In the point standings, Scott Dixon remained in the lead of the championship, but his lead dropped to only three points over Hélio Castroneves. Simon Pagenaud remained in third place, while Newgarden moved past his teammate Will Power thanks to his victory.[5] [6] [7]

Results

KeyMeaning
RRookie
WPast winner

Qualifying

PosNo.NameGrp.Round 1Round 2Firestone Fast 6
11 Simon Pagenaud259.557059.292258.9124
215 Graham Rahal159.398459.743259.2245
33 Hélio Castroneves159.683659.649759.4345
412 Will Power W159.391059.647659.5430
59 Scott Dixon W259.757859.573259.7970
65 James Hinchcliffe21:00.034859.72011:00.1415
72 Josef Newgarden W259.660959.8992
898 Alexander Rossi259.55771:00.0114
98 Max Chilton259.75551:00.1202
1026 Takuma Sato159.55271:00.1970
1127 Marco Andretti159.74641:00.3384
1221 J. R. Hildebrand159.69671:02.3040
1320 Spencer Pigot159.7585
1410 Tony Kanaan21:00.0607
1519 Ed Jones R159.8686
1628 Ryan Hunter-Reay W21:00.0926
1783 Charlie Kimball159.9820
184 Conor Daly21:00.2713
1914 Carlos Muñoz11:00.1650
207 Sebastián Saavedra21:00.6272
2118 Esteban Gutiérrez R21:00.7441
OFFICIAL BOX SCORE

Source for individual rounds:[8]

Race results

DriverTeamEngineLapsTime/retiredPit stopsGridLaps led
12 Josef Newgarden WTeam PenskeChevrolet851:35:05.3522275853
298 Alexander RossiAndretti Herta AutosportHonda85+1.87042840
35 James HinchcliffeSchmidt Peterson MotorsportsHonda85+4.70202635
427 Marco AndrettiAndretti AutosportHonda85+18.740821132
51 Simon PagenaudTeam PenskeChevrolet85+19.427421232
628 Ryan Hunter-Reay WAndretti AutosportHonda85+27.390521628
78 Max ChiltonChip Ganassi RacingHonda85+28.338629127
83 Hélio CastronevesTeam PenskeChevrolet85+28.9415232425
915 Graham RahalRahal Letterman Lanigan RacingHonda85+29.76932222
109 Scott Dixon WChip Ganassi RacingHonda85+30.33694520
117 Sebastián SaavedraSchmidt Peterson MotorsportsHonda85+32.766822019
1283 Charlie KimballChip Ganassi RacingHonda85+36.482131718
1321 J. R. HildebrandEd Carpenter RacingChevrolet85+52.891021217
1418 Esteban Gutiérrez RDale Coyne RacingHonda85+53.985822116
1514 Carlos MuñozA. J. Foyt EnterprisesChevrolet85+57.277731915
1626 Takuma SatoAndretti AutosportHonda85+1:01.845731014
174 Conor DalyA. J. Foyt EnterprisesChevrolet85+1:02.375241813
1820 Spencer PigotEd Carpenter RacingChevrolet84+1 Lap41312
1910 Tony KanaanChip Ganassi RacingHonda83+2 Laps31411
2019 Ed Jones RDale Coyne RacingHonda75Mechanical21510
2112 Will Power WTeam PenskeChevrolet0Contact049
OFFICIAL BOX SCORE
Notes: Points include 1 point for leading at least 1 lap during a race, an additional 2 points for leading the most race laps, and 1 point for Pole Position.

Source for time gaps:[9]

Championship standings

Driver standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Scott Dixon423
2420
3 Simon Pagenaud404
14 Josef Newgarden400
15 Will Power359
Manufacturer standings
PosManufacturerPoints
1 Honda1,045
2 Chevrolet1,022

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Aleshin replaced by Saavedra for Toronto. David. Malsher. July 13, 2017. July 26, 2017. Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. July 29, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170729030909/https://www.motorsport.com/indycar/news/aleshin-replaced-by-saavedra-for-toronto-930157/. dead.
  2. Web site: Gutierrez cleared to race at Toronto. David. Malsher. July 16, 2017. July 26, 2017. Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  3. Web site: Pagenaud sets track record for Toronto pole. July 15, 2017. July 26, 2017. Racer.com. Racer Media & Marketing, Inc.. https://web.archive.org/web/20170728081938/http://www.racer.com/indycar/item/142333-pagenaud-sets-track-record-for-toronto-pole. July 28, 2017. dead.
  4. News: Newgarden races to second Toronto IndyCar win in 3 years. July 27, 2017. Associated Press. Associated Press. AP Sports. July 16, 2017. Toronto. https://web.archive.org/web/20170728203813/http://racing.ap.org/article/newgarden-races-second-toronto-indycar-win-3-years. July 28, 2017. dead.
  5. Web site: Toronto IndyCar: Newgarden holds off Rossi as other aces hit bad luck. David. Malsher. July 16, 2017. July 27, 2017. Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  6. Web site: Newgarden follows familiar path to Toronto victory lane. Mark. Robinson. July 16, 2017. Toronto. July 27, 2017. IndyCar.com. Brickyard Trademarks, Inc..
  7. Web site: Newgarden Finds Luck, Victory on Toronto Streets. Ben. Hinc. July 16, 2017. July 27, 2017. theapexracing.co. TheApex.racing LLC.
  8. Web site: Race Report: 2017 Honda Indy Toronto. July 11, 2017. July 27, 2017. theapexracing.co. TheApex.racing LLC.
  9. Web site: IndyCar 2017 Toronto. July 27, 2017. Motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.