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Sports

Focus returns to racing as IndyCar opens season

The Philippine Star

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida (AP) — It's been more than six months since Ryan Hunter-Reay became the first American driver in six years to win the IndyCar championship.

With a new season set to begin, he's finally getting some attention for his achievement.

As IndyCar heads back to the race track with Sunday's season-opening Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, the focus can finally return to the racing. The drivers and their on-track product have been largely overshadowed by the off-track issues that typically plague IndyCar, and there's been no bigger casualty than Hunter-Reay.

Not even mentioned among the preseason favorites a year ago, he put together a career season to climb into the title race. He used a late win at Baltimore to prevent Australian Will Power from clinching, and snagged his first championship in the season finale at Fontana.

It was a defining moment for a driver who had clawed his way through the ranks and worked hard to stay in racing when funding dried up.

"The best thing about winning a championship, this is what I've been working for my entire life, it's a dream come true," Hunter-Reay said. "Nobody can ever take that away from me now, from us, from our team. It's something that we accomplished. We earned it, straight up earned it."

But the proper credit never came.

Speculation swirled about the future of IndyCar CEO Randy Bernard for months leading into the season finale, and it consumed the series after Hunter-Reay became the first American since Sam Hornish Jr. in 2006 to win the title. Bernard's eventual firing and the unrest it created among fans overshadowed everything, including any potential marketing opportunities the series could have had with Hunter-Reay.

"I've tried not to pay much attention because it just makes me angry, the same way it makes the fans angry," English driver Justin Wilson said. "All we can do is focus on the things we can control, and that's the racing part."

IndyCar is playing catch-up now, with Hunter-Reay's face adorning banners and ads for both the series and Sunday's race through the streets of St. Pete, which is considered his hometown event because he lives in Fort Lauderdale.

He'll face intense pressure from Power, who came up short last season for a third consecutive year. He opened the season with three consecutive wins before the Indianapolis 500, struggled a bit on ovals, and found himself trying to stave off Hunter-Reay in the finale on the oval at Fontana.

Power ended up wrecking when he hit a seam in the track and lost the title by four points.

What does he need to do different this year to finally win a championship?

"Just get four points. I just need to score four more points," he said with a laugh.

But he was serious.

"It's not really to change much. We made changes within the team and had a relaxing offseason," Power said. "I've never seen a team work so hard in the offseason really. Me personally as well, so all we can do is bring what we've got, do our absolute best. Hopefully at some point we can get the thing done."

They'll both be challenged internally from their own teammates: Helio Castroneves at Penske Racing, and Hunter-Reay from James Hinchcliffe, who enters his second season with Andretti and was fast in preseason testing.

Hunter-Reay will carry the banner for Chevrolet, which wrapped up the driver and manufacturer titles last season in its return to IndyCar.

That didn't sit well with Honda, which celebrated Dario Franchitti's win in the Indianapolis 500 but was otherwise overshadowed by Chevy. Nor did it sit well with Chip Ganassi, who won his fifth consecutive title last year after Scott Dixon (2008) and Franchitti (2009-2011).

"I don't think it's any secret we need to be better this year," Ganassi said. "We all need to be better this year. Our team knows that. Honda knows that. We'll be better."

The Ganassi organization is down a car as Graham Rahal left to drive for his father, Bobby, at Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing.

Other big movers this year were Takuma Sato to AJ Foyt Racing in a pairing everyone will be watching. The hot-tempered Foyt has admitted "my Japanese ain't real good" and he's made it clear to Sato he doesn't want him taking chances to pick up positions when he's only got a 10th-place car.

Simona de Silvestro finds herself at KV Racing as teammate to Tony Kanaan in a big break for the Swiss driver.

"I've told her this is her chance, there's no excuses," Kanaan said. "It's the best opportunity she's had in IndyCar so far. Simona needs a good result, but the series does as well from having her, and her personality coming out more often will help us, too."

AUSTRALIAN WILL POWER

CHIP GANASSI

DARIO FRANCHITTI

FONTANA

FORT LAUDERDALE

FOYT RACING

HUNTER

HUNTER-REAY

REAY

SEASON

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