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Auto Racing Capsules: Kentucky Cup debut marred by traffic nightmare

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IndyCar results

Honda Indy Toronto results

The Associated Press

Sunday

At Toronto Street Circuit

Toronto, Canada

Lap length: 1.75 miles

(Starting position in parentheses)

1. (3) Dario Franchitti, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

2. (2) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

3. (8) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

4. (20) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

5. (14) Vitor Meira, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

6. (7) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

7. (10) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

8. (22) J.R. Hildebrand, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

9. (18) E.J. Viso, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

10. (17) Simona de Silvestro, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

11. (26) Ana Beatriz, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

12. (6) Oriol Servia, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

13. (5) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda, 85, Running.

14. (13) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda, 84, Running.

15. (11) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 83, Running.

16. (24) Paul Tracy, Dallara-Honda, 82, Running.

17. (12) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Honda, 81, Running.

18. (23) James Jakes, Dallara-Honda, 81, Running.

19. (21) Danica Patrick, Dallara-Honda, 79, Running.

20. (19) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 79, Running.

21. (25) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Honda, 77, Contact.

22. (4) Mike Conway, Dallara-Honda, 76, Contact.

23. (9) Alex Tagliani, Dallara-Honda, 71, Contact.

24. (1) Will Power, Dallara-Honda, 66, Contact.

25. (15) Sebastian Saavedra, Dallara-Honda, 43, Contact.

26. (16) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Honda, 2, Contact.

Race Statistics

Winners average speed: 76.805.

Time of Race: 1:56:32.1501.

Margin of Victory: 0.7345 seconds.

Cautions: 8 for 32 laps.

Lead Changes: 3 among 3 drivers.

Lap Leaders: Power 1-32, Franchitti 33-48, Rahal 49-71, Franchitti 72-85.

Points: Franchitti 353, Power 298, Dixon 270, Servia 232, Kanaan 221, Briscoe 219, M.Andretti 216, Rahal 208, Hildebrand 193, Tagliani 173.

Formula One

British Grand Prix results

The Associated Press

Sunday

At Silverstone circuit

Silverstone, England

Lap length: 3.66 miles

1. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 52 laps, 1:28:41.196, 128.720 mph.

2. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 52, 1:28:57.707.

3. Mark Webber, Australia, Red Bull, 52, 1:28:58.143.

4. Lewis Hamilton, England, McLaren, 52, 1:29:10.182.

5. Felipe Massa, Brazil, Ferrari, 52, 1:29:10.206.

6. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 52, 1:29:41.861.

7. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Sauber, 52, 1:29:46.786.

8. Nick Heidfeld, Germany, Renault, 52, 1:29:56.738.

9. Michael Schumacher, Germany, Mercedes, 52, 1:29:59.108.

10. Jaime Alguersuari, Spain, Toro Rosso, 52, 1:30.304.

11. Adrian Sutil, Germany, Force India, 52, 1:30.908.

12. Vitaly Petrov, Russia, Renault, 52, 1:31.877.

13. Rubens Barrichello, Brazil, Williams, 51, +1 lap.

14. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams, 51, +1 lap.

15. Paul di Resta, Scotland, Force India, 51, +1 lap.

16. Timo Glock, Germany, Virgin, 50, +2 laps.

17. Jerome d'Ambrosio, Belgium, Virgin, 50, +2 laps.

18. Vitantonio Liuzzi, Italy, HRT, 50, +2 laps.

19. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, HRT, 49, +3 laps.

Not Classfied

20. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 39, Wheel Nut.

21. Sebastien Buemi, Switzerland, Toro Rosso, 25, Accident Damage.

22. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Sauber, 23, Oil Leak.

23. Jarno Trulli, Italy, Team Lotus, 10, Oil Leak.

24. Heikki Kovalainen, Finland, Team Lotus, 2, Gearbox.

Drivers Standings

(After 9 of 20 races)

1. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 204 points.

2. Mark Webber, Australia, Red Bull, 124.

3. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 112.

4. Lewis Hamilton, England, McLaren, 109.

5. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 109.

6. Felipe Massa, Brazil, Ferrari, 52.

7. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 40.

8. Nick Heidfeld, Germany, Renault, 34.

9. Vitaly Petrov, Russia, Renault, 31.

10. Michael Schumacher, Germany, Mercedes, 28.

11. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Sauber, 25.

12. Adrian Sutil, Germany, Force India, 10.

13. Jaime Alguersuari, Spain, Toro Rosso, 9.

14. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Sauber, 8.

15. Sebastien Buemi, Switzerland, Toro Rosso, 8.

16. Rubens Barrichello, Brazil, Williams, 4.

17. Paul di Resta, Scotland, Force India, 2.

Constructors Standings

1. Red Bull, 328 points.

2. McLaren, 218.

3. Ferrari, 164.

4. Mercedes, 68.

5. Renault, 65.

6. Sauber, 33.

7. Toro Rosso, 17.

8. Force India, 12.

9. Williams, 4.

SPARTA, Ky. (AP) — Flashbulbs popped as pole sitter Kyle Busch led the 43-car Sprint Cup field to the green flag at Kentucky Speedway on Saturday night to kick off the long-awaited debut by NASCAR's top series at the 1.5-mile oval.

Yet the real story of the inaugural race at the track tucked among the hills in northern Kentucky was unfolding over the wall behind Turns 3 and 4 as Busch roared to the start/finish line.

Cars, many of them stuck in gridlock for hours on nearby Interstate 71, continued to inch along the overstuffed access roads. The maddening parade continued as the laps ticked off, with some fans eventually being asked to turn around after the race passed its halfway point so the track could start allowing those that did manage to make it in to leave.

Kentucky Speedway general manager Mark Simendinger put out a statement late Sunday saying the track "regrets" the traffic conditions and is working on a way to make amends with fans who never made it through the gates.

"We're committed to working with NASCAR, state and local officials and traffic experts to assure that this never happens again," Simendinger said.

NASCAR chairman Brian France said in a statement he was "thrilled" by the fan interest but also "extremely disappointed" with the numerous logistical issues that hampered the event and pledged the series will work with the track operator Speedway Motorsports Inc., to get it corrected.

"This situation cannot happen again," France said.

The 15-mile backups put a damper on the memorable show SMI chairman Bruton Smith promised to deliver when he received permission from NASCAR to move a date from Atlanta Motor Speedway to Kentucky last summer.

The track's first night on the series' biggest stage was memorable all right, but for all the wrong reasons.

Though more than 100,000 packed the revitalized grandstand, the race will be remembered more for the sea of brake lights along the interstate than for Busch's third win of the season.

Even the drivers weren't spared. Denny Hamlin worried he would miss the prerace driver's meeting after getting parked for several hours on overmatched I-71.

"It's back to reality to see the other side of things," said Hamlin, who did make the meeting and finished 11th. "Some guys around us had some problems. It's tough. Bruton and all those guys know it's an issue ... You've got a lot of fans that want to watch the race but you can't do anything about a two-lane road."

Heavy traffic at NASCAR events is nothing new, and Kentucky officials spent weeks assuring NASCAR folks they had a plan that would make the drive in bearable.

The state spent millions of dollars over the last decade to improve the infrastructure around the venue in hopes of one day getting a Cup date. Yet widening the interstate to three lanes for a couple of miles heading north to Cincinnati did little to expedite things.

Smith warned fans in the days leading up to the race that there would be some problems, calling I-71 the worst stretch of road in the country. The octogenarian even spent a little bit of time Saturday afternoon directing traffic.

A parting of the seas would have been more helpful.

Officials pledged to address the problem before the circuit comes back next summer.

"I'd rather have 12 months to work on that type of an issue than some of the other ones that you would possibly have," said track general manager Mark Simendinger. "Not to make any excuses but I do think that when it's your first time through you learn a lot of stuff and we certainly learned tonight."

The traffic headaches overshadowed the track's coming out party. In an era where long-time Cup staples have trouble filling the stands, the speedway was packed to check out a race over a decade in the making.

Yet the buzz on social media sites was overwhelmingly negative, with fans posting pictures of long backups as the sun started to duck over the horizon to the west.

The drivers could sense the frustration.

"It's disappointing," said five-time defending series champion Jimmie Johnson, who finished third. "I mean, the SMI group knows racetracks and does a very good job at all the racetracks they own. It's unfortunate we were unable to look ahead and see where these potential problems were."

A compelling race would have helped take away some of the sting, but the track's signature bumps provided little drama. Busch led 125 of the 267 laps and there were no green flag passes for the lead.

Drivers worried about the lack of SAFER barriers in certain areas before the race, but they never came into play. There were few dust-ups and only a handful of cautions as the 400-mile race resembled a parade more than the three-wide fireworks Smith promised.

"This place is so wide and you carry so much momentum, you're on the throttle for so long that there's really not much time for you to gain on the next guy in front of you," said Busch, who moved into the points lead after winning his 99th career NASCAR series event. "Whatever grind they did up top seemed to hurt it, I think, rather than help it."

Smith hasn't ruled out repaving the track in the near future, but he'd prefer a different kind of paving, one that helps alleviate the problems that marred what he hoped to be a special night.

It's unclear what the state can do. In addition to the road widening, it also pledged millions in tax incentives if Smith was able to bring a Cup race to the Bluegrass.

Gov. Steve Beshear, who watched a portion of the race from Smith's luxury suite, is in the middle of a re-election bid. Kentucky is in the midst of a financial crisis, and it's unclear whether spending millions to accommodate one night of racing is a viable idea.

Simendinger said better preparation and a little more patience next time could go a long way toward solving the problem.

"Did we know traffic was going to be heavy? Yeah," he said. "Did we know traffic was going to be distributed like that? I think we thought more people might take alternate routes anticipating heavy traffic. Is some of that on us? Yeah for not educating people the way we should have."

IndyCar

Franchitti wins race in Toronto

TORONTO (AP) — It took a lot of skill and a little luck for Dario Franchitti to avoid multiple collisions, difficult restarts and a challenge by a tenacious rival to win his third title on the 25th anniversary of the Honda Indy Toronto.

Franchitti survived a crash-filled Sunday that knocked out Will Power and several other drivers at Exhibition Place for his fourth IndyCar victory of the season, giving the Scottish driver a little breathing room atop the series points standings.

"That was a wild one, wasn't it?" he said. "That was an absolute wild one."

Franchitti took the checkered flag on the 85-lap, 1.75-mile street course with Target Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Scott Dixon in second and Ryan Hunter-Reay coming in third in the 26-car field. Marco Andretti was fourth coming off his victory in Iowa two weeks ago and Vitor Meira finished a season-high fifth.

It was Franchitti's 30th career win and fourth of the season, giving him a 55-point lead on Power in the standings.

The two rivals battled throughout the race until Franchitti nudged Power into a spin on the 57th lap that stalled the Australian's No. 12 Team Penske car. Franchitti kept going and stayed with the leaders while Power had to try to recover from 18th.

Initially, there was confusion about whether Franchitti's team had repealed a drive-through penalty, which would have cost Franchitti valuable position in the pack, but race officials later said the incident had been reviewed and no penalty had been issued.

That incensed Power, whose day was done nine laps later after getting banged into the wall from behind by Alex Tagliani. Power placed 24th in the second straight race he failed to finish after suffering a mild concussion in a crash at Iowa last month.

"We went into the corner and I gave (Franchitti) room and then he just drove into me," Power said. "I understood he was going to get penalized, but then there was no call. I just don't understand that."

After the race Franchitti said Power had cut across the front of his No. 10 car, and that he couldn't avoid the contact.

"I think it was a racing incident at best," Franchitti said. "I don't think I'm known throughout the paddock as a driver who races people dirty.

"I will say, in his defense, had that happened to me today, I would have been steamed when I got out of the car too. Particularly if I'd crashed later in the race. ... I understand his anger, but hopefully when he watches the replay on television he'll realize it was a racing incident."

Franchitti also benefited from a decision that was either exceedingly smart or extremely lucky.

He made a pit stop shortly before Helio Castroneves collided with Tagliani. The resulting caution forced Power, who had been leading, to pit and Castroneves, his Penske teammate, was effectively out of the race when his car required a long repair job.

With Power in the pit and out of the lead, Franchitti took over the top spot for the first time in the race.

"I think you have to have a certain amount of luck to win any race," Franchitti said. "It's one of the ingredients, it's one of the millions of things that has to go right to win any race. It's part of it. There's so many stages, every single person in the organization has to do their job right and you've got to have a certain bit of luck, too."

Luck often seemed in short supply on a cloudy but hot day near Lake Ontario.

Tagliani was launched into the air and out of the race by Danica Patrick on the 72nd lap, while a close battle between Toronto natives James Hinchcliffe and Paul Tracy resulted in a flat tire for Hinchcliffe and a damaged front wing for Tracy.

Tracy's hopes for a hometown victory were wiped out after he bumped into Meira on the 45th lap, dropping the 42-year-old fan favorite three laps out of the pack to a 16th-place finish.

Hinchcliffe, meanwhile, finished 14th after being involved in a five-car collision when Andretti turned into Oriol Servia, resulting in a pileup that banged up Hinchcliffe, Servia and Charlie Kimball, and ended Mike Conway's day.

Patrick started 21st and was a nonfactor after a collision with Japan's Takuma Sato punctured one of her tires. She finished 19th, but could at least say she crossed the finish line.

Brazil's Tony Kanaan wasn't so fortunate. He made an early exit after Ryan Briscoe clipped his back wheel rounding a corner, sending the Brazilian airborne into the wall just three laps after the start. Kanaan pointed at his head and yelled at Briscoe from the side of road as the Australian passed by his wrecked car.

"That's the thing about Toronto, right?" Hunter-Reay said. "It's bumpy, it's messy, it makes for some good racing."

Notes: Bobby Rahal, the father of Graham Rahal, won the inaugural race when it was called the Molson Indy in 1986. ... Canadian actor Dan Aykroyd served as grand marshal. ... The next stop on the circuit is the Edmonton Indy on July 24. ... Justin Wilson's brother, Stefan, won the Firestone Indy Lights developmental race Sunday to give both Wilson brothers victories in Toronto. Justin Wilson previously won the race in 2005.

Formula One

Alonso wins first race of season at British GP

SILVERSTONE, England (AP) — Fernando Alonso produced Ferrari's first victory of the Formula One season at the British Grand Prix on Sunday after championship leader Sebastian Vettel's hopes were thwarted by a pit-stop blunder.

Vettel was overtaken in the Silverstone pits by Alonso just after the halfway point when the Red Bull driver's mechanics struggled to attach a wheel.

"I saw the problem in the pit stop with Sebastian and we were in the lead at that moment, but who knows what might have happened after that," Alonso said. "I knew it was a race to be calm, make no mistakes, to not be off the track, and with that I knew the car had enough for victory and it came."

A 27th career victory for Alonso lifted the two-time world champion to third in the standings behind the Red Bull duo of Vettel and Mark Webber.

"Today it is 60 years since Ferrari won its first Grand Prix in Formula One," Alonso said. "And today we won on the same circuit with the same passion."

Vettel didn't linger on the pit-spot issue, saying that "Ferrari beat us fair and square."

"There were little mistakes here and there," said the German, who has won six of the opening nine races. "You can't get it right all the time, but credit to Ferrari — they have been getting stronger and improving their car, so it shows we need to keep pushing hard."

There was controversy on the final lap as Vettel increased his lead in the drivers' championship to 80 points over Webber, who had started from the pole position.

Webber had been ordered by the team to maintain third place and halt his pursuit of Vettel, who had jumped ahead of the Australian when they started from the front row.

Webber said he was "not fine" with the situation, disclosing that he had ignored "probably four or five" orders not to pass his teammate.

"Seb was doing his best, I was doing my best," Webber said. "I wasn't going to crash with anyone. I try to do my best with the amount of one way conversation I was having — I was trying to do my best to pass the guy in front."

Red Bull's bosses, though, stressed that they were trying to secure the maximum points possible for the team, which has a 110-point lead over McLaren in the constructors' championship.

"I can understand Mark's frustrations but we cannot give away a load of points," Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said. "We did not want to see our drivers in the fence at some time in the last two laps, which is how it would have ended up.

"Mark is not out of the championship race but we could not afford to risk losing points. Mark should be fine with that, he is a team player. Second and third is a very strong result."

Having qualified a season-worst 10th, McLaren's Lewis Hamilton began his surge from the start and edged Felipe Massa to finish fourth after going wheel-to-wheel with the Ferrari driver on the final lap.

"That was as close as it's going to get," Hamilton said. "I had a good start, made some places up but unfortunately towards end I had to save fuel. I had to give Webber his position.

"Then on the last lap they said now you can push and I was like, 'Thanks, after I'd let him catch me up' but I was not giving him that position."

Hamilton is fourth in the championship, tied at 109 points with teammate Jenson Button, whose race ended on lap 40 after exiting the pits with an unsecured front-right wheel.

"The guy on the front right lost a wheel nut and he went to get another one but as he turned I think the lollipop man thought we were good to go," Button said. "It is very disappointing — in front of my home crowd, I was enjoying the race, my pace was good," Button said. "Hopefully we won't have this sort of issue again. Anyone who had pace near the end had a chance of a podium and I definitely had pace."

-- Rob Harris

NHRA

Neff gets another Funny Car win

JOLIET, Ill. (AP) — Mike Neff raced to his fourth Funny Car victory of the season at the O'Reilly Auto Parts Route 66 NHRA Nationals on Sunday.

With the win, Neff gave Ford its 200th NHRA Funny Car victory as he powered his Ford Mustang to a performance of 4.246 seconds at 293.22 mph to defeat Jeff Arend, who posted a 5.168 at 186.54 in his Funny Car.

"The heat is what was hard for everyone out there today," Neff said. "It was a challenge. With the conditions it was one of those races where you have to get your car down the racetrack if you want to win. It's a tribute to our Ford Mustang body. It's a great car and we have great preparation by the team because the car is so consistent right now."

Del Worsham (Top Fuel), Greg Anderson (Pro Stock) and LE Tonglet (Pro Stock Motorcycle) also were winners of the NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series event.

Worsham raced to his fifth victory of the season in Top Fuel, powering his dragster past David Grubnic in the final round.

A three-time Funny Car winner here, Worsham joined Gary Scelzi as the only drivers to win in both nitro categories at Route 66 Raceway when he posted a 3.978 at 299.40 to hold off Grubnic's machine, which trailed with a 4.055 at 294.50.

Anderson earned his second victory of the season and 67th of his career, denying Erica Enders her first win in her fourth career final round.

Anderson took his first Route 66 Raceway victory with a holeshot victory as he drove his Pontiac GXP to a 6.670 at 207.18 to cross the finish line in front of Enders, who had a quicker, but losing, 6.659 at 206.89 in a Chevy Cobalt.

In Pro Stock Motorcycle, Tonglet rebounded from a DNQ at the previous event to claim his second victory of the season. He pulled away from Chip Ellis in the final with a 7.047 at 188.46 on a Suzuki. Ellis, whose last final round was in 2008 at Englishtown, N.J., finished in 7.153 at 185.49 on a Buell.


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