Franchitti finally reaches Indy as defending champ
Coeur d'Alene Press | UPDATED 13 years, 8 months AGO
INDIANAPOLIS - Dario Franchitti needed two Indianapolis 500 victories to feel like a defending champion.
Now he's getting used to it.
Four years after winning a rain-shortened race, the Scotsman has returned to the venue of his two biggest wins with an opportunity to - finally - become a repeat winner. He never got that chance in 2008, leaving the comfort of IndyCars for the world of stock cars.
"It's nice to talk about last year, but my job is to win this one," Franchitti said. "Yeah, I've got a shot, and I think I've got a good one."
Franchitti already has a sense of what this month will entail.
In March, NBA Hall of Famer Larry Bird presented Franchitti with his Indy 500 champion's ring. A week later, he returned to Indy in hopes of knocking out some of the interview requests he expects to fill over the next two weeks.
He's been asked to do more sponsor appearances, will participate in a soldout fundraiser Monday night to benefit Riley Children's Hospital of Indianapolis, and three days later will celebrate his 38th birthday.
Yes, it's been a busy month, and if the rain actually stops this week, Franchitti will have be cramming in all of his on-the-track work before qualifying starts next weekend. In Saturday's abbreviated practice, he was fourth on the speed chart with a best lap of 224.107 mph.
More showers washed out the 6-hour session scheduled for Saturday before any cars could make it onto the track, and rain is sprinkled into the forecast for most of this week, too.
The good news is that Franchitti's with a team, Target Chip Ganassi, and a teammate, Scott Dixon, who have endured the champion's treatement before.
"You're definitely a lot more in demand and it takes some time away as well," said Dixon, the 2008 Indy winner. "As long as you get that managed well, and focus on the track, you'll be all right."
Franchitti could have sampled it himself after winning the 500 in 2007.
But five months after the race and just weeks after clinching the first of his three IndyCar points titles, Franchitti left Michael Andretti's IndyCar team for Ganassi's Sprint Cup team.
It was a miserable experience.
Franchitti failed to finish higher than 17th in his three warm-up races to close the 2007 season, then broke his left ankle in a Nationwide Series crash in 2008 at Talledega. The worst part was watching Dixon dominate the race at Indy with another ex-IndyCar driver, Max Papis, on Memorial Day weekend in Charlotte, N.C.
Things got even worse in '08.
By midseason, Franchitti's NASCAR sponsorship dried up and just 11 months after joining the Sprint Cup series, he gave up the experiment to return to the more familiar IndyCars.
"I'm sure he had regrets about not being here (in 2008), but Dario was trying to do a different discipline and looking toward the future and I talked to him quite a bit that year," Dixon said. "I'm sure he would have liked to have been back here as defending champ, but that's why he had to go out and do it again."
n Rice bumps Patrick off top of Indy's speed chart: Former Indianapolis 500 winner Buddy Rice jumped to the top of the Indianapolis 500 speed chart with a fast lap of 223.710 mph.
That knocked Danica Patrick out of the No. 1 spot. She went 223.586 in the first hour of practice. Vitor Meira was third at 223.495 and two of Roger Penske's drivers, Ryan Briscoe and Helio Castroneves, were next. Briscoe went 223.115. Castroneves, a three-time winner from Brazil, was third at 222.973.
Four drivers topped 224 mph in Saturday's rain-shortened practice. Sunday's six-hour practice session was a complete washout.
But the conditions were dramatically different from Saturday's warm, overcast skies. On Monday, drivers contended with tricky winds and cool temperatures.