
Practice Shots: Lundgaard Gives Chevrolet a Strong Early Run
Honda has been nearly unstoppable in the 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season, claiming 11 wins in 12 races, including a perfect 3-for-3 record on street circuits.
Dating back to the 2022 Toronto race weekend, Honda has captured 13 of the last 14 street circuit victories. That stretch includes a podium sweep on the 1.786-mile Exhibition Place track last season.
Heading into this weekend, Honda remains the heavy favorite to collect more hardware. But if Chevrolet is going to mount a challenge, keep an eye on Christian Lundgaard and his No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, a pairing that was ninth-fastest in Friday's practice with a lap of 1 minute, 1.1962 seconds.
Lundgaard's lone career victory in 64 starts came in Toronto in 2023 — 37 races ago — where he won from pole position while driving a Honda for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. It remains his last NTT P1 Award.
'Coming to Toronto always brings back great memories,' Lundgaard said. 'I've had strong results here in the past, including my first win. I'm excited for the weekend ahead. We know what it takes to be quick here, so now it's all about putting it together and making it happen.'
This season, Lundgaard has averaged an eighth-place finish on street circuits, including a podium at Long Beach. He has also never finished worse than eighth at Toronto, highlighted by a charge from 16th to seventh in last year's event.
Here are three observations about the first practice in preparation for Sunday's Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto, plus other notes of interest:
· The Turn 8 runoff proved to be a trouble spot during the session. At one point, Scott McLaughlin (No. 3 Gallagher Insurance Team Penske Chevrolet), Santino Ferrucci (No. 14 Sexton Properties/AJ Foyt Racing Chevrolet) and Pato O'Ward (No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet) all ended up in the runoff simultaneously due to separate incidents. The flurry of mistakes wasn't surprising as Toronto's street circuit is notoriously bumpy and slick. Friday's session also featured both Firestone Firehawk primary and alternate tires, giving drivers a chance to push the limits ahead of qualifying.
· Alex Palou (No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda) opted to use two sets of primary tires during Friday's practice session, leaving him with just three sets for the remainder of the weekend. With some drivers predicting Sunday's race could require a three-stop strategy, tire management may prove critical, especially if primary tires emerge as the preferred compound. That would leave Palou with only one fresh set for qualifying and two for Saturday's practice. Palou has yet to win at Toronto and struggled in qualifying. In three career starts, he's never advanced past the first round of qualifying, starting 22nd, 15th, and 18th. Despite those setbacks, the three-time series champion has consistently charged through the field, finishing sixth, second, and fourth.
· Seven different teams were represented in the top eight of Friday's speed chart led by Andretti Global's Kirkwood. Team Penske was the only organization to place multiple drivers in the top eight, with McLaughlin in second and Will Power (No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet) in fifth. Rounding out the top eight were Palou (Chip Ganassi Racing) in third, Marcus Armstrong (Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb-Agajanian) in fourth, Callum Ilott (PREMA Racing) in sixth, Pato O'Ward (Arrow McLaren) in seventh, and David Malukas (AJ Foyt Racing) in eighth.
DeFrancesco Returns Home For Third Toronto Start
Ontario native Devlin DeFrancesco is the lone Canadian in this weekend's 27-driver field. He was 25th-quickest in Friday's session.
Making his third Toronto start, his best result came in 2022, qualifying 12th and finishing 18th.
'I love Toronto,' DeFrancesco said. 'I got my first Fast 12 here and always look forward to going home. A lot of my family will be at the race.'
Born 15 weeks premature and given last rites multiple times at Toronto's Sunnybrook Hospital, DeFrancesco defied the odds. Now driving the No. 30 HUB International Honda for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, he's optimistic after a strong showing on Detroit's bumpy street circuit — a layout similar to Toronto — and is encouraged RLL's 2023 win with Lundgaard.
'We found a few things, performance-wise wise on the Detroit street course that has helped us quite a bit so that is an avenue we will follow. This team has been very strong in Toronto the last couple of years, so we should be fast.'
ECR Brings Momentum
Alexander Rossi returned to Toronto after being forced to sit out last year's event with a hand injury suffered in a crash in practice. This time around, he left Friday unscathed, turning the 17th quickest lap (1:02.2232).
Rossi, in his first year driving the No. 20 ECR Java House Chevrolet, has three career top-10 finishes at the venue, including a runner-up in 2017 driving for Andretti Global. Half of his four top-10s this season have come on street courses.
'The Toronto circuit is one that is always a great mix of exciting and challenging,' Rossi said. 'I am looking forward to competing this weekend after missing last year's race.'
Teammate Christian Rasmussen, fresh off two top-10s at Iowa, is also feeling confident. He's 15th in points, just ahead of Rossi in 16th and was 12th overall (1:02.0923) on Friday.
'There's definitely momentum on our side,' he said. 'Hopefully, we can build on that and have another strong result.'
Rasmussen earned his first professional win at this track in 2019, competing in USF2000. He claimed his first INDYCAR SERIES podium at World Wide Technology Raceway on June 15 — the second of four top-10 finishes this season, all coming on oval tracks.
Team owner Ed Carpenter knows Rasmussen's aggressive driving style isn't always popular with competitors, but he's not concerned.
'He's super aggressive,' Carpenter said. 'I don't know if everyone likes it, but from my perspective, I love it. If he's making people nervous out there, I don't see a problem with that. He's been aggressive long enough now and pulls off a lot of really slick moves. He's done it enough that it's clearly not a fluke.'
Odds and Ends
· Toronto is the second-shortest street circuit on the NTT INDYCAR SERIES calendar. At 1.786 miles, it's slightly longer than Detroit's 1.645-mile, 10-turn layout, the shortest street course in the series. By comparison, St. Petersburg measures 1.8 miles with 14 turns, and Long Beach is 1.968 miles with 11 turns. Despite their compact sizes, these circuits offer plenty of corners to challenge drivers and create separation in the field. Toronto has 11 turns, just one more than Detroit. Scott Dixon was 13th in Friday's session. The lack of overall speed in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda is somewhat concerning because he has a six-spot grid penalty in Sunday's race. Dixon suffered the same penalty at Detroit when he qualified 10th but rolled off 16th in the race. He climbed to finish 11th. Dixon is a four-time Toronto winner and has 12 career top-five finishes at the track. That's tied with Michael Andretti for most all-time.
· The series returns to the track at 10:30 a.m. Saturday for the second practice session in advance of the three-round knockout NTT P1 Award qualifying session scheduled to begin at 2:35 p.m. Both Saturday sessions will air on FS1, FOX Sports app and INDYCAR Radio Network.
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Instant Recall: Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto
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TORONTO — Pato O'Ward had a comfortable lead over the final third of the race on the streets of Toronto, so he could have let his mind wander. He could have taken just a moment — maybe a second — to wonder how much he could cut into Alex Palou's championship lead on Sunday afternoon. But he didn't look to see where Palou was running. He didn't ask. That's how far the gap was coming into the race, and when he heard he had cut Palou's lead from 129 points to 99, O'Ward wasn't going to let the big hill that he still must climb ruin an afternoon where he earned his second victory in the last three races. Palou, who has seven wins this year, finished 12th. "It's only, like, [down to] 99," O'Ward said. "It's a good chunk. His good weekends are days like [mine] today. We need to make sure that we continue to have days like today. Not just one but a few. "I think we're going to keep this conversation going until Nashville. That's my goal." To keep the conversation running until the season finale at Nashville, O'Ward would need to be within 54 points of Palou. One of Palou's best tracks comes next weekend at Laguna Seca Raceway. Then the final three races are at Portland International Raceway, The Milwaukee Mile and Nashville Superspeedway. Palou won't be able to clinch at Laguna Seca. He would have to be 108 points ahead of O'Ward after Portland to clinch and 54 points ahead of O'Ward after Milwaukee to seal his third consecutive title and fourth overall. O'Ward is the only driver even remotely in the championship hunt. Kyle Kirkwood sits third in the standings at 173 points behind and Scott Dixon is 174 points behind. "Obviously, we're at a time in the championship where we're going to have to get a little bit more into the conversation of getting our elbows out because that's what I had to do today just to open the doors to having a chance to win this race," O'Ward said. "That's the only way we're even going to catch a whiff of making him sweat a little bit." Those elbows out included contact with Will Power. INDYCAR reviewed the move to see if O'Ward could have avoided it, as Power had slight contact with the barrier after knocking wheels with O'Ward. Pato was cleared of any wrongdoing and INDYCAR ruled it a racing incident. He felt bad for Power but also said the driver who is on the outside of two-wide in that corner is risking contact. "The problem is that it's such a fine line that you're battling with," O'Ward said. "You don't want to lose any positions. "When you're going through where you're full opposite lock [of the way you're turning], we basically hit square. When you hit tire to tire, both of our wheels got out of our hands. You had to, like, gather it back up." Power rallied back to finish 11th, one spot ahead of Palou. Today, Palou was a victim of strategy. He started on the primary tires early and then needed to run on the alternate tires longer than other drivers. He led early but then was mired in traffic for the second half of the race. "I chose the strategy," Palou said. "There [with the strategy] is what we did wrong today. I was pushing for that strategy. I thought it was going to give us the best opportunity to win. "The car was really fast. I wanted to be up front, trying to avoid being trapped in traffic. It happens. We knew it was going to be a risky strategy." McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown said if it weren't for Palou, many would look at O'Ward as having a great season. He also said he believes in miracles. "Championship is not over," Brown said on the FOX broadcast prior to the race. "A miracle might need to happen. But miracles can happen. That's what makes the sport exciting." What the team must work on now is entering every race with full faith that they can pull off a win. Toronto, for example, typically hasn't been one of the better tracks for O'Ward. "I think the biggest challenge Pato and I have is to make everybody believe that no matter what, especially in INDYCAR, every time you take the green flag, that is an opportunity," said team principal Tony Kanaan. "We had a pretty good and intense meeting last night. I said, 'We got to believe it.' Days like this, it makes a big difference in our people. I think you give them an extra boost of confidence that we can do it, we can take the next step." That next step is more three-week stretches for O'Ward where he is battling for the win no matter the track. "You need a car that you can attack with and that you can pass people," O'Ward said. "I feel like you can't just always rely on strategy. If we just relied on strategy today, I think maybe we would catch a whiff of a podium. "But that's not enough. You need something to be able to really fight your way forward … It feels really good to earn it today. It really does. Especially in a place that's been a very tough weekend, basically every time we come here." Bob Pockrass covers NASCAR and INDYCAR for FOX Sports. He has spent decades covering motorsports, including over 30 Daytona 500s, with stints at ESPN, Sporting News, NASCAR Scene magazine and The (Daytona Beach) News-Journal. Follow him on Twitter @bobpockrass.