Pocono IndyCar winner Will Power 'lucky' not to crash early on
IndyCar Pocono race winner Will Power was lucky not to crash in the early part of Sunday's race, according to his race engineer
Power had just passed Tony Kanaan's Ganassi-Honda for fourth place approaching one-third distance when the front wing adjuster in the nosecone broke, collapsing the wing setting.
It forced Power to pit out of sequence and go a lap down, but his race engineer David Faustino told Autosport the consequences could have been much more severe.
"It's a stock Dallara part, and a bearing in there failed and let the front wing drop down flat," Faustino explained.
"I don't know why it failed but there's a lot of air turbulence on the straights, and the turns are very high downforce.
"So it's lucky Will didn't crash, because if that failure had happened in one of the turns, that's a push-into-the-wall situation.
"We got lucky there.
"He came into the pits, we changed the front wing and went a lap down, so we added a bunch of downforce to help his balance a little bit to help him deal with dirty air in the traffic."
Power's trouble was compounded by rear wing damage, which he sustained in contact with Charlie Kimball, but a caution allowed Penske to pit its driver and fit a new one.
"After that the car was fast," said Faustino.
"We passed a lot of cars and then Will got out into clean air and the car was fast - Will's laps were 216s[mph], 217s - and we made huge ground on the others who'd stopped several laps earlier."
Once Power moved into clear air Penske "scrambled to take out a bunch of downforce", according to Faustino, which allowed its driver to see out a remarkable back-to-front victory.
"I didn't want to slow the stop down too much and give up all our track position advantage," he added.
"We did just enough where he was able to hang onto the lead.
"In my opinion, we still had too much drag in the car.
"Once the guys behind got close enough to catch our draft, they were towing up to Will, so it was close."
Power made 10 pitstops during the race, compared with seven for Penske team-mate Josef Newgarden, who finished second, and six for other victory contenders.
The team also had to fit a new engine after qualifying because the previous unit had reached its allotted 2500-mile limit.
"I've got to hand it to our guys," said Faustino.
"The engine change after qualifying to barely make the final practice session and then having to do a mid-race front-wing change, mid-race rear-wing change, downforce adjustments all-day long...
"It's really gratifying to emerge from a race like that with the win."
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