Indy 500 winner Hunter-Reay looks to bounce back

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WEST ALLIS, Wis. — Ryan Hunter-Reay caught up on
sleep and sent links to funny videos to teammate James Hinchcliffe. He
was even thinking about catching a movie while waiting out the rain
Wednesday at the Milwaukee Mile.
Hunter-Reay’s life has slowed
down just a tad since winning the Indianapolis 500 a few weeks ago. He
wouldn’t mind bouncing back from three disappointing finishes since his
milestone victory.
A 19th-place finish last weekend at Texas. Finishes of 16th and 19th the previous week in dual races in
Detroit.
"Absolutely, a tough run but we’ve had more difficult times, that’s for sure," Hunter-Reay
said.
He
has followed a breakneck pace since the highlight-reel finish at Indy
on Memorial Day weekend, the first American to win the race in eight
years. The media spotlight has been intense, though he’ll gladly take
the attention that comes with victory.
There is a break in the
race schedule until dual races in Houston on June 28-29, though testing
is ongoing. Hunter-Reay is third in points among drivers behind
first-place Will Power and Helio Castroneves.
"At Texas we had a Honda issue there, just like teammate Marco (Andretti) did. Nothing to do about
that," Hunter-Reay said.
A fuel fire in the engine compartment hurt his effort in one race at Detroit.
"And
then in the first race, last lap, just lost the rear of the car and got
into the tire barrier. Lost six or seven points at the end of the race
there. So all in all, it’s been a pretty tough run since the 500," he
said. "The thing is we know why, so as long as you know why, then you
can adjust and move on from that."
Hunter-Reay, though, doesn’t
think that either he or the Andretti Autosport team is any more of a
target since winning at Indianapolis.
"I think since we won the championship in 2012 the target’s been there," he said.
Any
added stress was likely washed away by the rain that fell Wednesday on
the 1-mile oval just outside Milwaukee. Hunter-Reay should feel very
comfortable here after winning Milwaukee the last two years.
Expectations
can skyrocket after winning Indy "even if it’s unjustified,"
Hinchcliffe said. "I pulled him aside at one point and said, ‘Hey look
man, we’ve all had weekends like this, and 99.9 percent of the time, it
wasn’t the week after we won the Indy 500.’"
Hinchcliffe expects
his teammate will be just fine in the end — after he moves on from
sending those URLs to Hinchcliffe and fellow teammate Marco Andretti.
Bending forward at the waist in laughter, Hinchcliffe said most of the
links were "fairly inappropriate" to share, though one involved a scene
from the movie "Back to the Future 3."
"I don’t know how he finds
it," said Hinchcliffe. "Marco and I are genuinely worried about him.
He’s got a problem, but it’s a funny problem."
Notes: Andretti
Sports Marketing operates the Milwaukee race, which will be sponsored by
ABC Supply Co. through 2015. The race used to fall in June, but has
been pushed back to Aug. 17, the weekend following the end of the
Wisconsin State Fair at State Fair Park. Promoters plan to sell tickets
at the fair, which has drawn more than 900,000 people each of the last
three years. "Having it on the tail-end of the fair could bring a lot of
extra attention to the race, and ultimately that’s what we’re her to
do," Hinchcliffe said.

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