CART: School is in session for Kanaan at the 'University of Mo'
4 April 2000
NAZARETH, Pa. (April 4) Having passed his first test down in Homestead, Fla., two weeks ago albeit with a couple of technical glitches Tony Kanaan continues his higher education on the 2000 CART FedEx Championship Series with this weekends Lesson 2, entitled Mastering the 1-Mile Tri-Oval, at Nazareth Speedway. Call me a freshman at the University of Mo (a.k.a. Mo Nunn University), said the ever-colorful 25-year-old Brazilian, who drove the #55 Hollywood/Mo Nunn Racing Mercedes-Benz Reynard to an inspiring 10th-place finish at the Homestead Miami Speedway as one of CARTs newest entries made its debut. It was the highest finish by a first-year CART team since Bobby Rahal was third in the 1992 opener for Rahal-Hogan Racing, and it left owner Morris Nunn and his troops wondering what might have been were it not for a pair of late-race pit lane violations that ended Kanaans bid for a seemingly surefire podium finish. Thats all behind us, now, and the pressures that come with a first race are finally over, Kanaan continued. Nazareth is a place where I havent had too much success in the past, so the only thing I care about now is finding out the secret way around this place from Morris. He has been successful here, and its up to me to study hard, once again. Kanaan, the 1998 series Rookie of the Year and last years U.S. 500 champion, was 9th and 23rd here the last two seasons. But he knows this years attempt to master the tricky 1-mile tri-oval will be under the direction of the man who engineered the last four CART titles. Tony says he hasnt been particularly successful on the mile ovals, but based on what Ive seen so far, including his relentless push to the front at Homestead, I dont see why he shouldnt contend for a victory here, said Nunn, who won here last year with Juan Montoya and the previous year with Jimmy Vasser. If Tony has a good car under him, like he had at Homestead, and the crew does its job, as it did at Homestead, he has what it takes to win anywhere we go. Kanaan knows that key to staying in front from beginning to end here is finding a setup that works well in traffic, because there is plenty of it. This ones typically a really busy race on the racetrack, Kanaan said. You always find yourself lapping people ... or being lapped. Not only do you need to have a race car that works well when its running alone, the best car seems to be the one that works best in traffic. Your car has to be good in traffic because thats where you can make up the most time, here. Its important to stay in front, as it is anywhere else, but before too long, youll be catching other cars. Practice for the Bosch Spark Plug Grand Prix, Round 2 of 20 on the 2000 CART FedEx Championship Series, begins Friday (April 7), with qualifying set for Saturday (April 8). Race time Sunday (April 9) is 1 p.m. EDT with live coverage set for ABC-TV.