
Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto begins today at Exhibition Place
TORONTO — The Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto kicks off with a full day of practices and qualifying this morning.
Headlined by an IndyCar Series race on Sunday, there's a total of nine races from several series and a variety of automobile classes over the weekend.
All of the races will take place around a street course that goes through Exhibition Place, along Lake Shore Boulevard, and then loops back through the fairgrounds in downtown Toronto.
Toronto's Devlin DeFrancesco is the lone Canadian in the IndyCar field.
Colton Herta of the United States is the returning champion.
Admission is free today but fans are encouraged to make a donation to Make-A-Wish Canada.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 18, 2025.
John Chidley-Hill, The Canadian Press
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Reigning champion Colton Herta takes pole at Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto
Colton Herta, of the United States, zooms around the track on his way to the fastest time in the second practice for the 2025 Honda Indy Toronto in Toronto on Saturday July 19, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn TORONTO — There will be a couple of familiar faces in the grid's front row when the green flag drops at the Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto on Sunday. Defending champion Colton Herta earned pole position in the only IndyCar Series race outside of the United States. Alex Palou, who has a comfortable lead atop the open-wheel circuit's points list, will be right beside Herta at the starting line at Exhibition Place. Herta held pole position in three of the past four races in Toronto, but only won in 2024. "I think it's just what this team is capable of around here for the street courses," said Herta on Andretti Global's reputation for strong showings on street courses like Toronto. "We continue to be a dominant force in the league for that style of racing. "It was a stressful one, though. Really close to being knocked out in the first round." Herta clocked the 11-turn, 2.874-kilometre course around Toronto's fairgrounds — also home to the CFL's Argonauts, Major League Soccer's Toronto FC, the American Hockey League's Marlies, the Professional Women's Hockey League's Sceptres, and starting in 2026, the WNBA's Tempo — in 59.8320 seconds. It was Herta's first pole of the season and he's winless so far, although he does have three top-five finishes. "We want to do well. We're striving to do better every weekend," said Herta as his news conference wound down and Palou walked in to the media centre to do his. "It's a tough sport, so any little thing that we drop the ball on, it creates a big impact. "Just need to be heads-up on Sunday and not give this (expletive) a win." Palou chuckled before getting to the microphone. He has dominated IndyCar this season with seven wins, four poles, 10 top fives and 11 top 10s, leading for a total of 442 laps. He has 515 points to put him well ahead of No. 2 Pato O'Ward's 386. Despite the quality of his season, Palou said that starting second would be a tough assignment Sunday. "It's never easy to start second," said Palou, whose best qualifying lap was 0.2758 seconds behind Herta's. "If the person in third is awake, they're usually able to pass the person on the outside. "We'll see what we can do. It's not easy to be around the outside in Turn 1. Honestly, it's still great. As long as we're in the top four or five by Lap 1, it's where we want to be. We can race from there." Marcus Armstrong and Will Power were third and fourth respectively. Scott Dixon, a four-time champion in Toronto, was 11th in qualifying but IndyCar announced Friday that he'd earned a six-position starting grid penalty for an unapproved engine change following last week's race at Iowa Speedway. Dixon is second only to all-time great Michael Andretti's seven wins around Exhibition Place. Toronto's Devlin DeFrancesco, the only Canadian on the grid, was 26th. Several drivers complained after Friday's practice about a large bump on Lake Shore Boulevard, just before the braking zone heading into Turn 3. Race officials repaved the area overnight with mixed reviews from Herta and Palou. "It's much better. Yeah, it was pretty brutal yesterday," said Herta. "I didn't really mind it because I think it adds character and whatnot. But it was on the limit. It was very aggressive. "I thought IndyCar did a good job. I think there's no problems at all with it." Palou was less positive. "(The patch) didn't really make any difference for us. I guess they tried hard," he said. "The good thing is we brake past that, so it's just uncomfortable when you drive through there. "But it was not any smoother. You were still hitting very, very hard." This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 19, 2025. John Chidley-Hill, The Canadian Press