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How to be an ace engineer: Leading IndyCar race engineer Michael Cannon

Big teams and small teams, Michael Cannon has worked with the lot during his lengthy career in Indycar race engineering. The Canadian, now at AJ Foyt Racing, reflects on his journey to the top

Michael Cannon is a protege-turned-mentor, a man you can bring in as an overseer and advisor for young race engineers, or can be slotted into a hands-on race engineer role. He can be strict but is also regarded in IndyCar circles as one of the more empathetic individuals in the role, willing to give the driver what they want rather than refusing to budge from what on paper appears the fastest set-up.

It’s assumed that Cannon got hooked on racing through watching his British-born father John Cannon race (under the Canadian flag) to victory after victory in the Formula 5000 Continental Series, culminating in becoming 1970 champion, or when winning the 1968 Can-Am race at Laguna Seca. Yet Cannon insists not.

He recalls: “From when I saw the F5000 finale in 1970 and saw my dad pick up the trophy and cheque, I didn’t go to another race until the 1975 F5000 event at Watkins Glen, and then not again until the Formula 1 race at Montreal in 1978. In between times, I was just trying to be a pilot, aiming to go to RAF Cranwell, just like dad.

“In 1983, Jerry Agapiou – he and his brother had run my dad in F5000 and Can-Am – gave me a summer job putting together a Formula Ford team. Driving one of the cars was part of my compensation.”

That dream of being a racing driver had died by 1986, and Cannon found he enjoyed “tinkering with race cars” as much as driving them.

“I don’t think the path that I took exists anymore,” he says. “You need a formal education. I’m reading Adrian Newey’s book at the moment and I was struck by the parallels, but the big difference was that he did eventually finish school whereas I got distracted by wanting to be a driver and got into it that way.”

He learned the ropes as a mechanic in Formula Ford, Atlantic, Super Vee and Indy Lights, before becoming an early data acquisition engineer in the mid-’80s. Through the ’90s, Cannon was one of the founders of Genoa Racing in Atlantic, which sent Jimmy Vasser and Greg Ray on to successful careers at the top level. In Indy Lights he ran Dave DeSilva and the “vastly underrated” Mark Hotchkis.

Joining Forsythe Racing for 1997 was the move that Cannon’s talents deserved. As number two to Lee Dykstra, they ran David Empringham and Lee Bentham. Soon he graduated to Forsythe’s Indycar team.

Source: Autosport

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