For the first nine races of the 2006 season, the winner was either from Marlboro-Team Penske or from Target/Ganassi Racing............that streak ended today, as Andretti-Green Racing finally notched their first win of the year, courtesy of 2004 series champion Tony Kanaan.
With clear skies and, unlike last year, comfortable track conditions, the field took the green and proceeded to stampede through to turn 1, as polesitter Helio Castroneves(#3 Marlboro-Team Penske D/H) led early, with Tony Kanaan(#11 Team 7-11 D/H) in hot pursuit, having climbed from 4th to 2nd on the start. Several times Kanaan tried to take the lead from Castroneves, but Helio held him off until lap 32, when Kanaan slipped under Castroneves in turn 1 and held the low line, getting in front of Castroneves. Several laps later, Kaanan's AGR teammate, rookie Marco Andretti(#26 NYSE Group D/H) did the same thing to Castroneves, getting by in 1 to take 2nd. By then, Kaanan had proceeded to take about a 3-5 sec. lead on Marco, who kept pace with TK over the next 30 or so laps.
Around lap 70, the first round of pit stops began, with most teams changing fuel and tires; several also made front-wing adjustments. Through the first round of stops, Vision Racing's Tomas Scheckter(#2 Rock & Republic D/H) and Rahal-Letterman Racing's Jeff Simmons(#17 Ethanol D/H) would hold the lead for one lap apiece before pitting; eventually, the lead went back to Kanaan, who continued to pace the field, even through the first caution of the race on lap 96(for debris......

what debris!). Several teams, however, opted to make another pitstop to top off their fuel, deciding to play fuel strategy as the way to possibly capturing a win.
When the green flew again on lap 107, Kanaan led, only to lose the lead to another AGR teammate, Dario Franchitti(#27 Canadian Club/Klein Tools D/H) in turn 3 one lap later; Franchitti head onto the lead until lap 130, which included a caution for an on-track incident involving Castroneves and Ed Carpenter(#20 Rock & Republic D/H) which took both drivers out of the race.......and Spiderman was not happy; the normally happy and jovial Castroneves jumped out of his car visibly angry, pointing his fist up the pitlane towards the #20(IMHO, the incident was Special Ed's fault; he was a lap down on the leaders and should've let Helio by.......

) and angrily walking back to the paddock so fast, he nearly knocked ESPN pit reporter Jamie Little over as he walked by.
Meanwhile, there was a race to run, and some new characters had made their way to the front; besides Franchitti, who took the lead from Kanaan, Castroneves' Penske teammate, Sam Hornish, Jr.(#6 Marlboro-Team Penske D/H), had made it to front, along with Simmons' RLR teammate, Danica Patrick(#16 Argent/Pioneer D/H), Scheckter, and Panther Racing's Vitor Meira(#4 Revive USA/EcoNova D/H). Meira didn't stay at the front long, though........remember Patrick's crash at the Mile last year? On lap 137, Meira was trying to pass her when his car snapped around and smacked the outside wall, bringing out the second caution of the day. As the track was being cleaned, the second round of stops occurred, this time putting Andretti back on the point. When the green flew once again, the rookie held off his teammate Kanaan for several laps; however, Kanaan got a heck of a run on Marco entering turn 3, using the draft to pass him and retake the point. For about the next 50 laps, the pair, joined occasionally by Patrick, Scheckter and Hornish, Jr., took turns trying to pass Kanaan, all to no avail.
A final caution on lap 200 set up an interesting finish; several drivers, including Patrick, Scheckter, Franchitti and Hornish all came in for new tires, while Kanaan and Andretti stayed out. For the rookie Andretti, it didn't play out in the end, as he fell several spots at the end. For Kanaan, though, it didn't matter what his opponents did, as he held off several charges from both Hornish and Scheckter to notch his first win since Infineon in 2005. Meanwhile, Hornish would finish 2nd, holding onto the points lead, while Scheckter would give Vision Racing its' first-ever top-5 finish with a third-place finish. Here are the top-10 from Milwaukee.........
1st}#11 Tony Kanaan.....................................225 laps
2nd}#6 Sam Hornish, Jr..................................-1.827 sec
3rd}#2 Tomas Scheckter................................-2.011 sec
4th}#16 Danica Patrick...................................-8.471 sec
5th}(R)#26 Marco Andretti..............................-10.261 sec
6th}#27 Dario Franchitti.................................-11.237 sec
7th}#7 Bryan Herta........................................-14.120 sec
8th}#10 Dan Wheldon.....................................-1 lap
9th}(R)#17 Jeff Simmons................................-2 laps
10th}#9 Scott Dixon.......................................-2 laps