BROOKLYN, Mich. — Sam Hornish Jr. would rather race aggressively, making risky moves and pushing his car from start to finish in every race.
The two-time Indy Racing League champion acknowledges that wouldn't be wise.
With just four races left, including the Firestone Indy 400 on Sunday, Hornish knows another IRL title likely will be his if he can just keep his car on the track.
"If you're behind, you do whatever it takes to win every race — and I like driving that way," Hornish said. "I'd rather be doing the pushing, instead of getting pushed, though I can't really complain being where we are.
"But if you're the leader, you have to do it a little differently. You have to be smart."
His series-high 356 points lead Scott Dixon by 25 points, Marlboro Team Penske teammate Helio Castroneves by 30 and defending champion Dan Wheldon is just two more points back.
Hornish won the Indianapolis 500 in May, and finished first about a month ago at Richmond and Kansas in consecutive races. He and Castroneves are the only IRL drivers with three wins this year.
"Watching him up close as a teammate, I'm amazed at how talented he is in critical moments," Castroneves said. "When he's on the last lap, or in a do-or-die situation, he usually makes it happen. If he doesn't, he rarely makes a bad mistake that costs him."
Hornish likes the lead he has, but he is not comfortable with it even though a seventh-place finish or better would ensure he wouldn't lose it.
"I'd feel better if we had this lead going into the final race," he said. "Four guys have a good opportunity to win, but if we don't have a DNF (did not finish) the rest of the way, I really like our chances."
That play-it-safe strategy seems to be a savvy way to go, especially at Michigan International Speedway. The 2-mile, high-banked oval often features three-wide racing and the past four years there has been an average of 18 lead changes — more than any current track on the IRL circuit.
Hornish has raced at the grueling track four times and his average finish is about fourth place.
"A lot of it is being at the right place at the right time," he said. "We almost put it altogether a few years ago, when we finished second by a couple of feet."
The track 75 miles west of the Motor City is one of three ovals on the IRL circuit where Hornish has not won. However, he finished first at similar tracks at Indy and Kansas this year.
Another trend might also help Hornish.
Six drivers, from Johnny Rutherford in 1980 and Buddy Rice in 2004, have won an open-wheel race at MIS in the same year they won the Indy 500.
Famed owner Roger Penske has won nine open-wheel races at MIS, a track he owned for more than 25 years, but hasn't tasted victory at the track since 1991 when Rick Mears won his last race.
Hornish visited the headquarters for Penske's various businesses in suburban Detroit, where the lobby is filled with racing hardware, and it tested his disciplined approach for the Firestone Indy 400.
"My focus is finishing, period, but I'd love to give Roger his first IRL win here in his backyard," he said. "He has nothing to prove in racing anymore, but it's his passion like hunting and fishing are for others. He just wants to win and it would be great to put a bigger smile on his face Sunday."
It would also please Hornish's cheering section.
Hornish is from Defiance, Ohio, a town about 70 miles away, where Wednesday was "Sam Hornish Jr. Day." There was a parade and a new monument was unveiled, recognizing Hornish's Indy 500 win.
"When they first told me about it, I wondered if anybody would show up," he said. "Then when I got there and saw all about 10,000 people, it was an incredible experience.
"I rode in a parade car from the Indy 500 that my dad bought — one of two Corvettes he bought there after I won. He has joked with me, 'You don't know how much money it cost me when you won the Indy 500."'