Cannon joins PREMA as head of engineering

Michael Cannon has joined PREMA Racing in the newly created position of “head of engineering.” A.J. Foyt Racing’s former technical director left the team in early November and after meeting with prospective NTT IndyCar Series teams, he’s taken a …

Michael Cannon has joined PREMA Racing in the newly created position of “head of engineering.”

A.J. Foyt Racing’s former technical director left the team in early November and after meeting with prospective NTT IndyCar Series teams, he’s taken a full-time role with the Italian squad ahead of its debut IndyCar season.

After helping to turn Foyt’s team into a front-running organization, Cannon’s acquisition is an important one for the Indianapolis-based team owned and run by Rene Rosin and his partner Angelina Ertsou. Cannon will oversee the engineering efforts for drivers Callum Ilott and rookie Robert Shwartzman.

Prior to Foyt, Cannon’s stint at Chip Ganassi Racing as Scott Dixon’s race engineer produced the 2020 championship — Dixon’s sixth — and earned consecutive Indianapolis 500 pole positions with the New Zealander.

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Between stops at larger teams like Ganassi, Andretti Global and the former Player’s Forsythe Racing, Cannon has had a penchant for working with smaller outfits like HVM Racing, Ed Carpenter Racing during its formative days, Dale Coyne Racing and Foyt — all teams that were accustomed to running behind the bigger programs — where his influence would have a greater impact.

The trend continues at PREMA, which starts its IndyCar journey in March. Cannon’s presence should accelerate the team’s competitiveness beyond previous expectations.

A.J. Foyt Racing parts ways with technical director Cannon

A.J. Foyt Racing and technical director Michael Cannon have parted ways. The change comes two years after the Canadian joined the team led by Larry Foyt. Cannon’s introduction spurred the team’s recent rise in competitiveness, including Santino …

A.J. Foyt Racing and technical director Michael Cannon have parted ways. The change comes two years after the Canadian joined the team led by Larry Foyt.

Cannon’s introduction spurred the team’s recent rise in competitiveness, including Santino Ferrucci’s charge to third at the Indianapolis 500 in May of 2023, the forging of a technical alliance with Team Penske during the summer of 2023, and oversight of Foyt’s engineering program which propelled Ferrucci to ninth in the championship last season with Penske-supplied race engineer James Schnabel.

On Wednesday, Cannon reached out to share his thoughts on the development.

“I’d like to thank Larry Foyt for the past two seasons – we certainly met some of our goals,” he said.

“Larry was kind enough to hand me his team, let me run with it, and never denied me the tools I needed. He also forged a very fruitful alliance with the fine group at Team Penske and their generosity has been remarkable. Of course, huge thanks must go to the entire team – they worked miracles in my first 16 weeks at the shop.

“They produced two rapid cars, the 14 and 55, that made the Fast 12 at Indy, got a third place finish and Benjamin Pedersen took home Indy’s Rookie of the Year. An impressive effort by all. The 2024 season was a massive step up in on-track results and the team is poised to better themselves, yet again, in 2025. Both David and Santino are very capable of using a good car to good effect. However, Larry and I couldn’t reach an agreement for 2025. I fully expect to be in the paddock next year and will always take a minute to stop and say hello to the Foyt team.”

Joining Foyt from Chip Ganassi Racing where he won the 2020 championship with Scott Dixon and earned back-to-back Indy 500 poles in 2021 and 2022 with the New Zealander, Cannon stepped into a team which was relegated to the bottom of the Entrants’ standings and left with Ferrucci positioned as the top driver behind goliaths at Ganassi, Andretti Global, Team Penske, and Arrow McLaren.

“We’re certainly going to miss Mike and it was really awesome working with him,” Foyt told RACER. “I tried to get him for many years, so I’m really sorry that it’s not going to continue.”

Foyt declined to speak to why Cannon left, but says he will not seek an immediate replacement.

“As far as the T.D., we’re not in a huge hurry to fill that role,” he said. “I think with everything that’s working with Penske that we’re fine, and we’ve got enough engineers in the building to do everything we’re hoping to do.”

The Foyt team will swap race engineers for 2025 with Schnabel moving from Ferrucci’s No. 14 Chevy to the sister car piloted by team newcomer David Malukas. Michael Armbrester, who engineered Sting Ray Robb in the No. 41 last season, is moving across to the No. 14 where he’ll be reunited with Ferrucci.

“We’re all going to be in the same room and everything’s very open with what the way we run things,” Foyt said. “Believe it or not, Santino has actually worked with Armbrester before when he did a drove at Rahal (in 2021) and they know each other well. And having James with us, and how James and Santino worked together this year was awesome, I think he and David will be really good together. He’s a fantastic engineer, for sure.”

Also related to the No. 14, its popular crew chief Didier Francesia – a central figure who united the team under the tent – is headed to Arrow McLaren in a new shop-based role. Foyt has hired from within the paddock to fill the vacancy as the team prepares to field both cars from its shop in Indiana for the first time after moving the No. 14 from Texas to Foyt’s base in Speedway, IN.

“We have hired a crew chief,” he said. “But we haven’t necessarily decided which chief will be on which car; we have a couple chiefs in house, but we did hire Steve McKenzie from Rahal, who is a nice fit.”

This story has been updated to include quotes from Michael Cannon.

Foyt finally feeling the ‘Cannon effect’ at Indianapolis

With Michael Cannon on his timing stand, Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon earned the last two pole positions for the Indianapolis 500. And with Cannon overseeing the A.J. Foyt Racing cars this year, his former Dale Coyne Racing driver Santino …

With Michael Cannon on his timing stand, Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon earned the last two pole positions for the Indianapolis 500. And with Cannon overseeing the A.J. Foyt Racing cars this year, his former Dale Coyne Racing driver Santino Ferrucci qualified within 0.228mph of Dixon as he rocked time trials in the No. 14 A.J. Foyt Racing Chevy.

By the end of the first day of qualifying, the young American would settle for P9, and not far behind him in P11, teammate and rookie Benjamin Pedersen starred on the opening day of qualifying by holding P10 for most of the afternoon. Together, they authored Foyt’s best collective effort of the season.

“We’ve been fast all week, which has been pretty spectacular,” Ferrucci told RACER. “We’ve been there and I plan to keep it there. My bread and butter is always the racing, so to qualify well, that’s pretty sweet. Not a lot of cars in front of me.”

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Ferrucci says the completely retooled team is finding what it needs to challenge some of its bigger rivals.

“It’s finally starting to click with everybody because there was a lot of personnel changes, myself included,” he added. “And you know, it was bit hard to get our footing. Long Beach, we had a solid race weekend. Alabama, we kind of struggled. Texas, we were doing really well, but we had a car failure. Even here, the Indy GP, the race was going really well for a while. We’re missing that final little piece. And I think that having these two weeks of time spread out will give us that chance to find that little piece.”

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