TORONTO — Indianapolis 500 winner Simon Pagenaud will start from the pole for the IndyCar race through the streets of Toronto.

Pagenaud has been on a tear around Exhibition Place all weekend as his Team Penske Chevrolet has been consistently fast and he paced Saturday morning's final practice on the 11-Turn, 1.786-mile street course. Then he took pole in qualifying, edging out reigning series champion Scott Dixon for the top starting spot in Sunday's race.

"This is the best you can feel in racing, when you achieve what you expect," said Pagenaud, who won the Indy 500 in May from the pole.

Dixon said after qualifying he's been bothered almost a month with "tennis elbow" — an inflammation of the tendons in the elbow — from working in the simulator and the discomfort has been problematic on Toronto's rough street circuit.

"It's been a bit of a nightmare," Dixon said. "I got it the week of Texas and then I had it all the way through at Le Mans, and then at Road America it was really bad in the race. So we've been trying to do some therapy with it but tennis elbow. There's no easy fix. It might be an off-season project, we'll see."

Dixon teammate Felix Rosenqvist qualified third for Chip Ganassi Racing, followed by Indy 500 runner-up Alexander Rossi for Andretti Autosport as Honda drivers took spots two through four.

IndyCar points leader Josef Newgarden qualified fifth, followed by Ed Jones.

Marco Andretti, Sebastian Bourdais , Spencer Pigot and Takuma Sato qualified seventh through 10th.

The day got off to a hot start when Sato confronted Bourdais following the morning practice session. Bourdais was still in his cockpit when Sato approached and appeared to grab the Frenchman, Bourdais climbed out of his car throwing haymakers and a team representative tried to separate the two drivers. But the scuffle continued another few seconds and Bourdais said later Sato seemed to overreact to an on-track pass.

"I passed him on the out-lap ... I'm not sure it deserved that kind of reaction, but it doesn't matter," Bourdais said. "If there was anything, I'm the one who should be pretty (mad). He pretty much ruined our race in Texas from three laps down and blocked us the last three stints. I've never asked him for anything. We know he races hard but with that little incident, I'm not so sure what should happen to him."

Sato later said of his emotions "I'm cool," and thought the scuffle was triggered by Bourdais, who Sato thought was aggressive on track and then blew up after Sato grabbed Bourdais by the collar of his firesuit while Bourdais was in the car.

"He was excited. It wasn't me," Sato said. "Passing me was absolutely pointless. It was just one lap. He went blasting by me and then turned into Josef Newgarden. What was the point?"

The IndyCar championship is currently between Newgarden and Rossi, who are separated by seven points headed into Sunday. But Pagenaud is not out of the fight and is ranked third, 61 points behind teammate Newgarden and 33 points ahead of Dixon in fourth place.

In a contract year with Penske and aware of rumours that Rossi was set to replace him inside IndyCar's top team, Pagenaud has flipped a switch since May, where he swept both races at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and earned a promise from Roger Penske that his contract would be renewed. But Pagenaud's success has been limited to Indy as the Frenchman doesn't have another top five finish anywhere else this season. His average finishing position in the eight races outside of Indianapolis is 9.88.

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