INDIANAPOLIS -- The orange and brown glasses slide down the bridge of Jacques Villeneuves nose. Along with the greying hair and growing bald spot, they give the Canadian driver a professorial vibe. Its only reinforced when he begins to speak. In clear, crisp sentences spiced by that unmistakable French-Canadian accent, Villeneuve lays out his opinion on just about anything -- especially when it comes to the Indy 500. He will talk about the latest generation of cars, lament the fact there is only one chassis manufacturer, and argue that spotters who are supposed to make the race safer have often had the opposite effect. Then hell talk about the speed and the danger. "Some younger drivers didnt grow up seeing racing as being dangerous," said Villeneuve, who is back at the Indianapolis 500 after a 19-year absence. "They break their little finger and they are surprised. Its like, Be happy its only that." Of course, Villeneuve forgets many of those younger drivers grew up watching him. James Hinchcliffe, a fellow Canadian, said his earliest memory of watching a race was 1995, when Villeneuve took advantage of a late penalty on Scott Goodyear to win the Indy 500. That was also the last time Villeneuve stepped into an Indy car at the iconic racetrack. At least, it was until this year. "Its cool to have him back," Hinchcliffe said, "because hes obviously one of the guys I looked up to as a young driver, and one of the guys I never thought Id have a chance to race." Villeneuve spent nearly two decades driving just about everything but an IndyCar. He won a Formula One title, tried his hand at NASCAR and drove at Le Mans. He dabbled in RallyCross and even raced V8 Supercars around the street circuits of Australia. But the lure of Indy started to tug him back. Villeneuve, who will start 27th on Sunday, watched with rapt attention last year as Tony Kanaan took the checkered flag. He was intrigued by the record number of lead changes, the way cars moved through the field and how stiff the competition had become. Villeneuve managed to land a ride with team owners Sam Schmidt and Rick Peterson, and will be part of a stable that includes Mikhail Aleshin and Simon Pagenaud on Sunday. "If I jumped from F-1 to this again, it wouldnt be an issue," Villeneuve said of the return to open-wheel racing, "but the first 20 laps, your eyes, your brain -- its not used to those speeds, so it is a big shock. You have to get out, breath again, and then get back in and its like, All right. Business as usual." His team may be an underfunded underdog, at least compared to heavyweights Penske, Ganassi and Andretti Autosport, and he may have struggled Friday in the final practice on Carb Day. But none of that will convince Villeneuve that he doesnt have a chance to win. "When I won here we were two laps down and we spent the whole race minding our own business," he said. "Thats the key: You should mind your own business. Figure out what is happening with everyone else at the end. You need a little bit of luck, and then you need to see how it pans out. I just hope Im not one of those people who does something stupid." Pagenaud was surprised to see his new teammate prepare for the race the moment he arrived in Indianapolis. Qualifying was almost an afterthought as Villeneuve gazed ahead to Sunday. "It actually makes me wonder why he focused so much on the race," Pagenaud said with a wry grin. "Im sure hell come up with something in the race and Ill learn then." If he does come up with something, Villeneuve could make history. The 43-year-old would break Al Unsers record of 17 years between victories that has stood since 1987. Even if he doesnt win, though, a good showing could prove invaluable. Villeneuve has dropped hints that he may be try to run the IndyCar series full-time next year, and that would turn the Indy 500 into quite an audition. "I had an opportunity to spend half an hour with Jacques in the garage area a week ago," said Goodyear, now an analyst for ABC. "Through all the questions I was asking him, catching up with him, I asked him, Why come back to something that youve won, have great memories with? "He said, Racing is my oxygen. I need to race something." Nike Air Force 1 Just Do It Uomo .L. - Defending womens champion Alberta improved to 3-0 at the Canadian junior curling championships with a 10-3 win over Ontario in Sundays afternoon draw. Nike Air Max 1 Just Do It Uomo .40 metres at the Drake Relays. Drouin, from Corunna, Ont., bested his own record of 2.38 metres set in Aug. http://www.nikejustdoit.it/air-max-270-italia.html . -- Caris LeVert had 14 points and a career-high 11 rebounds for his first career double-double, and No. Air Max 270 Uomo Offerta . And like the near entirety of last season, Jonathan Bernier and Torontos goaltending tandem is up to the task. Nike Air Vapormax Scontate . Jannero Pargo scored 14 of his 24 points in the fourth quarter to help the Charlotte Bobcats erase a 21-point deficit and rally for an 83-76 preseason victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday night.CALGARY - The Canadian freestyle skiing program is getting a significant bump in Own The Podium funding this winter, while money for skeleton has been slashed almost to the bone.Own The Podium doles out federal government money based on a sport federations ability to produce Olympic medallists.Freestyle skiers led Canadas medal haul at this years Winter Olympics with seven, including three gold.Out of OTPs budget of $21,605,000 for the 2014-15 winter season, freestyle skiing will have $3.78 million at its disposal. Thats a significant raise on the average of $2.58 million annually in the four years between the 2010 and 2014 Winter Olympics.Skeleton, by contrast, will receive just $20,000 this winter and far less than the average of $876,250 in the previous quadrennial.OTP meets with each sport federation to identify athletes with medal potential and come up with a training and competition plan to get them on the podium. Chief executive officer Anne Merklinger emphasizes the financial allotments for 2014-15 were not rewards for results in Sochi in February.Where the money went reflected a sports ability to not only win medals in Pyeongchang, South Korea, in 2018, but also in 2022, she said.It is very much about investing in future podium potential athletes and teams, Merklinger said in an interview. Sure, the past result is important because it indicates an organization has been successful in getting athletes on the podium, so its embedded in their culture. Thats important, but at the same time, if theres no athletes in the pipeline particularly for zero to four years out for the upcoming set of Games, then thats OTPs mandate, to help Canadian athletes and coaches win more medals.No athletes, no money.OTP is the organization established five years out from the 2010 Vancouver Olympics to get the home team on the podium.The majority of its money comes from taxpayers via Sport Canada, although the Canadian Olympic Committee contributes to OTPs budget from its own corporate sponsorship campaign.Canada topped the gold-medal count in 2010 with 14, which is a Winter Games record, and ranked third in the overall medal count with 26. In Sochi, Canada was third in the gold-medal count with 10 and fourth overall with 25.Canada achieved the goal of a top-three ranking in gold medals won at both Paralympic Winter Games with 10 in 2010 and seven in Sochi.But a troubling stat for Merklinger is the number of Canadians who finished in the top eight at the Winter Games fell from 72 in 2010 to 57 in Sochi. That decline is one indicator of a shrinking pool of athletes with medal potential, which would impact Canadas performance at future Games.Canada needs to widen and deepen that pool and not just for Pyeongchang, Merklinger said.Going into Sochi, going into Vancouver, the lens from OTP was pretty narrow, she explained. It was about podium performance in the upcoming set of Games.We made a very deliberate decision to look at the top sports that have multiple medal potential and invest a little bit deeper in the pathway, so looking at athletes who are eight to five years away from a podium performance in addition to those sports that have athletes who are four to zero years away.So the Canadian Freestyle Association is using its increased funding to hire staff and operate projects for athletes who are competing at a level between the provincial and national teams.The most visible sign of the increased money will be seen this winter at Canada Olympic Park in Calgary.The CFSA has hired the best half-pipe course designer in the world, according to chief executive officer Bruce Robinson, to construct and maintain this years edition of the half-pipe.In half-pipe skiing, the quality of the pipe is incredibly important, Robinson said.It allows our team to have the best training possible in their home country and not always having to go to the United States or overseas. Thats a huge benefit for us.The CFSA also hired a staff to work with developmental athletes across the four freestyle disciplines of moguls, aerials, half-pipe and freestyle.A moguls program of 10 to 15 athletes who race on the NorAm circuit, one level below the World Cup, was also established in Whistler, B.C.Canada won gold and silver in Sochi in skicross, which falls under the freestyle umbrella internationally. OTP funds it separately from freestyle, however, as it is administered domestically by Alpine Canada.After skeleton made its Olympic debut in 2002, Canadians won World Cups, world titles and Olympic medals over the next decade. But Canada has been overtaken by Europeans and Americans. OTP has determined there isnt another Duff Gibson or Jon Montgomery on the near hoorizon.ddddddddddddOur analysis was skeleton does not at this point does not have medal potential for 2018, Merklinger said.The head of Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton disagrees with that assessment.I believe and I think the organization believes that OTP underestimated the talent we have and their prospects of medalling in 2018 and 2022, Sarah Storey said. That being said, we need to demonstrate that to a degree.Im confident well be able to show OTP these athletes are worth OTP investing in because they do have the talent and the potential and we do have a plan to get them there.Skeletons coaching staff has been reduced to one, Ivo Pakalns, who oversees all athletes in the program. Gibson, the 2006 Olympic gold medallist who coached the Canadian team in Sochi, says he returned to his job as a firefighter for family, not funding, reasons. BCS will provide financial support for Canadian skeleton athletes who qualify to race World Cups this winter, Storey said.It is still our responsibility and mandate to develop world-class athletes to get medals, she said.Its a major setback, but were not going to let it affect these athletes and the next athletes coming through. Its very important we restore funding next year and were working on that.The majority of winter sports saw more modest gains or drops in funding ranging from a few thousand dollars to tens of thousands.But long-track speed skatings piece of the OTP pie shrunk to $1.35 million from an average of $1.75 million in the previous quadrennial. The athletes are feeling the pinch.Ottawas Ivanie Blondin says she and her teammates were told earlier this month they must pay $1,500 in team fees out of their own pocket to race on the national team this winter. I just finished paying off my tuition, Blondin said.We kind of saw it coming, but moving forward I will have to look for sponsorship somewhere for myself. I do have a spot available on my racing skinsuit that I can fill, but its trying to find that one company or one supporter that would will be willing to give me that per season is really hard right now with the economy.After winning a combined 13 medals in 2006 and 2010, the long-track team produced two in Sochi. The national team is smaller this winter with just 11 skaters named to the senior team, but there are 20 on the developmental squad.Long track was cut significantly from every year of the quad previously, Merklinger acknowledged. We certainly cant abandon the podium potential athletes that are there now and we need to work closely with long track to strengthen the program.For Canada to continue to be a strong winter sport nation, we need long track to get back to where they were.Ski jumping and its cousin Nordic combined will receive no funding this winter. Ski jumpings OTP funding in 2013-14 was just $54,000. Even with the introduction of womens ski jumping to the Olympics, OTP determined Canada is not close to having a medal threat.___WINNERS AND LOSERS: A QUICK LOOK AT SPORTS IMPACTED MOST BY NEW OTP FUNDINGWINNERSFreestyle skiing, $3.78 million — Freestyle is one of the few winter sports where Canada has the depth to get more than one athlete on the podium in moguls, half-pipe and slopestyle. Moguls skier Mikael Kingsbury, half-pipe skiers Mike Riddle, Noah Bowman and Matt Margetts and womens slopestyle specialists Dara Howell, Kim Lamarre and Kaya Turski are among them.Luge, $1.020 million — A trio of fourth-place finishes and two women in the top five in Sochi indicates the lugers are on track to claim Canadas first Olympic medal in the sport. Keep your eye on Kimberley McRae, who was fifth in Sochi, en route to 2018.Figure Skating, $1.1 million — Canada must keep its world-class talent across singles, pairs and ice dance to remain a medal threat in the team event, as well as contend for individual medals. Nam Nguyen in mens singles and the ice dance team of Kaitlyn Weaver and Andrew Poje are the ones to watch for the next four years.LOSERSSki jumping/Nordic combined, $0 — The introduction of womens ski jumping in Sochi was four years too late for Canada, whose best medal prospects were competing prior to 2010. There are just two ski jump venues in the country and few people who participate, so the talent pool is very shallow.Skeleton, $20,000 — It was a glorious decade of Canadian World Cup, world and Olympic champions after the sport made its Olympic debut in 2002, but OTP has determined no slider is currently tracking to get there again.Long-track speedskating, $1.35 million — Looks like a lot of money, but down significantly from previous years because of fewer potential medallists.---Follow Donna Spencer on Twitter at @DLSpencer10 ' ' '