From Last To First, Scott Dixon Wins Again At Mid-Ohio

Scott Dixon celebrates his victory in Sunday's Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio.  Photo by Bret Kelley

Scott Dixon celebrates his victory in Sunday’s Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio. Photo by Bret Kelley

LEXINGTON, OH – Scott Dixon tied Al Unser, Jr. for sixth on the all-time Indy car win list with a dramatic last-to-first Verizon IndyCar Series win Sunday in the Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio. The win was the 34th of Dixon’s career and his fifth win at the Mid-Ohio Sport Car Course in his last eight starts on the 2.258-mile, 13-turn road course.

Dixon’s win from the 22nd starting position is the second-most positions gained by an Indy car race winner on a road/street course. Max Papis won at Laguna Seca in 2001 from the 25th starting position.

“Truthfully, I didn’t think it was possible,” said Dixon, who has won in 10 consecutive seasons. “Great pit stops by everybody on Team Target and the strategy was spot on once we got that (lap 37) yellow. Long, hard-fought day but huge thanks to Chevy and obviously we got fantastic fuel mileage there, too.”

Verizon P1 Award winner Sebastien Bourdais finished second, hitting the finish line 5.3864 seconds behind the race winner.

“That was tough,” Bourdais said. “Hats off to Dixie (Scott Dixon) and the (Chip) Ganassi guys. We didn’t have anything for them. They were clearly the class of the field and deserve it. It is a one-two for Chevy so I couldn’t be any happier with the Mistic boys. We will keep rolling.”

Dixon gave Chip Ganassi Racing its first victory of the season and is the 10th different driver representing seven teams to win this season.

“We had a couple close calls in Iowa (fourth place) and Pocono (fifth place) and finally came through,” team owner Chip Ganassi said.

Hinchcliffe finished a season-high third in the No. 27 United Fiber & Data car and Andretti Autosport teammate Carlos Munoz placed fourth. Graham Rahal of New Albany, Ohio, earned his second top-five finish on a road/street course this season in the No. 15 National Guard Rahal Letterman Racing car.

“That start was pretty crazy,” Hinchcliffe said. “Going down into turn 4 there, it was like the seas parted in front of me. I felt bad for the guys that got involved in that wreck, but it allowed us to get up there a little bit. The car was really fast, we were running off some really good lap times there. We got caught behind a couple of guys, and at some point we might have been able to pick one more spot up. I’m really proud of the United Fiber & Data guys.”

Will Power finished sixth to wrestle the Verizon IndyCar Series championship points lead from Team Penske teammate Helio Castroneves. The door opened for Power before the green flag as Castroneves’ No. 3 Hitachi car pulled into its pit box with what was diagnosed as a stuck throttle. Castroneves joined the race four laps down and finished 19th.

Castroneves, who entered Round 15 ahead of Power by 13 points, heads to the ABC Supply Wisconsin 250 at Milwaukee IndyFest on Aug. 17 four points back (548-544).

“At first, I thought the throttle issue was a quick fix because as soon as they started the car for ‘gentlemen, start your engines’ I knew there was something wrong,” Castroneves said. “Then, during the parade laps, I noticed that it was stuck. That could be a big problem and cause a big crash. When we came back down pit road we figured out it was a bigger problem. There was just a bit of a mistake in our fuel mapping. It was a tough race, knowing that I was on a lap by myself the entire time. We will just to rebound from this. We might have been knocked down but we will get back up. On to Milwaukee.”

Ryan Hunter-Reay, who looked to gain on the Team Penske duo with a strong result after starting fifth, also experienced misfortune when the No. 28 DHL Andretti Autosport car spun exiting Turn 11 on Lap 37 to bring out the second full-course caution. He finished 10th and holds down third in the standings by one point over Simon Pagenaud (485-484).

“It was one of those days we really needed to capitalize,” said Hunter-Reay, who has a series-high three wins this season. “We had to come through for a (pit lane speed) penalty and that put us back in the field. I had a spin. We recovered from that to put the DHL car in 10th, narrowed the points margin to the points leader but not enough. We’ll have to get pretty creative here the rest of the year.”

Verizon IndyCar Series
Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course – Lexington, OH
Honda Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio – Aug. 3, 2014

1. (22) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
2. (1) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
3. (17) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
4. (4) Carlos Munoz, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
5. (7) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
6. (6) Will Power, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
Our medications are generic soft tabs viagra continue reading for source branded and constitute the real patented ones being absolutely equivalent in ingredients. Of course, attention is paid on the calorie restricted tadalafil overnight delivery nutritious food has it greater effect on aging. Sometimes it may impair the This page commander cialis color vision. The aim of this branch is to find the similarities and dissimilarities in the different cultures found in the world. sildenafil cost http://www.devensec.com/sustain/Biomass_in_Food_and_Energy_Production_Revised.pdf 7. (20) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
8. (19) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
9. (9) Simon Pagenaud, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
10. (5) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
11. (11) Juan Pablo Montoya, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
12. (2) Josef Newgarden, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
13. (12) Mike Conway, Dallara-Chevy, 90, Running
14. (13) Mikhail Aleshin, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
15. (8) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
16. (18) Jack Hawksworth, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
17. (10) Carlos Huertas, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running
18. (21) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 89, Running
19. (15) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Chevy, 86, Running
20. (14) Sebastian Saavedra, Dallara-Chevy, 24, Mechanical
21. (3) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevy, 0, Contact
22. (16) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 0, Contact

Winners average speed: 108.140

Time of Race: 01:52:45.2043

Margin of victory: 5.3864 seconds

Cautions: 2 for 10 laps

Lead changes: 7 among 5 drivers

Lap Leaders:
Bourdais 1 – 25
Hunter-Reay 26 – 27
Bourdais 28 – 39
Dixon 40 – 61
Newgarden 62 – 64
Bourdais 65
Hinchcliffe 66 – 67
Dixon 68 – 90

Point Standings: Power 548, Castroneves 544, Hunter-Reay 485, Pagenaud 484, Montoya 447, Dixon 440, Munoz 416, Bourdais 400, Kanaan 389, Andretti 383

 

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