Scott Dixon Slays As Will Power Survives Commonwealth Based Race At Honda
Indy Toronto
Canada, New Zealand, and Australia are all still active members of the
Commonwealth Of Nations ... Britain and its dominions agreed they were "equal
in status, in no way subordinate one to another in any aspect of their
domestic or external affairs, though united by common allegiance to the Crown,
and freely associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations". The
term "Commonwealth" was officially adopted to describe the community.
[ht: Wikipedia]
The reason that this point-of-order came to light in conjunction with this
Honda Indy Toronto race is that Scott Dixon, upon winning at this venue a
fourth time in his career, stated that he considers Toronto to be his "home"
track since New Zealand, Dixon's birthplace, is a Commonwealth member nation -
so is Australia, Will Power's birthplace.
After the three round Knock-Out Qualifications format, the following 25 car
field for the 10th race of the 2022 season was set up as follows:
Four rookies in the top 12 of the field. Season points leader Marcus
Ericsson starting down at P9 - number two in the season points, Will Power
starts way down at P16 (but has two sets of fresh REDS), and third in the
points, Josef Newgarden starts at P3.
Biggest possible season points winner in this deal may just be sixth in the
season points starting at P2 Scott Dixon if he has nothing but Green Flag
racing ahead of him - he is set to begin a season ending run.
Race Stare Tire Strategy - Image Credit: Facebook (2022) |
For Will Power to survive the battle for season points out of the shortest
street course on the NTT INDYCAR SERIES schedule, he will need another drive
of the year as he had in Mid-Ohio where he started at P21 due to a Quals.
Penalty - slid to last place at P27 due to a non-contact spin on the first
lap - to finish at P3 on the podium!!!
This excerpted and edited from Motorport.com -
Toronto IndyCar: Dixon scores 52nd win, matches Mario Andretti
By: David Malsher-Lopez - Jul 17, 2022, 2:16 PM
Chip Ganassi Racing-Honda’s legend Scott Dixon held off Colton Herta and
Felix Rosenqvist to score his 52nd IndyCar triumph and his fourth in
Toronto, and match the legendary Mario Andretti in second on the all-time
IndyCar winners list.
From the start, polesitter Herta was unthreatened, while Dixon swept
across from the outside to ensure Newgarden couldn’t sneak up from third
to claim second. Newgarden checked his momentum and that allowed Alexander
Rossi around his outside to try and claim third, but Newgarden had put the
matter beyond dispute by the end of the lap. Scott McLaughlin, his
teammate, passed David Malukas for fifth, but there was even worse luck
for the other Dale Coyne Racing-Honda, that of Takuma Sato who was shoved
into the wall at the Turn 1 kerfuffle, and limped his very broken car back
to the pits. The debris left behind obliged Race Control to throw the
full-course caution.
Following the Lap 4 restart Felix Rosenqvist demoted Malukas down to
seventh, while Power had already taken advantage of his alternate tires to
move into 12th, from 16th on the grid, but rather than burn up all his
push to pass trying to stay ahead of Romain Grosjean who he’d passed on
the opening lap, he let the Frenchman back past on Lap 11 and pitted next
time by to grab primaries. Defending champion Alex Palou, who had started
22nd, had pitted a couple of laps earlier to take on primaries and such
had been his pace, the undercut ensured Power emerged behind him. To avoid
the risk of getting jumped should a yellow fall, the leaders rapidly
started pulling in, Newgarden remaining ahead of Rossi but now split by
rookie Malukas. Herta and McLaughlin stopped on Lap 19, a lap after Dixon
and found himself being outbraked by the six-time champion into Turn 1, to
effectively take the lead. Behind them, Newgarden and now Rossi were ahead
of Malukas, while Rosenqvist had turned in fast enough laps at the end of
his stint to emerge ahead of McLaughlin and hold off the Penske driver.
However, Dixon wasn’t yet in the lead, for Graham Rahal, Rinus VeeKay,
Pato O’Ward, Jimmie Johnson and Conor Daly had risked running a long first
stint on their primaries to try and make a net gain.
Rahal finally pitted from the lead on Lap 25, emerging in 14th which
would become 10th once his fellow long runners stopped. Further back,
Power was only 19th, and not even threatening the Andretti cars of
DeFrancesco and Grosjean ahead.
On Lap 30, Rosenqvist moved ahead of Malukas and onto the tail of future
Arrow McLaren SP driver, Rossi, who was applying the pressure to Newgarden
while the Penske driver stayed bottled up behind the yet-to-stop Daly.
O’Ward finally stopped on Lap 32, leaving Dixon out front with a 2.5sec
lead over Herta, the pair of them in a race of their own as 14sec behind
them, Daly continued to hold up a train of cars led by Newgarden, Rossi
and Rosenqvist. Finally Daly uncorked the bottle on Lap 36 and pitted.
Not that Newgarden then made any notable progress thereafter because he
was in fuel-save mode having been one of the early stoppers. On Lap 43,
just past half distance in this 85-lap race, Dixon was 2.3sec ahead of
Herta, with Newgarden still 14sec back, with Rossi and Rosenqvist 2sec
further back disputing fourth.
That dispute ended in tears on Lap 45, just as Rosenqvist was encouraged
by his strategist to make the pass. At Turn 3, the AMSP driver flicked to
the inside of the future AMSP driver, and he was fully alongside as they
exited the turn but as Rosenqvist floored the throttle his car slid
sideways and the contact sent the Andretti car hard into the wall. Race
Control would say the attempt was legit and so there was no penalty for
the AMSP driver.
The drivers wended their way into the tortuous pitlane, and Newgarden
suffered a horrible stop as he stopped too far from his crew, and the
refueler struggled to get the nozzle engaged nad Newgarden was down to
11th.. With VeeKay and Daly having stayed out front after their late
stops, Ed Carpenter Racing-Chevrolet had a 1-2 – VeeKay on reds, Daly on
blacks – ahead of Dixon, Herta, Rosenqvist, McLaughlin, Rahal, Pagenaud,
Ericsson and Palou. Following the restart, Newgarden lost out further to
Christian Lundgaard and O’Ward.
Up (almost) at the front, Herta was now fully able to stay in Dixon’s
wake, but then the yellow flew for debris at Turn 1 – concrete debris,
caused by the track breaking up – compressed the field once more.
Following the Lap 59 restart, Ericsson had a couple of wheel banging
moments with teammate Ericsson over eighth place but failed to make a move
stick. He only had to wait a few seconds to gain eighth anyway, because
the yellow had to be thrown once more due to Kirkwood and Johnson coming
together at the back of the field and stalling. That yellow saw VeeKay
duck into the pits, but because the field had to go so slow through the
incident scene, the Dutch driver was able to emerge in 13th despite the
field being bunched together.
The next restart came at the end of Lap 66, with 19 laps to go, and into
Turn 1, Rahal muscled down the inside of McLaughlin to snatch fourth and
the Penske driver got out on the marbles through Turn 2 and lost places to
Ericsson, Palou, Lundgaard and Pagenaud. On Lap 69, Pagenaud passed
Lundgaard for seventh. Another Penske driver, however, moved forward,
getting ahead of O’Ward and Malukas to grab 10th.
Up front, Dixon pulled away from Herta who was having to watch his
mirrors for Rosenqvist. Some 1.7sec back, Rahal was fending off the
Ericsson vs Palou battle.
In the final 10 laps, Palou eased off from the back of Ericsson, allowing
the championship leader to focus on trying to find a way past Rahal. Three
seconds further up the road, Rosenqvist’s efforts to get around Herta
redoubled, but he couldn’t quite get it done, and he fell half a second
short. Ahead of them Dixon scored his first win of the year, after leading
40 of the 85 laps, and ensuring he has now scored at least one win in 18
seasons.
Rahal was great fourth ahead of Ericsson, while Palou can be proud of his
charge from 22nd to sixth place, the highest finishing driver of those who
had never seen Toronto before this weekend.
Lundgaard was a fine eighth ahead of Penske drivers McLaughlin and
Newgarden who completed the Top 10.
ENDS
A great day for points movement for Chip Ganassi Racing drivers with a win by
Dixon, the maintaining in the season points lead by Ericsson (tacking on a few
points to the margin between him and Penske's Will Power), and a couple of
leap frog position moves - Alex Palou moves Newgarden to P4 and takes over P3
with Scott Dixon winning, he moves from P6 over Pato O'Ward to P5.
NTT INDYCAR SERIES Point Standings:
Ericsson 351, Power 316, Palou 314, Newgarden 307, Dixon 307,
O'Ward 276, McLaughlin 274, Herta 254, Rosenqvist 244, Pagenaud 243,
Rossi 236, VeeKay 211, Rahal 210, Daly 198, Grosjean 197,
Lundgaard 183, Castroneves 173, Malukas 163, Sato 154, Harvey 126,
Ilott 113, DeFrancesco 111, Johnson 108, Kirkwood 106, Tony Kanaan 78,
Kellett 76, Santino Ferrucci 71, Tatiana Calderon 58, JR Hildebrand 53, Ed Carpenter 49,
Juan Pablo Montoya 44, Simona De Silvestro 21, Marco Andretti 17, Sage Karam 14, Stefan Wilson 10
CGR drivers are now sitting at P1, P3, and P5 in the season points tally with seven races remaining.
Next up? Two races - HY-VEEDEALS.COM 250 PRESENTED BY DOORDASH & HY-VEE SALUTE TO
FARMERS 300 PRESENTED BY GOOGLE - Iowa Speedway - July 22-23 -
Official Schedule
... notes from
The EDJE
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TAGS: NTT INDYCAR SERIES, Honda Indy Toronto, Chip Ganassi Racing, HY-VEE, Iowa Speedway, The EDJE
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