Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Mid-Ohio IndyCar: Ganassi's Scott Dixon comes from last to victory

Scott Dixon came from last on the grid to take an extraordinary IndyCar win at Mid-Ohio on Sunday

The Ganassi driver was one of several to be put to the back of the grid after spinning and causing red flags during Saturday's wet qualifying session, but an aggressive strategy and great fuel mileage combined to deliver Dixon his first win since Houston last year.

It was his fifth win at Mid-Ohio in eight years, and also Ganassi's first IndyCar triumph of 2014.

Dixon capitalised on an early caution to stop on the second lap, and he stopped again just seven laps later to rid himself of the harder black tyres. That left him with three sets of new red tyres for the remainder of the race, and he used them to full effect.

With each stop he fell progressively more in line with the conventional pit strategy, although he was still carrying around two laps less fuel than the cars behind him as the race entered its final phase, and it seemed to be touch and go as to whether he could go the full distance on fuel.

Dixon wasn't being conservative - in the closing laps, he was 0.4 seconds faster than the cars behind him - and the true picture of just how close it was didn't emerge until he pulled the car to the side of the track just after taking the chequered flag.

Polesitter Sebastien Bourdais was forced to settle for second. The Frenchman spent much of the race scrapping with Josef Newgarden, but the Sarah Fisher Hartman driver's hopes were scrapped by a slow pitstop followed by a drive-through for running over his air hose.

His misfortune allowed James Hinchcliffe to claim the final step on the podium ahead of Carlos Munoz and Graham Rahal.

It took just one lap for IndyCar's two-year caution-free streak at Mid-Ohio to be broken. Tony Kanaan was turned around by another car, and Marco Andretti had no opportunity to avoid him. The ensuing crash ended both drivers' participation in the race, and cost several other drivers positions as they took to the grass to avoid becoming involved.

That would prove to be the only major incident of the afternoon, but a handful of more minor ones could prove to have a significant impact on the championship battle.

The first came when Helio Castroneves, who headed the points coming into the weekend, suffered a mechanical problem during the parade laps and lost five laps undergoing repairs.

Initially, things were looking better for Ryan Hunter-Reay, who was among the frontrunners during the opening half of the race. His day took a turn when his haste to beat Bourdais out of pitlane earned him a drive-through for speeding, which he followed almost immediately by spinning while running ninth.

Both drivers' setbacks proved a boon for Will Power, who finished a relatively quiet sixth but still heads into the next race at Milwaukee as the new points leader.

Results - 90 laps:

Pos  Driver              Team/Engine              Time/Gap
 1.  Scott Dixon         Ganassi/Chevrolet    1h52m45.2043s
 2.  Sebastien Bourdais  KV/Chevrolet              +5.3864s
 3.  James Hinchcliffe   Andretti/Honda            +7.3335s
 4.  Carlos Munoz        Andretti/Honda            +9.3551s
 5.  Graham Rahal        Rahal/Honda              +11.8508s
 6.  Will Power          Penske/Chevrolet         +15.9769s
 7.  Charlie Kimball     Ganassi/Chevrolet        +16.8533s
 8.  Ryan Briscoe        Ganassi/Chevrolet        +17.502 s
 9.  Simon Pagenaud      Schmidt/Honda            +18.6160s
10.  Ryan Hunter-Reay    Andretti/Honda           +20.0766s
11.  Juan Pablo Montoya  Penske/Chevrolet         +21.7366s
12.  Josef Newgarden     Fisher/Honda             +22.0987s
13.  Mike Conway         Carpenter/Chevrolet      +23.8352s
14.  Mikhail Aleshin     Schmidt/Honda            +29.806 s
15.  Justin Wilson       Coyne/Honda              +44.6415s
16.  Jack Hawksworth     Herta/Honda              +58.7211s
17.  Carlos Huertas      Coyne/Honda            +1m02.5847s
18.  Takuma Sato         Foyt/Honda                  -1 lap
19.  Helio Castroneves   Penske/Chevrolet           -4 laps

 Retirements:

     Sebastian Saavedra  KV/Chevrolet               24 laps
     Tony Kanaan         Ganassi/Chevrolet           0 laps
     Marco Andretti      Andretti/Honda              0 laps

Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Mid-Ohio IndyCar: Sebastien Bourdais takes another pole in wet
Next article Honda expects big differences between IndyCar aero kits in 2015

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe