Ganassi makes Indy gambles pay off
INDIANAPOLIS – Strategy was almost as important as speed Saturday as Scott Dixon won the pole for the Indianapolis 500 with a big gamble by his Target Chip Ganassi Racing team.
Dixon and teammate Dan Wheldon, who took the second spot, both took advantage of Indy’s unique qualifying format, which allows each entry up to three tries on each of the four days of time trials.
Dixon got the biggest benefit of the team strategy, canceling out a four-lap average of 225.178 mph earlier in the day and making it pay off with four laps at 226.366 that held up for Ganassi’s third Indy pole.
“I was part of that decision, so it wasn’t really a surprise,” Dixon said. “We had been out testing, so we were confident we could go much faster. The tough part came later in the day, knowing whether or not we should do a third attempt (if we got knocked off the pole).”
The New Zealander’s pole run came with just more than two hours left in the session and only moments after Ryan Briscoe, the first driver to qualify, made his gamble in an effort to give team owner Roger Penske a record 15th Indy pole. The team withdrew his earlier speed of 224.833 and Briscoe, who wound up third, put his Team Penske entry on top briefly at 226.080.
Wheldon’s earlier speed of 225.840, which had held the pole briefly, was then withdrawn by his team with about 20 minutes left. The 2005 Indy winner, responded with a run that came up just short of his teammate at 226.110.
Penske’s other driver, Helio Castroneves, a two-time Indy winner and two-time pole-winner here, had his car pulled out of the qualifying line by his team earlier in the day because of gusty winds. When the two-time Indy winner finally made his only attempt, he also came up short at 225.733, good for fourth on the busy afternoon.
After a rain-marred opening week of practice for the May 25 race, there was a long line of cars ready to go when the opening time trials began at noon with the top 11 positions in the 33-car field up for grabs.
Danica Patrick, two weeks past making history as the first woman to win an IndyCar race, set the early pace, knocking Briscoe off the top spot with a four-lap run averaging 225.197 mph on the famed 2.5-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval.
That drew a huge cheer from the crowd of about 40,000 at the sprawling speedway, the biggest spectator turnout for pole day in more than a decade.
But Wheldon spoiled her storybook moment when he came out about 20 minutes later and pushed Patrick to the middle of the tentative front row. She never went back on the track and wound up fifth.
Eleven more spots will be decided today, with the final 11 positions to be determined in qualifying next Saturday. After that comes “Bump Day” next Sunday, the last chance for drivers to knock the slowest qualifiers out of the field.