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Dixon Takes On AGR

Dixon Takes On AGR

TRACK TACTICS: Target Chip Ganassi Racing driver Scott Dixon (9) races Andretti Green Racing's Tony Kanaan for track position Sunday at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma, Calif. (Dennis Mattish Photo)

Ganassi Driver Beats Franchitti And Co. To Capture The Win, Point Lead

By Bruce Martin
NSSN Correspondent

SONOMA, Calif. — Scott Dixon’s charge over the faltering Dario Franchitti continued as he won Sunday’s Motorola Indy 300.
Franchitti had dominated most of the afternoon before he crashed into Andretti Green Racing teammate Marco Andretti late in the race.
Franchitti was able to continue and finish third, but he basically threw away a chance at an easy victory.
Dixon defeated Helio Castroneves by 0.5449 second.
Dixon’s fourth win of the season gave him the IndyCar Series point lead over Franchitti, who entered with an eight-point lead but now trails the 2003 champion by four points.

RIGHT ON TARGET: Scott Dixon celebrates his IRL IndyCar Series victory with his crew. (Jim Haines/IRL IndyCar Photo)
RIGHT ON TARGET: Scott Dixon celebrates his IRL IndyCar Series victory with his crew. (Jim Haines/IRL IndyCar Photo)
Dixon, who claims he was victimized by “team tactics” from the four AGR drivers throughout the race, believes the rival team “got what they deserved.”
“Today was very frustrating, especially having to deal with TK (Tony Kanaan, another AGR driver) a lot,” Dixon said. “He was not playing fair at all. We were all warned in the drivers meeting about team tactics. I think the IRL (Indy Racing League, sanctioning body of the IndyCar series) was watching another race because it was definitely going on.”
Andretti pitted as the leader with 12 laps to go but as he came out of the pits, he was in front of Franchitti, who clipped his teammate’s car, sending Andretti off the track and into a tire barrier in turn two. Team owner Michael Andretti, Marco’s father, threw his headset in disgust and later said he was upset that Franchitti didn’t “show more patience.”
That brought out the first of just two full-course caution periods in the race.
The contact busted Franchitti’s front wing but with only eight laps of green-flag racing left, the team told him to stay out of the pits rather than change the broken part.
Dixon, who at times felt as if he were outnumbered 4-1 by the AGR drivers, saw the incident and couldn’t help but laugh at the outcome.
MOVING MARCO: Dario Franchitti (27) makes contact with teammate Marco Andretti during Sunday's Motorola Indy 300. (Dennis Mattish Photo)
MOVING MARCO: Dario Franchitti (27) makes contact with teammate Marco Andretti during Sunday's Motorola Indy 300. (Dennis Mattish Photo)

“It was kind of ironic when Marco and Dario hit each other,” Dixon said. “I could definitely see what happened. Marco was coming out of the pits and Dario was at full speed. Dario probably felt because Marco was his teammate that he was obviously going to give him some room. But I really don’t think Marco knew he was there. It was one of those things, coming out of the pits, you’re trying to get out as fast as possible and those things happen.”
After being blocked and held up throughout the race by the AGR drivers, Dixon was asked if he felt a sense of “karma” when he saw Franchitti’s race end in a tangle with a teammate.
“It sure did,” Dixon said with a smile.
When the green flag waved, Franchitti tried to block Dixon but the New Zealander was able to outsmart this year’s Indianapolis 500 winner by taking the outside line going up the hill in turn three for the lead.

“It enabled us to have a really good go at him,” Dixon said. “He slipped a little bit in turn two; we had the run going into turn three.
“Pretty much then, it was smooth sailing.”
As Dixon drove away from the field, Vision Racing’s A.J. Foyt IV ran into the spinning car of Scott Sharp in the final hairpin turn.
After two laps of caution, the green flag waved with four laps to go with Dixon in front of Castroneves and Franchitti.
Telemetry in Dixon’s pit area indicated a tire pressure problem but the driver had to stay on the course as he began to drive away from Castroneves.

POINT MAN: With his victory at Infineon Raceway Sunday, Scott Dixon leads the IRL IndyCar standings by four points. (Tom Parker Photo)
POINT MAN: With his victory at Infineon Raceway Sunday, Scott Dixon leads the IRL IndyCar standings by four points. (Tom Parker Photo)
Dixon babied his race car with the lead, which allowed the hard-charging Castroneves to close up to the gearbox on tight areas of the track but Dixon continued to lead.
Kanaan refused to pass teammate Franchitti for third place while holding up Sam Hornish, Jr. in an attempt to protect his teammate in the title race.
Franchitti finished third after leading four times for a race-high 62 laps.
 “It was a perfect day right up until Marco and I got together in turn one,” Franchitti said. “We’ve come close to getting together earlier in the pits. He was out there on cold tires going a good bit slower.
“Tony and I had a similar situation earlier in the race. Tony had given me space. Hell, even Dixon did it on cold tires. But Marco was out there trying to win the race and we were out there trying to win a championship.”
And this is where the priorities clashed.
“He had his priorities, I had mine,” Franchitti said. “You saw what happened.
“Right now I’ve only got my side of it and he’s only got his.”
Marco Andretti’s side of the story was Franchitti is enough of a racing veteran to know how to pick and choose his passing zones.
“I gave racing room and I was hoping Dario would race me clean,” Marco said. “I hate to think he’d do anything intentional. I was saving so much fuel and my car was good enough that we were still catching them as we were saving fuel and that was the win right there.
“If we would have played fair, that would have happened.”
Instead, it was Dixon who celebrated his 10th career IndyCar series triumph with a check for $131,000.
Dixon carries the point lead into next Sunday’s street course race in Detroit.