The Southland Times

Disbelief, shock for Kiwi driver

- MOTORSPORT

The whole plan had been to celebrate Scott Dixon’s polewinnin­g run for the Indianapol­is 500 at a downtown Italian restaurant.

But the restaurant was closed by the time Dixon had completed his media obligation­s on Sunday night (Monday NZ time).

‘‘Really, only the next choice was to get fast food,’’ Dixon said yesterday.

So Dixon and friend Dario Franchitti headed to Taco Bell, where Dixon planned to order his usual Cheesy Gordita Crunch, subbing beans for the meat. Just a mile down the road from hallowed Indianapol­is Motor Speedway, the two were robbed at gunpoint while waiting in the drive-thru lane.

‘‘It was definitely shocking, disbelief for the most part,’’ said Dixon, who acknowledg­ed the ‘‘bizarre contrast’’ of being robbed a few hours after the high of winning the pole for the fabled race coming up this weekend.

‘‘It will make you feel really small again,’’ Dixon said.

Dixon has been advised not to discuss details of the robbery, in which police arrested two boys, ages 15 and 14, a short time later.

Tony Kannan, a team-mate of Dixon’s with Chip Ganassi Racing, told reporters that Dixon and Franchitti had their windows down when they were approached at gunpoint. ’’They held a gun at Dixon’s head and asked him for his wallet and his phone,’’ Kanaan said.

Dixon, who is nicknamed ‘‘The Iceman’’ because nothing seems to rattle him, said he felt he and Franchitti remained calm throughout the incident.

Both he and Franchitti are avid watch collectors; Dixon said the vintage Rolex he was wearing and ‘‘a Daytona edition that Dario has been wearing as his lucky watch’’ were the two most valuable things in the car. Neither watch was taken.

Dixon, by the way, won the pole using a white-knuckle setup from engineer Chris Simmons. His four-lap average was 373.63kmh, the best qualifying run in 21 years at Indy .

Two days removed from the rollercoas­ter of emotions, Dixon seemed intent on putting the robbery behind him and focusing on winning his second Indianapol­is 500 as he made the annual offday media tour, this time to Toronto.

The New Zealander did have some reflection about his experience at Taco Bell - the choice only because McDonalds, a Ganassi team sponsor that had a location next door was closed for renovation­s.

‘‘I think the biggest thing is you are just hoping that everything is OK, grateful that nothing silly happened,’’ Dixon said.

‘‘That’s the world of ence.

‘‘That aside, personally, it maybe brings you to think about choices you make.’’

Like going to Taco Bell 10pm after winning the pole?

‘‘I’d still go,’’ he laughed. differ- at

 ?? PHOTO: PHOTOSPORT ?? ‘‘It will make you feel really small again,’’ said Scott Dixon, right, of being robbed at gunpoint hours after securing pole position for the Indianapol­is 500.
PHOTO: PHOTOSPORT ‘‘It will make you feel really small again,’’ said Scott Dixon, right, of being robbed at gunpoint hours after securing pole position for the Indianapol­is 500.

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