Dayton Daily News

An Indy 500 ending to forget for 6-time series champ Dixon

- By Mark Long

Scott Dixon answered a few questions and started to trudge down pit road when he realized he forgot something: His wife.

Dixon turned around, grabbed Emma’s hand and took off on what had to be one of the most agonizing walks of his IndyCar career. Disappoint­ment. Disgust. Discomfort. Dixon had to be feeling them all.

The 41-year-old New Zealander had the car to beat for much of the Indy 500 on Sunday until a late speeding penalty cost him a chance to kiss the bricks at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway for the first time since 2008.

Dixon was trying to make what should have been his final pit stop, with 23 laps remaining, when he locked up the rear tires while braking and wiggled. IndyCar’s sophistica­ted timing-and-scoring system flagged his speed, and officials handed down a passthroug­h penalty that cost him valuable seconds and a significan­t number of spots.

He essentiall­y had no chance down the stretch.

“It’s just heartbreak­ing, to be honest,” Dixon said. “It must have been very close. ... I think it was like a mile an hour over or something. It’s just frustratin­g. The car was really good all day. We had really good speed. The team did an amazing job on strategy. I just messed up.” He owned it, too.

Dixon climbed out his No. 9 Honda, apologized to each crew member he could track down and even went next door to do the same to everyone working in Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Alex Palou’s box.

It was a bitterswee­t ending for sure.

Another Ganassi teammate, Marcus Ericsson, won the Indy 500 after Dixon’s error, and close friend and teammate Tony Kanaan crossed the finish line in third.

Dixon was 21st, his fourthwors­t finish at IndyCar’s signature event.

Dixon got plenty of sympathy and support as he walked the grid. Fans cheered his name. Crewmen from other teams offered condolence­s. Indianapol­is native Ed Carpenter stopped Dixon and asked what happened.

Kanaan and Dixon shared a long embrace. Graham Rahal patted him on the back.

Emma Davies-Dixon asked both of them the same question: Why did IndyCar throw a red flag with five laps to go? It was just two years ago that race control was in a similar position — with Scott Dixon running second to Takuma Sato — when IndyCar let the race finish under yellow.

“Because they’re no consistenc­y,” Rahal responded. “They do what they want.”

Kanaan had a different take, saying IndyCar made the right call for one main reason.

“I believe we’re here for the fans,” Kanaan said. “We hear the fans. Yeah, a lot of people are going to have different opinions about it . ... They came here to see a race, green-flag and checkered-flag race. That was the right call . ...

“That’s what people wanted to do. I’m in full support . ... If I was in the stands, I want to see a race finish under the green.”

Scott Dixon refused to weigh in on the different race-ending approaches.

“I don’t know. We were out of it then by then so it didn’t really matter for us,” he said.

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Scott Dixon

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