The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Power’s IndyCar Grand Prix victory is his 3rd in 4 years

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Will Power’s timing was impeccable Saturday.

He picked the perfect strategy with his red tires. He pressed the push-to-pass button at precisely the right moment. He gave Roger Penske his 200th series win at Penske’s place — Indianapol­is.

Power overcame a late caution period that shrunk his lead, barely won the race off pit lane on the final stop and even drove through some light rain to pull away from Scott Dixon by 2.2443 seconds for his second straight IndyCar Grand Prix victory.

“It’s been a slow start for us, so it’s fantastic to get the win,” the first three-time race winner said. “It’s amazing to be a part of that history with Penske Racing because it’s such a deep history.”

It might be just what the Australian needed. He came into the weekend with only one top-five finish all season, a second at Long Beach. The only other top-10 he had this season was in the season opener at St. Petersburg.

But Power won the pole Friday and dominated again on Indy’s 2.439-mile, 14-turn road course. He led a racehigh 56 laps, including the last 34 after taking advantage of his tire choice to quickly close the gap with race leader Robert Wickens on the front straightaw­ay before making a smooth move to beat the rookie into the first turn on Lap 51.

Power has won three of the last four road-course events at Indy — all from the pole.

Wickens, a Canadian who drives for Schmidt Peterson Motorsport­s, finished third, more than 8.1 seconds off the pace. “That was the first time where I felt like a true rookie in that final stint because I’ve never had to save fuel before,” Wickens said. “The amount we had to save was something I didn’t think was even possible.”

Power and Dixon didn’t have any problems, of course. Dixon, the New Zealander with Chip Ganassi Racing, methodical­ly maneuvered through the field after starting 18th. He managed to get into the top three but never really got close enough to challenge Power.

The only thing that seemed to slow down Power was the caution that came on Lap 56 when his teammate Josef Newgarden spun in the 12th turn. The yellow flag shrunk Power’s lead from more than four seconds to less than one. Then he barely beat Wickens off pit lane on the final stop and never looked back.

Seven drivers led the race, tying a record set in 2014, and there were 214 total passes. Chevrolet now leads Honda 3-2 in victories in the engine manufactur­er’s race.

Three-time Indianapol­is 500 winner Helio Castroneve­s finished sixth in his season debut.

Hamilton takes F1 pole: Lewis Hamilton ended Sebastian Vettel’s dominant run in F1 qualifying by setting a track record and winning pole position for today’s Spanish Grand Prix. Hamilton had a lap of 1 minute, 16.173 seconds at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, only four hundredths of a second ahead of Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas. Vettel, who won three straight poles, will start third. It was Hamilton’s record-extending 74th pole and his first since the season-opener in Australia.

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