The Capital

Palou claims IndyCar title

- By Jenna Fryer

LONG BEACH, Calif. — Smooth and steady, same as he’s been all season, Alex Palou cruised to his first IndyCar championsh­ip with an easy Sunday drive at the Grand Prix of Long Beach.

The 24-year-old became the first Spaniard to win the IndyCar championsh­ip and pulled it off in just his second season in the United States with a fourth-place finish on the temporary downtown street course that rolls along the Long Beach waterfront.

Colton Herta won the race — Long Beach is considered his home track — for his second consecutiv­e win and third of the season. Josef Newgarden finished second and Scott Dixon, the six-time and reigning champion, finished third before turning the IndyCar crown over to his Chip Ganassi Racing teammate.

Palou’s dream growing up outside of Barcelona was to someday make it to IndyCar and if he was lucky, maybe he could land a ride with Ganassi. He manifested both goals when, as an IndyCar rookie last year, he introduced himself to Ganassi during Palou’s first Indianapol­is 500 and parlayed it into a ride for this season.

Palou won the season opener, finished second in the Indy 500 and led the standings 12 of 16 weeks.

After climbing his way through the European ranks, Palou raced two years in Japan and hasn’t won a title since competing in go-karts as a teenager in Spain.

Now Palou has joined an exclusive club of all-stars in Ganassi’s elite “I like winners” club. The title was the 14th in American open-wheel racing for Ganassi among six drivers and came 25 years after Jimmy Vasser gave the organizati­on its first championsh­ip.

Palou joins Vasser, Alex Zanardi, Juan Pablo Montoya, Dario Franchitti and Scott Dixon as Ganassi open-wheel champions; he’s the first Ganassi champion since Montoya in 1999 not named Franchitti or Dixon, who combined for nine titles from 2008 through last year.

Franchitti is now the Ganassi driver coach, and Palou is considered the best driver in the No. 10 as Dixon’s teammate since a head injury forced Franchitti into an early 2013 retirement. Palou is the first Ganassi driver since Franchitti to beat Dixon in the season standings.

Palou held a 35-point lead over Pato O’Ward at the start of the race and needed only to finish 11th or better to clinch the title. O’Ward was knocked out of the race 18 laps after it started, and Palou just had to make it to the finish line.

O’Ward was eliminated from title contention just 18 laps when his drive shaft broke because of contact on the very first lap.

O’Ward needed Palou to have a disastrous day to become IndyCar’s first Mexican champion. But the 22-year-old was frustrated all weekend, even though he had vowed to pull all the stops to disrupt the championsh­ip race.

He was unhappy with his car in practice Friday, then furious Saturday when a ruling prevented him from advancing to the final round of qualifying.

That put O’Ward in eighth at the start of the race — in traffic that led to a first-lap disaster.

 ?? ALEX GALLARDO/AP ?? Alex Palou, center, celebrates after clinching his first career IndyCar championsh­ip Sunday with a fourth-place finish at the Grand Prix of Long Beach.
ALEX GALLARDO/AP Alex Palou, center, celebrates after clinching his first career IndyCar championsh­ip Sunday with a fourth-place finish at the Grand Prix of Long Beach.

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