The Day

Ganassi goes to Indy with five strong shots

Scott Dixon starts on the pole for the fifth time in his career for Sunday’s marquee race

- By JENNA FRYER

Indianapol­is — Chip Ganassi skipped his 1982 graduation ceremony at Duquesne to qualify for the Indianapol­is 500. The Pittsburgh native made the field but turned out to be just an OK race car driver.

His strengths were outside the car and inside the boardroom. In the 40 years since, Ganassi has built one of the top open-wheel programs in North America. Ganassi has collected 14 championsh­ips and won four Indy 500s as a team owner, though the last one for Chip Ganassi Racing was a decade ago.

That's a drought the boss doesn't find at all acceptable.

“It's been 10 years since we won here, we should be trying to win this thing,” Ganassi said Friday.

Well, come Sunday, the Indy 500 appears to be Ganassi's race to lose.

He's got not one, not two, not three, but five thoroughbr­eds in the stable and Ganassi cars have been untouchabl­e for nearly two weeks at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway.

Scott Dixon starts from the pole for the fifth time in his career as the six-time IndyCar champion continues his determined quest for a second Indy 500 win. The New Zealander won from the pole in 2008 but has fallen short in 18 other tries.

Dixon has been runner-up three times, and his loss to Takuma Sato in 2020 stings the most. The race ended under yellow, and Dixon had to helplessly follow Sato across the finish line. Over the past week, he set an Indy 500 pole-winning record in qualifying with laps over 240 miles per hour (386.24 kph) and now is chasing the item atop his to-do list.

“I just want to win, that's all it comes down

“I just want to win, that's all it comes down to. When you are younger, you don't really give a (crap). The first championsh­ip? The first Indy 500? I had no idea.”

SCOTT DIXON

to,” Dixon told The Associated Press. "When you are younger, you don't really give a (crap). The first championsh­ip? The first Indy 500? I had no idea. It took some (crap) years for it to actually sink in what big achievemen­ts those are.

“And so those close misses, those are the ones that leave you pissed off. Those are the ones that make you keep knocking on the door, and winning another Indy 500 is top of the list. Out of everything, that is what matters most at the moment."

The competitio­n will come from within his own camp: Ganassi driver Alex Palou, the reigning IndyCar champion and last year's Indy 500 runner-up, starts second. Dixon and Palou are both 13-2 race favorites, according to FanDuel Sportsbook.

Ganassi drivers Marcus Ericsson and 47-year-old Tony Kanaan, the oldest driver in the field, start fifth and sixth, respective­ly, and were fastest in Friday's “Carb Day” final practice.

And back there in 12th? Why, it's Jimmie Johnson, the seven-time NASCAR champion making his Indy 500 debut.

He's achieving his childhood dream at age 46 after proving to his wife that Indy cars have dramatical­ly improved in safety.

Knows the turf

Johnson knows his way around the Indianapol­is Motor Speedway — he won four times at the track in NASCAR — and if not for a bobble that led to a remarkable save in qualifying, Johnson would be starting much closer to his Ganassi teammates.

“Each day we get closer to the 500, it gets busy. The pressure is ramping up,” said Johnson, who was sent to “The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon” this week by IndyCar to promote the 106th running of the race.

Ganassi is quick to point out that trophies aren't awarded in practice and his five-car fleet has accomplish­ed nothing yet.

“I like our chances. We're as prepared as we can be,” Ganassi said. “You're always hesitant to feel good about the race at this place, but I probably feel as good as any car owner going into the race.”

The race is the first where Roger Penske will be able to fully open the gates since his purchase of the speedway in early 2020. His first Indy 500 was held without spectators, and last year he could only admit about 150,000.

Speedway officials expect to fall 5,000 tickets shy of a sellout, which would put more than 300,000 on the IMS grounds for the second-biggest 500 in decades and make the race again the largest single sports event of the year, as it usually is and certainly since the pandemic hit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States