The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)
Dixon qualifies 13th for Pocono
Though he has appeared flawless at times this season, Scott Dixon, seeking his fifth IndyCar Championship, finished 13th in qualifying for Pocono, leaving the door open for Alexander Rossi in points.
LONG POND, PA. » Scott Dixon has been about flawless as he chases his fifth IndyCar championship.
He hit a minor bump at Pocono.
Days after signing a contract extension with Chip Ganassi Racing, Dixon had one of his worst qualifying performances of the season. He starts 13th on Sunday, well behind his closest championship contenders.
Dixon holds a 46-point lead over 2016 Indianapolis 500 champion Alexander Rossi in the standings. Rossi, Josef Newgarden and Will Power all have Dixon in sight with four races left in the IndyCar season.
“I need him to have a bad run and I need to have a good run,” Power said.
Power will begin his bid for a third straight win at Pocono Raceway from the pole. He turned a lap of 219.511 mph on Saturday to take the top spot and perhaps bolster his shot for a second championship.
Power won his 53rd pole and tied A.J. Foyt for second on the career list.
Power and Newgarden made it a 1-2 start for team owner Roger Penske.
“One, two for Team Penske. You can’t bemad about that,” Newgarden said. Rossi starts third for Sunday's 500-mile race. Newgarden, the defending series champion, trails Dixon by 60 points in the standings. Power is 87 points back in fourth place. Dixon isn’t in any major trouble — though he’s a bit more at risk early at getting collected in a wreck in front
of him— and starting in the middle of the pack hasn’t hindered him much this season. He started 17th and finished fourth at Phoenix and started 18th and finished second at the Grand Prix.
“The car bottomed out somewhat there in the first lap, so I’m not sure what happened,” Dixon said. “It is what it is though and the car feels comfortable. It’s a long race tomorrow and we’ll have to deal with traffic and try and get to the front.”
The New Zealand native has 44 victories, trailing only Foyt andMario Andretti on the career wins list. Here are other items of note from Pocono:
POLE POSITION
Power said it was “cool” to match Foyt. Andretti leads the way with 67 career poles. “It is possible to reach that,” Power said.