The Commercial Appeal

Dixon holds off Sato at Gateway

- Ken Roberts

MADISON, Ill. – Scott Dixon and Takuma Sato repeated their 20-lap shootout from the Indianapol­is 500 a week ago, with Dixon reversing the finishing order Saturday by winning at World Wide Technology Raceway outside of St. Louis.

Sato held off Dixon a week ago for his second Indy 500 victory in four years. Dixon had 20 laps to chase Sato down, but a late caution ended the race under yellow.

At Gateway, Dixon took the lead by first beating Pato O’ward out of the pits and then cycled to the front when Sato made his stop with 25 laps remaining. Sato returned to the track in third, quickly passed O’ward and set his sights on Dixon.

Dixon had 20 laps to navigate lapped traffic while holding off Sato.

“Sato was coming strong at the end and I didn’t realize how strong he was coming,” Dixon said. “We were kind of going into reserve mode a little to look after the engine and then he was coming fast.”

Dixon beat Sato by 0.1404 seconds for his fourth win of the season and 50th overall and praised his Chip Ganassi Racing team. The New Zealander led 111 of 200 laps at Indy but couldn’t catch Sato in the closing laps before the caution froze the field.

“Last week at Indianapol­is was a bit of a bummer,” Dixon admitted.

Dixon moved within two victories of Mario Andretti on Indycar’s victory list. Andretti is second with 52; A.J. Foyt is the leader at 67.

Dixon holds a 117-point lead in the Indycar championsh­ip standings as he chases a fifth title.

“That was a textbook Scott Dixon race. Steady, one at a time, here, there, nothing fancy,” said winning team owner Ganassi.

Sato finished second for a 1-2 sweep for Honda. O’ward, the highest finishing rookie in last week’s 500, was third for Chevrolet.

Sato was attempting to become the first driver since Arie Luyendyk in 1997 to win the race immediatel­y following the Indy 500.

“Since last week we carried a lot of momentum,” said Sato of Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. “The boys did a fantastic job two weeks in a row, I’m very proud of them.”

The race got off to a rocky start with a multi-car accident when the green flag waved. Alex Palou and Oliver Askew, both rookies, were penalized by Indycar for triggering a crash that knocked out three cars from Andretti Autosport.

Alexander Rossi, still seeking his first win of the season in a horrible year for the perennial title contender, was collected with teammates Marco Andretti and Zach Veach. It also ended the race for Ed Carpenter and Simon Pagenaud eventually had to retire with damage to his car.

“I was driving straight. I don’t know what you want me to say,” said Rossi, who likened the incident to an iracing race.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? Scott Dixon holds the trophy after winning Saturday’s Indycar race at World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Ill. Dixon beat Takuma Sato by 0.1404 seconds for his fourth win of the season and 50th overall.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP Scott Dixon holds the trophy after winning Saturday’s Indycar race at World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Ill. Dixon beat Takuma Sato by 0.1404 seconds for his fourth win of the season and 50th overall.

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