It’s Monday, August 14, 2023 and this is Race Recap, your summary of last weekend’s motorsports action. The focus of the racing world was on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway this weekend with NTT IndyCar Series and NASCAR Cup Series doubleheader at
Even before his 54th career victory, it was going to be a memorable day for The New Zealander set a new IndyCar record with his 319th consecutive race start. Dixon hasn’t missed a start since the 2004 Menards A. J. Foyt 225 at the Milwaukee Mile. While Dixon started the race in 16th place, the pole was won by Graham Rahal. The qualifying triumph illustrated the massive turnaround for Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing after the team faltered during Indianapolis 500 qualifying and Graham Rahal
The Gallagher Grand Prix’s opening lap would see Andretti’s Devlin DeFrancesco take the lead into the first corner after his own impressive qualifying performance landed him on the front row. There would be chaos further back in the field going through Turn 7. Ganassi teammates Alex Palou and Marcus Armstrong made contact. Their other teammate Dixon would be spun by Romain Grosjean before the Andretti driver ran into Armstrong’s right-rear wheel.
Josef Newgarden would be the worst off in the incident after his car mounted the front of Armstrong’s Ganassi. The Penske driver was forced to pit for repairs, taking him out of contention for the race win and severely hurting his title chances. Palou eventually finished seventh while Newgarden crossed the finish line two laps down in 25th. With a 101-point lead, Palou will only need to outscore Newgarden by five points at Gateway in two weeks to win the championship.
After the final round of pit stops, Dixon held a seven-second lead but had to conserve fuel to make the finish. also had to contend with a hard-charging Graham Rahal. The lead was slashed to less than a second during the closing laps, but Rahal just couldn’t get close enough to attempt a pass. Dixon’s win also meant he has won a race in 19 consecutive IndyCar seasons.
Scott Dixon (Ganassi)
Graham Rahal (Rahal) - +0.477 seconds
Pato O’Ward (McLaren) - +8.092 seconds
Christian Lundgaard (Rahal) - +9.321 seconds
Alexander Rossi (McLaren) - +9.793 seconds
put on a road racing clinic during the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard. The Front Row Motorsports driver led 54 of the race’s 82 laps and held first for the last 29 laps under completely green flag conditions. Chase Elliott pursued McDowell over the final third of the race. Neither driver was locked into the playoffs and needed a win to get in. Elliott desperately closed the gap from four seconds to just under a second, but he couldn’t reach McDowell’s rear bumper. The race victory was McDowell’s second career Cup Series win, a year and a half after
wasn’t able to replicate his Chicago success, but he was still competitive in the No. 91 Trackhouse Camaro and finished tenth. The other overseas stars found themselves outside of the top 20. His Supercars title rival Brodie Kostecki finished 22nd in the No. 33 RCR Camaro. Garage 56 drivers Mike Rockenfeller and Jenson Button found themselves 24th and 28th. Toyota Le Mans winner Kamui Kobayashi was 33rd in the No. 67 23XI Camry.
Michael McDowell (Front Row)
Chase Elliott (Hendrick) - +0.937 seconds
Daniel Suarez (Trackhouse) - +5.750 seconds
Tyler Reddick (23XI) - +6.473 seconds
Alex Bowman (Hendrick) - +19.994 seconds