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Mid-Ohio IndyCar: McLaughlin beats Palou, Power charges to third

Team Penske-Chevrolet’s Scott McLaughlin led 45 of the 80 laps at Mid-Ohio to hold off Alex Palou and score his second win of the season, while teammate Will Power charged from a first-lap spin to claim third.

The first start was waved off because the second half of the grid was still strung out as the leaders were exiting Turn 2, since IndyCar races are started at Mid-Ohio on the long ‘straight’ that stretches from Turn 2 down to Turn 4.

From pole, Pato O’Ward’s Arrow McLaren SP-Chevrolet made a strong start ahead of Scott McLaughlin’s Team Penske-Chevrolet, while Felix Rosenqvist, the highest starter on primaries, immediately got around Colton Herta’s Andretti Autosport-Honda to get third and threaten McLaughlin, who held him off, while Scott Dixon and Simon Pagenaud filed through fifth and sixth.

Next time by, Palou was threatening Pagenaud, while Kyle Kirkwood moved his AJ Foyt Racing-Chevy past David Malukas of Dale Coyne Racing w/ HMD-Honda, despite being on primary tires. Further back, Will Power’s day went from bad to worse, as he nudged into Takuma Sato’s Coyne car and half-spun at Turn 9, dropping to the back of the field.

Up front, O’Ward wasn’t escaping from McLaughlin, running just 1sec clear by Lap 8, while teammate Rosenqvist was doing a fine job in third on his primary tires, 0.8sec hehind McLaughlin, 0.8sec ahead of Herta. However, the following lap, the immensely unlucky Swede’s car suddenly slowed off Turn 2 and the #7 AMSP-Chevy expired, and although he crept it down to Turn 4, the car stopped there, with his visibly and audibly gutted driver posting the first DNF of the day. Under the subsequent caution, Graham Rahal, Power and Jack Harvey pitted, the two RLL cars took on Firestone alternates, while Power replaced his primaries with primaries. At the restart, Power would pass Rahal and Jimmie Johnson.

The restart on Lap 11 saw six-time Mid-Ohio winner Dixon get around Herta to move into third, and the AA driver had to work hard to joust hard with Pagenaud to retain fourth place. Malukas took advantage of his reds coming up to temperature quicker than Kirkwood’s primaries to move past his 2021 Indy Lights rival and gain seventh. In ninth ran Alexander Rossi, pressing Kirkwood, with Callum Ilott completing the Top 10 ahead of Josef Newgarden and Rinus VeeKay who were both on primaries.

Newgarden and VeeKay pitted at the end of Lap 23, and emerged in 23rd and 24th, while Romain Grosjean pitted his Andretti Autosport-Honda next time by, Palou and Helio Castroneves stopped on Lap 25, and Malukas, Rossi and Ilott did the same on Lap 26.

Up front, O’Ward was only 0.77sec ahead of McLaughlin, with Dixon only 1.1sec further back, and Herta only 0.9sec behind the Ganassi driver. After 29 laps, O’Ward and Dixon pitted, with McLaughlin and Marcus Ericsson and Power stopping next time by. However, this was just before Race Control threw a full-course caution, as Kirkwood, who had just pitted to switch from primaries onto alternates, had gone off course and stopped at Turn 9.

The big beneficiary from the undercut, stopping four laps before O’Ward and Dixon, was Palou, who had taken on another set of Firestone reds, set some blistering laps and jumped to second place, behind McLaughlin whose Penske #3 crew had got him out ahead of O’Ward, who was now third ahead of Herta, Dixon and other early stoppers Newgarden and VeeKay.

Another driver to benefit from making a late stop before the yellow was called was Power , who had legitimately climbed to 18th beforehand but now gained a further six places.

On the Lap 36 restart, McLaughlin – now on the harder primaries – slithered out of Turn 2, the Keyhole hairpin, which allowed Palou to close up but before he could make an attempt to make a pass, the caution flew again as Harvey ran AJ Foyt Racing’s Dalton Kellett off the track at the Keyhole. That didn’t happen before Rossi had passed Malukas for 10th.

The next restart on Lap 40, saw Dixon defending fifth so hard from Newgarden through Turn 4, that the pair of them didn’t notice VeeKay carrying so much more momentum into Turn 5, and the bold ECR-Chevy driver drove around the outside of both Newgarden and Dixon at Turn 6 to gain fifth. His charge wouldn’t stop there, either, for O’Ward was struggling with an engine issue – possibly down to fuel feed problems. O’Ward would lose out to Dixon and Newgarden on Lap 44 and Marcus Ericsson Lap 45.

Also making strong progress was Power who following the most recent restart had demoted Malukas, Pagenaud and Rossi to move into ninth. That became eighth as the crippled O’Ward continued to drop down the field.

By Lap 50 of 80, primary-tired McLaughlin held a one-second lead over Palou (reds), Herta ran 2sec further back with a 4sec advantage of VeeKay who had pulled a couple of seconds clear of Dixon.

Newgarden pitted at the end of Lap 52 as the next pit window opened, and grabbed a set of fresh alternates. To cover off the potential undercut, and in response to an imminent yellow flag for Tatiana Calderon going off track at Turn 4, the rest of the frontrunners pitted, too. Herta, however, stayed out and his race was now ruined as he would lose several places as the field was bunched and the pits was closed.

The pitstops saw McLaughlin emerge ahead of Palou with Power out ahead of Newgarden, while both O’Ward and Ilott went out with engine issues.

At the restart Palou pressured McLaughlin, and Power passed VeeKay for fourth at Turn 4, while teammates Rossi and Grosjean came together at Turn 2 and brought out yet another yellow. Under this yellow, Herta stopped and dropped. Following the restart, he’d be nudged off at Turn 2 by Grosjean, who was then affronted when Rossi dived up his inside again. Both Grosjean (for the Herta collision) and Rossi (for later nudging off another teammate, Devlin DeFrancesco at Turn 6) would serve drive-through penalties.

The Lap 63 restart saw Palou drop a wheel out of Turn 1, but kept it all together to easily hold off Power down to Turn 2. Behind Power – the lead driver on alternate tires – VeeKay held off Scott Dixon – who was pursued closely by Ericsson and Newgarden. Then came Castroneves, who charged past Malukas, and teammate Pagenaud to move into eighth. With 10 laps to go, the top three were one second apart, with VeeKay a further 3sec back.

The battle up front was a stalemate, with Palou burning up his overtake boost trying to catch McLaughlin, but McLaughlin having enough in hand to keep him at arm’s length, just like in their lead battle in the season-opener at St. Petersburg. Their battle took them around three seconds clear of Power who was now nursing his red tires and conserving his own push-to-pass which he had used so much in the early laps.

McLaughlin crossed the line 0.5512sec ahead of Palou to score his second IndyCar win in superbly composed fashion, thereby pushing Penske’s win tally at Mid-Ohio to 12, one ahead of Ganassi.

Power delivered a third place from 21st on the grid – from 27th on Lap 1 – to close to within 20 points of championship leader Ericsson, who finished right behind Dixon and right ahead of Newgarden. VeeKay could be satisfied with a fine fourth, especially after his stunning pass of Dixon and Newgarden.

Cla Driver Team Laps Time Gap Mph Pits Retirement
1 New Zealand Scott McLaughlin United States Team Penske 80 1:46'43.3290   115.879 2  
2 Spain Alex Palou United States Chip Ganassi Racing 80 1:46'43.8802 0.5512 116.467 2  
3 Australia Will Power United States Team Penske 80 1:46'47.1705 3.8415 115.094 3  
4 Netherlands Rinus van Kalmthout United States Ed Carpenter Racing 80 1:46'54.7032 11.3742 114.987 2  
5 New Zealand Scott Dixon United States Chip Ganassi Racing 80 1:46'55.6484 12.3194 115.190 2  
6 Sweden Marcus Ericsson United States Chip Ganassi Racing 80 1:46'56.3990 13.0700 114.723 2  
7 United States Josef Newgarden United States Team Penske 80 1:46'57.1007 13.7717 114.465 2  
8 Brazil Helio Castroneves United States Meyer Shank Racing 80 1:47'00.1880 16.8590 114.509 2  
9 United States David Malukas Dale Coyne Racing with HMD 80 1:47'02.4248 19.0958 113.914 2  
10 France Simon Pagenaud United States Meyer Shank Racing 80 1:47'09.5204 26.1914 112.977 2  
11 Denmark Christian Lundgaard United States Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 80 1:47'10.4139 27.0849 112.296 2  
12 United States Graham Rahal United States Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 80 1:47'12.2473 28.9183 113.477 3  
13 United States Conor Daly United States Ed Carpenter Racing 80 1:47'12.7411 29.4121 113.711 2  
14 Japan Takuma Sato United States Dale Coyne Racing 80 1:47'13.0778 29.7488 114.165 2  
15 United States Colton Herta United States Andretti Autosport 80 1:47'19.0093 35.6803 112.973 2  
16 United States Jimmie Johnson United States Chip Ganassi Racing 80 1:47'19.9802 36.6512 113.391 2  
17 Canada Devlin DeFrancesco United States Andretti Autosport 80 1:47'22.9846 39.6556 113.394 2  
18 Switzerland Simona de Silvestro Paretta Autosport 80 1:47'29.3568 46.0278 113.743 3  
19 United States Alexander Rossi United States Andretti Autosport 80 1:47'30.2631 46.9341 114.364 4  
20 United Kingdom Jack Harvey United States Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 80 1:47'48.3532 1'05.0242 112.374 6  
21 France Romain Grosjean United States Andretti Autosport 79 1:47'36.9034 1 Lap 105.938 4  
22 Canada Dalton Kellett United States A.J. Foyt Enterprises 78 1:47'37.2059 2 Laps 113.076 3  
23 United Kingdom Callum Ilott Juncos Hollinger Racing 57 1:19'15.1199 23 Laps 44.150 3 Mechanical
24 Mexico Patricio O'Ward United States Arrow McLaren SP 52 1:10'33.0902 28 Laps 99.284 2 Mechanical
25 Colombia Tatiana Calderon United States A.J. Foyt Enterprises 51 1:09'12.1205 29 Laps 113.117 1 Mechanical
26 United States Kyle Kirkwood United States A.J. Foyt Enterprises 28 36'43.8463 52 Laps 100.482 1 Accident
27 Sweden Felix Rosenqvist United States Arrow McLaren SP 8 10'16.8806 72 Laps 116.091   Mechanical

 

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