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IndyCar Iowa: McLaughlin beats O’Ward, Palou stalls then wrecks

Team Penske’s Scott McLaughlin won a chaotic opening race of IndyCar’s double-header at Iowa Speedway on Saturday night.

The New Zealander started second and took advantage of a rapid pitstop to jump into the lead and hold the field at bay to win by 0.4814s over Arrow McLaren’s Pato O’Ward at the 0.894-mile oval.

It is the fifth win of McLaughlin’s career, second of the season and first-ever on an oval.

“What got it done was the guys in the pits got me out front there and we just showed our pace,” he said. “That’s a big deal, man.

“I’ve been working on that for a couple years. It takes a lot of hard work.”

Team-mate Josef Newgarden’s attempt to earn a seventh victory at Iowa Speedway fell short, rising from 22nd on the grid to finish third and give Team Penske two of the three spots on the podium.

Chip Ganassi Racing’s Scott Dixon finished fourth, ahead of Ed Carpenter Racing’s Rinus VeeKay.

AJ Foyt Racing’s Santino Ferrucci came back from an early penalty and going a lap down to finish sixth, with Andretti Global’s Kyle Kirkwood in seventh.

Herta led the field at the start (Photo by: Josh Tons / Motorsport Images)

Alexander Rossi (Arrow McLaren), Marcus Ericsson (Andretti Global) and Marcus Armstrong (Chip Ganassi Racing) cleaned up the rest of the top 10.

Pole-sitter Colton Herta finished 11th after leading 88 of the 250 laps. McLaughlin led the rest.

Polewinner Herta led the field to the green flag, which turned yellow moments later after a multi-car crash in Turn 2 after David Malukas made what he called a “rookie mistake” to put his left-side tyres on the white line of the apron, which caused his Meyer Shank Racing entry to drift up the track and collect the Juncos Hollinger Racing duo of Agustin Canapino and Romain Grosjean.

Christian Lundgaard also spun in the corner on his own accord, stalling out and needing a tow back to the pits to return to the track several laps down.

The restart came on lap 20 and Herta was forced to fend off a charge by McLaughlin, who attempted a pass on the outside into Turn 1.

Dale Coyne Racing’s Jack Harvey retired after 29 laps after extended and unbearable pain plaguing his neck and back. He needed assistance getting out and said he felt “agony in the car” and “did more laps than I thought we might do” in the race.

A delayed call by Race Control handed out a drive-through penalty – that ended up being a stop-and-go – to Ferrucci, who was running fifth but deemed to get out of line on the restart. He fell a lap down to 22nd as a result.

A caution came out on lap 80 due to a loose right-front wheel (with “cracked wheelspoke” reported over the radio) for Graham Rahal, which led to pitstops the following lap; McLaughlin managed to just beat Herta to the pit exit, while championship leader Alex Palou, who was running third, stalled on pit road and fell down to 19th.

Jack Harvey, Dale Coyne Racing Honda (Photo by: Josh Tons / Motorsport Images)

Ferrucci was able to get his lap back under that yellow, now running 20th. Meanwhile, Newgarden managed to break into 10th after starting down in 22nd.  

The race resumed on lap 94, with McLaughlin forced to now fend off Herta, who attempted an inside push to the inside but to no avail.

Meanwhile, Will Power (Penske) was handed a drive-through penalty for a pit lane speed violation during his initial pit stop under caution, falling to 20th after running fifth.

The top five at the halfway mark of the 250-lap race was McLaughlin followed by Herta, Dixon, O’Ward and Rossi. Severe vibrations started impacting Herta’s car shortly after.

Herta pitted from second on lap 175 but the caution came out simultaneously as Palou, running 11th, spun across the frontstretch at the start/finish line before crashing into the wall. The Spaniard took ownership of the incident as a “driver mistake”.

McLaughlin led the field down pit road on lap 178 and he managed to beat out O’Ward and Dixon. A phenomenal pitstop by Newgarden saw him jump up four spots into fourth, ahead of Armstrong in fifth.

A restart on lap 189 saw McLaughlin get a clean jump, but it was Armstrong’s spot being challenged by VeeKay, who took it and brought Ericsson with him to drop Armstrong two spots to seventh.  

With 50 laps to go, McLaughlin held a 0.9s lead over O’Ward. The caution flag waved once more with 40 laps to go after Linus Lundqvist pulled to the apron on the inside of Turn 1. He was towed back and then pushed behind the wall to the garage area.

Alex Palou, Chip Ganassi Racing Honda (Photo by: Geoffrey M. Miller / Motorsport Images)

McLaughlin led the field to the green for a restart with 30 laps to go. Ferrucci rocketed up to seventh from 11th, surging by Kirkwood with an outside pass and then an inside move on Armstrong, who was enduring a mechanical issue as red lights were blinking from his rear wing assembly as if he was under caution.

And it foreshadowed as the yellows returned with 28 laps to go after Herta performed a half-spin in Turn 3, saving it and continuing on.

The next restart was waved off when Ed Carpenter and Pietro Fittipaldi were involved in a crash after Fittipaldi was hit from behind by Power, sending him into a spin and collecting Carpenter. Power was handed a stop-and-hold penalty for igniting the incident.

At the final restart with 12 laps to go, Ferrucci pulled another outside pass on a restart on Ericsson and moved up to sixth. He applied pressure on VeeKay but was unable to pull off a move.

Newgarden was able to move up to third after passing Dixon, setting his sights on O’Ward with six laps to go.

McLaughlin was unchallenged to the end, with O’Ward and Newgarden cleaning up the rest of the podium spots.

IndyCar Iowa Race 1 Results

   
1
 - 
4
   
   
1
 - 
2
   
Cla Driver # Laps Time Interval Mph Pits Points Retirement
1 New Zealand S. McLaughlin Team Penske 3 250

-

         
2 Mexico P. O'Ward Arrow McLaren 5 250

+0.481

0.4814

0.481        
3 United States J. Newgarden Team Penske 2 250

+1.517

1.5174

1.036        
4 New Zealand S. Dixon Chip Ganassi Racing 9 250

+5.004

5.0041

3.487        
5 Netherlands R. van Kalmthout Ed Carpenter Racing 21 250

+6.566

6.5656

1.562        
6 United States S. Ferrucci A.J. Foyt Enterprises 14 250

+7.458

7.4575

0.892        
7 United States K. Kirkwood Andretti Global 27 250

+8.420

8.4200

0.963        
8 United States A. Rossi Arrow McLaren 7 250

+9.343

9.3425

0.922        
9 Sweden M. Ericsson Andretti Global 28 250

+10.377

10.3770

1.035        
10 New Zealand M. Armstrong Chip Ganassi Racing 11 250

+11.401

11.4006

1.024        
11 United States C. Herta Andretti Global with Curb-Agajanian 26 250

+11.811

11.8114

0.411        
12
N. Siegel Arrow McLaren
6 250

+12.128

12.1279

0.317        
13 Sweden F. Rosenqvist Meyer Shank Racing 60 250

+12.465

12.4651

0.337        
14 United States K. Simpson Chip Ganassi Racing 4 250

+13.505

13.5048

1.040        
15
R. Robb A.J. Foyt Enterprises
41 250

+14.024

14.0242

0.519        
16 United States G. Rahal Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 15 249

1 lap

         
17 United Kingdom K. Legge Dale Coyne Racing 51 249

+1 Lap

3.9534

3.953        
18 Australia W. Power Team Penske 12 241

8 laps

         
19 United States E. Carpenter Ed Carpenter Racing 20 228

21 laps

        Accident
20 Brazil P. Fittipaldi Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 30 228

21 laps

        Accident
21 Sweden L. Lundqvist Chip Ganassi Racing 8 209

40 laps

        Mechanical
22 Denmark C. Lundgaard Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing 45 178

71 laps

        Accident
23 Spain A. Palou Chip Ganassi Racing 10 175

74 laps

        Accident
24 France R. Grosjean Juncos Hollinger Racing 77 48

201 laps

        Accident
25 United Kingdom J. Harvey Dale Coyne Racing 18 28

221 laps

        Retirement
26 Argentina A. Canapino Juncos Hollinger Racing 78 0

249 laps

        Accident
27 United States D. Malukas Meyer Shank Racing 66 0

249 laps

        Accident
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