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Dixon Ties Indycar Series Record With Third-Straight Win

ANTINUCCI CLAIMS FIRST CAREER WIN

LEXINGTON, Ohio, Sunday, July 22, 2007 – Scott Dixon gained ground on
IndyCar Series points leader Dario Franchitti by winning the inaugural
Honda 200 at Mid-Ohio presented by Westfield Insurance.

Unfortunately for the Target Chip Ganassi Racing driver, who tied a
series record with his third consecutive victory, Franchitti was the
runner-up. Dixon, who started sixth in the 85-lap race, inherited the
lead when Franchitti had to take on fuel with nine laps remaining. A
sprint around the 2.258-mile, 13-turn course ensued, with Dixon
prevailing by 2.6917 seconds. Dixon was celebrating his 27th birthday.

Pole sitter Helio Castroneves finished third and Tony Kanaan fourth.
Danica Patrick, who started on the front row, rebounded from a Lap 1
incident in which her No. 7 Team Motorola car was sent off-course by
Kanaan’s car that had spun to finish fifth. The No. 26 car driven by
Marco Andretti also was involved in the incident, winding up on its top.
Andretti was not injured.

Darren Manning finished sixth. Ryan Hunter-Reay, making his IndyCar
Series debut in the No. 17 Team Ethanol car for Rahal Letterman Racing,
advanced three positions to finish seventh.

Also on July 22, rookie Richard Antinucci claimed his first win in the
Indy Pro Series, holding off Wade Cunningham to win the Mid-Ohio 100.

Antinucci, the nephew of 1998 Indianapolis 500 winner Eddie Cheever Jr.,
started fourth and moved behind race leader Alex Lloyd on Lap 6 of 40.
On Lap 15, Antinucci was 0.4064 of a second behind Lloyd’s No. 7 Lucas
Oil/Isilon Systems/Sam Schmidt Motorsports car. On the next lap, he
passed the series points leader in Turn 4 of the 2.558-mile, 13-turn
circuit.

On a Lap 23 restart, Lloyd’s car was eliminated when he lost drive to
the wheels and guided the car off the course. Cunningham inherited
second and a battle ensued between series rookie and the 2005 series
champion.

MID-OHIO 100 POST-RACE NOTES:

. This is Richard Antinucci’s first Indy Pro Series victory. His
previous best finish was fifth at Watkins Glen #2 earlier this month.

. This is Cheever Racing’s first Indy Pro Series victory. It joins
Panther Racing, Andretti Green Racing and A.J. Foyt Racing as teams with
wins in the IndyCar Series and Indy Pro Series.

. Wade Cunningham finished second, his fifth consecutive top-five
finish.

. Stephen Simpson finished third, the best finish of his Indy Pro
Series career. His previous was fourth at St. Petersburg #1 earlier this
year.

MID-OHIO 100 POST-RACE QUICK QUOTES:

RICHARD ANTINUCCI (No. 51 Cheever Racing, winner Mid-Ohio 100): “We were
very progressive, getting faster and faster. I was worried after the
restart. We struggled a bit compared to (Wade) Cunningham. I think he
had higher tire pressures, which allowed him to be set up quicker. But
we were there all weekend, and we finally won one.”

WADE CUNNINGHAM (No. 27 Automatic Fire Sprinklers, finished second): “It
was tough. We opted to go for a light downforce setup, and it was great
for passing. But the car definitely was difficult to drive over the long
run. Richard (Antinucci) was running more downforce than us. We were
much quicker down the straight. We had to take that gamble starting
sixth, and it got us a second so I’m pleased with that.”

STEPHEN SIMPSON (No. 24 Kenn Hardley Racing, finished third): “We were
probably two- or three-tenths off Wade (Cunningham) and Richard
(Antinucci), so there’s a little more work to do. But all in all it was
a strong weekend for the Kenn Hardley Racing crew.”

ANDREW PRENDEVILLE (No. 5 RLR/Andersen Racing, finished fourth): “It was
a great weekend. Our best yet. I don’t think I had any contact with
anyone. It was close with [Bobby] Wilson. I’ll have to ask him if we
touched, but I don’t think so. We raced hard, but we’ve done that so
many times before. They were gaining 10 car lengths on the straights,
and I could pull nine to 11 car lengths on them in the twisty stuff to
keep in front of them. The only way that was possible was because we had
a really good-handling car. The start was not the greatest. (Wade)
Cunningham blew right by me. That was just a case of better
straight-line speed. But I was able to make up a lot of the distance,
and I almost got the position back a little later. We finished all 40
laps for the Best Friends Animal Society. We had our best qualifying
result yet, and we duplicated our best race result. It was a great
weekend.”

HONDA 200 AT MID-OHIO POST-RACE NOTES:

. This is Scott Dixon’s third consecutive IndyCar Series win and
the ninth win of his IndyCar Series career. Dixon ties the record that
Kenny Brack (1998) and Dan Wheldon (2005) share for consecutive IndyCar
Series victories.

. This is Target Chip Ganassi Racing’s 15th win in the IndyCar
Series.

. Dario Franchitti finished second, his 11th consecutive top-five
finish and 12th consecutive top-10 finish.

. Helio Castroneves finished third, his fourth top-five finish
this season.

. Tony Kanaan finished fourth, his eighth top-five finish this
season.

. Danica Patrick finished fifth, her best finish on a road/street
course, and her third top-five finish in the last six races.

. Ryan Hunter-Reay finished seventh in his debut race with
Rahal-Letterman Racing.

HONDA 200 AT MID-OHIO POST-RACE QUOTES:

SCOTT DIXON (No. 9 Target Chip Ganassi Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone,
winner Honda 200 at Mid-Ohio): “”I was a little frustrated after the
second or third stop when Helio (Castroneves) jumped us. We soon found
out why, he just didn’t put in as much fuel as we did. The guys in the
pits have been fantastic throughout the season. They’ve really made my
races a lot easier. It was a tough race. The first stint was about
saving fuel. I could tell Helio was doing it. We just saved a little bit
more to do an extra lap. The second or third stint was so flat out I
couldn’t believe it. It was like qualifying every lap just trying to
hang on. It was a tough day but a great day for the championship.”
(About three wins in a row and closing in on the points lead): “It’s
been fantastic. We’re just trying to close in. That’s the problem with
Dario (Franchitti), he’s just so consistent. When we’re winning, he’s in
the top three. It would have been nice if he would have had a fourth or
fifth today.

DARIO FRANCHITTI (No. 27 Canadian Club Dallara/Honda/Firestone, finished
second): “We finished in second place but unfortunately (Scott) Dixon
was in front of us again. He really drove a great race and Helio
(Castroneves) as well. We were really pushing each other the whole time,
pushing as much as our cars would allow. It was a hell of a battle out
there. I don’t know. We’re loosing it somewhere. I know it’s going to be
a fight until the end for the championship, but I wasn’t expecting
anything else. We’ll just keep pushing the Canadian Club car each week
and we’ll work on it. We kind of messed up there on the start because
we had Dixie (Scott Dixon) covered but then Danica (Patrick) spun and
Tony (Kanaan) spun avoiding her then Marco (Andretti) got involved. I
had to check up to avoid getting wiped out by Tony and that was a lot of
the race right there.”

HELIO CASTRONEVES (No. 3 Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone, finished
third): “We didn’t have the strongest car, but I was driving the wheels
off it. It’s just a shame that Dixon beat us in the pits, but that’s the
way it is. I made the call to pit early, and TC (Tim Cindric) thought it
was the right decision. There is no resting in this race. We’re pushing
all of the time, which is fun. Third place is not what we wanted but
we’re coming back from a lot of bad results, so third looks really
nice.”

TONY KANAAN (No. 11 Team 7-Eleven Dallara/Honda/Firestone, finished
fourth): (About Lap 1 incident): “There was nothing I could do. Danica
(Patrick) appeared to be sliding. She had a loose moment in front of me.
I hit the brakes to avoid her and spun. Unfortunately, I took Marco
(Andretti) out in the process. It’s just unfortunate. I felt so bad for
Marco because he had nothing to do with it. Actually, Marco turned me
back straight and then he rolled over. I feel bad about it, and
unfortunately, it happened between us. It’s really disappointing for the
7-Eleven team. Eric Cowdin (race engineer) gave me a great race car
today. George (Klotz) (team manager) did a great job calling the race
and the guys in the pits were awesome. We had a great car today, capable
of winning, and it’s unfortunate.”

DANICA PATRICK (No. 7 Motorola Dallara/Honda/Firestone, finished fifth):
“I got into Turn 1 – or 4 as it would be called on the track – and slid
just a little at mid-corner and then felt that I had been tapped. It’s
always tough coming into the first turn carrying the speed we were.
Helio (Castroneves) really jumped the start pretty well. He gunned it
out of the last corner and never looked back when they threw the green.
We approached Turn 1 flat out. We got some people in the pits and then
after that I was able to pick off people one by one.”

DARREN MANNING (No. 14 ABC Supply Co./A.J. Foyt Racing Dallara/Honda/
Firestone, finished sixth): “It was good. I caught (Sam) Hornish (Jr.)
in Turn 1, then slipped through that melee and followed Dixie (Scott
Dixon). It was good running up front. We were cautious on our fuel
strategy and that kind of hurt us on the first stop. We pitted a lap
early and those guys got ahead of me, and I caught up to them but I
couldn’t get around them. We still have a lot of potential with this
car, and we’re close on speed right now. We have a good starting point
on the road courses and we can build from here.”

RYAN HUNTER-REAY (No. 17 Rahal Letterman Racing Team Ethanol
Dallara/Honda/ Firestone, finished seventh): “It felt great. The first
time out in these cars with no testing and to finish in the top seven
feels like a win for me. We had a couple of fluky things happen in
practice and the Ethanol team showed amazing tenacity, we kept after it,
we didn’t do anything cute, we had good pace and ran well. It was a
satisfying day for us.”

BUDDY RICE (No. 15 Dreyer & Reinbold Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone,
finished eighth): “It was OK today. Obviously we expected more. I think
our car was faster than what we showed. We’ve just got some things that
we need to get a little bit better on. We didn’t necessarily have a
top-five car, but we could have been a couple spots further up. We’ll go
fix it and try and get ready for Sonoma in a couple of weeks.”

TOMAS SCHECKTER (No. 2 Vision Racing Dallara/Honda/Firestone, finished
ninth): “First, I’ve just got to thank my guys, who gave me some really
great pit stops today. That really made the difference. I’m thrilled for
the team that we could finally finish back into the top 10 again before
our weekend off. We really needed to get some momentum this weekend, and
I think we found a little bit today. Hopefully, we can build off of that
at Michigan.”

SAM HORNISH JR. (No. 6 Team Penske Dallara/Honda/Firestone, finished
14th): “The Team Penske car was working very well at the beginning of
the race. But since it’s so hard to pass here, we were just following
(Dario) Franchitti and trying to save fuel so that we could try to stay
out a little longer and avoid the big rush in the pits during the second
round of stops, and I just lost my concentration momentarily and spun
off course. Unfortunately, my mistake put us a lap down, and laps are
virtually impossible to get back on road courses. I feel bad for the
crew because they gave me a great car. Hopefully, they’ll do the same
for me in a couple of weeks in Michigan, and I’ll be able to turn in a
better result.”

INDYCAR SERIES POINT STANDINGS:

1. Dario Franchitti 474

2. Scott Dixon 450

3. Tony Kanaan 363

4. Dan Wheldon 357

5. Sam Hornish Jr. 345

6. Helio Castroneves 323

7. Danica Patrick 297

8. Scott Sharp 284

9. Tomas Scheckter 255

10. Vitor Meira 253

***

The next IndyCar Series event is the Firestone Indy 400 at Noon
on Aug. 5 at Michigan International Speedway. The race will be televised
live by ESPN2 and broadcast by the IMS Radio Network. The next Indy Pro
Series event is the Kentucky 100 on Aug.11 at Kentucky Speedway. The
race will be broadcast at 5:30 p.m. on Aug. 16. ESPN2’s coverage of the
Mid-Ohio 100 will be televised by ESPN2 at 5:30 p.m. on July 26.

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