By David Morgan, Associate Editor
MADISON, Ill. – On a notoriously difficult to pass race track like World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway, track position is the name of the game.
But when the green flag drops on Saturday’s Bommarito Automotive Group 500, the Chip Ganassi Racing duo of Alex Palou and Scott Dixon will have the work cut out for them following grid penalties assessed to them this weekend.
Both cars exceeded the engine limit rule in place when they put in their fifth motor of the season ahead of this race, which in turn caused them both to be assessed a nine-position grid penalty.
Palou, the current NTT IndyCar Series points leader, will drop from seventh to 16th place on the starting grid, with his teammate, six-time series champion and defending Gateway winner falling to 19th after his 10th place qualifying run.
With passing likely at a premium on Saturday, both cars will likely have to go the strategy route to try and make up track position throughout the evening and hopefully things will fall their way to end on a good note.
Palou to his credit is taking a more optimistic outlook on their situation, hoping that the second lane will open up to allow more passing and they can make their way forward that way.
“If we can go on the second groove making it work, I think there’s more deg than everybody expected, which is great,” Palou said. “It’s gonna be four, five stops, three if there’s a ton of yellow, but it’ll be tough. So, I think it’ll be more interesting than the last couple of short oval races we had.”
Regardless of how Saturday night shakes out, Palou will still have a hold on the points lead with his current 49-point advantage over Will Power with five races remaining in 2024.
Despite that safety net, Palou is still on the offensive, looking to come out of Gateway with an even bigger lead.
“I mean, it wouldn’t feel nice to lose 40 points tomorrow,” Palou added. “It feels good, with the points that we have now, but we need to extend it. We don’t need to lose anything.”
Meanwhile, his teammate Dixon will be eyeing a repeat of the strategy play that netted him the win at Gateway a year ago when he started in 16th place, but was able to save enough fuel to make one less pit stop than the entire field, leapfrogging his way to the lead and on to the win.
“I think if you do a three stop for this year, you win clearly as well,” Dixon said. “The mileage is…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Motorsports Tribune…