Franchitti wins IRL season title
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP)—Dario Franchitti basked in Victory Lane, getting showered by an enormous amount of red, white and blue confetti.
Yellow, nowhere to be found.
How appropriate, because on a day when no caution flags came out, Franchitti reigned supreme over the IndyCar series again.
Franchitti emerged victorious from one of the closest points races in series history Saturday, winning the season-ending Indy 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway in the first caution-free IRL race ever. He used a significantly different fuel strategy than the other two title contenders, Scott Dixon and Ryan Briscoe, and was rewarded with his second championship in three years.
“I still can’t believe it,” said Franchitti, the scent of champagne obvious on his soaked racesuit an hour after the checkered flag came out in his honor. “Really, I can’t.”
Maybe it was all in the numbers: On the 10th day of the 10th month of the year, Franchitti’s No. 10 car won a championship—the 10th win of the season for Target Chip Ganassi Racing, to boot.
Franchitti’s IndyCar contract with Ganassi was drawn up on a cocktail napkin. In the end, it was genius.
“There’s a lot of guys who can win races,” Ganassi said. “There aren’t as many who can win championships.”
Franchitti sat back in third place, about 25 seconds behind Dixon and Briscoe, saving fuel over much of the final 50 laps. When his two fellow contenders pitted late, the title was his.
Only a caution could have saved Dixon and Briscoe, and somehow, that flag was never needed.
“How great is my husband at being fast while saving fuel?” said actress Ashley Judd, Franchitti’s wife, who shrieked and raised her arms high in triumph when it was all over.
How great?
How about better than anyone else in the field?
“I’m thinking, ‘C’mon baby, don’t run out of fuel here,”’ Franchitti said. “And she didn’t.”
Dixon, Franchitti’s teammate in the Ganassi garage, was second in the points standings. Franchitti finished with 616 points, Dixon had 605 and Briscoe—who led 103 of the 200 laps for Penske Racing—finished with 604.
“It’s tough,” Briscoe said. “But I’m young. I’ll be back.”
Tony Kanaan was fourth and Helio Castroneves fifth, but on this day, they were afterthoughts.
The average speed of 201.420 mph was the second-quickest in IRL history, behind only the 207.151 mph at California in 2003. And there had been six IRL races with only one yellow caution flag, two of them this season, but never before a race that was incident free.
It was a three-man race for the title, and from the very beginning Saturday, a three-man race at Homestead, too.
Dixon, Briscoe and Franchitti opened a lead of nearly 1 1/2 seconds by the time the race was 10 laps old and piled on from there—2 1/2 seconds after 15 laps, 3 1/2 seconds after 20 laps, 10 seconds by the 30-lap mark.
By the time the race was half over, the three contenders were the only ones on the lead lap.
“There was two races,” Castroneves said. “The top three guys, and the rest of the field.”
Outside of the three title contenders going back and forth, the only drama was in the pits: Danica Patrick and Dan Wheldon—who have some history, going back to Milwaukee in 2007 when they brushed cars during the race and brushed bodies on pit road after the race—collided again during a pit stop with about 45 laps left, sending both far back in the pack.
“I’ve got a lot left in me. I think next year will be even better,” said Patrick, the closest she’s come yet to confirming she’ll return to IndyCars in 2010.
Really, though, this race and championship might have been decided when Briscoe and Dixon pitted together with 56 laps remaining, whereas Franchitti came in six laps later. So when Briscoe and Dixon came in again to get a splash of fuel with about seven laps left, Franchitti stayed on the track, knowing he had enough to get to the finish.
When Briscoe left the pit that final time, Franchitti whizzed past right before his eyes—and with that, the title was decided.
“You always think there’s always going to be a yellow,” Dixon said. “We just came up a little bit short on fuel.”
There was definitely some irony at play, in terms of fuel conservation helping Franchitti to a title.
Dixon was two turns away from a race—and season—victory in the 2007 finale at Chicagoland when he ran out of gas. Franchitti passed Dixon’s rapidly slowing car with ease for the win, which was enough to get his name etched that year on the giant silver trophy that honors IRL champions.
Franchitti jumped to NASCAR after winning that IRL title in 2007.
He won’t toy with that again.
“I got to go away, have a bit of a holiday, and realize what I was missing,” Franchitti said. “I’m absolutely where I should be.”
Last season was a lost season for Franchitti, who struggled with stock cars, missed several races with a broken ankle and saw his year end unceremoniously when the team folded over a lack of sponsor dollars. Ganassi welcomed him back to IndyCars, and together, they reached the top once again.
“Definitely loving it right now,” Franchitti said.

15 Comments
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Busch, Earnhart, all of em. I've seen it done in F1, at Lemans, Sebring and the Daytona 24. BUTTT
If it's done Indycar its bull$hi#?? You people make me hurl. There are all kinds of stratagies used to
win races. Ganassi just chose right on this day. Give the guy and Dario some props. I think it was
fantastic strategy. IMO Would you butt munchers please get off Danica's ass. Fercrisakes, she has
her best season in Indycar, with less then perfect equipment, and you still give her grief. You guys,
wasting time and space @#$%ing about her is what is making her more popular. You're just male chauvinist's that don't want to see a woman succeed. And secondly, you Indycar haters are really
just prejudice of some forgein drivers making it in the U.S. We're not in the 1960's anymore, folks.
It's time to man up and realize that there are drivers, with nads, from all over the world that strap themselves into those little missles and fly around @ 200 mph.
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Yup, Mrs. Almost-Should've-Could've-Would've will back all right. To not win as her 1-80 record indicates. I'm sure Michelle Weak's fans are saying the same thing...and she's 0-81.
Which means the 2 most overhyped people in the history of sports are a combined 1-161.
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Did you know that 19th place finish was because Weldon's team sent him out of his pit while she was pulling into hers right in front of him (note, she was running 6th at that point). His pit crew should be fired. Hello???? Not her fault. And had the race been 10 more laps, she would have finished ahead of Fisher and pretty damn close to Duno (who blocked her in the first stretch, allowing Kanaan to take advantage and pass her for 4th). She would have gotten a top 10 finish (6th minimum because 7th was no where near her) had Weldon not taken her out of contention. Briscoe and Dixon ran horrible gas strategies (they both had to pit in the final ten laps).
And she still ended 5th in the standings for the season.
So you guys who are threatened by a female, get used to it, because she'll be back.
P.S. A win on ANY soil is a win. American soil is no better than Japanese soil - ridiculous comment.
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John Pedretti
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A NINETEENTH place finish in this finale! And a THIRD place finish among the WOMEN! Milka Duno and Sarah Fisher BOTH finished AHEAD of Mrs. Overrated!!!
Now that the Irrevelent Racing League season is over with, here's the final tally that should be noted by our BSNM regarding Mrs. Overexposed but probably won't...
An 0-17 record for 2009 for Mrs. Almost-Should've-Could've-Would' ve and a career racing record of 1-81 that inclues ZERO wins in races held in the USA and ZERO wins in 500-mile races.
Oh, and more speeding tickets (two) than racing wins (one).
Enjoy the offseason, Mrs. Hospenthal fans.
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Geez, I thought these guys were in the witness protection program what with all the stories, headlines and photographs of someone who's only in 5th place and hasn't won a race in almost a year and a half.
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