Skip to content

IndyCar: Ed Carpenter wins IndyCar 600 at Texas Motor Speedway

Will Power of Australia drives during the Verizon IndyCar Series race at St Petersburg
Image: Will Power of Australia drives during the Verizon IndyCar Series race at St Petersburg

Ed Carpenter held off Will Power and Juan Pablo Montoya after a restart with just two laps left to win the IndyCar 600 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Australian Power started from pole and dominated most of the race, leading 145 of 248 laps.

                 

Carpenter, who started in fifth place, took the lead on lap 182.

                 

During a late-race round of pit stops, Carpenter and Power pitted from first and second on the same lap, but Power received a pit lane speeding penalty, which put him nearly one lap behind in sixth place after serving his drive-through.

                 

Carpenter held a 12-second lead over second-place runner Montoya with seven laps left when Japan's Takuma Sato suffered a blown engine that dropped fluid on the track, forcing a third caution.

                 

During the caution, Power pitted for four tires and returned to the field in sixth.

                 

Power then charged to the front following the restart and took second away from Colombia's Montoya during the final lap. But Power came up 0.5247 seconds short of the victory.

                 

Carpenter, who is competing only on oval tracks and not the road/street courses this season, claimed his third career IndyCar win.

                 

Two weeks ago, Carpenter started on the pole for the Indianapolis 500 but was involved in an accident with James Hinchcliffe following a restart with 25 laps remaining. He had led 26 laps and was in contention to win prior to the crash.

                 

Power increased his lead in the championship point standings to 43 over team-mate Helio Castroneves, who finished 10th.

                 

Brazil's Castroneves won last year's race and was coming off a win on Sunday in the second race of a double-header at Detroit.

                 

Montoya, a former Formula One driver and Indy 500 champion who is back in open-wheel racing after a spell in NASCAR stock car racing, finished a season-best third.

                  

France's Simon Pagenaud was fourth and reigning IndyCar champion Scott Dixon of New Zealand fifth.

Around Sky