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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 5:19 p.m., Sunday, May 25, 2008

INDY 500
Scott Dixon beats Vitor Meira in Indianapolis 500

By PAUL NEWBERRY
AP National Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Scott Dixon, of New Zealand, douses himself with milk after winning the Indianapolis 500.

DARRON CUMMINGS | Associated Press

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INDY 500

1. (1) Scott Dixon, 200 laps, 143.567 mph

2. (8) Vitor Meira, 200.

3. (7) Marco Andretti, 200.

4. (4) Helio Castroneves, 200.

5. (10) Ed Carpenter, 200.

6. (20) Ryan Hunter-Reay, 200.

7. (9) Hideki Mutoh, 200.

8. (17) Buddy Rice, 200.

9. (14) Darren Manning, 200.

10. (12) Townsend Bell, 200.

11. (25) Oriol Servia, 200.

12. (2) Dan Wheldon, 200.

13. (23) Will Power, 200.

14. (18) Davey Hamilton, 200.

15. (29) Enrique Bernoldi, 200.

16. (21) John Andretti, 199.

17. (32) Buddy Lazier, 195.

18. (28) Mario Moraes, 194.

19. (27) Milka Duno, 185.

20. (15) Bruno Junqueira, 184.

21. (31) A.J. Foyt IV, 180.

22. (5) Danica Patrick, 171, accident

23. (3) Ryan Briscoe, 171, accident

24. (11) Tomas Scheckter, 156, mechanical

25. (19) Alex Lloyd, 151, accident

26. (26) E.J. Viso, 139, mechanical

27. (16) Justin Wilson, 132, accident

28. (24) Jeff Simmons, 112, accident

29. (6) Tony Kanaan, 105, accident

30. (22) Sarah Fisher, 103, accident

31. (30) Jaime Camara, 79, accident

32. (33) Marty Roth, 59, accident

33. (13) Graham Rahal, 36, accident

Winner's average speed: 143.567 mph.

Time of Race: 3 hours, 28 minutes, 57.679 seconds.

Margin of Victory: 1.750 seconds.

Caution Flags: 8 for 69 laps.

Lead Changes: 18 among 9 drivers.

Lap Leaders: Dixon 1-2, Wheldon 3-9, Junqueira 10-11, Rice 12-19, Wheldon 20-35, Dixon 36-74, Wheldon 75-79, Dixon 80-91, Wheldon 92-93, Kanaan 94-105, Dixon 105-121, Ma.Andretti 122-135, Moraes 136-138, Ma.Andretti 139, Dixon 140-155, Carpenter 156-158, Dixon 159, Meira 160-171, Dixon 172-200.

Point Standings (After 5 of 18 races): 1,Dixon 191; 2,Castroneves 176; 3,Wheldon 153; 4,Kanaan 139; 5.M.Andretti 130; 6,Patrick 122; 7,Carpenter 120; 8,Power 114; 9,Mutoh 113; 10,Servia 112; 11,Hunter-Reay 105; 12,Bernoldi 99; 13,Meira 98, Rahal 98; 15,Viso 93; 16,Foyt 92, Manning 92.

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INDIANAPOLIS — Scott Dixon stayed ahead of the trouble, got a boost from his crew and drove to his first Indianapolis 500 victory today.

Dixon got out of the pits ahead of Vitor Meira on the final round of stops, then held off the Brazilian and hard-luck Marco Andretti to win the first 500 since the two warring open-wheel series came together under the IndyCar banner.

Danica Patrick failed to finish for the first time in four trips to Indy, though it wasn't her fault. She was clipped on pit road by Ryan Briscoe with 29 laps to go, breaking the left rear suspension on a car that had run in the top 10 most of the race but never seriously challenged for the lead. She finished 22nd.

Patrick's mishap was one of numerous crashes and mechanical failures that slowed the race under the yellow caution flag eight times for a total of 69 laps. But Dixon, who started from the pole, clearly had the strongest car on the track.

"There were so many yellows," Dixon said, "it was really hard to get into a rhythm."

Meira, driving for the one-car, low-budget Panther Racing team, has never won an IndyCar race but finished runner-up in the biggest race of all for the second time in four years.

Andretti appeared to knock teammate Tony Kanaan out of the race with an aggressive move just past the midway point, but all he got was another close call for a family that is now 1-for-57 at the Brickyard. The 21-year-old settled for third.

Dixon led 115 of the 200 laps and Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Dan Wheldon was out front for 30 more, backing up the speed they had shown all through the month of May.

"You're clear now," Dixon's spotter screamed over the radio as the 27-year-old New Zealander cleared the last group of lapped cars with two turns to go. "Bring it home! Bring it home!"

For a while, it looked as though an Andretti might finally break through to give the star-crossed family its first Indy victory since grandfather Mario won in 1969. Instead, it was the eighth time Marco, father Michael or Mario finished second or third.

Marco led twice for 15 laps, but the Andretti Green Racing — co-owned by Michael — made a crucial miscalculation on its last pit stop. They adjusted the rear wing, looking for more speed, but the No. 26 car wound up falling back in the closing laps.

"I think it was a team decision to do what we did," Marco said. "OK, we missed. So we messed up as a team. So move on."

The race was marred by all sorts of crashes and miscues, two of them while the cars were running under the yellow. That held down the average winning speed to 143.567 mph and took out two of the most prominent drivers in Kanaan and Patrick.

Kanaan was leading on lap 106 when Dixon surged past him right on the backstretch. Andretti dove to the inside, which appeared to catch his teammate off guard. Kanaan drifted high going into the third turn, scraped the outside wall and turned into the path of Sarah Fisher, one of three women in the 33-car field.

Neither was hurt, but both were done for the day.

Andretti apologized over the radio for his aggressive move. When told that his youthful teammate was sorry, Kanaan responded, "He'd better be. That was a very stupid move. Me being a good teammate, I didn't want to turn into him and take out two cars. So I give up today."

Kanaan has led 214 laps in his Indy career — running out front in every one of his seven trips to the Brickyard — but he's never tasted milk in Victory Lane.

"Every time I lead, something happens," said Kanaan, who finished 29th, the worst of his Indy career.