Scott Dixon lays down stellar final run to second place in Iowa
Scott Dixon delivered one of his trademark superb drives in his fight to second place in Saturday's rain-delayed𝓰 Iowa 300.
The runner up finish was his first at the ⅞ mile oval and the 45th♓ of his career bꦯut featured a performance that only a driver of his caliber could muster.
The five-time NTT IndyCar Series champion started the 300-lap event in ei♓ghth place but never wa♌s able to work his way to the front throughout the race's opening half.

Scott Dixon delivered o𒊎ne of his trademark superb drives 💫in his fight to second place in Saturday's rain-delayed Iowa 300.
The runner up finish was his first at the ⅞ miꦐle oval and the 45th of𝓡 his career but featured a performance that only a driver of his caliber could muster.
The five-time NTT IndyCar Series champion started the 300-lap event💧 in eighth place but never was able to work his way to the front throughout the race's opening half.
The driver of the No. 9 PNC Bank Honda for Chip Ganassi Racing lingered near the end of the top ten for the race's opening 32 laꦅps but quickly lost pace as his Firestone tyres aged and dropped to 16th when rain halted the race after 51 laps.
The yellow allowed him to get fresh r🦄ubber and move up to ninth for the Lap 65 restart, but t💞he problem persisted during the second stint. He plummetted to 13th and was lapped by race leader Josef Newgarden on Lap 121.
His struggle prompted a change in strategy as he conserved fuel in an attempt to🍌 make up his lost laps in case of a yellow flag. The gamble paid off when Ed Carpenter crashed in Turn 2 on Lap 263 after many of the frontrunners had pitted on Lap 263.
That allowed Dixon to make his final stop on Lap 269 an👍d secured his lead lap position in ♋sixth place.
The 39-year-old Kiwi put on a show from 🐻there as he tore through the field with fresher tyres to his advantage and second and third place James Hinchcliffe and Simon Pagenaud became easy targets.
He moved into second place on Lap 285 and eventually crossed the line 2.85 seconds behind Newgarden at the 🎐checkered flag.
The 45-time Indy car race winner surmised that he felt the race was going to be a strug🤡gle right from the get-go.
"We didn't have a perfect car at any ℱpoint this weekend," he said. "I feel we actually made some pretty good gains end of the final practice. It was really bizarre, too. We didn't really change too much.
"Had a pretty good understeer car for the start, then once the race started, it was extremely l꧂oose, especially through two and four. It was just really 🍨bizarre.
"We kind of chased it all night. It was one of those situations where we didn't really have the gap. Even adjusting🐭 the front wing, tire pressure was shifting balance of the car a ton, much more than I really experienced before.
"The second to last set of tires I thought were extremely bad. The last set felt good🤡, but we had a lot bett๊er tire laps than the rest.
"I don't know. We really 🐻struggled here the past few years. Not exactly sure why♌. We tested here with Felix. It looks like we didn't really accomplish much. It's definitely a track that we need to totally revamp and try to understand where we're going wrong."
The night was the second comeback drive of the year for the Chip Ganassi Racing dr♏iver – the first being a recovery from a spin on the oܫpening lap at Road America to finish fifth.