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Pato O’Ward dominates Milwaukee and displays his popularity with 1st win on an oval since 2022

Pato O’Ward, of Mexico, left, wears a sombrero at the post-race news conference after winning the IndyCar auto race at the Milwaukee Mile in West Allis, Wis., Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024. (AP Photo/Jenna Fryer)

WEST ALLIS, Wis. (AP) — Pato O’Ward remained in the headlines Saturday by winning the first race of a doubleheader at the Milwaukee Mile, where he has spent the weekend questioning IndyCar leadership for allowing NASCAR to beat the series to a race in Mexico City.

O’Ward, from Monterrey, Mexico, is IndyCar’s most popular driver and desperately wants to race in his home country. Instead, NASCAR said this week it will race in Mexico City next June and O’Ward is miffed that there’s no longer room for IndyCar.

The situation escalated when IndyCar CEO Mark Miles said the Mexico City promoters have felt the series and O’Ward are not popular enough to warrant anything but a lease agreement to stage the race themselves.

That irritated O’Ward, who has organically and steadily built his fanbase and is probably second only to Formula 1 driver Sergio Perez in popularity in Mexico.

His response was Saturday’s win at Milwaukee, his third win of the year but first on an oval since Iowa Speedway in July 2022. The three wins are the most in one season for an Arrow McLaren Racing driver and came hours after Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, his F1 counterparts, swept the front row in qualifying for Sunday’s race in Italy.

O’Ward led 133 of the 250 laps and came to the post-race news conference wearing a sombrero. Runner-up Will Power immediately said, “We really should be in Mexico City, not NASCAR.”

O’Ward replied: “Pato who?”

The victory overshadowed the championship battle between points leader Alex Palou and Power, who started the race in a 54-point deficit to the reigning IndyCar title holder.

But Power finished second to cut Palou’s lead to 43 points with two races remaining, both on ovals.

Conor Daly, who was out of a ride earlier this season but hired last month to finish the year for Juncos Hollinger Racing, finished third in JHR’s first ever podium. It was Daly’s first podium since 2016 and he celebrated by pouring the celebratory champagne all over his face.

“It feels amazing,” Daly said. “We had a lot of bad luck, and I think a lot of people were wondering was this the guy to do it. They gave me the car to do it. I want to do well in the series. My goal is to be on the podium in this series, and it’s been far too long since I’ve been on the podium. It’s nice to get another one.”

Chevrolet swept the podium in IndyCar’s return to Milwaukee after an eight-year absence.

Santino Ferrucci, who was running second late, gave up position to Power as his A.J. Foyt Racing team has an alliance with Power’s Team Penske group. Daly used the moment to squeeze his way through and Ferrucci fell to fourth.

Palou finished fifth and is still in control of the title race, which wraps up after Sunday’s second race at Milwaukee and then next month with the finale at Nashville Superspeedway. Palou has never won an oval, while Power has 10 career victories on ovals, including one at Milwaukee.

Power has also raced before at Nashville, while Palou has not. Both drivers are seeking a third IndyCar title. For Palou, it would be his third in four years, while Power won the 2022 title in between Palou’s two campaigns.

Palou twice was boxed in on pit stops by Power, who was in the stall in front of him. It forced Palou to get aggressive to get around Power’s car — and he needed to take an evasive maneuver when one of Power’s tire changers was awfully close to the edge of the pit box as Palou pulled around his title rival.

He was actually monetarily penalized for “hitting another team’s equipment” as he pulled away. Power insisted he was not gaming the pit stops and racing Palou cleanly.

Up Next

IndyCar races Sunday at the Milwaukee Mile in the second part of a doubleheader weekend.