LEXINGTON, Ohio — Chip Ganassi had a plan. Of course he did. He always does.
When the relentless IndyCar owner hired Charlie Kimball to drive the No. 83 Honda in 2011, Ganassi did it with implicit instructions. None of those instructions included racing to win.
"He's telling you to go out and just finish the races and learn as much as possible," Kimball said. "And you get a lot of flak for not getting the results that you might expect or want to, but you're following the boss's orders."
Ganassi urged Kimball to study teammates Scott Dixon and Dario Franchitti, and stressed he would remain patient with the results so long as Kimball stuck to his end of the bargain.
By year three, Ganassi believed Kimball would be ready to win. And as usual, Ganassi was right.
Kimball's dominating victory in the Indy 200 at Mid-Ohio on Sunday did more than allow the 28-year-old to raise a trophy for the first time in his IndyCar career. It also put to rest the notion he would spend his time at Ganassi as the program's third wheel.
Not that Franchitti needed to be convinced. The four-time series champion knows talent when he sees it. He watched Kimball's team build momentum and realized it was only a matter of time before he would find himself on the podium looking up at his teammate.
"He's smart and he's taken full advantage of the fact that he's a member of the team, the Ganassi team and all the stuff that he's got available to him, whether it's experience or the engineering group or equipment at his disposal," said Franchitti, who finished third behind Kimball and Simon Pagenaud. "He's taking full advantage of it."