INDIANAPOLIS — Takuma Sato and Scott Dixon gave Chip Ganassi Racing a big boost in the first Indianapolis 500 practice.
Nobody else could catch the two Indianapolis 500 winners Wednesday.
Dixon, the 2008 champ, needed less than 10 minutes to produce a fast lap of 229.174 mph, which stayed atop the speed chart until Sato, a two-time Indy winner, topped it with a late run of 229.439.
Only Santino Ferrucci, of A.J. Foyt Enterprises, prevented Ganassi from sweeping the top three spots. His speed, 228.977, barely edged 2021 series champion and current points leader Alex Palou (228.720). Ganassi's other driver, defending 500 winner Marcus Ericsson, was seventh.
"It's good to be on the fast side and to see all the Ganassi cars (high on the speed chart)," Sato said before talking about Dixon's run. "That was quite impressive to see, Scott up to speed that quickly because I wasn't up to speed by that time."
It was an incredibly fast start as Dixon embarks on a potentially historic qualifying weekend.
If he captures a sixth career pole, he'll tie Rick Mears' all-time 500 record (six) and become the first driver in race history to earn the top starting spot in three consecutive years. In 2022, Dixon also posted the fastest four-lap qualifying average of any Indy pole winner, 234,046, while his 53 wins and six series titles both rank second all-time to A.J. Foyt (67 wins, seven series titles).
Yet, the 500 has produced some baffling final results for The Iceman.