Unlike a few of my friends (Clinton and Alison immediately come to mind), I am not a big Indy fan. But that doesn’t mean I wasn’t excited to learn that Danica Patrick became the first woman to ever win an Indy race on Sunday – the Indy Japan 300, specifically. I have been casually keeping up with her career over the years, and I am thrilled to learn that she has finally broken yet another barrier.

photo courtesy of The Superficial

Danica Patrick became the first female winner in Indy-car history Sunday, taking the Indy Japan 300 after the top contenders were forced to pit for fuel in the final laps.

Patrick finished 5.8594 seconds ahead of pole sitter Helio Castroneves on the 1.5-mile Twin Ring Motegi oval after leader Scott Dixon pitted with five laps left and Dan Wheldon and Tony Kanaan came in a lap later.

“It’s a long time coming. Finally,” Patrick said. “It was a fuel strategy race, but my team called it perfectly for me. I knew I was on the same strategy as Helio and when I passed him for the lead, I couldn’t believe it. This is fabulous.”

The 26-year-old Patrick won in her 50th career Indy-car start, taking the lead from Castroneves on the 198th lap in the 200-lap race.

What was her secret strategy? What gave her the edge? In a nutshell: She kept pushing at the end, while other leaders took pit stops.

Hmmm, this has the feel of an Aesop’s fable, doesn’t it?

Congratulations Danica, you are an inspiration! :-D

Source: CBS Sports Canada

Related posts:

  1. Congratulations Are In Order!
  2. Congratulations Michael & Team!
  3. Be a Summer Intern for Geek.com
  4. JAMMing at the Arcade
  5. Apple’s Accelerometer Stars in Handmark’s Arcade-Style Racing Game for iPhone