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Monday, Aug. 25, 2008

Dancing king Castroneves ends 30-race victory drought

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SONOMA -- For Helio Castroneves, his first win in 30 races was a matter of faith.

Known as Spider Man for his fence-climbing celebrations, Castroneves acknowledged that he checked out the best place to make his climb just in case he won Sunday's Grand Prix of Sonoma at Infineon Raceway.

"I did, actually," Castroneves said. "There were photographers there and I told them exactly where I was going to go. I said, 'Right there. Make sure you wait for me there.' It's just a positive attitude."

The victory did more than break a winless string stretching back to the St. Petersburg race April 1, 2007. It also put Castroneves squarely back into a championship duel with IndyCar Series leader Scott Dixon that looked like a lost cause before Sunday.

Dixon suffered through one of his worst days of the season, finishing 12th, and saw his lead shrink from a seemingly comfortable 78 points to 43 heading into next week's race at Detroit's Belle Isle, the penultimate race of the season.

Castroneves and teammate Ryan Briscoe started 1-2 and finished the same way, completing an amazing weekend after losing their primary cars in a transporter fire Wednesday and racing here in hastily prepared backup cars.

Castroneves, frustrated until now by seven runner-up finishes this season, was almost delirious with joy as he crossed the finish line, screaming and hollering, "Bring it home, baby."

Living up to his prerace promise to those photographers, the Brazilian scrambled out of his No. 3 Dallara Honda at the finish line and ran to the short fence behind the pits. He quickly climbed it and found himself surrounded by admiring fans.

Castroneves then jumped back down to the track and sprinted back to his team, joining them in a group hug.

"They kept telling me, 'Push, push, push.' And I was pushing to the limit," Castroneves said. "There was nothing left out there.

"That was fun, a lot of fun. Oh my God, this is awesome. We've been close so often. We never lost faith. This is great for Detroit."

Tim Cindric, president of Team Penske and the man who manages the races for Castroneves, said, "We would not have won this race if Helio hadn't driven the wheels off it when he needed to. ... We will keep going and see where we end up at the end of the year.

"I think our approach next weekend is the same: We go for broke. That's the only thing that is going to get us where we need to be."

As happy as Castroneves and his team were, Dixon was just as frustrated.

"It was definitely a bad day. We lost a ton of points," the New Zealander said. "This is a race that's very tough. Unfortunately, we got the bad end of the stick. I guess we just need to shrug it off and come back strong next week."

Team owner Chip Ganassi said Dixon is still the favorite to add another title to the one he won in 2003.

"I think if Helio wins the next two (races), we just have to place fourth, so we should be able to do that," Ganassi said. "We just have to stay behind him. We're OK. We have a long way to go yet."

Tony Kanaan and Den Wheldon, both eliminated from championship contention Sunday, finished third and fourth, followed by Danica Patrick and E.J. Viso.

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