In fairness, Sato is a lot better than his record indicates, besides his boneheadedness at way too many times. BAR wasn't a race winning outfit against the Ferrari horde, then Super Aguri (Honda Bux) obviously no better. He's spent most of his IndyCar career in pretty average equipment as well, including way too long at AJ Foyt which is a dead end...
I think most hardcore IndyCar fans also know this. My main reason for not exactly being thrilled that Sato won is that he's gonna do jack to move the needle here in the US, which is desperately needed.
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Very twisted though that in a race with even more attention on it thanks to Honda's biggest detractor, in a race where that guy's Honda goes boom again, Honda's guy that they have thrown money at to keep him around ends up winning. Like, the karma score on that one is way screwed up. They got their dream result... but in the most embarrassing possible fashion.
Alonso ran pretty much as expected, though I was shocked how totally non aggressive he was. I don't think he would have won though had the motor not popped - he looked like he was kind of comfortably uncomfortable out there. I didn't see any move that was really a "wow, this guy is that good" at any point. If you've watched the 500 with this car, you know that the driver absolutely needs to know how to win, how to MAKE a win. Never saw that from Fernando.
Same reason you should have known Chilton wouldn't win - he isn't a winner. Look at how Ed Jones drove, then look at how Chilton did - the difference is clear. Ed dared to hold it two wide with Helio through turn 3, Chilton rolled over and surrendered.
Dario left not an inch to spare leaving it wide open on the outside with Sato trying to squeeze inside in 2012. Kanaan went super aggro in 2013 on a restart. RHR double juked Helio while nearly clipping the grass in 2014. Montoya passed people in the grass in 2015. Rossi ran an unbelievable fuel number that shouldn't have even been possible last year. Sato this year drove with the weight of knowing what it's like to lose.
Sure, Fernando may have pulled a great move had the opportunity occurred, but once he dropped back to around 9th he just kind of went nowhere quick before kablammo. That was the opportunity for greatness, and he just didn't produce there. The car just must not have been up to snuff in the dirty air, he might not have been comfortable - but you knew Helio would get a go at the win despite originally being behind him.
He was driving to finish the race, he wasn't driving to win the race. None of this is unexpected for a total rookie to the world of oval racing, and none of that is a problem. But this is why I don't think he was a serious threat to win. He'd have done great in the pre DW12 formula, but he was too passive in the crunch times IMO.
IDK. Fernando did well, it's a tremendous shame he didn't get to do the full distance, but I think he was a lot further from winning than many other people believe. If he comes back again next year then he'll have a serious shot.