Patrick, Wheldon, IRL gear up for 'Rumble at the Speedway'
CBS SportsLine.com wire reports
FORT WORTH, Texas -- When Danica Patrick gets fire in her eyes, look out.
Last Sunday at the Milwaukee Mile, she had run-ins with Dan Wheldon both on the track and off.
The Indy Racing League called the on-track incident in which the two bumped wheels, sending Patrick on a wild ride through the grass, "nothing more than a racing incident," and handed out no penalties.
In the heated aftermath, Patrick said she thought she had made the pass, while Wheldon said he was still in front and had the right of way.
Patrick, the third-year IndyCar Series driver, and Wheldon, the 2005 Indy 500 winner and series champion, had another very public meeting after the race.
She caught up to Wheldon on pit road and, in front of a roaring crowd that appeared heavily in her corner, grabbed the Englishman around the waist, did most of the talking and, when she didn't get the answer from him she desired, gave Wheldon a light push and walked away.
Afterward, Wheldon suggested Patrick is feeling the pressure of not having won yet and warned, "She's messing with the wrong person if she wants to get feisty. I'm a lot tougher than she is on track."
Maybe.
It's true that Patrick, the woman who inspired a national "Danica-Mania" by becoming the first female to lead the Indy 500 and then setting a record for her gender by finishing in the race, has yet to win a race.
Some are already trying to equate the attractive Patrick, who made waves several years ago by posing for a men's magazine in a scanty outfit, with tennis player Anna Kournikova, who gained notoriety for her good looks and marketability but never won a major event.
But Patrick is showing on the track she's far more than just another pretty face.
Two weeks ago, in her third Indy 500, she finished eighth. But, before the race was cut short by rain and her shot at a victory ended by a fuel strategy that left her in the wrong place at the wrong time, Patrick was running competitively with the big boys.
"I thought she was very impressive," said Andretti Green Racing teammate Dario Franchitti, who won at Indy. "She had a fast race car and she was sticking her nose in there and racing with everyone.
Copyright 2012 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or
distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The
Associated Press is strictly prohibited.