Myles Rowe Goes Last-to-First in Final Laps at INDY NXT World Wide Technology Raceway

Myles Rowe surged from last to first in the final laps of the INDY NXT by Firestone race at World Wide Technology Raceway, captured in a Fox News video.

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Lauren Price
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Sports journalist reporting on tennis, golf, and international sports events. Credentialed at Wimbledon, the US Open, and the Masters.
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Myles Rowe Goes Last-to-First in Final Laps at INDY NXT World Wide Technology Raceway

finished from last to first in the final laps of the race at World Wide Technology Raceway, a dramatic closing sequence captured on video and published by.

The clip, which shows only the race’s final laps, documents Rowe moving through the field to cross the line ahead of the pack. The published video carries a title that restates the result outright: "Myles Rowe finished from last to first at ."

The single measure that makes the moment news is simple: last to first. Rowe occupied the rear of the field and, within the laps shown, emerged in the lead. The visual evidence in the clip supplies the outcome; the move itself—its timing and the final passing sequence—forms the core of what viewers will replay and discuss.

Context matters after the result. The footage is a highlight reel of INDY NXT racing at World Wide Technology Raceway and exists as a short-form record of the event’s finale rather than a full race archive. is the publisher of the clip; no accompanying race report, timing data, or post-race comments are provided in the video description, and no other race results are included in the published material.

The obvious gap in the clip is also its tension point: the video shows Rowe finishing from last to first, but it does not explain how. There is no on-screen telemetry, no pit-stop log, no explanation of other competitors’ issues, and no commentary attached that lays out the precise sequence of overtakes, strategy, or circumstance that produced the turnaround. That absence leaves the finish as a remarkable visual fact without the mechanical story that would let a viewer understand whether the result came from pace, pit strategy, contact, retirements, or some combination of events.

The single most consequential unanswered question is the one the clip poses aloud: how did Rowe do it? For anyone wanting to move beyond the highlight, the next step is clear—locate full-race timing and the official race report or watch complete race coverage to assemble the sequence of events that turned last into first. Until that follow-up appears, the video stands as a striking, verifiable moment of racecraft and circumstance, and it leaves open the work of explaining the mechanics behind a finish that will draw attention precisely because the video shows only the closing pages of the story.

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Sports journalist reporting on tennis, golf, and international sports events. Credentialed at Wimbledon, the US Open, and the Masters.