Andretti Autosport's Alexander Rossi says Scott Dixon's consistency in the IndyCar Series is a lesson from him, having failed to take the title in 2018.
Rossi became Dixon's closest title rival as the 2018 season reached its conclusion in Sonoma, eventually finishing 57 points behind the Kiwi.
The Californian equalled Dixon's tally of three wins but the Ganassi driver finished outside of the top six positions just twice, in Long Beach and Iowa, while Rossi fell outside of those spots on seven occasions.
That ultimately proved a crucial difference en route to the outcome of the championship.
Rossi is preparing for his fourth season in IndyCar, and second with the full Andretti squad, having spent his first two years driving for the Andretti/Herta outfit.
"I think the big thing with Scott and his team is just the consistency that they had over the year," said Rossi.
"Obviously he won a lot of races, but when we look at where it went wrong for us, it was quite a few races we gave away pretty easy points.
"It's a competitive championship, as we've all said, and it punishes mistakes, even small ones.
"So I think we've just got to continue the development that we saw from 2017 to 2018 and carry that forward to next year and just be more consistent across the board, and hopefully, that will be enough."
Rossi was quick enough to praise his rival and jokingly mentioned he'd hope he would retire soon
He added: "But I'm sure Scott will continue winning races, and he's won like 100 now, so he'll be hard to beat until he stops racing, which I hope is soon."