WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – Shane van Gisbergen celebrated his 37th birthday on the eve of Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series showdown at Watkins Glen International, and the occasion came with a prerequisite dose of razzing. Though he’s still relatively new to stock-car racing’s top division in just his second full Cup season, SVG slots into an age bracket reserved for veterans — a phase that can sometimes mean a dulling of otherwise sharp instincts or the “better with age” savvy that still schools the younger generation on how it’s done.
On Sunday, van Gisbergen left no doubt about which veteran driver category applies to him.
“My mates were all giving me (expletive) yesterday about how I’m getting too old for my birthday,” van Gisbergen said. “You know, I don’t feel old. I felt like that’s the best I’ve driven. It was pretty cool.”
A sterling drive from a staggering deficit wrapped up another Shane van Gisbergen masterclass in his second consecutive Watkins Glen triumph, providing his Trackhouse Racing team with a much-needed jolt to its 2026 campaign. Aided by fresher tires at the end and a strategy that positioned him on full attack for the home stretch, SVG overcame a 29.2-second gap with 24 laps remaining, regained command in the 93rd of 100 laps and powered away to a 7.288-second margin of victory — fourth-largest in the track’s NASCAR history.
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Sunday marked the latest chapter in a meteoric rise for the New Zealand import, whose road-racing acumen has resulted in seven Cup Series wins in just 14 road-course starts. His victorious Cup debut nearly three years ago at the first Chicago Street Race looks less and less like a surprise now, given how his Australian Supercar skill has translated to the NASCAR world.
Trackhouse owner Justin Marks said he was stopped on pit road post-race by distant Watkins Glen runner-up Michael McDowell, who cracked that he would have roughly three more Cup Series wins on his resume if Marks hadn’t brought SVG stateside. Marks, who had respectable road-racing chops during his own driving days, says he still marvels at what he’s wrought, but also that van Gisbergen’s performance benchmark remains such a high bar to clear.
“He still surprises me, yes,” Marks said during a break in Victory Lane photos, “and the reason is that after his maybe third win on the road courses, I was like, all right, so competitive response is going to start creeping in here, because everybody can see the data, everybody can study what he’s doing, but they haven’t closed the gap on it, which is just truly, truly remarkable. And I’ve had the pleasure in my career to be teammates with some incredible drivers back in the sports car days, Bill Auberlen and Joey Hand, some of these amazing drivers, AJ Allmendinger, and when I’m watching what he’s doing, there’s a touch to it and a style and an elegance to it that is just so unique and so special. And I’ll say it again, I’m just really glad he’s in a Trackhouse car.”
Van Gisbergen led 74 of the 100 laps, but his dominance had some crept-in doubt after a pivotal shake-up in the final stage. When a caution flag waved on Lap 60, the yellow split the field on strategy, with nine lead-lap cars staying out and the rest hitting pit road for what they hoped would be a final stop. The teams that chose to pit were at the edge of their fuel window, and their drivers would need to stretch their mileage to make it to the end.
When the majority of the field zigged in his rearview mirror, SVG cursed over the No. 97 team radio, knowing he’d have to stop again and feeling his shot to win may have fizzled. But crew chief Stephen Doran reassured him that his peers’ pace would slow, and that fresher tires and no fuel concerns would sustain him. Even then, Doran had reservations.
“There were about 10 laps where I was a little nervous. Like, are we going to get there?” Doran said. “But then they started to fade, having to save, their tires were going away. With 15 to go, I felt pretty good about where we were at, but when he got back out there, we just told him go like hell, you’re going to have to pass all these guys.”
Those worries were shared down in the No. 97 team’s pit box.
“Man, to be honest with you, when Stephen made the call … obviously I don’t get paid to be a crew chief to make those calls, but as a pit crew guy, I’m like, ‘Man, was that the right decision?'” said No. 97 jackman Marshall McFadden, carrying an empty bottle of the champagne that had soaked his fire suit moments earlier. “But after about 10 laps in and I saw SVG slice through the field, I was like, we’re gonna be all right. But if you’re going to draw it up, I think that’s the way to draw it up right there. To watch him just drive through the field, I’m talking about 18 spots, it was just beautiful to see, bro. That’s beautiful to see.”
The beauty eventually had its bloom. As his rivals raced onward with a defensive stance, van Gisbergen’s pace picked up on offense and his methodical path up the leaderboard was cast. Shortly after his final stop on Lap 76, SVG’s gap seemed insurmountable. On the clock, the deficit to then-leader Ty Gibbs was nearly half a minute. In physical distance, Gibbs was rounding the Turn 5 carousel on the other end of the property as SVG completed the 90-degree Turn 1.
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The gap shrank in big chunks, and SVG’s focus narrowed. When his crew gave him updates on his running position, van Gisbergen dismissed it, saying all he needed to know was how many laps were left and how many seconds separated him from the lead. “He’s made it pretty clear, especially at these tracks, he likes to be on offense,” Doran said, “so we put him there.” Van Gisbergen reacted accordingly, turning that initial fear into a determined drive to the finish.
“That’s the best feeling you can get when you have a tire advantage and an awesome car. Like, I was just carving everyone up,” van Gisbergen said. “Some people were nice and laying over, which is cool. The people that didn’t, you had to put good moves on. Yeah, that’s the most fun. Then, especially when the gap started getting less seconds than how many laps to go, I sort of knew it was going to happen at that point. Yeah, that’s one of the best moments you can have as a driver.”
The victory was easily the best moment in what’s been a challenging-at-best season for Trackhouse, which had struggled for speed in the year’s first 11 races. Though the shift to The Chase postseason format this year means that SVG’s win doesn’t include an automatic playoff berth, the correlating three-spot bump in the Cup Series standings handed him the 16th and final spot on the provisional grid.
Marks was quick to acknowledge that more headway is needed. Teammate Ross Chastain rests 19th in the Cup Series points, and rookie Connor Zilisch sits 32nd after his bid for a career-first top five soured in Sunday’s late going. Van Gisbergen’s adaptation to oval-track racing also continues to be a work in progress, and while Sunday’s showing provides a morale boost, Marks has his eyes trained on long-term improvement relative to the rest of the field.
“It’s kind of like turning a Titanic. I mean, it’s one race at a time,” Marks said. “There’s not gonna be one event. This win today doesn’t change anything. We’ve got to go to Dover next week, and we’ve got to maximize the downforce and the setup, and we’ve got to do the same at Charlotte, the same at Nashville. So it’s going to make for some nice, good mood in the shop this week, but it’s right back to work tomorrow.”
Before that work was set to resume, the No. 97 group soaked up every bit of the season’s top highlight in an especially jubilant Victory Lane early Sunday evening. Their driver was one year older and battle-proven better, and the organization reaped what it hopes will be a lasting benefit.
“I think it’s everything for Trackhouse, you know. I just think it’s a jump-start,” McFadden said. “It’s been some tough outings, but I think this will give us a little life, man. It’s that jump-start we needed.”