Before Jeff Gordon drove important laps in a NASCAR career that would lead to four Cup Series championships and 93 Cup victories, Charlotte Motor Speedway president Humpy Wheeler introduced the driver as “the finest young racing talent in the world today.”
Wheeler was better than most at evaluating racing talent. Gordon was better than most at using that talent. On the day that Wheeler escorted Gordon to a stage in front of curious NASCAR media, however, the driver looked more like a kid on the way to his junior prom than a wheelman who would race to international fame.
Connor Zilisch could play the young Jeff Gordon in a movie. Nineteen years old and as trim, clean-cut and well-spoken as Gordon back in the day, Zilisch would not need a stunt driver for the racing scenes. He will arrive full-time in the Cup Series next season with clear billing as the Next Big Thing, a highly skilled driver with unlimited potential and promise.
RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Driver page
After somewhat of a tentative start this year, Zilisch has stormed through the Xfinity Series like a man aflame. Garage area observers were wide-eyed last season when Zilisch won his Xfinity Series debut at Watkins Glen International in the first of four get-acquainted races in NASCAR’s No. 2 series. Impressive, for sure, but there was little thought of what would follow this season.
Over the past 16 Xfinity races, Zilisch, driving for JR Motorsports while on loan from Trackhouse Racing, has won eight times, finished second four times and has finished in the top five in every race. It is not a stretch to claim that he could have won all 16 of those races.
Having proven the potential Trackhouse owner Justin Marks saw in him when he was signed as a developmental driver, Zilisch will be promoted to the Cup Series a year ahead of the original schedule. After a handful of Cup appearances this season, he is scheduled to run the full Cup tour in 2026, and it was announced Sept. 23 that veteran crew chief Randall Burnett, previously with Kyle Busch at Richard Childress Racing, will lead his team.
Of course, other young drivers have been labeled as solid prospects over the years. Some fall by the wayside; others don’t reach projected heights because of team or other issues; some win sporadically; others stumble out of the gate under the heat of expectations but eventually perform at high levels.

Famously anointed by no less a personage than NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin as a sure-fire talent and nicknamed Sliced Bread (as in “best thing since” by Randy LaJoie), Joey Logano arrived in the Cup Series as royalty-in-waiting. The going was slow, however, as he scored only three times across his first five seasons before winning five races in 2014 and a first Cup championship in 2018.
Zilisch, having paved the way with brilliance in Xfinity, has everyone’s attention. He will roll into 2026 with a winning team, deep sponsorship (including designation as a Red Bull athlete, putting him in strong international company) and experience with a top-flight Xfinity operation.
The world will be watching, and Zilisch, mature beyond his years and quietly confident in his experience and ability, seems ready. And he understands that there will be no slipping under the radar, no arriving in the dark of night at Daytona Beach in February wearing a disguise.
Earning garlands at the next level will be a tougher go, and the bright lights will be on.
“It’s tough to avoid it, especially in today’s age with social media and how often you see it and get tagged in it,” he said. “But, with that, I enjoy the pressure and wanting to live up to it and wanting to be one of the greats. My expectations are the same going into every weekend, regardless if I’ve won four in a row or if we’ve wrecked out of the last four.
“You have to use the momentum as confidence, and you have to build on that, but you can’t let it get to you and affect the way you’re preparing each week. So I tell myself every week not to let the outside noise affect what I’m doing, not to let it change the way I approach each weekend.”
His emotional balance at such a young age came from his parents (Jim and Janice Zilisch) and former driver and current racing consultant Josh Wise, who counts Zilisch among the clients he has helped move through the rapids that can slow advances at the top levels of automobile racing.
“Josh has been a big mentor of mine and has helped me with not setting expectations,” Zilisch said. “There are so many things in this sport that are not in the driver’s control, so you’re only a small part of the puzzle. If you don’t live up to expectations, maybe sometimes it’s not because you didn’t do your job.”

If Zilisch could pick a turnaround moment this season, it came on April 26 at Talladega Speedway. A crash in the 11th race of the Xfinity season left him with several damaged back vertebrae and forced him to miss the following race at Texas Motor Speedway.
Zilisch sat in the team pit box during the Texas race and watched substitute driver Kyle Larson drive the Zilisch car to victory. Zilisch returned to the car for the next race at Charlotte Motor Speedway and hasn’t finished worse than fifth since.
“After I hurt myself at Talladega, the switch flipped and things have kind of just completely turned around,” he said. “Certainly, this year has been a lot of fun, but as we go into next year, it’s going to be a much different story.”
Zilisch crashed a few cars in the first half of the season, before and after winning March 1 at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas.
“I hit enough people that I realized that something I was doing was not right,” he said. “I sit down with the people that I trust and I ask them, ‘Is this my fault?’ They’ll tell me yes or they’ll tell me no. I have to understand that some things aren’t teachable. You have to go out there and mess up to learn.
“I don’t think I’m going to learn much next year if I try to stay under the radar and just putt around. I want to go out and give it my all, knowing that every week is not going to be great. The goal is to give it 100 percent and try to compete for wins.”
Mardy Lindley, Zilisch’s crew chief at JRM, said the driver is a sponge. “He coaches himself,” Lindley said. “He looks at all the data. He can correct himself if he needs to, and he does it mostly on his own. We can see issues, but he sees them before we even have to say anything, which makes him really unique. He’s just a natural. He’s not just intelligent; he’s race-intelligent.
“We’ve had other guys do well in our cars, but they all had a lot more experience than Connor. You have to tell yourself to remember that he’s a rookie, and he’s got the attention of the NASCAR garage.”
Zilisch started racing go-karts at age 4. Four years later, the family went on the road in search of better competition and bigger events. “Being 8 years old and traveling for a sport, I just thought that was the coolest thing ever,” Zilisch said. “I’ve enjoyed it all from a young age. It’s what I’ve loved to do since before I can remember.”
The Zilisches met Kevin Harvick and his son, Keelan, along the go-kart trail, and Connor said Harvick was instrumental in moving him from karts to stock cars and into the Chevrolet fold. The wins kept coming, and Zilisch was carried along in a wave of successes. The standard life of a teenager was no more.
His “normal” education came through online classes. “I never stepped foot in a high school,” he said. “I know I’m never going to get to go to college. I never got to watch my friends play football on Friday nights. But there’s not much I would trade for the life I live now.”
For many, Zilisch wasn’t particularly a big news figure until he made headlines by falling off his race car while celebrating in Victory Lane Aug. 9 at Watkins Glen. He suffered a broken collarbone but won three straight races (at Daytona, with relief-driving help from Parker Kligerman, Portland and Gateway) after the fall.
Zilisch is an unusual name, both in NASCAR and in general. Connor is busy giving it wider exposure. He points out that there’s at least one other Connor Zilisch in the United States. “He’s a little older than me, and we’ve talked,” Zilisch said. “I’d like to get him to a race one day.”
Maybe in Victory Lane. Maybe next year.









