
The legend of Shane van Gisbergen continues to grow when the NASCAR Cup Series goes road racing. Even when an alternate strategy forced him to lose all of his track position, van Gisbergen mounted an incredible charge through the field to win Sunday's race at Watkins Glen.
Here are four takeaways from the Go Bowling at The Glen:
Since van Gisbergen officially announced his arrival in the 2023 Chicago Street Race, he has dominated the field on road courses, including his 11.1-second win over Christopher Bell in the 2025 race at Watkins Glen.
However, Sunday's race produced another level of dominance from the New Zealander. Van Gisbergen led a race-high 74 of the 100 laps, but after electing to stay on the track while the majority of the field pitted under the race's final caution with 40 laps to go, a green-flag stop with 25 to go put his hopes of winning the race in jeopardy.
Even after facing a 29-second deficit to the leaders, van Gisbergen quickly chased down Ty Gibbs and Connor Zilisch for the top spot, making the winning move around Gibbs with eight laps left to win his second consecutive race at Watkins Glen, his first race of the season and the seventh of his career.
Gibbs and Zilisch had a memorable battle for the lead until van Gisbergen's arrival, but neither one had any chance to fend him off. When the dust was settled, van Gisbergen followed up his massive margin of victory from last season with a 7.2-second advantage over Michael McDowell, which was good for the fourth-largest margin of victory in track history.
Entering the weekend, the RCR organization only had one top 10 the entire season. Watkins Glen provided the silver lining that drivers Austin Dillon (sixth) and Kyle Busch (eighth) needed after a pair of top-10 runs.
Dillon has historically struggled on road courses, while Busch has endured a crew chief change, a late-race encounter with John Hunter Nemechek at Texas and a nagging sinus cold at Watkins Glen. Some solid, drama-free runs from the two is exactly what RCR needed to stop the bleeding.
William Byron led the HMS organization in qualifying (13th), but neither of the four drivers had anything to be pleased with coming out of Upstate New York.
Byron's day spiraled out of control when contact from Chris Buescher sent him around in the bus stop on the Lap 44 restart. He never recovered after damaging his right-rear toe link and finished 36th.
Trouble for @WilliamByron in the bus stop! pic.twitter.com/ZhjP4pKDvJ
— NASCAR (@NASCAR) May 10, 2026
It was not much better for the rest of the HMS stable with Kyle Larson (23rd), Chase Elliott (24th) and Alex Bowman (25th) running outside the top 20, leaving the powerhouse organization with more questions than answers after a no-show at one of its best tracks.
The first half of Sunday's race was mostly straightforward, but the combination of some drivers pitting under caution and others like van Gisbergen making their final stop under green set up a fascinating scenario in the closing laps.
Fuel saving became the priority for the leaders, while some could go all out and give it everything they had. Throw in the additional 10 laps that NASCAR added to the race, in addition to the increased horsepower and tire wear, and it made for a captivating final stage.
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