• My account
NZ Autocar
Subscribe

No products in the cart.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Industry
  • Reviews
  • Electric
  • Utes | Vans
  • Bikes
  • Classics
  • Motorsport
  • Brands
  • Prices
    • New Car Prices
    • New Bike Prices
  • My account
NZ Autocar
SUBSCRIBE
No Result
View All Result
Home Main Categories Motorsport

Shane Van Gisbergen takes maiden Xfinity Series win at Portland

Words Matthew Sampson| Images Supplied

by Peter Louisson
June 4, 2024

Shane van Gisbergen has qualified for the Xfinity Series playoffs by taking his maiden win in the most recent road course race at Portland International Raceway.

The Kiwi took the lead off Justin Allgaier with four laps remaining following a late restart. He would hold the position to take his first victory in 13 attempts.

Van Gisbergen earlier qualified second for the 75-lap road course outing. Sam Mayer claimed pole with an advantage of just 0.044 seconds over the Kiwi.

The two would come together at Turn 1, with the #97 clipping the #1 into a spin.

Van Gisbergen also overcame early damage in Stage 2, which left a tyre rubbing. Later he had an off-track excursion that dropped him to eighth. He took to the restart of the final 25-lap stage in tenth, his lowest position outside the pit window of the race.

Chaos at the start of the run to the flag put him to sixth. He was then able to work forward for a famous win on the 1.967-mile, 12-turn road course.

Following his Lap 1 contact with Mayer, the Kiwi lost places. However, he returned to the lead with a pass on Riley Herbst mid-stage, pulling to a two-second advantage.

Kaulig Racing sacrificed stage points for track position on the restart and pitted van Gisbergen from the lead on Lap 23.

He would start at the front for Stage 2 but lost ground on the restart, taking damage and dropping to seventh.

SVG made ground back on the leaders before running off at Turn 12. However, he rejoined in eighth and worked back to fifth at the next green and white chequered on Lap 50.

Van Gisbergen lost five places in the pits on the final round of stops to take the green flag tenth. He escaped through a Turn 1 incident that saw Josh Bilicki spun out of third to emerge sixth.

A charge to second followed before a caution was required on Lap 62 when Hailee Deegan’s punctured right front parted with her car.

The three-time Supercars champion dropped to fourth off the following restart. But he quickly retook third off Mayer before a multi-car incident behind triggered another caution. Ultimately, it was a four-lap dash to the flag.

Sheldon Creed, running second, was penalised for falling out of formation on the previous restart. That elevated van Gisbergen to the front row at the green flag.

He would get past Justin Allgaier on Lap 72 to hit the front and held on to take the win.

SVG at the wheel of his Nascar racer.

As it happened

Mayer led the field to green but was left facing the wrong way at Turn 1 after contact from van Gisbergen. The Kiwi ran the inside line in the pack and clipped the #1 as it cut inside.

Herbst snuck through for the lead, with Justin Allgaier attempting to follow.

The Kiwi would go on to take the top spot off Herbst during the opening 25-lap stage. He pulled over two seconds clear as the green and white chequered loomed.

However, Kaulig Racing sacrificed stage points for track position on the restart and boxed the Kiwi under green on Lap 23.

Allgaier went on to win Stage 1 from Herbst and Sheldon Creed.

Van Gisbergen led the field to green on Lap 30. He was quickly overcome by several others on the restart, tumbling down the order to slot into seventh.

Contact in the tight pack also damaged his right front, with his tyre rubbing on body work.

He made ground back over the following laps but had his progress undone on Lap 37 when he took turns 10 and 11 too fast before running off at Turn 12. He used the runoff before cutting across the grass on the outside of the tight right-hander to re-emerge eighth.

The three-time Supercars champion quickly made ground back and was fifth at the green and white chequered ending Stage 2.

Allgaier led at the 50-lap mark from Sheldon Creed, Josh Bilicki, Custer and van Gisbergen.

The Kiwi was tenth off pit road but climbed to sixth in a wild restart. That saw Bilicki spun from third and several others, including Herbst, forced to cut the chicane.

By Lap 57, he was up to fourth, behind only Allgaier, Creed and Smith.

He moved into the podium places that tour, with Mayer following him through over Smith to take fourth.

A battle for second followed, with van Gisbergen and Mayer running right behind Creed. The #97 attempted the pass several times and contact was made more than once.

He finally got the position on Lap 61, with Mayer following shortly after.

By this point, Allgaier had pulled to an advantage of nearly three seconds, but his gains were quickly undone. A caution was required when Hailee Deegan’s right front parted ways with her car.

Allgaier led the field to green with nine laps to run. Van Gisbergen was overcome by Creed and Mayer in a three-wide battle entering Turn 1 for second.

On the same lap, the Kiwi quickly returned to third over Mayer before a large collision in the mid-field left Brandon Jones’s #9 buried in the tyres.

Chandler Smith, Ryan Ellis, Blaine Perkins and Brennan Poole were also casualties.

Creed was penalised for falling out of formation on the previous restart, which saw van Gisbergen elevated to second at the next restart for a four-lap dash to the chequered flag.

The #97 retained second on the restart, got an excellent run exiting Turn 1 and took the lead off Allgaier on the inside at Turn 5.

Allgaier and Mayer followed close behind, but the pole-sitter’s right rear punctured, leaving a two-car battle for the lead entering the final lap. Mayer was able to keep running, and the white flag was shown, meaning there would be no overtime if a caution were required.

The Kiwi would hold the position from Allgaier to take the victory, with Sammy Smith completing the podium.

AJ Allmendinger overcame a qualifying crash to finish fourth in Kaulig Racing’s spare car, ahead of Ed Jones, Custer, Josh Williams, Parker Kligerman, Parker Retzlaff and Riley Herbst.

Van Gisbegren celebrated with a signature burnout and drifted back to the start-finish line before signing a rugby ball and punting it into the crowd.

Header Image: Kaulig Racing

Previous Post

2024 Skoda Enyaq Sportline 80 vs Subaru Solterra comparison review

Next Post

Dixon wins IndyCar Detroit Grand Prix, Armstrong third

NZ Autocar is New Zealand’s leading automotive magazine. Delivering news reviews from the automotive world, including commentary from leading automotive writers and covers the scope of motoring including new cars, classic cars, EVs and motorbikes.

Our team

Managing Editor: Richard Edwards
General Manager: Gavin Shaw
Editor: Kyle Cassidy
Senior Editor: Peter Louisson
Creative Director: Alex Schultz

To Subscribe

Subscribe

Contact Us

Advertising:
Gavin Shaw
[email protected]
.
Editorial:
Kyle Cassidy
[email protected]
.
NZ Autocar
PO Box 18121
Glen Innes
Auckland 1743
New Zealand

Categories

Useful Links

Home
News
Motorsport
Search Manufacturer
Search reviews
New Car Prices
New Bike Prices
Industry
Commercial
Subscriptions
Competitions
Contact Us
Advertising
Terms and Conditions

2025 © AUTOCAR 2024 LIMITED. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Industry
  • Reviews
  • Electric
  • Utes | Vans
  • Bikes
  • Classics
  • Motorsport
  • Brands
  • Prices
    • New Car Prices
    • New Bike Prices
  • My account

2025 © AUTOCAR 2024 LIMITED. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.