Zilisch gives a masterclass en route to first Xfinity victory at the Glen

Zilisch gives a masterclass en route to first Xfinity victory at the Glen

Introducing โ€ฆ Connor Zilisch.

The 18-year-old North Carolina native made his formal entree into big time NASCAR racing with a major statement holding off the field on a pair of thrilling overtime restarts at the historic 2.45-mile Watkins Glen International road course to claim his first career NASCAR Xfinity Series victory in his first career start.

The Mission 200 at The Glen finished under caution with Joe Gibbs Racingโ€™s Sheldon Creed finishing runner-up โ€“ for a record 12th time โ€“ emerging from a three-wide battle for second place with a multi-car accident farther behind in the field bringing out the yellow flag that ultimately froze the field.

โ€œI worked so hard for this one,” a smiling Zilisch said, his voice cracking with emotion. โ€œIโ€™ve been working for this one for months and itโ€™s so special to me, man. I donโ€™t even have words.

โ€œI donโ€™t know how I saved enough, I sputtered up the hill,” he said of having to save fuel in the closing laps which included a restart with two laps remaining and then two more in overtime.

โ€œWith two to go, I didnโ€™t think I was going to make it back to the line, even. Iโ€™m going to enjoy this one for a while. I canโ€™t say enough about JR Motorsports and everyone who supports me.”

 

Zilisch, who also won in class in this year’s Rolex 24 at Daytona IMSA race, is the seventh driver to win in his first NASCAR Xfinity Series start โ€“ a list that includes the legendary Dale Earnhardt and current NASCAR Cup Series standout Ty Gibbs. He also becomes the second youngest race winner — to Joey Logano — in series history at 18 years, one month and 23 days.

It was that kind of weekend for the young driver, who led a race best 45 of the 90 laps after earning his first career Xfinity Series pole position earlier Saturday. On Friday, he claimed his fifth ARCA Menards Series victory in seven starts.

His work Saturday wasnโ€™t necessarily an โ€œeasyโ€ win, however. He really had to earn it — rallying from a mid-race penalty and managing fuel in the closing laps.

In an unusual situation during a caution, Zilisch received a penalty while running among the top-three late in the race. NASCAR ruled the top-running trio โ€“ also including Gibbs and Sammy Smith โ€“ cut the course and the penalty sent them all to the rear for the restart. Zilisch rallied from 31st-place and was top five 20 laps later.

Creed, who is still competing for that first series victory after so many close calls, smiled on pit road Saturday, conceding this time his second-place finish was one he could actually be pleased with instead of seeing it as a near-miss. His rally on the final lap getting the best of some of the best road course drivers was a small victory in and of itself.

โ€œJust trying to keep the nose on it there, actually really fun,” Creed said of the last lap battle. โ€œI felt like that was the battle for the win probably there if the No. 88 ran out . I thought I put myself in really good positions to end up second again. Iโ€™m actually happy for how my day was going.”

He finished just ahead of Kaulig Racingโ€™s A.J. Allmendinger, the NASCAR Xfinity Seriesโ€™ all-time road course best, JGR teammate Chandler Smith and Kauligโ€™s Shane van Gisbergen, who had won the seasonโ€™s previous three road course races.

Van Gisbergen was so impressed with Zilisch that when he congratulated the teenager in Victory Lane, he smiled and suggested some team should put Zilisch in a NASCAR Cup Series car for Sundayโ€™s race.

Zilisch’s took a call from team owner, NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. during his winner’s press conference.

“Enjoy this; you never win your first again,” Earnhardt told him.

Ross Chastain, who won the pole position for Sundayโ€™s NASCAR Cup Series race at the track earlier Saturday, finished sixth in the DGM Racing Chevrolet with Big Machine Racingโ€™s Parker Kligerman scoring a seventh-place finish. Richard Childress Racing rookie Jesse Love was eighth, followed by Joey Logano in the AM Racing car and MBM Motorsportsโ€™ Josh Bilicki.

The race was impactful with only a single event now left in the regular season to determine the 12-driver Playoff field. JR Motorsportsโ€™ Justin Allgaier finished 17th after an eventful day when the veteran was collected in multiple multi-car incidents. He still emerged as the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship leader by 43-points over defending series champion, Stewart-Haas Racingโ€™s Cole Custer, who finished 21st Saturday after also being caught up in incidents on track.

At the other end of the standings, JR Motorsportsโ€™ Sammy Smith was able to slightly extend his advantage over RSS Racingโ€™s Ryan Sieg for the 12th and final Playoff position. Despite a mechanical issue from his first green flag pit stop, Smith was able to rally to a 19th-place finish. Sieg, who collected points during the second stage, is now 44 points behind Smith heading to Bristol.

The regular season finale concludes with Friday nightโ€™s Food City 300 at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on the CW Network, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Current NASCAR Cup Series driver Noah Gragson is the defending race winner.

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