feature-image

Imago

feature-image

Imago

Porsche Penske Motorsport completes its Daytona hat-trick. The Roger Penske-owned team has won its third straight 24 Hours of Daytona race today after multiple factors threatened their lead. And while it was a rewarding 24 hours for them, it was a tough pill to swallow for their rivals.

Terrell Owens holding Dude Wipes XL

Celebrating its 60th anniversary, Porsche Penske Motorsport, driven by Felipe Nasr, Laurens Vanthoor, and Nick Tandy, secured Penske’s 21st Rolex 24 victory, joining an elite group of just three teams to win the race three years in a row. To make matters more heated, Penske’s competition was the France family that owns NASCAR. Action Express Racing is owned by Jim France. And they could’ve won the race if not for a slight mishap in their garage.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

ADVERTISEMENT

Disaster for France and domination for Penske

Interestingly, before the race started, things were not looking good for Roger Penske. His rival, Jim France’s Cadillac, had won pole position for the race. Their prodigious driver, Connor Zilisch, was looking forward to a good race to try to repeat his feats from 2024. However, their car ended up disqualified before the race. As a result, it would start from the 31st on the grid.

The drivers waged their way through the longest caution that lasted for over six hours owing to heavy fog. The caution time literally forced Roger Penske to take a mid-race break. The team owner prides himself on staying awake throughout the 24 hours, but ultimately, even he couldn’t last against the long caution period.

ADVERTISEMENT

Eventually, the race became a face-off between the two most powerful families of NASCAR. The owner of IndyCar vs the owner of NASCAR. Roger Penske and Jim France’s drivers came out together after the final pit stops. There was a mere 0.3s between Nasr and Aitken. Aitken started attacking aggressively, forcing Nasr to bring out his heroics from last season. His final move was squeezed out by Nasr on the frontstretch.

ADVERTISEMENT

Nasr managed to put some distance between himself and Aitken. However, he was met with traffic, which allowed Aitken to rapidly close the gap. Nevertheless, it was Porsche Penske Motorsport and Nast who prevailed during the race.

For Nasr, it was a historic moment. He has now been a part of the winning team six times in the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona event.

ADVERTISEMENT

So until the next time, the Penske family has the edge over the France family. But about the wonder kid, Connor Zilisch?

Connor Zilisch fails to earn his second Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona victory

ADVERTISEMENT

Cadillac’s lineup was equally amazing, with the likes of Jack Aitken, Earl Bamber, Mercedes Formula 1 driver Fred Vesti, and NASCAR rising star Connor Zilisch. Unfortunately for Connor Zilisch, there was nothing he could do as his team finished second.

Team Porsche Penske Motorsport won the race with a lead of 1.569 seconds. However, the 19-year-old will have plenty of chances to take his revenge on Penske this year.

ADVERTISEMENT

He will now drive full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series for Trackhouse Racing. Zilisch has earned the respect of veterans and the love of fans. So for him, the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series will be the make-or-break season. There is a lot of hype around his entry, and the way things are progressing, he might just make it to the top in a few years.

He also expressed his interest in racing in Formula 1 one day if he achieves success in NASCAR for a few years. Either way, Connor Zilisch is an upcoming prospect who will define the next generation of NASCAR drivers.

Share this with a friend:

Link Copied!

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Written by

author-image

Rohan Singh

306 Articles

Rohan Singh is a NASCAR Writer at Essentially Sports who is accustomed to conveying his passion for motorsports to a large audience. He has previously created driver and event pages for NASCAR legends like Dale Earnhardt, Jimmie Johnson and the Crown Jewel events of the sport like the Daytona 500 and Brickyard 400. As a writer, Rohan uses his understanding of the technical concepts of engineering to deconstruct the complex and highly technological motorsports vertical for his audience. He fell in love with motorsports in 2013, watching Sebastian Vettel claim his crown in India, and since then, he has been pursuing motorsports as his lifelong goal. Armed with the technical know-how and engineering expertise of a Mechanical Engineering degree, and pairing it with his journalistic experience of more than 600 articles in motorsports, Rohan likes to reel in his audience by simplifying the technicalities of the sport and authoring content which appeals to them as a dedicated motorsports fan himself.

Know more

Edited by

editor-image

Suyashdeep Sason

ADVERTISEMENT