SVG Speaks Out About NASCAR Chase Format ‘It’s a Good Target’
SVG has recently spoken about NASCAR’s change from the playoff format to returning to the Chase. The biggest change the sport has made since changing from the Chase to the playoffs back in 2014. And the biggest the Kiwi Cup driver has experienced in his young NASCAR career.
Everyone knew that one of NASCAR’s biggest rising stars had a huge advantage in the playoffs. His dominance on the road courses promised him a spot in NASCAR’s postseason. A promise he’s no longer given with the returning Chase. So it’s interesting to get his thoughts on it.
Why Shane van Gisbergen Embraces NASCARโs Chase Format
As the NASCAR Cup Series heads into 2026 with a familiar playoff structure, one of the sportโs brightest stars has offered some refreshingly honest insight into how the changes affect both his season plans and the broader competitive landscape.
SVG or Shane van Gisbergen, the New Zealand phenom turned full-time NASCAR contender, has publicly weighed in on the return of the Chase-style championship format, and while itโs not a seamless fit for his own strengths, he still sees a clear path forward.
After roaring onto the NASCAR scene with a sensational win in the 2023 Chicago Street Race and a slew of road course victories in subsequent seasons, SVG has become one of the most talked-about drivers in the sport.
But the 2026 Chase structure, which places a premium on consistent point accumulation across the regular season rather than merely earning a playoff berth through a single win, represents a shift from the โwin-and-youโre-inโ reality that served him well in 2025.
In a recent interview reflecting on the revamped system, SVG didnโt shy away from the personal impact: โI think it kind of needed a changeโฆ but itโs hard for me, the reason Iโm in this series is โwin, and youโre in,โ right?โ
Still, that candid admission was followed by a more strategic observation: โI think itโs a good target for us and something that is achievableโฆ it rewards those top guys now that are always winning.โ
Is A Broader Mindset At Play?
That nuanced take is emblematic of van Gisbergenโs broader mindset. He isnโt dismissing the challenge; heโs recalibrating for it. Under the updated Chase rules, drivers must demonstrate year-long consistency, with regular-season points playing a central role in playoff qualification.
In practical terms, that puts a spotlight on oval performance as much as road course dominance, a meaningful shift for a driver whose early NASCAR success came largely on twisty circuits.
Yet van Gisbergenโs reaction blends realism with optimism. He acknowledges that the format favors the perennial winners and consistent top performers, but he also frames it as a pure racing championship one that underscores driver adaptability and resilience over an entire campaign.
For a competitor like SVG, thatโs not a resignation. Itโs a strategic milestone. Heโs not just targeting race wins anymore. Heโs targeting sustained excellence. For fans, the commentary adds an intriguing subplot to 2026. Will NASCARโs return to a traditional playoff chase elevate consistency over sporadic brilliance?
Next Steps
Can van Gisbergen translate his rapid road-course mastery into a broader championship push on ovals and across the full schedule? As the Daytona 500 looms, those are the kinds of questions that turn a season into a story worth following, and SVGโs honest, grounded take makes the answer all the more compelling.
