Supercars News: Mostert wins Championship after teammate wrecks Feeney

In a season finale that will be etched in Supercars lore for its raw drama and bitter controversy, Chaz Mostert (pictured) seized his long-awaited maiden Drivers’ Championship at the bp Adelaide 500.

–by Mark Cipolloni–

The two-time Bathurst 1000 winner delivered a poised runner-up finish in his Walkinshaw Andretti United (WAU) Ford Mustang, capitalizing on title rival Broc Feeney’s lap-one nightmare and subsequent mechanical gremlins to snatch the crown by a razor-thin margin.

Mostert, a 33-year-old Gold Coast native raised in Queensland’s Beaudesert, entered the day trailing Feeney by 23 points. The 23-year-old Triple Eight prodigy had dominated the 2025 Repco Supercars Championship with a staggering 14 race victories and a record-tying 19 pole positions, positioning him as the overwhelming favorite for his first title. Yet, what unfolded was a cruel twist of fate, echoing the high-stakes chaos of NASCAR’s playoffs—a format Supercars controversially adopted this year to inject playoff-style intensity.

Adelaide Race 3 -Mostert takes checkered flag. Photo courtesy of Supercars

A Pole-Start Shocker: The Crash That Ignited Outrage

From the green light, Feeney bolted into the lead aboard his Red Bull Ampol Racing Chevrolet Camaro, starting from his 19th pole of the season. But WAU’s Ryan Wood, eliminated from finals contention and with nothing to lose, spied a narrow gap at Turn 6 on the opening lap. Wood dove aggressively inside, only for his Mustang to clip the wall before tagging the rear of Feeney’s #88 machine. The contact spun Feeney sideways, plummeting him from first to the back of the 24-car field amid a cloud of debris and disbelief.

Adelaide Race 3 Start with Broc Feeney on pole. Photo courtesy of Supercars

Officials slapped Wood with a 15-second penalty for his role in the melee, but the damage was irreparable for Feeney. As he clawed his way through the pack, his engine began to falter—spluttering under load and robbing him of precious pace. A mid-race pit stop for a loose rear wheel only compounded the misery, turning what should have been a coronation lap into a survival slog. Feeney limped home in 20th position, his title dreams evaporating in the Adelaide heat.

The incident divided the paddock and fanbase like few moments in recent Supercars history. Wood defended his “brutal” lunge unapologetically in post-race interviews, insisting it was hard but fair racing. “I saw a gap and I went for it,” he said, reviewing onboard footage. “I definitely had a car inside and got crowded down to the wall. That’s where the contact occurred… I was here to win the race today.” WAU team principal Ryan Walkinshaw doubled down, blasting Feeney for squeezing Wood into the barriers: “He very clearly had Woody alongside him and pushed Woody into the wall! … Entirely Broc’s fault.” Vision of WAU’s garage erupting in wild celebration as Feeney spun only fueled the fire, drawing accusations of unsportsmanlike glee.

Adelaide Race 3, lap 1 – Ryan Wood on the outside gets ready to take out Broc Feeney on the inside of him, thereby hand the title to his Andretti United Walkinshaw teammate Chaz Mostert. Photo courtesy of Supercars

Feeney’s Triple Eight teammates were less forgiving. Reigning champion Will Brown, who podiumed third, called the move “disappointing,” adding, “Not sure the play was on at the start there… I think he [Feeney] really deserved that one.” Team boss Jamie Whincup labeled it “grubby,” while analysts Mark Skaife and Garth Tander offered a nuanced take: Feeney bore some blame for a sluggish start from pole, leaving himself exposed, but Wood’s dive was overly aggressive given the stakes. “I never like to see that stuff actually play out in a way that inevitably has changed the result of a very dominant season from Broc Feeney,” Skaife lamented.

Feeney’s Tearful Farewell: “You Won’t Hear Me for a While”

The emotional toll hit hardest for Feeney, who fronted the media through choked-back sobs—a mark of the young gun’s maturity despite the devastation. Visibly shattered, the Gold Coaster paused mid-sentence, tears welling as he reflected on a year of near-perfection undone in minutes. “I just want to thank everyone at Red Bull Ampol Racing—it’s been a phenomenal year, something I’ll be very proud of for the rest of my life,” he said, voice cracking. “That’s the new system they’ve got. You can have a shocker in the last race of the year and it all falls apart… No matter what happened today, the thing was going to break down unfortunately.”

Red Bull Ampol Racing Team’s Chevrolet ace Broc Feeney entered the final day of the 2025 Repco Supercars Championship holding a 23-point lead over Chaz Mostert after a dramatic race in Adelaide Saturday

In a raw moment that captured the sport’s human side, Feeney bid a temporary adieu: “I can’t thank my team enough, my family, friends, everyone that’s got my back… I don’t think you’ll be hearing from me for a while, mate. I’ll be flying under the radar for a bit.” Fox Sports commentator Steve Larkham consoled him on air: “You were wringing its neck, you didn’t give up on it. I reckon you’ve got 15 more shots at this… Thanks, buddy.” Feeney later edged Brown for second in the final standings, with rookie sensation Kai Allen rounding out the top four.

Fans, meanwhile, unleashed a torrent of outrage online, spilling over from NASCAR’s own playoff woes to savage Supercars’ eliminator format. “Absolute joke,” one vented, while another warned, “You guys have a decision to make now. Keep this format while chasing casual fans that won’t come, while driving away core fans and eliminating legitimacy in your sport.” The backlash painted Mostert’s triumph as “tainted,” with cries of a “clown of a championship” that rewarded finals fireworks over season-long excellence.

Mostert’s Ice-Cool Masterclass: A Title 12 Years in the Making

Amid the turmoil, Mostert was the picture of composure. Piloting his Mustang to second behind race winner Matt Payne—the 2025 Bathurst 1000 victor—Mostert methodically chipped away at Feeney’s lead, his WAU squad’s four finals wins proving decisive under the new system. “Congrats to Chaz, obviously had a great finals series,” Feeney graciously acknowledged, even in defeat.

This victory marks Mostert as the 28th different champion in Supercars/ATCC history and WAU’s first since Garth Tander in 2007—though some trace it back to Mark Skaife’s 2002 crown under the team’s prior guise. For Mostert, a Supercars veteran since his 2013 debut, it’s poetic closure before a seismic shift: This was his final dance in a Ford, as WAU pivots to Toyota machinery in 2026. Fittingly, it was also Feeney and Brown’s swan song in the Chevrolet Camaro, with Triple Eight reverting to Ford.

The race bid a poignant farewell to several full-time stalwarts: James Courtney, Will Davison, and Nick Percat hung up their helmets, joined by Bryce Fullwood and Jaxon Evans in stepping back from the grid. Injecting fresh blood, 2026 welcomes five rookies: Ryaln Gray, Jackson Walls, Jobe Stewart, Zach Bates, and Jayden Ojeda.

Fallout and the Road Ahead

As confetti rained on Mostert’s podium, the Adelaide finale left Supercars at a crossroads. Brown’s parting shot hinted at evolving tactics: “It opens up the games in next year with what happened. And I’m looking forward to that.” The crash’s echoes—and the format’s flaws—will linger, much like NASCAR’s playoff debates that inspired it. Feeney’s heartbreak may scar, but at 23, his 15-plus title shots loom large.

The 2026 Repco Supercars Championship revs to life on February 20 at Sydney Motorsport Park, promising redemption arcs, manufacturer showdowns, and—hopefully—fairer fights. For now, Mostert savors his breakthrough, but in the unforgiving world of wheel-to-wheel racing, today’s champion is tomorrow’s challenger.

Adelaide Race 3 Results

Pos No. Driver Team Car Laps Behind Gap
1 19 Matthew Payne Grove Racing Ford Mustang GT 78 0.000s 0.000s
2 25 Chaz Mostert Walkinshaw Andretti United Ford Mustang GT 78 5.9772s 5.9772s
3 1 William Brown Triple Eight Race Engineering Chev Camaro ZL1 78 14.8182s 8.841s
4 26 Kai Allen Grove Racing Ford Mustang GT 78 16.1223s 1.3041s
5 18 Anton De Pasquale Team 18 Chev Camaro ZL1 78 21.5776s 5.4553s
6 38 Brodie Kostecki Dick Johnson Racing Ford Mustang GT 78 24.0649s 2.4873s
7 8 Andre Heimgartner Brad Jones Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 27.7663s 3.7014s
8 4 Cameron Hill Matt Stone Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 32.3915s 4.6252s
9 55 Thomas Randle Tickford Racing Ford Mustang GT 78 33.7295s 1.338s
10 14 Bryce Fullwood Brad Jones Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 35.1452s 1.4157s
11 20 David Reynolds Team 18 Chev Camaro ZL1 78 36.3511s 1.2059s
12 6 Cameron Waters Tickford Racing Ford Mustang GT 78 37.8217s 1.4706s
13 17 Will Davison Dick Johnson Racing Ford Mustang GT 78 44.5094s 6.6877s
14 7 James Courtney Blanchard Racing Team Ford Mustang GT 78 52.5821s 8.0727s
15 3 Aaron Cameron Blanchard Racing Team Ford Mustang GT 78 55.8956s 3.3135s
16 96 Macauley Jones Brad Jones Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 57.8385s 1.9429s
17 31 James Golding PremiAir Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 1:00.4104 2.5719s
18 12 Jaxon Evans Brad Jones Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 1:16.0208 15.6104s
19 62 Jayden Ojeda PremiAir Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 78 1:18.0988 2.078s
20 88 Broc Feeney Triple Eight Race Engineering Chev Camaro ZL1 77 1 lap 33.7982s
21 5 Austin Cindric Tickford Racing Ford Mustang GT 77 1 lap 11.9743s
22 222 Nick Percat Matt Stone Racing Chev Camaro ZL1 75 3 laps 1 lap
23 99 Cooper Murray Erebus Motorsport Chev Camaro ZL1 72 6 laps 3 laps
24 2 Ryan Wood Walkinshaw Andretti United Ford Mustang GT 71 7 laps 1 lap
DNF 9 Jack Le Brocq Erebus Motorsport Chev Camaro ZL1

FINAL STANDINGS – 2025 REPCO SUPERCARS CHAMPIONSHIP

Pos Car Driver Major Sponsor Make Team Points Dif
1 25 Chaz Mostert Mobil 1, Optus Ford Mustang WAUR 5306
2 1 Will Brown Red Bull, Ampol Chevrolet Camaro Triple Eight 5244 -62
3 88 Broc Feeney Red Bull, Ampol Chevrolet Camaro Triple Eight 5240 -66
4 26 Kai Allen Penrite Ford Mustang Grove Racing 5223 -83
5 19 Matthew Payne Penrite Ford Mustang Grove Racing 4461 -845
6 6 Cam Waters Monster Energy Ford Mustang Tickford 4314 -992
7 55 Thomas Randle Castrol Ford Mustang Tickford 4286 -1020
8 18 Anton De Pasquale Dewalt Chevrolet Camaro Team 18 3557 -1749
9 38 Brodie Kostecki Shell V-Power Ford Mustang DJR 3536 -1770
10 2 Ryan Wood Mobil 1, Truck Assist Ford Mustang WAUR 3455 -1851
11 8 Andre Heimgartner R&J Batteries Chevrolet Camaro BJR 1784 -3522
12 4 Cameron Hill Supaglass Chevrolet Camaro MSR 1514 -3792
13 20 David Reynolds Tradie Chevrolet Camaro Team 18 1476 -3830
14 31 James Golding Nulon Chevrolet Camaro PremiAir Racing 1458 -3848
15 14 Bryce Fullwood Middy’s Chevrolet Camaro BJR 1340 -3966
16 222 Nick Percat Bendix Chevrolet Camaro MSR 1286 -4020
17 9 Jack Le Brocq Tyrepower Chevrolet Camaro Erebus 1256 -4050
18 99 Cooper Murray TotalEnergies Chevrolet Camaro Erebus 1201 -4105
19 7 James Courtney Snowy River Caravans Ford Mustang BRT 1176 -4130
20 17 Will Davison Shell V-Power Ford Mustang DJR 1171 -4135
21 96 Macauley Jones Pizza Hut Chevrolet Camaro BJR 1062 -4244
22 3 Aaron Cameron Redarc Ford Mustang BRT 874 -4432
23 12 Jaxon Evans SCT Logistics Chevrolet Camaro BJR 855 -4451
24 62 Jayden Ojeda Nulon Chevrolet Camaro PremiAir Racing 768 -4538