A look at the weekly NASCAR Cup Series stock watch after the race at Charlotte, including Daniel Suarez and Shane van Gisbergen.
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Sunday night’s Coca-Cola 600 was unlike any race in recent NASCAR Cup Series memory — and not solely because of what happened on the track. Racing in the shadow of Kyle Busch’s passing, the field took the green flag at Charlotte Motor Speedway in what became one of the most emotionally charged events the sport has seen in years.
Beyond the raw emotion of a night that will long be remembered in NASCAR history, there are several additional storylines worth unpacking. From an organization continuing to cement its legitimacy to a handful of contenders dealing with costly setbacks, here are the drivers and teams trending up and down after Charlotte.
📈Stock Up | NASCAR Cup Series Stock Watch After Charlotte
Daniel Suarez
With the Coca-Cola 600 being the first race since the tragic passing of Kyle Busch, several drivers in the field had some extra motivation on Sunday night. Given the impact that the late legend had on the NASCAR career of Daniel Suarez, it’s hard to argue that there could’ve been a more fitting winner.
Suarez overcame plenty of on-track adversity en route to the crown jewel victory. He started 14th, dealt with unscheduled pit stops for tire vibrations early, and was nowhere close to the front through the first 356 laps. With weather imminent, crew chief Ryan Sparks made the race-winning call — two tires for the No. 7 Chevrolet on what proved to be the final pit stop of the race.
While frontrunners Tyler Reddick, Denny Hamlin, Christopher Bell, and Kyle Larson all took four fresh Goodyears, Sparks’ two-tire gamble successfully got Suarez the lead coming off of pit road. His driver then held off a freight train of Toyotas through two restarts before the rain made it official 27 laps short of the scheduled distance — and when it did, the tears came immediately.
The first person Suarez thought of was Kyle Busch. The two-time champion had been one of his earliest and most vocal supporters after he made the move from the NASCAR Mexico Series to the U.S. circuit in 2014. Suarez is one of a handful of current Cup Series drivers who previously drove for Kyle Busch Motorsports in the Craftsman Truck Series.
It was also a landmark night for Sparks, who earned his first career NASCAR Cup Series win as a crew chief on one of the biggest stages in the sport. And the win never would’ve happened without the strategy call. Suarez now jumps up to tenth in the point standings, and Spire Motorsports is well-positioned to secure two bids into The Chase.
Shane van Gisbergen
The knock on Shane van Gisbergen in this sport has always been his performance on ovals. Sunday night at Charlotte, that narrative took a significant hit. With qualifying rained out, SVG drew the third starting spot via the qualifying metric — a gift from his Watkins Glen win the week prior. The expectation was that he’d fade once the field settled in.
To the shock of many, that fade never materialized. Van Gisbergen ran inside the top 10 for virtually the entire race, collecting stage points in each of the first three stages and eventually leading 11 laps on older tires with a pack of fresher cars behind him. When the rain finally ended things, he was classified 11th — a finish that genuinely undersells his race-long performance.
The result moved him up two spots to 14th in the NASCAR Cup Series standings, giving him some breathing room when it comes to The Chase bubble. For a driver whose Cup résumé on ovals was thin coming in, Charlotte may represent a turning point.
It was also a badly needed bright spot for Trackhouse Racing, which has dealt with a frustrating 2026 campaign. Both Ross Chastain and Connor Zilisch crashed out Sunday night and remain well outside the playoff picture. SVG showing he can genuinely compete on 1.5-mile tracks — not just survive them — gives the organization something to build on.
Zane Smith
Zane Smith has compiled a handful of results in the NASCAR Cup Series that suggest he is capable of punching above his weight class with regard to the Front Row Motorsports team he drives for. The full picture of his Coca-Cola 600 effort is worth a closer look.
Smith utilized an alternate two-tire strategy to his advantage in Stage 1 to gain track position and it worked. He held off faster cars with four tires on the ensuing restart and led a career-best 31 laps. Unfortunately, he was penalized for speeding — by just .01 seconds — on pit road during the ensuing stage break. This erased all of that hard-earned track position in an instant.
What happened next is the real story. Rather than fading into the mid-pack shuffle, Smith methodically worked his way back through the field and crossed the line in tenth. In a 600-mile race on one of the most demanding tracks on the circuit, that kind of recovery requires both a fast car and a composed driver. The speed suggests there could be more performances like this one coming.
📉Stock Down | NASCAR Cup Series After Charlotte
Carson Hocevar
Carson Hocevar’s Coca-Cola 600 was a microcosm of a frustrating stretch since his Talladega breakthrough. The speed was clearly there — Hocevar was second-fastest in practice and showed it early in the race before pit road problems derailed his night entirely.
The first issue came during Stage 1, where Hocevar eventually found himself as the free pass car after an early pit road setback. He battled back into contention just outside the top 10, showing the car had plenty of life. A second pit road problem in the later stages undid that recovery entirely. He could never get himself back onto the lead lap after that and finished 23rd.
For the purposes of NASCAR Cup Series stock watch, this race represents the latest installment of a pattern that’s begun to undercut what should be a momentum-building stretch of the season. Spire Motorsports as an organization had an all-time night with Suarez’s crown jewel victory, but within that same camp, Hocevar and his team have work to do.
The No. 77 car has the pace to contend on 1.5-mile tracks and beyond. However, they won’t be able to sniff a second race win until the pit road miscues get cleaned up.
Chase Elliott
Chase Elliott entered Charlotte having won twice this season, sitting comfortably among the championship contenders and firmly established as the most consistent Chevrolet in the field. Sunday night was a reminder that momentum in the NASCAR Cup Series can evaporate quickly.
Elliott spun on Lap 90 in a single-car incident, getting loose off Turn 2 and collecting the inside wall. He was running 17th at the time — already not where the No. 9 should be on a 1.5-mile track — and the DNF dropped him to fifth in the standings. His own assessment was blunt: “It’s been a terrible race throughout the course of my career. I’ve just crashed a bunch.”
The timing makes it sting more. Over the three weeks since his Texas victory, Elliott has now posted a 24th at Watkins Glen — a track where he’s historically been elite — an early exit in the All-Star Race, and now a Charlotte DNF.
The points damage is manageable for now, but if the No. 9 camp doesn’t right the ship soon, what looked like a championship-caliber stretch in the spring could start to feel like a distant memory.
Bubba Wallace
Bubba Wallace’s night at Charlotte started with promise and unraveled through no fault of his own driving. He showed solid early pace before getting caught up in a wreck that left him with right front damage. Wallace kept the car running through the finish, but was effectively a spectator from a competitive standpoint for the remainder of the race, eventually finishing laps down in 22nd.
The result is the latest in a frustrating mid-season stretch for the No. 23 team. Wallace was one of the most consistent drivers in the entire sport through the opening weeks of 2026 — posting four top-10s and no finish worse than 11th in the first five races of the campaign. Since then, a combination circumstances have led to several poor results that have effectively eroded much of that early-season goodwill in the standings.
Wallace now sits 13th in points, 292 back of leader and 23XI Racing teammate, Tyler Reddick. Given how he started the season, the fact that he is slipping back into the clutches of The Chase bubble is alarming. The speed of his car is not a concern. However, Wallace’s on-track performance and results continue to be lackluster relative to the other Toyotas.





