When you have a season with 34 races, there are going to be some stunning performances.
The 2025 Repco Supercars Championship was full of remarkable drives. One driver won 14 times, two won for the first time, and we had first-time Bathurst winners and champions.
However, which ones caught our eye?
Honourable mentions
Where do we start? Well, Broc Feeney won 14 races. Each win was brilliant, 11 coming from pole position. Brodie Kostecki/Todd Hazelwood dominated the AirTouch 500 at The Bend, Cameron Hill and Ryan Wood claimed their first wins, and Cam Waters swept Sydney. Chaz Mostert also charged from 17th to second in Townsville.
5) Payne’s clincher
Matt Payne, 11th to 1st, Tasmania Race 13
You're not supposed to win from outside the top 10 in Tasmania. It simply doesn't happen. Well, Matt Payne and Penrite Racing had other ideas, playing a strategy blinder. Payne faced a 48-lap mission after stopping twice under Safety Car. He pulled it off, denying a racy Broc Feeney to win by 0.05s. Incredible.
4) Broc’s crowning moment
Broc Feeney, three from three in Darwin

We struggled to isolate one performance by Broc Feeney. He was different gravy in Darwin, winning from pole three times to claim the Triple Crown. It was a massive statement, and one that proved to the rest of the field that was wasn't mucking around in 2025.
3) Where there’s a Will, there’s a way
Will Brown, 15th to second and 17th to third, Sandown
Will Brown left the Gold Coast in the drop zone, and in desperate need of a strong weekend. Cue, qualifying performances of 15th and 17th. Disaster, right? Not for Brown, who passed 27 cars in two days to save his season. Wet or dry, the #1 Red Bull Ampol Camaro was on another planet at Sandown.
2) Clutch Chaz
Chaz Mostert, 12th to 2nd, Adelaide Race 33
With a title on the line, Chaz Mostert tripped up on the penultimate day in Adelaide. Starting 12th, Mostert scythed through the carnage to finish behind his rival Broc Feeney. Mostert hit everything but the Safety Car, belting the Senna Chicane tyre bundles. He was driving like a man possessed, and delivered the result he needed, the one he rates as his best, and the one that arguably delivered his title the next day.
1) A great Great Race performance
Matt Payne/Garth Tander, 18th to 1st, Bathurst Race 27
After a qualifying shocker, Garth Tander took the start 18th. Seven hours later, he had won the Great Race for a sixth time, Matt Payne braving the elements to win a stunning Bathurst 1000. The #19 Penrite Mustang survived many hits, slides and offs, but Payne was there when it mattered most when James Golding and Cooper Murray collided. Then, on the final lap, he denied a run from David Reynolds.